8 December 2023 24 minute read
REIT Tax News - December 2023
Editor’s note
Welcome to the 2023 year-in-review edition of
REIT Tax News. This year has been a busy year
for AKD Partners’s National REIT Tax practice, and
we want to thank our readers for coming with us on this
journey.
The beginning of 2023 had taxpayers and tax
professionals adjusting to the Treasury
Department’s December 2022 issuance of
proposed regulations
under Internal Revenue Code (the Code) Section 897. The
proposed regulations came as a surprise to the REIT tax
community and significantly modified longstanding
interpretation of the definition of “domestically
controlled” REIT status.
In particular, the proposed regulations would disallow
the common practice of foreign investors using a
foreign-owned domestic corporation to create a
domestically controlled REIT which was permitted under
prior guidance (the so-called corporate look-through
rule). Please see our prior
client alert
for more information. In addition, we contributed to the
American Bar Association Section of Taxation’s
Comment Letter
to the IRS on the proposed regulations recommending both
a modification of the corporate look-through rule and an
appropriate grandfathering of the rule.
As of the date of publication of REIT Tax News,
the Treasury Department has not yet issued final
regulations, although there is still time for the
Treasury Department to do so before the end of
2023.
In June 2023, the Treasury Department and the IRS issued
long-awaited
proposed regulations
addressing transfers of green energy tax credits under
the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA). Prior to the IRA, a
REIT typically held solar projects through a taxable
REIT subsidiary and could not benefit from these credits
without paying corporate tax. The transferability
feature of the IRA allows a REIT to monetize these
credits simply by selling the credits to an unrelated
buyer for cash without needing to use a taxable REIT
subsidiary. For more information, please see our prior
client alert
and our contribution to the New York State Bar
Association Tax Section
Report.
Fresh off the heels of the Treasury Department’s
release of the proposed regulations under Code Section
897, in late January 2023, the IRS provided helpful
guidance on parking, amenity space, and various
complimentary tenant services provided by REIT-owned
office buildings and the character of the income derived
therefrom for purposes of Code Section 856(d). For more
information, please see PLR 202304003 (available on
IRS.gov) and our prior
client alert.
More recently, in the fourth quarter of 2023, the IRS
issued a Private Letter Ruling related to a REIT’s
ownership of floating docks from a REIT qualification
perspective. The IRS held that such floating docks
constitute real estate assets for purposes of Code
Sections 856(c)(4) and (5) and the related storage fees,
pipeline use fees, and docking fees constitute rents
from real property for purposes of Code Sections
856(c)(2) and (c)(3). This is a positive
development for REIT taxpayers and is consistent with
prior rulings. For more information, please see PLR
202346008 (available on
IRS.gov). The IRS has also made the long-awaited update
to Form W-8EXP to allow qualified foreign pension funds
(QFPFs) to certify its status as a withholding qualified
holder under Code Section 1445. This updated form will
help streamline the investment of QFPFs into REITs.
Turning to the courts, 2023 includes a tax case
currently before the Supreme Court of the United States.
Earlier this year, the Supreme Court agreed to hear
Moore v. United States, Docket No. 22-800.
Although the amount in controversy in Moore is
small (approximately $15,000), a decision in favor of
the taxpayer imposing a realization requirement for
federal income taxes could have a significant impact on
other parts of the Code, not only on the mandatory
repatriation tax at issue in the case. Notably, the
imposition of a realization requirement may have an
impact on REITs and, in particular, mortgage REITs that
issue debt instruments with original issue discount may
be able to defer distribution. For more information,
please see the most recent
Transcript of Oral Arguments
and our recently published
article
on Bloomberg.
2023 also introduced several legislative proposals that
we will continue to monitor in 2024. Over the summer, US
Representatives Mike Kelly and Brian Higgins introduced
H.R. 5275
to restore the percentage of taxable REIT subsidiary
(TRS) securities that a REIT may hold back up to 25
percent of a REIT’s assets, increased from the
current 20 percent. For more information, see
H.R. 5275
and the
October 2023 edition of REIT Tax News.
