in the US, you want an s corp if you want more personal investment in the company. c corp is more limited liability. also for s corp there is no corporate tax rate (it's the same as your personal rate) but for c corp you pay the corporate tax rate.
== == A partnership can not own an S corporation. It is not a person, and does not qualify as a Q-Sub trust. The references as to who can own a S corporation can be found at the following government web address: http://edocket.access.gpo.gov/cfr_2006/aprqtr/pdf/26cfr1.1361-1.pdf
Yes, yes, yes. Tax issues get fun when consolidating between entity types. The answer is too long to type. Pay a CPA.
If it is the S corp going BK it does not effect your personal assets, except to the amount you own in the S corp or co-signed loans for it.
Limited Partnership, LLC, and Incorporation (S-corp; C-corp) form a business.
The tax form filed by the entity will tell you if it is a C corp (Form 1120), and S corp (Form 1120S), or a Partnership (Form 1065).
Uh? NOLs from where. The Sub S isn't taxable, its losses were passed through. If you mean can you deal in NOLs between non-combinning/consolidated reporters...NO.
CT Corp
File an 8832, apply for a new EIN. Get a CPA there are some tricky tax treatmetns, look up BIG tax.
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An S Corp is dissolved by filing a certificate of dissolution with the Nevada agency where the Corp is registered. Once the paperwork is filed, the S Corp is considered dissolved.
MedCath Corp.'s population is 30.