Palladium Network moves through the RWA landscape with the kind of conviction you only get from believing the rest of the industry is still asleep at the wheel. The mission is simple: break real estate into pieces small enough to buy, sell, or hold without the drama of a loan officer, a down payment, or a decade-long plan. In their view, tokenization isn’t a trend; it is the new flooring the market has to learn to stand on.
For Business Development Director Kevin Boeve, the route into crypto started in traditional finance.
“I got into crypto probably in 2018. My background is finance and investing,” he says, a quiet nod to years spent watching markets long before blockchain entered the frame.
That background shapes the company’s logic. Palladium buys physical properties, then turns each one into its own NFT collection. A $200,000 home becomes 20,000 tokens priced at $10 each.
“Our company would buy that property and convert them into NFTs… a unique collection specific to that property,” Kevin says.
The structure is mechanical; the appeal is emotional. People buy what they can touch; they trust what they can see.
The value proposition is almost blunt. A portion of the rental income flows straight to token holders.
“If you own 10% of that property, you’re getting essentially $500 deposited into your wallet,” he says. No mortgages; no liens; no legacy paperwork. The company runs the property; the holders collect the yield.
Kevin sees it as the antidote to the modern housing narrative where ownership feels like a luxury and debt feels like a default.
“There are a lot of people who have some savings but not enough to get the loan that they want,” he says.
Tokenization fills that gap.
“This seems like a way that people can sort of start investing in real estate without having to put down the $20,000, $50,000.”
The structure is open. If someone wants 1% of a property or if someone wants 51%, it is fair game.
“There’s no limit to what they own. It’s first-come, first-served.”
The tokens trade on exchanges; investors can exit the position like they would any other asset.
The company enters the market with a clear memory of the 2021 NFT boom; a moment inflated by culture and speculation rather than intrinsic worth. Kevin doesn’t dance around it.

