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KTech Grows with IRBs Industrial Revenue Bonds don’t just attract companies from outside the state—they facilitate the growth of homegrown business as well. Ktech, an engineering and manufacturing company, secured a $12 million industrial revenue bond to build a 90,000-square-foot manufacturing facility at the Sandia Science and Technology Park. The facility houses Poly-Flow Engineering, a Ktech acquisition that manufactures spray cleaning equipment for the semiconductor industry. The IRBs give property and other tax breaks to Ktech, allowing it to bring Poly-Flow here from California. |
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Industrial Revenue BondsUse of an Industrial Revenue Bond (IRB) for larger industrial projects effectively allows qualifying businesses to purchase plant and process equipment free of gross receipts or compensating tax, and with a full or partial exemption from property tax on project property for up to thirty years. Technically, an IRB is a loan from the bond purchaser to a company where the loan proceeds and repayment flow through a county or municipal issuer ('issuer'). Bond funds are used by a business to buy land and equipment as agents for the government entity. A company enters into a lease with the government entity to use the property in its operations. The agreement provides the company will lease the facility from the issuer and, at the end of the lease, purchase the facility from the issuer for a nominal amount. The government entity does not exercise any control over plant operations and has no interest in doing so. The county or municipality has no financial risk in the arrangement which essentially lets a private business take advantage of the tax exempt status of counties and municipalities. IRBs in Metro New Mexico have advantages, conditions, and cautions.
For more information or a free custom analysis of tax incentives for your company, call 800-226-2935 or email us . |
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