In September 2008, Anne Dykstra decided to celebrate her 70th birthday the best way she could imagine -- by retiring. The longtime educator from Golden Valley decided she could live on her pension, Social Security and $1,800 a month from an obscure form of real estate. The next month, Dykstra got a letter announcing the monthly real estate checks would no longer arrive. More than half her income was gone. Suddenly Dykstra had a new job -- trying to salvage her retirement.Dykstra is one of about 500 Minnesotans and 8,000 investors nationwide whose finances have been ravaged by the collapse of DBSI Inc., an Idaho company that specialized in supposedly worry-free real estate investments. Investors like Dykstra bought a small piece of an office building or shopping center from DBSI in exchange for "guaranteed" annual returns of 6 to 10 percent, depending on the property.
With cash from these investors, DBSI assembled a portfolio of more than 240 properties nationwide, worth an estimated $2.6 billion. But last fall, the private company abruptly stopped paying investors and filed for bankruptcy. Thousands of people, many of them retirees, found themselves paying lawyers and dealing with far-flung properties they knew little about.
DBSI said it's merely a victim of the declining commercial real estate market. But in January, securities regulators in Idaho filed a lawsuit accusing the company of fraudulently misleading investors. Last month, an investigator hired by the bankruptcy court concluded the company was in financial trouble as early as 2004 and stayed afloat with an "elaborate shell game" in which new investors paid off the company's existing obligations.
Some industry experts say federal regulators were slow to heed warnings that companies like DBSI were peddling these investments, called tenants-in-common (TIC), without adequately disclosing their risks. By 2007, when the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission finally prodded DBSI to treat these deals like securities, it was too late for thousands of investors like Dykstra.
"We knew about this DBSI thing and were trying to stop it," said Renee Brown, a Minneapolis securities dealer whose industry group complained to the SEC back in 2005. "The SEC was nowhere."
SEC spokesman John Heine said no one at his agency was prepared to discuss regulation of DBSI or tenant-in-common investments.
Exploiting a loophole
TICs, the little-known investment that proved DBSI's downfall, involved selling little pieces of commercial property to lots of investors. A single office building, for example, could be owned by 20 or more individuals, each of whom would receive a deed for their percentage. DBSI would buy the property and flip it to the TIC investors at a markup, from 20 to 40 percent.