Title: Corporations and Real Property
1Corporations and Real Property
2Investment Corporations
Individual Investors Individual Consumers
Corporate Investors Corporate Producers
3Real Estate Investment Trust
- All about REITs
- A company that owns income- producing real estate
- Created by Congress in 1960 to give anyone and
everyone the opportunity to invest in
large-scale commercial properties - It may focus on a particular type of property,
for example offices, apartments, shopping malls,
strip centers or industrial properties - Its revenue is the total rent coming in from the
tenants - Its profit is what remains after the property
managers, janitors, lighting companies, mortgage
companies, and local units of government have
been paid - To be a REIT, a company must distribute at least
90 of its taxable income to shareholders
annually in the form of dividends - Public REITs in United States (Wikipedia)
- Real Estate Investment Trusts (Securities and
Exchange Commission)
41995 2006
Changes in Timberland Ownership
5Timber Investment Companies - Timber Investment
Management Organizations
- An Introduction to Timberland Investing (Lyme
Timber Co) - Institutional Ownership of Timber (George
Draffen) - A Survey of TIMOs (Forest Service)
- Institutional Timberland Investment (Yale
University) - Hancock Timber Resources Group
- RMK Timberland Group
- Timberland Investment Resources (private)
- The Lyme Timber Company (private)
- TIMOs and REITs (.docstoc)
- Timber (SmartMoney 2001)
- REITs Spread to Timber Industry (Wall Street
Journal Nov 2005) - Wells Timberland REIT
- Plum Creek
- Potlatch
- Pact Will Form First Publicly Traded Timberland
REIT (Memphis Business Journal) - Timberland Wealth Emerges From the Forest
(Wealth Management Exchange, May 2008) - RMK and Nature Conservancy in the Adirondacks
(Timberland Blog)
6Corporations
- Real estate company
- Maintenance - Builder/remodeler, painter,
electrician, plumber - Utilities Bundled telecommunications,
electric/gas, water - Waste
- Retail companies consumer goods furniture,
food, clothing, durable goods, - Banking and other financial services insurance,
mortgage, financial
7Corporations (Wikipedia)
- A corporation is a legal entity determined by the
law of the state in which the business is
incorporated - Composed of individual owners but exists
separately from them - stockholders - stock holders own a part of the
company that issues the stock - bondholder - bond holders loan the company money
- Employs individuals and produces good or provides
services - Corporate law which tries to balance the
interests of the shareholders who invest capital
and the employees who contribute labor -
?liability issues - Recognized by law to have rights and
responsibilities like actual people - May be responsible for human rights violations -
be convicted of criminal offences, such as fraud
and manslaughter - Born" into existence through its members
obtaining a certificate of incorporation, they
can "die" when they lose money and become
insolvent
8- A corporation is legally a citizen of the state
in which it is incorporated - Corporate business law differs from state to
state, and many prospective corporations choose
to incorporate in a state whose laws are most
favorable to its business interests - Many large corporations are incorporated in
Delaware without being physically located there
because that state has very favorable corporate
tax and disclosure laws
9Public Corporations
- Joint stock company - a business partnership in
which capital is collected from the individual
contributions of shareholders, each of which is
given certificates of ownership (stocks) in
return - The shareholders are free to transfer their
ownership interest at any time by selling their
stockholding to others - Ownership of stock confers a number of privileges
- The company is managed on behalf of the
shareholders by an elected Board of Directors
unusual for shareholder to be on board - Hold annual general meeting, produce an annual
report, are audited yearly - Shareholders share in the company's net profit
also called a divided calculated as net profit
divided by the total number of owned shares - (Individual share of the profit is the dividend
multiplied by the number of shares owned) - Shareholders are liable for company debts that
exceed the company's ability to pay but limited
to the face value of their shareholding
10Public Companies
- Public corporations those owned by the public,
whose stock is traded on the New York Stock
Exchange or other exchanges - Any company that files a Form S-1 with the
Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and
raises money from the public - A public company needs to file reports
- a public company with 300 or more shareholders as
defined in the 1933 Securities Act can elect to
become a reporting company - a public company with 500 or more public
shareholders or a company with some public
shareholders and assets of 5 million dollars
must become a reporting company - May incorporate in any state
- Minnesota Statutes
