Document Type
Article
Publication Date
9-19-2022
Keywords
Fintech, Financial technology, Real estate investment
Disciplines
Banking and Finance Law | Property Law and Real Estate | Securities Law
Abstract
Until relatively recently, real estate with a small footprint — one-to-four-family homes as well as small retail, office and industrial buildings — were generally within the sole purview of small investors who invested locally.
Today, because of technological advances, these owner-occupants and investors face significant competition from institutional investors and an emerging class of decentralized finance investors.
These fintech companies are bringing new approaches to the challenges that real estate investing traditionally poses: illiquidity, lack of capital, lack of diversification and uneven access to market information.
This article focuses on how decentralized finance investors in particular are meeting those challenges and suggests that while much of their vaunted innovation is simply old wine in new bottles, there is good reason to think that they will be driving a lot of investment in small real estate transactions in the future, in no small part because people like shiny new bottles.
Recommended Citation
Joseph Bizub, Justin Peralta and David Reiss, "How Fintech Cos. May Transform Real Estate Investment," Law360 (September 19, 2022)
Included in
Banking and Finance Law Commons, Property Law and Real Estate Commons, Securities Law Commons
Comments
This article predates Prof. Reiss's affiliation with Cornell Law School.