financial planner

1031 Exchange Tips for Financial Planners

Financial Planner

Many financial planners have clients who may be interested in 1031 exchanges. In this article, we are going to offer up a few 1031 exchange tips for financial planners advising their clients on section 1031.

Keep Your Client’s Money Working for Them

The greatest thing about 1031 exchanges is that they let you defer capital gains taxes and keep your money working for you over time in a continued investment.

Work with a Qualified Intermediary

Working with a qualified intermediary is the best way to ensure the success of a 1031 exchange. A qualified intermediary knows the 1031 exchange process inside and out and can advise you (and your client) on the best course of action.

The More Prep Time, The Better!

If you have a client who is interested in pursuing a 1031 exchange of real estate, encourage them to start the process early. A little prep work goes a long way when it comes to 1031 exchanges. It’s a good idea to have at least an idea of what replacement property you want to exchange into before beginning the process. There is also paperwork that needs to be finalized for the closing table so it’s best to give as much lead time as possible.

Minnesota Qualified Intermediaries

CPEC1031 has been providing 1031 exchange services to clients throughout Minnesota and the United States for over two decades. We work with title closers, realtors, real estate attorneys, financial planners, and more! Our intermediaries can help you through the entire 1031 exchange process from start to finish, ensuring that you understand what’s happening every step of the way. Contact us today at our downtown Minneapolis offices or at one of our satellite offices located around the country!

  • Start Your 1031 Exchange: If you have questions about 1031 exchanges, feel free to call me at 612-643-1031.

Defer the tax. Maximize your gain.

© 2020 Copyright Jeffrey R. Peterson All Rights Reserved

Tips for Finding 1031 Replacement Property

Finding 1031 Replacement Property

If you're doing a 1031 exchange you may find that the 45-day identification period goes by way too fast. So today we're going to talk about some tips for locating or finding the 1031 replacement properties to identify during those first 45 days.

Other Trusted Advisors

If you’re a real estate investor you may not have the biggest window on the world of all of the potential replacement properties that may be available to satisfy your exchange. So other trusted advisors can be brought in to widen your window of potential replacement properties.

Financial Planner

A very good resource to talk to is a financial planner that specializes in products that satisfy 1031. These are typically either Delaware Statutory Trusts or tenancy-in-common investments. These are syndicated securities that can only be marketed to accredited investors.

Commercial Real Estate Broker

Another important resource that can widen your window of potential properties is a commercial real estate broker that has the designation CCIM or SIOR. These are real estate agents that have specialized experience in commercial real estate and can offer up possibilities you may not have been aware of.

The most important thing is to start the process early. Get out there looking even before you’ve sold your relinquished property to get a feel for what you may want to designate, understanding that the 45 day identification period goes by way too fast.

  • Start Your 1031 Exchange: If you have questions about finding 1031 replacement property, feel free to call me at 612-643-1031.

Defer the tax. Maximize your gain.

© 2017 Copyright Jeffrey R. Peterson All Rights Reserved

How a Qualified Intermediary can Help Financial Planners Collect Fees in a 1031 Exchange

Financial Planning Fees in a 1031 Exchange

Many financial planners don't want to collect a commission for their client’s purchase of a tenant-in-common or Delaware Statutory Trust property, but a fee instead. The 1031 qualified intermediary can be helpful in facilitating the payment of typical and customary transactional expenses during a 1031 exchange, which could include your fee for consulting and advising your client on the purchase of the property.

How a Qualified Intermediary Can Help

To accomplish this, you simply need to send to the intermediary your fee agreement that says that you're entitled to $50,000 (for example) for advising your client on the purchase of this asset, and the client's signature on that agreement.

Then what the qualified intermediary can do is prepare a disbursement request to authorize the transfer of the $50,000 transactional expense to the financial advisor, which is typically wired in conjunction with the other wire for the purchase of the replacement property interest.

So at the time of the closing, the intermediary sends one wire to the financial planner to pay them for their fees in conducting and advising the client and the other wire goes to the DST sponsor to pay for the property.

Customary Expenses

Typical and customary expenses can be paid for by the intermediary and if it's authorized in writing we have no problem whatsoever in facilitating the payment of commissions and flat advisory fees for your valuable service in helping the client find and close on an appropriate fractional interest in a property.

  • Start Your Exchange: If you have questions about collecting advisory fees in a 1031 transaction, feel free to call me at 612-643-1031.

Defer the tax. Maximize your gain.

 

© 2017 Copyright Jeffrey R. Peterson All Rights Reserved

What Financial Planners Need to Know About 1031 Exchanges

financial planners and 1031 exchanges

Most taxpayers like to involve their financial planners when doing a 1031 exchange. While it's a good idea to do this, many financial planners are not experts at executing 1031 exchanges. Here are a few things that financial planners need to know about 1031 exchanges.

Delaware Statutory Trusts

Many financial planners sell securitized investments set up as Delaware Statutory Trusts. These trusts have properties in them and they are subject to preexisting institutional (typically non-recourse) debt. So every owner that goes into that trust will put in their equity but will also be allocated a corresponding amount of that institutional debt.

When you’re sizing up how much replacement property your client needs to satisfy their 1031 you need to look at the specifics of each of those Delaware Statutory Trusts and make sure that the amount of their Value, Equity and Debt in the replacement property is sufficient.

