EB-5 Investor Testimonial

Ram from India

Country of Birth

India

Selected EB-5 Project

Twin Lakes Georgia Phase I

Investment Date

February 2023

Select Highlights of the Interview with Ram from India
EB-5 Investor in the EB5AN Twin Lakes Rural EB-5 Project

 

After realizing that an EB-2 visa would take an unbelievably long time to process and approve, I started looking at alternative ways to get my Green Card.

I spent most of 2022 researching EB-5 online. A simple Google search made it look as though there were hundreds of EB-5 projects out there. The biggest decision-making areas as an EB-5 investor are finding the right immigration attorney and then the right regional center or project to work with.

Having worked with immigration attorneys who had filed EB-2s for my wife and friends, I realized that I needed to go with a smaller firm that could dedicate its time to me. I don’t have a problem with big firms, but a smaller one will hold your hand throughout the process.

I found Anahita, through EB5AN, who was able to walk me clearly through the EB-5 process, and this definitely made me feel like she was the right attorney. She took the time to understand our case and was on top of her game.

I would recommend to other investors to find the right immigration attorney and the right project for your specific case.

Ask lots of questions and really get clear on the specifics of the project you want to invest in. Some projects look great on paper, but ask questions about the variables that could make this project fail.

I would definitely recommend EB5AN. It was great working with you because you provided a lot of detail and responded to my questions quickly. In addition, the videos that you provide helped me increase my knowledge on the whole EB-5 process, and I really appreciate that.

Full Interview with Ram
EB-5 Investor in the EB5AN Twin Lakes Rural EB-5 Project

 

Transcript of the Full Interview with Ram from India

Why Did You Make An EB-5 Investment?

Today, we’re going to be chatting about our Twin Lakes Georgia EB-5 rural investment project, and we have the pleasure of having Ram with us. He is an EB-5 investor originally from India who’s going to share his experience in selecting an EB-5 immigration attorney, explain why he decided to pursue an EB-5 investment, and chat a little bit about his experience in researching various EB-5 projects, and eventually, selecting the Twin Lakes Georgia EB-5 rural investment project. Ram, thank you for taking some time to join us today. Please introduce yourself. Tell us a little bit about your experience, how you found your way to the United States, and what’s driven your desire to pursue permanent residency through the EB-5 program.
Hi, Sam. Happy to be here. My name’s Ram. I’m originally from India. I came to the United States first on my F-1 visa to pursue grad school, and after graduating with a master’s degree, I got a job in the United States and my employer-sponsored my H-1B visa. I’ve been on an H-1B visa ever since. Overall, I’ve been in the United States for about 10 years. Within that time, my employer did sponsor me for a Green Card through the EB-2 employment category, which was approved in May 2017, and ever since I’ve been stuck in this EB-2 queue waiting for a Green Card.

 

Finding an EB-5 Immigration Attorney and Filing Form I-526E

Looking at that queue, what made you decide to pursue an EB-5 investment even though you’re already in line for a Green Card through EB-2?

This primarily happened during the pandemic, when I saw the EB-2 numbers move forward in the visa bulletin. That intrigued me to inquire, “Hey, let’s go and look at when my number’s going to come up in the EB-2 category and when I’ll be able to come out of the H-1B visa with a Green Card in hand.” At that time, I was primarily trying to make sense of supply and demand. Supply in the number of visas that are issued for EB-2 Indian nationals, and then demand on how many people who are applying for EB-2 visas from India. On the supply side, I was able to find that pre-COVID USCIS was able to approve about 7,000 applicants in 2015, and then the numbers started to go down. In 2020, you could see about 2,500 applicants were approved.

In the chart that’s here, you can see that the 2021 and 2020 numbers are outliers because of COVID. There was a spillover from family-based applicants into the employment category, but since then, that number has stabilized. From the supply side, you can think of the best-case scenario: USCIS is going to go back to processing about 7,000 applicants a year. Worst case, it’s going to be somewhere between 2,000 applicants per year. We have a good idea of what happens on the supply side. Now, if you go onto the demand side of things is where it gets a bit more challenging to figure out how many applicants are in front of a given priority date. I worked with the I-140 numbers because, in the EB-2 category, each applicant who’s filing for a Green Card should have an I-140 approved before they go on to get their Green Card, and you get the Green Card only when your priority date becomes current.

