Not legal, tax, or customs-broker advice. Edge Management LLC is not a law firm, CPA firm, tax advisor, registered investment adviser, broker-dealer, or licensed customs broker. Information on this page is general and educational. Specific eligibility, claim sizing, tax positions, and legal outcomes depend on facts unique to your business and require licensed professional advice. Engagements involving CAPE filings are coordinated with your existing licensed customs broker, or with a partner licensed customs broker engaged under a power of attorney.
Claim outcomes are not guaranteed. Eligibility for an IEEPA tariff refund depends on entry-by-entry audit of CBP records, importer-of-record status, the current state of CBP guidance, and ongoing legal and administrative developments. References to industry estimates such as “$166B” describe market-wide totals; they do not represent or imply that any particular importer will receive a refund or any specific amount.
Capital partner introductions. Where Edge introduces an importer to a specialty buyer or private credit fund for sale or financing of a refund claim, the transaction is privately negotiated between the importer and the capital partner with their respective counsel. Edge does not act as a broker-dealer or investment adviser, does not solicit retail investment, and does not negotiate price or terms. Such introductions are made only to accredited or qualified institutional parties. Sale of a refund claim transfers all rights to the underlying CBP refund — the original importer does not separately receive the refund after assignment. Importers should obtain independent legal and tax advice before any assignment, financing, or related agreement.
Active §1514 protests and CAPE. An active §1514 protest on an entry will, under current CBP practice, block a CAPE filing on that same entry. Filing a protest is not a substitute for, or compatible with, a parallel CAPE submission. Where prior protest positions exist, withdrawal is generally required before CAPE submission. Edge does not represent that any particular protest or CAPE strategy will preserve or expand a claim — this is a fact-specific determination by qualified trade counsel and your licensed customs broker.
DDP shipments. CAPE refund claims belong to the importer of record (IOR) named on the entry. In a Delivered Duty Paid (DDP) arrangement where the foreign seller acts as IOR, the U.S. buyer typically does not have the claim.
Third-party risk. Plaintiffs' firms have, in adjacent contexts, asserted “pass-through” or unjust-enrichment claims against importers who retained refunded amounts that were originally absorbed downstream (by customers or counterparties). Whether such risk applies in a given supply chain is a matter for the importer's counsel to assess.
Fee structure transparency. Edge engagements on tariff refund work typically combine a defined-scope retainer with a success fee tied to recovery. Both components are disclosed in writing in the engagement letter before any commitment. We do not operate on a pure contingency basis on this work because the audit, quantification, and capital-strategy components require committed senior time independent of recovery outcomes.
Data handling. Edge operates offices in New York, Chicago, London, and Mohali, India. Client engagement data — including entry-level CBP records — may be processed by team members across these locations under engagement-specific confidentiality and data-protection terms. Specific data-handling arrangements are detailed in the engagement letter.