Protecting american taxpayers and homeowners path act

On December 18, 2015, President Obama signed into law the Protecting Americans from Tax Hikes Act of 2015 (the PATH Act). In short, the PATH Act:

Part II of this memorandum summarizes certain of the temporary provisions that were extended or made permanent, Part III discusses the REIT spinoff provisions, Part IV discusses the expanded opportunities for foreigners to invest in U.S. real estate without incurring FIRPTA tax, and Part V discusses the other REIT and FIRPTA provisions.

II. The Extender Provisions.

The PATH Act extends or makes permanent over 50 separate provisions that had expired or were set to expire. This part II summarizes certain of those provisions:

III. Restrictions On Tax-Free REIT Spinoffs.

Under prior law, C corporations were able to spin off REITs (or elect REIT status after a spinoff). This was a popular technique for separating an operating company’s real estate assets into a tax-efficient REIT that would lease back substantially all of the real estate to the operating business (so-called “OpCo-PropCo structures”). Companies such as Penn National, Windstream and Darden adopted OpCo-PropCo structures. Recently, the IRS and the Treasury Department issued Notice 2015-59, which suggested significant restrictions on the ability of C corporations to separate their assets into a REIT. The PATH Act now generally bars tax-free spinoffs involving REITs except in two situations. First, a REIT may be spun off if both corporations are REITs immediately after the spinoff. Second, a REIT may spin off a taxable REIT subsidiary (“TRS”) if at all times during the 3-year period ending on the distribution date (1) the distributing corporation has been a REIT , (2) the distributed corporation has been a TRS of the REIT, and (3) the REIT held at least 80% of (a) the total combined voting power of the TRS’s voting stock and (b) of each class of the TRS’s nonvoting stock, in each case directly or through one or more partnerships, during that 3-year period. If a corporation that is not a REIT was a distributing or controlled corporation in a spinoff, that non-REIT may not elect to become a REIT for 10 years following the spinoff. This provision applies to distributions on or after December 7, 2015, other than distributions pursuant to a transaction described in a ruling request that was initially submitted to the IRS on or before December 7, 2015 and, as of December 7, 2015, either was not withdrawn or was issued or denied in its entirety.

Partial IPOs, taxable spinoffs and other REIT transactions are not affected by this provision of the PATH Act.

IV. Expansion Of Opportunities For Foreigners To Invest In U.S. Real Property Without A FIRPTA Tax.

Increase From 5% to 10% of Maximum Stock Ownership In A Publicly Traded REIT Without FIRPTA Tax. Under prior law, a non-U.S. person could own up to 5% of the stock of a publicly traded REIT without the REIT stock being treated as a “U.S. real property interest” that is subject to a FIRPTA tax upon a sale of the stock or upon the distribution of proceeds from the sale or exchange of a U.S. real property interest by the REIT. Under the PATH Act, the 5% limit is increased to 10%. This provision applies to dispositions or distributions on or after December 18, 2015.

Exemption From FIRPTA Tax On REIT Shares Held By Certain Foreign Qualified Collective Investment Vehicles, Such As Dutch Beleggingsinstellings and Australian Property Trusts. Foreign entities that (x) either are (1) publicly traded and eligible for benefits under a tax treaty that provides for information exchange or (2) foreign limited partnerships organized in jurisdictions with a tax information exchange agreement with the United States and that have a class of limited units that (i) constitutes more than 50% of the total value of its partnership units and (ii) is regularly traded on the NYSE or NASDAQ, (y) are “qualified collective investment vehicles” and (z) maintain records of the identity of persons who hold 5% or greater interests at any time during the taxable year are treated as “qualified shareholders” of a REIT and are not subject to FIRPTA tax on REIT shares they hold. The exemption from FIRPTA tax is cut back for qualified shareholders whose investors hold (directly or indirectly) more than 10% of the REIT shares. This provision applies to dispositions or distributions on or after December 18, 2015.

Exemption From FIRPTA For Certain Foreign Retirement Or Pension Funds. Certain “qualified foreign pension funds” are now exempt from FIRPTA tax. The exemption is available for any trust, corporation, organization or other arrangement if: