How tokenizing real estate can turn the ‘rules’ on their head – by mastering them first

It’s been more than four years since the world’s first real estate token offering, which saw a stake of almost one-fifth of the St. Regis Aspen resort hotel sold to investors keen to acquire a slice of the prestige Colorado property.

The sale of the stake in the 179-room hotel raised US$18 million and was hailed at the time as a revolutionary new means of opening up arguably the world’s oldest asset class to the wealth creation potential of blockchain.

In the period since, properties around the world have been tokenized in a development that has the potential to reshape the real estate sector. Yet the phenomenon has not gained the kind of traction many of its proponents had hoped it might by now.

As is the case in many segments of the digital asset space, part of the reason may be the complexity of the technology, much of which remains poorly understood by large swaths of the general public, even though it has gained much attention amid the wild volatility of the cryptocurrency market in the past two years.

Part of the reason may also be that real estate tokenization can mean different things to different people, depending on who you ask.

Different strokes

“When you talk about real estate tokenization, it really depends on what kind of structure we’re talking about,” Michael Wong, a partner at the Hong Kong office of multinational law firm Dechert, told Forkast. “If you’re just using blockchain technology to replace a land registry and issue a token as evidence of ownership, then it would mostly be regulated under the relevant land laws.

“But if you’re referring to tokenization by taking an asset and issuing a security backed by that asset, that’ll be similar to a collective investment scheme where investors’ money is pooled by virtue of acquiring the tokens and returns are based on the return of the asset, and therefore will most probably be subject to securities law,” Wong said, noting the compliance burden such law entails and securitized property tokenization’s parallels with real estate investment trusts (REITs), which are typically subject to numerous restrictions and requirements.

Jason Chan, a senior associate at Dechert and a colleague of Wong’s, said: “It’s not very different from REITs or real estate funds, which already exist whether or not there’s tokenization of real estate. Tokenization is an evolution of that by putting it on the blockchain.”

Laura Pamatian, the founder of US-based HeightZero Real Estate, an independent advisory firm that focuses on blockchain and artificial intelligence in real estate, told Forkast that tokenization in the industry could certainly be a form of securities trading, which she said benefited from an already well-established framework of regulation.