Yesterday Casper asked, “Why does it matter that you can convert 50 SURGE to 1 LSTR if LSTR isn’t $50 yet?” — and I know he's not the only one asking these types of questions.
It’s exactly the kind of thing most people seem to miss when they hear about SURGE and watch price action under $1.
Here’s the key: the LSTR conversion isn’t meant to be used today.
It’s not like a swap feature.
It’s a conversion right, similar to a convertible note in traditional finance.
A convertible note is a short-term debt instrument that allows an investor to loan money to a company with the option to convert that debt into equity (shares) at a later date, typically during a future financing round.
It functions as a hybrid security, starting as a loan with interest and a maturity date but having the potential to become ownership in the company under specific "trigger events".
Convertible notes are frequently used by early-stage startups to raise capital without immediately establishing a formal company valuation.
Right now, 50 SURGE = 1 LSTR only makes sense if LSTR trades at or above $50.
That’s when the math flips in your favour.
When the conversion value ($50 per LSTR) exceeds the $1 intrinsic value of each SURGE.
Until then, SURGE holders simply collect their yield and enjoy the $1 floor.
So the upside is not immediate; it’s optional and asymmetrical.
You get paid 15% (or 20% if you’re buying at $0.75) every year while waiting for the moment when LSTR’s growth makes conversion worth it.
Think of it like this: * Below $50 LSTR → hold SURGE, collect yield. * Above $50 LSTR → convert and capture upside.
You never lose the $1 floor, and you never have to convert.
It’s just sitting there, waiting, like a long-dated call option that costs you nothing to hold.
That’s why it’s called “optional upside.”
You’re being paid to wait for the chance to be right later.
Best of probabilities to you.
Dane.
Posted Using INLEO