Finance
2022 Year-End Financial Moves Every Small Business Owner Should Consider

The tax-filing system continues to be months away however now is a superb time to start out serious about subsequent 12 months’s return. Listed below are some issues to think about.
Feminine entrepreneur reviewing her 2022 enterprise productiveness.
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Assessment Your Retirement Plan Choices – There are three.
Self-employed staff and small-business homeowners who need a straightforward and cheap retirement plan ought to think about a Simplified Worker Pension IRA, or SEP IRA for brief. They’re comparatively straightforward to ascertain and have decrease administrative prices. SEP IRA plans are simpler to ascertain than different retirement plans and have decrease prices to manage. They’re out there for quite a lot of small-business sorts and help you arrange a conventional IRA for your self and any staff you will have.
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Professional Tip: The sort of account can also be a very good choice for a employee with a facet gig in addition to his or her common job. It could help you contribute totally to your employer’s 401(ok) and use the SEP IRA for self-employment revenue.
Paperwork about Particular person retirement account IRA on a desk. The SEP-IRA, Roth IRA, Pension, 401k … [+]
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The one-participant (or Solo) 401(ok) is a conventional 401(ok) plan overlaying a enterprise proprietor with no staff. It has the identical guidelines and necessities as another 401(ok) plan. It’s appropriate for sole proprietors, partnerships, C firms and S-corporation enterprise homeowners. It have to be established within the 12 months wherein you are taking the deduction in your tax return. Elective deferrals are as much as 100% of compensation (“earned revenue” within the case of a self-employed particular person) as much as the annual contribution restrict: $22,500 in 2023. A Solo 401(ok) might be funded with both pre-tax, after-tax, or designated Roth contributions. Know that you could be be required to file an annual Type 5500 (EZ or SF) with the Division of Labor.
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You possibly can select to take part in an IRA or Roth IRA program if you happen to meet the next circumstances:
You aren’t eligible to take part in an organization retirement plan, or in case you are eligible, it’s essential to have an adjusted gross revenue of $68,000 or much less for singles, or $109,000 or much less for married {couples} submitting collectively. In case you are not eligible for an organization plan however your partner is, your conventional IRA contribution is totally deductible so long as your mixed gross revenue doesn’t exceed $204,000. For 2022, the utmost IRA contribution you can also make is $6,000 ($7,000 in case you are age 50 or older by the tip of the 12 months). Though you received’t get a tax break with a Roth, it might be a more sensible choice as a result of all withdrawals might be tax free in retirement. To contribute the total quantity, it’s essential to earn $129,000 or much less a 12 months in case you are single or $204,000 if you happen to’re married and file a joint return.
Have a look at Wealth Switch Methods – As a result of annual exclusion items don’t depend in opposition to your lifetime reward tax exemption, this can be a nice strategy to switch property with out incurring taxes. You may give as much as $15,000 tax-free, to a single recipient. Spouses may give one other $15,000. You should use this gift-tax exclusion for a vast variety of recipients.
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For instance, a married couple with two kids may give as a lot $60,000 in a single 12 months. The Present Tax Exemption in 2022 is $12.06 million. You too can create an property plan to ascertain long-term lifetime trusts or trusts at demise through your will that maintain enterprise pursuits. Which will considerably maximize your revenue and switch tax financial savings–particularly in case you are contemplating transitioning your enterprise to the following technology.
Make a last-minute estimated tax fee – Should you didn’t pay sufficient to the IRS throughout the 12 months, you will have an enormous tax invoice, plus curiosity and penalties. Don’t get caught with an underpayment penalty.
Professional Tip: Should you make an estimated fee by January 15, you may erase any penalty for the fourth quarter, however you continue to will owe a penalty for earlier quarters if you happen to didn’t ship in any estimated funds again then. However, in case your revenue windfall arrived after August 31, you may file Type 2210: Underpayment of Estimated Tax to annualize your estimated tax legal responsibility, and probably cut back any additional expenses.
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Make sure you get what’s yours – Companies can deduct odd and mandatory prices, equivalent to promoting, salaries and wages, curiosity expense and insurance coverage. You will discover extra data on deductible enterprise bills in IRS Publication 535. Work with a CPA or different monetary skilled to make sure that your companies is taking full benefit of deductions, write-offs and different tax benefits. These professionals additionally will allow you to keep knowledgeable about tax legal guidelines and rules, that are always altering.

