Wednesday, December 3, 2008

Where to Retire magazine article

A prospective client recently told me they were going to try to determine whether there was interest among potential buyers for a fractional interest in their California beach home. My response was that fractional industry insiders will tell you that even though sales may have dropped off somewhat at the moment, interest in fractional ownership is at an all time high. Now, more than ever, sophisticated families seek to diversify their real estate portfolios and hedge their risk by only buying as much cabin or beach house as they can realistically use. My google alerts for news on fractional ownership have been active for years and I certainly see more news today on existing and new fractional homes than a year or two ago.


In fact, Alan Macher has written an informative article on fractional ownership in this month's Where to Retire magazine. Alan interviewed me a couple of months back and he was kind enough to include a few quotes on page 49.

Check out the article here: http://www.elcorazondesantafe.com/images/news/elc_article.pdf

Thursday, May 1, 2008

FSBO Fractional: Do It Yourselfers Beware

Do you own a vacation home that has substantial untapped appreciation?
Are you a custom home builder with projects in resort areas?
Are you part of a group of family or friends that has considered "partnering" on a vacation property?

Solution: a Fractional Offering on your vacation property.

Currently Own
By selling 5/6 or 7/8 or 9/10 of your current vacation property, you can cash out of the majority of the appreciation on your property and diversify your portfolio. 1 out of 4 fractional owners purchase fractional vacation homes in other geographic locales. Wouldn't you like to have a property on the beach AND in the mountains?

Custom Home Builder
By putting a fractional offering on your custom home project, you can expand your target market and potentially increase demand. In a 180 mile radius around our project in Shaver Lake, California, the market that can afford whole ownership of our property is only 1.9% but the market that can afford a 1/10th interest of our property is over 10%! More buyers that can afford means more traffic at your site, more people talking about your beautiful property. Speaking of talking, fractional will create "buzz", especially if you are one of the first movers in a previously un-fractioned market. We have received free press in the form of newspaper articles, TV interviews and other notoriety, simply because we were offering fractions for sale. In the past three weeks our Shaver Lake property has been shown 13 times. A little buzz in this market doesn't hurt.

Go In With Friends/Family
You say "well, I'd just rather go in with my buddies and my uncle Ben than go to all that trouble." A fractional offering is even MORE relevant in this scenario than any other. If I could list all the disastrous stories I've heard of family and friends informally purchasing a vacation home together, it would be volumes. My family thought about going in together for a mountain cabin in 2000. We didn't do it because we were afraid that one person wouldn't clean, wouldn't pay bills on time, would want to sell at an inopportune moment, etc. etc. Bottom line: we missed out on a tremendous investment opportunity. The little cabins we were considering purchasing went from $150,000 to $500,000 and then we were priced out. A fractional offering can be private (just for you and your family / friends). Among other things, an appropriately structured offering sets up accounting and management structures to deal with cleanliness, monthly bills, reserve funds for replacement of life-limited assets, allows one co-owner to voluntarily sell their fraction (yes, without everyone having to sell), and has provisions to protect each other in the event a co-owner dies, divorces, declares bankruptcy.

Who can put a fractional offering on my property?
There lies the niche for fractional development and consulting at the individual home and small development level. At www.lloydlanson.com, we supply the expertise necessary to put a fractional offering in place on your property. Email me at garywinter@lloydlanson.com with some basics about your property and we'll set up a call to discuss.

Also, check out my latest article on fractioning one-off vacation homes at Nick Copley's site http://www.sherpareport.com/prc/fsbo-fractional.html

Wednesday, March 26, 2008

Can HOAs Regulate Fractional Ownership?

Here's an interesting article where a Tahoe HOA makes remarks about regulating or eliminating fractional ownership in their development to preserve the status of the community. For some time now, HOAs in certain resort areas have put in place conditions, covenants and restrictions (CC&Rs) that prohibit the sale of timeshares within a development. However, the difference between timeshare and fractional is vast. In my opinion, HOA or municipality attempts to regulate fractional are erroneously rooted: (1) in a misunderstanding of the definition of fractional ownership (they think it's timeshare); and (2) in fear that the "caliber of the neighborhood" will degrade due to the influx of fractional buyers perceived as being lower class.



