Archive for the ‘Retirement Tax Advice’ Category

The best retirment plan I’ve ever seen

Saturday, May 2nd, 2009

Mention retirement to any group — no matter how young or old — and the knee-jerk reaction is almost always the same: stuff as much as you can into a qualified retirement plan (for example, IRA, 401(k), profit-sharing plan and the like). Actually good advice.

Why?

Well, the money going into the plan is 100 percent tax-deductible and your earnings are tax-deferred until the day you take money out. Good! Very good!

But wait, what happens when you take the money out?

Not so good. You are hit with taxable income (plus a 10 percent penalty if you are not older than age 59½). Worse yet, if you die with funds in your plan, your heirs are robbed by a double tax, both income and estate tax as high as 73 percent, with your heirs only getting 27 percent.

Think about it: $1 million in your plan(s) is demolished down to $270,000. Bad. Real bad. Apply this sad tax tragedy to your own plan(s) numbers.

What’s better? A Roth IRA!

Sorry, you can’t deduct your contributions to a Roth. But what happens when you take those dollars out? Drum roll, please. Tax-free! Yes, every penny comes out free of the income tax. Great!

Any problems with a Roth? Unfortunately, yes. There are two significant restrictions: without giving all the gory details:

(1) If your income exceeds $114,000 and you are single, you cannot make any contribution to a Roth; if married, the prohibition number is $166,000 of income.

(2) The maximum annual contribution for 2007 is $4,000, rising to $5,000 in 2008.

Is there really something better than a Roth IRA? Of course there is. And the strategy has been around since the 60s. Yet few people know the strategy –called a “Private Retirement Plan” (PRP) — even exists.

Taxwise, a PRP is exactly like a Roth: no deduction when funds go into the PRP, no tax when the funds — contributions, plus tax-free earnings — come out. Now here’s what makes a PRP superior to any other plan:

(1) There are no restrictions as to how high (or low) your income can be.

(2) There is no limit on the amount of your annual contribution.

Truly, a PRP — whether or not you are a resident of Florida — is the best tax-advantaged retirement plan I have ever seen.

A PRP is simply a special kind of high cash surrender value life insurance policy. We have been using PRPs to fund for retirement for clients, their children and even grandchildren since the early¥’50s. Although a PRP is easy to do, each one (whether for a 1-year old or a 60-year old) must be individually designed. So if you are a reader of this column and would like to see real-life numbers of how a PRP might work for you (or other family members), fax your name and birthday (same for other family members) along with all phone numbers (business/home/cell) where you can be reached.

Are you one of the many readers who has accumulated large amounts (say $300,000 or more) in your IRAs, 401(k)s or other plans? If so, you have a huge tax problem and can lose up to 73 percent of your hard-earned plan wealth to the IRS.

Are you forever stuck in this horrible double tax trap? Probably not. There are a number of easy-to-do plan rescue strategies to get you out of the trap. Like the PRP, each strategy must be individually designed.

So, if you want to learn now to escape your qualified plan tax trap, fax me (Irv Blackman at 847-674-5299) the information requested above for a PRP, plus the total amount in all your qualified plans. Write “Plan Rescue” at the top of the page.

Irv Blackman is a certified public accountant who lives part-time on Marco Island and specializes in estate planning, business succession and asset protection.

The retirement plan rescue

Saturday, May 2nd, 2009

Raise your hand if you have a substantial amount in a qualified retirement plan — typically an IRA, 401(k), profit-sharing plan or the like. For our purposes, a substantial amount means $300,000 or more.

The larger the amount, the bigger the problem or the better the opportunity (to apply the “Retirement Plan Rescue” and create tax-free wealth).

This is a bad-news/good-news article. Most people want to weep at the bad news, yet high-five at the good news.

First, the bad news, in the form of an example: Joe (winters in Florida, but is not a Florida resident) has $1 million (substitute your own real number) in his 401(k). Two taxes destroy Joe’s $1 million plan wealth. When Joe takes out just $1, the income tax on average (state and federal) grabs 40-percent (40 cents), leaving 60 cents. At Joe’s death (using 2011 rates) the estate tax steals 55-percent (33 cents) of the 60 cents. What’s the results? The family gets only 27 cents out of every $1; the tax collector gets 73 cents. If Joe dies with funds still in his 401(k), the tax collector still double taxes the balance (as described above).

So, dead or alive, the tax collector will get $730,000 of Joe’s $1 million in his 401(k); the family only $270,000. Outrageous!

Note: If you are a Florida resident, you escape the state income tax and are only subject to the 35-percent federal income tax rate.

To make matters worse the IRS has, without warning, refused to favorably rule (as it did in the past) on a strategy called the subtrust. The use of this strategy allowed us — depending on the client’s marital status, age and health — to turn that $270,000 (as in Joe’s example) into a range between $2 million and $6 million in cash wealth, all taxes paid in full.

The subtrust only had one trick: allowed you to use qualified plan funds to buy life insurance and the death benefit was free of the income tax and the estate tax. We’ll miss the subtrust.

So, it was back to the drawing board for me and my network of experts. Our goal was to come up with a strategy that would give us the tax-saving, wealth-building results of a subtrust but was free of even a remote possibility of an IRS naysayer.

Now the good news: We have come up with a new strategy (really a variation of various strategies we have been using for decades) that gives the same tax-saving, wealth-building results as a subtrust. We named the strategy the Retirement Plan Rescue (RPR for short).

The core concept behind an RPR is to shift from a highly taxed environment (a qualified plan) into a tax-free environment (life insurance). Sorry, but if you are uninsurable or highly rated (have serious health issues), an RPR won’t work for you. Have a healthy spouse? She/he will probably save the day and put an RPR in your planning picture.

The benefits of RPR are easy to summarize — save a large amount of taxes and multiply the before — tax value of your qualified retirement plan (tax-free). However, the implementation of an RPR requires a great deal of expertise. In addition, each RPR (because of the many variables) is different and must be looked at on a case by case basis.

Finally, the big questions for readers are, “How will an RPR work for me and my family? What will my tax-savings be? How much tax-free wealth can I create?”

So, if you have $300,000 or more in your qualified plans (have more than one plan? … just combine them), you can turn a potential tax travesty into a tax-free, wealth-building cash pool for your family.

I have arranged for readers of this column to submit the information necessary to create an RPR. Here’s the information you should fax (847-674-5299) to me (Irv Blackman): (a) your name, address, phone numbers (business/home/cell); (b) total amount in all qualified plans combined (if married, same for your spouse) and (c) your birthday (also your spouse.) Write “RPR” at the top of the page.

A Risk-Free Concept To Skyrocket Your Rate Of Return

Wednesday, April 15th, 2009

Tax-free investments are big. Interesting, tax-deferred investments are even bigger. Logically, tax-free should be number one. Sorry, but the cruel fact is that with the exception of life insurance (got to die to get your tax-free reward) or municipal bonds (plagued by low rates of return), there just isn’t much to talk about that’s tax free. Sad, but true.

Ah, but tax-deferred. That’s where the action is. The biggest tax-deferred sandbox to play in, by far, is the qualified plan area. They — profit-sharing plans, 401(k) plans, IRAs of all sorts, and others — abound. Billions pour in every year. Employer-sponsored plans are usually the tax-weapon of choice. Non-employer plans (traditional and Roth IRA) give every taxpayer an opportunity to play in this sandbox.

But IRAs have dollar limits. Tax-deferred annuities (annuities) have no limits. You can toss as many dollars as you like into annuities. All are after-tax dollars. Not one cent is deductible. Annuities earning powers are low (more about this defect later). Severe penalties murder your dollars if you want to get out in the early years. Simply put, there’s no liquidity.

So what’s the magnet that draws billions of dollars into this not-such-a-good-deal-investment? Here’s the answer and the magic words: tax deferred.

