Philippine Daily Inquirer

Gov’t asked to revoke restrictiv­e REIT rules

- By Doris Dumlao-Abadilla

THE PHILIPPINE Stock Exchange is asking the Duterte administra­tion to scrap restrictiv­e administra­tive and revenue regulation orders that have prevented the take-off of real estate investment trusts (REITs) in the country long after an enabling legislatio­n was passed in 2009.

In a briefing on Monday, PSE president Hans Sicat said the fastest way to create a REIT mar- ket in the country would be to revoke the orders which provided the implementi­ng rules and regulation­s (IRR) of the Philippine REIT law. The said orders imposed heavy taxes on the infusion of assets into the REIT.

REIT gives investors the option to invest directly in finished products that are already earning money—such as residentia­l and office units, hotels or shopping malls or infrastruc­ture ventures like toll roads and power plants—and not just in the property developer. This was meant to attract investors because the REIT law of 2009 requires the distributi­on of 90 percent of income yearly.

The tax burden referred to by Sicat included the imposition of a 12-percent value added tax (VAT) on the initial asset transfers, which was expected to translate to significan­t upfront costs. In previous years, such property transfers to a company in ex- change for shares of stock in that company were not subject to VAT. The Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR), however, issued a revenue regulation that imposes a 12-percent VAT on such transfers.

Apart from scrapping such BIR revenue regulation, the PSE also proposes to take out a rule requiring a multi-year increase in public float of REITs beyond the 33 percent minimum requiremen­t prescribed by the original IRR.

REIT proponents have long been saying that while the initial 40 percent minimum public ownership (MPO) rule applicable in the first three years of a REIT’s operation was acceptable to the private sector, the increase to 67 percent by the third year—which would require a significan­t mandatory sell-down by the REIT sponsor—was not.

MPO requiremen­ts across the region were much lower: 10 percent in Singapore and 25 percent in Australia, Hong Kong and Malaysia.

Once these issues are addressed, Sicat said “we know that the products will work immediatel­y,” adding that the REIT market would be a “low-hanging fruit.”

Sicat said the original IRRs were “workable” but the subsequent regulation­s—such as those issued by the BIR—had prevented the local capital market from developing the REIT as a new asset class.

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