Seize the Opportunity (zone), but Keep Your Head on Straight
The IRS defines an opportunity zone as an “economically distressed community where new investments may be eligible for preferential tax treatment.”...
The IRS and Treasury issued its much anticipated second set of proposed regulations related to Qualified Opportunity Funds (QOFs). The proposed regulations addresses the gains that may be deferred as a result of a taxpayer's investment in a QOF, the treatment of tangible leased property, Section 1231 gain, the 90-percent asset test, and more. The guidance is generally taxpayer-friendly and provides the flexibility that businesses and investors were seeking. Treasury also released a document soliciting public input on how best to collect public information to track and measure the economic activity in opportunity zones.
Qualified Opportunity Zone Basics
The TCJA now allows the designation of certain low-income community population census tracts as Qualified Opportunity (QO) Zones eligible for a number of favorable tax rules aimed at encouraging economic growth and investment in businesses within the zones. There are currently more than 8,700 communities in all 50 states, the District of Columbia and five U.S. territories that have been designated as QO Zones. They will retain those designations until December 31, 2028.
Investors can form private investment vehicles, known as qualified opportunity funds (QOFs), for funding development and redevelopment projects in the zones. The tax code provides temporary deferral of inclusion in gross income for capital gains reinvested in a QOF and the permanent exclusion of capital gains from the sale or exchange of an investment in the QOF.
In general, a QOF is an investment vehicle: 1) that's organized as a corporation or a partnership for the purpose of investing in QO Zone property (other than another QOF) and 2) that holds at least 90% of its assets in QO Zone property.
Below are the highlights of the proposed regulations:
Substantially all
The term “substantially all” was used several times in the statute, but only defined once. The guidance clarifies this requirement for both the holding period and the use of the tangible property. In the holding period context, the substantially all requirement is 90 percent and in the use context it is 70 percent.
Original use requirements
The proposed regulations provided additional guidance related to the original use requirements:
Used Proper Guidance |
Insights |
For purposes of depreciation and amortization, the proposed regulations state that the “original use” of an asset acquired by purchase starts on the date when the property is first placed in service in a qualified opportunity zone (QOZ). Tangible property located in a QOZ that is depreciated or amortized by a taxpayer other than a qualified opportunity fund (QOF) or QOZB would not qualify. |
The acquisition of a partially constructed building or acquisition of a building or development prior to the receipt of a certificate of occupancy should meet the original use requirements. |
Used property will satisfy the original use requirements if the property has not been previously used or placed in service by any taxpayer in the QOZ – no substantial improvement would be required. |
The used property provision will permit companies to relocate and move used property into a QOZ without the need for substantial improvement of that property. |
A building or structure that has been vacant for at least five years prior to being purchased by the QOF or QOZB will satisfy the original use requirement – no substantial improvement would be required. |
The new guidance easing the original use requirement for vacant buildings will allow investors to improve vacant and underused properties within opportunity zones. Because there is no substantial improvement required, there currently is concern that investors may acquire vacant buildings and make no improvement to the property. |
Improvements made by a lessee to leased property are treated as original use property and treated as being purchased for the cost of the improvements. |
This provision is beneficial as many QOZBs will lease their property. |
Land
The original use requirement is not applicable to improved or unimproved land. Further, there is no substantial improvement test applicable to the purchase of unimproved land if it is used in the active conduct of a trade or business of a QOF or a QOZB. There is a general anti-abuse provision that can be used to prevent “land banking.”
Asset-by-asset vs. aggregate testing
The proposed regulations state that the substantial improvement requirement is made on an asset-by-asset basis. The guidance, however, notes that this approach might be onerous for certain businesses (e.g., a project with multiple projects over multiple parcels, with multiple structures and asset classes). As such, Treasury is seeking comments regarding the advantages and disadvantages of adopting an aggregate approach to determine potential substantial improvement requirements.
Inventory in transit
The proposed regulations clarify that inventory, including supplies such as raw materials, are QOZ property and will count for the purpose of the asset test.
Leased tangible property meeting certain criteria may be treated as QOZB property to satisfy the asset test and the substantially all requirements. The leased tangible property must be acquired under a lease entered into after December 31, 2017, and substantially all of the use of the leased tangible property must be in a QOZ during substantially all of the period for which the business leases the property. The regulations provided additional, flexible guidance regarding leases:
QOFs and QOZBs have a choice of valuation methods for the 90 percent asset test and the 70 percent value of tangible property test. The QOFs and QOZBs can use the amount reported on an applicable GAAP financial statement (if leases are assigned a value) or an alternative valuation method. Under the alternative method, the value of the leased property is the sum of the present value of all the lease payments, calculated at the time the lease is entered into. The discount rate is the applicable federal rate under Section 1274(d)(1). Once a method is selected, it must be applied consistently to all leased tangible property for the taxable year.
