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TENANT IN COMMON FRACTIONALIZED OWNERSHIP
Exchanges under Internal Revenue Code Section 1031 have long been a proven and popular way to defer the gain from the sale of properties. In past years, a real estate investor usually had to rely on cumbersome rules that discouraged the exchange process. Then, the IRS made exchanging more available to many investors by approving delayed exchanges. However, many investors still have problems in exchanging one property for another because they believe that they are only exchanging one set of property management headaches for another set of even greater headaches.
Institutions have long had the advantage of property ownership, because they purchase larger quality properties that afford ease of management and more dependable return on investments. In the past, the smaller investor has not had these same advantages, because the small investor does not have a capital amount to compete for institutional-quality properties. That has changed with Tenant in Common, Fractionalized Ownership (TICFO).
Call us today and see the Winner-Baird difference for yourself!
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