Cointime

Download App
iOS & Android

Crypto leaders are wrong about tokenized property

Validated Individual Expert

Opinion by: Darren Carvalho, Co-Founder and Co-CEO of MetaWealth

During Paris Blockchain Week, Securitize Chief Operating Officer Michael Sonnenshein made headlines by dismissing real estate as a sub-optimal asset class for tokenization. This isn’t the first time crypto leaders have underestimated the merits of bringing real estate onchain, and it is likely not the last. While I respect Sonnenshein’s contributions to digital asset adoption, his assessment misses fundamental points about real estate tokenization’s transformative potential.

Real estate represents the world’s largest asset class and is projected to reach a value of $654.39 trillion this year, according to Statista. When industry leaders claim that this massive market isn’t suitable for tokenization, they overlook today's transformative infrastructure and the core value proposition that extends far beyond liquidity, transforming access to the asset class.

Replacing traditional foundations

Sonnenshein argues that “good systems” already exist for traditional assets. He implies that tokenization offers marginal improvements at best, but this assessment overlooks fundamental inefficiencies in today’s real estate market that tokenization addresses.

The current real estate transaction process involves weeks of paperwork. Within the UK, there are a number of purchasing fees which can easily add 10% to the total bill. Settlement periods can extend to months and complexity multiplies exponentially for cross-border transactions.

These aren’t minor flaws. They’re systemic failures that tokenization technology is uniquely positioned to solve. Take smart contracts’ ability to automate compliance, for instance, enabling verification and payment distribution while reducing fraud through immutable record-keeping.

Redefining demand beyond liquidity

When Sonnenshein says “the onchain economy is demanding more liquid assets,” he misinterprets what everyday investors truly demand. For the 99% excluded from institutional-grade real estate investments, the primary task is not Bitcoin-like liquidity; it’s meaningful access to an asset class that has built more wealth than any other over the past century.

Traditional real estate investment vehicles require significant sums as minimum investments, accredited investor status and multi-year capital lockup periods. These barriers effectively exclude teachers, nurses and middle-class families from participating in prime real estate properties that have historically delivered consistent returns for investors.

Tokenization fundamentally changes this equation. Fractionalizing ownership through tokenization, investors can now participate with as little as $100, receive proportional income distributions and eventually trade their positions on specialized secondary markets. The demand for this democratized access is enormous, even if secondary market liquidity initially lags behind liquid markets.

Translation problems? Not quite

Sonnenshein also suggests that tokenization does not “translate well” to representing ownership in real estate. This assessment overlooks the blockchain’s revolutionary capability to enable fractional investments in properties that were previously accessible only to institutional investors.

Tokenization technology excels precisely at creating transparent, secure fractional investment opportunities with minimal overhead. A $50 million residential development project can be divided into 500,000 tokens, each getting an equal share of the rental income and potential appreciation. This dramatically lowers barriers to entry while maintaining the core benefits of real estate as an asset class.

This fractionalization fundamentally transforms how people can build wealth through real estate. Previously, REITs offered the only realistic path to diversified property exposure, often with high fees, no control and limited transparency. Tokenization allows investors to build personalized portfolios across multiple property types, all managed through a single digital wallet.

What does not “translate well” isn’t the technology. Outdated regulatory frameworks and incumbent business models resist this necessary evolution. The UAE government recognizes this reality, supported by its recent initiative to tokenize $1 billion in real estate assets.

Building tomorrow’s infrastructure

The conservative stance on RWA growth projections misses the accelerating infrastructure development underway. BlackRock’s tokenized money market fund BUIDL is quickly approaching $3 billion in assets, demonstrating a significant institutional appetite for tokenized investment vehicles. This isn’t an isolated case.

UBS Asset Management, Hamilton Lane, Franklin Templeton and many more have launched tokenized investment vehicles, signaling a fundamental shift in how traditional finance views tokenization technology.

What critics consistently underestimate is the network effect of financial infrastructure. Each institutional entrant doesn’t just add linearly to the ecosystem. It exponentially increases connectivity and liquidity pools. We’re witnessing the early stages of a self-reinforcing cycle where each new participant reduces friction for subsequent entrants.

The narrative shouldn’t center on current limitations. Instead, there should be a spotlight on what’s being built. Secondary marketplaces optimized for real-world assets are emerging, regulatory clarity is increasing in key jurisdictions, and each development strengthens the foundation for mass adoption at a pace that will likely surprise today’s skeptics.

