Introduction: Microshares with Purpose
Trisolace Company Limited, a leading name in sustainable agribusiness in Ghana, has introduced a crowd-farming model that allows individuals to purchase MicroShares in agricultural projects. These MicroShares offer participants up to 30% in dividends, making it a compelling option for people seeking to support real farming while earning from it.
But how can Trisolace offer such dividends without requiring SEC licensing? Let’s explore.
What Are Microshares in Crowd Farming?
Unlike traditional stock market investments, Trisolace’s microshares are tied directly to real agricultural production cycles—including maize production, rabbit rearing, and vegetable cultivation.
Participants are not buying equity in the company or publicly traded securities. Instead, they are funding specific farming operations and, in return, receiving a share of the output value, which is calculated and distributed as a dividend—approximately 30% after the farming cycle (which typically ranges from 6 to 9 months).
Why SEC Approval Isn’t Required
In Ghana, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) regulates public financial investments, equity trading, pooled capital markets, and financial instruments. Trisolace’s model does not fall under these categories because:
- The model is based on agricultural value-sharing, not speculative or pooled financial investments.
- Returns are tied to actual farming outputs, not market speculation.
- The microshares do not represent ownership in the company or any transferable security.
- Trisolace is transparent about risks, and dividends are only paid based on successful farm cycles—not fixed guarantees.
This agri-crowdfunding approach is structured similarly to agribusiness cooperatives, where people support real production and earn when harvests succeed.
10 Years of Trust, Backed by Global Institutions
Trisolace Company has operated for over 10 years in Ghana and is fully registered and in good standing. We have been vetted and supported by international organizations including:
- UNDP (United Nations Development Programme)
- British Council
- SNV Netherlands Development Organisation
- GIZ (German Development Cooperation)
These partnerships reflect our commitment to transparency, ethical business, and sustainable development.
You can verify our payment page here:
👉 https://www.agricgate.farm
This page contains no mention of “investment” or securities but clearly states that users are supporting farming initiatives in exchange for output-based dividends.
Conclusion: Agricultural Support with Impactful Returns
While Trisolace offers up to 30% in dividends, this does not classify us as an investment company under Ghanaian SEC law. We are a crowd farming agribusiness committed to giving Ghanaians the opportunity to support and benefit from agriculture in a responsible, sustainable way.
If you're looking to grow your money through real farming, not speculation, then Trisolace's microshare platform offers a transparent, secure, and impactful option.