Of course, fractional ownership is NOT timeshare. See my post on March 12, 2008 and the article by fractional owner / attorney John Gosselin. I'm still formulating my reasons why I believe an HOA or municipality probably can not legally eliminate fractional ownership from a development. My initial thoughts are: (1) CC&Rs and zoning ordinances restrict the use of property, not the form of holding title; (2) If such a CC&R or zoning ordinance was passed, it would be overbroad and effect all co-owned property in the development; and (3) attempts to distinguish those fractional owners who have a formal co-ownership system for use from those who don't will be patently discriminatory. If your HOA is considering such amendments to its governing documents please contact me, as I'd be very curious to learn what their justification is. More on this in future posts as I predict that this will be a very hot topic when fractional projects continue to sprout in exclusive gated communities across the nation in resort areas.

As for the fear that here come the fractional buyers and "there goes the neighborhood" - I find this personally distasteful and factually baseless. What evidence is there that fractional ownership would in any way degrade a community? None. In fact, there is ample evidence to the contrary. Many fractional owners actually can afford a whole property in such developments but choose not to put all their eggs in one basket and instead buy multiple fractions in various geographic locales. In addition, fractional ownership has been shown to actually assist the local economy by keeping a second home occupied a higher percentage of the year and thereby keeping local merchants busier in the slow seasons. Remember, that the fractional owners are "owners" not renters or visitors. Owners, even of fractions, take pride of ownership because they have a significant investment at stake.

Wednesday, March 12, 2008

Fractional Ownership: Getting A Piece of the Pie

Attorney John Gosselin is the Managing Partner of Gosselin & Associates, PC in the Boston area. John recently purchased a fractional vacation home and wrote a brief article about what to consider on purchase. I find John's article to be generally well-written and recommend it to you. My thoughts on the article are below:

"They're Not Timeshares"
What's a Timeshare? The term "timeshare" has become somewhat a term of art in the nation's vernacular, it conjures up images of hard-selling elderly people on a $20,000 purchase at a crowded resort with a long buffet line and buyer's remorse when arriving back home and thinking "why did I just spend all that money to go back to a resort once a year when I could just pay at time of service?" Timeshares in the legal sense are merely pre-paid vacations at the resort. They give the timeshare owner the right to stay at the resort for a week or two per year for a fixed term such as 10 years. Once the ten years is over, the timeshare ceases to exist. Timeshares are legal "licenses" where the resort owner has merely given permission to the timeshare owner to stay. There is no ownership of real estate and therefore no hope of appreciation or significant resale value. This is not a slam on the timeshare industry because, by pre-paying, the timeshare has provided a significant savings for the timeshare owner over paying at time of stay.

How is the Fractional Vacation Home (FVH) Different? Night and Day. While there are many fractional resorts that now offer a very small share of ownership in the resort as an ownership alternative to timeshares, the following are key differences of a FVH:
1. FVH is a stand alone property;
2. FVH is owned with a few other people (generally less than 11 in California);
3. FVH is usually within 3 hr drive from your primary residence;
4. Owners receive a grant deed to a undivided fractional interest of the property;
5. Owners may resell their fraction (yes, as with every other piece of real estate there is a resale market);
6. Owners fraction value will track with the surrounding real estate market;
7. Owners may treat their fraction as an investment for tax purposes and utilize their expenses as deductions and even take advantage of Internal Revenue Code Section 1031 in certain situations (see your tax advisor obviously because situations differ);
8. Owners may borrow against their fraction without being on the same loan as other owners;
9. Owners have a voice in the management of the property;
10. Owners have responsibility for ongoing maintenance costs in proportion to their ownership interest;
11. Owners generally get a lot more usage of the property (at least 5 weeks per year and up to 12 weeks).

More on this soon...

Friday, March 7, 2008

Nice series of articles reviewing fractional vacation homes by Jennifer Openshaw

Jennifer Openshaw of CBS Marketwatch.com wrote a nice four piece series last August on fractional vacation homes. Check out Part 1, Part 2, Part 3 and Part 4.