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Is AMP a fund?
No. AMP is not a pooled investment fund, a mutual fund, or a hedge fund. It does not register as an investment company under the Investment Company Act of 1940. AMP is a direct participation program structured under Reg A+ Tier 2 in which investors co-invest alongside AMP in specific identified deals. There is no fund manager taking discretionary positions across an investor pool. Capital is deployed deal by deal, with investor participation governed by subscription agreements tied to specific opportunities.
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How does the AMP Ladder work?
The AMP LadderTM is a tiered participation architecture. Each rung represents a distinct investment level with defined capital commitment thresholds, yield rate bands, lock-up terms, and co-invest ratios. Investors enter at the rung appropriate to their capital position and advance by reinvesting or supplementing committed capital over successive cycles. Higher rungs carry access to larger deal allocations and enhanced yield participation. The Ladder is not a bonus scheme — it is a structural incentive for long-duration capital commitment.
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Who is Dr. Clive Y. Thomas?
Dr. Clive Y. Thomas is the economist whose doctrine forms AMP’s intellectual foundation. AMP carries his proposition — that development capital should belong to, and be understood by, the people who hold it — into its education curriculum (U·AMP), its founding doctrine, and the principles encoded in AMP’s DNA. He is not an operator of the platform and is not involved in deal selection or program governance. Each AMP cohort is structured and governed under its qualified Offering Circular.
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How is AMP different from a REIT?
A REIT is a passively managed, publicly traded or registered vehicle required to distribute 90% of taxable income and hold predominantly real estate assets. AMP is an active, deal-specific co-investment program that is not constrained to a single asset class, does not trade on an exchange, and does not operate under REIT distribution mandates. AMP investors know what deals their capital enters. REIT investors own a share of a portfolio they do not select. AMP’s structural transparency and principal co-invest obligation represent a fundamentally different risk-alignment model.