- Minnesota Department of Commerce
11- Stock corporations sell stock to generate capital
- Most are generally for-profit
- Publicly traded corporation, the shares of which
are traded on a public stock exchange (the New
York Stock Exchange or NASDAQ in the United
States where shares of stock of corporations are
bought and sold by and to the general public - Most of the largest businesses in the world are
publicly traded corporations - Non-stock corporations is a corporation without
stockholders but many have members - functional
equivalent of stockholders - Most are not-for-profit
- Tax-exempt non-profit corporations are often
called 501(c)3 corporation, after the section
of the Internal Revenue Code that addresses their
tax status -
- A mutual benefit nonprofit corporation is a
corporation formed in the United States solely
for the benefit of its members - a golf club
12Securities Exchange Commission
- The mission of the U.S. Securities and Exchange
Commission is to protect investors, maintain
fair, orderly, and efficient markets, and
facilitate capital formation - Statutes and rules that govern the securities
industry in the United States derive from a
simple and straightforward concept - All investors, whether large institutions or
private individuals, should have access to
certain basic facts about an investment prior to
buying it, and so long as they hold it - Statutes that govern the securities industry
- 17 CFR Securities and Exchange Commission
- Securities Law (FindLaw)
- SECLaw.com (The Securities Law Blog)
13Other corporate entities (Wikipedia)
- Consumers' cooperative
- Limited company
- Limited liability company
- Limited liability limited partnership
- Limited liability partnership
- Limited partnership
- Low-profit limited liability company
- Not-for-profit corporation
- Partnership
- Sole proprietorship
- Trust company, Trust law
- Minnesota Business Corporation Act (Minnesota
Statutes 302A) - Corporations, Business Organizations, and
Associations Law (LawMoose) - Importance of Corporations (ActionPA.org)
- CorpWatch.org
- Corporations (Anup Shar)
14Private Corporations
- Companies which are privately owned
- Capital raised via private funds
- Does not need to meet the strict Securities and
Exchange Commission filing requirements of public
companies - US largest private companies (Forbes.com)
- Finding out about private companies (Chris Roush,
UNC) - Often family owned Cargill, Carlson Companies,
Dairy Queen, Anderson Windows
15Political, religious, environmental, and
charitable purposes Nonprofit Organizations
- The 200 largest U.S. Charities (Forbes Magazine)
- A guide to environmental nonprofits (MotherJones)
- Environmental Law Institute
- Environmental Defense Fund
- Natural Resources Defense Council
- Land Trust Alliance
- Tax for Nonprofits (Internal Revenue Service)
- A Guide to Minnesota's charity laws (MN Dept of
Agriculture) - Council of Minnesota Nonprofits
- Minnesota Largest Nonprofits (Star Tribune)
16Government Corporations (GAO)
- A corporate entity established by Congress in
which the government holds all equity - Most listed in the Government Corporation Control
Act (1945) - The Act does not serve as a general incorporation
law each of these corporations have their own
enabling legislation that stipulates its powers - Commodity Credit Corporation
- Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC)
- Pension Benefit Guarantee Corporation
- Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA)
- The Saint Lawrence Seaway Development Corporation
- US Postal Service
- Fannie Mae
- The burden of government enterprises (Cato
Institute)
17Municipal corporation (Wikipedia)
- Minnesota Statutes
- Minneapolis
18Federal Policy in part
- Federal Statutes
- 15 USC Commerce Trade (Cornell University)
- 12 USC Banks Banking (Cornell University)
- 29 USC Internal Revenue Code (Cornell
University) - Federal Regulation
- 12 CFR Banks Banking
- 13 CFR Business Credit Assistance
- 16 CFR Commercial Practices
- 17 CFR Commodities Security Exchange
- US Department of Labor
- Occupational Health Safety
- US Department of Commerce
- International Trade Administration
- Federal Trade Commission
- Uniform Commercial Code law governing
commercial transactions
19Standard Industrial Classification
- United States government system for classifying
industries by a four-digit code - Established in 1937, it is being supplanted by
the six-digit North American Industry
Classification System released in 1997 - Certain government departments and agencies, such
as the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission
(SEC), still use the SIC codes - Manual Structure
20Division C. Construction
- building construction by general contractors or
by operative builders - heavy construction other than building by general
contractors and special trade contractors - construction activity by other special trade
contractors engaged in specialized construction
activities, such as plumbing, painting, and
electrical work, and work for general contractors
