EB5 Diligence
Categories
Due diligence, USCIS compliance issues
Date
May 03, 2016
Share this article
Author
Kurt Reuss
Kurt Reuss
Kurt Reuss is a registered securities broker who has been specializing in EB-5 since 2012. He offers advice on investment structuring and market conditions related to EB-5 investments.

Related Articles

EB 5 projects due diligence checklist

Understanding the EB 5 Visa requirements is the first step of getting the green card by investment. Checkout EB5 Visa checklist for EB 5 immigrant visa.

Read MoreAug 15, 2019
Loan Administration Checklist

The Manager of the NCE (EB-5 investors) should consider the following loan administration checklist.

Read MoreMay 19, 2018
Inferring that EB-5 due diligence firms are not independent and their findings can be procured is a red-herring, designed to maintain the status quo.

CMB - Inferring that EB-5 due diligence firms are not independent and their findings can be procured by a regional center is a red-herring, to maintain the status quo.

Read MoreAug 31, 2016

Challenge of Valuing Equity Contributions When Self-Dealing

Kurt: Robert, do you have a particular conflict of interest in EB5 that you think regional centers and attorneys should be careful of?

Robert: One which did occur to me is the interests of a party which sells something into the job-creation enterprise (JCE), like a land-owner which may be related to the developer or the regional center owners or the manager of the NCE or all of the above.

There's an important challenge to validate or confirm the value that is put on whatever it is that is being sold into the entity and to disclose who is getting paid for it.

Kurt: Does that need to be disclosed in a prominent way to say, "this is what I'm valuing my property at and this is the equity contribution I'm making to this deal"? Is that how you disclose that conflict?

Robert: Yes, and "this is how we came to that value which is tied to the land."

Kurt: I was looking at a deal recently where the contribution was intellectual property. Obviously, when you get into the value of things like intellectual property you probably have to really think through it and get experts to help to develop reasonable valuations.

Robert: Lately, I have noticed that the SEC has occasionally insinuated that there was something inappropriate about the landowner then using the proceeds of the land sale to do something that would have been inappropriate for use of the EB5 capital.

In particular, using the proceeds to pay "extra commissions" (beyond the administration fee) up front to the foreign agent. I personally don't think that that is wrong, because once EB5 money is properly spent on reasonably valued land (or intellectual property, or whatever), it shouldn't matter what the the recipient of the payment does with it.

If the recipient chooses to use it to pay extra commissions, that is not an immigration problem and it shouldn't be a securities problem, except to the extent that the nature and amount of compensation to the agent may have their own reflection of a conflict of interest of the agent that needs to be disclosed.

You need to let people know that the SEC has asked a lot of questions about those transactions, i.e. where you got money from selling your land into the JCE and what you did with that money.

Kurt: In some ways that talks to an ever bigger issue. It shouldn't be anyone's business what you do with your money after you sell your land into a project, and yet, we all need to realize that we as an industry are under a microscope.

Just striving to follow the letter of the law and thinking that you're therefore going to be in the clear is probably a mistake because if there is a perception that things are being done to avoid regulations or to structure things in order to take liberties, the SEC may come down on you.

And they don't need to win to make that possibility a nightmare outcome.

Popular Articles

Answers to Common EB-5 Visa Investor Questions

The most frequently asked question about the EB-5 Visa program to get US green card by investment. Answered by the industry's top EB-5 experts.

Read MoreMay 22, 2023
EB-5 Green Card process: from investment to U.S. permanent residency

Learn about the entire EB-5 process from selecting an investment, to filing an I-526, to conditional permanent residency, to filing an I-829 and approval.

Read MoreMay 17, 2023
EB-5 Source of Funds Requirements & Best Practices

A lawful source & path of funds is critical for EB-5 Green Card success. Get expert insight on USCIS requirements & and the use of unsecured loans.

Read MoreMay 15, 2021
EB-5 I-526 petition requirements & recent processing times

Discover EB-5 I-526 petition requirements: cost, “at risk,” source of funds & job creation. Learn why 2021 processing times should improve significantly.


Read MoreMay 13, 2021
What 'Reg S' Means and What EB-5 Issuers and Investors Should Know

Learn about the Reg S meaning, flow back, liability and compliance, the benefits for EB-5 issuers, and the impact of failing to register when required.

Read MoreMay 05, 2021