cherrytree group llc logo

Cherrytree Group LLC Blog

RSS Grab the Cherrytree Group Real Estate Blog feed

Get e-mail notifications of new blog posts! Enter email address below.


Delivered by FeedBurner

 

Top Six Cleantech Cities in the United States

Thursday, March 31, 2011

...by Warren Kirshenbaum


There are numerous cities across the United States which can be considered "cleantech capitals." With a large array of renewable resources, a dedication by businesses and homeowners to become more energy efficient, and a large hub for research and development, a lot can be accomplished when it comes to creating new, efficient and sustainable clean technologies. There are many factors that make up a "capital for cleantech," and although there are more than ten cities around the nation that are involved in clean technologies, here are six of the top cities.

1) Boston, Massachusetts. Boston is said to enjoy some of the most supportive policies in the United States for energy efficiency and renewable energy. After California, Boston is second in clean technology venture capital investments. With an environment that is ripe for cleantech startups, numerous companies are moving their business to Boston. The MIT Clean Energy Prize is a venture and innovation creation competition that encourages clean energy innovation. Its objective is to provide educational opportunities and supply incentives to ventures demonstrating the clean energy affordability. As well, the development of MIT's cleantech incubator will provide Boston with more access to cleantech flow, increasing the demands for all future building to be constructed in accordance to LEED standards set up by the U.S. Green Building Council.

2) San Jose, California. San Jose, part of California's Silicon Valley, has been very productive in clean technologies. The city has expanded a number of clean technology investments and because of the research and development institutions in the area, many cleantech companies are coming to make their home in San Jose. San Jose's, "Long-time leadership in engineering know-how, combined with semi-conductor, nanotechnology and optics R&D gives it a leg up in renewable energy development, particularly in solar energy applications." San Jose is also home to the Environmental Business Cluster, a non-profit technology commercialization center assisting startup cleantech companies developing goods and services to positively impact the environment.

3) Austin, Texas. Austin has long been Texas' hub for solar, wind, geothermal, and biomass power, as well as fuel cell technologies. Its commitment to the environment and sustainability has made it not only a national cleantech player, but a global one as well. Austin is home to some of the largest cleantech companies on a global level. A large research and development hub, the University of Texas at Austin has created several research expenditures to elevate research into energy efficiency and renewable energy. This includes a project by the College of Natural Sciences to create biofuel from blue-green algae and hybrid-electric automobile programs developed by The Center for Electromechanics.

4) San Francisco, California. California is one of the top cleantech states in the United States and it is cities like San Francisco that makes it happen. Currently, San Francisco is well on its way to becoming the first city to be completely run by renewable energy by the year 2020. With projects like Sunset Reservoir Solar Project, which is the largest municipal solar facility in the state, and a new $250,000 grant to increase renewable energy capabilities.
 
5) Seattle, Washington. Seattle has been leaving its mark in cleantech society by increasing the need for green standards. The Green Building Sustainable Communities Program, for example, creates city projects that meet sustainable outcomes. Tax breaks and loans are provided to businesses and residences that utilize green practices. Seattle has been a leader in using their garbage to get electricity. They have invested into electricity from garbage landfills.
 
6) Chicago, Illinois. Over 20 percent of total power in Chicago is coming from renewable sources. Due to the increase in the need for renewable energy and energy efficiency, Chicago has been able to create numerous job opportunities while, at the same time, increasing solar power and saving on CO2 emissions. Chicago is also becoming one of the major investment locations for international businesses. Chicago also has a number of green initiatives, including the Chicago Green Office Challenge.

Kirshenbaum Law and Cherrytree Group LLC can help you structure your tax credit transaction. Let us guide you through the process of applying for and securing renewable energy tax credits. These transactions typically require a lawyer, a consultant, and a syndicator, and Cherrytree Group and Kirshenbaum law can act in all three capacities, saving you time and money on your transaction.

