Company: IPST
Filing Date: 2025-11-18
Form Type: 10-Q
Source: 0001788230-25-000175
Chunk: 258

Company: Heritage Distilling Holding Company, Inc.
Filing Date: 2025-11-18
Form: 10-Q
Item: Part II, Item 8
Chunk 258
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 includes Heritage-branded micro production hubs, Heritage-branded stores and tasting rooms and the sale of our products and new tribally-branded products. In the typical TBN collaboration, the tribes own these businesses and we receive a royalty on gross sales through licenses we grant to use our brands, products, recipes, programs, IP, new product development, on-going compliance support and the other support we provide. The TBN is expected to form a network of regional production hubs that will support product trials and sampling, and will generate sales of finished, intermediate and bulk spirits depending on location, equipment and market. Importantly, because these premium spirits will be produced locally, we believe the TBN will promote the positioning of our brands as local and regional. We expect that, as the brands grow and the TBN footprint expands, there will be an important synergy with increased adoption and growth through our wholesale channels in the regions where the TBN locations are driving trial and awareness. Similarly, as demand for our products grows through our wholesale channels, there should be a positive effect on the demand for our products through the tribal distilleries.

Our Crypto and Related Business. In August 2025, we determined to focus our growing cryptocurrency efforts on the native cryptocurrency of the Story Network referred to as $IP Tokens. As part of this business segment, we established a new validator business related to $IP Tokens, staking 43.5 million of the 53.2 million $IP Tokens we secured in the August 15, 2025 PIPE transaction. To become a network validator, a holder of $IP Tokens is required to put up or “stake” $IP Tokens as collateral (like a security deposit) that shows the Story Network that it has “skin in the game.” A cryptocurrency validator is like a digital “notary” or “referee” in a blockchain network. Its job is to check that transactions on the network are real and follow the network rules. Validators are randomly selected to propose a new block of transactions to be added to the blockchain. When a participant attempts a transaction, that participant is required to pay a minimum “gas” fee. A participant also can opt to pay an additional fee to ensure that its transaction is added to the blockchain more quickly. These fees are denominated in the same cryptocurrency that is evidenced by the blockchain. The validator chosen to propose a block will (when that block is successfully confirmed by the other validator nodes) receive the gas fees for all transactions in the block (known as “execution layer rewards