under subcontract or directly for property owners - general contractors usually assume responsibility
for an entire construction project, but may
subcontract to others all of the actual
construction work or those portions of the
project that require special skills or equipment - general contractors may or may not have
construction workers on their payroll - Major Group 15 Building Construction General
Contractors And Operative Builders - Major Group 16 Heavy Construction Other Than
Building Construction Contractors - Major Group 17 Construction Special Trade
Contractors
211531 Operative Builders
- Establishments primarily constructing buildings
for sale - Builders primarily engaged in constructing of
single-family houses and other buildings for sale
on their own account rather than as contractors - Condominium developers on own account
- Cooperative apartment developers on own account
- Operative builders on own account
- Speculative builders
- Establishments primarily engaged in constructing
and/or renovating buildings for lease or rental
on their own account are classified in Real
Estate, Industry Group 651
22Division H Finance, Insurance, And Real Estate
- Major Group 60 Depository Institutions
- Major Group 61 Non-depository Credit
Institutions - Major Group 62 Security And Commodity Brokers,
Dealers, Exchanges, And Services - Major Group 63 Insurance Carriers
- Major Group 64 Insurance Agents, Brokers, And
Service - Major Group 65 Real Estate
- Major Group 67 Holding And Other Investment
Offices
23Major Group 60 Depository Institutions -
institutions engaged in deposit banking or
closely related functions, including fiduciary
activities
- Industry Group 601 - Central Reserve Depository
Institutions - 6011 Federal Reserve Banks
- 6019 Other Central Reserve Depository
Institutions - Industry Group 602 - Commercial Banks
- 6021 National Commercial Banks
- 6022 State Commercial Banks
- 6029 Other Commercial Banks
- Industry Group 603 - Savings Institutions
- 6035 Savings Institutions, Federally Chartered
- 6036 Other Savings Institutions
- Industry Group 606 Credit Unions
- 6061 Credit Unions, Federally Chartered
- 6062 Other Credit Unions
- Industry Group 608 Foreign Banking
- 6081 Branches and Agencies of Foreign Banks
- 6082 Foreign Trade and International Banking
Institutions - Industry Group 609 Functions Related To
Depository Banking - 6091 Non-deposit Trust Facilities
- 6099 Other functions Related to Depository
Banking
24Major Group 63 Insurance Carriers - carriers of
insurance of all types, including reinsurance
- Industry Group 631 - Life Insurance
- 6311 Life Insurance
- Industry Group 632 - Accident And Health
Insurance And Medical - 6321 Accident and Health Insurance
- 6324 Hospital and Medical Service Plans
- Industry Group 633 - Fire, Marine, And Casualty
Insurance - 6331 Fire, Marine, and Casualty Insurance
- Industry Group 635 - Surety Insurance
- 6351 Surety Insurance
- Industry Group 636 - Title Insurance
- 6361 Title Insurance
- Industry Group 637 - Pension, Health, And Welfare
Funds - 6371 Pension, Health, and Welfare Funds
- Industry Group 639 - Other Insurance Carriers
- 6399 Other Insurance Carriers
Agents and brokers dealing in insurance and
organizations rendering services to insurance
carriers or to policy holders are classified in
Major Group 64
25Major Group 61 Non-depository Credit
Institutions - establishments engaged in
extending credit in the form of loans
- Industry Group 611 - Federal And
Federally-sponsored Credit Agencies - 6111 Federal and Federally-Sponsored Credit
Agencies - Industry Group 614
- Personal Credit Institutions6141 Personal Credit
Institutions - Industry Group 615 - Business Credit Institutions
- 6153 Short-Term Business Credit Institutions,
Except Agricultural - 6159 Miscellaneous business Credit Institutions
- Industry Group 616 - Mortgage Bankers And Brokers
- 6162 Mortgage Bankers and Loan Correspondents
- 6163 Loan Brokers
26Major Group 62 Security And Commodity Brokers,
Dealers, Exchanges, And Services
- Establishments engaged in underwriting,
purchasing, selling, or brokering securities and
other financial contracts on their own account or
for others and exchanges, exchange
clearinghouses, and other services allied with
the exchange of securities and commodities - Industry Group 621 - Security Brokers, Dealers,
And Flotation - 6211 Security Brokers, Dealers, and Flotation
Companies - Industry Group 622 - Commodity Contracts Brokers
And Dealers - 6221 Commodity Contracts Brokers and Dealers
- Industry Group 623 - Security And Commodity
Exchanges - 6231 Security and Commodity Exchanges
- Industry Group 628 - Services Allied With The
Exchange Of Securities - 6282 Investment Advice
- 6289 Services Allied With the Exchange of
Securities or Commodities, Not Elsewhere
Classified
27Major Group 64 Insurance Agents, Brokers, And
Service
- Includes agents and brokers dealing in insurance,
and also organizations offering services to
insurance companies and to policy holders - Industry Group 641 - Insurance Agents, Brokers,
And Service - 6411 Insurance Agents, Brokers, and Service
