cash and carried interests: protecting the investor and developer in a real estate partnership...

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Cash and Carried Interests: Protecting the Investor and Developer in a Real Estate Partnership Howard E. Abrams Of Counsel, Steptoe & Johnson LLP Professor, Emory Law School www.steptoe.com Copyright 2003 by Howard E. Abrams. All rights reserved

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Page 1: Cash and Carried Interests: Protecting the Investor and Developer in a Real Estate Partnership Howard E. Abrams Of Counsel, Steptoe & Johnson LLP Professor,

Cash and Carried Interests: Protecting the Investor and Developer

in a Real Estate Partnership

Howard E. Abrams

Of Counsel, Steptoe & Johnson LLP

Professor, Emory Law School

www.steptoe.com

Copyright 2003 by Howard E. Abrams. All rights reserved

Page 2: Cash and Carried Interests: Protecting the Investor and Developer in a Real Estate Partnership Howard E. Abrams Of Counsel, Steptoe & Johnson LLP Professor,

2

The Basics of Economic Effect

• Capital accounts must be properly maintained.

• Final capital account balances must determine liquidating distributions.

• No negative capital accounts without clawback obligation.

Page 3: Cash and Carried Interests: Protecting the Investor and Developer in a Real Estate Partnership Howard E. Abrams Of Counsel, Steptoe & Johnson LLP Professor,

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The Problem of a Carried Interest; Of Taxes and Timing

Page 4: Cash and Carried Interests: Protecting the Investor and Developer in a Real Estate Partnership Howard E. Abrams Of Counsel, Steptoe & Johnson LLP Professor,

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• The term “carried interest” is not defined in the Internal Revenue Code.

• The term is not defined under case law or any IRS authority.

• Carried interest commonly refers to a partnership interest that is secondary in priority with respect to cash recovery; i.e., it does not get paid first.

• This does not mean, however, that carried interests necessarily get paid last.

What is a “carried interest”?

Page 5: Cash and Carried Interests: Protecting the Investor and Developer in a Real Estate Partnership Howard E. Abrams Of Counsel, Steptoe & Johnson LLP Professor,

5

Baseline Situation

I D

ID

$98,000 $2,000

Blackacre Whiteacre

$50,000 $50,000

Page 6: Cash and Carried Interests: Protecting the Investor and Developer in a Real Estate Partnership Howard E. Abrams Of Counsel, Steptoe & Johnson LLP Professor,

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Example 1a

Facts: ID sells Blackacre for $80,000 and distributes the sale proceeds to the partners.

Possible Results:

• Asset-by-Asset Approach -- $50,000 of the distribution is treated as a return of capital and $30,000 is treated as profit.

• Aggregate Approach – The entire $80,000 distribution is treated as a return of capital because the partners’ aggregate unreturned investment stands at $100,000.

Page 7: Cash and Carried Interests: Protecting the Investor and Developer in a Real Estate Partnership Howard E. Abrams Of Counsel, Steptoe & Johnson LLP Professor,

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Example 1a; Asset-by Asset Approach

_______ I _______ _______ D _______

Capital Basis Capital Basis

$ 98,000 $ 98,000 $ 2,000 $ 2,000

Contributions

Page 8: Cash and Carried Interests: Protecting the Investor and Developer in a Real Estate Partnership Howard E. Abrams Of Counsel, Steptoe & Johnson LLP Professor,

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Example 1a; Asset-by Asset Approach

_______ I _______ _______ D _______

Capital Basis Capital Basis

$ 98,000 $ 98,000 $ 2,000 $ 2,000

23,520 23,520 6,480 6,480

Contributions

Allocation of Profit

Page 9: Cash and Carried Interests: Protecting the Investor and Developer in a Real Estate Partnership Howard E. Abrams Of Counsel, Steptoe & Johnson LLP Professor,

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Example 1a; Asset-by Asset Approach

_______ I _______ _______ D _______

Capital Basis Capital Basis

$ 98,000 $ 98,000 $ 2,000 $ 2,000

23,520 23,520 6,480 6,480

(49,000) (49,000) (1,000) (1,000)

Contributions

Allocation of Profit

Return of Capital

Page 10: Cash and Carried Interests: Protecting the Investor and Developer in a Real Estate Partnership Howard E. Abrams Of Counsel, Steptoe & Johnson LLP Professor,

10

Example 1a; Asset-by Asset Approach

_______ I _______ _______ D _______

Capital Basis Capital Basis

$ 98,000 $ 98,000 $ 2,000 $ 2,000

23,520 23,520 6,480 6,480

(49,000) (49,000) (1,000) (1,000)

(23,520) (23,520) (6,480) (6,480)

$ 49,000 $ 49,000 $ 1,000 $ 1,000

Contributions

Allocation of Profit

Return of Capital

Profit

Total

Page 11: Cash and Carried Interests: Protecting the Investor and Developer in a Real Estate Partnership Howard E. Abrams Of Counsel, Steptoe & Johnson LLP Professor,

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Example 1a; Asset-by Asset Approach (continued)

Sale of Whiteacre at a Loss of $10,000

Loss must be charged back in proportion to prior allocation of gain.

Loss Share to I = $7,840

Loss Share to D = $2,160

Page 12: Cash and Carried Interests: Protecting the Investor and Developer in a Real Estate Partnership Howard E. Abrams Of Counsel, Steptoe & Johnson LLP Professor,

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Example 1a; Asset-by Asset Approach (continued)

_______ I _______ _______ D _______

Capital Basis Capital Basis

$ 98,000 $ 98,000 $ 2,000 $ 2,000

23,520 23,520 6,480 6,480

(72,520) (72,520) (7,480) (7,480)

$ 49,000 $ 49,000 $ 1,000 $ 1,000

Contributions

Allocation of Profit

Distributions

Totals

Page 13: Cash and Carried Interests: Protecting the Investor and Developer in a Real Estate Partnership Howard E. Abrams Of Counsel, Steptoe & Johnson LLP Professor,

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Example 1a; Asset-by Asset Approach (continued)

_______ I _______ _______ D _______

Capital Basis Capital Basis

$ 98,000 $ 98,000 $ 2,000 $ 2,000

23,520 23,520 6,480 6,480

(72,520) (72,520) (7,480) (7,480)

$ 49,000 $ 49,000 $ 1,000 $ 1,000

(7,840) (7,840) (2,160) (2,160)

$ 41,160 41,160 $ (1,160) $ (1,160)

Contributions

Allocation of Profit

Distributions

Totals

Allocation of Loss

New Totals

Page 14: Cash and Carried Interests: Protecting the Investor and Developer in a Real Estate Partnership Howard E. Abrams Of Counsel, Steptoe & Johnson LLP Professor,

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Example 1a; Aggregate Approach

_______ I _______ _______ D _______

Capital Basis Capital Basis

$ 98,000 $ 98,000 $ 2,000 $ 2,000

Contributions

Page 15: Cash and Carried Interests: Protecting the Investor and Developer in a Real Estate Partnership Howard E. Abrams Of Counsel, Steptoe & Johnson LLP Professor,

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Example 1a; Aggregate Approach

_______ I _______ _______ D _______

Capital Basis Capital Basis

$ 98,000 $ 98,000 $ 2,000 $ 2,000

29,400 29,400 600 600

Contributions

Allocation of Profit

Page 16: Cash and Carried Interests: Protecting the Investor and Developer in a Real Estate Partnership Howard E. Abrams Of Counsel, Steptoe & Johnson LLP Professor,

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Example 1a; Aggregate Approach

_______ I _______ _______ D _______

Capital Basis Capital Basis

$ 98,000 $ 98,000 $ 2,000 $ 2,000

29,400 29,400 600 600

(78,400) (78,400) (1,600) (1,600)

$ 49,000 $ 49,000 $ 1,000 $ 1,000

Contributions

Allocation of Profit

Return of Capital

Totals

Page 17: Cash and Carried Interests: Protecting the Investor and Developer in a Real Estate Partnership Howard E. Abrams Of Counsel, Steptoe & Johnson LLP Professor,

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Example 1a; Aggregate Approach (continued)

Sale of Whiteacre at Cost

Now suppose that ID sells Whiteacre for its cost basis of $50,000.

There is no book or tax gain to be allocated, so the books remain unchanged.

