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Due Diligence on a QI
Please note: This item is from our archives and was published in 2009. It is provided for historical reference. The content may be out of date and links may no longer function.
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As the financial press focuses on Bernard Madoff and other Ponzi schemes, recent investor losses approaching $1 billion by the failure of qualified intermediaries have gone relatively unnoticed. Qualified intermediaries, or QIs, facilitate tax-deferred exchanges of like-kind property under section 1031 of the Internal Revenue Code.
Some QIs have made allegedly imprudent investments in recent years, while others have allegedly siphoned off funds to related parties and are facing criminal charges.
Investor/taxpayers in these cases often not only lose the proceeds from the sale of their exchanged (and not yet replaced) property, but the exchange is deemed to be invalid, triggering a taxable event. Thus, due diligence is necessary before selecting a QI. Here are some points to include in such an inquiry:

Ensure that the QI requires taxpayer signatures for all withdrawals. This may be a single form from the exchange agreement or signature on the release for the bank.
This is not an all-inclusive list, but it does highlight some of the best practices of doing business with QIs. Review the answers annually or when there are significant changes for the QI, the industry or state laws.
—By Donald M. Deans, CPA/PFS, CFS, a financial consultant, and William B. Nicholson, ChFC, an advanced planning specialist, both at Capital Investment Cos. In Raleigh, N.C. Their e-mail addresses, respectively, are ddeans@capital-invest.com and bnicholson@capital-invest.com.