In addition, Senate Finance Chairman Ron Wyden
introduced the Ending Tax Breaks for Massive Sovereign
Wealth Funds Act at the end of the third quarter, aiming
to eliminate the Code Section 892 exemption for certain
foreign governments with large sovereign wealth funds,
many of which are active investors in REITs. Please see
our prior
client alert
for more information.
More recently, Chairman Wyden also introduced the
Billionaires Income Tax Act at the end of November 2023,
aiming to require billionaires to pay taxes annually by
eliminating the ability of high-income and
high-net-worth taxpayers to use tax planning strategies
such as “buy, borrow, die” to defer paying
taxes indefinitely. In particular, if passed, this bill
would treat a capital gain dividend received by an
applicable taxpayer from a privately held REIT as gain
from the sale of a non-tradable covered asset, and the
tax imposed would be increased by the “deferral
recapture amount” (ie, an amount akin to
interest charged on deferred tax). This bill would also
limit the availability of Section 1031 (like-kind
exchanges). For more details, please see
Senate.gov.
In international news, the South Korean National
Assembly passed an amendment to the Special Taxation Act
at the end of 2022 which, in part, allows certain Korean
investors to look through certain foreign entities under
Korean tax law. This amendment would facilitate the
ability of Korean investors to claim the benefits of the
US-Korean Income Tax Treaty for US REIT investments.
Historically, Korean investors were concerned that they
may lose the benefits of the US-Korean Income Tax Treaty
if they were to invest in a US REIT indirectly, for
example, through a Delaware partnership. With the new
amendment, it is now clear that this common structure is
no longer a concern. For more information, please see
Bloomberg.
We are excited to remind readers that we have launched
our online REIT Tax Resource Center, a centralized
homepage allowing for easy access to our REIT tax
thought leadership and news. The homepage also
identifies, organizes, and links to a variety of key
REIT tax resources, including IRS tax forms, Treasury
regulations, relevant Code sections, IRS notices, and
legislative history. Also available on our Resource
Center is a simple primer on the basics of REIT taxation
in the format of a
FAQ. To access, please check out our
website.
Our REIT practice was proud to be a sponsor of the
annual Nareit REITwise Law, Accounting & Finance
Conference. In addition, we served on the tax committees
of the Real Estate Roundtable, the Institute for
Portfolio Alternatives, the American Bar Association,
and the New York State Bar Association. Lastly, we were
honored to be awarded a Tier 2 ranking in
The Legal 500 United States 2023 and
Band 3 ranking in Chambers USA 2023.
I. Legislative updates
H.R. 5988: The United States-Taiwan Expedited
Double-Tax Relief Act.
House and Senate lawmakers have been proactively
advancing a version of a treaty-like domestic
legislation for US and Taiwanese taxpayers providing
for, among other things, a reduced rate of withholding
of 15 percent for qualified REIT
dividends.
For more information, see
H.R. 5988.
Billionaires Income Tax Act would eliminate
“buy, borrow, die” practice.
Legislation co-sponsored by 15 Democratic senators would
“end one of the most prominent, legal ways that
billionaires avoid paying taxes known as ‘buy,
borrow, die.’”
For more information, see
Billionaires Tax Act.
Bill No. 2117151: Amendment to the Special Taxation
Act (Korea).
The South Korean National Assembly passed an amendment
to the Special Taxation Act which, in part, allows
certain Korean investors to look through certain foreign
entities under Korean tax law which should result in
reduced uncertainty related to the interaction of Korean
tax law and Code Section 894(c) and may allow REIT
structures with Korean investors to be
simplified.
For more information, see
Bill No. 2117151.
II. Treasury regulations
No updates this quarter.
III. IRS memoranda and private letter rulings
IRS PLR 202346008: Floating docks storage fees
satisfy REIT requirements.
The IRS ruled that floating docks are real property for
purposes of Code Section 1.856-10(b) and, therefore, are
real estate assets for purposes of Code Sections
856(c)(4) and (c)(5). The storage fees, pipeline use
fees, and docking fees in relation to the floating docks
qualified as rents from real property within the meaning
of Code Section 856(d). The related Code Section 481(a)
adjustment and remediation payments are not treated as
gross income, and the taxpayer’s income from the
related insurance payout is treated as qualifying
income, each respectively for purposes of Code Sections
856(c)(2) and (c)(3).
