Tax & Audit Internships

Are you looking to gain valuable experience to complement your education? Urish Popeck’s internship program will help launch your career as you will be exposed to real-world experience and be responsible for accounting specific tasks. We provide a balanced work-life schedule so that you can effectively gain industry experience while continuing your education.

Responsibilities of Position:

  • Hands-on experience preparing tax returns and/or audit engagements
  • Develop working knowledge of audit and/or tax software and research tools
  • Develop relationships with team members
  • Participate in engagement planning and written client communications
  • Financial statement preparation assistance

Qualifications:

  • Pursuing a Bachelor’s in accounting
  • On track to obtain 150 credit hours
  • Working knowledge of Microsoft Office programs  
  • Possess strong interpersonal, analytical, and research abilities

What We Offer:

  • Opportunity to participate in engagements often found in much larger firms
  • Hands-on training
  • Flexible part-time work hours to accommodate class schedules
  • Employee events

The New Reality Of Commercial Real Estate

There’s no question the global pandemic of 2020 quickened trends of the future that were hitting the wall of the present: Employers resistant to allowing employees to work remotely suddenly had no choice as localities enacted mandatory state-at-home measures.

Businesses migrated to remote work on an unprecedented scale – a great experiment, the ripple effects of which are many for real estate. As parts of the business world adjust to working from home, some are finding multi-year office leases may no longer be required or, at a minimum, their needs for physical space will decrease. Others are looking to downsize given the impact of the recession on revenues. What does the future hold for landlords and developers managing commercial space?

Suburban Commercial Migration

The pandemic has accelerated a quiet yet steady suburban migration that has been underway for the last few years. 

As Millennials coming of working age helped shape reurbanization in the 2000s, so will they shape suburbanization in their search for different space needs, better quality of life and better schools for the families they are starting. The so-called death knell of suburbia was never to ring; the fluctuations in urban/suburban living over the last several decades are cyclical—and COVID-19 is accelerating the cycle. 

Satellite offices and suburban headquarters are two ripple effects we will see. What are the opportunities arising from them?

SATELLITE OFFICES

As businesses streamline their urban operations and seek small offices closer to where their employees live, they will be searching for the right mix of convenience and safety—for example, strip mall-like single- or two-story buildings to which employees can drive up and walk into without having to pass through a crowded office building lobby or ride an elevator with other people.

SUBURBAN HEADQUARTERS

Some may abandon urban headquarters entirely. Workers moving from urban areas will take their urban tastes and preferences with them. Landlords looking to support companies that want to attract and retain talent will try to understand and cater to those preferences. Suburban offices should consider:

  • Building out an “amenitized” campus
  • Outfitting areas for working outdoors (patios, balconies, rooftop gardens)
  • Adapting larger floor plates away from open floor plans
  • Building out amenities (redesigning shared spaces such as fitness centers, cafes or lunchrooms for social distancing and health safety, and providing childcare centers) 

Moving to a Hub and Spoke

With poll after poll finding that a significant percentage of workers desire work-from-home flexibility when offices reopen or will no longer accept long commutes to city centers, many businesses are tailoring their space needs and pivoting to a hub-and-spoke model, in which they downsize their urban presence and open satellite offices in suburban locations.

A dispersed client base and empty space are two ripple effects we will see. What are the opportunities arising from them?

DISPERSED CLIENT BASE

Hub as keeper of brand + culture: Concerns about keeping a cohesive culture and identity, even brand, in a post-COVID world in which employees don’t occupy the same space can be allayed by making headquarters the heart and soul of the company. For efficiency’s sake, landlords making changes to their buildings should also consider changes that support companies that are seeking to solve the culture challenge.

EMPTY SPACE

Coworking: COVID-19 will not be the end of coworking, but landlords will change how coworking looks. Companies will need smaller satellite spaces within cities to accommodate employees who live in urban areas and need to meet with clients or don’t necessarily want to work from home. In this scenario, businesses downsize their main headquarters and lease space that has been redesigned for social distancing and contagion concerns yet boasts modern amenities and flexible lease terms (more favorable than locking in a multi-year lease). 

Competition: Rising vacancy rates will mean competition for tenants. Landlords who take steps to address contagion concerns—offering touchless access and installing thermal cameras and HVAC systems, for example—will have an edge.

Suburban Industrial Migration

E-commerce has transformed the industrial sector: Tenants’ new needs (e.g., on-demand warehousing) altered business as usual. Now new pockets of e-commerce—like online grocery—are increasing market share; e-commerce sales are estimated to hit $1.5T by 2025, creating demand for 1 billion square feet of industrial space, according to JLL. Leaders should consider: 

  • Modernizing distribution centers and locating closer to end markets to keep up with growing consumer demand
  • Making new investments in areas where rapid growth in e-commerce is expected 
  • Locating in areas where valuations are lower than primary or more saturated markets

Increased demand and shifting population demographics are two ripple effects we will see. What are the opportunities arising from them?