A word about annuity rates of return: Fixed annuities are the most popular. They currently pay in the three to three and a half percent range per year. (Older annuities, when interest rates were higher, paid more.) The new darling is indexed annuities. Your yield is pegged to some index, typically the S&P, on an annual basis. Often in a (say the S&P) loss year, you are guaranteed a small yield (usually in the one and a half to three percent range). A small percentage rise (say four percent) in the S&P is the exact percentage (four percent) you get, but a large rise is capped at six percent to eight percent (for example, the S&P increased by 14 percent but you only get seven percent.

Okay, so what’s a tax-deferred investment that doesn’t have all the impediments of annuities and has a huge rate of return without risk? Senior settlements.

An example is the easiest way to explain senior settlements. Suppose Joe, age 68, has a $400,000 life insurance policy with a cash surrender value (CSV) of $50,000. Joe would like to stop his annual premium payments. Instead of canceling the policy and taking the $50,000 CSV from the insurance company, Joe sells his policy as a senior settlement, receiving $120,000. Joe’s a happy camper.

Investors bought Joe’s policy. Senior settlements have been around for about 35 years. The tax consequences are a delight. Your tax liability for profits are completely deferred to the day you actually receive back your entire investment and your entire profit.

There’s a public company (trades on the NASDAQ) offering senior settlements. The average rate of return has been 15.82 percent per year throughout the company’s 15-year operating history. If your goal is to make a killing on your investments, senior settlements are not for you. (Just a note: AIG, the giant insurance company, and Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway Inc. invest in senior settlements.) But if an average rate of return (almost 16 percent), with no market risk, is of interest to you (or one or more of your qualified plans) you are invited to learn more about senior settlements. Just fax me (239-417-9045) your name, address, phone numbers (business/home/cell) and estimated amount to invest (minimum is $50,000 for accredited investors.)

The Best Way To Attract And Keep Great People

Tuesday, April 14th, 2009

Our typical consulting assignment is to put together a wealth transfer plan for a successful business owner. Invariably, the client brings up two critical and related operational problems: “How do I keep my top executives?” (The headhunters—usually working for a competitor—are always circling.) And “How do I attract new quality people?”

The problem is not new. It’s part of the past and, more than likely, will get worse in the future as the bidding war for talented people escalates. What to do?

Nearly 20 years ago, after struggling with the problem for about a year, we decided to develop an organized plan to find the answers. We interviewed our few client/owners who did not have the two problems; we also interviewed their key management people. Then came the hard part: getting permission to interview the key people at clients that were suffering with the problem.

What quickly became clear was that almost 100 percent of the best key people had the soul of an entrepreneur. But for various reasons they did not want to strike our on their own or couldn’t (usually because they could not raise the required capital).

The answer turned out to be simple: Mimic ownership. Give them the same challenges as an owner and, if successful, most of the rewards. Additional interviews just kept reconfirming the original answers.

The top (non-owner) executives wanted four core benefits of ownership: (1) A piece of the action (a share of company profits); (2) get paid when they are sick or become disabled; (3) receive adequate retirement pay when its time to leave the company; (4) and a death benefit for their family (“Like my piece of the equity if I get hit by a bus” is the way most executives put it).

Over the years we have created hundreds of contracts (the technical name is a nonqualified deferred compensation agreement; the non-technical name is a golden handcuff agreement) that attracts and keeps the kind of people you want in your organization.

Let’s take a closer look at each of the four desired benefits:

A piece of the action — Typically, this is a percentage of the yearly profits in excess of specific dollar amounts. Often, the percentage grows as the business and profits grow. For example, Sam Eager will get three percent of all before-tax profits in excess of $200,000 and up to $300,000; five percent from $300,000, to $400,000; and eight percent over $400,000. Suppose the amount for a particular year is $24,000. Usually, Sam will get about one-third ($8,000) in cash and the balance ($16,000) is deferred. The deferred portion is invested for Sam’s benefit. When does Sam get the deferred portion and the accumulated earnings on this portion (usually called the side fund)? When he becomes disabled, dies or reaches retirement age (the age is usually set around 58 for younger key employees and in the 65-age range for older key people). When the key employee becomes entitled to collect the side fund (say it is $500,000), it usually is paid out in equal annual installments (say 10 years) or $50,000 per year plus the additional investment earnings for that year.

