Title: Real Estate Investment Trusts
1Real Estate Investment Trusts The United
States Experience
CTPA Roundtable February 2, 2006 Paris,
France Tony M. Edwards, EVP General Counsel
2Overview
- U.S. Tax Treatment of REITs and REIT Shareholders
- Operation and Profile of U.S. REITs
- Benefits of Investment in U.S. REITs
- Globalization of Real Estate Securities
- Tax Treaty Issues for REITs and REIT Shareholders
3Qualification as REIT for U.S. Tax Purposes
- Company must be in the commercial real estate
business - At least 75 of assets must be real property and
be held for the long-term - At least 75 of revenue must come from real
estate - Stock must be widely held
- At least 100 shareholders
- 5 or fewer individuals can not collectively own
more than 50 of the REITs stock
4U.S. Tax Treatment of REITs and Shareholders
- REIT structure intended to eliminate entity-level
tax - At least 90 of taxable income must be
distributed annually to shareholders - Company receives a dividends paid deduction
- Income taxes are paid at the shareholder level
5What is a U.S. REIT?
- Full-time professional management teams
- Business plans designed to maximize shareholder
value - SEC financial reporting and transparency
- Stock values backed by real assets
- Traditional corporate governance and
accountability - Tax transparency
6The U.S. REIT Industry in 2005
- Over 475 billion of commercial real estate owned
- 15-20 of investment-grade commercial real estate
- More than 24,000 properties nationwide
- All major property sectors
- All major geographic regions
- 331 billion equity market capitalization
- 197 publicly traded REITs in the NAREIT index
- 169 REITs trade on the NYSE
- 35 REITs in SP indexes (9 in SP 500)
75 Reasons to Invest in U.S. REITs
- Diversification
- Dividends
- Liquidity
- Performance
- Transparency
8Dividends REITs Deliver Reliable Current Income
Average annual total returns 13.8 Average
annual dividends 8.1 percentage points or 59
of total return
Percent
Average annual dividend return 8.1
9DividendsU.S. REITs Produce High Yields
Before-tax yields as of January 17, 2006
Percent
Equity REITs
Corporate Bonds
10-Year T-Notes
SP 500
3-Month T-Bills
10-Year TIPs
10PerformanceShort-Term and Long-Term Performance
Compound annual total returns in percent,
December 31, 2005
30-Year Compound Total Return
3-Year Compound Total Return
REITs
SP 500
SP 500
REITs
11Globalization of Real Estate Securities
- Many countries have adopted a REIT-type
structure - LPT - Listed Property Trusts (Australia)
- Dutch FBI - Fiscal Beleggings Instelling
(Netherlands) - S-REIT Singapore Real Estate Investment Trust
- J-REIT - Japanese Real Estate Investment Trust
- SIIC Sociétés d'investissements Immobiliers
Cotées (France) - Canadian REITs Legislated in 1993, growing
universe - Belgium REITs Growing universe
- Hong Kong REITs Largest REIT IPO Completed in
November 2005 - Bulgarian REITs Newest country with REIT
legislation - Malaysian REITs Growing universe
-
- Under discussion
- United Kingdom Draft legislation issued by UK
Treasury in Dec. 2005 - Germany Enabling legislation expected in 2006
or 2007
12Tax Treaty Issues for REITs and Shareholders
- Current tax treaty issues for REITs are very
different than the issues with respect to
collective investment vehicles - The issue that has been addressed in the United
States has been treaty treatment of dividends
from REITs to REIT shareholders - Key question treatment like other dividends
versus treatment like direct real estate income
13U.S. Tax Treaty Policy for REIT Dividends
- Pre-1988
- Non-U.S. investors in U.S. REITs treated the same
as investors in non-REITs - REIT dividends treated like all other dividends
- 1988-1997
- Non-U.S. individuals owning less that 10 of the
REIT treated the same as investors in non-REITs
and subject to 15 withholding tax rate - All other shareholders treated the same as direct
RE investors and subject to 30 withholding tax
rate (except as otherwise provided under U.S. tax
code)
14U.S. Tax Treaty Policy for REIT Dividends
- 1997-today
- Non-U.S. shareholders treated the same as
investors in non-REITs and subject to 15
withholding tax rate if - the shareholder owns 5 or less of the REIT and
the REIT is listed - the shareholder owns 10 or less of the REIT and
the REIT is diversified - the shareholder owns 10 or less of the REIT and
the shareholder is an individual - Other shareholders treated the same as direct RE
investors and subject to 30 withholding tax rate
(except as otherwise provided under U.S. tax code)
15Theory Underlying U.S. Tax Treaty Policy
- Our new policy takes into account that portfolio
investments in a REIT whether by individuals or
institutional investors may be indistinguishable
in intent and results from similar investments in
other corporate securities and should be afforded
similar tax consequences in appropriate
circumstances. - - Statement of Department of the Treasury Joseph
H. Guttentag, International Tax Counsel Before
the Committee on Foreign Relations (October 7,
1997)
16Future Treaty Issues for REITs and Shareholders
- As REITs become increasingly globalized, tax
treaties can help facilitate this cross-border
activity - Cross-border investment in REITs by non-residents
- Tax treaties could provide rules to address the
treatment of cross-border real estate investments
of REITs - Tax treaties could provide rules to address the
cross-border investment of one REIT in another
REIT