TL;DR — we've recorded a 3 min 30 sec walkthrough of the Annona Supply Chain Finance SPV platform. It covers how the manager runs the book, what the investor sees on their side, how an exporter logs in, and how a single container travels from the farmer's parchment delivery all the way to an EUDR Due Diligence Statement filed in TRACES NT.
When we explain the SPV in a meeting, three questions come back every time:
"How does the manager actually keep an 8-figure book of 120-day coffee advances under control?"
"As an investor, what do I see — and what am I protected by?"
"How does an EUDR-compliant shipment really work, line by line?"
Slides don't answer any of those well. A real product does. So instead of another pitch deck, we recorded the platform itself — scrubbable, pause-able, replay-able — and put it on the site.
What's in the walkthrough
The tour is 25 scenes long, grouped into five chapters.
1. The manager's book (scenes 1 – 7)
The day-to-day view from the SPV manager's desk. Deployed capital, active containers, the portfolio's mark-to-market plotted against the live ICE Arabica front-month, and the dotted line that shows exactly how much room is left before a margin call. The Container detail screen has a day-scrubber — drag it and replay a single shipment's full 120-day lifecycle, with the advance, LTV buffer, accrued fees and repayment all updating live.
Then: the Risk monitor (concentration, counterparty, KC stress test) and the — the seven-layer cascade that decides where every dollar goes when a container settles.
spvplatformwalkthrougheudr
Priority waterfall
2. Pipeline forecast — new (scene 8)
Everything above is today. The new Pipeline forecast projects the book forward 90 days: current parchment and green-coffee inventory flowing through milling, container fill and settlement, plus expected new intake from the harvest calendar. The hedging desk gets their shorts-to-add by contract month and USD-inflow schedule by tenor bucket automatically — no more rebuilding the model in Excel.
3. The investor's lens (scenes 9 – 13)
Same book, different camera. An LP logs in and sees their own NAV, called capital, accrued coupon, upcoming distributions — nothing about other investors, nothing about manager-internal numbers. The Mandate page shows the rulebook they signed up to (target coupon, tenor cap, permitted origins, ESG screen) and — crucially — shows it machine-checked against every active transaction, so a mandate breach surfaces the moment it happens.
The NAV forecast block on the investor side reuses the same pipeline model. Projected NAV at +30 / +60 / +90 days is derived from real inventory, not a flat-rate assumption.
4. Exporter lens (scene 14)
A producer cooperative logs in and sees only their own shipments and advance lines. Same platform, tightly scoped view. No accidental exposure of other exporters' pricing or investor-side numbers.
5. Full producer-to-EUDR traceability (scenes 15 – 25)
This is the chapter we're proudest of.
Producer lots — every parchment delivery from a farmer to the mill. QR code, weight, moisture, grade, price paid on the day.
Export lots — green coffee with its ICO number, single-origin or blend, with a drill-down to every producer lot that fed into it.
Containers — the full shipping book grouped by stage, with live AIS position for afloat containers and a digital warehouse receipt the SPV takes a pledge on once the container discharges at the EU warehouse.
EUDR report, three variants from the same underlying data:
A TRACES XML Due Diligence Statement — the machine-readable form the EU's TRACES NT system expects.
A signed auditor PDF with DDS reference, QR code and plot polygons embedded.
An internal compliance dashboard that rolls up every producer lot in the container to a single go / no-go.
No re-keying. No separate compliance stack. The same producer-lot record that was entered at the mill is the record that files with TRACES.
Who it's for
Prospective investors — the Investor-lens chapter answers most mandate and risk questions before the first call.
Exporters we're onboarding — the Exporter and Traceability chapters show exactly what you'll be asked to log, and what you'll see back.
Partners and auditors — the EUDR chapter is the fastest way to see how our compliance stack actually works.
A note on fidelity
The walkthrough is not a marketing render — it's the real platform, the real data model, the real screens we're building. The platform is in development; a few flows are still scaffolded rather than live. You'll see a "IN DEVELOPMENT · PREVIEW BUILD" chip in the intro that says so explicitly.