
RealT, a Florida-based RWA issuer, is being sued after offering tokenized shares of dozens of homes it does not own. Additionally, code and tax violations have accumulated over 408 properties in RealT’s possession.
This incident highlights a serious potential problem for the entire RWA market. Can these companies really offer returns on property incomes, or will Ponzi schemes power investor yields?
RealT’s Detroit RWA Plan
As befitting the crypto crime supercycle of 2025, many novel scams, hacks, and other frauds are preying upon investors right now.
The RWA market has been durable in bear markets, growing despite broader downturns, and RealT has allegedly pioneered a new type of crypto crime in the city of Detroit.
Local media reported that RealT’s fake RWA scheme was very simple. Essentially, the firm offered tokenized shares of 39 homes in Detroit’s Eastside neighborhood.
RealT used this method to obtain $2.72 million of investor funds, well exceeding the $1.1 million asking price of the homes in question. However, it never actually purchased this real estate.
“We’re getting closer to a Ponzi/Madoff-type scheme. If this is true, the very notion of a Real World Asset is void, and I would call into question my entire investment strategy. More clearly stated, I’m withdrawing all my investments from RealT,” an anonymous investor told reporters in an interview.
The company began advertising these RWAs in 2023. Potential users were promised a share of the properties’ rental incomes, but many of RealT’s homes are vacant and/or dilapidated. The city of Detroit is even suing over code and tax violations at 408 of its properties.
To be clear, RealT does own hundreds of the Detroit properties it’s promoting with RWAs. However, it did not complete the purchase for 39 homes in one neighborhood, but it’s nonetheless taken over property management.
Further investigation revealed more than 20 similar cases, where RealT sold tokenized shares of homes it did not own. Even more could exist.
A Big Problem for RWAs
RealT’s scam questions some of the foundational principles of the RWA market. Essentially, this operation couldn’t possibly be profitable even if the firm actually owned every single property it advertised.
To be blunt, there is practically zero experiential overlap between running a Web3 startup and renting out dilapidated houses.
The vacancy rate on RealT’s houses was up to 10x the advertised amount. How can token owners collect a share of nonexistent rents? Many of these homes were explicitly rent-controlled, enticing tenants to live in abandoned neighborhoods.
This measure might encourage Detroit’s urban renewal, but not investor returns.
That’s without counting property taxes, blight tickets, and other such concerns. Property management is a full-time job, but much of RealT’s operations need to focus on attracting crypto investors. In this environment, investor capital might replace the purported engine of real growth—in short, a classic Ponzi scheme.
All that is to say, the RWA market has regulators and investors alike salivating, but the RealT case reminds us of the practical difficulties involved.
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