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TICs Sold in Colorado are Securities
Colorado
Securities Commissioner, Fred Joseph has determined that TIC interests sold in the
state of Colorado by Mile High Capital and Replacement
Property Solutions are considered securities rather
than real estate. Replacement Property Solutions
was the qualified intermediary arm of Mile High Capital,
a real estate investment firm. Both companies
have been closed by the State and their principals
indicted for securities fraud.
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by
Author Gary Gorman
Founding Partner,
1031 Exchange Experts, LLC |
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A TIC (Tenant-In-Common) interest is
a small ownership slice of a large property. In
2002 the IRS ruled that TIC interests qualify for 1031
exchanges. This means an investor can sell a
piece of investment property and buy a partial interest
in a large property, such as an office building or
an apartment complex. Prior to the IRS ruling,
there was confusion as to whether TICs were treated
as real estate, or as partnership interests (which
are not allowed as 1031 exchange replacement property).
TIC interests are one of the fastest
growing segments of real estate markets as baby boomers
discover that they are a way to lock in cash flow,
avoid management hassles, and still enjoy future appreciation
on a property they would never be able to purchase
on their own. For example: Fred and Sue sell
their purple duplex, do a 1031 exchange, and buy a
slice of a multimillion dollar office building. They
share in the cash flow of the office building and the
potential for appreciation, but they no longer have
to manage the property.
One of the ongoing controversies about
TICs is the question of whether they are considered
real estate or a security. Don’t misunderstand – the
IRS has ruled that, if structured correctly, they qualify
as real estate for purposes of replacement property
for a 1031 exchange. But the question is “what
license do you need to sell them – a real estate
license or a security license?”
Obviously real estate brokers feel
that what is being sold is real estate, which entitles
them to a real estate commission (or a referral fee)
if one of their clients buys a TIC share as replacement
property. Several large and well known TIC sponsors
have taken this approach and pay referral fees under
the assumption that the product being sold is real
estate.
Securities and investment advisors
feel, however, that TICs fall under the SEC definition
of a security and require a securities license before
you can receive any type of fee from their sale. A
recent NASD directive, as well as comments from SEC
officials, indicate that they agree.
Apparently the Colorado Securities
Commissioner also agrees. The February 28, 2006
press release issued by the Colorado Division of Securities
announcing the filing of complaints and restraining
orders in connection with the Mile High mess, contains
the statement that “The Commissioner alleged
that the TIC interests offered and sold by defendants
are ‘securities’ as defined by the Act.”
While it is not clear whether the Commissioner
feels that any TIC offered for sale in the state is
subject to state securities law, or just the ones that
were offered by Mile High and Replacement Property
Solutions, the press release clearly tips the scales
towards TICs being defined as a security, at least
in Colorado. And I doubt that Colorado’s
Security Commissioner is the only state commissioner
that feels this way.
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