Event Title
Location
Zoom Recording Available at Link Below.
Event Website
https://media.law.seattleu.edu/Playlist/c2G6Rpd7?destinationID=4AUx5RIOEkqKZ8DZ1XLNHw&contentID=2-nY3Cuwd0uj0od_bW6zNQ&orderBy=videoTitle&orderByDirection=asc&pageIndex=1&pageSize=10
Start Date
13-6-2020 2:20 PM
End Date
13-6-2020 3:20 PM
Description
ABSTRACT: Is “tokenization” the next great leap forward needed to make homeownership more appealing to Millennials and Gen Z’s?
If single-family homeownership and time-sharing had a love child, what would it look like? Is it possible to adapt successful models for office sharing to homeownership so renters who lament not owning an appreciating asset could have a stake in “something” while not being tied down to one specific residential structure or a single geographic location, to make homeownership more attractive to younger generations? And, if so, does blockchain technology hold the key (pun intended) to fractional ownerships in real estate that might make this hybrid homeownership model both possible and more-easily practicable than the current system of land title recordations and transactions?
Included in
Environmental Indicators and Impact Assessment Commons, Environmental Law Commons, Environmental Monitoring Commons, Housing Law Commons, Land Use Law Commons, Law and Economics Commons, Law and Race Commons, Law and Society Commons, Legislation Commons, Property Law and Real Estate Commons, Science and Technology Law Commons, Securities Law Commons, Sustainability Commons
SESSION 5: Real Estate Tokenization
Zoom Recording Available at Link Below.
ABSTRACT: Is “tokenization” the next great leap forward needed to make homeownership more appealing to Millennials and Gen Z’s?
If single-family homeownership and time-sharing had a love child, what would it look like? Is it possible to adapt successful models for office sharing to homeownership so renters who lament not owning an appreciating asset could have a stake in “something” while not being tied down to one specific residential structure or a single geographic location, to make homeownership more attractive to younger generations? And, if so, does blockchain technology hold the key (pun intended) to fractional ownerships in real estate that might make this hybrid homeownership model both possible and more-easily practicable than the current system of land title recordations and transactions?
https://digitalcommons.law.seattleu.edu/sitie_symposium/itbe2020/june13/7
Comments
Featured Speaker: Joseph Vincent, Professor, Seattle University School of Law; Director of Regulatory & Legal Affairs, Washington Department of Financial Institutions
Panel Discussion: Joseph Vincent, (Featured Speaker & Moderator), Steven Bender, Peter Smirniotopoulos