The original article was written by Shawn Lesser, and can be seen at http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/03 /28/idUS317857292020110328

Real Estate Developers Can Attract Capital Through the EB5 Program

Monday, March 21, 2011

....by Warren Kirshenbaum

Acquiring capital for real estate investments is a difficult and daunting task in this weak economy.  The uncertainty of the real estate market has become a strong barrier between investors and real estate developers, leaving developers with very few options for obtaining capital.  The absence of eager/willing investors has prompted real estate developers to seek innovative means of financing.  One attractive source of financing is through foreign investment that is generated through the EB-5 Green Card program.  EB-5 is part of the Immigration Act of 1990 established for the purpose of attracting foreign capital to the United States.  Under this program, 10,000 green cards are set aside every year for qualifying candidates.  A qualified candidate must satisfy three basic requirements in order to be considered for approval.  These basic requirements include 1) establishing a U.S. business or investing in an existing business that was created or structured after November 19, 1990, 2) the foreign national must have invested $1 million in the business or $500,000 when investing in targeted employment areas and 3) the newly created business must create full time employment for 10 U.S. workers for a specified amount of time.  Once these requirements are met, the EB-5 investors must also demonstrate that they, their spouses and their children under the age of twenty-one have resided in the U.S. for two years by means of conditional visas.  

The EB-5 Program promotes the infusion of foreign capital into the American economy. This benefits real estate developers seeking additional investment capital for their projects.  The U.S. developer can obtain financing from the foreign investor in order to commence or complete local development projects.  This is a great opportunity for American developers to secure capital for their projects in an economy where banks are denying loans and U.S. investors are reluctant to invest in new endeavors.  The program not only benefits U.S. developers, but also offers incentives to foreign investors desiring to live out the American dream.  In exchange for the investor’s capital being put to work in the U.S., they receive green cards for themselves and their families as long as all of the program requirements are met.  This is a win-win situation for both the U.S. developer and the foreign investor in achieving their goals of real estate investment/development and expedited permanent residency status, respectively.  

EB-5 applicants invest foreign capital through Regional Centers that have varying investments programs.  The Regional Center may be a state government agency, a corporation or a private venture.  Companies or private entities that are approved EB-5 Regional Centers can directly contact foreign investors who are interested in participating in the immigration program. The Regional Center must verify that the investor’s capital was earned through lawful activity; otherwise it cannot be utilized for the program.  Once all of the required elements are met, the Regional Center can begin the application process for the foreign investor.  Don’t know where there is a regional Center? The Cherrytree Group can help you find one in your area.

At the Cherrytree Group we have extensive knowledge in structuring investments to achieve the optimal return on investment. The EB-5 provides valuable investment to new real estate development projects.

Orchestra's New Home

Friday, February 18, 2011
Orchestra of St. Luke's new DiMenna Center
Rob Bennett for The Wall Street Journal

... By Warren Kirshenbaum

Construction is nearly complete on a $37 million classical music center for Orchestra of St. Luke's slated to open in Hell's Kitchen in March.

Complete with rehearsal and recording space to accommodate a full symphony orchestra and chorus, a music library café and even showers for musicians, the 20,000-square-foot building will be the orchestra's first permanent home since its debut in 1974.

The center will also serve dozens of arts groups that rent space in the city's increasingly crowded rehearsal and performance spaces, including the New York Pops and the American Symphony Orchestra.

Raising money for building projects in the past few years hasn't been easy for the city's nonprofits. Decreases in donations and a tightening grip on public dollars have hurt funding for capital projects by charities in particular. Many donors also have focused their attention on emergency programs for the hungry and homeless.

With traditional funding harder to obtain, the Orchestra of St. Luke's became one of a growing number of nonprofits turning to a federal tax program for capital financing. This week, it will announce it has received a $4.6 million equity infusion from financial institutions including Goldman Sachs Group Inc.'s Urban Investment Group, Solomon Hess and United Fund Advisors through a federal program that provides tax credits to investors putting money into community development projects.
[ORCHEST2] Rob Bennett for The Wall Street Journal

Street view of the center at 450 W. 37th St., which is also home to the Baryshnikov Arts Center.

"We needed these tax credits to ensure the project would happen on time and as planned," says Zev Greenfield, the orchestra's vice president of finance and Operations. "While we received $4.6 million directly, we saved millions more on financing and fund-raising costs."

In 2008, the orchestra and the Baryshnikov Dance Foundation closed on a three-party deal for 450 W. 37th St., which formerly housed a consortium of theaters. The orchestra paid $16.6 million for 20,000 square feet, taking on a $7 million mortgage and a $5 million line of credit from M&T Bank.

