The Big Beautiful Bill brings significant tax law changes impacting real estate buyers, property owners, and real estate professionals. To help you navigate these updates, here's an in-depth overview of key provisions, who they affect, and practical examples that clarify their real-world implications.
Blog: Insights From the Fastlane
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“Zero-trust” sounds like something dreamed up by an IT team that drinks too much cold brew. In reality, it’s a finance concept wearing a tech hoodie.
At its core, zero-trust simply means this: no one gets access to money, data, or systems unless they continuously prove they should have it. Not once. Every time.
If that sounds familiar, it should. CFOs have been doing this for decades.
Download: CFO Zero-Trust Checklist & Scorecard
Zero-Trust Is Just Internal Controls, Modernized
What lenders actually read, the ratios that matter, and how to pre-negotiate terms
A bank package is not a document dump. It’s a curated, lender-ready narrative backed by numbers that survive scrutiny. Tight packages move through credit faster, earn cleaner covenants, and avoid the "please resend page 42" purgatory.
At Sharp CFO™, we build packages that speak banker. Mike, our founder, simultaneously ran a CPA firm, served as a CFO, and operated as a California real estate broker originating and underwriting mortgages. Translation: we’ve worked both sides of the table—corporate credit and the personal "global cash flow" lens lenders actually use.
Most businesses run on hope and yesterday’s P&L… Cute!
The companies that don’t panic on Thursdays run a 13-week cash flow. It’s simple, relentless, and unfairly effective at keeping you solvent while everyone else is guessing.
When an S-corp nets $150,000 to $250,000 before owner salary, the reflex is to crank up wages “to be safe.” That’s not always necessary. Our firm applies an effort vs. capitalization framework that pegs wages to the owner’s actual labor and credits a fair return to capital and systems.
Used correctly, this approach can support a $50,000 W-2 wage for the owner while keeping the rest available for distributions, cash reserves, and growth.
The Rule, In Plain English
An S-corporation must pay shareholder-employees a reasonable salary for the services they perform before distributing remaining profits. This isn’t folklore; it comes from how the Internal Revenue Code treats compensation and payroll tax: