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| Another way of investing in
commodities. |
From The Tax Adviser:
Tax
Benefits of Royalty Trusts
oyalty trusts provide income-oriented
taxpayers with opportunities to invest in natural
resources, realize cash flows and participate in the tax
benefits afforded this specialized industry. To educate
interested clients, CPAs should familiarize themselves
with this type of investment.
WHAT
ARE THEY?
Corporations owning
natural resources create royalty trusts to raise capital,
generate tax benefits or avoid tax burdens (for example,
the alternative minimum tax). A royalty trust is a legal
entity that purchases profit interests (interests that
pass through profits, but not losses) in mature,
low-risk, natural resource working properties (such as
oil and gas). It sells beneficial interests (trust units)
to investors to raise capital and distributes royalty
income to unit holders, net of management fees.
WHY
INVEST?
Royalty trusts promise
high yields when compared with traditional equity
investments and typically return no less than good
quality bonds do. While their prices fluctuate, they
currently provide about a 9% return (on an annualized
basis).
In addition to providing unit holders
with income from the working property, the trust passes
through proportionate shares of any depreciation or
depletion deductions or tax credits to which the
underlying property is entitled. Trust units are publicly
traded and readily marketable, and generally trigger
capital gain or loss on a subsequent sale (although
depletion deductions may have to be recaptured at
ordinary income rates). The trust itself is not taxed.
For the risk-averse investor, royalty
trusts offer diversification and a pure investment in
commodities; they reduce a portfolios overall risk
and provide a hedge against inflation. For example, the
unit price for a royalty trust with an interest in gas
wells would be tied directly to the underlying price of
gas. As the price of gas increases, the value of a trust
unit would be expected to increase. At the same time the
investor can avoid dealing with the exploration risk that
would be present with integrated oil companies.
TAXABLE
OR RETIREMENT ACCOUNT?
Normally, a royalty trust
investment should be made within a retirement account to
shelter the flow of current income against taxes, as long
as the investment is intended to meet future retirement
needs and retirement account contribution limits are not
a concern. On the other hand, if the investment is
intended to meet short-term goals (particularly an
immediate need for retirement income), the trust units
should be purchased via a taxable account. The tax
analysis must be balanced against the unit holders
risk tolerance and current need for cash.
CONCLUSION
Royalty trusts offer a
combination of investment and tax incentives. For the
income-oriented investor who can withstand value
fluctuations, they can be a good source of cash flow and
a way to enjoy directly the tax benefits afforded to
natural resources. This combination of attributes makes
the royalty trust an attractive investment device.
For more information, see Toolson,
Sanders and Raabe, Planning for Royalty
Trusts, in the August 2005 issue of The Tax
Adviser.
Lesli S.
Laffie, editor
The Tax Adviser
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