To fund the deal, the orchestra had received multimillion-dollar pledges from donors including financiers Joe DiMenna and Victor Elmaleh, and an $8.5 million pledge from the city's Department of Cultural Affairs. However, when the financial crisis deepened, additional fund-raising slowed and donations were delayed.

"Donors were supporting the project but needed to do it over a longer period of time, and that's why the credits became such an essential piece of the puzzle," says Katy Clark, the orchestra's president and executive director.

To fill the funding gaps, the orchestra hired a consultant and applied for the federal New Markets Tax Credit Program, rushing to close on financing before the end of 2010. Created in 2000 to spur economic revitalization through private sector investment, the program allows financial institutions to provide equity to projects in depressed neighborhoods and receive federal tax deductions in return.

The interest in tax credits heightened after the financial crisis hit, leaving cities eager for ways to tap the federal funding faucet to spur economic growth.

The New York City Economic Development Corp. partnered with financial-services company United Fund Advisors in 2008 to stimulate more projects using tax credits in the city.

Since then, they have financed more than $500 million of development costs, utilizing $89 million in New Markets tax credits.

The credits have allowed the city's nonprofits to raise financing for other large capital projects such as a new 75,000 square-foot museum and condo for the Museum for African Art on Fifth Avenue.

Slated to open this year, the museum received $18.8 million in New Markets tax credits. Other projects include a $13 million conversion of warehouse space in Lower Manhattan into a recreational sport facility called Basketball City USA, to be completed this summer.

The city and United Fund Advisors hope to obtain an additional $135 million allocation in tax credits later this year.

Still, nonprofits say qualifying for the tax credits generally requires the use of paid consultants, months of paperwork and complicated financing structures.

"It's an incredibly complex set of processes," Mr. Greenfield says. "You have to really spend the time to delve into the details."

REITs - Real Estate Investing Minus the Headaches

Thursday, February 10, 2011

REITs - Real Estate Investing Minus the Headaches

Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITS)

By Warren Kirshenbaum

Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITS) have traditionally offered many advantages to investors looking to the real estate market for diversification and tax advantages.

They generally have higher yields and lower portfolio turnover than stocks or stock funds, plus they have the potential for capital gains.

As real estate bottomed, the rumor was that REITs had come and gone. But more likely, the weak housing market may have opened the door for smaller investors to participate in the short- and long-term gains offered by REITs -- which is especially appealing to the many investors who can't afford to buy a home or who aren't interested in owning physical property.

How REITs Work

REITs are created to hold a pool of managed real estate properties or mortgages. The REIT itself is not actively managed, relying instead on a set portfolio of preselected properties that is maintained for the duration of the trust. When the trust matures, the portfolio is reset according to the REIT's investment objectives. Each trust is considered to be a distinct security, with each unit in the REIT constituting a proportional share of ownership in each asset held within the trust.

REITs tend to focus more on value than growth. Historically, REITs have provided higher yields than other types of fixed-income securities, making them attractive holdings for moderate income investors. They tend to be more immune to market volatility than stocks or stock funds because of their correlation with the real estate sector.

Categories of REITs

There are three basic categories of REITs: equity, mortgage and hybrid.

Equity REITs receive rental income from the properties held within the trust as well as the capital gains from property sales. These three different streams of income make equity REITs the most desirable of the three.

Mortgage REITs are considered to be riskier than equity REITs because of their vulnerability to changes in interest rates. As with all other fixed-income securities, the value of mortgage REITs can drop substantially if interest rates rise.

Hybrid REITs are a combination of equity and mortgage REITs. There are several different varieties of hybrid REITs: some are open-ended securities, while others are closed-ended; some have a limited life span, while others are perpetual. They can also be invested in as little as one property, although they are usually invested in a group of properties.

Taxation of REITs at the Trust Level

The IRS requires REITs to follow specific rules of taxation. First, they are taxed as a trust, and unitholders pay tax on the income they receive. In most cases, little or no income is held at the trust level, and usually 100% of the income is passed on to investors.

The IRS requires that REITs distribute at least 90% of the income generated by the trust’s portfolio to unit holders. However, they must follow the same method of self-assessment that corporations are required to use. This means that REITs have to obey the same valuation and accounting rules as corporations, but pass cash flow (instead of profits) directly through the trust to unitholders.

