Crowdfunding Professional Association (CfPA) Slams Republic’s “Mirror Token” Offerings

Crowdfunding Professional Association (CfPA) Slams Republic’s “Mirror Token” Offerings

Republic, the largest online capital formation platform in the world, has recently introduced a new product for investors. “Mirror Tokens” are digital assets that provide access for smaller investors to participate in private securities that are typically inaccessible to them. The Mirror Tokens pair with well-known private firms like SpaceX, Revolut, and OpenAI. Many of these firms are expected to pursue a public offering at some point in the future, thus providing exposure for smaller investors to any possible capital gain following an IPO.

These offerings are currently utilizing Regulation Crowdfunding (Reg CF) in the US to allow non-accredited investors to purchase securities that mirror the performance of these securities. Just last week, Republic Europe announced a similar offering on its UK-focused investment platform.

The Republic is not alone in offering digital assets that represent private shares in high-profile private firms.

In recent days, the Crowdfunding Professionals Association (CfPA) in the US has issued a statement slamming the new product. The CfPA states the Mirror Tokens are “raising pressing questions about how such synthetic products align with Reg CF’s purpose and its framework for investor protections.”

The CfPA states that while it supports investment access, it opposes Republic’s Mirror Tokens, as these “synthetic instruments diverge from the law’s core intent of directly funding small businesses and fostering community economic growth.”

The CfPA outlines four areas of concern, including: Dual Layer Risk, Regulatory Misalignment, Dangerous Precedent, and Complexity, along with Investor Protection concerns.

The CfPA statement criticizing the Mirror Token product is viewable here.

Brian Christie, co-Chair of the CfPA Board of Directors, shared the following comment on Republic’s Mirror Tokens.

“They contribute $0 to capital formation, degrade the integrity of the crowdfunding industry, and from my perspective, belong in a casino,” said Brian Christie, Co-Chair of the Crowdfunding Professional Association. “Products like this erode public trust, and once that trust is gone, the entire Reg CF ecosystem suffers.”

The CfPA statement, signed by Jenny Kassan, President of the CfPA Board of Directors, called on lawmakers, regulators, funding portals, and the broader Reg CF ecosystem to take action opposing these digital assets.

“We [aim] to ensure that Regulation Crowdfunding remains a safe and appropriate avenue for capital formation—not a vehicle for experimental financial products that resemble crypto derivatives more than true investments in businesses.”