Finance
Non-bank financial institutions’ reliance on banks for contingent credit under stress and its consequences
In recent years, banks’ credit line exposure to ‘shadow banks’, or non-bank financial institutions (NBFIs), has grown significantly faster than exposure to non-financial corporations. Between 2013 and 2023, bank credit lines to NBFIs tripled from $500 billion to $1.5 trillion, and in 2023 over 20% of all bank credit lines were committed to NBFIs (Acharya et al. 2024). How do the growing linkages between banks and NBFIs impact the performance and systemic stability of banks? We answer this question by studying an important leading example of a non-bank financial institution – real estate investment trusts (REITs; Acharya et al. 2025).
REITs are significant investors in commercial real estate (CRE), with over $4 trillion in investments, corresponding to 20% of the CRE market that is currently valued at $21 trillion.
Rising interest rates and an economic slowdown can therefore exert considerable pressure on the CRE sector.
Considering the vast scale of the CRE market, disruptions in the CRE sector can influence the availability of bank credit to households and businesses. Consequently, regulators and policymakers have increasingly focused on the risks associated with CRE loans in recent times. REITs, being large CRE investors, inherit these fundamental economic and financial risks.
Importantly, nearly half of all bank-originated credit lines to public NBFIs are allocated to REITs. As shown in Figure 1, REITs exhibit significantly higher utilisation rates on bank credit lines compared to other NBFIs and non-financial corporates. Moreover, their credit line usage is markedly more sensitive to aggregate market performance, as indicated by the slope coefficients in the figure. Notably, REIT utilisation rates spike during periods of market stress (such as the COVID-19 period), making credit lines to REITs a potentially significant source of systemic risk for banks.
However, despite these factors, the significant exposure of large banks to the CRE sector via their credit lines to REITs is often underappreciated. It is commonly assumed that disruptions in the CRE sector mainly affect smaller banks. Figure 2 illustrates the on-balance-sheet exposure in the form of CRE loans as a proportion of total equity over the past decade for three types of banks: community banks (assets under $10 billion), regional banks (assets between $10 billion and $100 billion), and large banks (assets exceeding $100 billion). The exposure of regional and community banks, when scaled by equity, is approximately four and five times greater, respectively, than that of large banks. As per this exposure measure, there has been a notable increase over the past decade in CRE loan exposure among regional and, especially, community banks, but not among large banks. This might suggest that the CRE stress does not pose systemic risk to the largest banks in the economy.
Figure 1 Average credit line utilisation by borrower group
Notes: This figure plots the average credit line utilisation rate by three groups of borrowers – REITs, NBFIs (excluding REITs), and non-financial companies – versus the S&P 500 return. Each dot indicates the utilisation rate in one of the quarters between 2005Q1 and 2023Q4. The dots for 2008Q4 and 2020Q1 are labelled to highlight the main crisis quarters. The solid blue line indicates the slope of a regression of utilisation rates onto the S&P 500 return for REITs, the dashed red line and the green dotted line indicate the respective slopes of the same regression for NBFIs excluding REITs and non-financial companies. Data are obtained from Capital IQ and CRSP.
However, these figures ignore loans and credit lines provided by banks to REITs. The primary conclusion that emerges from our empirical analysis is that to get a complete picture of bank exposure to CRE risks, it is important to focus not just on the direct CRE exposure of banks but also on the provision of credit, especially by large banks, to REITs. Once the indirect exposure of banks via term loans and credit lines to REITs is accounted for, CRE exposures are concentrated not only in the portfolios of smaller banks but also among the largest US banks. Figure 3 illustrates this fact. In this figure, we categorise bank exposure into direct CRE exposure, indirect exposure via term loans to REITs, and indirect exposure through credit lines to REITs. For large banks, indirect exposure constitutes about a third of their total exposure, whereas for regional banks, the indirect exposure through REITs is considerably smaller, and for community banks, it is practically negligible.
