Commercial Investment Real Estate March/April 2019 | Page 18

INVESTMENT A N A LYSIS REIT Due Diligence Buyers and sellers alike must look beyond operational functions to ensure compliance. T he complex rules governing real estate investment trusts add a challenging aspect to any entity- or prop- erty-level due diligence. Buyers of REITs or property to be held by a REIT must navigate ambiguous rules governing tenant services, make determinations regarding the customary nature of how the properties are operated, and con- sider all business relationships with tenants and contractors. Looking past the operational aspects of the properties, the administrative function of ensuring compliance is essential to REIT buyers and sellers. Income Test Defining “rents from real property,” which include, in part, charges for services customarily furnished or rendered in con- nection with the rental of real property, is central to the REIT income test requirements. Whether services are “customary” is subjective in nature, and little guidance is given. In fact, private letter rulings issued by the IRS are the most common sources of information; however, such rulings may be relied on only with respect to the taxpayer for which the ruling was issued. 16 March | April 2019 Ultimately, buyers and sellers may disagree on the treatment, and as such, all determinations of “customary services” should be well documented, specifically citing what the norm is for the asset class in that geographical area. REIT rules allow for an independent contractor exception, whereas non-customary services can be provided by the inde- pendent contractor to the tenants. In addition to REIT owner- ship thresholds of the independent contractor that cannot be crossed, a REIT generally cannot receive income (such as rent or dividend income) from the independent contractor; all costs for non-customary services must be borne by the independent contractor, and a separate charge must be made for the service. Relationships with independent contractors and tenants can exist without others’ knowledge. The attribution rules pro- vided by the Internal Revenue Code may result in a REIT being treated as owning a portion of a tenant or independent contractor if a shareholder owns a portion of the REIT and also owns a tenant or independent contractor. For this pur- pose, a REIT could run afoul of the 35 percent independent contractor threshold or 10 percent related party rent threshold. COMMERCIAL INVESTMENT REAL ESTATE by Stephen Bertonaschi