iped housing tax credits 101 san francisco, california july 24-25, 2008 molly r. bryson thomas a....

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IPED HOUSING TAX CREDITS “101” San Francisco, California July 24-25, 2008 Molly R. Bryson Thomas A. Giblin

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Page 1: IPED HOUSING TAX CREDITS 101 San Francisco, California July 24-25, 2008 Molly R. Bryson Thomas A. Giblin

IPED HOUSING TAX CREDITS “101”

San Francisco, CaliforniaJuly 24-25, 2008

Molly R. BrysonThomas A. Giblin

Page 2: IPED HOUSING TAX CREDITS 101 San Francisco, California July 24-25, 2008 Molly R. Bryson Thomas A. Giblin

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Background

• Part of 1986 Tax Reform to Encourage the Construction and Rehabilitation of Low-Income Rental Housing

• Administered by the Treasury Department and Allocated by State Agencies

• Contained in Section 42 of the Tax Code • Emphasis on Private Sector Involvement (i.e. Developing and

Managing Projects)• Objective: To Provide Investor Equity to Lower Debt Service, Thereby

Lowering Rents• Credit is a Dollar-for-Dollar Tax Reduction• Credit Amount Based on the Cost of Constructing or Rehabilitating

Housing Developments

Page 3: IPED HOUSING TAX CREDITS 101 San Francisco, California July 24-25, 2008 Molly R. Bryson Thomas A. Giblin

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Program Requirements

• Minimum Percentage of LIHTC Units (20/50 or 40/60)

• Minimum 30-Year Affordability Commitment

• Maximum Rents Limited for LIHTC Units

• Maximum Income Limited for Households Renting LIHTC Units

• Projects Subject to IRS and State Regulation/Compliance

Page 4: IPED HOUSING TAX CREDITS 101 San Francisco, California July 24-25, 2008 Molly R. Bryson Thomas A. Giblin

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•Credits Are Limited•In 2000, Congress Raised Cap from $1.25 to $1.50 in 2001, $1.75 in 2002, and Thereafter Adjusted for Inflation•$2.00 Per Person for 2008•$2,325,000 State Minimum in 2008

State Allocation Volume Limit

$0.00

$0.20

$0.40

$0.60

$0.80

$1.00

$1.20

$1.40

$1.60

$1.80

$2.00

'00 '01 '02 '03 '04 '05 '06 '07 '08

Page 5: IPED HOUSING TAX CREDITS 101 San Francisco, California July 24-25, 2008 Molly R. Bryson Thomas A. Giblin

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Volume Limit Rules

• Example:– State With Three Million Population Has $6,000,000 in

Credits in 2008• Allocated Amount is for One Year of Credit • 10% Nonprofit Set-Aside• 50% Test: Private Activity Tax-Exempt Bonds Subject to

Bond Volume Cap; No Credit Allocation Needed

Page 6: IPED HOUSING TAX CREDITS 101 San Francisco, California July 24-25, 2008 Molly R. Bryson Thomas A. Giblin

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Qualified Allocation Plans

• State Must Adopt QAP to Allocate Credits• QAP Must Set Forth Allocation Priorities• QAP Must Give Preference To:

– Lowest Incomes– Longest Period of Low-Income Use– QCT Projects Contributing to a Concerted Revitalization Plan

• QAP Must Provide Procedure for Notifying IRS of Non-Compliance

• Bond Financed Projects Must “Satisfy” QAP

Page 7: IPED HOUSING TAX CREDITS 101 San Francisco, California July 24-25, 2008 Molly R. Bryson Thomas A. Giblin

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Project Evaluation

• Credit May Not Exceed Amount State Agency Determines Is Necessary for Feasibility and Viability

• Agency Must Consider:– Sources and Uses– Amounts Expected to Be Generated by Tax Benefits– Reasonableness of Development and Operating Costs

Page 8: IPED HOUSING TAX CREDITS 101 San Francisco, California July 24-25, 2008 Molly R. Bryson Thomas A. Giblin

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Project Evaluation (Cont’d)

• Evaluation Occurs at Application, Allocation and Completion

• Owner Must Certify as to Amount of Subsidies• For Tax-Exempt Bond Financed Projects, Issuer Must

