Investor Presentation

A tightly bounded investment built around proven technology, a local operating base, two prototype projects, and a disciplined payback architecture.
$60M Total Investment — Equity + Debt | Q2 2026
$60M
Total Investment
$21M
Equity + $39M Debt
5.02x
Continue MOIC
29.0%
IRR
2029
Payback Year
10.1x
Continue / 45.6% IRR
1.95x
Buyout MOIC
25.1%
Buyout IRR
1.75x
Preferred Hurdle
1
Investment Overview

Investor capital buys proof, operating credibility, and a controlled first-node template. Parallel TCI and Bahamas factories under one consolidated platform with Nassau base DevCo. Factory economics are rolled up from the same core operating engine, with additional platform overhead and active debt.

Land banking and development capital sit on top of the two-factory operating foundation. Investor remains 100% preferred until the hurdle is met, then shifts to 70/30 split. Return architecture is conservative, and transparent continue-versus-buyout optionality.

$21M
Equity + $39M Debt
2029
Payback Year
10.1x
Continue MOIC
1.95x
Buyout MOIC
Core Structure: Two Factories + DevCo + Land development platform. Debt remains active and investor stay-in is 30% after hurdle.
The investor case is built on visible cash events first; long-duration platform upside is not required for Phase 1 to work.
2
Capital Request

Funded stack, debt, reserves, and milestone gated scope. Investor cash is $21.0M, sponsor in-kind contribution is $5.0M, and debt commitment is $39.0M, for total funded capitalization of $65.0M.

Debt is approximately 60% of funded capitalization, so reserve protection, debt-service coverage, and deployment sequencing matter as much as EBITDA growth. The capital is funding two factories, working capital and commissioning, Nassau DevCo and project equity, and a reserve architecture designed to keep the platform governable.

TopicCurrent PositionWhy It Matters
Capital structure$21.0M investor cash + $5.0M sponsor to kind + $39.0M debt.Phase 1 is purposely larger than the lighter launch packages and must be judged as a platform build, not only as a factory launch.
Operating perimeterTCI Factory + Bahamas factory + Nassau DevCo + land/project equity.The opening move includes proof, replication, and earlier project participation inside a governed capital stack.
Returns architecture1.75x MOIC / 25% IRR preferred hurdle; 30% investor share after.The waterfall remains investor-protective in the preference period and still preserves long-tail participation thereafter.
Payback and build profileInvestor cash payback in 2031; long-range continue economics 5.02x / 29.0%.The workbook is telling a total value story built on operating ramp, deleveraging, and project monetization rather than a single early event sale.
The capital story is disciplined: one raise, staged deployment, later project debt, and explicit reserve capacity from the start.
3
Phase 1 Components

Factory economics form the base of Phase 1. The platform funds the TCI reference factory and the Bahamas replication factory with a recurring earnings floor. Working capital, inventory, and receivables should stand immediately. Development capital and earlier project participation create controlled project monetization alongside the factories.

Phase 1 Use of Funds
Phase 1 Use of Funds allocation.
Factories are the underwriting floor: recurring output, rising margin quality, and better refinancing visibility after stabilization.
4
Market Problem

Island construction remains structurally overpriced and underperforming. Import dependence inflates delivered cost and makes scheduling harder in island markets. The marine environment offers many challenges for concrete, and raises lifecycle replacement burden. Island pain points can be transformed into advantages: turning reliability, speed, and thermal performance into economic advantages.

Delivered Cost
Structural, Not Cyclical
Durability
Salt, Heat & Logistics
Cost-of-Failure
Not Just First Cost
Three-burden framework
Three-burden framework: baseline vs. Acrete response.
Acrete is not entering a commodity market; it is entering a market where reliability and performance commands a premium.
5
The Acrete Solution

Acrete sells a system that converts performance into economics. Localized production reduces freight friction and improves delivery reliability. Durability-led mixes and industrialized outputs translate performance claims into measurable lifecycle value. Technical services and proof packs help engineers, owners, and insurers approve adoption with confidence.

Delivered Cost
Local Production + Logistics
Durability
Marine-Grade Mixes
Approval
Proof Packs + Documentation
Project Value
Panels, Pads & Tech Services

The Technology: BioCene + Basalt + A Proven Process

The technology is built around BioCene graphene and associated admixture chemistry designed for concrete applications in corrosive and high-stress environments. A single layer of carbon packed in hexagonal (honeycomb) lattice, the first truly 2D material. The BioCene graphene and basalt reinforcement operate as a compounding system rather than isolated additives. Acrete's commercial applications lower cement intensity and deliver better constructability with support services for a total building solution.

