9 March 2024 | 17 replies
When they go under agreement they have to get site approval from corporate and have to get permits from the city and county and do not want to close on a property until then.

9 March 2024 | 261 replies
American corporations are investing billions into the country, its real estate, tourism and manufacturing.

8 March 2024 | 9 replies
The first is just the mortgage payments which typically cannot exceed around 28%.Then your mortgage payments plus your other debt obligations which typically cannot be greater than 40-48% depending on the lender.

8 March 2024 | 5 replies
From what I understand from your post is that you are a landlord in which you have rented your unit to a company so that they can provide corporate housing to their employees (employee).

8 March 2024 | 7 replies
For other folks, here are some other entities that would, if you sold the property to, have negative tax consequences: YouYour spouseAny of your lineal ascendants or descendants (parents, children, grandchildren, and the spouses of children, grandchildren, — including legally adopted children)Any investment providers or fiduciaries of the IRAAny entity (like a corporation, LLC, or trust) where a disqualified person owns more than 50%Any entity (like previously listed) where the IRA account-holder is an officer, director, a 10% or more shareholder, or a highly compensated employee

7 March 2024 | 3 replies
I recommend working with a tax strategist to develop and implement strategies to reduce your tax obligations.

7 March 2024 | 3 replies
For me, for "rescue capital", the terms have to be unbelievable and phenomenal and I would rather structure it like mezzanine debt whereas if the GP fails on the obligation you could step in, take it over and they lose their ownership in the deal.Rescue capital is very risky and like VC for seed funding, you could lose it all, so it better be well worth it.

7 March 2024 | 7 replies
@Kalen AdamsonNot tax advice as a cpa can respond but typically when you cash in stocks that gain is taxed (if owned for a while at qualified dividend rate).You could take the cash, hold money for taxes and put that money as a contribution to the LLC and then start investing in real estateIf you invest in real estate you may get depreciation etc whixh could be paper loss and potential reduce tax obligation but the entire picture needs to be looked at

8 March 2024 | 22 replies
Are you suggesting that an executive in corporate America doesn't have the ability to manage a team, leverage those with experience, and deliver value for the shareholders?

7 March 2024 | 6 replies
I'm a corporate employee and it's time to transition so that I can retire from W2.