28Major Group 67 Holding And Other Investment
Offices
- Investment trusts, investment companies, holding
companies, and miscellaneous investment offices - Industry Group 671 - Holding Offices
- 6712 Offices of Bank Holding Companies
- 6719 Offices of Holding Companies, Not Elsewhere
Classified - Industry Group 672 Investment Offices
- 6722 Management Investment Offices, Open-End
- 6726 Unit Investment Trusts, Face-Amount
Certificate Offices, and Closed-End Management
Investment Offices
- Industry Group 673 Trusts
- 6732 Educational, Religious, and Charitable
Trusts - 6733 Trusts, Except Educational, Religious, and
Charitable - Industry Group 679 Miscellaneous Investing
- 6792 Oil Royalty Traders
- 6794 Patent Owners and Lessors
- 6798 Real Estate Investment Trusts
- 6799 Investors, Not Elsewhere Classified
29Industry Group 651
- 6513 Operators or Apartment Buildings
- Establishments primarily engaged in operating
apartment buildings (containing five or more
housing units) - Does not include hotels, rooming and boarding
houses, camps, and other lodging places for
transients which are classified in Services,
Major Group 70 - apartment buildings
- apartment hotels
- residential hotels
- retirement hotels
306798 Real Estate Investment Trusts
- Establishments primarily engaged in closed-end
investments in real estate or related mortgage
assets operating so that they could meet the
requirements of the Real Estate Investment Trust
Act of 1960 as amended - This act exempts trusts from corporate income and
capital gains taxation, provided - they invest primarily in specified assets,
- pay out most of their income to shareholders, and
- meet certain requirements regarding the
dispersion of trust ownership - Mortgage investment trusts
- Mortgage trusts
- Real estate investment trusts (REIT'S)
- Realty investment trusts
- Realty trusts
31REITs
- A security that sells like a stock on the major
exchanges and invests in real estate - REITs receive special tax considerations and
typically offer investors high yields - Equity REITs invest in and own properties and
derive revenue from rent - Mortgage REITs invest in and own mortgages - loan
money to owners of real estate or purchase
existing mortgages or mortgage-backed securities-
and derive revenue from the interest on the
mortgage - Hybrid REITs combine the investment strategies of
equity REITs and mortgage REITs by investing in
both properties and mortgages - Investopedia
- REIT Café
- National Association of REITs
- Statement by NAREIT President, 1999
32Division H. Finance, Insurance, And Real Estate
- Major Group 65 Real Estate Includes owners,
lessors, lessees, buyers, sellers, agents, and
developers of real estate - Industry Group 651 Real Estate Operators
(except Developers) and lessors - Industry Group 653 Real Estate Agents And
Managers - Edina Realty Inc, Coldwell Banker, Century21,
ReMax, Exit Realty - Industry Group 654 Title Abstract Offices
- Industry Group 655 Land Subdividers And
Developers
33Industry Group 651
- 6512 Operators of Nonresidential Buildings
- Bank buildings
- Insurance buildings
- Lessors of piers, docks, and associated buildings
and facilities - Commercial and industrial buildings
- Operators of nonresidential buildings
- Retail establishments
- Shopping centers
- Theater buildings
34Underutilized Databases
- Corporate Reports
- Particular corporation - Target
- Bond Rating Firm Moodys, Standard Poors
- Investment Advice Newspapers, Journals
- Industry Reports
- Standard Poor's NetAdvantage
- LexisNexis Academic
35General Growth Properties REIT - nation's
second-largest shopping mall owner
- Established by brothers, Martin and Matthew
Bucksbaum, in 1954 as General Management
opened first shopping center in Cedar Rapids,
Iowa In 1960 - 1970 became General Growth Properties
- 1972 became a publicly traded company on the New
York Stock Exchange. - 1984 became a private company - sold 19 malls to
Equitable Real Estate for 800 million but
continued to manage them - 1993 became public and in 1995 moved headquarters
from Des Moines, Iowa to Chicago - subsequently
expanding its portfolio by acquiring existing
properties and constructing new malls - On November 12, 2004, acquired The Rouse Company
in the largest retail real estate merger in
American history - April 16, 2009, company, owning 158 properties,
second-largest mall operator at the time filed
for the largest real estate bankruptcy in US
history - Macy's has 106 of its 840 stores in General
Growth's malls
36Bankruptcy
- The collapse of General Growth Properties, which
operates more than 200 properties, is being
called by analysts the largest ever failing by a
mall operator - The company currently has 27.3 billion in debt
versus 29.6 billion in assets - It has obtained 375 million in
debtor-in-possession financing - Ridgedale Center in Minnetonka
- Eden Prairie Center in Eden Prairie
- Knollwood Mall in St. Louis Park
- Apache Mall in Rochester
- Crossroads Center in St. Cloud
- River Hills Mall in Mankato
- The Bankruptcy of GGP and the Prognosis for
Retail REIT Debt Management