
Staff Reports | Business & Commerce
Randy Stoltz, founder of Scottsdale-based Clear Direction Investments, says U.S. business owners will see a significant benefit from the passage of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, which was signed into law by President Donald Trump on July 4, 2025.
He calls it a “game-changer” for business owners and real estate investors and breaks down how it will benefit business owners.
“From enhanced deductions to expanded estate planning tools, the OBBBA has delivered a financial blueprint that rewards entrepreneurship, long-term investment, and strategic tax planning,” Mr. Stoltz said in a prepared statement. “It’s one of the most advantageous pieces of legislation for business owners in recent memory.”
Among the highlights of the OBBBA and the key financial strategies is the Enhanced Qualified Business Income Deduction.
At the center of the OBBBA is a significant increase in the Qualified Business Income (QBI) deduction for pass-through business owners. Married filers now enjoy up to a $150,000 (up from $100,000). This means most business owners earning $300,000 in qualified income may pay taxes on only $240,000 – a 20% reduction.
Furthermore, there is an expansion of bonus depreciation: for “qualified property” the OBBBA restores the 100% “expense during year one” for items like machinery & equipment. It was going to be only 40% and declining.
“Therefore, this opens the door for savvy tax strategies including Roth conversions during high-deduction years to optimize tax efficiency for the rest of an investor’s life,” Mr. Stoltz said.
When it comes to Roth conversions and retirement planning the Scottsdale asset manager emphasized the strategic timing for Roth conversions during what he refers to as the “calm before the RMD storm” — the years between retirement and the age at which Required Minimum Distributions (RMDs) begin. With RMDs now delayed until age 73 or 75 — depending on birth year — business owners have more flexibility to shift pre-tax retirement assets into tax-free Roth accounts.
“Roth accounts not only grow tax-free but also eliminate future RMDs, making them ideal for both retirement income and legacy planning,” Mr. Stoltz explained.
For real estate investors, the OBBBA preserved and enhanced tax-deferral tools. In addition to those, we still have cost segregation and accelerated depreciation to allow investors to frontload deductions in the early years of property ownership.
“I personally completed a $5,000 cost segregation analysis that resulted in over $150,000 in deductions in my first year owning an investment property,” Mr. Stoltz said. “It’s one of the most powerful tax tools real estate owners have at their disposal.”
The OBBBA also permanently raised the federal gift and estate tax exemption to $15 million per individual, or $30 million per married couple — a critical increase from the previous $14 million figure and a safeguard against potential rollbacks to $7 million.
“This new threshold gives families more flexibility in passing along wealth without triggering estate tax liabilities,” Mr. Stoltz said.


