In most cases, REITs are generally exempt from taxation at the trust level provided they distribute at least 90% of their income to their unit holders. Even some REITs that adhere to this rule will still face corporate taxation on any retained income, depending upon the provisions spelled out in the initial trust indenture.

The taxation of REITs differs from that of other unit investment trusts. Because the government considers them to be the business of managing properties, rental income is treated as business income to REITs. Therefore, all expenses related to rental activities managed by the trust are deductible, just as business expenses can be written off by a corporation.

How Will You be Taxed on Income From a REIT?

Because they are rarely taxed at the trust level, REITs usually pay larger dividends than stocks, which can only pay dividends after being taxed at the corporate level.

For the most part, REIT dividends are taxed to the unitholder as ordinary income just like stock mutual fund dividends. This means that you will pay tax on these dividends at your marginal tax rate.

However, some REIT dividends are classified as “qualified” dividends, which are a special type of dividend taxed at the more favorable capital gain rates. Some of the dividends you receive from your REIT may also be considered a non-taxable return of capital. When this happens, your taxable income from the REIT is reduced accordingly for the year. Return of capital distributions reduce your cost basis and you will not pay tax on return of capital distributions until the REIT matures or you sell it.

The Increased Amounts of New Income Tax Credits are Being Awarded

Friday, January 21, 2011
Massachussetts Real Estate Development

by Warren Kirshenbaum

The Community Development Financial Institutions Fund (“CDFI Fund”), a program of the U.S. Department of Treasury released its 2010 Performance and Accountability Report on January 18, 2011, providing key insight into economic revitalization in 2010. The CDFI Fund promotes economic revitalization and community development through investment in, and assistance to community development financial institutions.

The Performance and Accountability Report demonstrated a continued level of interest in investment into low-income communities and showed a substantial increase in rewarded tax credits over 2009. In 2010, the CDFI Fund, which administers the New Markets Tax Credit Program (“NMTC”) distributed all $26 billion in its authority in 495 separate awards.

The NMTC was created as part of the Community Renewal Tax Relief Act of 2000 to provide a tax credit to taxpayers who provide investments to businesses in low-income communities.

Specifically, the NMTC stimulates capital investment in low-income communities by providing tax credits against federal income taxes to taxpayers who make equity investments (referred to as “QEI’s” or “qualified equity investments”) into a designated community development entity (“CDE”). Substantially all of the investments made by the taxpayer must be used to benefit low income communities in order to receive the tax credit, and that determination is made by reference to census tracts. The Performance and Accountability Report of 2010 announced that the demand for the NMTC is increasing. In 2010 over two thousand applications were submitted, containing requests totaling $202.6 billion in tax credit allocation. Accordingly, only 27% of applicants were selected to receive the awards with the average tax credit allocation award being $52.5 million. The tax credit allocations are limited, so they are approved by a competitive application process. This process of approving tax credit allocation is set up so that the most qualified organizations receive first consideration.

This past year also saw another record for investments raised – in the first three quarters of 2010, $3.1 billion in qualified equity investments were raised, surpassing the $2.8 billion raised for all of 2009. Furthermore, tax credit recipients reported making $3.5 billion of loans and investments in Qualified Active Low Income Community Businesseses – 64% of which went into real estate businesses. Lastly, in 2010, recipients also reported making over $168 million in direct investments into other CDE’s, and providing $12 million in financial counseling and other services to 7,139 businesses in low-income communities.

The 2010 report announced by the CDFI Fund shows the growing demand for investment capital in low-income communities. In sum, since the program’s inception, there has been a total of $15.8 billion of cumulative investments made via the New Market Tax Credit Program. If you are interested in how to qualify for these or any other potential tax credits, please call Warren today or fill out a Contact Us form.

Making Money with Commercial Real Estate

Monday, January 10, 2011

Making Money with Commercial Real EstateIf you are thinking about a strategy to make money in real estate, skip residential properties and focus on commercial real estate. This does not necessarily mean that you need to focus on commercial buildings, start with a small residential multi unit building. Buildings with five units or more are considered commercial.

Where the money happens is here; residential properties are not appraised in the same way by lenders as commercial real estate. This makes all the difference for someone looking to invest in commercial real estate.

