Given the uncertainties flowing from the elections and a lame-duck Congress getting set to play chicken with the “fiscal cliff,” is it any surprise that growing numbers of real estate investors are taking a new look at Section 1031 tax-deferred exchanges?
Talk to Scott Saunders, senior vice president of Asset Preservation Inc., a national 1031 subsidiary of Stewart Information Services, and he’ll tell you it comes as no surprise.
“We’ve had a significant increase in interest in exchanges” recently — 30 to 40 percent higher volume year over year, he told me in an interview. Part of the reason, he said, is rising real estate investor concerns about much higher tax bills ahead, no matter who wins the elections.
Or listen to Kevin M. Levine, executive vice president of Peak 1031 Exchange in Woodland Hills, Calif.: “We’ve seen a tremendous spike in 1031 transactions (in light of) election year uncertainty over the future of capital gains taxes. The political brinksmanship in Washington over extending or ending Bush-era tax cuts has left investors in the lurch. …”
What sort of brinksmanship and at what cost? Well, start with the fact that after Dec. 31, if the lame-duck Congress does not act with uncharacteristic bipartisanship and speed, capital gains taxes will jump to 20 percent on Jan. 1, up from the current 15 percent. The highest marginal tax rate for ordinary income will also increase, from the current 35 percent to 39.6 percent.
Then there’s the 3.8 percent Obamacare surtax on investment income scheduled to kick in for high earners ($200,000 adjusted gross income for single filers, $250,000 for married joint filers) on Jan. 1. Since many real estate investors and a sizable number of homeowners fall into this income category, a lot of people will be looking at capital gains taxes of 23.8 percent next year — a 58.6 percent jump over what they’re paying today.
For residential and commercial real estate investors, says Greg Rosica, an attorney and tax partner specializing in personal financial services and tax consulting with national accounting firm Ernst and Young, Section 1031 now “is worth doing the calculation: Do I rush to sell property in the closing days of 2012 and pay a 15 percent capital gains rate or do I begin planning to defer taxes with a 1031 exchange in 2013, assuming the worst?”
Section 1031 has been part of the federal tax code for decades. It allows the seller of an investment or business property to postpone recognition of gain provided the seller acquires another, “like-kind” property within the timing requirements spelled out in the law.
By eliminating capital gains taxes from the transaction proceeds, property sellers increase their purchasing power. With the money that would otherwise have gone to the IRS, they have more to reinvest in a bigger, perhaps higher-income-earning replacement property.
Consider this hypothetical case example prepared by First American Exchange Co., a subsidiary of First American Title Insurance Co.: Say you purchased a rental property for $100,000 many years ago, which now has a mortgage balance of $50,000. You’ve made no capital improvements to the property in the meantime, but have taken $50,000 in depreciation deductions.
Now you want to sell the building for $200,000. If you simply sell it and choose to pay capital gains at current rates, you’d owe $12,500 in depreciation recapture (which is taxed at 25 percent), $15,000 in capital gains taxes (at 15 percent), plus whatever tax your state levies on capital gains. For the purposes of this example, the latter rate is 5 percent ($5,000), but it can go much higher in states such as California. So simply selling conventionally under today’s tax rates, you’d owe $32,500. After paying off the mortgage balance, you’d have net proceeds of $117,500 to invest somewhere.
If you instead structured the transaction as a tax-deferred 1031 exchange, you’d pay zero in federal or state taxes, and have $150,000 in cash available to acquire a bigger and better new income property, whether another residential building, commercial or retail real estate — the potential range of choices is vast under the law.
Say you were able to obtain mortgage financing of 75 percent on the replacement property — you could use your $150,000 cash in hand to make the down payment on a $600,000 building. Had you gone the conventional tax route, your $117,500 in proceeds would have limited you to acquiring real estate worth just $470,000.
Now fill in next year’s potential rates: 20 percent capital gains, 3.8 percent health care surtax. The costs of a standard sale go up dramatically, and the cash you have to acquire bigger and better real estate declines dramatically.
