What is a DST 1031 Exchange Investment?
A Delaware Statutory Trust is a real estate ownership structure for 1031 Exchanges that allows multiple investors to each hold an undivided beneficial interest in the trust. The term “beneficial interest” means that investors hold a percentage of the ownership, and no single owner can claim exclusive ownership over any specific aspect of the real estate. The laws of DSTs allow the trust to hold title to one or more investment properties that can include commercial, multifamily, net lease, retail, office, industrial, self-storage, etc. Investors are keenly interested in DSTs because the IRS blessed them to qualify as “like-kind” investment property for the purposes of a 1031 exchange.
Currently, the appeal for 1031 exchange investment options like the Delaware Statutory Trust has been significant. The year-to-date equity raise for Delaware statutory trust offerings was more than $4.59 billion as of Oct. 31, 2024, a 16.9% bump from the previous end-of-month $3.93 billion – according to data from Mountain Dell Consulting.
What’s driving the popularity of 1031 Exchanges and like-kind investment strategies as DSTs? We believe there are several major forces driving the popularity of DSTs for 1031 Exchanges now and into the near future, and that these same forces will hopefully make it unlikely that Congress will pull the rug out from under the current exchange laws.
Force Number One - Demographics: Aging Baby Boomers Are Retiring from Landlord Responsibilities
Force Number Two - Pandemics: Historical Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic
Another powerful force that helped ignite the popularity of the 1031 Exchange laws was COVID-19 and its impact on rental property owners. Because our firm actively works with thousands of commercial property owners across the country, we heard firsthand some of the challenges and pressures property owners faced during COVID-19 (and continue to face). These include mandated eviction moratoriums, strict rent-control laws, and other regulations that directly impact the financial health of investment real estate. Now, many of these same investors are stepping away from the financial burdens brought about by COVID-19, and the headaches associated with “tenants, toilets, and trash”. Investors by the thousands are relinquishing their rental real estate and reinvesting the proceeds into other real estate opportunities like 1031 Exchange Delaware Statutory Trusts.
Without the ability to defer capital gains and other taxes through the 1031 Exchange rules, many of these “mom and pop” independent investors would be subject to tax bills that could amount to 40% of the gains these investors realized after decades of working hard to build a modest real estate portfolio. William Brown, past president of the National Association of Realtors summed it up nicely in a recent New York Times article when he said, “Getting rid of the 1031 exchange would hamper the opportunity of investors because most investors cannot afford to sell a property and then buy something else after paying taxes.”
Force Number Three - Economics: The Virtuous Cycle of the 1031 Exchange
Finally, there is something inherently virtuous in the IRC code 1031. That is, like-kind exchanges help propel commerce through a number of other industries like banking, construction, landscaping, and insurance.
A well-known study written by Professors David C.Ling of the University of Florida and Milena Petrova of Syracuse University analyzed how 1031 exchanges encourage useful economic activity and growth that also supports the local commercial real estate markets and local tax bases. According to the Ling/Petrova study, DST 1031 exchange also achieve the following three major economic benefits:
- Like-kind exchanges are associated with increased capital investment in and reduced loan-to-value ratios (in other words, reduced debt) on replacement properties.
- Tax-deferred exchanges improve the marketability of highly illiquid commercial real estate. (This increased liquidity is especially important to the many non-institutional investors in relatively inexpensive properties that comprise the majority of the market for real estate-like-kind exchanges).
- 1031 exchanges increase the ability of investors to redeploy capital to other uses and/or geographic areas, upgrading and expanding the productivity of buildings and facilities that in turn generates income and job-creating spending.
By repurposing capital and real estate in a compressed time frame, 1031 exchanges and Delaware Statutory Trusts help the economic growth of cities and states across the country making the like-kind law a relevant and important ingredient to the preservation of wealth and the continued strengthening of the United States economy.