Small residential rental properties are appraised by comparing the building to recently sold similar buildings within a mile radius. Therefore, to increase the appraisal value and recoup your down payment you have to either hold the property long enough for the value to be driven up by the market, or you need to improve the property itself. Neither of these options are very cost effective for making money quickly.

A commercial building is appraised by comparing the income and expenses to other comparable commercial properties in the area. So essentially, the lender subtracts the expenses from the rent roll and multiplies that by the capitalization rate for the vicinity of the property. The challenge is to look for properties with artificially low rent rolls. This can be found in a landlord who has owned a property for a long time or in buildings where the owner resides within and is looking to sell.

Therefore, in order to increase the value of the property and recoup your deposit, you can increase the rent roll and or decrease expenses. Not a costly endeavor in relation to the residential option, and if managed correctly, will not take an exorbitant amount of time.

You, as the investor, can recoup your deposit money in less than a year, giving you the funds to purchase a new property and repeat the strategy. With rates as they are now, still low despite the rise of the last couple months, this can make you, the investor, quite a bit of money in a few short years.


Recent Posts


Tags

federal and state tax credits Summertime Economy in Boston asset stripping hydro energy production converting tax credits to cash real estate business asset investment objectives capital raising questions, MA multi-family apartments renewable energy tax credit invest in commercial real estate new market tax credits gasoline market manipulation community block grants Brownfields sites solar capacity commercial real estate in MA rehabilitating historic buildings, Boston cost of producing renewable energy energy efficient property distressed asset investment brownfields tax credit preservation of historic buildings power generation, Boston brownfields tax credits, Boston selling tax credits for cash power generation, MA Kirshenbaum Law, Cherry Tree, LLC, Real Estate, MA Brownfields tax credt, Boston construction brownfields redevelopment, MA invest in real estate EPA brownfields grant money historic tax credit film tax credit money, MA Austin rehabilitation of historic buildings, Boston tax credits movie tax credit construction jobs Tax Credit credit line funding energy tax credit capital line funding tax credits, MA marine and hydrokinetic, solar Massachusetts Brownfields Tax Credits, MA NIMBY not in my back yard restoration projects microturbines cleantech capitals investing in commercial real estate state film tax credits, MA Broad Medows Salt Marsh REITS real estate, Boston investments in solar energy development in Massachusetts devastating environmental damage investment tax credits Boston Marathon brownfields redevelopment, CT 1603 Grant solar power development commercial tax credit program, MA brownfields tax credit, MA Chicago gas station loss of income clean technology business loans real estate investment trusts american symphony orchestra new normal declining property values renewable energy tax credtis, Boston historic rehabilitation, Boston income tax credit tax credit investments market rate housing tax credit, MA selling tax credits disaster relief, Boston renewable energy tax credit, Boston Massachusetts brownfields tax credit solar initiatives MGL Ch 21E biomass power wind power technology massachusetts non-profit wind incentive money lending loaning money to consumers real estate deals renewable engery credit, MA global energy demand wind farm tax credit sale of a tax credit commercial real estate investment solar energy low income housing tax credits distressed asset investment fund, ma visas for imigrants CHAPA examine tax credits BP Gas station owners tax deductions real estate investment, Boston REITs, Boston wind energy tax credit, Boston brownfields laws Commonwealth Solar Rebate Program 1603 Treasury Grant The Cherrytree Group multi-family construction portability of tax credits energy tax credits clean energy tax credit to spur redevelopment brownfields Credits, MA wind energy credit hedging transactions Cape Cod thayer morgan interivew solar facilities new market tax credit sale of tax credits renewable energy development solar ITC tax credit syndication Historic credits, RI RECs, MA energy companies permitting procedure multitude of renewable resources tax credits on brownsfields economy news wind Commercial Real Estate Loan Amortization Periods solar investment tax credit for income producing properties community rehabilitation Gulf Coast victimized Brownfields program, Boston Quincy, MA BTC, Boston commercial energy tax deductions engery tax credit, MA investing in surface parking lots BTC program, Boston LIHTCs financing solar installations solar energy development Historic tax credits, MA environmental remediation tax credits partial equity participation converting tax credits to cash, MA brownfields tax credits tax advantages solarize Massachusetts Housing Development Incentive Program BP oil spill film tax credit, Boston invest in development