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January, 2010 - Vol. 18 No. 1
Exit Strategies for Real Estate
Investors, Part 5
Case
Karl Hendricks was a man with the golden
touch. Throughout his life, it seemed
every investment idea that he touched
turned to gold. By far, Karl was most
successful with real estate investments.
It was definitely his passion.
Amazingly, Karl continued to buy and
sell real estate at the age of 85. For
instance, about three months ago, Karl
discovered a great investment property.
It was a "fixer-upper" commercial
building in a great area. While other
nearby buildings sold for over $2
million, the seller needed to sell
quickly and was asking just $1 million.
The condition of the building turned
many buyers away. It was being sold
"as-is." But Karl was not deterred. He
could see great potential with the
building and knew it would not take much
to get it to market condition.
Therefore, Karl swooped in, bought the
building for $1 million and instantly
hired contractors to refurbish the
place.
After three months of hard work
refurbishing the building, the place
looked like new! In the end, Karl
invested $250,000 in the building
bringing his total investment in the
property to $1.25 million. One month
after the completion of the work, Karl
was contacted informally by a company
that expressed an interest in the
building - a $2 million interest! This
was no surprise to Karl. He knew that
the building was another great buy.
After Karl learned about the benefits of
a FLIP CRUT, he eagerly wanted to move
forward. (See Parts 1 and 2 for a full
discussion of this decision.) It looked
like the perfect solution.
Question
However, there was still one issue
unresolved. There was a $100,000 debt on
the property that Karl incurred at the
time of purchase. The debt was a major
obstacle to the successful completion of
the FLIP CRUT plan. What solutions are
available to remove the debt?
Solution
Karl has at least
five solutions to the debt and FLIP CRUT
problem.
- Payoff - If possible, Karl may
have the resources to pay the debt
and then transfer the real estate to
the FLIP CRUT.
- Release - If there is a parcel
of land that may be divided under
zoning rules or there are multiple
deeds to the parcel, it may be
possible to obtain a release on some
of the property, leaving the debt on
the balance. The released property
may then be transferred to the FLIP
CRUT.
- Bridge Loan - Karl may borrow
funds on other property, pay the
debt on the existing property and
transfer an undivided interest into
the trust. When the property is
sold, the undivided portion retained
by Karl is used to pay the bridge
loan.
- Charity Purchase - The
charitable organization may be
willing to purchase part of the real
property from Karl. Following this
purchase, Karl has funds to pay off
the debt and transfer the balance of
the real property into the trust.
- Personal Guarantee - While the
Service has not approved this
method, some counsel have
transferred an undivided percentage
of encumbered property into a CRT.
When the property is sold, the
balance of the asset is used to pay
the debt. The donor gives a personal
guarantee that the trust will not be
required to pay debt. So long as the
transaction works as contemplated,
the theory is that the issue is moot
after the sale and debt repayment.
This is an aggressive strategy not
without risk.
Donors generally should proceed through
these five potential steps in order. The
technical and practical challenges
increase with the latter methods. Given
his choices, Karl quickly elects option
1 - payoff the debt. With the simple
removal of the $100,000 debt, the UBIT
and grantor trust status issues
disappear. Furthermore, the future sale
of the real estate will return the
$100,000 "pay off amount" back to Karl.
Karl is happy once again knowing that
his FLIP CRUT plan is back on track.
GiftLaw editor: A. Charles Schultz.
http://www.giftlaw.com.
The GiftLaw web site and Weekly E-mail Service are public services from
Crescendo Software.
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