A 1031 Example

Let’s say we have a client who sold a property for $100,000 but had an $80,000 mortgage against their old relinquished property. They need to buy a replacement property of roughly equal or greater value and equity. They also need to offset their debt relief of $80,000. If you put them into a replacement property that’s a Delaware Statutory Trust that has a lower ratio of leverage such as a loan to value of 50/50, then their $20,000 of net proceeds combined with 50% debt to equity won’t qualify as enough replacement property. You either need to find another trust to put them into, or they can fix the problem by putting more cash in (which would in turn increase their proportionate amount of dent allocated to their purchase).

The moral of the story is to put the relinquished property transaction under the magnifying glass. Analyze the equity and debt of your client, and make sure the size, value, and debt components of the new replacement property cover that of the relinquished property.

For more information on this topic, see our blog on the Napkin Test.

  • Start Your Exchange: If you have questions about what financial planners need to know about 1031 exchanges, feel free to call me at 612-643-1031.

Defer the tax. Maximize your gain.

 

© 2016 Copyright Jeffrey R. Peterson All Rights Reserved

6 Professionals you Need on your 1031 Exchange Team

When you are doing a 1031 Exchange, you do not want to cut corners on the professional advisers that you need to complete your exchange. You want to have your team assembled, and you want to have the full complement of professional services available. That way, if a problem comes up, you can get through it. Here are a few benefits of having a 1031 team assembled before you begin your exchange.

#1 Your 1031 Exchange Qualified Intermediary Acts as an Insulator

First and foremost, when you are doing a delayed 1031 Exchange, you need to have a Qualified Intermediary. The Qualified Intermediary will act as an insulator - someone who is going to hold the proceeds so that you don’t have actual or constructive receipt of the monies. In addition, the Qualified Intermediary can prepare:

  • The exchange agreement

  • The assignment agreement

  • The required written notices to the parties

They can interact and make sure that the paperwork which documents the exchange is properly set up.

#2 Your Title Company or Law Firm Acts as Settlement Agent

In addition to a Qualified Intermediary, you need to have a settlement agent. Typically, in the real estate realm, closings are conducted by either a title company or a law firm. Whichever one you have, you want to use a sophisticated operation that is familiar with commercial real estate transactions - more precisely, 1031 Exchanges. Because the learning curve can be rather steep, you don’t want to have an outfit that doesn’t do what you need. You want someone who is experienced with 1031 Exchanges, so they will set up your transaction and disburse the monies correctly.

# 3 Your Real Estate Agent is Doing More than Collecting a Big Commission

Also, if you are doing a real estate exchange, you want to have the best and the most experienced commercial real estate agent broker involved. People in the process need to be familiar and comfortable with 1031 Exchanges. Many of the things that they do behind the scenes can make the process much easier for you. For example, a real estate agent should put a cooperation clause in the listing agreement and in the purchase agreement that says that the parties understand that the taxpayer is doing an exchange and everyone agrees to cooperate with that. If you don’t have an experienced real estate agent, you may not finish all of those things that need to be done behind the scenes.

#4 Your CPA Reports the Exchange on IRS Form 8824

Having a CPA involved in the transaction can be very helpful. Many people don’t think to call their CPA until the exchange is over. However, that is tough on the CPA because then they have to forensically figure out what was done, and dissect the transaction in the rear view mirror.

Rather than do that, you will want to involve the CPA early in a consultation, and then keep them posted as you progress through the process. That way, when it comes time to report the exchange, they are familiar with the transaction. They will know the date on which you identified your replacement property because you communicated with them throughout the process. Therefore, your CPA will be able to report the transaction correctly.  Also, if needed your CPA can file an extension of your federal tax deadline, to allow you to maximize all of your 180 days in your exchange period (a problem that can occur if you start your exchange late in the year and have to file on April 15th of the next year).

#5 Your Tax Attorney Is On Call To Give You Advice And Legal Opinions

Another critical person to have on your team, or at least on your bench, is a tax attorney. A tax attorney can do the research, and more importantly, give you an opinion on questions that you might have during the 1031 process. Some of the questions might be as follows:

  • Can we do this exchange?

  • Is this appropriate?

  • What are the parameters?

  • Where is the gray line turning into black?

  • Is this a related party transaction?

  • Will this property qualified as business or investment property?

  • How do we extract a partner out before closing?

The tax attorney is a critical player, and many people overlook this because they think that this is so cut and dried. However, as with most things in life, and especially in the area of tax law, not everything is cut and dried. Therefore, you need a tax attorney on your team from the outset.

#6 Your Financial Planner Makes Sure Your Assets Match Your Goals

The last person that you want to have on your team, and the person that you don’t often think about, is a financial planner. This person will be an adviser who can make certain that the properties that you are purchasing as a replacement are appropriate for your overall portfolio of investments. If you are 99% in real estate and don’t have any exposures to stocks, bonds, gold or other investments, perhaps you need to rethink this and do a partial 1031 Exchange. Or, you might find a way to finance your real estate holdings to expand and diversify into other areas. So, a financial planner can be a critical part of making certain that the replacement properties that you buy are appropriate with your overall goals, your adversity to risk, and the length of time that you think you will hold these properties.

  • Start Your Exchange: If you have questions about how these professionals can help you through your 1031 exchange, feel free to call me at 612-643-1031.

Defer the tax. Maximize your gain.

 

© 2017 Copyright Jeffrey R. Peterson All Rights Reserved