Investors eagerly await Trump rules on Opportunity Zones; Dan Gauthier, Rose Law Group transactional attorney handling many O-Zone investments, comments

The SpringHill Suites by Marriott project site in Avondale, Ariz. Most of the projects spurred so far by the Opportunity Zone designations are real estate. / Credit Virtua Partners, via PR Newswire / New York Times

Disclosure: Rose Law Group represents Virtua Partners in some of their properties

By Jim Tankersley |The New York Times

A hotel groundbreaking ceremony here in an old cotton field not far from Interstate 10 last month featured two United States senators, a hot catered lunch and a stream of speeches about driving economic investment to this corner of the Southwest that is still recovering from the Great Recession.

Whether they were celebrating the beginnings of a wave of investment in distressed parts of America, or just another Marriott property, could hinge on a coming decision by the Trump administration.

A new batch of tax regulations from the Treasury Department will establish the most comprehensive guidelines yet for what sorts of investments qualify for tax benefits associated with opportunity zones, which were created by the 2017 tax law, and how investors must proceed in order to take advantage of them.

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“Forthcoming regulations from the Treasury Department may make or break the viability of certain investments in Opportunity Zones.”

~Dan Gauthier