Income trust
Categories: Corporate finance | Types of companies | Legal entities | Taxation in Canada | Economic history of Canada
An income trust is an investment trust that holds income-producing assets. The term also designates a legal entity, capital structure and ownership vehicle for certain assets or businesses. Its shares or "trust units" are traded on securities exchanges just like stocks. The income is passed on to the investors, called "unitholders", through monthly or quarterly distributions. Distributions are typically higher than stock dividends, offering yields of up to 10% a year (up to 20% for riskier trusts).
The unitholders are the beneficiaries of the trust, and their units represent their right to participate in the income and capital of the trust. Income trusts generally invest funds in assets that provide a return to the trust and its beneficiaries based on the cash flows of an underlying business. This return is often achieved through the acquisition by the trust of equity and debt instruments, royalty interests or real properties. The trust can receive interest, royalty or lease payments from an operating entity carrying on a business, as well as dividends and a return of capital. (Source: Canadian Ministry of Finance.)
The main attraction of income trusts (in addition to tax advantages) is their ability to generate constant cash flows for investors, which is especially attractive when interest rates on bonds are low. They are especially useful for financial requirements of institutional investors such as pension funds. (Investment Dictionary)
The names income trust and income fund are sometimes used interchangeably, even though most trusts have a narrower scope than funds.
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Tax advantages
As a flow-through entity (FTE) whose income is redirected to unitholders, the trust structure avoids the double taxation that comes from combining corporate income tax with shareholders' dividend tax. If the tax regime allows it, a corporate subsidiary set up to run a trust's business pays a liability that reduces its tax bill, preferably to zero – making those payments to the trust unitholders ("pass-through taxation").
In a typical income trust structure, the income paid to an income trust by the operating entity may take the form of interest, royalty or lease payments, which are normally deductible in computing the operating entity’s income for tax purposes. These deductions can reduce the operating entity’s tax to nil. The trust in turn, "flows" all of its income received from the operating entity out to unitholders. The distributions paid or payable to unitholders reduces a trust's taxable income, so the net result is that a trust would also pay little to no income tax. The net effect is that the interest, royalty or lease payments are taxed at the unitholder level. (Source: Canadian Ministry of Finance.)
Types of income trusts
There are three primary types of income trusts:
Real estate investment trusts
Real estate investment trusts (REITs) invest in real estate: income-producing properties and/or mortgage-backed securities. The REIT structure was designed to provide a similar structure for investment in real estate as mutual funds provide for investment in stocks.
Royalty/energy trusts
Royalty trusts, "resource trusts" or "energy trusts" exploit natural resources such as oil wells. The amount of distributions paid will vary from time to time based on production levels, commodity prices, royalty rates, costs and expenses, and deductions. [1]
Business trusts
Business income trusts are individual companies that have converted some or all of their stock equity into an income trust capital structure for tax reasons. Business income trusts are used in many sectors, such as manufacturing, food distribution, and power generation and distribution. They are not investment trusts in the classic sense, since they represent a single company's assets and not a pool of investments.
Among business trusts, utility trusts that invest in or operate public utilities such as electricity distribution or telecommunications are sometimes put in a separate category as they are inherently less growth-focused. (InvestCom)
In the US, the business trust structure typically takes the form of publicly traded partnerships (PTPs) or master limited partnerships (MLPs), essentially limited liability partnerships (LLPs) with units that trade on public securities exchanges. [2] Those were very popular in the mid-1980s but are rare today. A more recent alternative called income depositary shares (IDS) has also failed to attract investor attention due to the trust activity being focused on the Canadian market.
The issue of economic efficiency of business trusts is controversial. On one hand, the distribution of income can force managers to exercice more discipline in investment decisions. On the other hand, the distribution can stunt the company's growth by preventing its expansion. If large numbers of growth-oriented businesses start converting to trusts purely for tax reasons, this could adversly impact the growth of the economy.