Page 18: Cash and Carried Interests: Protecting the Investor and Developer in a Real Estate Partnership Howard E. Abrams Of Counsel, Steptoe & Johnson LLP Professor,

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Example 1a; Aggregate Approach

_______ I _______ _______ D _______

Capital Basis Capital Basis

$ 98,000 $ 98,000 $ 2,000 $ 2,000

29,400 29,400 600 600

(78,400) (78,400) (1,600) (1,600)

$ 49,000 $ 49,000 $ 1,000 $ 1,000

Contributions

Allocation of Profit

Return of Capital

Totals

Page 19: Cash and Carried Interests: Protecting the Investor and Developer in a Real Estate Partnership Howard E. Abrams Of Counsel, Steptoe & Johnson LLP Professor,

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Example 1a; Aggregate Approach

_______ I _______ _______ D _______

Capital Basis Capital Basis

$ 98,000 $ 98,000 $ 2,000 $ 2,000

29,400 29,400 600 600

(78,400) (78,400) (1,600) (1,600)

$ 49,000 $ 49,000 $ 1,000 $ 1,000

The partnership has turned a profit of $30,000,

But D made only $600! What happened to

the carry?

Contributions

Allocation of Profit

Return of Capital

Totals

Page 20: Cash and Carried Interests: Protecting the Investor and Developer in a Real Estate Partnership Howard E. Abrams Of Counsel, Steptoe & Johnson LLP Professor,

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Example 1a; Aggregate Approach (continued)

Could the partners agree to distribute the final cash other than in accordance with final capital account balances?

Page 21: Cash and Carried Interests: Protecting the Investor and Developer in a Real Estate Partnership Howard E. Abrams Of Counsel, Steptoe & Johnson LLP Professor,

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Example 1a; Aggregate Approach (continued)

Could the partners agree to distribute the final cash other than in accordance with final capital account balances?

No, because that would violate the requirement of “substantial economic effect.”

Page 22: Cash and Carried Interests: Protecting the Investor and Developer in a Real Estate Partnership Howard E. Abrams Of Counsel, Steptoe & Johnson LLP Professor,

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Example 1a; Aggregate Approach (continued)

What if a clawback was imposed on I?

Page 23: Cash and Carried Interests: Protecting the Investor and Developer in a Real Estate Partnership Howard E. Abrams Of Counsel, Steptoe & Johnson LLP Professor,

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Example 1a; Aggregate Approach (continued)

That would not work either. If we require that I contribute additional funds to the venture, that contribution will increase I’s capital account. Because final liquidation proceeds must be made in accordance with capital account balances, the clawback cannot operate to shift funds from I to D

Page 24: Cash and Carried Interests: Protecting the Investor and Developer in a Real Estate Partnership Howard E. Abrams Of Counsel, Steptoe & Johnson LLP Professor,

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Example 1a; Aggregate Approach (continued)

Then what is the solution?

Page 25: Cash and Carried Interests: Protecting the Investor and Developer in a Real Estate Partnership Howard E. Abrams Of Counsel, Steptoe & Johnson LLP Professor,

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Example 1a; Aggregate Approach (continued)

The only way to fix the problem is to anticipate and address the tax allocations from the beginning.

We need to allocate the gain in accordance with profits interests even though we will distribute the cash as return of capital. This yields:

Page 26: Cash and Carried Interests: Protecting the Investor and Developer in a Real Estate Partnership Howard E. Abrams Of Counsel, Steptoe & Johnson LLP Professor,

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Example 1a; Aggregate Approach (continued)

_______ I _______ _______ D _______

Capital Basis Capital Basis

$ 98,000 $ 98,000 $ 2,000 $ 2,000

23,520 23,520 6,480 6,480

(78,400) (78,400) (1,600) (1,600)

$ 43,120 $ 43,120 $ 6,880 $ 6,880

Contributions

Allocation of Profit

Distributions

Totals

Page 27: Cash and Carried Interests: Protecting the Investor and Developer in a Real Estate Partnership Howard E. Abrams Of Counsel, Steptoe & Johnson LLP Professor,

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Example 1a; Aggregate Approach (continued)

The moral of this story:

Even if cash will be distributed on an aggregate basis, profits must be

allocated on an asset-by-asset basis.