Insight:
The proposed regulations clarify that a QOZB can lease property in opportunity zones. Care should be taken to ensure that this is an operating lease for federal income tax purposes. The lease provisions provide opportunities to structure deals with leases where the land was owned prior to January 1, 2018, and the owner retains more than a 20-percent interest. It appears that leases with fixed price purchase options with an estimated fair market value at the time of the purchase will not qualify.
Real property straddling a QOZ
The proposed regulations rely on Section 1397C(f) from the empowerment zone provisions to determine whether a QOZ is the location of services, tangible property or business function. If the real property located within the QOZ is substantial as compared to the amount of real property outside the QOZ based on square footage, and the real property outside of the QOZ is contiguous to all or part of the real property in the QOZ, then all the property is deemed to be in a QOZ.
Fifty-percent gross income requirement
The statute stated that QOZB must derive at least 50 percent of its total income “from the active conduct of such business.” The proposed regulations have clarified this meaning and have provided three safe harbors:
If the QOZB does not meet any of the safe harbors it may still meet the 50 percent test by showing that based on the facts and circumstances, at least 50 percent of the gross income of the trade or business is derived from the active conduct of the trade or business in the QOZ.
Insight:
This 50-percent requirement was a major concern for QOZBs in the service industry or with customers primarily outside the QOZ. The income sourcing rules provide needed clarity, while being very flexible, which will enable many different types of QOZBs to satisfy the 50-percent requirement.
Active conduct of a trade or business
The proposed regulations state that a trade or business for purposes of QOZ rules is a trade or business within the meaning of Section 162. Further, the guidance clarifies that the ownership and operation of real property, including leasing, is considered the active conduct of a trade or business. Merely entering into a triple-net-lease, however, will not be deemed to be the active conduct of a trade or business.
Insight:
The preamble notes that there is a large body of case law and administrative guidance interpreting this meaning under Section 162 that provides additional guidance. Stating that real estate rental is a trade or business is welcome guidance.
Working capital safe harbor expansion
The proposed regulations expand the working capital safe harbor to include expenditures used in the development of a trade or business in the QOZ, as well as the acquisition, construction, and/or substantial improvement of tangible property. The regulations provide examples of working capital (e.g., hiring and training kitchen staff, marketing, leasing equipment, etc.). Further, a QOZB will not violate the working capital safe harbor if it exceeds the 31-month period due to delays in government action (e.g., delayed permits or other government approval).
Insight:
The working capital safe harbor appears to still only apply to QOZBs and not QOFs.
Use of intangibles
The statute stated that a substantial portion of the intangible property of a QOZB must be used in the active conduct of a trade or business in the QOZ. The proposed regulations define “substantial portion” as 40 percent.
Section 1231 gain
Section 1231 property has special tax treatment. If at the end of the taxpayer’s tax year, the gains from the sale of all Section 1231 property exceeds the losses of the Section 1231 property, then the net gain is treated as capital gain. If the result is a net Section 1231 loss, then the net loss is treated as an ordinary loss. The tax treatment of the Section 1231 property cannot be determined prior to the taxpayer’s year-end. As such, the proposed regulations state that Section 1231 gain can only be invested in the 180 days beginning on the last day of the taxable year of the sale.
Insight:
Since income is only determinable as of the last day of the year, the new guidance provides that the 180-day window for investing capital gain in a QOF begins on the last day of the taxable year. Because of the previous lack of guidance, Section 1231 gains in 2018 were likely invested in QOFs as the sales occurred, rather than at year end. There has been criticism regarding this guidance as many early investors may have investments disqualified.
When applying the 90-pecent asset test, QOFs do not need to take into account investments made in the preceding six months as long as the new assets are held in cash, cash equivalents, or debt instruments with a term of 18 months or less.
QOF short-term reinvestment rule
The proposed regulations state that if a QOF reinvests the proceeds from the sale of QOZB property, sale of QOZ stock, or QOZ partnership interest within 12 months, the proceeds will qualify as QOZ property for purposes of the 90-percent asset investment requirement. The QOF may reinvest proceeds from the sale of an investment into another type of qualifying investment (e.g., proceeds from the sale of an investment in stock into QOZB property). And, similar to the working capital provision, the proposed regulations extend the QOF reinvestment relief if failure to meet the 12-month deadline is due to the delay in government action. The proposed regulations, however, confirm that a QOF and its investors must recognize any gain on the sale of the assets.
