
17 April 2025 | 5 replies
Depending on your level of activity, we may recommend wholesaling in a subsidiary of the LLC so that if there is any liability that is triggered from one wholesale deal that you can isolate it inside of that subsidiary and close it down without compromising your parent LLC that has the trademark.

21 April 2025 | 10 replies
I had done a pyramid structure where the top (parent company) owns the two bottom subsidiaries (one for management, one for holding properties).

19 April 2025 | 7 replies
Over time, as you flip more properties within a single entity, the risk of liability increases — a problem with one property could expose the entire business to legal and financial issues.A better approach is to have the C Corporation own separate subsidiary LLCs, with each LLC holding a single flip property.

11 April 2025 | 4 replies
I had it set up a holding company in Wyoming, then an llc in PA that was a subsidiary of the holding company.

7 April 2025 | 29 replies
Originally posted by @Jonathan Bren:Hi Guys,Currently own multiple properties (Sfr),they are spread out into various LLCs, having couple of properties in each LLC.these LLCs are all owned by and a subsidiary of a 1 holding LLC.Rent is currently flowing into 1 bank account, all expenses and income are being segregated and and accounted for with QB and works well.Ive been reading that each LLC should have its own Bank account.. i feel this would be a pain to do..What do you suggest doing?

5 April 2025 | 6 replies
Instead, it is better to have a subsidiary LLC owned by the C Corporation, and that subsidiary LLC would own the flip property.

5 April 2025 | 310 replies
They are a subsidiary of Berkshire Hathaway.

17 March 2025 | 6 replies
Not to mention all the subsidiary jobs that will be created to support such an influx of trades.

10 March 2025 | 5 replies
These lenders wont lend directly on your kind of deal, but they're typically the borrower-facing subsidiaries of asset managers, and their account execs will have partners to refer you to.

6 March 2025 | 7 replies
Has any of the above BP's had further dealings since posting your comments regarding GMG or their subsidiary American Mortgages?