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What is it

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By definition, real estate includes natural assets, such as minerals, ... Real estate can be classified into four major categories: Land ... free ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: What is it


1
What is it?
  • Real estate is land and the buildings and
    improvements on land.
  • By definition, real estate includes natural
    assets, such as minerals, under the land.
  • Because of the obvious limited supply of land,
    especially in desirable locations, real estate
    has long been viewed as an attractive investment
    alternative.
  • Real estate can be classified into four major
    categories
  • Land
  • Residential
  • Commercial
  • Industrial

2
What is it?
  • Land
  • Unimproved
  • Farm land
  • Recreational
  • Ranches
  • Subdivided lots
  • Residential
  • Single family dwellings
  • Multiple family dwellings
  • Apartments and condominiums
  • Hotels and motels

3
What is it?
  • Commercial
  • Residential rental
  • Office buildings
  • Retail stores
  • Shopping centers
  • Specialty buildings
  • Industrial
  • Factories
  • Warehouses
  • Industrial parks
  • Utility facilities

4
When is the use of this tool indicated?
  • When an investor desires an investment with tax
    shelter potential
  • When a long-term hedge against inflation is
    needed
  • When a relatively constant cash flow is required
  • When an investor is looking for long-term
    appreciation
  • When the investor would like a tangible
    investment
  • When the investor wants to make maximum use of
    leverage
  • Lenders are willing to advance large sums of
    money on the security of real estate for long
    periods of time at relatively low interest
    because real estate is not only tangible and
    stationary, but is also reasonably stable in value

5
Advantages
  • Real estate has numerous different tax related
    advantages
  • Expenditures that are considered ordinary and
    necessary in the production or collection of
    income or in the preservation of its value as an
    investment are deductible.
  • The cost of supplies, labor, and other components
    necessary to keep the property in good repair can
    be deducted.
  • Real estate property taxes are deductible.
  • A tenant leasing business property may deduct
    reasonable rental costs.
  • Interest on the unpaid balance of the mortgage is
    deductible
  • The full cost of buildings and real estate
    improvements is depreciable.

6
Advantages
  • Gain on the sale of real estate can be reported
    over more than one tax year.
  • This may allow the investor to defer the payment
    of tax until cash proceeds from an installment
    sale of the property are received
  • Losses incurred on the sale of real estate are
    deductible.
  • One parcel of real estate can be exchanged for
    another without immediate recognition of income.
  • Tax-free exchange rules
  • Upon the involuntary conversion of real estate,
    the investor does not have to pay any tax upon
    the receipt of cash from insurance or
    condemnation award.
  • So long as the cash is reinvested in qualified
    property having equal or greater value

7
Advantages
  • Liquidity can be obtained from real estate
    without paying taxes through a mortgage on the
    property.
  • The cost of rehabilitating certain buildings or
    structures may qualify for a special investment
    tax credit.
  • Passive activity tax rules
  • Limit the ability to use real estate losses to
    offset income from other sources

8
Advantages
  • Real estate is tangible.
  • Real estate has historically proven itself as an
    excellent hedge against inflation.
  • It tends to increase in value while prices are
    rising and the value of the dollar is declining.
  • Each parcel of real estate is unique.
  • Because no two parcels can share the same
    location, no two can be exactly alike.
  • The monopoly each real estate owner has on each
    individual location is itself of value.
  • Because of its great value as security for a
    loan, real estate enables an investor to obtain
    maximum potential leverage.

9
Disadvantages
  • Real estate is almost always relatively illiquid.
  • Difficult to convert to cash quickly
  • Some degree of management is necessary with all
    real estate investments.
  • Typically the investment in real estate is large
    in amount.
  • Requires the commitment of investable funds for a
    long period of time.

10
Disadvantages
  • Costs related to the purchase or sale of real
    estate reduce its value as an investment that can
    produce a short-term gain.
  • Include transfer taxes, title insurance,
    appraisals, financing fees and points, title
    recording and notary fees, and sales commissions
  • May run as high as 1015
  • Real estate, by definition, cannot be moved.