Sure there are a few downsides to 1031 — it is, after all, a deferral of taxation not a forgiveness, and at some point down the line you or your estate will probably have to reckon with the IRS and pay taxes at rates that are currently unknowable. Similarly, when you do a 1031 exchange, you move your tax basis to the replacement property and that cuts your depreciation deductions.
But bottom line, many real estate investors are beginning to “do the calculation,” as Greg Rosica puts it, and are finding that 1031 is looking better and better.
Daily Archives: November 7, 2012
Touch me, feel me? | Cross River NY Real Estate
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You obsess on product, tweaking it to perfection.
You slave over your service, honing it to deliver a razor-sharp slice of delight.
You market your goods, crafting the most inviting offer.
You think you’ve nailed the customer experience.
Not so fast, Timmy.
No nutritional value
Jeff Smisek, United Airlines’ CEO, spoke at me from the screen. He labored on about the improvements his airline is undertaking just for me.
It was all talk.
Gate 16 had one electrical outlet — a droplet for the dozens of thirsty travelers in need of juice. Boarding was painfully slow. The cabin reeked of locker room sweat and mildew.
The onboard service ran out of real food by the time they reached my row. I was offered Pringles. I passed. They had the same nutritional value as the scuzz caked onto my seat.
The week prior I was on a Virgin flight. It was heaven. This week, I was in hell.
Virgin created heaven by attending to the simple things. Things they know turn us on. Things attainable by United — or any airline — if they reached high enough.
Brand vibes
Ever walk into a place and it just feels wrong? Think Rite Aid. Radio Shack. Payless Shoes. Toys R Us. Denny’s.
Each of these establishments offers the things you’ve entered to acquire. Yet something about the vibe is off. The way things are laid out or designed or the aura the store projects just doesn’t play to your sensibilities. Or to your desire to feel special as their customer.
Instead, you feel like a number. Part of a faceless herd.
Ever go somewhere you never wanted to leave? We all have. These are the places that attend to those little things that make us feel special. The details add up.
For example:
Whole Foods. You shop for more than food at this grocery store. You go to rediscover sustenance. Meet new brands. Local purveyors. Secure the finest ingredients. You leave with items that were never on your list.
Car2Go. It’s transportation, environmental commitment and personal convenience. Avis tried harder for 66 years. Car2Go is trying a lot harder. And they’re winning loyal fans wherever they go. They’ve simplified process and price and made it easy to be environmentally responsible. That feels good.
Four Seasons. Enter the front door. Serenity. Their service bar is high. And it’s consistent. You expect to feel good during your stay, and you leave happy.
Virgin. Their presence is an oasis in the middle of a harsh airport desert. Calm. Convenient. Designed for modern life. People wait at their gates to pass the time until their United flights board. Soaking up the good vibe.
We respond to the simple things these brands do. Time and time again.
Love your customer
Everyone wants unabashed loyalty from their customers. To get that, you’ve got love them in lots of little ways.
Some examples come to mind immediately:
Voice mail. You have an ambiguous, sterile or long message with endless menu options. Fix that. People call you because they want to speak to a person and get information. Make it easy. Personable. And to the point. No one wants to call a menu system so remove it if you can. A friendly, helpful voice that greets people every time and provides them the information or the direct line they need right away is a small thing that goes a long way to getting them to call you again.
Website. Busy websites stress visitors. The more choices, options, images and elements you place on a page, the more likely it is users will bounce or get frustrated trying to find the thing they came to the site for. I know about the pressure you’re under to place everything on the home page. Resist it. The simpler, cleaner and more user-focused the site its, the more of a calm, engaging and clear vibe it gives off. You can scream at the user, or whisper gently. Choose wisely.
