Commodities
Extending Capital Into the Foundations of the Real Economy
At .168 Capital, commodities represent the connective tissue of the real economy — the materials, inputs, and resources that make production, infrastructure, and daily life possible.
While our platform today is anchored by gold-backed income and long-horizon real assets, we view essential commodities as a natural extension of our real-asset architecture. These are not speculative instruments or trading positions, but the physical inputs that sustain manufacturing, energy systems, food supply, and industrial continuity.
Our approach to commodities is deliberate: capital is structured to support broader economic function, not price-driven exposure.
As the platform evolves, commodities serve as a deployment pathway for retained capital — reinforcing supply chains, industrial systems, and production capacity that economies rely on to function across cycles.
This orientation ensures that capital remains embedded in the real economy, strengthening systems that generate value through physical throughput, not financial abstraction.
How Commodities Fit Within the .168 Platform
Gold provides the income engine.
Land and real estate provide permanence.
Commodities provide economic continuity.
Areas of Strategic Focus
Rather than operating discrete commodity vehicles, .168 approaches commodities through selective participation, co-investment, and infrastructure-linked exposure aligned with real economic demand.
The raw inputs of civilization.
Industrial Materials
Critical metals and raw materials essential to construction, transportation, and manufacturing. These inputs underpin infrastructure development and industrial productivity and remain indispensable regardless of market conditions.
Energy Inputs
Foundational energy commodities that support mobility, logistics, and industrial operations. Our interest lies in continuity, efficiency, and modernization — not price cycles.
Agricultural & Food Systems
Processing, Logistics & Trade Infrastructure
Facilities and systems that connect raw materials to usable output — refining, storage, transport, and trade corridors that ensure commodities serve real economic purpose.
Staple commodities that sustain food supply chains and downstream processing. These systems are central to social stability and long-term economic resilience.
Commodities, when approached through disciplined capital structures, support far more than resource extraction. They enable:
Manufacturing and industrial output
Infrastructure development and maintenance
Energy security and supply continuity
Food system stability
Employment and regional economic activity
Supporting Broader Economic Activity
Strengthening the inputs that allow communities, industries, and nations to function.


We do not pursue commodities to chase cycles. We engage with them because economies cannot function without them.
As the .168 platform continues to scale, commodities represent an embedded capability — a way to extend capital into the systems that support industry, infrastructure, and everyday economic life.
This is how we ensure that capital not only generates returns, but supports the broader economic activity those returns depend on.
Positioning for Long-Term Resilience