Insight:
Many investors had hoped that there would be a provision allowing QOFs to sell QOZ property and invest the sales proceeds in other QOZ property (i.e., churn the assets) without recognizing gain. However, Treasury and the IRS concluded that it did not have the authority to avoid gain recognition under Sections 1001(c) and 61(a)(3). There may be an opportunity for investors to invest the resulting gain into a QOF to obtain a deferral of tax if the capital gain occurs before December 31, 2026.
Long-term investment sale of QOZ assets vs. QOF interest – Fund structure
The proposed regulations provide special tax treatment to investors in QOF partnerships and S corporations that have held their investments for more than 10 years. If the QOF disposes of QOZ property, the investor may elect to exclude from its gross income some or all of the capital gain generated by the disposition. The election appears to be available irrespective of the QOF partnership’s holding period in the underlying asset. This benefit does not apply to investors in QOF organized as C corporations. Further, if an investor does not satisfy the 10-year holding period at the time of the sale, the allocable share of the gain or loss must be recognized.
Insight:
There was concern that investors would be required to sell their interests in QOFs to be eligible for the 10-year basis step-up benefit. As a result, most funds are set up with a separate QOF for each asset. The proposed regulations eliminate this restriction, which should enable multi-asset funds, since properties can be sold individually. Allowing multi-asset funds will help to mitigate the risk of a bad deal with one single asset and will allow for portfolio funds to exit assets without triggering taxes.
This provision appears to be only for dispositions of property by QOFs and not for tiered allocations from the sale by a QOZB subsidiary of a QOF. As such, most QOFs will continue to operate through QOZBs, since they have the most flexible and favorable provisions. The QOF will have to sell the interests in the QOZB, rather than the assets held by the QOZBs, for investors to avoid tax after holding for 10 years.
Debt financed distributions
The proposed regulations clarify that the taxpayer’s basis in a qualifying interest will be increased by the partner’s share of liabilities under Section 752. As such, the guidance allows a QOF partnership to make debt financed distributions if the distribution does not exceed the partner’s basis in its partnership interest (which includes the investor’s share of the liability). The leveraged distribution will not be treated as an inclusion event, as set forth in Example 10 of Section 1.1400Z2(b)-1(f)(10).
The proposed regulations, however, rely on the “disguised sale” rules under Section 707. If determined to be a disguised sale, then the sale amount will reduce the amount of the qualified investment. Also, a cash-out distribution within two years of an investment in a QOF will disqualify that amount from obtaining the QOZ tax incentives. Debt financed distributions that occur after two years from the initial investment appear to be permitted.
Insight:
Real estate development projects often involve debt financed distributions to developers or investors after asset stabilization. This usually occurs more than two years after the initial investment, so the leveraged distribution typically will not be treated as an inclusion event, assuming the other factors are met.
Secondary purchase of QOF interest
Pursuant to the proposed regulations, an investor can now use capital gain to acquire an interest in a QOF from another investor. The taxpayer is treated as making an investment in an amount equal to the amount paid for the eligible investment. The holding period would start at the date of acquisition.
Insight:
This provision assists in creating a secondary market for interests in QOFs. It will allow for more flexibility for funds that have staged closings and for investors entering a QOF after the initial offering. It also provides liquidity to the extent that an original investor needs to prematurely sell their interest in a QOF.
Tiered partnerships
For an investment to be treated as an “eligible investment,” the taxpayer must invest its capital gain into a QOF. While the proposed regulations permit investors to contribute their QOF interest into a partnership, it does not appear that an investor can make an initial investment into a QOF through a feeder fund. If a taxpayer invests its capital gain into a partnership that then invests in a QOF, it will not be treated as an eligible investment and will not garner the benefits under the QOZ program.
Conclusion
These proposed regulations are subject to further revisions based on comments received by the Treasury during the comment period. However, the Treasury has stated that taxpayers may rely upon many of these proposed rules, providing that the taxpayer applies the rules in their entirety and in a consistent manner.
Treasury and the IRS announced that they expect to address the administrative rules under Section 1400Z-2(f) applicable to a QOF that fails to maintain the required 90-percent investment standard, as well as information-reporting requirements for an eligible taxpayer under Section 1400Z-2 in separate regulations, forms, or publications. Further, Treasury and the IRS anticipate revising Form 8996. While the proposed regulations did not answer every question, it is clear from the guidance that the government is trying to incentivize investment in QOZs by easing the tests and providing flexibility to investors.
If you have any questions about how you can take advantages of these Qualified Opportunity Zone, contact us.
The IRS defines an opportunity zone as an “economically distressed community where new investments may be eligible for preferential tax treatment.”...
3 min read
The IRS recently issued proposed reliance regulations to help clarify the new qualified business income (QBI) deduction that was introduced as part...
The IRS recently issued much-needed guidance on how tax-exempt organizations should calculate unrelated business taxable income (UBTI) for each...