Office space. Brokers: Spend a few grand sprucing up your office. Pop a coat of fresh color on the wall. Here’s another idea: Design some of your retail space like rooms in a home. A den. A Finished basement. A bedroom. A man cave. This could be a cool, feel-good environment for agents to meet with clients. Especially if these rooms are staged beautifully. Maybe a local furniture store or decorator could curate and design in exchange for free advertising. Make them want to come for a visit.
Aftercare. None of us do enough to service people post-sale. Asking customers for referrals or sending them holiday cards is OK. That’s touching them. But in a creepy sort of way. People yearn for something more meaningful than a touch. They yearn for value. Relevance. Starbucks sends me a coupon for a free drink on my birthday. That matters more to me than a Hallmark card. Conjure up something more meaningful than a turn your clock back this Sunday reminder. There are a million ideas here — too many for me to list.
Fun. Enjoyment. Happiness.
At Ikea, a color-coded path eases the ordeal of navigating thousands of products. Creatively orienting their goods inspires shoppers. Ikea makes shopping fun, which makes their customers feel good in the process. It’s the simple, singular difference between them and every other furniture manufacturer.
You will return.
Fun baked into functionality. Enjoyment at the beginning of the experience. Happiness when it concludes.
Here’s the thing to consider: The average customer in real estate doesn’t experience fun during the process. It’s clear why. Real estate is stressful. But so is flying and buying furniture — and Virgin and Ikea have taken aim right at that stress, resulting in amazing customer experiences.
While you ultimately can’t extract all the stress from the real estate transaction, you can address the simple things around it that determine how that stress is felt.
You feel me?
Q3 home prices show strongest growth since 2006 | South Salem NY Real Estate
Home prices and home sales both showed strong annual growth during the third quarter, according to the latest report by the National Association of Realtors.
The national median existing single-family home price jumped 7.6 percent from a year ago, to $186,100 — the strongest year-over-year increase for any quarter since first-quarter 2006, when prices were up 9.4 percent from the previous year.
Sales of existing homes rose 10.3 percent during the third quarter, to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 4.68 million, up from 4.25 million a year ago.
Median prices posted annual gains in 120 of 149 metros tracked, up from 110 metros showing gains in the second quarter of 2012 and 39 metros with price appreciation during the third quarter of 2011.
Inventory of existing homes for sale was down 20 percent from a year ago, to 2.32 million. The combination of rising prices and tight inventory on a quarterly basis indicate that the housing recovery is settling in, said Lawrence Yun, NAR’s chief economist, in a statement.
“We expect fairly normal appreciation patterns in 2013, but there is a risk of price acceleration if builders are unable to meet the needs of our growing population and household formation,” Yun said.
While NAR attributed some of the price gain to a reduction in the percentage of distressed home sales — only 23 percent of existing homes sold in second-quarter 2012, down 30 percent from a year previous — the trade group stated that “higher prices significantly reflect a market recovery.”
Housing affordability numbers also fared well for the housing market. With a third-quarter national median family income of $61,700, NAR calculated that with a 5 percent down payment, a household would need only $40,900 to afford a home at the third-quarter national median price, assuming a 4 percent mortgage interest rate and 25 percent of gross income devoted to mortgage principal and interest. That home affordability income threshold drops as the down payment percentage rises.
The proportion of first-time buyers didn’t change in the third quarter from last year, but held steady at 32 percent, nearly twice the 17 percent share of investors who purchased homes in the quarter.
The share of all-cash buyers was down on a yearly basis in the third quarter to 27 percent from 29 percent in third quarter 2011.
“The modest decline in first-time buyers and investors shows the impact of limited inventory in the lower price ranges from a shrinking share of distressed homes, which are popular with both groups,” Yun said.