Make Similar Evaluation• Agency Must Require Market Study Paid by Developer

Page 9: IPED HOUSING TAX CREDITS 101 San Francisco, California July 24-25, 2008 Molly R. Bryson Thomas A. Giblin

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Industry Participants

• Congress• IRS/Department of Treasury• State Tax Credit Agencies• Developers/Owners• Property Managers• Syndicators/Investors• GSEs• Nonprofits• State/Local Governments• HUD• Tenants• Tax Professionals

Page 10: IPED HOUSING TAX CREDITS 101 San Francisco, California July 24-25, 2008 Molly R. Bryson Thomas A. Giblin

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Who Can Use Credits?

• C Corporations Can Use Credits and Losses Against Ordinary Income and Taxes

• Limitations on “Closely-Held” Corporations• Individuals Limited Under Passive Loss Rules to

Approximately $9,900/Year at the 39.6% Rate• Cannot Use Credits Against Alternative Minimum Tax

Page 11: IPED HOUSING TAX CREDITS 101 San Francisco, California July 24-25, 2008 Molly R. Bryson Thomas A. Giblin

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Structure

Investor LP$$$

Syndicator GP

InvestmentPartnership LP

Local GP

Developer

OperatingPartnership

Page 12: IPED HOUSING TAX CREDITS 101 San Francisco, California July 24-25, 2008 Molly R. Bryson Thomas A. Giblin

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Key Business Terms

• Projects Owned by Limited Partnership or Limited Liability Company

• Limited Partner Generally Owns 99.99% of Tax Credits, Losses and Profits

• Limited Partner Pays in Capital Contributions in Multiple Installments (Generally 3 or 4), Based on Negotiated Benchmarks

• General Partner Guarantees Completion, Amount of Credits, and Funding of Deficits

Page 13: IPED HOUSING TAX CREDITS 101 San Francisco, California July 24-25, 2008 Molly R. Bryson Thomas A. Giblin

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Tax Credit Development Timeline

July 2008 Read State QAP. Analyze Prior Winners, Meet With Staff.

July 2008 Pick Site, Plan Type of Project.August 2008 Develop Cash Pro Formas and Construction

Budget. Investigate Loan Availability and Interest Rates. Request Market Study.

November 2008 Option Land (With Conditions Regarding Zoning, Approvals).

November 2008 Apply for Soft Loans/Grants, if Necessary.December 2008 Receive Soft Loan Commitment.

Page 14: IPED HOUSING TAX CREDITS 101 San Francisco, California July 24-25, 2008 Molly R. Bryson Thomas A. Giblin

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Tax Credit Development Timeline (Cont’d)March 2009 Apply for Tax Credits.May 2009 Receive Reservation of Tax Credits.May 2009 Work on Site Plan and Zoning Approvals. Submit

Applications for Construction and Permanent Loans.July 2009 Obtain Site Plan and Zoning Approvals.July 2009 Purchase Land. Select Equity Investor and Execute Letter

of Intent. Execute Commitment Letter for Debt/Equity. November 2009 Submit Cost Certification of 10% of Reasonably Expected

Basis for Carryover Allocation (State Deadlines Vary).December 2009 Obtain Carryover Allocation.

Page 15: IPED HOUSING TAX CREDITS 101 San Francisco, California July 24-25, 2008 Molly R. Bryson Thomas A. Giblin

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Tax Credit Development Timeline (Cont’d)January 2010 Close on Equity Investment and Construction

Loan. Begin Construction.November 2010 Finish Construction. Begin Leasing.January 2011 Start First Year of Credit Period. Continue

Leasing. Submit Cost Certification for Forms 8609.

April 2011 Achieve Full Lease-up and Beginning of Break-Even Period. Obtain Forms 8609.

September 2011 Close Permanent Loan and Achieve Final Equity Contribution.

December 31, 2011 Place All Buildings in Service.