Available on
IRS.gov.
IRS PLR 202340012: Taxable REIT subsidiary provided
late election relief.
The IRS ruled that a taxpayer and its subsidiary
satisfied the requirements for granting a reasonable
extension of time to jointly elect under section 856(l)
to treat the subsidiary as a taxable REIT subsidiary of
the taxpayer where the taxpayer’s counsel became
aware it had “inadvertently failed” to
timely file Form 8875,
Taxable REIT Subsidiary Election. The
taxpayer requested relief before the Statute of
Limitations under Code Section 6501(a) had expired for
the taxable year of the election and before the failure
to make the election was discovered by the IRS.
Taxpayer represented that it did not use hindsight in
requesting relief and that the grant of relief would not
result in having a lower tax liability. No other
factors sided against relief.
Available on
IRS.gov.
IRS PLR 202344007: Relief granted for inadvertent REIT
election.
The IRS ruled that a taxpayer could be treated as not
having elected to be a REIT after its tax consultant
inadvertently elected for it to be a REIT by filing a
Form 1120-REIT,
U.S. Income Tax Return for Real Estate Investment
Trusts. The tax consultant’s team member that had
been directly involved in discussions with the taxpayer
was on paternity leave, and his remaining team members
filed the election. An advisor discovered the
error within a year, and the taxpayer immediately
engaged the tax consultant to file a Form 1120-X,
Amended U.S. Corporation Income Tax Return, to
undo the Form 1120-REIT and to submit a request for a
private letter ruling. The IRS held that the
filing of Form 1120-X was to be effective and to not be
treated as a termination or revocation of a REIT
election for purposes of section 856(g).
Available on
IRS.gov.
IV. Court updates
Moore: The Supreme Court hears oral
arguments.
The Supreme Court heard oral arguments in
Moore on December 5, 2023. The questions
that the Justices choose to ask, as well as the general
tone of questioning, frequently provide insight into the
ultimate outcome of a case. For more detail,
please see our recent
article
on Bloomberg.
Available on the
Supreme Court's website.
V. Other news
IRS updates Internal Revenue Manual to extend
electronic signature relief.
The IRS updated the Internal Revenue Manual (10.10.1) to accept electronic signatures (instead of
handwritten signatures) indefinitely with respect to
certain IRS forms. The update is an extension of
the IRS’s temporary COVID-19-era procedures
related to the acceptance of electronic signatures on
certain IRS forms. Notably for REITs and their
advisors, Form 1120-REIT,
U.S. Income Tax Return for Real Estate Investment
Trusts, is among the forms (see IRM Exhibit 10.10.1-2) for which the IRS will accept electronic signatures
in lieu of “wet-ink” signatures.
Details of the IRS’s release are available on
IRS.gov.
IRS releases a new version of Form W-8EXP.
The IRS has updated Form W-8EXP, to include the ability
of qualified foreign pension funds (QFPFs) to claim
their exemption from withholding and taxation under
FIRPTA. Prior to this, REITs required special
certifications from QFPFs.
The revised Form W-8EXP is available on
IRS.gov.
EARLIER EDITIONS OF REIT TAX NEWS
The three prior quarterly editions of REIT Tax News, which covered REIT tax news from the first, second, and third quarters of 2023, respectively, can be found here (Q1 2023), here (Q2 2023), and here (Q3 2023).
CONTACTS
To learn more, please contact any of the following REIT tax attorneys at AKD Partners:
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ABOUT AKD Partners'S REIT TAX PRACTICE
AKD Partners’s National REIT Tax practice has in-depth knowledge and experience with US-listed public REITs, Singapore-listed public REITs, non-traded public NAV REITs, and private REITs. We advise on the acquisition, disposition, and operation of real estate assets through fund, REIT, and joint venture vehicles. Our attorneys are recognized as industry leaders by The Legal 500 and Chambers USA. We regularly publish articles in legal and trade publications and actively participate in real estate and REIT industry organizations.