Blockchain could help cut costs and redundancies in the mortgage process, according to a new report from Moodyâs.
The firm touched on the technologyâs promise in a new in-depth report that analyzes the impact of new technologies on the U.S. housing sector. While innovation in the years since the financial crisis has transformed a range of industries, the researchers wrote, housing has been mostly untouched.
That suggests a sizeable opportunity for blockchain applications to âstreamline key mortgage processes, eliminate redundancies and reduce costs,â the reportâs authors wrote.
For example, the tech could improve the monitoring of loan performance, the authors argued, while boosting the degree of transparency throughout a mortgageâs lifecycle, allowing âmortgage insurers to transfer discrete mortgage credit risks to reinsurers and other alternative capital providers on a cost-effective basis.â
Some of the most outsized benefits would come in the area of title transactions, according to the report, since blockchain platforms could reduce the number of necessary personnel and cut spending on commissions. A 10â20 percent cut in these expenses, the report estimates, would amount to $840 millionâ$1.7 billion in annual savings.
The report notes that some projects are underway to incorporate blockchain technology into the housing sector. It also references title registry trials undertaken by officials in Cook County, Illinois, and the city of South Burlington, Vermont.
The Moodyâs researchers do sound a note of caution, however, about the amount of data that can be processed at a given time through todayâs existing networks.
âOne of blockchainâs current limitations is the small number of transactions that can be processed within a period of time,â they write, âbased on the restricted size of the blocks and the high costs of using the technology.â
The reference to block sizes appears to indicate the authors have public networks like bitcoin in mind. These are unlikely to be adopted in the near term, however, not just because of scalability, but because of regulatory concerns, which the Moodyâs report also highlights.
Regulatory agencies, it says, âwant to ensure that those solutions do not create new risks for individual firms or the industry.â
Mortgage and key image via Shutterstock