This paper is part two of our three part summary of CIPFA's guidance on Local Authority Investment Property Investment.
Once appropriate legal powers have been identified, an authority must then be satisfied that the proposed acquisition is reasonable. This should include the consideration of the Wednesbury principles of reasonableness, which seeks to ensure that when a Local Authority makes a decision it:
- Has not taken into account matters which ought not to have been taken into account;
- Has not refused to take into account or neglected to take into account matters which ought to have been taken into account; and
- Has not based decisions on conclusions so unreasonable that no reasonable authority could ever have come to them.
In addition to Wednesbury Principles, the Local Authority should consider the guidance within Section 15 of the Local Government Act 2003, which includes the MHCLG’s Statutory Guidance on Local Government Investments and CIPFA’s Prudential Code.
The Investment Guidance
The investment Guidance seeks assurance that Local Authorities:
- Support CIPFA’s view regarding not borrowing more than or in advance of need, purely in order to profit from the investment of the extra sums borrowed.
- Require transparent reporting about the implications of an acquisition for the security, liquidity and proportionality of the investment and the authority’s risk exposure.
- Recognise the need for appropriate capacity, skills and culture.
Whilst it is acknowledged that the Investments Guidance cannot prohibit the acquisition of commercial/ investment property funded by borrowing, Local Authorities not following the Prudential Code and the Investments Guidance are expected to provide an explanation in their published Investment Strategy. This means that Members of the Local Authority will have to endorse the strategy and make it publicly available.
Any decision to acquire commercial/investment property will therefore always be in line with appropriate governance and be both open and transparent.
CIPFA’s Prudential Code
With regard to the CIPFA Prudential Code, Regulation 2 of the Local Authorities (Capital Finance and Accounting) (England) Regulations 2003 (SI 2003 no 3146, as amended) requires Local Authorities to ensure that the acquisition and financing of commercial/investment properties are:
- Affordable,
- Prudent, and
- Proportional
Affordable
Decisions must take into account all associated costs. Such costs can include:
- Initial transaction costs
- Maintenance costs
- Letting costs
- Tenant management costs
- Void losses and bad debts
- Interest costs on any borrowing
- Minimum Revenue Provision (MRP) for the repayment of debt
The MRP Guidance requires MRP to be set aside where the acquisition has been partially or fully funded by an increase in borrowing. The cost of the investment property that has not been financed from other resources will be eligible for MRP, amortised over the useful life of the asset, up to a maximum of 50 years, unless the asset was acquired under a lease or private finance initiative (PFI) contract with a term of more than 50 years.
It should however be noted that paragraph 21 of the MRP Guidance does acknowledge that it cannot be prescriptive:
“... other approaches are not meant to be ruled out, provided that they are fully consistent with the statutory duty to make prudent revenue provision. Authorities must always have regard to the guidance, but having done so, may in some cases consider that a more individually designed MRP approach is justified ... the decision on what is prudent is for the Authority and it is not for MHCLG to say in particular cases whether any proposed arrangement is consistent with the statutory duty.”
However, any alternative MRP policy should always recognise that:
- investment properties will be subject to wear and tear like any other property held by an authority, even if proper accounting practices do not require depreciation to be accounted for separately
- the acquisition of an investment property will normally require incurring substantial transaction costs, which proper accounting practices will allow to be capitalised but which would not prudently be carried forward unfinanced indefinitely
- in many cases, investment properties are only likely to hold their value if subsequent capital expenditure is incurred to replace components or refurbish the fabric of the building.
- Any anticipated increase in market value should be balanced against the potential physical depreciation of the building.
Prudent
Decisions should be based on assessing the reliability of the costs and understanding the risks and impacts that any adverse changes might have on future projections.
Such considerations might include:
- Inflation increases
- Reduction in Market rates
- Increasing void periods and rent arrears
- Increasing interest rates
- Reduction in strength of covenant, resulting in a smaller capital receipt upon disposal
- Changes in the regulatory environment relating to landlord activities
- Changes in property tax frameworks
- Changes in local government finance regulation
Proportional
It is essential that the Local Authority’s revenue budget is not over-reliant on income from commercial property and that property income does not constitute an inappropriate proportion of the Council’s overall investment portfolio.
As a minimum, Local Authorities should follow the recommendations of the Investments Guidance and set an indicator for the ratio of commercial income to net service expenditure. In addition, it is recommended that a weighted average expected loss is calculated to ensure that the Local Authority has sufficient resources to meet any potential losses or ensure that actions are put in place to mitigate the risks, in order to protect the Council’s reserves.