Income trusts: Frequently Asked
Questions
CBC News Online | October 11, 2006
BCE's October 2006 announcement that
it would join the most popular financial
club in town by turning Bell Canada into
an income trust was a watershed moment
for the burgeoning trust industry. With
a market worth north of $25 billion and
a stock that is among the widest held in
Canada, BCE's move would create the
biggest income trust in the country.
It also seems likely to raise new
questions about the proliferation of
a business entity that was a
relatively minor player on the TSX
just a few years ago. After all, if
BCE can do it, what's stopping the
big banks and almost every other big
cap company? What are the financial
implications for investors, federal
and provincial tax revenues, and the
markets?
What is an income trust?
In the arcane vernacular of
tax-speak, they're known as
flow-through entities (FTEs). But
most people call their FTEs by their
other name: income trusts.
An income trust allows a company to
avoid the double taxation that now
applies to its income — first, the
corporate taxes it pays and then the
personal taxes on dividends it pays
out to its shareholders. Trusts
manage to pay little or no corporate
tax because they aren't
corporations. Income trusts are
simply vehicles that "flow through"
interest, dividends and capital
gains directly to their investors
(called unitholders) as
distributions.
The unitholders, who then pay tax
at a preferential rate on the income
that is distributed to them
(usually) every quarter.
Some income trusts (like oil, gas
and real estate investment trusts)
have been around for quite a few
years. Many others — the business
trusts — are more recent creations.
There are now income trusts that
flow through income from sales of
everything from mattresses to peat
moss. Some trusts get their juice
from Yellow Pages advertising,
hamburger sales, newspaper
advertising, customs brokerage fees,
even coffee and jam. Any business
with a strong and steady cash flow
is a potential candidate.
About a million Canadians own
income trusts now. Retail investors
have snapped them up for those rich
payouts. But it's not just the
investing public that likes them.
Pension plans have been heavy
buyers, too. Investment banks have
made many millions bringing new
income trust issues to market. And
companies that hadn't even thought
about going public found an easy way
to join the party.
Why become an income trust?
There are several reasons why
companies have been jumping on the
income trust bandwagon. First, there
are the tax benefits for the
corporation. By flowing through
income directly to unitholders, it
can avoid paying corporate tax at
rates of up to 35 per cent. BCE
estimates that, had it not converted
to an income trust, it would face
corporate taxes of $800 million in
2008.
Secondly, the value of the company
gets an instant lift when the trust
conversion is announced. When Telus,
Canada's second biggest phone
company, announced its intention to
"go trust" in August 2006, its stock
price jumped almost 14 per cent to
an all-time high. That boosted the
stock market capitalization of Telus
by $2.5 billion.
Nowadays, it seems a company CEO
has merely to mumble in his sleep
about converting to a trust and his
firm's stock vaults higher.
What's in it for investors?
In one word — yield. That's the
return investors get from placing
their money in a particular
investment.
Let's look at the current
investment climate. Guaranteed
investment certificates now pay
three or four per cent at the big
banks. There's no risk. But for many
people who count on their nest egg
to generate a monthly income, that
just doesn't cut it.
There are stocks that generate
dividends: banks, utilities,
pipelines, that type of thing. Those
dividends are typically two to four
per cent. And while dividend
payments face less tax than
interest, they're still not the
gravy train some have been looking
for.
The yields on income trusts, on the
other hand, can be six per cent,
eight per cent, 10 per cent, often
more. A few of the riskier ones
yield more than 20 per cent.
"Tax-exempt" investors, like RRSPs
and pension funds, like investing in
income trusts because the company
they're investing in doesn't pay
corporate taxes and, as tax-exempt
investors, they don't pay tax
themselves on the distributions. The
federal Liberals tried to limit
pension plans' ability to invest in
trusts, but backed off when the
industry complained.
All other things being equal,
investors will take home more income
from an income trust, rather than as
a dividend from a tax-paying
corporation, because the
distribution will tend to be larger.
For instance, BCE says Bell Canada's
annual distribution as an income
trust will be $2.55 a unit. BCE's
dividend is just $1.32 per share.
It's all made for a trust boom.
Where there were just 70 income
trusts and similar products listed
on the Toronto Stock Exchange in
2000, there are almost 250 today.
Total market value is over $200
billion.
Are there risks?
Some investor advocates are worried
that many holders of income trusts
aren't fully aware of the risks.
Income trusts, after all, are all
about the income. Their unit prices
rise and fall on the health of that
distribution. And when they fall,
they can fall hard.
Several trusts have suspended
distributions entirely when the cash
available to distribute has shrunk.
Others have cut their distributions.
Predictably, the unit prices of
those trusts have fallen
dramatically. And they haven't
revived.
There are other concerns. Some
accountants say the current system
encourages excessive distributions.
There are also questions about the
financial reporting, the valuations
and the aggressive marketing of many
trusts.
Accountability Research Corp.
looked at the 50 biggest business
trusts in 2005 and found that, on
average, a significant portion of
their cash distributions (more than
a third) were not actual income from
the business, but were simply a
return of the investors' own money.
The bond rating agency, Standard &
Poor's, looked at 40 large Canadian
income trusts this year and found
that there were 19 different ways
companies calculated cash available
for distribution to their
unitholders. The Ontario Securities
Commission is promising new rules by
the end of 2006 on how trusts should
calculate and report distributable
cash.
The future
When former federal finance
minister Ralph Goodale announced a
review of the income trust sector in
2005, the finance department
estimated that trust conversions
cost the federal treasury $300
million in tax revenue in 2004. That
figure is sure to have grown since
then.
When Goodale put an end to the
review by announcing no new tax on
income trusts and a lowering of the
effective tax rate on dividends to
try to "level the playing field"
between corporations and income
trusts, the investment community
applauded.
But the end of the trust policy
review left other questions still
unresolved. Is the no-tax treatment
given to income trusts "legalized
tax evasion," as the Canadian Auto
Workers union has put it? Are income
trusts pressured to pay out too much
of their income as distributions
instead of reinvesting in the
business? And is the whole sector an
accounting nightmare just waiting to
explode?
There's no question that income
trusts have made a lot of investors
very happy. In most cases,
valuations have risen and
distributions have been healthy. But
there are no guarantees. One big
collapse could make a lot of
investors take a second look at a
sector that's become a fixture in
many portfolios.
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