You have a lot of people who are stuck with approved I-140 applications from India. The red line here shows the number of I-140 approvals that’s happening per year. This doesn’t account for duplicate entries. For example, I have two I-140s approved because I switched employers and my second employer also sponsored my Green Card, and I have an I-140 approved. The only reason I haven’t been given a Green Card is because the priority date for India nationals in EB-2 category is not current. Every year, there’s about 30,000-ish applicants who have the I-140 approved for Indian nationals. Taking that number, the second line from the bottom shows the running sum—if you have a priority date on, let’s say, December 31, 2021, there are about 200,000 I-140 applicants who have gotten their I-140s approved before you.

The other intricate thing that I found as I was reading through all this was that your dependents also count towards the numbers in the visa category, so we have to account for dependents and then we have to also account for duplicate entries and people who abandon their I-140s. Just doing some rough calculations here, I subtracted 20% from the running sum to account for duplicates and for people who abandoned their I-140 applications. You could imagine that this number could be different, but just a quick back-of-the-napkin math subtracts 20% from the running sum; for example, in 2021 there were 200,000 people with approved I-140 applications. And then accounting for dependents basically doubles that number. That puts the total number of people who have I-140s approved as of December 31, 2021, to be about 440,000.

Now, this gives you an idea of what the demand could be. This is not super accurate, but at least gives you a picture of what the demand is for different years. Now that we have the trends showing what the supply was and we have a basic idea of what the demand could be, the next slide would be just putting these numbers together. If you go onto the next slide, you can see that the gray boxes are basically the running sum of I-140 approvals, including the dependents, and then we just plot different numbers trying to make sense of what would be the approval rate on a specific date. For example, there are three lines. One is assuming the worst case scenario, that USCIS will process about 5,000 visas per year.

The second-best scenario is doing about 700,000 visas per year. The third-best scenario would be processing about 10,000 visas per year in the EB-2 India queue. When I was evaluating when my number was going to come up, I leaned towards looking at the 5,000 per year rather than the 10,000 per year number just because we were past the COVID bump. We were right into the normal processing years, so I expected USCIS numbers to be somewhere between five to seven thousand. As someone who is on the EB-2 queue with a priority date of May 2017, I am looking at, in the best-case scenario, about 20 to 35 years to get a Green Card through the EB-2 queue.

 

Selecting an EB-5 Project and Regional Center

If we look at, let’s say, someone who had a priority date of December 31, 2018, if we look at that center column there and then we look at the three different processing levels (the five, the 7.2, and the 10K)—someone who had a priority date for EB-2 at the end of 2018 could be expected to be eligible for a Green Card anywhere from 29 years (in the best case, assuming consistent processing every year at 10,000 per year) and then, in the worst case, 59 years at the much lower 5,000 per year. That range is pretty significant, 29 to 60 years, for someone who has a priority date at the end of 2018. The same holds true for these other years, and so we take that back to 2017. Again, 23 to 46 years is a pretty wide range.
Exactly, and then even in this wide range, the lower number is not great because for 2018, you’re looking at 29 years. When 29 years is your best case scenario, there’s a lot that goes into it. One is, you are expected to maintain employment status for 29 years in H-1B, you can’t pursue other career paths because your I-140 is approved for a specific work level, so you need to maintain that work level. Then come the travel issues; you need to get your visa re-stamped each time you leave the U.S. That is a lot to do to make sure you’re in legal status in the United States for those 29 years.

 

Concluding Advice for EB-5 Investors

Once you had a chance to really run the numbers and do this analysis for yourself, you came out with, “Okay, if I don’t do anything, I’m looking at 20 to 35 years of restricted travel, restricted employment, stress about visas and constant employment.” Then you basically thought, “I don’t really want to do that. What else can I do to accelerate this process and get in a much, much shorter line?” Is that what you were thinking?
Exactly. I started looking into these numbers in mid-2022, but as late 2022 rolled in, there were tech layoffs. That made me eager to find out what the other legal pathways were to a Green Card given that I had to wait about 20 years (at a minimum) to get my Green Card through the EB-2 queue. I was just researching these pathways, and to be honest, the only other way that I found was EB-5. I have friends who have done EB-1, but that required special skills and knowledge of a specific domain, and then they have to be leaders in this domain to pursue EB-1. Based on my profile, it made more sense to pursue the EB-5 line. That is the queue for Indian nationals, but there are also dedicated visa numbers for specific categories within EB-5.

 

Then you can eliminate the fear of potentially facing a layoff and knowing that you’ve adjusted status and you don’t have to worry about leaving the country.
Exactly. When I started looking into EB-5, one benefit that came with EB-5 was the ability to adjust status once you file, and then get an employment permit. That definitely takes some pressure off in terms of layoffs and the ability to easily switch jobs. EB-5 also allows for international travel with the advanced parole.
We’ve covered the reasoning why waiting for EB-2 to become current is very daunting and could be 20 to 35 years for your priority date, or potentially 30 to 90 years for others depending on their priority dates as well. Now, you’ve come to the decision, “I want to do EB-5. That’s going to be the best option for me to eliminate all the stress and unpredictability.” What was your next step once you had made that decision about which was the best path forward?

I spent most of 2022 researching EB-5 online. When I started with EB-5 research, just a simple Google search made it look like there were hundreds of EB-5 projects out there, but I had to spend some time understanding the specific immigration rules for EB-5 and trying to figure out what best suited my scenario—specifically, for someone who’s an Indian national, given that there’s also a queue in EB-5. I didn’t want to just go from one queue to another never-ending queue. So, the two main areas, the biggest decision-making areas as an EB-5 investor are finding the right immigration attorney and then finding the right regional center or project to work with. Coming back to that first point on trying to find the immigration attorney, I’ve had some experience with corporate immigration attorneys who have filed EB-2s for both my wife, who’s also on the EB-2 queue, and me, and for my friends. One thing I kind of took away from that experience is that I wanted to go with the smaller firm for the EB-5 immigration for a couple of reasons.

One, so they could dedicate their time to me and make sure they brought me along as a person who’s going through this immigration process, the application filing process; so I would get to understand what was happening, the rules that we needed to follow for EB-5. Going from an H-1B or an EB-2 queue to an EB-5 comes with its own set of rules. In the immigration attorney space, I was basically looking online trying to narrow it down to small firms who had been working in EB-5, and I also came across Anahita in one of your other webinars. I think it was for the Wohali project. She did catch our eye on that webinar, and then just looking at other client testimonials, one from Siddharth in your other video and then online. Also, just talking to her even before we signed on with her, she was able to walk us clearly through the EB-5 process. This definitely helped us pick the right attorney.

Once you’d completed the immigration attorney research and decided which attorney to hire, what was that process like? What types of documents did you need to assemble? How long did it take? How many hours a day, for how long, was that process until you know were able to finish and get your petition submitted?
I had done some of the groundwork in late 2022, because by late 2022 we were pretty sure we were going to do EB-5 in this semester. I had started collecting the source of funds, and also, made sure that when the time came to sign onto a project we were ready to go. I guess when we met with Anahita, our goal was to help her understand our case and where we were in the process and what we were thinking. For us, we wanted to move really fast because we had a source of funds ready to go. We were almost narrowed down to a handful of projects that we were looking at. From the day we made contact, we were able to file within two weeks.
Fairly quickly, but you had done a lot of groundwork in anticipation of an application.
Exactly.
Having just completed the process, what are some tips, some advice that you’d give to someone who’s considering EB-5 and is looking at a number of different attorneys? You mentioned you wanted to avoid a larger firm on this application. Why was that the case, and specifically, what things were you really looking for in an EB-5 attorney to help you through the process?
A couple of main things that I was looking out for is someone who had processed hundreds of applicants on EB-5 and who had good expertise in the EB-5 space. Also, someone who could help us understand the process and guide us through correcting the right set of documents, because there are a lot of documents. Also, if our attorney is on top of the game, this gives us more confidence in the filing that we’ll make to USCIS. These are some things I looked for when talking to multiple attorneys, specifically to avoid large firms. I don’t have anything against the large firms, but personally for our case, I wanted to make sure we had someone that we could really rely on and kind of hand-hold us throughout this case process; rather than just, we upload the source of funds documents and then days after they come back to us with, “Oh, here’s your filing.” That’s the main reason that we wanted to go with the smaller firm.
How was your experience working with Anahita? What was good, and what was not so good? Just tell us about that experience.
I think, Sam, you introduced us to Anahita and then she took time to understand our case. Your immigration attorney becomes your partner through this process. As an individual investor, you’re working with your immigration attorney, who’s representing you to make sure you have all the right set of documents in place. Just working with Anahita, she was able to understand our case, figure out what needed to be done in terms of the source of documents, proofs, etc. And then, her being in regular contact with us for those two weeks really helped speed up our filing process, because there are a lot of documents that go into the filing. I think ours is very close to over 6,000 pages. You would want an attorney who’s on top of their game and able to walk you through the filing, which definitely was our experience working with Anahita.
6,000 pages. That’s a lot of pages.
Yeah.
Let’s chat a little bit now about the other piece of the equation that you mentioned earlier. First step: interview a number of attorneys. Find one that’s a good fit for your particular case, where your money’s from, communication style, responsiveness, time zone, all those factors are important when selecting an EB-5 attorney. The attorney that may be the best fit for you could not be the best fit for someone else. It’s definitely not a one-size-fits-all situation.
Now, moving onto the project side, once you have all your documents in place to make an EB-5 investment and everything’s organized, then you’ve got to choose a project and the regional center that project is associated with. Tell us a little bit about how you approached the project side of your research and what were some of the main things that were important to you. How did you come to the decision after doing all that research to invest in the Twin Lakes rural EB-5 project?

Starting with the top list of all projects that I could find online, I wanted to go with regional centers who had at least 10 years of experience and had done this process end to end. From the day we file Form I-526 to the day that we remove the conditions from our Green Card and move on to a regular Green Card, it’s going to take us a long time. So, we are looking at projects or regional centers that have done that cycle at least once or multiple times, so that puts us at a 10-year experience period for a regional center. That narrowed it down to only a handful of regional centers. Then the project component of it, specifically for an Indian national: I had to look for a rural project just to avoid being stuck in the EB-5 queue.

Again, it’s a handful of projects. When we try to evaluate the projects, this is the hard part for an individual EB-5 investor. Personally, I have been a software engineer for the last 10 years and I don’t have the financial skills to evaluate the project thoroughly end to end. I was just trying to read through the subscription documents for each of those projects, trying to make sense of those projects, and seeing if this was a project I was comfortable with. I looked at the risk variable associated with each project. It’s kind of starting from the top with all EB-5 projects and narrowing it down to a handful of projects that fit our specific requirements.

Then, within those requirements, trying to make sense of the different projects and the variables that are associated with each project, and reading through these documents, we found that EB5AN’s and Kolter’s project, Twin Lakes, was definitely one of our top ones in the list. We researched more on this project by asking questions to Sam about things in the subscription agreement that I didn’t understand. These are some questions that I posed to all regional centers. Just trying to get more clarity, which helped me narrow it down to the Twin Lakes Project.

You narrowed it down to that handful of projects, some of which are in different parts of the country. What specifically about Twin Lakes, compared to the others that made it to that final handful, stood out to you?
One is that it’s a real estate investment. Second, it is a single family home community where the development happens as the demands for new homes come up. It’s not a project where everything is completed, and then they go and look at the supply and demand equation. It is a project where the supply comes up as the demand comes up. That definitely got us interested, and the location definitely got it interested. I would say that looking at this project from the perspective of a normal person who didn’t have the financial means, definitely put this in the top. Then, digging in a little bit more on the project, seeing a senior loan that’s funded from a lender that has financial muscle and has done a good deal of scrutiny on the project. As an individual investor, I was not able to exercise the same level of scrutiny on the project.
I think you made two really good points there. One is on supply-demand with respect to the underlying economics of the project, and second, having an actual senior construction loan that’s actually been signed and funded. I want to dig a little more into those two points. On the first point, tell us a little bit more about what you mean by supply-demand more easily fitting together in this project versus some of the other projects that you were looking at.
Between projects, I found some variations as I was reading through the subscription agreements for different regional centers. There are projects that do construction in one go and then look at the sale of the property, like a condo or an apartment or renting out an apartment, versus projects like Twin Lakes. Twin Lakes is more of a single family home community that’s being built as they get rid of an existing inventory versus trying to build, let’s say, all 1,500 homes in one go. That definitely was more interesting for us and that fit with our risk profile compared to the other projects.
Let’s say another project was building one very large building, a hotel or an apartment building. They could only really see how the project would perform after that building was done and actually available to rent to people. Is that what you’re alluding to in terms of the project having that more flexible supply-demand equation?
Exactly. Being a hotel or an apartment, it’s more about future projections: “This gets completed, and then the supply’s done and then the demand side is going to come into play,” versus here it’s more of “As we get rid of inventory, we end up building new homes.”
On to the second point, the presence of a senior lender. Tell us a little bit about that. Why was that an important component of the project you wanted, and how did that compare with some of the other projects that you looked at?
As I said, I am not a financial professional and I don’t have the skill sets to evaluate project documents in detail, so that’s where I feel like the senior loan definitely comes in play. This means that someone had already done the homework, scrutinized the project, and funded it. Honestly, this is the first EB-5 project that I’m ever looking at versus a bank who’s funding these projects as an everyday activity; they would have the right set of people to go and evaluate this project end to end. Just having that senior loan person be part of that equation was definitely important for me. Then, I asked, what kind of percentage is the senior loan in the project? Is that EB-5 funding a mandatory requirement needed to hit project completion or is it more of an extra supplement that’s added in along with the senior loan. The latter is the case with this project, which made us more comfortable in our risk variables for this project.
Taking that situation with Twin Lakes and comparing it to some of the other projects, did other projects not have a senior loan in place or were reliant on EB-5 for completion? What was the distinction that you found?
We came across a broad range of projects—from where they were still trying to find senior loans, sign on a senior loan entity—versus where they already had a senior loan, but they also had a mandatory requirement of “I need to hit X number of dollars from EB-5 investment for the project to succeed.” There were also projects where the senior loan percentage was not big enough, with high reliance on the EB-5 funding. Finally, there were projects where the EB-5 funding was good to have, but the project was already scrutinized and funded completely by the senior loan.
On the immigration side, having sufficient job creation is critical to getting the permanent Green Card approved later on in the process. How did the job creation factor into your decision taking Twin Lakes versus some of the other projects you were looking at?

