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THE FUTURE
of The 1031 Exchange Industry
So far in 2007, there
have been three spectacular 1031 intermediary defalcations:
Southwest Exchange of Henderson, Nevada ($100 million),
Scoop Daniel of Breckenridge (the attorney that took
one million and disappeared), and IXG (locally) and
its related companies ($150 million).
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by Gary Gorman
founding partner, 1031 Exchange
Experts, LLC |
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All of these problems arise from two
systemic problems with the industry: first of all there
are no entry barriers to become an intermediary. Both
Southwest and IXG were existing intermediary companies
that were purchased by people who had no intermediary
experience and whose sole intention for purchasing
the company, apparently, was to get control of the
exchange balance. Locally, Mile High Capital
from last year is another example of this problem because
according to several press reports they set up their
own intermediary company and hired a convicted felon
to run it.
Secondly, there are no controls
on what intermediaries can do with the exchange proceeds
while they hold them. All of the problems
we’ve had with bad intermediaries involve commingled
accounts where the intermediary has placed all of
the exchange proceeds into one commingled, or pooled,
account, rather than in a separate, or segregated,
account for each client.
So, what does the future look like
for the 1031 exchange industry? Will Congress
do away with Section 1031? Will it be re-written to
clamp down on exchange intermediaries? And what role
will the states, like Colorado, play in all of this?
First of all, Congress will not do
away with Section 1031. They have done a number
of cost/benefit studies, and all of them conclude that
they collect more taxes with 1031 exchanges than they
would without. And it would make sense that Congress
would amend the code section to clamp down on intermediaries,
but given all of the other issues that Congress is
faced with right now, including the war in Iraq, this
issue is pretty small potatoes to them.
Colorado is much more likely to enact
laws regulating intermediaries. Nevada just imposed
a new law in reaction to the Southwest Exchange mess,
and their law provides a pretty good road map of where
Colorado is likely to go. First of all, the Nevada
law requires intermediaries to be licensed, including
new owners when an intermediary is sold. While
this wouldn’t have protected the public from
Scoop Daniel (because he was an attorney), it would
have protected us locally from the IXG buyer and from
the intermediary portion of the Mile High mess because
a background check is required and you have to show
knowledge of, and experience in, the 1031 industry.
The Nevada law most heavily regulates
how the clients exchange proceeds are held. It
requires two signatures to withdraw money from the
account (the client’s and the intermediary’s);
this implies that you must park the money in a segregated
account for each client, although my banking friends
tell me that it is theoretically possible to have a
pooled fund with two signatures required for each withdrawal. That
sounds like a logistical nightmare to me; wouldn’t
it just be easier to have segregated accounts?
The Nevada law also requires the state
banking commission to audit the intermediary not less
often than every five years. That implies to
me that the funds have to remain within Nevada because
I doubt that they’re going to fly all the way
to Denver to audit my account, and what are they going
to audit anyway – all of my exchanges, or just
my Nevada exchanges? Having all of the money
from that state’s exchanges be held in the state
would solve a lot of audit problems.
The Nevada law also requires the intermediary
to post a fidelity bond and to carry errors and omissions
insurance. This will be the kiss of death for
small intermediaries since this insurance will be very
expensive, if the intermediary is able to obtain it
at all.
So, looking into my crystal ball, this
is what the intermediary industry will look like in
Colorado in a couple of years: intermediaries will
be regulated by the Colorado banking commission. We’ll
have to be licensed, which will require a background
check and proof of competency. We’ll have
to keep each exchange account in a segregated account,
which will require two signatures, and the account
holding Colorado exchange funds will have to be in
a Colorado financial institution. Fidelity and
errors and omissions insurance will be required.
The end result is that most, if not
all, small “mom-and-pop” type intermediaries
will disappear; even some of those owned by title companies. Costs
for intermediaries will sky rocket and revenue will
shrink which means that fees will increase dramatically
and your choices of intermediaries will diminish as
well (you won’t be able to shop around for lower
fees).
On the plus side, the intermediaries
that survive will do so providing a superior level
of service and the technical level of intermediary
work will increase accordingly. And best of all,
your money will finally be safe.
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