Investor risks
Income trusts are equity investments, not fixed income securities, and they share many of the risks inherent in stock ownership. Each trust has an operating risk based on its underlying business; the higher the yield, the higher the risk. They also have additional risk factors:
- Lack of diversification: unlike mutual funds, income trusts are generally single-sector or even single-enterprise, and their investments are sensitive to business cycles, especially for real estate and commodities.
- Potential sacrifice of growth: most revenue is passed on to unitholders, rather than reinvested in the business; in some cases a trust can become a wasting asset.
- Lack of income guarantees: income trusts do not guarantee minimum distributions or even return of capital. If the business starts to lose money, the trust can reduce or even eliminate distributions; this is usually accompanied by sharp losses in units' market value.
- Exposure to regulatory changes: while REITs and royalty trusts are generally well-established, single-company business trusts can cause significant losses in government tax revenue if they become too numerous. The government may decide to intervene and remove some of the tax benefits.
- Liability: depending on the local regulations, income trusts may be considered partnerships that do not provide the same limited liability protection as common stocks.
(Source: TD Waterhouse July 2005 paper)
Income trust booms
The tax advantages offered to trusts in certain jurisdictions have fueled income trust booms and bubbles in the recent economic history of several countries. In each case, the growth was led by the multiplication of business income trusts. (Main source: “What we can learn from other markets”, Globe and Mail, October 13, 2005.)
Australia
See also: Economic history of Australia, Taxation in Australia
Resource-rich Australia has had royalty trusts (and REITs) for a long time but in the early 1980s, a wider range of firms sought the same tax benefits and started converting into income trusts. Yield-hungry investors jumped on the bandwagon and rewarded the trusts with higher valuations. When Queensland Coal converted to a trust in 1984, its stock price tripled overnight.
The Australian government, seeing ever-increasing (but unquantified) losses of tax revenues, clamped down in 1985. All trusts except REITs and royalty trusts were given 3 years to find an exit strategy: to either keep the current structure at higher tax rates, or convert (back) to a public company. As unit prices started to collapse, the majority dropped the now-pointless trust structure.
United States
See also: Economic history of the United States, Taxation in the United States
In the US, the business trust structure appeared with publicly traded partnerships (PTPs) which were limited liability partnerships (LLPs) with units that trade on public securities exchanges, combining the tax advantages of partnerships with the liquidity of public companies. Starting from the early 1980s all sorts of business, from manufacturers to the Boston Celtics basketball team, converted to PTPs.
In 1987, conversions numbered more than 100 and Congress estimated that the trend was costing Washington $245-million a year in lost revenue. All PTPs except those categorized as "slow-growth investments" (roughly a third of them) were therefore given 10 years before they would be taxed as corporations. Just like in Australia, most of them converted back as unit prices fell, but the decade-long transition meant fewer sharp losses for investors. Others such as Cedar Fair received a special corporate tax rate on the condition that they would not be allowed to diversify outside of their core businesses. Few of the partnerships remain today as US income-focused investors favor high-yield bonds or debentures instead.
With the Canadian income trust market booming in the 2000s, American investment bankers have tried to import the Canadian model in a structure called income depositary shares (IDS). A handful of small IPOs have used this model since late 2003; but due to lack of investor demands, interested companies have preferred to go public directly in the hot Canadian market. (“Chasing Higher Yields Up North”, BusinessWeek, March 28, 2005.)
Canada
See also: Economic history of Canada, Taxation in Canada
The first Canadian tax ruling enabling the income trust structure, inspired on the American PTPs, was awarded in December 1985 to the Enerplus Resources Fund royalty trust. The first corporate conversion into a proper business trust, using the 1985 ruling, was Enermark Income Fund in 1995. The move attracted little attention at the time as the vast majority of trusts were still REITs and royalty trusts (the so-called "CanRoys").
The trust structure was "rediscovered" after the dot-com crash of 2000, as investment banks were for new sources of fees after the IPO market has dried up. The first high-profile conversion was former BCE unit Yellow Pages Group becoming the Yellow Pages Income Fund and raising C$1-billion in the process. By 2002, trusts accounted for 79% of all money raised through IPOs in Canada, with only 38% in the traditional sectors of petroleum and real estate. By 2005, the income trust sector was worth C$160-billion (approx. US$135-billion at October 2005 rates). The mere announcement by a company of its intention of converting could add 10-20% to its share price.
