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Condo Smarts: Pitfalls to avoid when investing strata funds

Dear Tony: Our strata corporation has $350,000 invested in GICs with an investment brokerage. We have used the same company for the past five years and are very satisfied with the returns and the management of our funds.
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Strata corporations can have contingency funds running into six or seven figures. When it comes to managing those funds, it's important for council to get it right and abide by the Strata Property Act.

Dear Tony: Our strata corporation has $350,000 invested in GICs with an investment brokerage. We have used the same company for the past five years and are very satisfied with the returns and the management of our funds.

It takes little work for the strata council: We get a quarterly report on the financials, which we publish in our council minutes, and we simply provide instructions to the broker when we require funds or how they are reinvested.

Our manager has instructed us that the brokerage is not permitted to hold the funds as they are not licensed and it is a violation of the Real Estate Services Act.

The brokerage is not actually holding the funds; they are in GICs in 91原创 banks, so we don鈥檛 understand the licensing problem.

Jennifer Morgan

Dear Jennifer: You are correct. Provided the brokerage is not holding your funds in trust, and the funds are invested in GICs that comply with the new regulations, established July 16, 2014, and they are solely in trust in the name of your strata corporation, your strata corporation and the investment brokerage are not in violation of the Real Estate Services Act.

There are, however, a few problematic practices that might result in placing a strata corporation鈥檚 investments at risk.

Here are a few tips to avoid violations or risks to your strata corporation鈥檚 reserve funds.

Do not permit your funds:

A) to be consolidated with any other funds;

B) to be in the name of any party other than the strata corporation in trust;

C) to be invested in any way that allows any party to retain any of the revenues from the fund;

D) to be transferred without a written or documented decision of the strata council;

E) to be invested in any instrument that is not within the requirements of Regulation 6.11;

F) to be transferred online without the explicit knowledge and permission of the strata council.

The strata council may delegate its authority for the administration of the funds to a licensed strata manager or to a council member, such as the treasurer.

That delegation of authority to manage the funds, however, should also include a detail of instructions on how the funds are to be invested, the length of the investments (term) and how the investments are reported to the strata council on a monthly basis.

Your bank, credit union or brokerage may require documentation to verify the scope of authority and instructions conveyed to the person making the decisions.

The issue of fees for the service also needs to be verified to ensure the strata is authorized to pay for the costs. A perfect example is a GIC for the contingency reserve funds. Any interest earned on a contingency investment must be consolidated back into that fund, as it is also reported as a revenue for your strata tax return.

As a result, a brokerage or service is not permitted to retain a share of the interest as their fee, because those fees have to be approved either through a CRF expense, which would require a three-quarters vote at a general meeting, or the approval of the fee as a line item as part of the annual budget.

Your strata may have also contracted through your strata management agreement a fee or structure of services that authorize your strata management company to invest your funds, with specific directions on rates of interest, limits of costs and instructions on the type of investments.

Review all of your service agreements closely to confirm that you are receiving a best return on your investments while also ensuring you have funds accessible for emergencies or planned major renewals as they arise.

The investment regulations and guide can be found on the home page of the Condominium Home Owners Association website at www.choa.bc.ca.

Tony Gioventu is executive director of the CHOA. Send questions to him by email. [email protected].