Sunday, July 26, 2009

Investor Report: Bankruptcy Filings

Tax-deferred real estate exchange investors who've been victims of bankruptcy filings by intermediary companies in recent months could be in for some relief from the IRS.


In a letter to Senator Chris Dodd of Connecticut, chairman of the Senate Banking Committee, the IRS said it is aware of the financial pain, and potentially severe tax liabilities, faced by Section 1031 exchange investors around the country.

Among the most prominent recent bankruptcy filings that have interfered with thousands of exchanges: Land America 1031 Exchange Services, Inc., a subsidiary of title insurance giant Land America; and Summit Accommodators.

In both cases, the intermediary firms were holding millions of dollars of exchange participants' money, which were then frozen by the bankruptcy filings.

So-called "qualified intermediaries," or "QIs", play a pivotal role in tax-deferred exchanges. They hold the proceeds of investors' transactions in escrow while the investors are locating replacement properties to qualify for federal tax deferral.

During that interim period, the investors have no access to the escrowed funds. Though many QIs deposit escrowed funds into FDIC-insured bank accounts, some exchange agreements do not require that.

In the case of Summit, for instance, the company reportedly had lent millions of dollars of investors' escrow money to an affiliate , which in turn invested it into real estate ventures.

At the time of the bankruptcy filing, roughly $14.2 million in investors' money reportedly was missing -- making it impossible for them to acquire replacement properties to complete their tax-free exchanges.

More than $419 million in investors' escrowed money was tied up in the LandAmerica filing, exposing hundreds of investors to potential capital gains taxes because their exchanges could not be completed.

In its letter to Dodd, the IRS said it has no statutory authority to extend Section 1031 deadlines to accommodate investors harmed by QI bankruptcies. But it indicated that it is "considering some type of relief for taxpayers in this situation." The letter did not say what types of relief might be in the cards. "Investors are really in a tough spot," said Mary Foster, a past president of the Federation of Exchange Accommodators, a 1031 industry group.

Bill Horan of Realty Exchange Corp.in Gainesville, Virginia, told Realty Times there's a second category of investors who need help: victims of outright fraud, where QIs "took the (escrowed) money for themselves."

Ed Okun of Miami, who ran multiple QI firms, was convicted in March of defrauding hundreds of exchange investors of $126 million in a Ponzi scheme where funds allegedly were used for Okun's personal activities - including a divorce settlement and purchase of a 131-foot megayacht.

by Kenneth R. Harney

Real Estate - Pre sold Property Offers Confusing Sale Status

Remember the largest home sale to close in Pulaski County during 2007?

It was a whopper, in more ways than one, at $3.5 million.

Don't feel bad if you don't recall the sale of the 10,000-SF residence in west Little Rock's Chenal Downs neighborhood.

Neither did we.

That's because there was no $3.5 million real estate transaction.


The only deed connected to the property since the house was built was filed back in June 2005.

That's when Steve Landers Jr. and his wife, Karmen, bought the undeveloped lot for $183,000 from Rick Ferguson Inc.

How does an upscale lot sale get transformed into a $3.5 million house sale in the database at Cooperative Arkansas Realtors Multiple Listing Services Inc.?

That sounded like a question for Toni Fryar at the Bryant office of Crye-Leike Realtors, the listing and selling agent for the property.

Fryar explained that the residence was "presold," indicating that the house-to-be-built was tied to the lot sale.

The "sale" of the house didn't hit the CARMLS database until construction was completed in 2007.

Steve Landers Jr. wasn't familiar with the presold arrangement connected with the house built on the lot he purchased, and Ferguson couldn't be reached for comment.

http://www.toprealtynews.com/realestatenews/id_54709/

Science - Solar Eclipse, New Dragon Species, and a Prehistoric Blast: Buzz Week in Review

Corruption probes, presidential regrets, and other breaking news occupied headlines this week, but a mighty big science phenomena dwarfed those earthly concerns. After a busy seven days, take a look at the latest—and some ancient news, too—in the Buzz Week in Review.

An eclipse to remember
Earthlings won't see another solar eclipse like the one that darkened Asia this week for another 123 years, but that's soon enough for some. Millions ventured outside to enjoy the six-minute plus blackout, with astronomy experts gathering in Shanghai (which reportedly offered the "best views"), Japanese party planners setting up a music festival for the occasion, and passengers chartering a plane in India for a closer view. The prospect of being submerged in darkness, though, unleashed old superstitions, as some shut themselves indoors, cleansed their sins in the Ganges River, or prayed against bad omens. The event may have come and gone, but video and photos abound.

Another new Dragon species?
The Komodo dragon has had a busy year. First, studies of its venomous bite upgraded the lizard to an elite poisonous group occupied only by the Gila monster and the Mexican beaded lizard. Now the Komodo's got new kin: German scientists stumbled upon a new (to human beings) species of mangrove monitor lizard in the Talaud Islands. The discovery of the Varanus lirungensis (which is also related to the crocodile monitor) points to a huge predator diversity in Indonesia. So watch where you step!

The other big bang?
The theory about space rocks wiping out Ice Age species just got another boost: It turns out the first human inhabitants may have also been hit. Rare "nano-sized diamonds" that form under extremely hot fires are evidence that space rocks hit the North American continent about 13,000 years ago. Unfortunately, some pygmy mammoth (a smaller version of the woolly mammoth) and a group called the Clovis people happened to be in the line of fire. The galactic slam, plus "overhunting and climate change," created what one researcher called a "perfect storm" that wiped out the Ice Age population. The findings swelled searches on Yahoo! for the prehistoric "clovis people," so named because of artifacts first found in Clovis, New Mexico. For more on the mastodon hunters and the first Americans, check out this 2007 LiveScience article.

Also buzzing this week...

by Vera H-C Chan
http://buzz.yahoo.com/buzzlog/92849/?fp=1