11
Disadvantages
  • Once land has been improved with a building, that
    improvement is often difficult and expensive to
    modify or remove.
  • Referred to as fixity of investment.
  • It is often difficult or impossible to assess the
    economic risks and projected return on a real
    estate investment with exactness.
  • Because the investment return on real estate is
    significantly affected by the available tax
    benefits, such investments are most susceptible
    to the risk of challenge by the IRS.

12
Tax Implications
  • All the ordinary and necessary expenses paid or
    incurred by a real estate investor during the
    taxable year in carrying on a trade or business
    are deductible.
  • Include costs incurred in the production or the
    collection of investment income, as well as
    expenditures for the management, conservation, or
    maintenance of real estate property held either
    to produce income or for appreciation
  • Routine repair and maintenance expenses (those
    that do not appreciably add to the value of the
    property) are deductible in the year the outlay
    is incurred.
  • The cost of improvements must be capitalized.
  • Added to the investors basis in the property
  • Recovered through depreciation deductions

13
Tax Implications
  • Amounts paid for real property taxes are
    deductible when paid.
  • Construction period taxes must be capitalized and
    then amortized.
  • Rental expenses for the use of business property
    are deductible currently.
  • Interest paid to finance the purchase of
    investment real estate may be deductible
    currently.
  • Rules may limit the deductibility of
  • Construction period interest
  • Investment interest
  • Prepaid interest
  • Points
  • Passive losses / At risk rules

14
Tax Implications
  • Land is not depreciable
  • Improvements upon the land are eligible for
    depreciation deductions.
  • Tax losses from depreciation deductions are
    subject to the passive activity rules.
  • Tax on the gain upon the sale of real estate can
    be deferred.
  • Installment sale rules permit an investor to
    delay reporting any gain or paying any tax until
    money is received.
  • The law does not set a limit as to how long the
    parties can agree to extend the payment period.
  • Tax law expects that the parties will provide for
    interest on the loan inherent in an installment
    sale.

15
Tax Implications
  • Losses on the sale of real estate held for
    investment or used in a trade or business are
    generally deductible in the year incurred.
  • Losses incurred on the sale of personal use
    realty are not deductible.
  • Real estate held purely for investment is treated
    as a capital asset.
  • Subject to capital gain / loss rules
  • Real property used in a trade or business is not
    a capital asset.
  • If held for the long-term holding period before
    being sold, such property is called Section 1231
    Property.
  • Capital gain or ordinary loss

16
Tax Implications
  • Like-kind exchange
  • Under certain circumstances, it is possible for
    an investor to trade/exchange properties with
    another party and postpone all or part of the
    gain that would normally have to be recognized on
    a sale.
  • Tax deferral may also be available upon
    involuntary conversion.
  • Involuntary conversion is the destruction of
    property by fire or other casualty.
  • It may also be caused by the condemnation of
    property by a governmental body utilizing its
    right to take private property and convert it to
    the use of the public.
  • Any gain realized can usually be deferred if the
    investor reinvests the full proceeds in similar
    property within three years from the end of the
    year in which the proceeds are received.

17
Tax Implications
  • An investor can convert part of the appreciated
    value of property into cash without either
    selling it or otherwise triggering a tax on any
    gain.
  • Use property as security for a loan
  • The cost of constructing or rehabilitating
    certain building or structures may qualify for a
    special investment credit.
  • The properties eligible for this credit include
  • Qualified low income housing
  • Certified historic structures
  • Buildings that were first placed in service
    before 1936

18
Alternatives
  • Few investments are comparable to real estate
    because of its unique characteristics, location,
    potential for significant tax shelter benefits
    and relatively constant cash flow, and
    psychological comfort.
  • Other investments, such as stocks, do provide a
    long-term hedge against inflation, the
    possibility of substantial appreciation, and the
    potential to maximize the use of leverage.

19
Where and How do I get it?
  • An individual will typically purchase real estate
    in his own name directly from the seller or
    through a real estate broker or agent.
  • Most real estate acquired for tax shelter
    purposes is acquired by purchasing an interest in
    a partnership or other investment entity.

