Combine Reverse and Delayed Exchanges for a 360-day exchange timeline - Safe harbor guidance - by Lynne Bagby

March 23, 2018 - Spotlights
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Sometimes a New England investment property owner may want to sell an investment property and buy another investment property, but the replacement property they seek to purchase is worth less than the property they are selling. Further, the investor may have located and be ready to close on the desired investment property purchase but not yet be ready to close or even under contract on the relinquished property being sold. By combining a reverse and a delayed exchange, the investor may have as much as 360 days to complete all desired transactions and still have the potential to achieve 100% tax deferral.

For example, suppose a property owner is under contract to sell an office building in Boston for $300 million on September 30, 2018. Such building owner is also under contract to purchase a Boston hotel for $200 million on April 30, 2018. Properly structured, the building owner could take full advantage of its $300 million sale by acquiring the hotel in a parking arrangement utilizing a qualified intermediary as an Exchange Accommodation Titleholder (EAT) and entering into an Exchange Accommodation Agreement with the EAT prior to closing on the purchase of the hotel. Then, under Revenue Procedure 2000-37, this property owner has an additional 180 calendar days from the date the hotel is parked with the EAT to sell the office building which it does, thereby deferring the gain on $200 million of its $300 million sale. The building owner then has the ability to purchase additional replacement property for the $100 million remaining balance in its 1031 exchange account in a standard delayed exchange within a consecutive 180 calendar days from the date of sale of the office building. 

Tax deferred exchanges have been part of the U.S. Tax Code since 1921. Since that time, the government has approved certain methods to structure exchange transactions that are so called “safe harbors.” For example, in 1991 the U.S. Treasury issued final regulations that provided important guidance on the structure of delayed exchanges including the 45 day identification period and 180 day exchange period timelines and certain other procedural requirements necessary to complete a tax deferred exchange safely. On September 15, 2000, the Internal Revenue Service released Revenue Procedure 2000-37 that provided guidelines for structuring reverse exchanges (a transaction in which replacement property is acquired by an accommodating party before the sale of the relinquished property and held as replacement property to complete the exchange). A replacement property may be acquired and held (sometimes called “parked”) by the accommodating party for up to 180 calendar days. The IRS provided guidance (See ILM 200836024) approving the combination of a reverse parking arrangement exchange and a forward delayed exchange resulting in two sequential 180 day exchange periods associated with one integrated exchange transaction. 

Since the accommodating party, the EAT, in a reverse exchange can only hold the replacement property for 180 days, the relinquished property must generally be sold by the taxpayer within that 180 day time period. If the parked replacement property is the only property that is desired by the taxpayer to complete the exchange, then the exchange is complete upon the EAT’s transfer of the replacement property to the exchanger. But what if the parked replacement property is just one of several replacement properties desired by the taxpayer? In that event, the standard delayed exchange that commences with the sale of the relinquished property may be used to acquire other replacement properties over the second 180 day exchange period commencing with the sale of the relinquished property. In this fashion, the exchange transaction spans two exchange periods starting with the accommodator’s acquisition of the parked property and ending on the exchanger’s acquisition of the last replacement property, potentially spanning 360 calendar days. 

Lynne Bagby, CES, is the Northeast division manager for Asset Preservation, Inc., Boston, Mass.

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