EB-5.net is a division of Glenwood Financial I Incorporated. EB-5.net
was created out of the desire and need to assist International Business
Professionals with their investments needs in the United States.
EB-5.net is a group of bilingual U.S. lawyers, paralegals, developers,
lenders and real estate professionals based in Las Vegas, Nevada.
For
further information we can be reached in person by calling Thomas Payne or
Francine Payne at 702-838-9638 ext 101 or e-mail us at:
Info@glenwoodfinancial.com
The EB-5 Visa - A Flexible
Immigration Investment Option
The EB-5 Visa provides the most flexible path to a
green card based on a US investment. The EB-5 visa does not require the
applicant to manage the day-to-day affairs of a business. One may invest in
an existing business, or a new business. More than one person may invest in
the same business. The EB-5 investor may be a minority owner of the
business.
One may qualify for an EB-5 as follows:
-
Invest $1 million and hire ten employees anywhere in the
USA
-
Invest $500,000 and hire ten employees in an area where
the unemployment rate exceeds the national average unemployment rate by
150%
-
Invest in a regional center.
INS designated specific areas, called Regional Centers,
as eligible to receive immigrant investor capital. INS approved over 20
Regional Centers. Regional Center investors may rely on indirect job
creation rather than directly hiring ten employees. A competent
professional, such as an economist, must quantify the indirect employment.
If the regional center is in a high unemployment area the required capital
is reduced to $500,000.
Of the 10,000 investor visas (i.e., EB-5
visas) available annually, 5,000 are set aside for those who apply under a
pilot program involving an INS-designated "Regional Center." To date, the
quota has not been exceeded.
FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
IMMIGRATION TO THE UNITED
STATES UNDER THE EB-5 INVESTOR VISA
Q: Who should invest?
EB-5 investors include people
from all walks of life; professionals, business people, persons wanting to
facilitate a child's education, and retirees. Because the EB-5 visa permits
employment in the US, many EB-5 investors become involved in charity or part
time work. Simply put, the EB-5 visa gives you the flexibility to do what
you want in the USA.
-
If you don't want to actively manage your business, you
should consider EB-5
-
If you have a US citizen parent or child over 21 years
of age, you should consider family class visa categories.
-
If you have exceptional skills or are famous you may
qualify for a green card based on your skills or fame.
-
If you want to manage your own business, consider L-1,
E-2, international manager visa categories.
-
If your goal is to have a green card and not to actively
manage a business, it is most often cheaper to utilize the EB-5 category
rather than to start and maintain a business.
Q: Is EB-5 a truly passive investment?
The EB-5
regulations require involvement in management or policy making. The
regulations deem a limited partner in a limited partnership that conforms to
the Uniform Limited Partnership Act as sufficiently engaged in the EB-5
enterprise. However, the Uniform Limited Partnership, adopted by most states
of the United States, prohibits the limited partner from actively
participating in management.
On one hand you must be involved in
management or policy making, while on the other hand you can't. We resolve
this contradiction by granting the limited partners the right, as a group,
to oust the general partner for "cause" and to suggest or recommend issues
of overall policy. Furthermore, limited partnerships properly structured,
comply with the Uniform Limited Partnership Act.
Q: How is
the investment structured?
Each Limited Partnership owns one
building. The investment purchases an interest in the Limited Partnership.
You become a Limited Partner. Your percentage share of the Limited
Partnership depends on the percentage your investment bares to the value of
the project. The prospectus for each project describes the valuation
methodology.
The Limited Partnership, managed by our associate in
the USA, is the general partner of the Limited Partnership. The general
partner, renovates the property, leases the property, and manages the
property. The Limited Partners receive their share of the income from the
properties. Immigrant investors receive 50% of the profits for the sooner of
five years or receipt of the permanent green card, and 70% of the profits
thereafter. Investors who do not seek an immigration benefit receive 70% of
the profits from the out set time of their initial investment.
To
date, each of the investments in which our clients have participated, have
generated and continue to generate return on investment in accordance with
the project prospectus.
Q: What is a limited partnership?
This is best explained through an overview of the various entities available
to investors.