SHIFTING POPULATION DEMOGRAPHICS

Suburban demand: As city dwellers seek out the suburbs, there will be a synchronous shift in the location of demand: Companies like Amazon will desire fulfillment centers located closer to the end user, for example. Industry operators should reassess their projections for where demand will be and make investments accordingly.

INCREASED DEMAND

Creative space: Net absorption rates vary depending on the market. The global impact of e-commerce is here to stay, and landlords should consider:  

  • Giving prospective tenants flexibility within their lease terms to utilize industrial space according to their specific needs, which could be seasonal or based on other fluctuations in product demand
  • Building out adjacent acreage, if possible
  • Outfitting space with the latest digital capabilities in order to increase operational efficiencies and lower costs

This Great Experiment may prove to be a value proposition for both employer and employee, causing a shift in real estate. Employees may now see the value in shorter commutes and demand additional suburban locations to accommodate their lifestyles while employers may be willing to accommodate based on lower suburban rents and proof that everyone does not need to be in a downtown office for a business to succeed.  Still, there is no one-size-fits-all solution to the future of work. The future will shift as the impacts of the global pandemic continue to unfold, but we will continue to feel the ripple effects of the Great Experiment for the foreseeable future.

PPP Loan Forgiveness Update: Change For 5% Owner-Employees Of Corporations And Certain Non-Payroll Costs

On August 24, the Small Business Administration (SBA) issued an Interim Final Rule (IFR) that, for the first time, sets a de minimis rule for Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) loan forgiveness for owner-employees who own less than 5% of a corporation. The IFR also provides additional guidance on PPP loan forgiveness of certain nonpayroll costs. The IFR is effective immediately.


New Rule for 5% Owners of Corporations

SBA guidance on PPP loan repayment from May and June capped the amount of loan forgiveness for owner-employee payroll compensation and attempted to explain what that meant for different types of entities – with different results for C corporations, S corporations, limited liability companies (LLCs), general partnerships, and sole proprietorships.  But the earlier guidance did not set forth any exceptions based on the owner-employee’s percentage of ownership.

Under the new IFR, any individual with a less than 5% ownership stake in a PPP borrower that is a C corporation or S corporation is now exempt from the special PPP owner-employee compensation rules when determining the amount of their compensation that is eligible for PPP loan forgiveness. Less than 5% corporate owner-employees can now use the more favorable nonowner rules for payroll costs to be forgiven.

In issuing the de minimis ownership rule for C and S corporation owners, the SBA said that the exemption was intended “to cover owner-employees who have no meaningful ability to influence decisions over how loan proceeds are allocated.” The new IFR creates different results based on the PPP borrower’s choice of entity.

Accordingly, borrowers may want to revisit their PPP loan forgiveness application to increase payroll costs for owner-employees who own less than 5% of a corporation.

UPCO Insight

The new IFR did not address LLCs, partnerships or sole proprietorships, so the 5% owner exception appears to be limited only to corporations for the time being. The owners of LLCs taxed as partnerships might not be covered. Regardless, not all partners are treated as owner-employees because earlier guidance applied the owner-employee rules only to general partners.

New Nonpayroll Cost Rules

The IFR sets out new limits for PPP loan forgiveness on rent payments and mortgage interest payments made to “related parties.” The IFR says: “Any ownership in common between the business and the property owner is a related party for these purposes.” So the typical controlled group, affiliated service group or common control rules (including family or other attribution rules) do not apply in determining if the parties are related for PPP loan forgiveness of nonpayroll costs. Now, rent or lease payments to related parties qualify for forgiveness only if (1) the payments don’t exceed the amount of mortgage interest owed on the property during the covered period that is attributable to space rented by the business, and (2) the lease and mortgage were entered into before February 15, 2020. The IFR also says that mortgage interest payments made to a related party are not eligible for PPP loan forgiveness.

Finally, the new IFR says that nonpayroll amounts attributable to a business operation of a tenant or subtenant of a PPP borrower are not eligible for forgiveness.

UPCO Insights

Many businesses pay rent to their owners that don’t have a mortgage on the property. Nothing in the CARES Act or prior IFRs hinted at these new limitations based on a landlord-tenant or related party relationship, so many borrowers likely included those amounts in their expected PPP forgiveness calculations.

Accordingly, borrowers may want to revisit the PPP loan forgiveness documentation to eliminate (1) rent paid to related parties that exceeds the interest on the property’s mortgage, (2) any nonpayroll expense that is reimbursed by a sublease tenant, and (3) mortgage interest payments to a related party.