Disability — The employee gets paid when sick or disabled — whether for a day or for a lifetime. This benefit is covered by long-term disability insurance. It’s essential that disability is defined word for word in your agreement the same as the word is defined in the disability insurance contract.

Retirement — The side fund (described in one above) supplements any regular retirement program (like a 401k or profit-sharing plan). Typically, the executive is allowed to direct the investment of the side-fund, which remains an asset of the employer. Following are the tax consequences of the arrangement: The side-fund earnings are taxable to the employer. When the employee receives a distribution, the company gets a deduction for the exact amount distributed and the employee must report the identical amount as taxable income. If the employee leaves for any reason — except because of disability, death or retirement — the entire side fund is forfeited by the employee and remains the property of the company. Hence, the name, golden handcuffs.

A set amount of money at death — When an owner dies, the family can sell the business (assuming it is not transferred to the kids). A similar benefit (really a death benefit) should be given to the employee. Of course, this benefit should be insurance funded.

We have been doing these non-qualified plans for years. Done right, they work. Often, when an owner does not have a family member to pass the business to, the side fund serves as the down payment by one or more of the key people to buy the business from the owner.

Two warnings: This article does not attempt to cover every detail and the endless variations for tailoring an agreement that is perfect for your company. Always, and we mean always work with an experienced advisor. Years of experience has proved that the right agreement will make your good people even better. But sadly, there is no agreement we have ever seen that will make a bad employee even a little bit better.

In a way this getting-and-keeping good people is a frustrating subject. The reason is that we have never been able to develop a cookie cutter solution. Yes, the four core benefits are almost always the same or similar. But the bells, whistles and unique requirements of each situation makes it impossible to write a complete report — much less a book — on the subject. But if you have a question call Irv Blackman at 239-417-9732. Let’s chat about your specific key employee situation and how to keep ’em.

Irv Didn’t Invent Taxes, Just 227 Ways To Beat Them

Saturday, March 28th, 2009

There are three main ways the federal tax law picks your pocket and becomes your legal partner: payroll taxes, the income tax and the estate tax. So, how can you fight back?  Here are five areas in which you can save money from taxes.

Column from: Modern Machine Shop, Contributed by: Irving L. Blackman

Would you believe that the basic tax law, the Internal Revenue Code and regulations, is about 50,000 pages long with no logical, organized theme? There’s also a constant stream of Internal Revenue Service rulings and case law. No one person can know it all—not Congress, which passes the law, nor the IRS, which enforces it.

There are three main ways the federal tax law picks your pocket and becomes your legal partner: payroll taxes, the income tax and the estate tax. So, how can you fight back? One day, just for fun, we (four tax guys) started to count the ways to legally get around paying the three taxes listed. We were just getting warmed up when we counted 227 options and stopped. The following are five areas in which you can save money from taxes:

1. Payroll Taxes. This money-stealing parasite is persistent and expensive: This year, $16,404 on the first $106,800 of your earnings goes to the tax man. That’s a scandalous 9.76 percent. For earnings of more than $106,800, you pay an additional 2.9 percent.

Here are examples of the three most common ways to lose payroll taxes to the IRS: The first mistake involves Joe, the owner of an S corporation who taxes a large salary (often $500,000 or more) and takes a huge bonus at the year’s end to bring down profits. For this S corporation, a tax-free dividend instead of compensation would save a bundle of unnecessary payroll taxes and would cost no more in income taxes. A second payroll tax mistake is when owners’ wives and moms take a salary when they either don’t work or are overpaid. It is much better tax-wise to give them a gift. The third mistake is operating a business as an LLC, which makes all income to the owner(s) subject to payroll taxes.

