July 26, 2025
11 11 11 AM
Latest Post
Crypto Still Seen as ‘Risky’ Among U.S. Investors Despite Ownership Surging 8x Since 2018: Survey A Japanese AI Firm Plans to Buy 3,000 Bitcoin Over Next 12 Months Bitcoin Hits $1T Realized Cap as Price Holds Above $118K After $9B BTC Sale by Satoshi-Era Whale State of Crypto: The Senate Responds to Clarity Act Coinbase’s Base App Rebrand Sends a Little-Known Token Soaring 440% Amid SocialFi Boom BNB Rebounds to $780 After $520M Windtree Buy Commitment, Shows Signs of Stabilizing Demographics will 'leapfrog' Bitcoin adoption in Pakistan — Bilal Bin Saqib SUI Soars 15% as Analysts Predict Breakout to as High as $10 on Surging Momentum Winklevoss Claims JPMorgan Halted Gemini Onboarding After Data Access Fees Criticism XRP wallet linked to Chris Larsen still has $9B to sell, analyst warns

Luxury Brokerage Christie’s Allows Buyers to Purchase Real Estate With Crypto: NYT

Christie’s International Real Estate has launched a dedicated division to facilitate real estate transactions conducted entirely in cryptocurrency, the New York Times reported on Thursday.

Spearheaded by Aaron Kirman, CEO of a Christie’s-affiliated firm in Los Angeles, the initiative follows several high-profile deals, including a $65 million Beverly Hills transaction where crypto was used exclusively.

The new division comprises legal, financial, and crypto experts to handle peer-to-peer transactions without reliance on banks. The goal is to enable high-end buyers and sellers — often seeking privacy — to use digital assets seamlessly for real-world property acquisitions.

With roughly 14% of Americans owning crypto, Kirman projects that digital currency could represent over a third of U.S. residential real estate deals within five years.

The use of crypto offers enhanced buyer anonymity, often via LLCs funded directly with digital assets, making ownership harder to trace than traditional banking channels.

Kirman’s crypto-accepting portfolio now exceeds $1 billion in value, including marquee properties like the $118M La Fin in Bel Air and Joshua Tree’s $17.95M Invisible House.

Christie’s did not respond to CoinDesk’s request for further

This post was originally published on this site

Please enter Coingecko Free Api Key to get this plugin works