A Corporation, formed by filing a charter with a state
government, is owned by shareholders. The corporation is taxed on its
income. The shareholders are only taxed on dividends paid to them by the
corporation. Shareholders do not pay tax on the corporation's income. The
shareholders only risk the cost of their investment in the corporation they
bare no responsibility for the general affairs of the corporation.
A
partnership is comprised of two or more people or entities coming together
for an enterprise, without any particular state charter. The partnership
does not pay tax, but passes through all items of income and loss to the
partners. The partners pay tax on partnership earnings. Each partner, unlike
a corporate shareholder, undertakes responsibility for the entire operations
of the partnership. If the partnership were to be sued and judged liable,
each partner bares full responsibility for the damages. A corporate
shareholder has no such direct liability.
A limited partnership
combines corporate limited liability with partnership taxation. The limited
partnership, formed by filing a charter with a state government, consists of
a general partner and one or more limited partners. The charter details the
rights and powers of the limited and general partners, percentages of
ownership, and distributions of profits. The general partner manages the
business.
As in a corporation, the limited partners are passive
investors liable only for the value of their investment. As in a general
partnership, limited partnership income is taxed at the partner level, not
at the entity level.
A limited liability company is a corporation
that passes through income and loss to the shareholders but offers
shareholders the same limited liability as a limited partner or corporate
shareholder. You could say a limited liability company is a corporate
version of a limited partnership.
Q: How is my limited partner
interest protected?
The Certificate of Limited Partnership must be
recorded with the State of Washington as a public record. The Certificate
refers to a Schedule A of the limited partnership agreement, which lists the
names and percentage interests of the limited partners. The deed for the
investment property is held in the name of the limited partnership. The deed
is also of public record. This means the property cannot be sold, mortgaged
or altered without complying with the terms of the limited partnership
agreement.
Q: Is my investment guaranteed?
No. The law
requires an "at risk" investment without guarantees or redemption rights.
Q: What are my risks?
As in any investment there is a risk
of total loss. Our associate invests in real estate without mortgage or bank
financing. This lack of debt eliminates much of the risk of total loss. Like
everybody we risk the deleterious effects of acts of god, war, and market
fluctuations in rental income or real estate prices. All investors are
provided with sound references to permit independent verification of the
information contained in the investment prospectus.
Q: Why must I
invest before you will apply for my green card?
Our associates
understand that other investment companies accept EB-5 investors place funds
in a trust or escrow account pending visa approval. In this case the funds
may only be released upon visa approval.
The primary activity of our
associate in the USA is business in real estate development. Most of the
capital injected into their projects comes from investors who do not seek an
immigration benefit. These investors invest on financial consideration only,
without preconditions. EB-5 investors, however, have two considerations, the
soundness of the investment, and obtaining their green card.
The
investment must be analyzed upon its merits. Their policy is to require that
you commit your capital as any other investor. If for some reason, you do
not receive your green card the contract with you requires a refund of your
investment. They maintain credit lines with several banks for this purpose.
They also have a constant stream of new investors, providing an alternative
source of funds to refund your investment, should you fail to obtain your
green card.
Escrow or trust agreements present immigration
difficulties. They offer investment opportunities on a first first-come
first first-served basis. While your investment capital sits in escrow or
trust pending the results of a visa application, which may take six to eight
months to complete, the target investment, which formed the basis of your
visa petition, may have been sold out to other investors. You would be in
the unfortunate position of basing your green card on an investment that
didn't exist, and run the risk of having your application denied. Finally,
although the regulations permit escrow arrangements we find that INS looks
more favorably on petitions based on a completed investment rather than a
pending one.
Hopefully, you will be satisfied with your investment
and wish to keep all or part of the investment regardless of the out come of
your green card application. The need for a green card is situational. You
may decide you don't like life in America, or your family or economic
situation may change. The need for sound investments never changes. While
you would not have come to us unless you were seeking a green card, now that
we've met, we hope you will be more than satisfied by the investment results
and service.
Q: How does the partnership distribute income?