Figure 2 Total on-balance-sheet exposure to the commercial real estate market
Notes: This figure shows the total reported on-balance sheet exposure to the commercial real estate market scaled by the total book value of equity of the bank. Data are from the FR Y-C at the quarterly frequency from 2013Q1 to 2023Q4. We split banks into three types: community banks (assets
Figure 3 Total exposure of banks to commercial real estate
Notes: This figure shows the total exposure of banks to commercial real estate (CRE) by stacking their direct exposure through on-balance sheet CRE loans and indirect exposure through banks’ term loans and credit lines to Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs). Banks are classified as follows: community banks (assets
What, then, are the underlying mechanisms through which credit-line exposure of banks to REITs might pose a system-wide risk? In summary, there is a higher utilisation rate of credit lines by REITs relative to other NBFIs and non-financial corporates, especially when the performance of the underlying real estate assets declines and particularly during periods of aggregate economic stress. This behaviour is associated with a notable decrease in stock returns for banks more heavily exposed to undrawn credit lines extended to REITs, consistent with capital encumbrance imposed by credit line drawdowns impeding banks’ future intermediation activities.
We first tease out why REITs have higher utilisation rates on credit lines, especially during stress. By regulation, REITs are required to pay out at least 90% of their income in the form of dividends, restricting the amount of cash REITs can accumulate.
This leads to a disproportionately large dependence of REITs on bank credit lines for liquidity during stress periods. For example, Blackstone REIT (BREIT) and SREIT (managed by Starwood Capital) relied on their lines of credit during 2022 and 2024 respectively, nearly exhausting their credit line capacity to satisfy investor withdrawal requests.
We show that the findings in these case studies generalise to a broader setting in which we find significant positive correlations between redemptions and credit line drawdowns for all REITs in our sample. We also find that REITs increase investments and dividend payouts and reduce cash in the four quarters after a drawdown. This seems to indicate that they use both their cash and the liquidity from credit lines to acquire properties and pay out dividends. During crises (Global Crisis and COVID-19) however, we find that REITs start building cash buffers and they discontinue investing, i.e. acquiring properties. In fact, 72 cents of each dollar drawn is used to increase cash holdings. In other words, REITs use bank credit lines like ‘working capital’ for business activities in normal times, but to hoard cash during stress times.
We next investigate the impact of higher credit line utilisation by REITs on banks. Unlike term loan exposures that banks report on their balance sheet and fund with capital, and whose potential risks they manage through loan loss provisions, credit lines are off-balance-sheet and funded with equity capital to a much lesser extent until drawn down. Moreover, the risk of simultaneous drawdowns by borrowers during widespread market stress may suddenly constrain bank capital and/or liquidity, thereby reducing the banks’ ability to intermediate effectively. Consistent with these channels, we find that banks with higher undrawn credit line commitments to REITs experience lower stock returns during crises (controlling for banks’ total credit line commitments).
Finally, we document that credit lines to REITs substantially increase banks’ capital requirements during aggregate stress periods. We estimate an expected (market-equity-based) capital shortfall under aggregate market stress (e.g. -40% correction to MSCI Global Index) vis-à-vis a benchmark capital requirement (e.g. 8% of market equity relative to market equity plus non-equity liabilities), by incorporating REIT and non-REIT credit lines in stress test scenarios. We compare three models: one treating all borrowers uniformly, one distinguishing REITs by their unique drawdown behaviour, and one considering direct on-balance-sheet CRE exposure. As of Q4 2023, we estimate that the incremental capital requirement for publicly traded US banks rises by approximately 20% — from $180 billion to $217 billion — primarily due to REIT drawdowns, while CRE exposures add only $2 billion. Notably, over 90% of this additional capital burden falls on large banks. These results highlight the systemic risks posed to banks, and in turn to the real economy, by REIT credit lines, underscoring the need for careful regulatory scrutiny.
While we have focused on publicly traded REITs, this raises broader questions about the growing linkages between banks and NBFIs. Acharya et al. (2024) document that NBFI drawdowns have risen from 25% in 2013 to over 50% post‐COVID, with private NBFIs accounting for nearly 60% of drawdowns by private firms (compared to 30% for public ones). Additionally, credit lines to NBFIs such as business development companies (BDCs) and collateralised loan obligations (CLOs) have increased from 28% to 42% of total bank credit to NBFIs between 2013 and 2023. Given that private NBFIs generally exhibit higher credit line utilisation rates than REITs, stress in their funding conditions could similarly affect banks via the credit line channel. In essence, as NBFIs continue to expand their role in credit intermediation, their continuing reliance on banks for contingent liquidity highlights a critical channel through which risks may be transmitted back to the banking system.
