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Balcony has partnered with Chainlink to bring more than $240 billion of government-sourced property records on-chain. The companies announce partnership (PR Newswire), saying Chainlink’s Runtime Environment (CRE) will stream verified parcel data into Balcony’s Keystone platform to support tokenized real-estate markets and a unified “chain of title.” The plan aims to cut fraud and speed transfers for agencies and private institutions.
The deal lands as public registers and private ledgers begin to connect. CoinDesk detail integration, noting CRE will help standardize data from multiple sources so assets can be tokenized and settled with transparent audit trails. Better data quality is critical for large-scale RWA programs, including mortgages, land leases, and commercial deeds that require strong provenance and compliance checks.
Balcony says Keystone will digitize fragmented land records and apply AI to reconcile files before minting programmable assets. The firm previously highlighted government workstreams and media coverage on county-level projects; its newsroom list initiatives that move paper archives into tamper-evident registries. Chainlink’s ecosystem page also confirm partnership and frames CRE as the compliance-aware execution layer for tokenized assets.
“Meeting regulatory standards is essential for bringing real estate on-chain… the Chainlink Runtime Environment delivers the secure and compliant execution layer that allows Balcony … to stream authenticated property data on-chain and enable compliant digital real-estate markets,” said Gregg Lester, Co-CEO and President of Balcony, as he outlined vision for public-sector integrations. (Gregg Lester, Co-CEO & President).
If successful, parcel-level data could unlock faster closings, clearer liens, and secondary trading of tokenized property interests. Analysts point out that trusted oracles and standardized metadata are prerequisites for institutional participation; CoinDesk’s coverage link trend to broader RWA adoption. The next test will be live county deployments, issuer onboarding, and how regulators assess CRE-based workflows for title, escrow, and asset-backed tokens.