
12 April 2020 | 76 replies
Instead of five of every book being in stock at 500 stores, Amazon can have 500 books in stock nationally.

12 April 2020 | 13 replies
Another thing I like about them is that they're a national company.

14 April 2020 | 28 replies
What they need is an "investor" (oftentimes parent(s)) to help them qualify.When I was working in corporate America I was in the same situation as you.

3 April 2020 | 1 reply
Hello BP Communinity,Would like to gain advice on how to legally rent out a condo and have it for corporate leasing and AirBNB.

3 April 2020 | 1 reply
And while people want to blame it on the virus our economy & society had deep flaws & risks many ignored & would not discuss like entitlements, socialism creeping in over decades & more like national debt & of course the elephant in the room of Federal Reserve manipulation & Keynesian not Austrian/Biblical Economics!

4 April 2020 | 3 replies
Do you guys finance nationally?

4 April 2020 | 0 replies
I have been researching corporate structures and am getting some conflicting information.A tax adviser is suggesting that I setup an LLC in Wyoming, with a trust as the owner, and with me as the sole beneficiary of the trust.I read several articles that say I may have to register the LLC as a foreign entity in my state, New Jersey, because I would still be "transacting" in in my home state.I read some exemptions on what constitutes doing business though:(7) creating or acquiring indebtedness, mortgages, or security interests in real or personal property;(8) securing or collecting debts or enforcing mortgages or other security interests in property securing the debts and holding, protecting, or maintaining property so acquired;I'm trying to figure out what the bolded section means as far as owning income producing real estate, it looks like it may be exempt?

5 April 2020 | 2 replies
That being said a 501c3 is a corporation so that’s what you would use as your entity structure if you want to proceed that way.

8 April 2020 | 26 replies
It will still shield liability, if properly setup, and as long as your actions don't "pierce the corporate veil".

12 February 2020 | 5 replies
I leased a building built in the 1800s and there were multiple deals that fell through because 1) the building was grandfathered in as non-ADA compliant, but the tenant could not run their business in a building without an elevator, 2) the building was grandfathered in to not need fire sprinklers (and Ownership didn't want to spend $100k+ to put them in), that crosses off a lot of large national tenants who have higher standards.