Page 28: Cash and Carried Interests: Protecting the Investor and Developer in a Real Estate Partnership Howard E. Abrams Of Counsel, Steptoe & Johnson LLP Professor,

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Example 1a; Aggregate Approach (continued)

_______ I _______ _______ D _______

Capital Basis Capital Basis

$ 98,000 $ 98,000 $ 2,000 $ 2,000

23,520 23,520 6,480 6,480

(78,400) (78,400) (1,600) (1,600)

$ 43,120 $ 43,120 $ 6,880 $ 6,880

Contributions

Allocation of Profit

Distributions

Totals

Page 29: Cash and Carried Interests: Protecting the Investor and Developer in a Real Estate Partnership Howard E. Abrams Of Counsel, Steptoe & Johnson LLP Professor,

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Example 1a; Aggregate Approach (continued)

_______ I _______ _______ D _______

Capital Basis Capital Basis

$ 98,000 $ 98,000 $ 2,000 $ 2,000

23,520 23,520 6,480 6,480

(78,400) (78,400) (1,600) (1,600)

$ 43,120 $ 43,120 $ 6,880 $ 6,880

Contributions

Allocation of Profit

Distributions

Totals

But now there is a cash flow problem for D.

Page 30: Cash and Carried Interests: Protecting the Investor and Developer in a Real Estate Partnership Howard E. Abrams Of Counsel, Steptoe & Johnson LLP Professor,

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Example 1a; Aggregate Approach (continued)

_______ I _______ _______ D _______

Capital Basis Capital Basis

$ 98,000 $ 98,000 $ 2,000 $ 2,000

23,520 23,520 6,480 6,480

0 0 (2,592) (2,592)

Contributions

Allocation of Profit

Tax Distribution

Page 31: Cash and Carried Interests: Protecting the Investor and Developer in a Real Estate Partnership Howard E. Abrams Of Counsel, Steptoe & Johnson LLP Professor,

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Example 1a; Aggregate Approach (continued)

_______ I _______ _______ D _______

Capital Basis Capital Basis

$ 98,000 $ 98,000 $ 2,000 $ 2,000

23,520 23,520 6,480 6,480

0 0 (2,592) (2,592)

(77,408) (77,408) 0 0

$ 44,112 $ 44,112 $ 5,888 $ 5,888

Contributions

Allocation of Profit

Tax Distribution

Return of Capital

Totals

Page 32: Cash and Carried Interests: Protecting the Investor and Developer in a Real Estate Partnership Howard E. Abrams Of Counsel, Steptoe & Johnson LLP Professor,

32

Hurdles; Guaranteed Payments and Preferred Returns

Page 33: Cash and Carried Interests: Protecting the Investor and Developer in a Real Estate Partnership Howard E. Abrams Of Counsel, Steptoe & Johnson LLP Professor,

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Guaranteed Payments

The ID Partnership Agreement may provide that guaranteed payments will be made on contributed capital generally or only on the capital contributed by I.

Because guaranteed payments for the use of capital are deductible, the guaranteed payment obligation reduces the Partnership’s net income.

This reduces the amount of income derived from D’s carry, as some portion of that amount will be used to satisfy the Partnership’s guaranteed payment obligation.

Page 34: Cash and Carried Interests: Protecting the Investor and Developer in a Real Estate Partnership Howard E. Abrams Of Counsel, Steptoe & Johnson LLP Professor,

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Guaranteed Payments; Example 1a

The ID Partnership agreement provides for a cumulative, guaranteed return of 6% (compounded annually) on I’s invested capital

The Partnership sells Blackacre at the end of Year 2 for $80,000, which results in a gain of $30,000.

However, the Partnership’s income will not be $30,000. Rather, because of the deduction attributable to the cumulative guaranteed payment (of $12,113), the partnership’s income from the sale of Blackacre will be only $17,887.

