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If adopted by commercial real estate,

the potential impact of blockchain

on industry processes and practices

could be enormous. Just like that

dollar bill, the blockchain could provide

information regarding all buyers, sellers,

title work, reporting, lease comps

and vendor work on any individual

commercial property. Having this

information at your fingertips could

cut out paperwork, enhance market

transparency and shorten the speed to

transact from days/weeks/months to

minutes or seconds.

With the digitization of smart real estate

contracts, which have been designed to

replace leases, blockchain could:

Enable a commercial property

to have a digital signature

containing details, such as building,

performance (including rental

and occupancy rates) and legal

information. This information could

be accessed online by authorized

parties in seconds.

Allow for commercial real estate

deals to transact in seconds rather

than days, weeks or months.

Better facilitate the commercial

property sales and/or leasing

payment process, once a deal has

been concluded.

Not only will real estate transactions

begin to resemble the buying and selling

of stocks/commodities with blockchain,

but properties in bustling areas could

change hands many times a year, many

times a month, or even many times a

week, depending on the strategy.

In addition, as publicly-accessible

ledgers, blockchains can make all

kinds of record-keeping more efficient.

Property titles are a case in point.

They tend to be susceptible to fraud,

as well as costly and labor intensive to

administer.

To this end, a number of countries

are undertaking blockchain-based

land registry projects. For example, in

Sweden, the government land registry

is already testing all land titles and

transfers on blockchain. It aims to make

property purchases quicker, cheaper

and more secure by holding all title

information digitally and enabling virtual

transactions.

Picture a spreadsheet that is duplicated thousands of times across a network of

computers. Then imagine that this network is designed to regularly update this

spreadsheet and you have a basic understanding of the blockchain. Information held

on a blockchain exists as a shared – and continually reconciled – database.

A dollar bill provides a good analogy for how blockchain technology works. If handed

a dollar bill, you have no idea where that dollar bill has been or what it has purchased

in the past. Blockchain can provide a history of where that dollar bill has been, what

transactions it has been used in, and where and what it’s been traded for to better

identify its worth and value.

WHEN ADOPTED BY THE CRE INDUSTRY,

BLOCKCHAIN TECHNOLOGY WILL MAKE

LEASING, BUYING AND SELLING OF PROPERTY

MUCH MORE INFORMED, FLUID AND EFFICIENT.

27

The Future of the CRE Industry