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Chapter 8: Investment Issues; Plan Types

393

B.

Hedge funds and other “private” investments.

IRA investment in hedge funds and

similar private investments sometimes creates logistical difficulties. See,

e.g.

, PLR 2010-

13067, in which the participant, to meet a deadline for investing in a particular partnership,

deposited cash in the partnership, intending to later (when rollover funds were received

from another IRA) “restructure” the partnership investment as an IRA investment, a

procedure that obviously does not work. The IRS granted him a late rollover waiver

( 2.6.07 )

because he relied on incorrect financial institution advice.

A more common problem with these investments is titling mistakes. Title to IRA assets

must be held by a bank (or other institution that has gone through the IRS process for approval to

hold IRA assets)

. § 408(a)(2) .

An individual can NOT hold direct title to assets that are supposedly

in his IRA. Thus, the title of a partnership unit held by an IRA should be “[Name of bank], as

custodian [or trustee] of [name of participant] IRA.”

This requirement can be easily overlooked when the IRA owner wants to invest in a hedge

fund, LLC, or other private investment vehicle. The hedge fund accepts money that is supposed to

be a rollover from an actual IRA or plan, deposits the money in its fund, and opens an account

entitled “John Doe IRA.” Because there is no bank holding title to the account, however, this

investment is not “in” an IRA; it is owned by John Doe directly. The result is a taxable distribution

from the original plan or IRA that the money came out of.

If the funds came from an IRA or plan distribution that the participant thought he was

simply rolling over or transferring (still inside an IRA) to another investment vehicle, the

participant may be able to get a hardship waiver of the 60-day rollover deadline

( ¶ 2.6.07 )

that will

allow him to get the money back into an IRA. The IRS granted such waivers in PLRs 2007-37047,

2007-37048, 2009-19066 (real estate limited partnership), 2009-21038 (limited partnership),

2009-31063 (investment pool), and 2010-05058. In each of these PLRs, it appears the participant

relied on information from the company that was to receive the investment and/or other financial

advisors in assuming that the new investment was indeed properly held in a rollover IRA.

However, in PLR 2010-15039, the IRS denied a waiver to an IRA owner who withdrew

from her IRA and used the money to buy a share of “Company C” based on a seminar she attended

and (she claimed) assurances from the lawyer for Company C that this would constitute a valid

rollover and IRA investment. The difference between this and the “winning” waiver requests is

not entirely clear, except that in this one no advisor or company admitted any error. In the

successful deadline-waiver requests based on failure to have a bank hold the “IRA” investment,

the financial institutions and/or advisors apparently did admit they had incorrectly advised the

participant.

C.

S corporation stock.

Owning “S corporation” stock inside an IRA or Roth IRA does not

disqualify the IRA. However it does cause the corporation to lose its qualification as an S

corporation, with the disastrous result that the corporation will be taxed as a regular “C”

corporation. Rev. Rul. 92-73, 1992-2 CB 224; Reg. § 1.1361-1(h)(1)(vii).

Though the Code section that creates S corporations does not specifically prohibit S corp.

stock ownership by an IRA, the IRS has consistently ruled that IRAs (and Roth IRAs) are

considered “trusts” for purposes of the Tax Code. No trust may own S corp. stock other than a

“grantor trust” or an “electing small business trust,” and an IRA is neither of those. § 1361(b)(1),