Real Estate Investor Magazine South Africa September 2018 | Page 17
TECHNOLOGY
PART
2
Smart contracts
a game changer
BY WERNER RIEKERT
I
n part one of this series on the impact of blockchain
on real estate (found in the August/September issue),
we looked at how blockchain technology will transform
the way land ownership and title deeds are transferred, re-
corded, and protected. In this part, we will focus on how
blockchain based real estate transaction would work and
what the implications of this would be.
Hailed as the biggest digital innovation since the inter-
net, blockchain is the infrastructure that is changing the
way people interact, transact, and exchange. It is a technol-
ogy that, for the first time in history, guarantees any infor-
mation (i.e. contracts, documents, assets, ownership, value,
etc.) is 100% correct, original, and has not been manipu-
lated. Although this already sounds remarkable, blockchain
has one more trick up its sleeve, Smart Contracts.
What is a Smart Contract?
In 1996, over a decade before Bitcoin came to market,
digital currency pioneer and computer scientist extraordi-
naire, Nick Szabo, introduced a contractual protocol that
was entirely self-executing. We call this protocol a “smart
contract,” an encrypted and trackable agreement between
consenting parties.
Since the dawn of organized property exchanges, real
estate brokers, agents, governments, and legal entities have
existed in pairs. Sometimes they coexist productively, but
more often than not, the cross-industry dialogue is a pain
point. We need legal representatives to outline the terms
and ensure these terms are met by all parties including, land
registry, bond/mortgage providers, surveyors, the buyer, the
seller, and agent etc. With a high-value exchange depen-
dent on the compliance of such an immense web of people
and organizations, the process frequently encounters long-
term setbacks and unexpected tribulations.
Smart contracts eliminate the number of hands involved
by cutting out extraneous third parties. Who remains? The
buyer, the seller, and in some cases, the agent. The conditions
are established and then programmed into a smart contract
that lives on the blockchain. As soon as a predefined condi-
tion is met, it will trigger a reaction automatically, and the
contract self-executes.
The process remains relatively similar to tradition-
al contracts. A property is selected through a blockchain
multi-listing service or agent, negotiation takes place,
terms are agreed upon and a smart contract agreement is
programmed. Payments and cash flow, real-time status of
transactions and ownership transfers are all automated.
However, this all happens without any legal involvement
as smart contracts cannot be broken, manipulated or cor-
rupted.
Property Listing
The property listing market is dominated by centralized,
sometimes monopolistic listing platforms which are of-
ten subscription-based, charging high fees and subject to
human error. These intermediaries have cut off the direct
connection between the asset owner and customer. A block-
chain-based listing gives the connection and valuable in-
formation about users back to the asset owners and allows
users to view information such as the properties location
and history, ownership information and the title informa-
tion. Using blockchain for the property search process will
reduce transaction costs and be more secure and efficient.
Due Diligence
Currently, the due diligence process in a real estate trans-
SA Real Estate Investor Magazine SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2018
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