good
How Much Do You Get Paid to Donate Sperm? We’ve Got All the Answers
This was originally published on The Penny Hoarder, which helps millions of readers worldwide earn and save money by sharing unique job opportunities, personal stories, freebies and more. The Inc. 5000 ranked The Penny Hoarder as the fastest-growing private media company in the U.S. in 2017.
Why Now Might Be a Good Time to Sell Your Investment Real Estate
Historically speaking, independent real estate investors who held for the long-term walked a relatively straightforward (although bumpy and slow at times) path toward achieving asset appreciation and long-term wealth. This path would often look something like this: An investor would purchase a piece of property that would potentially generate enough cash flow to cover the expenses, including principal and interest on the mortgage, insurance, property taxes and maintenance costs. Over time, the property would (hopefully) increase in value, income (rents) would rise, and certain tax advantages, like the ability to deduct operating and depreciation expenses, could be utilized to improve cash flow.
- SEE MORE Are You Being Too Frugal in Retirement?
However, the steady march of new government regulations, the impact of COVID-19, and some basic real estate economics have helped some real estate investors recognize that the real estate investments they own have become less profitable and could even worsen to the point where investors could actually lose money each year.
The Growing Impact of Rent Control Before and After COVID-19
While this may sound like hyperbole to some, our firm is actively working with numerous apartment owners across the country, and we hear firsthand some of the challenges and pressures property owners are facing. Even national media are picking up on this trend. For example, a  recent Wall Street Journal article cites that apartment owners and investors are leaving California and the Northeast for places like Florida, Texas and the other Southern states where warm weather, business-friendly governments and laws, lower taxes and fewer regulations seem like a breath of fresh air.
Reuters recently lamented that beset by COVID-19 and its fallout, many smaller local landlords are offloading their properties and selling to national institutional investors, and CNBC recently reported that at least 60% of single-family rental homeowners are owed back rent and are being forced to sell their rental properties to recoup losses. Finally, CBS announced that as a last-ditch effort to claw back tens of billions of dollars in unpaid rent, a national group of landlords is suing the federal government for back rent.
- SEE MORE How to Build Wealth (or Rebuild It)
However, even before COVID-19 rolled across the nationâs multifamily rental real estate investment market, landlords were seeing new rent-control legislation start to encroach on their investment real estate portfolios, and squeeze ownersâ profits. When COVID-19 arrived in the United States, cities across the country started expanding rent-control laws and eviction moratoriums at an alarming rate, directly exposing landlords to financial peril. Legally speaking, the term ârent controlâ can be defined as any statutory rule that regulates the timing or frequency of increasing tenantsâ rent, the services landlords must provide tenants, and the limited ability of landlords to evict tenants.
Today, multiple cities, states and jurisdictions are under some form of strict rent-control regulation, including Washington, D.C., Maryland, New Jersey and New York. Most recently, Oregon and California have enacted statewide rent-control laws that have greatly reduced landlords’ ability to raise rates. Cities like Santa Ana and St. Paul have both passed bills limiting rent increases to 3% a year. Seattle even passed a bill requiring landlords to pay the moving costs for tenants who canât afford to stay in their homes, and Los Angeles passed a law that protects tenants from eviction for unpaid rent.
Perhaps no other region in the nation is more challenging for landlords than Californiaâs Bay Area. For example, Berkely has had one of the strictest rent-control environments in the country, capping not only rents, but also garbage and parking fees; Hayward caps rent increases at just 5%, and rent increases following voluntary move-outs cannot be more than 5%; Oaklandâs Rent Adjustment Program (RAP) limits rental increases to 30% in a five-year tenancy.
Even more worrisome for landlords, cities like Portland and Oakland have recently created new restrictions limiting the ability of landlords to screen potential tenants, including:
- Prohibiting the use of criminal background checks.
- Limiting the use of financial background checks.
- Requiring landlords to accept previously evicted tenants.
- Limiting security deposits to 1.5 x month’s rent.
Adding to these growing restrictive rental laws, landlords today must also face the reality of complicated and costly eviction laws and the soaring costs associated with repairs and maintenance.
Finally, many owners are recognizing that perhaps their rental property may not make as much financial sense as it once did. Why? Well, for several years now, property values in certain situations have risen faster than an ownerâs ability to raise rents. The result is that the cash-on-cash return, or âequity yield,â gets compressed the higher property values rise. In some cases, this cash-on-cash return can be squeezed from a double-digit return to a low single-digit return. Add to this the uncertain factors, like inflation and unemployment, higher taxes, and a softening rental market, combined with city- and government-imposed rent-control and eviction moratoriums, and more landlords are coming to the conclusion that now might be potentially a good time to sell their investment real estate.
Enter the Delaware Statutory Trust and Passive Real Estate Investing
So why donât rental owners simply take their equity positions and cash out? The simple answer because of the tax liabilities â including federal capital gains (15%-20%), state capital gains (0%-13.3% depending on the state), depreciation recapture tax (25%) and possibly the Medicare surtax (3.8%) â will now be due upon sale. These associated taxes could potentially take up to 40% of the assetâs sale price out of the sellerâs proceeds.
In addition, while it is true that a 1031 exchange would allow them to defer their taxes, it is also true that they would most likely be limited to exchanging into another multifamily building or a single-tenant NNN building. Whatâs the problem with these assets? Nothing, except investing in another multifamily building doesnât offer the owner much diversification, and because the proverbial âThree Tâsâ of tenants, toilets and trash will still be involved, there will always be headaches and management expenses involved. A single-tenant net-lease property relies heavily on the quality of that sole tenant, and if that tenant fails, the investorâs income is likely to be reduced or eliminated (during COVID-19 there were a number of NNN tenants who went bankrupt or sought rental relief from their landlords). Also, triple net lease properties can be hard to locate, and conducting proper due diligence can be difficult to accomplish within the time frame of 1031 exchange.
