Nonrecourse debt or a nonrecourse loan (sometimes hyphenated as non-recourse) is a
secured loan (debt) that is
secured by a pledge of
collateral
Collateral may refer to:
Business and finance
* Collateral (finance), a borrower's pledge of specific property to a lender, to secure repayment of a loan
* Marketing collateral, in marketing and sales
Arts, entertainment, and media
* ''Collate ...
, typically
real property
In English common law, real property, real estate, immovable property or, solely in the US and Canada, realty, is land which is the property of some person and all structures (also called improvements or fixtures) integrated with or affixe ...
, but for which the borrower is not personally liable. If the borrower
defaults, the lender can seize and sell the collateral, but if the collateral sells for less than the debt, the lender cannot seek that deficiency balance from the borrower—its recovery is limited only to the value of the collateral. Thus, nonrecourse debt is typically limited to 50% or 60%
loan-to-value ratios, so that the property itself provides "overcollateralization" of the loan.
The incentives for the parties are at an intermediate position between those of a full recourse secured loan and a totally unsecured loan. While the borrower is in first loss position, the lender also assumes significant risk, so the lender must
underwrite the loan with much more care than in a full recourse loan. This typically requires that the lender have significant domain expertise and financial modeling expertise.
Consumer finance
In Europe, mortgage loans secured by personal residences are usually recourse loans.
Most states in the United States also permit recourse for residential mortgages, but antideficiency statutes in a minority of states require nonrecourse mortgages.
Around 13 states can be classified as nonrecourse states, depending on a researcher's classification standards.
[ The Connecticut Office of Legislative Research, relying on data from the ]National Consumer Law Center
The National Consumer Law Center (NCLC) is an American nonprofit organization headquartered in Boston, Massachusetts, specializing in consumer issues on behalf of low-income people. Legal services, government and private attorneys, as well as co ...
, concluded that at least 10 states can be generally classified as nonrecourse for residential mortgages.
Self-directed
IRA investors who choose to purchase investment real estate are able to leverage their purchase with a nonrecourse loan. Due to
Internal Revenue Service
The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) is the revenue service for the United States federal government, which is responsible for collecting U.S. federal taxes and administering the Internal Revenue Code, the main body of the federal statutory ta ...
regulations, it would be deemed a violation of the qualified retirement account status to personally guarantee any loan on real estate owned by a
self-directed IRA.
A
property assessed clean energy PACE financing (property assessed clean energy financing) is a means used in the United States of America of financing energy efficiency upgrades, disaster resiliency improvements, water conservation measures, or renewable energy installations of re ...
(PACE) loan, used by some states to fund residential energy improvements, is an example of a loan that is nonrecourse to the borrower.
Commercial lending
Nonrecourse debt is typically used to finance commercial real estate, shipping, or other projects with high capital expenditures, long loan periods, and uncertain revenue streams. It is also commonly used for
stock loans and other securities-collateralized lending structures. Since most commercial real estate is owned in a partnership structure (or similar tax pass-through), nonrecourse borrowing gives the real estate owner the tax benefits of a tax-pass-through partnership structure (that is, loss pass-through and no
double taxation), and simultaneously limits personal liability to the value of the investment. A nonrecourse debt of $30 billion was issued to
JPMorgan Chase by the
Federal Reserve in order to purchase
Bear Stearns on March 16, 2008. The nonrecourse loan was issued with Bear Stearns's less liquid assets as collateral, meaning that the
Federal Reserve will absorb the loss should the value of those assets be below their collateralized value.
The
legal financing industry
The legal financing industry provides non-recourse legal financing to litigants. Sometimes this financing is funded from outside of the firm or from individual lawyer's finances, and then funneled through a third-party company. Financing is often f ...
provides nonrecourse financial products used to provide financial assistance to plaintiffs involved in a
contingency-based lawsuit like a car accident. The funds are provided to the consumer on the potential
settlement amount. This money is true nonrecourse funding, if the case is lost, one does not owe the company funding the lawsuit anything. This is a purchase of an asset and not a loan.