2. Asset Protection. In a heartbeat, your family wealth, including your business, can be depleted or even destroyed by a lawsuit.

Keep your business thin by keeping only those assets—typically, necessary cash, inventory and receivables—needed for operations in your business. Here are some basic sub-strategies: Elect S corporation status; personally own (via separate LLCs) any new real estate or expensive equipment, and lease it to your operating company; and never own delivery vehicles in your operating company. Put the vehicles into a separate corporation or LLC.

The sad fact is, we can’t protect the assets inside of your operating company, but we can protect you and your spouse. All of your significant assets are simply retitled using typical lifetime planning documents—such as family limited partnerships, LLCs and appropriate trusts.

3. Life Insurance. You can save money in taxes whether you, your spouse or your kids own the insurance.

Critical issues concerning life insurance are premium cost, the death benefit and the tax due on the benefit at death (usually the estate tax). The following are common ways to modify insurance plans to save premiums or increase the death benefit without additional costs:

• For single life or second-to-die insurance, you can get a cash-surrender value of more than $200,000 on a policy that is 9 years old or older. This results in significantly more death benefit for the same premium cost or a significantly reduced premium cost for the same death benefit.

• If you, the husband, are at least 55 years old, worth more than $5 million and have insurance on your life only, you are wasting premium dollars. Second-to-die coverage with your wife will typically give you the same death benefit for about 35 percent less premium cost.

• If you have more than $400,000 in a qualified plan such as a 401(k) or IRA, that amount is subject to a double tax (income and estate) of as much as 73 percent to the IRS. On average, you can turn every $270,000 of after-tax dollars into $3 to $5 million (tax-free), depending on your age and health. This plan works for second-to-die or single life insurance.

4. Business Succession. This affects your business and your business kids. The typical business owner wants to transfer the business to his kid(s) so that he and his kid(s) don’t get killed by taxes. He also wants to treat his non-business kids fairly, ensure that he controls his business for as long as he lives and ensure that the company stock stays in the family by never going to a kid’s ex-spouse. Every one of these goals is easily accomplished. Best of all, the business can be transferred tax-free, with no income tax, gift tax or estate tax for the owner or the kids.

5. Estate Plan. A proper estate plan is actually two plans: a lifetime plan and a death plan. The plans are designed to cover every significant tax-saving possibility—from the minute the lifetime plan is created until after you get hit by the final bus (covered by the death plan).

Why invest in life settlements? High return is only TIP of iceberg!

Thursday, March 26th, 2009

The stock market is uncertain. Net losses sometimes exceed net gains. So-called traditional, safe investments — CDs, treasury bonds, municipal bonds and the like — offer only limited returns.

Is there an investment that can match the potential high returns of successful stock market investors, yet has the prime characteristic — no risk — of traditional, safe investments?

Yes!

Chances are you have never heard of this investment: life settlements, often called transferable insurance policies or TIPs. The best way to understand how a TIP works is by an example.

Joe, 68, owns a life insurance policy with a $500,000 death benefit and a $60,000 cash surrender value (CSV). Joe would like to stop paying premiums. Of course, he can cancel the policy and get the $60,000 CSV from the insurance company.

A group of investors buys Joe’s policy for $150,000, paid in cash to Joe immediately. The investors now own the policy. The investors will receive the $500,000 death benefit when Joe dies.

Let’s say you are one of the investors. You invest $100,000. You will wind up with a diversified portfolio of TIPs. One of the TIPs will be a fractional interest in Joe’s $500,000 policy — say 3 percent, or $15,000.

Joe’s TIP will pay you exactly $15,000 — including your principal (the amount you invested) and profit — when Joe dies. Insurance companies love people like Joe when they terminate their policies. And why not? The insurance company pays a mere $60,000 for the CSV and is off the hook for a $500,000 death benefit.

Terminated policies are highly profitable for insurance companies. Of course, they want to keep the entire life-settlement industry a secret. Why? Because investors — like you — now have found a simple and easy way to help the Joes of the world and at the same time to stand tall in the profit shoes of the insurance companies.