Thatâs why many landlords are utilizing Delaware Statutory Trust (DST) 1031 exchanges to exit the active management role of owning rental real estate. Delaware Statutory Trusts are a form of fractional ownership that can be used to make passive investments in real estate and achieve monthly income potential via ACH direct deposit and diversification across multiple assets. Also, because DSTs are eligible for 1031 exchanges, investors can sell their investment property and reinvest the proceeds into one or more DST investments while deferring capital gains and other taxes.
Another reason DST investments are popular among real estate investors is because many types of diverse real estate assets can be owned in a DST, including industrial, multifamily, self-storage, medical and retail properties. Also, it is not uncommon to find properties within a DST investment that include institutional-quality assets like those owned by large investment firms, such as a 450-unit Class A multifamily apartment community or a 100,000-square-foot industrial distribution facility leased to a Fortune 500 logistics and shipping company.
In addition, Delaware Statutory Trust 1031 exchanges offer real estate investors the following specific potential benefits as well:
- The ability to close their 1031 exchange within typically three to five days.
- The opportunity to eliminate the hassles of tenants, toilets, and trash (i.e.. the Three Tâs).
- The potential to receive regular monthly distributions via ACH direct deposits/
- The ability to access institutional-grade real estate assets.
- The potential advantages associated with greater portfolio diversification by geography, tenants, and asset class.*
The Bottom Line
Investment properties have gone through significant changes over recent years, and in many cases, owners have been faced with challenges they have never seen before, including the COVID-19 pandemic, and ensuing eviction moratoriums. For qualified property owners who are motivated to sell soon and are facing capital gains, reinvesting the proceeds in qualifying properties, including DSTs, will allow them to not only defer capital gains taxes but also become part of a diversification* strategy with the potential for appreciation and monthly income.
*Diversification does not guarantee returns and does not protect against loss.
This material does not constitute an offer to sell nor a solicitation of an offer to buy any security. Such offers can be made only by the confidential Private Placement Memorandum (the âMemorandumâ). Please read the entire Memorandum paying special attention to the risk section prior investing. IRC Section 1031, IRC Section 1033 and IRC Section 721 are complex tax codes therefore you should consult your tax or legal professional for details regarding your situation. There are material risks associated with investing in real estate securities, including illiquidity, vacancies, general market conditions and competition, lack of operating history, interest rate risks, general risks of owning/operating commercial and multifamily properties, financing risks, potential adverse tax consequences, general economic risks, development risks and long hold periods. There is a risk of loss of the entire investment principal. Past performance is not a guarantee of future results. Potential cash flow, potential returns and potential appreciation are not guaranteed.
Nothing contained on this website constitutes tax, legal, insurance or investment advice, nor does it constitute a solicitation or an offer to buy or sell any security or other financial instrument. Securities offered through FNEX Capital, member FINRA.
- SEE MORE Got Cash on Hand? How to Protect It from Lawsuits
What Is Cash Management?
Cash management refers to the day-to-day process of gathering and managing oneâs cash flow. In business, cash management is typically handled by an individual or the team running the company in order to optimize financial performance. Effective cash management can also be important for individuals when they are setting personal budgets; the same principles can […]
The post What Is Cash Management? appeared first on SoFi.
The Best Credit Builder Loans for 2022
Opening a Business Bank Account: How Business Bank Accounts Work
Business bank accounts can help owners keep professional transactions separate from personal banking and aid in their business cash management. These accounts often come with special conditions and requirements, and they may have various fees. Here, weâll take a closer look at these accounts, their pros and cons, and what it takes to open one. […]
The post Opening a Business Bank Account: How Business Bank Accounts Work appeared first on SoFi.
Decorators Share the Best Ways to Refresh Your Home for Free
This was originally published on The Penny Hoarder, which helps millions of readers worldwide earn and save money by sharing unique job opportunities, personal stories, freebies and more. The Inc. 5000 ranked The Penny Hoarder as the fastest-growing private media company in the U.S. in 2017.
Are We Near the Peak of the Current Housing Cycle?
They say real estate is cyclical, much like the stock market and the wider economy. It ebbs and flows, goes up and down, experiences booms and busts, can make us feel rich one day and poor the next. It doesnât follow a straight line up or down over time â instead, it can be rather… Read More »Are We Near the Peak of the Current Housing Cycle?
The post Are We Near the Peak of the Current Housing Cycle? appeared first on The Truth About Mortgage.
When to Change Tax Withholdings â and How to Do It
Wondering when you need to change your tax withholdings â and how to actually do so? We break it all down quicker than you can say âW-4.â
This was originally published on The Penny Hoarder, which helps millions of readers worldwide earn and save money by sharing unique job opportunities, personal stories, freebies and more. The Inc. 5000 ranked The Penny Hoarder as the fastest-growing private media company in the U.S. in 2017.
When Market Realities Bite, Stay Flexible and Adapt
Finding the perfect home is like finding the perfect mate. Everyone’s wrong, until they’re right. Sometimes it seems like the more homes you see, the more discouraged you become. You may be unsuccessful because of all-cash offers or bids that are thousands of dollars over the asking price. Take a deep breath. It may be […]
The post When Market Realities Bite, Stay Flexible and Adapt appeared first on Home Buyers Guide.