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Published byHugh Richardson Modified over 9 years ago
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Untangling Property Dispositions: The Partnership Tangle NCSHA June 2015 Los Angeles CA
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2 The Y15 Landscape Most Year 15 events do not involve sale of the property Instead, the Property GP (the Developer) buys out the LP (the investor or syndicator) Most LPs want an exit Untangling the tax credit partnerships can be complex and contentious – and take a long time Two key factors in the unwind negotiations: Level of equity value in the property Level of ambiguity and complexity in the partnership documents
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3 The Difficulty Scale Document Complexity or Ambiguity Equity Value of Property
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4 The Easy Deals Either: There is limited equity value in the property OR Partnership documents are very clear about exit Limited Equity Value Very low rent/income restrictions Weak markets High levels of soft debt Mortgage prepayment restrictions or penalties Clear Documents Usually means a clear Right of First Refusal or option at Debt + LP Taxes
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5 Non-Profit Right of First Refusal Practically speaking, usually treated like an option LPs do want their exit tax paid Non-profit GPs now working with LP during years 10-15 to manage tax capital accounts to zero When exit tax is high, negotiations can get trickier and/or the exit can be slowed
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6 Low Equity Value GP makes offer LP confirms GP estimate of value with internal analysis or Broker Opinion of Value LP will want to be caught up on any unpaid priorities LP may want transaction expenses covered GP handles all third-party approvals If prior to Year 15, LP will want assurances about continued compliance
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7 The Tough Deals Lots of value to fight over In many deals, GP has an option to purchase the property or the LP’s interest at fair market value In the absence of a real market sale, fair market value can be debated endlessly Dueling appraisals is an expensive way to address this problem
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8 Valuing the LP Interest First you have to agree on the property value Then you run it through the capital proceeds waterfall in the partnership agreement But it’s not that simple: Reserves Liquidation analysis Other partnership provisions
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9 Liquidation Analysis Issue Virtually all partnership agreements have provisions about the distribution of in the event of a liquidation The provisions can differ from the capital transactions waterfall They tend to favor the Investor Limited Partner The provisions do not apply if the GP is buying out the LP, but the LP can and often does argue that the hypothetical sale on which the buy-out is based would in fact be a liquidation Buy-outs can get stuck on this issue
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10 Other Complicating Factors in the Buy-Out LP has no right to force a sale of the property LP has a right to force a sale but cannot really enforce its right without removing the GP LP’s ability to transfer its interest without the GP’s consent The GP gets the majority of the cash flow but very little of the residual proceeds There are conditions to the exercise of the Right of First Refusal
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11 The Good News Significant equity value is a happy surprise Most GPs and third-party buyers are not planning QCP or market rate conversion Planning to operate for cash flow and/or Redevelop with a new round of tax credits, extending affordability New deals are structured with more thought about back-end Track record of cash flow and residual proceeds helps keep investors interested in further investment
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Untangling Property Dispositions: The Partnership Tangle NCSHA June 2015 Los Angeles CA
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