Page 16: IPED HOUSING TAX CREDITS 101 San Francisco, California July 24-25, 2008 Molly R. Bryson Thomas A. Giblin

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Calculating Credits/Defining Terms

• Annual Credit Amount = Applicable Percentage X Qualified Basis

• Annual Credit Amount Available for 10 Years• Credit Period Begins When a Building is Placed in

Service Unless the Taxpayer Elects to Defer the Start of the Credit Period to the Next Taxable Year

• First Year Credit Reduced to Reflect Qualified Occupancy During First Credit Year

Page 17: IPED HOUSING TAX CREDITS 101 San Francisco, California July 24-25, 2008 Molly R. Bryson Thomas A. Giblin

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Applicable Percentage

• Two Credits:– 70 Percent Present Value Credit (“9% Credit”)– 30 Percent Present Value Credit (“4% Credit”)

• Credit Rates– 7.93% and 3.40% for July 2008– Lowest Rates for July 2003 (7.78% and 3.33%)

• Owner Elects to Set Applicable Percentage Either(i) When Receiving a Binding Commitment From the State (or When Tax-Exempt Bonds Issued) (a “Lock-in Election”), or (ii) When Building Placed in Service

Page 18: IPED HOUSING TAX CREDITS 101 San Francisco, California July 24-25, 2008 Molly R. Bryson Thomas A. Giblin

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9% Credit vs. 4% Credit

New Construction

Rehabilitation Acquisition

9% Credit Yes Yes No

4% Credit Yes Yes Yes

Page 19: IPED HOUSING TAX CREDITS 101 San Francisco, California July 24-25, 2008 Molly R. Bryson Thomas A. Giblin

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4% Credit for New Construction or Substantial Rehabilitation

• Federally Subsidized New Construction or Rehabilitation Expenditures– Building Receives Tax-Exempt Bonds or Below Market

Federal Loan

• Below Market Federal Loan– From Federally Appropriated Funds– Interest Rate Below AFR (in July 2008 for Long-Term

Loans Compounded Annually, AFR = 4.60%)

Page 20: IPED HOUSING TAX CREDITS 101 San Francisco, California July 24-25, 2008 Molly R. Bryson Thomas A. Giblin

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Exceptions From Federally Subsidized Definition

• HOME Loan if 40% at 50% Targeting (in Each Building)• Community Development Block Grant (“CDBG”) Loans• Affordable Housing Program (“AHP”) Loans• Loan or Bond is Subtracted From Eligible Basis• Section 8• Native American Housing Assistance and Self-

Determination Act (“NAHASDA”) of 1996 if 40% at 50% Targeting (in Each Building)

Page 21: IPED HOUSING TAX CREDITS 101 San Francisco, California July 24-25, 2008 Molly R. Bryson Thomas A. Giblin

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4% Credit for Acquisition

• Based on the Acquisition Cost of an Existing Building• Purchase From an Unrelated Party• Ten-Year Rule• Certain Placements in Service Ignored– Carryover Basis– Acquired From Decedent– Placement in Service by Governmental Unit or Nonprofit Entity– Foreclosure

• Waiver of Ten-Year Rule From Treasury

Page 22: IPED HOUSING TAX CREDITS 101 San Francisco, California July 24-25, 2008 Molly R. Bryson Thomas A. Giblin

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Substantial Rehabilitation Requirement

• Expenditures During a 24-month Period Selected by the Taxpayer Must Equal the Greater Of:– $3,000 Per Low-Income Unit, or– 10% of Adjusted Basis

• “Separate New Building”

Page 23: IPED HOUSING TAX CREDITS 101 San Francisco, California July 24-25, 2008 Molly R. Bryson Thomas A. Giblin

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9% Credit for New Construction or Substantial Rehabilitation

• If Not Federally Subsidized

Page 24: IPED HOUSING TAX CREDITS 101 San Francisco, California July 24-25, 2008 Molly R. Bryson Thomas A. Giblin

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Basis Calculations

• Start With Eligible Basis, Then Qualified Basis

Page 25: IPED HOUSING TAX CREDITS 101 San Francisco, California July 24-25, 2008 Molly R. Bryson Thomas A. Giblin

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Eligible Basis

• New Construction = Adjusted Basis (Generally, Development Cost Less Land)