Characterization in corporate finance
Nonrecourse debt is usually carried on a debtor company's
balance sheet as a liability, and the collateral is carried as an asset. For
U.S. Federal income tax purposes, the interaction among the concepts of (1) the "amount realized" upon a disposition, (2) the amount of nonrecourse debt, and (3) the amount of
adjusted basis in the property is fairly complex. The tax consequences of a disposition depend on whether the taxpayer acquired the property with the nonrecourse debt already attached, or whether the taxpayer took out the nonrecourse debt after acquisition of the property, and the relative relationships between
fair market value and purchase price and disposition price. Upon a sale or other disposition of property under U.S. income tax law, a taxable gain generally results where the amount realized upon the sale or other disposition of property exceeds the amount of the taxpayer's adjusted basis in that property.
Generally, the amount realized is the amount of cash and other consideration received by the taxpayer. The amount of any loan forgiven or discharged is generally part of that consideration.
The
adjusted basis is the sum of the following:
* The amount of the original cost incurred by the taxpayer when the property was acquired, including the amount of any nonrecourse debt assumed by the owner/taxpayer as part of the acquisition (also known as "original basis"),
* Plus the costs of improvements (if any) made by the taxpayer to the property,
* Less the amount of depreciation (or similar) deductions allowed (or allowable) to the taxpayer on that property.
If the amount realized exceeds the amount of adjusted basis, the taxpayer has realized a gain at the time of disposition. If the adjusted basis exceeds the amount realized, a loss has been incurred. The federal income tax effect of nonrecourse debt may be explained by first considering the tax effect of a disposition involving
recourse debt (that is, a debt in which the property provides first security coverage, and the borrower/taxpayer is personally liable for any deficiency that may remain after the lender forecloses against the property), and then contrasting against similar facts involving nonrecourse debt, as follows:
As an example, suppose:
# The unpaid principal of the recourse debt is $100,000;
# The fair market value of the property is $80,000;
# The taxpayer's adjusted basis in the property is $45,000.
Assuming that the creditor forecloses on the property and that the $20,000 excess of the debt over the property's fair market value ($100,000 less $80,000) is contractually discharged (for didactic symmetry with the nonrecourse example, let's assume, contrary to the commercial point of a recourse loan, that the debt is outright forgiven by the creditor, with no actual payment), the taxpayer would realize the $20,000 amount as income from the discharge of indebtedness. That $20,000 of forgiveness would be taxable to the taxpayer as ordinary income even though the taxpayer received no cash at the time of the discharge. The $35,000 excess of the fair market value over the adjusted basis ($80,000 less $45,000) would be treated as a taxable capital gain on the "sale or other disposition" of the property—again, even though the taxpayer received no cash at the time of the foreclosure.
Assuming the same facts except that the debt is nonrecourse, the result would be quite different. The taxpayer would realize zero taxable ordinary income from the discharge of debt. Instead, the entire $55,000 difference between the unpaid principal of the debt and the taxpayer's adjusted basis ($100,000 less $45,000) would be treated as a taxable
capital gain
Capital gain is an economic concept defined as the profit earned on the sale of an asset which has increased in value over the holding period. An asset may include tangible property, a car, a business, or intangible property such as shares.
...
on the "sale or other disposition" of the property—again, even though no cash is received by the taxpayer at the time of foreclosure.
At the sale, foreclosure or other disposition, nonrecourse debt incurred as part of the financing of the acquisition, and money extracted from an investment by mortgaging out, are treated the same: both are taxable realization only at the time of the property's disposition, even if, at time of disposition, the property is worth less than the amount of the mortgage. Nonrecourse debt that is in place at the time of acquisition of the property is included in basis, ''
Crane v. Commissioner
''Crane v. Commissioner'', 331 U.S. 1 (1947), was a case heard before the United States Supreme Court concerning the value, for tax purposes, of inherited property with a nonrecourse mortgage encumbering it. According to Boris I. Bittker, ''Cra ...
'', subsequent borrowing is not. ''Woodsam Associates, Inc. v. Commissioner''.
[''Woodsam Associates, Inc. v. Commissioner'', 16 T.C. 649 (1951), ''aff'd'', 198 F.2d 357 (2d Cir. 1952).] Subsequent borrowing proceeds reinvested in a depreciable property thereby avoid ''Woodsam'' and take advantage of ''Crane''.
See also
*
Mortgage loan
*
Project finance
*
Recourse debt
*
Synthetic lease
A synthetic lease is a financing structure by which a company structures the ownership of an asset so that –
* for financial accounting purposes (under pre-2003 U.S. financial accounting rules), the asset is owned by a special-purpose entity and ...
Footnotes
{{Reflist
Debt
Loans
Business terms
Taxation in the United States
United States housing bubble