The Acrete Advantage

Performance AttributeBenefit
100x stronger, higher tensile and compressive strengthStructural reliability and reduced material volume.
Reduced water permeabilityMarine durability and longer lifecycle.
25% lighter and more durableLower shipping cost and improved logistics.
Superior thermal conductivityBetter building envelope and energy performance.
Lower-energy inputs, lower CO2 emissionsSustainability credentials and regulatory positioning.
Higher chemical and fire resistanceBetter structural integrity in island environments.
The moat is not a single admixture claim; it is the repeatable system that makes better concrete financeable.
5b
BioCene + Basalt + A Proven Process

The material story begins with graphene's lattice structure and how it interacts with the concrete matrix. The technology is built around BioCene graphene and associated admixture chemistry designed for concrete applications in corrosive and high-stress environments.

What is Graphene

Graphene lattice structure
Graphene honeycomb lattice structure.
BioCene production equipment
BioCene graphene production equipment.
Acrete will sell outcomes, not just graphene technology.
6
Our Products

The initial offer stack is deliberately simple, sellable, and expandable. Phase 1 starts with core offerings such as ready-mix for on-site pour applications and bagged product. The company will expand into panels and other products in Phase 2. Acrete will prove dependable delivery before it broadens complexity.

Ready-Mix
Core Foundation
Bagged
Channel Width
Specialty
Premium SKUs
Panels/Pads
Margin Expansion
Tech Services
Proof Engine

New Product Development: Future Optionality

The technology set may create future optionality beyond Phase 1, but it is not required for the base underwriting case. The development of a graphene-concrete structural energy storage concept in which wall systems can perform as "structural power," an analog to a battery, to support solar and other systems. Structural-energy-storage applications, off-grid and resilience value in island settings. Explicitly excluded from the Phase 1 base underwriting case.

Phase 1 wins by being dependable before it tries to be broad. Future technology optionality can strengthen the long-term story, but Phase 1 must stand on concrete cash flow and proof.
7
Why TCI and the Bahamas

Excellent proof markets where Acrete has local relationships. Visible markets that are small enough to control, limit pain points, and validate the value proposition quicker. Markets are also large enough to prove and visible to manage tightly and gain credibility. Gives the first investor a sound combination of geography visibility, operating focus, and reputational control. Phase 1 sets up future growth and investment opportunities for core investors.

Five-country construction
Five-country construction opportunity backdrop (proxy).
Phase 1 remains bounded even though the larger platform is wider.
8
Strategic Partner

Phase 1 is not a cold start. It is built around a local operating partner in TCI. North Caicos Contracting Ltd. has a 20+ year operating history, with experience across residential and commercial projects, equipment base, and local relationships. They have extensive expertise in mining aggregates, concrete technology and construction practices.

20+ Years
Operating History
Local
Relationships & Access
Lower Risk
vs. Cold Start

The strategic imperative is clear. Having an existing local partner and Acrete owner lowers startup risk, accelerates commercial access, and improves institutional credibility.

Institutionalizing an existing local operator is materially lower risk than inventing one from scratch.
8b
North Caicos Contracting Ltd.

North Caicos Contracting Ltd. is the strategic local partner anchoring Phase 1 operations in TCI. With a 20+ year track record in residential and commercial construction across the Turks and Caicos Islands, they bring established local relationships, equipment, and operating infrastructure.

20+ Years
TCI Construction Experience
Full Service
Residential & Commercial
North Caicos project North Caicos project North Caicos project North Caicos project

www.northcaicoscontracting.com

9
The Operations

Phase 1 execution is founded on two disciplined nodes with clear stage gates. Plant, dispatch, QC, inventory buffers, and PMO cadence must operate as one integrated control system. Daily, weekly, and monthly review rhythm is part of the execution model, not an afterthought. Production building + warehouse + lab / offices + aggregate yard. Automated batching, mixers, truck flow, and a real QC lab are non-negotiable. Regional replication should not begin until TCI proves repeatability and credibility.

Factory output ramp
Factory output ramp and utilization.
9b
A Streamlined Factory

Commercial demand is diversified across prototypes, anchor accounts, and third-party local customers. Prototype projects generate the first proof assets. Anchor accounts support early utilization and operating credibility.

Third-party local market provides stand-alone operating credibility beyond affiliated demand. All required for Acrete to be investable as a stand-alone platform.

  • Traceability and QC thresholds create operating discipline rather than marketing claims.
  • Testing cadence and documentation packs make premium performance auditable.
  • Bounded warranty posture reduces approval friction and helps make performance financeable.
Factory process flow diagram
Input-Process-Output: BioCene graphene production flow.
Streamlined factory facility
Solar-powered production facility concept.
Affiliated demand helps start the engine, but independent demand keeps the engine investable.

Revenue to EBITDA

The TCI shows startup drag first, then EBITDA conversion and margin expansion in the ramp-up phase. Revenue grows from $5.7M in 2026 to $69.9M in 2030 and $114.3M by 2035. EBITDA improves from a launch-year loss to $31.3M in 2030 and $64.3M by 2035. EBITDA margin reaches 44.8% in 2030 and 56.2% by 2035. The operating story remains factory-led: utilization, output, mix quality, and project capture drive the conversion profile.