As a TIP investor you can enjoy:

– an average rate of return of 16.28 percent per year;

– not worrying about the market being volatile or whether it goes up or down;

– the guaranteed return of your principal, as well as your profit; and, best of all,

– keeping 100 percent of the profit because there are no fees or costs when you buy a TIP.

What are the tax consequences of your TIP profits? There are only two simple rules:

– The tax on your profit is deferred until you actually receive your principal and profit (always a fixed amount).

– Your profit is taxed as ordinary income.

Even the big-hitter investors are buying life settlements. Following is a quote from the May 18 issue of The Wall Street Journal:

“AIG (American International Group Inc., the insurance giant) has bought less than 1,500 policies since 2001. … A few years ago, Berkshire Hathaway Inc., the investment vehicle of billionaire investor Warren Buffett, began buying life settlements, according to securities filings.”

Ask your professional adviser to check out life settlements for your personal investments and qualified-plan funds.

Stop IRS from taking most of the dollars in your retirement plan

Thursday, March 26th, 2009

I am about to kill a few sacred cows. Qualified-employee-benefit-plan cows to be exact. This is a painful subject.

The best introduction I ever heard of the subject was in a speech by Jonathan Blattmachr, a brilliant New York estate-planning lawyer, who said:

“What I’m going to talk about now is the most heavily taxed receipt in estate planning. …

“It is called income in respect of a decedent, typically known by its initials, IRD.

“I could tell you the story about the physician who came to me with $8 million in IRAs and pension plans. Within a year after he died without planning, his estate had been whittled down to under $800,000. …

“Everybody you know in your neighborhood, the lawyers, the doctors and dentists, are loaded up with income in respect of a decedent.”

And add owners of closely held businesses to the list of those who can get clobbered by IRD. In fact, anyone who has accumulated even a small amount of dollars in a qualified retirement plan is an IRD disease carrier. The disease eats the dollars in pension plans, profit-sharing plans, 401(k) plans and similar plans.

Can it be cured? Yes.

My usual explanation of IRD to a client — “The IRS gets 70 percent or more, while your family gets 30 percent or less” — has a predictable response, ranging from a look of horror to an expletive utterance.

How does this tax robbery take place?

Well, if you are in a high tax bracket and take a distribution during your life from your qualified plan, you are hit with about a 40 percent income tax, including state and federal. Say each distribution is $100,000. This leaves you $60,000.

When you die, another 50 percent (it could be as high as 55 percent) for estate taxes slices the $60,000 in half. Now only $30,000 (30 percent of the $100,000) is left for your family. Taxes gobbled up $70,000.

What if you die with money in your qualified plan? The balance in your account is taxed twice as IRD — once for income tax and a second time for estate tax.

Result? The same 30 percent tax disaster as in the when-you-were-alive example. Yep, 30 cents of each dollar for your family, 70 cents to the tax collector.

A new concept (as far as I know, this author was the first person to write and lecture about it) called the “IRD-avoidance concept” can turn that 30 cents back into a dollar (or $300,000 back into $1 million or whatever the number may be).

Although complex to implement, the concept can be explained as a simple three-step process:

– The plan participant (let’s call him Joe) takes his distribution in the form of an annuity payable for life.

– Joe collects the annuity payments for life.

– Joe uses an irrevocable life insurance trust (often called the “super trust”) to purchase a life insurance policy, using the after-tax balance of the annuity payment to pay the premiums.

What are the tax results?

– Income tax: tax-free.

Estate tax: no value at death, so no estate tax.

– Income tax: taxable as ordinary income.

Insurance proceeds are free of estate tax and income tax.

If you have about $350,000 or more in your qualified plans (add your pension, profit sharing, 401(k) and IRAs together), you owe it to yourself and your family to check with your tax professional to determine how the IRD-avoidance concept can save you and your family huge amounts of taxes, and also create wealth greater than the original amount in the plans.

Do it.