Existing-home sales, third quarter 2012
Seasonally adjusted annual rate 4.68 million % change from third quarter 2011 +10.3% % change from second quarter 2012 +3.2% National median price $186,100 % change from third quarter 2012 +7.6% Share of all-cash buyers 27% Share of investor buyers 17% Share of first-time buyers 32% Share of distressed sales 23% Source: National Association of Realtors
Nearly all U.S. regions saw existing-home sales and prices swell in the third quarter from a year ago — except the Northeast, which saw home prices dip slightly — with the Midwest leading the way with a 17.8 percent year-over-year increase in existing-home sales. The median price in the Midwest also rose in the third quarter from a year ago, up 4.2 percent to $151,100.
The annual pace of sales grew in the South 11.7 percent in the third quarter with median existing-home prices rising 5.7 percent to $165,400.
In the Northeast, sales jumped 9.8 percent on an annual basis, with median prices slipping 0.3 percent to $246,900.
Fighting tight inventory, the West saw the lowest percentage jump of existing-home sales in the third quarter with a 2.1 percent bump from a year ago. The short inventory also translated into a median home price leap of 20.2 percent to $247,400 from a year ago.
Mortgage application filings drop in wake of Hurricane Sandy | Bedford Hills NY Real Estate
October Prices Seen Rising to Six Percent Annually | Pound Ridge NY Real Estate
CoreLogic’s pending sales index indicates that October prices will rising by 5.7 percent on a year-over-year basis from October 2011 and falling by 0.5 percent on a month-over-month basis from September 2012 as sales exhibit a seasonal slowdown going into the winter.
Excluding distressed sales, October house prices are poised to rise even higher, to 6.3 percent year-over-year from October 2011 and by 0.2 percent month-over-month from September 2012. The CoreLogic Pending HPI is based on Multiple Listing Service (MLS) data that measure price changes for the most recent month.
Home prices nationwide, including distressed sales, increased on a year-over-year basis by 5 percent in September compared to September 2011, the biggest increase since July 2006 and the seventh consecutive increase in home prices nationally on a year-over-year basis, according to CoreLogic
On a month-over-month basis, including distressed sales, home prices fell by 0.3 percent in September compared to August*. The HPI analysis from CoreLogic shows that all but seven states are experiencing year-over-year price gains.
Excluding distressed sales, home prices nationwide also increased on a year-over-year basis by 5 percent in September compared to September 2011. On a month-over-month basis excluding distressed sales, home prices increased 0.5 percent in September compared to August , the seventh consecutive month-over-month increase. Distressed sales include short sales and real estate owned (REO) transactions.
“Home price improvement nationally continues to outpace our expectations, growing five percent year-over-year in September, the best showing since July 2006,” said Mark Fleming, chief economist for CoreLogic. “While prices on a month-over-month basis are declining, as expected in the housing off-season, most states are exhibiting price increases. Gains are particularly large in former housing bubble states and energy-industry concentrated states.”
“Home prices are responding to better market fundamentals, such as reduced inventories and improved buyer demand,” said Anand Nallathambi, president and CEO of CoreLogic. “So far this year, we’re seeing clear signs of stabilization and improvement that show promise for a gradual recovery in the residential housing market.”
Highlights:
- Including distressed sales, the five states with the highest home price appreciation were: Arizona (+18.7 percent), Idaho (+13.1 percent), Nevada (+11.0 percent), Hawaii (+8.9 percent) and Utah (+8.7 percent).
- Including distressed sales, the five states with the greatest home price depreciation were: Rhode Island (-3.5 percent), Illinois (-2.3 percent), New Jersey (-1.8 percent), Alabama (-1.3 percent) and Delaware (-0.5 percent).
- Excluding distressed sales, the five states with the highest home price appreciation were: Arizona (+14.0 percent), Idaho (+10.5 percent), Nevada (+9.5 percent), Montana (+8.5 percent) and California (+8.4 percent).
- Excluding distressed sales, this month only four states posted home price depreciation: Alabama (-3.1 percent), New Jersey (-1.6 percent), Delaware (-1.4 percent) and Rhode Island (-1.3 percent).
