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

 

Treasury Announces $3.5 Billion in Awards for Economic Development and Community Revitalization

Joseph Coupal - Monday, March 07, 2011

... By Warren Kirshenbaum

Baltimore Area Institutions to Receive Over $155 Million in New Markets Tax Credit Awards

BALTIMORE, MD - In an effort to highlight the Obama Administration’s key investments in broad-based economic growth and commitment to the revitalization of communities stricken by the economic crisis, Community Development Financial Institutions Fund Director Donna Gambrell today visited a job training and human services organization in Baltimore benefiting from private sector investments made possible through the New Markets Tax Credit (NMTC). Speaking alongside Representative Elijah Cummings, Director Gambrell announced the selection of 99 organizations nationwide to receive NMTC allocation awards under the 2010 program round. These 99 awards will leverage billions of dollars of investment into businesses and real estate projects to create jobs and promote growth in communities with high rates of poverty and unemployment.

“The New Markets Tax Credit continues to be a tool for job-creation and economic revitalization in areas that struggle to attract investment because of poverty, unemployment and a lack of opportunity” said Director Gambrell. “I am honored to announce the 2010 New Markets Tax Credit Award allocations with Representative Cummings here in Baltimore, where our partners have demonstrated why this tool has been so effective in making literally thousands of projects possible across the country and give Americans a chance to make a living, to start a business and to build a better future in areas that need it most.”

The NMTC, established by Congress in December 2000, permits individual and corporate taxpayers to receive a credit against federal income taxes for making equity investments in investment vehicles known as Community Development Entities (CDEs). The credit provided to the investor totals 39 percent of the cost of the investment and is claimed over a seven-year period. CDEs must apply to the Treasury Department’s Community Development Financial Institutions Fund (CDFI Fund) to compete for this allocation authority. The 99 organizations receiving awards were selected from a pool of 250 applicants that requested over $23.5 billion. They are headquartered in 27 different states and the District of Columbia; but have identified principal service areas that will cover nearly every state in the country, as well the District of Columbia.

“By helping our partners in community development secure critical funding for job-creating projects, the New Markets Tax Credit is helping to bring opportunity and drive investment in our local businesses and communities,” said Representative Cummings. “In these tough economic times Baltimore welcomes the support of the CDFI Fund, and we will continue working to ensure that we're reaching the hardest hit.”

Director Gambrell’s and Representative Cummings’ announcement was made today at Humanim Inc., a nonprofit organization that provides workforce development and rehabilitation services to individuals with disabilities and other barriers to employment. An award winning human services organization, Humanim provides a ground-breaking model for delivering expanded employment services that gives those individuals in greatest need the opportunity to build a career and attain financial independence. Over $14 million in NMTC financing provided by City First Bank of DC and the National Trust Community Investment Corporation allowed Humanim to convert a large brewery that sat abandoned for 35 years in one of the poorest neighborhoods in Baltimore into its headquarters. Humanim reaches individuals of all ages with comprehensive vocational services.

Having benefitted from funding under the NMTC, Humanim highlights the effectiveness of the NMTC in leveraging private investment to complete economic and community development projects that help revitalize communities with high rates of poverty and unemployment. In total, five institutions in Maryland will receive funds in this NMTC award round to invest in development projects.

To date, over $20 billion of private-sector capital has been invested through the NMTC into urban and rural communities throughout the country, helping to create or retain hundreds of thousands of jobs and to provide low-income community residents with access to quality education, health care, job training, housing and critical retail services in their communities.

2010 NMTC Program Awards

2010 NMTC Program Award List
2010 NMTC Program Highlights
2010 NMTC Program Allocatee Profiles
2010 NMTC Program Award Booklet

A complete list of the 99 organizations selected and additional information on the NMTC Program can be found on the CDFI Fund’s web site at: http://www.cdfifund.gov.

Private Equity and the Midterm Elections

Joseph Coupal - Wednesday, November 03, 2010

... by Warren Kirshenbaum

It is my opinion that banks really do not have much incentive to lend money. Banks can borrow money from the Fed at rates that approximate zero, and they can then purchase US Treasuries and return a 3 point spread with little to no risk. Accordingly, why would they be willing to incur the time consumption of due diligence, the transaction expenses, and the inherent risk of loaning money to consumers and businesses when they can be profitable borrowing from the Fed, lending to each other, and engaging in hedging transactions. Nevertheless, as their apparent mandate is to take in deposits and then loan those funds out to borrowers while maintaining a reserve of funds to maintain net capital requirements, they need to put some money out to work in loan transactions but their documents, loan covenants, underwriting requirements, equity requirements, and debt-service coverage ratios are very restrictive, and in some cases are either unprofitable for borrowers or are putting businesses in the position of having to run business decisions by their bankers prior to accessing necessary working capital or credit line funding. I have been promoting for some time now that businesses need to create their own sources of funding, in order to decrease their reliance on bank financing, which is fast becoming a scarce resource. Private equity or corporate debt issuance is a viable option in these economic times, and I urge businesses of all sizes and levels of growth and development to formulate a plan to tap their non-bank resources for capital funding.

Interestingly, a midterm election that changes the majority party in Congress, such as the 2010 Midterm elections did can have a profound effect on the business plans of many different types of companies. For example, those businesses that supply the defense industry may find that under a Republican controlled Congress there are more dollars appropriated to defense spending, and will benefit from such a political change. Those businesses that are non-unionized may find that a Democratic Congress or state administration would be more favorable to union labor and open-shop employers may find that the cost of labor would dramatically increase, effectively turning a company’s cash flow upside down. Any of these factors would cause a company to need to seek financing to smooth out the edges while it re-formulates its business plan and carves out new market niches for itself.

My message is that if you are hoping to seek bank financing, you should add to your quiver of options the possibility of raising funds using private equity, or by issuing corporate bonds or debt instruments. As you are setting the terms of the offering or issuance you are in more of a position to control and accept provisions, terms, covenants and this will be beneficial to your business interests, and that will spur, and not hamper or restrict growth. We, as small business people are in need of capital and funding to execute many, if not most of the objectives of our business plans, but the sources of capital have become restrictive, unwieldy, and stifling. It is time to change the terms of this game, and look for alternate sources of funding.


Recent Posts


Tags

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

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.