|
Developers
may claim housing tax credits directly, but most sell the tax credits
to raise equity capital for their housing project. The developer
can sell the tax credits:
-
Directly to an investor; OR
-
To a syndicator, who assembles a group of investors and acts
as their representative.
Tax
credits can be claimed annually over a 10-year period by the property
owner. However, the developer needs the money immediately to pay
for development costs, not 10 percent annually for 10 years. Accordingly,
the developer typically syndicates the credits - i.e., sells the
rights to the future credits in exchange for up-front cash.
The
credit purchaser must be part of the property ownership entity;
usually this is accomplished by creating a limited partnership (in
which the credit purchaser is a 99%+ limited partner) or a limited
liability company (in which the credit purchaser is a 99%+ non-managing
member). The general partner is responsible for managing the project
and the partnership, while the limited partners are typically limited
to a passive investment role.
Typically,
profits and losses and housing tax credits are shared according
to the partners' (members') percentage ownership interests. However,
each Limited Partnership Agreement (or LLC Operating Agreement)
also provides for a carefully-negotiated "waterfall" that
describes how any positive cash flow of the property is to be distributed.
Typically, the general partner (managing partner) receives a large
share of any positive cash flow, often structured in the form of
fees for services such as partnership management, incentive management,
or investor services.
Note
the following:
- Limited partnerships were the most common ownership
structure for multi-family properties in the 1960s, and continuing
through much of the 1990s. A typical LIHTC limited partnership
consists of the developer (or an affiliate) as the general partner,
and the credit purchaser as the limited partner. The general
partner has a small percentage ownership interest (often below
1 percent), but has the responsibility to manage the affairs
of the partnership, arrange for management of the property,
and make most of the day to-day operating decisions. The limited
partner has a large percentage ownership interest (often well
above 99 percent), has a passive role, and has liability that
is limited to the amount invested. That is, if a disaster occurs,
the most the limited partner can lose is the amount invested;
however, the general partner can lose many times the amount
invested. The rights and obligations of the partners are outlined
in a Limited Partnership Agreement. Typically the limited partners
do not participate in day-to-day operating decisions but do
participate in major decisions such as decisions to sell or
refinance the property.
- Limited
liability companies (LLC)
are an increasingly common ownership structure for multi-family
properties. A typical LIHTC LLC consists of the developer (or
an affiliate) as the managing member, and the credit purchaser
as an additional (non-managing) member. The managing member
has a small percentage ownership interest (often below 1 percent),
but has the responsibility to manage the affairs of the partnership,
arrange for the management of the property, and make most of
the day-to-day operating decisions. The non-managing member
has a large percentage ownership interest (often well above
99 percent), and has a passive investor role. All members of
an LLC have liability that is limited to the amount invested.
That is, if a disaster occurs, the most they can lose is the
amount invested. The rights and obligations of the partners
are described in an LLC Operating Agreement. Typically the non-managing
members do not participate in day-to-day operating decisions
but do participate in major decisions such as decisions to sell
or refinance the property.
A
Closer Look at Syndication
Syndication
is a complex and expensive process. By law, syndicators must offer
prospectuses to potential tax credit purchasers, fully disclosing
the terms and risks of the investment. Sales of tax credits to multiple
investors in the general public are referred to as public placements
and have the highest disclosure requirements. Private placements
are sales to a few knowledgeable investors. They have lower disclosure
requirements and sales costs.
Of
course, developers are interested in the highest possible price
paid by investors, and the lowest possible syndication costs. Similarly,
investors are interested in paying the lowest possible price, at
the lowest possible level of risk. Syndicators are interested in
earning high fees, and potentially future business with the developer
and investors. To-be-developed properties are not easy to evaluate.
These factors mean that the market for housing tax credits is as
complicated and sophisticated as the market for stocks and bonds.
It is also quite competitive.
|