OThe big rage
in real estate these days are TIC interests. TIC stands for "tenant-in-common,"
which is the legal title that these types of interests hold title to
property. TIC interests are program investments similar to the partnership
tax shelters of the 1970s and '80s, in that they pull together a group
of investors to purchase one large property.
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by
Author Gary Gorman
Founding Partner,
The 1031 Exchange Experts |
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There are two major
reasons for this great surge in these type of investments: the first
is that the IRS approved TICs as suitable replacement properties for
1031 exchanges in 2002. Prior to that date it was uncertain whether
a TIC interest could be purchased as the replacement for a 1031 exchange
because their structure so closely resembles a partnership. As a result
investors were wary of them. Today, however, approximately 70% of the
TIC interests are purchased by such investors.
The second reason
for their popularity is their desirability to aging baby boomers. Because
a TIC interest lets them own a piece of a property large enough for
a professional management team to care for, the busy investors is relieved
of that chore. It also allows them to invest in large multi-million
dollar properties that would otherwise be beyond their means. Approximately
30% of the TIC interests are currently purchased by investors as an
alternative to other types of real estate investments such as Real Estate
Investment Trusts (or "REITS"), which are similar to mutual funds, but
only own real estate.
Because the TIC
industry is so new, it still has a number of rough edges that you need
to watch out for. The most important thing to watch for is the size
of the sponsor. Approximately 10% of the sponsors (people or companies
that put together a TIC offering) are large companies that have multiple
properties available for purchase at any one time. The other 90% are
small sponsors that may only package one property at a time, and many
of them may only ever sponsor one property.
The reason that
size is so important is that you need to have an exit strategy for your
TIC investment. While most of the projects have a stated investment
timeframe of, say five years, there is no guarantee that the project
will be sold at that time because market forces dictate such sales and
you have no way to predict when the market will be right for the sale.
Because your own
situation may require that you get out of the investment before the
date the property is sold, finding someone to buy your interest may
be very difficult. This is where dealing with a large sponsor is important
large sponsors have good investor relations programs, because they want
you to reinvest with them when your building is sold. And because of
their size, they always have a very large pool of potential, and usually
willing, investors. It is to their advantage to line you up with another
investor that will buy your interest.
Lastly, because
of their size, these sponsors have excellent "due diligence" departments
that thoroughly analyze each property they sponsor -- they can afford
to avoid a law suit.
You can find these
sponsors on the internet by searching for "TIC" or for "Tenant In Common."
Your search results will make it pretty obvious who the big players
are.
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