Each partnership distributes profits to its investors monthly. The
distributions are based on the prior month's gross rental income net of
expenses. Investors receive a profit and loss statement with each month's
distribution. At the end of the year the partnership issues a summary report
along with Internal Revenue Service form K-1. Form K-1 details your yearly
income and expenses. Your accountant will require form K-1 to prepare your
US annual tax return.
Q: What is the history of the EB-5 visa
category?
The EB-5 visa category started in 1991. Regional Centers
started in 1993. Our associate formed its regional center in 1996 and raised
capital from some 40 investors between 1996 and 1998. Several companies
competed for investment capital during this period. Most of the companies
didn't offer sound investments and were really in business to collect fees
rather than to fund an ongoing business. Many investment opportunities
didn't raise the full $500,000 investment capital or hire the required
number of employees.
INS, rightly wanted to stop these abuses of the
program. In 1998, INS wrongly applied their revised rules retroactively to
people who already had approved petitions. INS attempted to revoke these
visa petitions. This started the litigation. In 2002, Congress passed a new
law to protect the pre-1998 investors. Also, in 2002, in a case commonly
known as "Chang" the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that INS may not
apply their new rules retroactively. In August of 2003, INS began approving
regional center petitions for the first time since 1998.
It is now
common knowledge that EB-5 immigration petitions based on sound investments,
for the full $500,000 as prescribed by the rules, with proper supporting
documentation, will be approved.
Q: What documents must I prepare to
process my visa petition?
You must prepare complete biographical
information for each applicant and the principal applicant must prove the
source of the investment funds. To prove the source of investment funds, INS
requires five years of tax returns, five years of bank records, proof of
ownership in any businesses, financial statements for each business and
business licenses. The idea is present a track record of an honest course of
dealing. If your capital came from a specific transaction, such as sale of a
house, inheritance or gift, you must prove the transaction occurred, by
providing an official document, such as a closing statement or contract or
other official documents. This is not an exhaustive list. Documents Other
documents may be required and vary on a case-by-case basis.
Q: What
issues have been problematic in EB-5 cases?
Our associate uses the
same investment model for each case. INS has reviewed their investment model
and has approved visa petitions based on their model. The most common
problem area has been insufficient documentation of the source of funds.
Many people try to disclose the least possible information only to have the
file returned with a request for further information. It is better to
provide too much information rather than too little information. In this era
of terror alerts, and suspicions about money laundering, INS case examiners
require a well- documented source of funds.
Q: Where can I find a
copy of the relevant law and regulations to study?
Please go to the
Bureau of Citizenship and Immigrations Services web site. A direct link to
investment visa information is:
Immigration through Investment
Q: How long does INS take to process my visa petition?
Processing times vary from as little as a few weeks to as much as
eight months. We can't predict or promise a particular processing time. You
should plan for the entire process to take approximately one year to avoid
disappointment.
Q: What are the processing procedures?
A
general outline of the application process follows:
Step 1) File
form I-526 Petition for Alien Entrepreneur with the California Service
Center. This petition requests INS to certify the applicant and the
investment as eligible for EB-5 visa status.
Step 2) Upon approval
of the I-526 petition, (a) if you are in the United States you may apply for
Adjustment of Status to Permanent Residence by sending form I-485 and
supporting documents to the INS regional processing center nearest your US
residence. (b) If you are abroad you must wait for notification from the
Embassy in your home country to prepare documents for the visa interview.
The purpose of the Adjustment of Status or consular visa interview
is to make sure you are not subject to a grounds of exclusion, e.g. a
criminal past, infectious diseases, etc.
Step 3) Upon approval you
receive a form evidencing the approval and as well as a travel document. You
will also receive the temporary green card in the mail. If you are abroad
you must enter the US within six months of the date of the Embassy approval.
Step 4) After two years, you may file for removal of conditions or
your permanent green card using Form I-829. This procedure permits INS to
verify that you have maintained your approved investment for the required
two-year period.
For more information please e-mail us at:
Info@glenwoodfinancial.com
We can also be reached in person by calling Thomas Payne
or
Francine Payne at 702-838-9638 ext 101.