projects hydro electric power Fim Tax Credit revenue new energy technologies EB-5 Regional centers commercial buildings building improvements commercial tax credits, MA renewable energy expensive to produce solar power initiative negative environmental effect investing in surface lots cherrytree group llc private equity offerings venture development capital MA environmental remediation Fim Tax Credits tax credits speaker series Boston brownfields tax incentives, Boston capitalism recession commercial building tax deductions investing in commercial real estate, Boston community development entity tax planning strategies disaster recovery assisstance, Boston brownfields ITCs, MA renewable energy credits, MA Former Getty owners commercial tax credit attorney methods of renewable energy production renewable energy incentives green energy projects banking laws of Brownfields distressed assets non-renewable energy sources historic rehabilitation credits renewable energy the difference between tax credits and tax deductions foreign investors renewable tax credits, Boston film tax credit incentives informational technology brownfields redevelopment federal new market tax credits renewable energy projects private sector investments Massachusetts film tax credit biomass facilities solar power credits deepwater horizon oil spill hydro power Massachusetts brownfields tax credits, MA wind production tax credit commercial tax credit new markets tax credits private investments film credits, MA Historic credits biodiesel polluted sites tax credit, New Bedford Rhode Island wind energy tax credit tenant representative QECBs developing real estate, MA rehabilitate properties what is Brownfields tax credit, Boston renewable energy funding solar energy production borrowing by small businesses tax credits, Boston list of brownfields sites solar pilot program REIT industry residential real estate historic preservation tax incentives, Boston commercial tax credits, New Bedford renewable energy jobs wholesale acquisitions historic remediation, MA Transactional Law Group New Markets Tax Credit, Boston Massachusetts tax credits rownfields Act borrow money distressed asset investment fund tax credits to fix up historic buildings 40B credited with spurring upwards of 80% new development monetize a renewable energy tax credit, Boston Brownfields tax credt program, Boston green standards solar farms contractors, Boston, MA Quincy Broad Medows Salt Marsh tax credit programs, New Bedford Martha's Vineyard renewable energy tax break outsourcing venture capital more control over financing costs green energy historic rehabilitation tax incentives, Boston alternate funding investment tax credits, MA affordable housing private equity offerings distressed asset investing renewable resources Housing Development Incentive Program, Quincy foreign capital depressed and booming markets fuel cell initiatives transfer of tax credits renewable energy tax credits, MA capital Massachusetts gas station owners large capital projects historic rehabilitation tax credits, Boston buy real estate, MA wind engery tax credit, MA landfill gas facility SREC visas for buying homes commercial properties largest accidental marine oil spill PTC, Boston wholesale energy private equity' midterm elections REAL program geothermal power REIT developing real estate in MA renewable energy program tax credits for development Business Financing thayer morgan deduction for energy efficient buildings infrastructure investment economics of environmental projects traditional funding solar energy properties film tax credits, MA renewable energy, MA brownfields tax credit, Boston developers, Boston, MA trash facility federal investment tax credit community development build a wind farm The Transactional Law Group - MA tax credit programs renewable energy tax credits monstrous oil spill commercial real estate brownfields tax credit, CT citizens housing and planning association fuel cells Massachusetts Contingency Plan invest NYC tax credits tax advantages, Boston solar renewable energy credits monetization of ITC, Boston commercial tax credits, Lowell film tax credit energy efficiency improvement projects LIHTC tax credits private equity, MA brownfield redevelopment, CT sydicator of tax credits new markets Massachusetts Ballot Questions, Question 2 Explained real estate lawyer, MA energy systems San Jose capital funding renewable energy, Boston renewable energy facility equity new housing developments tax credits to help economy wind energy credits PTC NMTC real estate attorney, ma Brownfields Act, MA Plymouth, MA real estate development distressed asset sales real estate SRECs solar energy markets capital requirements San Francisco Kirshenbaum Real Estate investing in apartment projects, MA commercial tax credts, Boston state historic tax credits secure capital Brownfields tax credit, Massachusetts business capital offshore wind investors in renewable energy obtaining capital geothermal debt-service sources of funding economic growth BTC, Massachusetts state and federal tax credits, Boston historic preservation tax credits, Boston brownfield cleanup program investments small business RAO Housing Development Incentive Program, MA commercial real estate investments value-added services heat and power develop renewable energy systems renewable