• Acquisition = Acquisition Cost• Substantial Rehabilitation = Capitalized Rehabilitation

Expenditures (24-Month Rule)• Must Subtract Federal Grants• 130% Increase in Qualified Census Tracts (“QCTs”) and

Difficult Development Areas (“DDAs”)

Page 26: IPED HOUSING TAX CREDITS 101 San Francisco, California July 24-25, 2008 Molly R. Bryson Thomas A. Giblin

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Qualified Basis

• Qualified Basis = Applicable Fraction X Eligible Basis• Applicable Fraction is the Lower of:

– Number of Occupied Low-Income Units Divided by the Total Number of Residential Units, or

– Floor Space Fraction

Page 27: IPED HOUSING TAX CREDITS 101 San Francisco, California July 24-25, 2008 Molly R. Bryson Thomas A. Giblin

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Example of Tax Credit Calculation

• 100 Unit Project/70 Low-Income Units• Total Development Costs (Including Land) = $5.5m• Land Value = $500k• Eligible Basis = $5.0m• Qualified Basis = $3.5m ($5.0m X 70%)

Page 28: IPED HOUSING TAX CREDITS 101 San Francisco, California July 24-25, 2008 Molly R. Bryson Thomas A. Giblin

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Example Tax Credit Calculation (Cont’d)

• Applicable Percentage = 7.93% (Not Federally Subsidized)

• Annual Credit = $277,550 ($3.5m X 7.93%)• 10-Year Credits = $2,775,500

Page 29: IPED HOUSING TAX CREDITS 101 San Francisco, California July 24-25, 2008 Molly R. Bryson Thomas A. Giblin

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Common Areas• Eligible Basis Includes Cost of Common Areas and

Tenant Facilities to the Extent Such Facilities Are Made Available to all Residents Without Additional Charge

• Common Areas Include Community Rooms, Garages, Laundry Rooms and Pools/Playgrounds

• Common Areas/Tenant Facilities Must Be Used “Exclusively” by Tenants of the Tax Credit Property

• Community Service Facility Exception: Cost of Construction “Community Service Facility” May Be Included in Eligible Basis Even if Non-Residents Use the Facility

Page 30: IPED HOUSING TAX CREDITS 101 San Francisco, California July 24-25, 2008 Molly R. Bryson Thomas A. Giblin

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Manager Units

• Eligible Basis Includes Cost of Constructing Units Occupied by a Full-Time Resident Manager/On-Site Maintenance Personnel

• Manager Units Are Excluded From the Applicable Fraction When Determining a Building’s Qualified Basis

Page 31: IPED HOUSING TAX CREDITS 101 San Francisco, California July 24-25, 2008 Molly R. Bryson Thomas A. Giblin

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Determining Eligible Basis in Mixed Use Buildings

• Mixed Use Buildings May Qualify for Tax Credits but the Eligible Basis Must be Reduced by the Cost of any Non-Residential Rental Property

• Cost of Common Areas Allocated Between Residential/Non-Residential Use According to any “Reasonable Method” that Properly Reflects the Proportional Benefits to Be Derived by the Residential/Non-Residential Property

• Common Approach: Allocating Cost of Common Elements Based on Relative Square Footage of Residential/Commercial Property

Page 32: IPED HOUSING TAX CREDITS 101 San Francisco, California July 24-25, 2008 Molly R. Bryson Thomas A. Giblin

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Equity Calculation

• Pricing Primarily Based on Total Amount of 10-Year Credits Available to Investor and Market Conditions

• Expressed as “Cents Per Tax Credit Dollar”• In Above Example, if Investor Will Pay $0.80 Per Tax Credit

Dollar, Equity Equals $2,194,980 ($2,744,000 X 99.99% X 0.80)• Equity Generally Paid in Several Installments (Often 3 or 4

Installments) Based Upon Negotiated Benchmarks• If Bond-Financed 4% Deal, Equity Equals $951,905 (($5,500,000

- $500,000) X 70% X 3.40% X 10 X 0.80 X 99.99%)

Page 33: IPED HOUSING TAX CREDITS 101 San Francisco, California July 24-25, 2008 Molly R. Bryson Thomas A. Giblin

