Real Estate Investor Magazine South Africa February/ March 2020 | Page 8
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Using blockchain in real
estate transactions
Q
How will blockchain change
commercial real estate
transactions in the future & how
will blockchain make the due
diligence of an investor easier?
CAREL DE JAGER
Consultant at The Blockchain Academy
A A
blockchain is essentially a place where digital
data can be stored. But what makes it unique is
that it is decentralised. It functions according to
a set of rules for adding and removing data, yet it has
no owners and is not stored on any single hard drive.
The first and most obvious use case of such an
exceptional database is a financial ledger. The utopia
of real sovereign money with a fixed monetary policy
can be accomplished for the first time in history. The
mere fact that Bitcoin is still not dead after 10 years
shows us that it works.
But a decentralised database can be useful for
much more than money. A promising application
developed by big corporates include identity
management – one of the biggest barriers to progress
in the modern world.
Governments are generally poor at recording,
maintaining and protecting identity systems. A self-
sovereign identity system is one where an individual,
company or robot records and maintains its own
identity on a blockchain, and the role of government
is reduced to the simple act of verification.
Other interesting blockchain use cases include
insurance (through smart contracts), voting systems,
healthcare, intellectual property, accounting and
supply chains. From smart rental contracts to
transparency in all areas, the real estate industry
stands to be disrupted as well. However, none as
much as the Registrar of Deeds.
A property registry is an obvious database that
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FEBRUARY/MARCH 2020 SA Real Estate Investor Magazine
would benefit from decentralisation. On a high level,
the deeds office maintains a record of property
ownership. This record is opaque however, with
frequent and costly disputes. It is not scalable and built
on a foundation of fragile technology. A blockchain
on the other hand would produce an unambiguous
record of ownership. A simple smart contract would
govern changes in the record, replacing the trust
provided by a conveyancer.
Transferring a property would therefore be as
quick and costly as sending an email. Blockchains
and smart contracts also allow for infinite complexity,
meaning that a full title property with thousands of
owners is possible. Imagine holding a title dead for a
single square cm of property, bought for R5. Since the
recording and change of ownership is free and instant,
this is possible. A South African founded company
called Fraxeum has already laid the groundwork to
enable this.
Blockchains have the ability to make any asset
liquid and like the internet. It has no apprehension
for a geographical boundary. If a deeds registry is
recorded on such and regulators eventually wake up,
it would open ownership to a global market with zero
barriers to entry. This has immense consequences for
the industry.
When a property can be sold and settled instantly
(potentially several times per day) to any of the 5 billion
adults in the world, its real market value will be realised.
Debt, risk and ownership would be redefined.