Yeah, that’s a good question. This is the part where there is an overlap between what the project provides for us as an immigration benefit versus what we file. We want a project that definitely meets the immigration requirements in terms of job creation. Again, a broad set of projects that we found were yet to be started or were in the early stages, versus projects where there was construction already, there were already sales happening, and the job creation conditions were met.

We were more comfortable with projects that were already in progress and had met the job requirements because, going through this journey of immigration for 10 years, we wanted to make sure we selected projects where the immigration benefit was already merl. This removes one of the risk components in the project, the immigration requirement, and then that leaves us just the fund requirement: the funds must be at risk, with no projects being able to guarantee a return of funds. That narrows it down to just focusing on the risk variables of, is the project going to be completed and what is the possibility of our funds being returned to us. Knowing that a project has met the immigration benefit was a crucial requirement for us.

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Having just gone through this process recently, what general advice would you have for another investor looking to make an EB-5 investment, in terms of the entire process overall? Is it a good fit for me? And then, what should I be aware of as I start my research on making an investment?
I would say the two main focuses should be finding the right immigration attorney, and second, finding the right project for your specific case and the risk variables you’re comfortable with as an individual investor. I think the first part is easier to do compared to the second part of finding the right set of projects. As you read through the different subscription arguments for each project, I would encourage an individual investor to ask clarifying questions to that regional center, compare variables between the different projects. There are projects that look really good on paper, but just ask clarifying questions on what the variables are that could make this project fail. How is the demand that’s been projected going to turn out to be true? Things like that will be super helpful to get more clarity on the project.
On the project side, how important was financial return to you when you were evaluating some of these different projects?
In terms of financial return, I would say I was pretty clear in understanding the USCIS requirement that the funds are to be at risk. Any project that promises a hundred percent of our funds, run away from that. By default, I filtered that out. In terms of the funds being at risk and the possibility of the funds coming back, you could fit that into a set of risk variables, like what is the probability this project is going to succeed? What is the supply side and the demand side? Are the projected numbers for this project going to stay true? And then, trying to get a comparison between the projects, which one’s more likely to succeed, and which one has a higher probability of returning the funds?
Would you recommend your EB-5 attorney and EB5AN to other investors considering EB-5 and why? What was important in your experience that you’d want to highlight to other investors considering EB-5?
I would definitely recommend EB5AN, and specifically, things that were really great working with you guys include the detailed docs and agreements and your ability to be really quick in responses to my questions. Also, the educator videos on the channel as someone who was looking at EB-5 investment and trying to learn a lot more in the early stages; those videos definitely came helped me increase my knowledge on the whole EB-5 process.
How about your immigration attorney? Would you recommend her to others considering EB-5?
Yes, definitely. Anahita is someone who takes the time to understand your specific case and then works with you throughout the process, so I would definitely recommend Anahita as an immigration attorney as well.
Thank you again, Ram, for taking time to share your experience. We really appreciate it, and as you can see, we just want to make sure that investors have the most information possible from which to research and increase their knowledge level about EB-5, the various steps, and the different variables that are going to be more important to some investors than others. Just having all that information readily available in an easy to follow and understand format is really important. Part of that, of course, is hearing from other investors who have recently decided to do EB-5 and getting to learn about what was important to them; perhaps there are some parallels between one investor and another as they’re considering projects.
Of course. Happy to help.

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