Revenue, EBITDA
Revenue, EBITDA, and EBITDA margin trajectory.

Capital Deployment

Capital deployment is tied to milestones and closing conditions. Base CapEx and startup costs are concentrated in Year 1 into Year 2; modeled growth CapEx steps down materially after the first wave and the two factories are self-sufficient in 2028.

RevenueGross ProfitEBITDAEBITDA MarginEnding Cash
$5.7M$1.5M$-5.4M-104.2%$17.8M
$20.6M$4.7M$7.4M35.7%$17.0M
$31.4M$8.7M$7.1M22.5%$7.6M
$47.9M$14.5M$14.5M30.3%$11.7M
$69.9M$31.2M$31.3M44.8%$17.7M
$80.6M$31.2M$31.3M-$27.5M
$92.8M$45.0M$45.3M48.8%$38.5M
$103.5M$56.8M$57.2M55.3%$52.5M
$114.3M$64.0M$64.3M56.2%$15.8M
Annual capital deployment
Annual capital deployment profile.
Debt, reserve discipline, payback mechanics, and board-level control are load-bearing elements of Phase 1. The operating approach is mechanical rather than promotional: fixed-cost absorption first, then volume, mix, and margin quality.
10
The Return Profile

Return framing stays disciplined until the final monthly waterfall is fully locked. The financial model supports a continue-case MOIC of about 5.02x and IRR of 29.0% in 2035. Buyout-case in 2030–2031, MOIC of 1.75x and IRR of 25.1%. Acrete presents both paths transparently: longer-duration participation versus a cleaner buyout option.

5.02x
Continue MOIC
29.0%
Continue IRR
1.75x
Buyout MOIC
25.1%
Buyout IRR

Investor cash payback occurs in 2031 in the current proforma. Preferred distributions remain 100% to the investor until the greater of 1.75x MOIC or 25% IRR is achieved; after that, excess cash splits 30% to investors and 70% to founders.

liquidity and deleveraging
Cash flow and debt mechanics: liquidity and deleveraging profile.

Payback Architecture

The investor payback year implied by the current workbook is 2031. Cumulative investor and founder distributions should be shown against the 1.75x preferred hurdle of $36.75M. The hold-value profile matters more than an early-flip story because recurring factory earnings, controlled project participation, and debt clearance drive long-tail economics. Continuing share begins in 2030 under the continue case. Prototype sales + operating participation create early cash bridge.

Cumulative distribution path
Cumulative distribution path and preferred hurdle.
Tangible return architecture first; optional platform upside second. An investor opportunity is strongest when it shows timing, sequencing, and cash mechanics, not just a headline multiple.
11
Risk Management

The main downside protection variables to mitigate risks are timing, utilization, mix, and capital discipline. Utilization, price realization, and product mix drive the quality of operating participation. Reserves and proof packs are part of the mitigation, not afterthoughts. Capital discipline matters more in a first-node island build because avoidable overruns can erode liquidity and credibility.

Sensitivity ranking
Sensitivity ranking (illustrative).

Risk Controls

Supply
Dual Sourcing, Buffers, Long-Lead Reserves
QC/Variance
Test Cadence, Acceptance Thresholds
Weather
Insurance, Hardening, Emergency Procedures
Execution
Focused Scope, PMO Cadence, Hiring Discipline

Risks are real but mitigation is designed into the system for operational resiliency. Governance, capital controls and reporting are built to institutional standards from day one. The revised supplement architecture already anticipates board rights, reserved matters, information rights, audit rights, and a formal weekly / monthly / quarterly reporting cadence. That reporting discipline is part of the investment case because Phase 1 is a proof node, not just a plant build.

Governance is not decorative here; it is one of the main de-risking features for Phase 1 capital. The real sensitivity drivers are execution levers management can monitor and influence.
12
Closing View

The investment case for Acrete Global is valid because scope, controls, and cash logic are all legible. Phase 1 is a controllable: two proof markets, complementary development activities, and a return profile driven by visible operating evidence.

Phase 1 is actionable: long-term experienced local partner and Acrete owner on the ground. Visible use of proceeds and disciplined draw schedule. Two factories create a recurring earnings floor. Nassau DevCo and project participation improve pull-through. Regional expansion remains sequenced, not diffuse.

TCI + Bahamas
+ Nassau DevCo
Explicit
Leverage + Reserve Discipline
2031
Investor Cash Payback
1.75x / 25%
Preferred Hurdle IRR
The investor is underwriting a highly specified, risk-mitigated, sound return opportunity.
Jason Carter
Managing Director
Acrete Global Ltd.
Patrick Fleming
Managing Director
Acrete Global Ltd.