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Income-Restricted

• Minimum Set-Aside Election of:– 20% of Units at 50% of Area Median Income (“AMI”), or – 40% of Units at 60% of AMI

• Election Upon Placement in Service• Must Meet Minimum by End of First Credit Year• HUD Publishes Area Income Figures Annually

Page 34: IPED HOUSING TAX CREDITS 101 San Francisco, California July 24-25, 2008 Molly R. Bryson Thomas A. Giblin

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Rent-Restricted

• Rent (Including Utilities) Cannot Exceed 30% of Qualifying Income for Assumed Family Size; Based on Bedrooms Per Unit

• Rent Limits Change Annually With Publication of New Area Median Incomes

• Rent Will Not Decrease Below Original Floor• Gross Rent Does Not Include Section 8 (or Similar Rental

Subsidies)• Gross Rent Must Include Utility Allowance for Tenant-Paid

Utilities (i.e., Deduct From Rent to Owner)

Page 35: IPED HOUSING TAX CREDITS 101 San Francisco, California July 24-25, 2008 Molly R. Bryson Thomas A. Giblin

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Continued Compliance

• 15-Year Compliance Period• Continued Tenant Qualification

– 40% Increase Above Eligibility OK– Vacant Units/Over-Income Units OK if Next Available Unit

Rule Followed

Page 36: IPED HOUSING TAX CREDITS 101 San Francisco, California July 24-25, 2008 Molly R. Bryson Thomas A. Giblin

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Understanding The Affordability Commitment

• 30-Year Affordability Commitment– 15-Year Tax Credit Compliance Period– 15-Year Extended Use Period

• Early Termination of 30-Year Affordability Commitment– Foreclosure (or Instrument in Lieu of Foreclosure)– Qualified Contract Process

• Extended Use Agreements

Page 37: IPED HOUSING TAX CREDITS 101 San Francisco, California July 24-25, 2008 Molly R. Bryson Thomas A. Giblin

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Qualified Contract

• State to Find Buyer if Requested by Owner After 14th Year Pursuant to Qualified Contract– Contract =

• Outstanding Debt +• Adjusted Investor Equity +• Other Capital Contributions, Less• Cash Available for Distribution

Page 38: IPED HOUSING TAX CREDITS 101 San Francisco, California July 24-25, 2008 Molly R. Bryson Thomas A. Giblin

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Qualified Contract (Cont’d)

• Adjusted Investor Equity = Initial Investor Equity to Project Inflated by COLA (Up to 5% Per Year)

• If No Buyer Found Within One Year, Property May Be Sold or Converted to Non-Low-Income Housing, Subject to 3-Year Vacancy Decontrol

• IRS Issued Proposed Regulations in June 2007; Comments Received and Under Review; Public Hearing Held

Page 39: IPED HOUSING TAX CREDITS 101 San Francisco, California July 24-25, 2008 Molly R. Bryson Thomas A. Giblin

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Recapture

• Recapture on Non-Compliance:– Accelerated Portion of Credit Recaptured (1/3 of Credit

First 10 Years, Decreasing Through Year 15)– If Minimum Set-Aside Fails, All Accelerated Credits

Recaptured– Otherwise, Unit-by-Unit (Extent of Decrease in Qualified

Basis)

Page 40: IPED HOUSING TAX CREDITS 101 San Francisco, California July 24-25, 2008 Molly R. Bryson Thomas A. Giblin

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Recapture (Cont’d)

• Recapture on Change of More Than 1/3 in Ownership or Sale of Project

• Bond Posting Procedure• New Owner Steps Into Seller’s Shoes Upon Sale of

Project

Page 41: IPED HOUSING TAX CREDITS 101 San Francisco, California July 24-25, 2008 Molly R. Bryson Thomas A. Giblin

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Compliance Monitoring

• State Credit Agencies Monitor Projects• Owners’ Recordkeeping Requirements:

– Number of Low-Income and Total Units– Income Certifications/Annual Re-Certifications and Backup

Verifications– Qualified Basis and Eligible Basis Amounts– Rent Amounts

• Owner Annual Compliance Certifications

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