Thus, the books of the partnership will become:

Page 35: Cash and Carried Interests: Protecting the Investor and Developer in a Real Estate Partnership Howard E. Abrams Of Counsel, Steptoe & Johnson LLP Professor,

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Guaranteed Payments; Example 1a (Continued)

_______ I _______ _______ D _______

Capital Basis Capital Basis

$ 98,000 $ 98,000 $ 2,000 $ 2,000

14,310 14,310 3,577 3,577

( 5,724) ( 5,724) (1,431) (1,431)

(59,517) (59,517) (1,215) (1,215)

$ 47,069 $ 47,069 $ 2,931 $ 2,931

Contributions

Allocation of Profit

Tax Distributions

Return of Capital

Totals

Page 36: Cash and Carried Interests: Protecting the Investor and Developer in a Real Estate Partnership Howard E. Abrams Of Counsel, Steptoe & Johnson LLP Professor,

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Preferred Returns

While preferred returns and guaranteed payments are similar in many ways, there exist two significant differences:

(1) If the partnership does not do well, the preferred return will have no impact while a guaranteed payment obligation must be satisfied regardless of the partnership’s performance; and

(2) The guaranteed payment is taxed as ordinary income to the recipient and gives rise to an ordinary deduction for the partnership (usually shared between I and D), while the preferred return does not affect the character of the income or loss.

Page 37: Cash and Carried Interests: Protecting the Investor and Developer in a Real Estate Partnership Howard E. Abrams Of Counsel, Steptoe & Johnson LLP Professor,

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Preferred Returns; Example 1a (continued)

_______ I _______ _______ D _______

Capital Basis Capital Basis

$ 98,000 $ 98,000 $ 2,000 $ 2,000

12,113 12,113 0 0

14,310 14,310 3,577 3,577

12,113 12,113 0 0

( 5,724) ( 5,724) (1,431) (1,431)

(59,517) (59,517) (1,215) (1,215)

$ 47,069 $ 47,069 $ 2,931 $ 2,931

Contributions

Preferred Return

Allocation of Profit

Preferred Distribs.

Tax Distributions

Return of Capital

Totals

Page 38: Cash and Carried Interests: Protecting the Investor and Developer in a Real Estate Partnership Howard E. Abrams Of Counsel, Steptoe & Johnson LLP Professor,

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A Vesting Carried Interest

Page 39: Cash and Carried Interests: Protecting the Investor and Developer in a Real Estate Partnership Howard E. Abrams Of Counsel, Steptoe & Johnson LLP Professor,

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A Vesting Carried Interest

• Compare actual capital account to target capital account.

Page 40: Cash and Carried Interests: Protecting the Investor and Developer in a Real Estate Partnership Howard E. Abrams Of Counsel, Steptoe & Johnson LLP Professor,

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A Vesting Carried Interest

• Compare actual capital account to target capital account.

• Gross-up actual capital account by distributions.

Page 41: Cash and Carried Interests: Protecting the Investor and Developer in a Real Estate Partnership Howard E. Abrams Of Counsel, Steptoe & Johnson LLP Professor,

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A Vesting Carried Interest

• Compare actual capital account to target capital account.

• Gross-up actual capital account by distributions.

• No need for regulatory allocation offset provision.

Page 42: Cash and Carried Interests: Protecting the Investor and Developer in a Real Estate Partnership Howard E. Abrams Of Counsel, Steptoe & Johnson LLP Professor,

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Contributions of Property

Page 43: Cash and Carried Interests: Protecting the Investor and Developer in a Real Estate Partnership Howard E. Abrams Of Counsel, Steptoe & Johnson LLP Professor,

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Contributions of Property

• Prohibit taxable dispositions of contributed property.

Page 44: Cash and Carried Interests: Protecting the Investor and Developer in a Real Estate Partnership Howard E. Abrams Of Counsel, Steptoe & Johnson LLP Professor,

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Contributions of Property

• Prohibit taxable dispositions of contributed property.

• Prohibit contributions of contributed property to lower-tier partnerships.

Page 45: Cash and Carried Interests: Protecting the Investor and Developer in a Real Estate Partnership Howard E. Abrams Of Counsel, Steptoe & Johnson LLP Professor,

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Contributions of Property

• Prohibit taxable dispositions of contributed property.

• Prohibit contributions of contributed property to lower-tier partnerships.

• Control the section 704(c)(1)(A) recovery method.

Page 46: Cash and Carried Interests: Protecting the Investor and Developer in a Real Estate Partnership Howard E. Abrams Of Counsel, Steptoe & Johnson LLP Professor,

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Exempt Organization as Partners

• The Fractions Rule:– Irrelevant if no debt on property– Irrelevant if all partners are “qualified

organizations”– Limits book allocations only– Consider distributing appreciated property to

the exempt organization.