Democratized wealth creation

Institutional investors have enjoyed privileged access to the most profitable real estate investments for decades, while retail investors were limited to residential properties or high-fee REITs. Tokenization breaks this paradigm by allowing anyone to build a diversified property portfolio spanning commercial, residential and industrial assets across multiple geographies.

When crypto leaders dismiss real estate tokenization based solely on liquidity metrics, they apply the wrong measurement standard. The transformative potential lies in democratizing access to an asset class that has created more millionaires than any other investment vehicle in history.

The endgame of real estate tokenization is making institutional-grade property investments accessible to everyone. The adoption of tokenized real estate and other real-world assets will continue to grow despite skepticism from executives who miss the forest for the trees.

Comments

All Comments

Recommended for you

  • Ghana passes law legalizing the use of cryptocurrency

    according to Bloomberg, the Ghanaian Parliament has approved a cryptocurrency legalization bill aimed at addressing the expanding use of cryptocurrencies in the country but the lack of regulation. According to Johnson Asiamah, Governor of the Bank of Ghana, the newly passed Virtual Asset Service Providers Act will facilitate the licensing of crypto platforms and the regulation of related activities.

  • CryptoQuant: Bitcoin network activity cools, market shows clear bearish signs.

    CryptoQuant published an analysis stating that the Bitcoin market continues to be in a bear market state, with multiple network indicators showing a significant cooling of activity. Data shows that the 30-day moving average of Bitcoin is below the 365-day moving average (-0.52%), and the bull-bear cycle indicator confirms the current bear market pattern. The number of network transactions has dropped from about 460,000 to about 438,000, fees have decreased from $233,000 to $230,000, and highly active addresses have reduced from 43.3K to 41.5K, all indicating reduced speculative activity and that the market is in a defensive phase.

  • ETH falls below $3,000

    the market shows that ETH has fallen below $3000, currently at $2999.5, with a 24-hour increase of 0.86%. The market is highly volatile, please manage your risks accordingly.

  • BTC breaks through $89,000

    market shows BTC breaking through $89,000, currently at $89,014.5, with a 24-hour increase of 0.85%. The market is highly volatile, please manage your risk accordingly.

  • F2Pool co-founder: Last year, 500 bitcoins were transferred in to confirm whether the private key had been leaked; hackers took 490 bitcoins.

    regarding the community's heated discussion about the 50 million USDT phishing attack, F2Pool co-founder Wang Chun tweeted, "Last year, I suspected that my private key was leaked. To confirm whether the address was really hacked, I transferred 500 bitcoins to that address. To my surprise, the hacker 'generously' only took 490 bitcoins, leaving me 10 bitcoins, enough for me to make a living."

  • BTC falls below $88,000

    market shows BTC fell below $88,000, currently at $87,991.97, with a 24-hour decline of 0.08%. The market is highly volatile, please manage your risk accordingly.

  • US lawmakers draft new bill to exempt capital gains tax on stablecoin transactions under $200.

     U.S. representatives are drafting a cryptocurrency tax bill called the Digital Asset PARITY Act, which will exempt capital gains tax on stablecoin transactions under $200, and staking and mining rewards will also have the option for a five-year tax deferral.

  • Tether CEO posts job openings, sparking speculation that a mobile encrypted wallet is on the horizon.

    Tether CEO Paolo Ardoino posted on the X platform stating that Tether has started recruiting a senior software engineer who will be responsible for Tether's mobile crypto wallet-related products, which will be supported by artificial intelligence, Wallet Development Kit (WDK), and QVAC technology. Later, Paolo Ardoino also posted a suspected wallet product screenshot in another tweet, which shows "Own your Money".

  • Bloomberg analysts: Among the top 25 US equity ETFs with the highest annual inflows, BlackRock IBIT is the only ETF with negative returns.

    Eric Balchunas, a senior ETF analyst at Bloomberg, posted the annual top 25 U.S. stock ETFs by fund inflows on the X platform. Among them, BlackRock's Bitcoin exchange-traded fund IBIT is the only ETF with a negative return, with an annual return rate of -9.59%. It is worth noting that despite the negative return, IBIT's annual fund inflow still ranks sixth, even surpassing the GLD ETF with a 64% return. In the long run, this is a very good sign, as it received over $25 billion in fund inflows during the bear market phase, indicating greater potential once the market turns bullish.