
20 April 2008 | 1 reply
I am direct to a resource, but he only gets involved with short term, commercial/corporate scale lending needs (10MM to 600MM).Regards,KWS

6 May 2008 | 2 replies
i think you need to explore the idea of your client building his corporate depth. as an individual he can only do so much. he might have to go to a hedge fund that works with a top ten bank and uses thier funds to set up a wide variety of programs that they as a fund service.

11 August 2008 | 2 replies
These nonemployer businesses included 18.2 million sole proprietorships, 1.4 million corporations and 1.2 million partnerships.

14 August 2008 | 9 replies
You need to contact your state's "Department of State" Corporation Bureau to find out what the rules are.

16 August 2008 | 5 replies
The study by the Government Accountability Office, expected to be released Tuesday, said about 68 percent of foreign companies doing business in the U.S. avoided corporate taxes over the same period.

21 August 2008 | 13 replies
We have a government that insists on charging one of the highest corporate tax rates in the world, double taxes on capital gains, taxes interest on savings, bails out irresponsible corporations, fights expensive wars in the middle east and decides to put its head in the sand and not create a national energy policy for the 21st century.

14 August 2008 | 5 replies
At best you will still pay the federal and state corporate rates and at worst you could be hit with penalties for retaining earnings beyond the amount needed to conduct the business.

20 August 2008 | 3 replies
That being said, I have my concerns about a big corporate "dude" coming in when I am a farm boy and should be able to associate with the land owners for sure.

16 August 2008 | 2 replies
An LLC can be treated like a sole proprietor, partnership or corporation for tax purposes.