Trusts received another boost in 2004-2005 as the provinces of Ontario, Alberta and Manitoba implemented limited liability legislation that shields trust investors from personal liability. (Such legislation existed in Quebec since 1994).
Partly as a result of this ruling, Standard & Poor's then announced plans to add the largest income trusts to the S&P/TSX Composite Index on December 16, 2005, starting with a 50% weighting and gaining full representation on March 17, 2006. A new equity-only composite index would be created that will resemble the present structure without trusts. This move is seen as a strong gesture of support for the trusts, who would see increased demand from index fund managers and institutional investors replicating the index.
Business trusts have come to the attention of the government. In the March, 2004 federal budget, Finance Minister Ralph Goodale had tried to prohibit pension funds from investing more than 1% of their assets in business trusts or owning more than 5% of any one trust. Powerful funds led by the Ontario Teachers Pension Plan, which at the time had a significant stake in the Yellow Pages Income Fund, fought the proposed measure; the government backed off and suspended the restrictions.
On September 8, 2005, the Canadian Department of Finance issued a white paper suggesting that the trusts had cost it at least C$300-million in taxes losses the preceeding year, with provincial governments possibly losing another $300-million. The markets barely reacted and on September 13 Gordon Nixon, CEO of the Royal Bank of Canada, mentionned in passing that he was not opposed to Canada's largest bank converting into a trust. One week later on September 19, the Department of Finance announed that they were suspending advance tax rulings – essential for investor confidence – on future trusts. [3]
The resulting uncertainety caused an immediate slump with the trust market losing approximately $9-billion in market capitalization during the following week. This also caused CanWest Global Communications to reduced its proposed $700-million IPO spin-off [4] to $550-million. CI Fund Management has also showed hesitation regarded its planned trust conversion. Previous plans by ACE Aviation Holdings to spin-off Air Canada Jazz into an trust were put on hold indefinitely. [5] "Traditional" Canadian REITs, once content to ride the trust boom, are now trying to distance themselves from the new business trusts, to avoid regulatory "collateral damage." [6] (“Ottawa's move on income trusts throws sector into disarray”, Globe and Mail, September 28, 2005.)
According to RBC Dominion Securities, yearly trust cash distributions amounted to C$16-billion in 2005, not including potential capital gains taxes on trust conversions. Of that amount, $3.3-billion collected in tax. RBC estimates that taxing trusts like regular companies could slash the market value of Canadian business trusts by as much as 30% [7] – again, not counting the loss of the share price premium of companies that had announced their conversion and would then back off.
As of October 2005, Mr. Goodale and Department of Finance have declined to comment or answer questions on the future of income trusts. Intense lobbying efforts to "save the trusts" are underway by the business community and the Conservative Party of Canada. They demand that if equal treatment is to be granted to trusts and traditional companies, it should be implemented by leaving the trusts alone and cutting corporate and/or dividend tax to match the trust advantage. That solution would cost the government an additional C$1-billion, which the lobbyists claim would be a small price to pay for stabilizing the market and satisfying the public investors/voters.
The trust debate might turn into a major political issue. The political repercussions mostly depend on how much retail investors, especially seniors saving for retirement, are involved in the market. Some analysts put this at 60-65% of the market, up to 80% when counting mutual funds. If this is the case, a decision affecting the finances of a large proportion of their voting base may prove hazardous to Prime Minister Paul Martin's minority Liberal government. [8]
See also
External links
- Tax and Other Issues Related to Publicly Listed Flow-Through Entities from the Canadian Department of Finance
- Distribution requirements of the Ontario Securities Commission, including a section on income trusts and other indirect offerings
- Income Trust Centre from the Globe and Mail
- InvestCom section on Canadian income trusts
- Canadian Income Trusts List