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If EB-5 returns in future stimulus bill, consider how new industry tool shows the most attractive projects don't need the money (so the program's about profit enhancement)

EB-5 was not resurrected in the recent federal stimulus bill, The Real Deal reported 3/30/20, despite a report from Politico about a proposal to drastically cut the required investment amount.

But it may not be over. Added the Real Deal:
Yet, EB-5 reform is not off the table, according to some experts. There are reports that Congress is also considering another stimulus package that could be larger than the most recently passed $2 trillion stimulus as the federal government looks to keep the economy afloat during widespread closures and layoffs, according to the Wall Street Journal.
ā€œCongress is sure to consider other economic stimulus legislation this spring, and proponents hope EB-5 reforms may succeed then,ā€ said Stephen Yale-Loehr, an immigration law professor at Cornell University and an expert on the EB-5 program.
Note that Yale-Loehr is not merely an academic expert but a longtime industry insider, of counsel at the law firm Miller Mayer (which worked on the initial Atlantic Yards EB-5 fundraising) and founder of Invest In the USA, a trade association of so-called regional centers, the investment pools that raise money as middlemen and take fees as well as a piece of the interest.

A key admission

Just days before that Real Deal report, I saw a 3/28/20 press release headlined EB5 Affiliate Network and Klasko Law Update EB-5 Project Risk Assessment Tool Following EB-5 Rule Changes. Here's the lead:
EB5 Affiliate Network (EB5AN), a leading EB-5 regional center and EB-5 service provider, has announced that it has updated its EB-5 Project Risk Assessment Tool for EB-5 investors to reflect the recent EB-5 rule changes enacted by United States Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) on November 21, 2019. The tool, developed in collaboration with Klasko Immigration Law Partners (Klasko Law), offers EB-5 investors valuable transparency and insight into the project diligence and reliability of potential EB-5 projects in an attempt to educate investors and enable them to identify fraudulent or poorly managed projects.
The Project Risk Assessment Tool helps investors gauge the legitimacy of potential EB-5 projects through a series of multiple-choice questions and provides a chart at the end to visually assess the reliability of the project examined. All the questions have been updated to reflect the new EB-5 rule changes.
When I took a look at that new risk assessment questionnaire, I saw an astounding admission:

In response to the question, "Is the project construction contingent or dependent on EB-5 capital?" the Strong Answer was this:
There is no minimum EB-5 capital raise for the project and all the capital needed to complete the project has already been committed, OR the EB-5 capital is being used to partially recapitalize bridge funding per USCIS requirements.
Consider what that means, especially the first of the two parts of the answer: they don't need the money.

As I wrote, leading regional center operator Nicholas Mastroianni II told a panel in Shanghai in November 2016 stated, "Projects that don't typically need the capital are the projects that we look to lend money on. If a project can't be developed without the EB-5 capital, it's not a project that you should be looking to invest in, because you've got a desperate situation."

But if projects don't need EB-5 loans, the program has no reason to exist. It's just "profit enhancement," to quote NYU scholar Gary Friedland. Public assets produce no public benefit.

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