20
Where and How do I get it?
  • Real estate may be held by an investor in any of
    the following forms
  • Outright ownership
  • General partnership or joint venture
  • Limited partnership
  • Corporate (C corporation)
  • S corporation
  • Real estate investment trust (REIT)

21
Where and How do I get it?
  • Outright Ownership
  • Does not protect the individual investor from
    full personal liability relating to the ownership
    and operation of the property
  • Full management responsibility
  • All tax benefits and costs are personal to the
    investor
  • An outright owner can convey the title to all or
    a portion of the property at any time without
    restriction
  • Death results in the termination of the
    individual ownership form
  • The property will then pass through the
    investors estate to his heirs or by operation of
    law to his joint owners.

22
Where and How do I get it?
  • General Partnership
  • Two or more individuals join together for
    investment purposes
  • General partner jointly and severally liable for
    all the debts and obligations
  • If a partner cannot pay his part of the
    obligation, the remaining partners are liable.
  • Usually only a few partners are actively involved
    in operations
  • Not taxed as separate entities
  • Income, deductions, and credits flow through to
    the partners
  • Losses deductible only up to basis in partnership
  • Right to transfer interest in property is limited
    to the terms of the partnership agreement
  • Death of a partner may cause termination of the
    partnership unless the partnership agreement
    provides otherwise

23
Where and How do I get it?
  • Limited Partnership
  • Limited liability for limited partners
  • Most are heavily leveraged
  • Limited partners not at risk may not be able to
    deduct partnership losses
  • Limited partners cannot take part in management
  • Vested solely in the general partner
  • Income, deductions, and credits flow through to
    the partners according to their proportionate
    ownership

24
Where and How do I get it?
  • Right to transfer interest in property is limited
    to the terms of the limited partnership agreement
  • More restrictive than partnership agreements
  • Death of a partner will not cause the termination
  • Heirs succeed in interest
  • Syndicated partnership
  • Syndicator-promoters
  • Investors

25
Where and How do I get it?
  • Corporations
  • Limited liability
  • C or S corp
  • Full liability stops with the corporation
  • Corporate borrowing
  • Personal guarantees
  • Centralized Management
  • Board of directors elected by shareholders
  • Does not terminate at death of shareholder
  • Indefinite life
  • Enhanced transferability
  • Shareholder can transfer any number of shares
  • Restricted on S corp
  • C corporation is a separate legal entity
  • Must file its own tax return
  • Corporate earnings paid to shareholders taxed
    twice

26
Where and How do I get it?
  • S Corporations
  • Treated essentially the same as a C corporation
    except for taxation
  • Taxed similarly to a partnership
  • May not have more than 100 shareholders
  • All individuals or trusts
  • No nonresident aliens
  • Not more than 1 class of stock

27
Where and How do I get it?
  • REITs (Real Estate Investment Trust)
  • A vehicle specifically designed to facilitate
    large-scale public participation in real estate
    investments.
  • Operates similarly to a mutual fund
  • Having many investors, each contributing
    relatively small amounts of capital, enables the
    management of the REIT to make diversified and
    large-scale investments on their behalf.

28
What fees or other costs are involved?
  • Brokers commissions
  • Legal fees
  • Title examination and registration fees
  • Title insurance
  • State and local transfer taxes
  • Syndicated real estate venture
  • Higher costs of investing than an investment
    where the owner finds, develops, and manages the
    property because these responsibilities are
    assumed by the developer/promoter.
  • 16 to 26 of the amount invested
  • In a private offering, total costs range from 13
    to 25.

29
How do I select the best of its type?
  • Location of the property
  • Soundness of construction and appropriateness of
    design for intended use
  • Cost of capital
  • Financing fees
  • The cost of operating and maintaining the
    property
  • Organization and offering expenses
  • Sales commissions
  • Construction costs
  • Fees paid to the general partner for managing the
    partnership and the underlying investment
    property
  • Projected cash flow and tax results from
    operations

30
Where can I find out more about it?
  • Tax Facts on Investments
  • Tax-Advantaged Investments
  • Tax Planning for Investors
  • The real estate industry offers many educational
    programs and courses
  • The National Marketing Institute of the National
    Association of Realtors
  • The Certified Commercial Investment Member
    designation
  • Member of Appraisal Institute
  • Farm and Land Institute
  • Graduate of Real Estate Institute
  • Certified Residential Broker
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