News
Property problems: Syndicates must comply with Securities Act
Monday 6th of September 2004
apartment developers do not?
A. The position of the developer of an apartment building selling individual apartments on a unit title-based scheme is different to offering interests in a property syndicate.
Typically, ownership of an apartment in such a development does not entitle the apartment owner to any sort of proportionate entitlement to the income or any other return from the development as a whole.
Instead the apartment owner obtains rights of ownership to their specific apartment, coupled with rights in common with other apartment owners to use certain common facilities in conjunction with ownership of the apartment.
Essentially, the buyer is not participating in any form of communal investment scheme in which they stand to gain a proportionate interest in the investment return enjoyed by the entire development. As a consequence, such an interest is not a "security" for the purposes of the Securities Act.
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A. The position of the developer of an apartment building selling individual apartments on a unit title-based scheme is different to offering interests in a property syndicate.
Typically, ownership of an apartment in such a development does not entitle the apartment owner to any sort of proportionate entitlement to the income or any other return from the development as a whole.
Instead the apartment owner obtains rights of ownership to their specific apartment, coupled with rights in common with other apartment owners to use certain common facilities in conjunction with ownership of the apartment.
Essentially, the buyer is not participating in any form of communal investment scheme in which they stand to gain a proportionate interest in the investment return enjoyed by the entire development. As a consequence, such an interest is not a "security" for the purposes of the Securities Act.
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