energy tax credits, Boston tax incentives and credits downturn qualified energy conservation bonds business solar investment tax credit office space cleantech low-income housing tax credits state tax credits, MA finance real estate strategy cleantech cities brownfields, MA making money with commercial real estate small residential properties Chapter 40B vote results tax incentives MA tax advantaged development EB-5 Green Card Program renewable energy credits energy efficient tax deductions massachusetts BTC program, Boston tax credit broker historic rehabilitation tax credit Massachusetts historic rehabilitation tax credit Historic Preservation Investment Tax Credit Chapter 40B explained residential properties equity investments Historic tax credits extension of BTC, Boston free up capital commercial real estate attorney financing preservation of mills commercial multi-family housing, MA oil spill solar energy array projects American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 - Section 1603 Warren Kirshenbaum new market credits ITC, Boston production tax credit, Boston wind tax credit federal government investing in real estate in MA solar investment tax credit wind farm development Louisianna renewable energy certificates weak economy historic property preservation, Boston commercial leases Federal Historic Rehabilitation Tax Credit real estate investment trusts, Boston wind power, Boston sustainable technology Cape Wind federal low income housing tax credit production tax credtis, Boston buy commercial real estate, MA business investment investment into business rural energy for america program environmental projects private equity offerings, ma RECs Massachusetts brownfields tax credits, Boston Massachusetts state tax credits tax credits for wind power, Boston new markets tax credit program extending Brownfields tax credit, Boston small business loans solar power project development boycotting BP gas stations Brownfields tax credit program, Boston workforce development rehabilitation EB-5 state tax credits real estate investments solar system investing in parking lots build green tax relief Massachusetts BTC, Boston how REITs works engery credit, MA real estate projects equity requirements business tax credit consultant commercial tax credits raising capital, MA private sector investment destructive oil spill monetizing your tax credits ITCs historic tax credits, Boston energy production historic rehabilitation tax credit, Boston investing in apartments, MA production tax credit federal tax Credit private equity economic development bill, MA wind subsidies remedy operation status commercial real estate owners wind tax credits, Boston federal tax credits solar installations Historic tax credits, RI REIT investments expensive to produce Historic rehabilitation tax credits, MA Historic rehabilitation tax credits commercial real estate lawyer historic rehabilitation gasoline price fixing foreign investment tax breaks brownfields projects, Boston solar energy credits tax credit sydication independent gas station owners motion picture tax credits american recovery and reinvestment act historic preservation tax credit, Boston financial incentives to develop real estate in MA urban redevelpment economic slump new markets investments development of the renewable energy industry Brownfields credits new york pops Massachusetts tax credit program Brownfields programs historic and low income housing non-bank resources for capital funding investment tax credtis, Boston tax credits, RI capped landfills real estate properties historic preservation tax credit Brownfields sites, MA RI renewable energy grants Massachusetts Brownfields tax credit, Boston tax credits for gateway cities, New Bedford renewable energy credit HUD insured mortgages market rate program, MA real estate attorney FERC federal energy regulatory commission low-income neighborhoods investment tax credit expiring tax credits tax deductions LSPA, Boston commercial tax credits, Boston historic building tax credit, New Bedford capital finance Brownfields Act, economically distressed areas, Massachusetts Brownfields Tax Credits, Massachusetts Contingency Plan, MGL Ch 21E, RAO, remedy operation status, renewable energy, sale of tax credits, tax advantaged development, tax credit syndication, tra sale of renewable energy credits Seattle Brownfields tax credt alternative funding sources tax credits for environmental clean up, Boston solar projects renovation projects new market program Massachusetts Brownfields Tax Credits brownfields, CT brownfields projects, MA MA Brownfields tax credt commercial tax credits, Fall River tax incentive deals economically distressed areas real estate lawyer tax credt community development financial institutions renewable energy industry wind power new market LIHTC tax-excempt bonds Brownfields tax credt, MA

Archive

Disclaimer

This Blog is made available by the lawyer publisher for educational purposes only as well as to give you general information and a general understanding of the law, not to provide specific legal advice. By using this blog site you understand that there is no attorney client relationship between you and the Blog publisher. The Blog should not be used as a substitute for competent legal advice from a licensed professional attorney in your state.