References
Acharya, V V, N Cetorelli and B Tuckman (2024), “Where Do Banks End and NBFIs Begin?”, NBER Working Paper.
Acharya, V V, M Gopal, M Jager and S Steffen (2025), “Shadow Always Touches the Feet: Implications of Bank Credit Lines to Non-Bank Financial Intermediaries”, NBER Working Paper No. w33590.
Gupta, A, V Mittal and S Van Nieuwerburgh (2022), “Work from home and the office real estate apocalypse”, Working Paper, NYU Stern School of Business.
Hardin III, W and M Hill (2011), “Credit line availability and utilization in REITs”, Journal of Real Estate Research 33: 507–530.
Jiang, E X, G Matvos, T Piskorski and A Seru (2023), “Monetary Tightening, Commercial Real Estate Distress, and US Bank Fragility”, NBER Working Paper.
Mei, J and A Saunders (1995), “Bank risk and real estate: an asset pricing perspective”, The Journal of Real Estate Finance and Economics 10: 199–224.
Finance
Hong Kong economy to post solid growth in first quarter: finance chief Paul Chan

Hong Kong’s finance chief has predicted the economy to post solid growth in the first quarter, while pledging to press on with plans to control government spending to maintain the city’s competitiveness.
Financial Secretary Paul Chan Mo-po gave his forecast on Sunday in the lead-up to this week’s announcement of gross domestic product (GDP) figures for the quarter.
He said the economy had benefited from the increase in tourist arrivals and exports between January and March, but warned of uncertainties in the global outlook amid an ongoing trade war.
“Driven by these positive factors, the advance estimates on GDP for the first quarter of 2025 to be released this week are expected to be robust,” he said in his weekly blog.
“But looking ahead, the bullying acts and the unilateral protectionism of the United States will continue to haunt the global economic outlook.”
Chan said the number of tourist arrivals in the first quarter had increased by 9 per cent year on year to 12.2 million, thanks to a series of mega-events and large-scale international meetings that boosted the performance of the retail and catering sectors.
Finance
One Manx Financial Group Insider Raised Stake By 228% In Previous Year
Viewing insider transactions for Manx Financial Group PLC’s (LON:MFX ) over the last year, we see that insiders were net buyers. This means that a larger number of shares were purchased by insiders in relation to shares sold.
While insider transactions are not the most important thing when it comes to long-term investing, we would consider it foolish to ignore insider transactions altogether.
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The CEO & Director Douglas Grant made the biggest insider purchase in the last 12 months. That single transaction was for UK£245k worth of shares at a price of UK£0.15 each. So it’s clear an insider wanted to buy, even at a higher price than the current share price (being UK£0.14). Their view may have changed since then, but at least it shows they felt optimistic at the time. We always take careful note of the price insiders pay when purchasing shares. As a general rule, we feel more positive about a stock when an insider has bought shares at above current prices, because that suggests they viewed the stock as good value, even at a higher price. Douglas Grant was the only individual insider to buy during the last year.
The chart below shows insider transactions (by companies and individuals) over the last year. If you want to know exactly who sold, for how much, and when, simply click on the graph below!
See our latest analysis for Manx Financial Group
Manx Financial Group is not the only stock insiders are buying. So take a peek at this free list of under-the-radar companies with insider buying.
I like to look at how many shares insiders own in a company, to help inform my view of how aligned they are with insiders. Usually, the higher the insider ownership, the more likely it is that insiders will be incentivised to build the company for the long term. It appears that Manx Financial Group insiders own 36% of the company, worth about UK£6.1m. This level of insider ownership is good but just short of being particularly stand-out. It certainly does suggest a reasonable degree of alignment.
The fact that there have been no Manx Financial Group insider transactions recently certainly doesn’t bother us. But insiders have shown more of an appetite for the stock, over the last year. Insiders do have a stake in Manx Financial Group and their transactions don’t cause us concern. So these insider transactions can help us build a thesis about the stock, but it’s also worthwhile knowing the risks facing this company. Every company has risks, and we’ve spotted 3 warning signs for Manx Financial Group you should know about.
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