A Melbourne, Fla.-based startup called Deedcoin wants to create a system that will slash agent commissions to 1 percent and dramatically reduce brokerage overhead–and it’s planning on using virtual currency tokens to do that.
The company, an offshoot of the local investment brokerage Momentum Realty, aims to sell 70 million “deedcoin” tokens on its website for $1.50 to $3.00 each, through an Initial Coin Offering (ICO) scheduled to take place on January 25 (after several delays). In total, the company is hoping to raise $150 million.
ICOs are a hot new crowdfunding format for enthusiasts of digital currencies. Basically, a company creates its own unique digital currency (many are based on existing digital currencies such as bitcoin and ethereum) for a specific purpose.
In Deedcoin’s case, the currency is designed to allow homebuyers and sellers to hire real estate agents through an online network at drastically reduced rates, paying them in tokens that amount to a 1 percent commission (down from about an average of 5 percent commission today). The company will offer these tokens for sale to the public through a website, where home buyers and sellers can pay for them with Bitcoin, Ether, Litecoin, or US dollars.
A limited number of brokers and agents will be allowed to join Deedcoin’s platform at a cost of $300 per month, giving them low-cost access to a pool of buyers and sellers. That’s a fraction of the $14,000 in monthly costs Deedcoin claims most brokerages shoulder, according to the Deedcoin whitepaper, a document most ICOs issue to explain the structure, timing, and purpose of their fundraising.
Deedcoin estimates each token can save consumers $190 if the typical commission is 6%–a pretty nifty return on $1.50, assuming all goes according to plan. Deedcoin founders would fare brilliantly: 15 percent of Deedcoin goes to the founders (locked up for six months) and another 15 percent to a reserve.
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In general, startups have raised over $3.6 billion year-to-date through ICOs, up from $96 million in 2016. However, real estate-specific ICOs have been bit players, raising a measly $35 million this year–about one-third of what Deedcoin alone aims to raise.
ICOs do come with risks. Several have also run afoul of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and been shut down.
Deedcoin hopes to avoid this fate, claiming it is compliant with U.S. securities law due to some legal due diligence. But the SEC just said last week said even so-called utility ICOs may need to register, a move that Deedcoin says it is actively working to address.
“We have pushed the clock back a little on our live pre-sale, with the SEC releases lately we wanted to stay compliant so we are having our law firm take another look through everything to make sure we are doing things right,” Deedcoin co-founder and lead coordinator Charles Wismer, also a Realtor at Momentum Realty, said in an email sent out to Deedcoin’s newsletter subscribers.
Wismer elaborated in another email to Inman, writing: “Delays have been due to a company choice to make the platform entirely useable across the US before launch, we have chosen not to sell any Deedcoin token until they are useable.”
Still, he thinks Deedcoin will be a hit with home shoppers and agents alike. “The real estate industry is bloated,” Wismer told Inman. “It’s not good for the consumer.”
There are too many real estate agents —1.3 million members at the National Association of Realtors vying for about over 5 million transactions–which means they are averaging only four sales yearly, Wismer said.
However, not all NAR members are agents or brokers; only 444,100 are. And residential specialists closed on a median 7 transactions. But, okay, we get the larger point. The Deedcoin founders are banking on a reservoir of frustration with the status quo among agents, buyers, and sellers to rally around its platform. Indeed, even Deedcoin’s marketing materials accuse NAR of “prevent[ing] savings through unseen market control.”
Deedcoin is far from a sure thing. So far, in addition to the founding brokerage Momentum Realty (25 listings on its website, not all active), Deedcoin says it’s signed on another 12 brokers in major cities. The website notes of strategic partnerships with Fintech companies and real estate developers, but Deedcoin declined to name any to Inman. A recent NASDAQ interview on Twitter’s Periscope livestreaming platform with CEO Matthew Herrick probably won’t sway doubters:
#TradeTalks : Real Estate Meets Blockchain Technology #Deedcoin @JillMalandrino https://t.co/pn5yjxBCs6
— Nasdaq (@Nasdaq) December 6, 2017
And Adam B. Levine, CEO of a separate digital currency software startup called Tokenly, warned Inman that building a network is “super-duper hard.” In his experience, consumers resist using wallets for cryptocurrencies. “If you lose the credentials (passwords) to the wallet, you can’t get them back.” The technical part of building the platform – with enough money – is the easy part, he said.
That isn’t stopping others from trying. Many more real estate ICOs are now on the calendar–including Realisto, Skye Properties, and Squarex. But Deedcoin’s Wismer told Inman that his company’s ICO is the only token based on the Ethereum smart contract to attack the cost structure of home sales by involving all the main parties– reps, sellers, and buyers.
Just in case things don’t work out for Deedcoin, Wismer told Inman that refunds for his tokens are possible. “That said, I am confident based on the partnerships we have made and feedback we have received that people will be using Deedcoin agents nationally by this time next year.”
“Last week we got a dozen calls,” he told Inman back in November. “We got eight the previous week.”
One hundred five million. Even $35 million. A moonshot? Maybe. But then, Melbourne is only a 40-minute drive from Cape Canaveral.
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