Two factors determine priority when Cache is allocating capacity across contributors.

The first is time on platform. Contributors who transferred earlier receive priority over those who transfer later. Getting your assets onto the platform ahead of a close puts you ahead of anyone who arrives after you.

The second is the diversity of your contribution basket. A contributor bringing a single high-demand stock like NVIDIA competes directly with every other NVIDIA holder for the same slice of capacity. A contributor bringing NVIDIA alongside Home Depot and Lowe's, for example, receives higher overall priority because the diversified basket is more useful to the fund.

If you hold a high-demand stock like NVIDIA or Apple, you're competing with more contributors for limited capacity. Contributing additional positions alongside your primary stock increases your overall priority and your chances of receiving an allocation when the next aperture closes.

If you hold multiple concentrated positions, contributing them together is worth considering. It improves your standing in the allocation queue and reduces the risk of missing capacity on your primary stock.

For more on how Cache's investment algorithm builds each fund and determines overall fund size, see How does Cache determine who gets an allocation and how big each fund is?