PPM (Private Placement Memorandum)

A private placement memorandum (PPM) is a legal document provided to prospective investors when selling investment positions in a property or business. The PPM describes the company selling the investment positions, the terms of the offering, and the risks of the investment.

Qualified Intermediary (QI)

By law, real estate investors involved in a 1031 exchange cannot receive (or touch) money from a sold property that is used to purchase the replacement property. A Qualified Intermediary is an independent third party that is unrelated to the investors or has had a business relationship during the preceding two years.

A Qualified Intermediary in a 1031 tax-deferred exchange serves three main functions in order to never allow the investor to “touch” the money:

  1. Prepares documents the IRS requires for the sale of the relinquished property and for the purchase of the replacement property
  2. Acts as a custodian of the the sales proceeds from the sold property as they are placed in a trust account and transfers those funds to pay for the replacement property when the transaction is completed, never allowing the taxpayer access to the funds
  3. Pays the taxpayer any interest earned from the funds being held during the escrow period with the taxpayer liable for reporting any interest received as ordinary income

Real Estate Investment Trust (REIT)

A company that owns and operates income-producing real estate. REITs can focus on a specific asset class or subclass, or they can be general in nature.

Relinquished Property

In a 1031 exchange, the relinquished property is the property being sold.

Relinquished Property

Relinquished property is the investment or business-use real estate that an investor sells as part of a 1031 exchange. The proceeds from its sale must be handled properly through a qualified intermediary in order to preserve tax deferral.

Replacement Property

Replacement property is the like-kind investment or business-use real estate acquired by the investor as part of a 1031 exchange. To qualify, it must generally be properly identified within 45 days and acquired within 180 days of the relinquished property sale.

Reverse 1031 Exchange

1031 tax-deferred exchanges generally fall into three categories: delayed, reverse, and build-to-suit. While delayed 1031 exchanges are the most common, real estate investors use a reverse 1031 exchange when they must close on the replacement property before the relinquished property is sold.  Learn more about reverse exchanges.

Safe Harbor

In a 1031 exchange, the intermediary temporarily holds the relinquished or replacement property, creating a ‘safe harbor’ to comply with the rules of the 1031 exchange.

Self-Directed IRA

A Self-Directed IRA is a type of traditional or Roth IRA that allows you to save for retirement on a tax-advantaged basis and has the same eligibility and contribution rules. While regular IRAs typically house only stocks, bonds, mutual funds and other relatively common investments, self-directed IRAs offer many more possibilities including investment in real estate. NAS Investment Solutions investment opportunities are suitable for a Self-Directed IRA.

Self-Directed IRA Real Estate Investing (SDIRA)

Self-directed IRA real estate investing refers to using a self-directed individual retirement account to invest in real estate assets rather than only traditional securities such as stocks or mutual funds. NASIS includes self-directed IRA investing among the real estate investment topics it discusses for investors.