Our Purpose
Real estate crowdlending education in Latin America has largely been produced by the sector itself. Numerionex was created to offer something different: analysis without a commercial agenda.
The Problem
When someone wants to understand real estate crowdlending in Latin America, most available resources come from platforms, brokers, or marketing content produced by parties with a financial interest in the outcome. The information is not wrong, but it is shaped by its context.
Platforms describe their own structures in the most favorable terms. Comparisons between models are made by parties who benefit from the comparison. Regulatory complexity is smoothed over in favor of accessibility. This is not dishonesty — it is the natural consequence of commercial incentives operating on educational content.
The result is a gap. People who want to understand the sector analytically — before making any decision, or simply to satisfy professional or intellectual curiosity — have very few places to go that are not, at some level, trying to sell them something.
We are an educational institution, not a marketplace, brokerage, or platform. Our analysis is produced with no commercial relationship to any entity in the crowdlending sector.
This means we can describe what exists without recommending it, compare models without favoring any, and explain risks without minimizing them. The goal is understanding, not conversion.
Why Argentina
Argentina cannot be understood through the lens of other Latin American markets. Its financial conditions are specific enough to require dedicated analysis.
Argentina's multi-rate currency environment creates specific challenges for understanding how crowdlending returns are denominated, calculated, and ultimately received. This requires explanation that goes beyond generic regional analysis.
The CNV framework for collective financing has evolved significantly. Understanding what it actually requires — as opposed to what platforms say it requires — is important context for anyone examining the sector.
Argentine property prices have behaved differently from other regional markets for structural economic reasons. Understanding those reasons is part of understanding any crowdlending structure built on top of them.
Our Methodology
Our starting point is always a thorough description of how a structure, model, or market actually works. We resist the temptation to evaluate before we have described completely. This discipline matters because premature evaluation often prevents the full picture from emerging.
Only after a structure is described with sufficient precision can meaningful comparison or analysis be useful. This is the sequence we follow throughout the program.
The program includes substantial comparative analysis of operational models, regulatory frameworks, and market structures. This comparison is analytical: it identifies differences, traces their implications, and explains what those differences mean in practice.
It does not tell you which model is better, which platform to use, or which market to prefer. That is not our role. Our role is to give you the tools to make those assessments yourself, from a position of genuine understanding.
Where we describe regulatory frameworks, we work from the actual texts: CNV resolutions, legal statutes, court decisions, and official guidance. Where we describe platform structures, we work from the documentation those platforms make publicly available.
This approach takes more effort than relying on secondary summaries, but it produces more reliable understanding. Secondary sources often simplify in ways that matter when the details are what you are trying to learn.
Next Steps
The full curriculum is structured across five modules. You can review the program outline, learn about the Argentine market specifically, or get in touch directly.