- Including distressed transactions, the peak-to-current change in the national HPI (from April 2006 to September 2012) was -27.0 percent. Excluding distressed transactions, the peak-to-current change in the HPI for the same period was -20.4 percent.
- The five states with the largest peak-to-current declines, including distressed transactions, are Nevada (-53.9 percent), Florida (-44.7 percent), Arizona (-41.7 percent), California (-37.2 percent) and Michigan (-35.0 percent).
- Of the top 100 Core Based Statistical Areas (CBSAs) measured by population, 18 are showing year-over-year declines in September, nine fewer than in August.
*August data was revised. Revisions with public records data are standard, and to ensure accuracy, CoreLogic incorporates the newly released public data to provide updated results.
Robert Paul’s Blog | Bedford Hills NY Real Estate
Storm recovery continues. NYSEG has 58 crews dedicated to the Town for restoration. NYSEG estimates full restoration to Bedford by 11pm on Wednesday, 11/7. If the NYSEG website shows your power as restored and it is not, please call them (800-572-1131) or go to their website and report it. If service is pulled away from your house or you see (don’t touch) wires down between your meter and the street/service pole, contact NYSEG and let them know. If you have a generator and are using it quite a bit, you will need to change the oil. Generators have an oil change schedule usually of every 100 hours of use to prevent engine damage or failure.
Dry ice and bottled water is available in front of the Town House.
Day warming shelter and charging stations continue to be available at all three libraries and fire houses in the Town of Bedford.
Readers Digest (1 Readers Digest Rd • Pleasantville) is open as an overnight Emergency Shelter with hot meals.
The STOP lights are out on Route 35 and Rt. 22 intersection and the on and off ramps to 684 – SLOW down and use extreme caution.
The Town Board will hold there first monthly meeting as scheduled on Wednesday November 7, 2012 at 8PM.
Contact the Town House at 666-4534 if we can help you in any way.
Armonk NY Real Estate storm update | Armonk NY Homes for sale
As we move into the 8th day of our restoration efforts progress has been slow, but steady. We have approximately 60% of our residents with power restored. Presently we have a total of 17 restoration crews with 39 bucket trucks working throughout the Town.
Living in our homes with no heat, lights or water without a generator is very trying. I know because I am also one of those residents. I assure you that we are pushing Con Ed as hard as we can to bring more resources to North Castle. We have been told that an additional 50 crews will reach WestchesterCounty tonight. We hope to get our fair share.
Here is a partial list of restoration work areas for today: Route 22, North of Chestnut Ridge andWoodcrest Drive, Windmill at North Lake andUpland, General Heath in North White Plains,Annadale Road, and East Middle Patent Road. I will tweet other locations as they come in.
All voting places are open and have been functioning well. Gas is available at all gas stations in North Castle.
Please prepare for tomorrow’s storm. If winds reach 40-50 MPH as predicted, crews can not work up in the air or handle wires during heavy rains. We may lose a day of restoration. Let’s hope not.
As fast as restorations is completed neighborhoods are turned on. We often don’t know until the lights go on. Please believe me, we are working as hard as we can to get all of our community back on line. We appreciate your patience.
SHELTER, SHOWERS, WATER UPDATES
HERGENHANRECEPTIONCENTER: open 7AM-10PM.
BRYNWOOD: open for showers and internet
seven am to seven pm. Bring your own towels and toiletries. Kids 14 and under must be accompanied by parent or adult.
THE GYM: open for showers MON – THURS 5-7AM and 1-
10PM, FRI 5-7AM and 1-9PM; SAT1-5PM; SUN1-4PM. Bring your own towels and toiletries. Kids 14 and under must be accompanied by parent or adult.
WATER: available 24 hours in front of HergenhanRecreation Center,Community Park, 205 Business Park Drive, Armonk and Banksville Firehouse.
DRY ICE: available 12-5 pm at the WestchesterCountyCenter
BANKSVILLE FIREHOUSE: has meals ready to eat
Howard Arden, Supervisor




