Posts Tagged ‘10 million’

Don’t Let ‘Estate-Tax-Itis’ Drain The Family Wealth

Wednesday, April 15th, 2009

Adreaded disease is spreading like wildfire — in all 50 of the United States.

It debilitates most successful business owners, then, ravages some or all of the kids and eventually hurts the grandkids.

Known by various names, the most common name is “estate-tax-itus.” It drains family wealth.

Some people don’t even know they have the disease. Most know because they have the painful symptoms (a huge tax bill) and search in vain for a cure. They attend seminars, read articles, special reports and books. They go from advisor to advisor looking for relief.

The key question is: “Is there a cure?”

The answer is a resounding :Yes!”

This article shows you how to start the process to totally cure estate-tax-itus for yourself, your family and your business — every time, no matter how young or old you are, whether you are worth $1 million, $10 million (or much more).

There are many ways to fight the disease, but the best way is to build a “tax-immune system.” For best results, start today.

Here’s a three-step process that works every time. Steps No. 1 and No. 2 make the diagnosis. Step No. 3 accomplishes the cure.

Step No. 1: Prepare a personal financial statement for you and your spouse. Divide your assets into the following five categories.

— Residence

— Business

— Qualified plans (pension, profit-sharing, 401(k), rollover IRA or other qualified plans)

— All other assets (typically, investments)

— Life insurance

Step No. 2: Make a list of your goals (actually three lists) — (1) for you and (if married) your spouse; (2) for your family (typically children and grandchildren); and (3) your business.

Here are the typical core goals we see in practice:

For list (1) — Maintain your lifestyle for as long as you (husband and wife) live and allow you to control your assets for as long as you live;

For list (2) — transfer your assets to the children and grandchildren intact — free of the estate tax-and educate your grandchildren;

For list (3) — transfer your business to the business child (or children) tax-free and treat the non-business children fairly.

Step. No. 3: Find an advisor who knows how to identify and implement the exact tax strategies that accomplish your goals using the specific assets on your financial statement.

Following are the are most often-used strategies we use in our practice to accomplish a typical client’s goals, based on the assets owned.

Your Residence. Use a Qualified personal residence trust to remove the residence from your estate, yet live in it and control it for as long as you live.

Your Business. Transfer your business to the business children using an Intentionally Defective Trust. It removes the business from your estate, transfers business to kids (tax-free to you and the kids), yet allows you to keep control for life (because you retain voting control).

Qualified plans. The funds in these plans are double-taxed, robbing your family of about 75 percent of the plan funds (i.e. the tax collectors get about $750,000 if you have $1 million in the plans, your family receives only $250.000).

Create a Subtrust or retirement plan rescue (RPR) to buy life insurance. This usually triples (or more) the amount you have in the plan, and your heirs get it all tax-free. For example, $1 million in the plan (worth only $250,000 to your family) will turn into $3 million (or more) for your family with a Subtrust or a RPR. And the entire $3 million is tax-free.

All other assets. Transfer these assets (all your assets, except those in the first three categories; for example, publicly traded stocks, bonds, real estate and other investments) to a family limited partnership, which legally reduces the value of these assets for tax purposes by 35 percent (yes, $1 million of real estate, stocks, bonds, etc. are only worth only $650,000 for tax purposes.)

Insurance. Get it out of your corporation and transfer all policies you or your spouse own to an irrevocable life insurance trust (But a Subtrust is best, if you can use it. See 3. above). Also, check out premium financing, a wonderful concept that allows you to buy huge amounts of life insurance ($3 million, $10 million or more) without paying premiums.

Finally, if your estate plan is already done, and it does not effectively eliminate the estate tax, get a second opinion.

Old-Time Tax Religion Yields To New-Time Tax Religion

Monday, April 13th, 2009

If you are a tax sinner, please step forward. Today’s sermon at The First Anti-Tax Church is entitled, “How You Can Enrich the IRS When Transferring Your Business.” Strange title? Not really. It’s the conventional wisdom or what our preacher calls “The Old-Time Tax Religion.”

Following is a true story of good against evil taken straight from the pages of the ever-growing-tax-business bible. If you’re a business owner with two or more children-listen up.

A business owner (age 68) (we’ll call him Joe) from Alabama told me how three employees (ages 38, 45, and 52) had helped build his business (Success Co.) over the years. Profits were plowed back into the business. Today its worth $10 million, with 80 percent owned by Joe and 20 percent owned by the employees. Joe and his wife, Mary, have three children, none active (and not likely to be) in the business.

Joe’s goals are simple: After he passes on, the business should go to the three employees; his three children should get the value ($8 million) of Joe’s share of the business. What’s the conventional wisdom? Have Success Co. own life insurance. The actual amount of insurance is now $11 million. The extra $3 million allows for growth.

The insurance funds a buy-sell agreement. After Joe dies, Success Co. will buy Joe’s stock. Then the employees will own 100 percent of the business. (Good! That’s what Joe wants.) The kids will get the $8 million or more, which is also what Joe wants. Perfect? Joe’s lawyer, accountant, and insurance consultant assured him that this is — by conventional wisdom — the “best” way to go.

What’s wrong with the picture? Each dollar of those insurance proceeds used to buy Joe’s stock will be divided two ways: 55 cents to the IRS; 45 cents to the kids. Unwittingly, the IRS, not Joe’s family will benefit the most from Joe’s business, which took him a lifetime to build.

What to do? The solution may vary with your particular situation (for example, how many kids you have in the business, how many are nonbusiness children, your age, your wife’s age, the value of your business and the value of the rest of your assets). But here’s a plan to beat the pants off of the conventional wisdom and the IRS, legally. And it’s easy to do.

Step one: Get the insurance out of the corporation into Joe’s name and then into an irrevocable life insurance trust. No, the insurance proceeds will be free of the estate tax.

Step two: Recapitalize Success Co. (which will create voting and non-voting stock) so Joe can keep voting control (a tax-free transaction) for as long as he lives. Say there is 100 shares of voting stock and 10,000 shares of non-voting stock. Joe will keep the 100 shares of voting stock (and absolute control) for as long as he lives.

Step three: Create an annual stock-bonus/stock-gift program. Success Co. will give stock bonuses of non-voting stock to the employees. (In a more typical example, the employees would be Joe’s children.) Joe would make annual gifts of Success Co. stock to his children and grandchildren.

This sermon does not attempt to cover all the details of the plan outlined above. Find a professional who knows how to use this structure to craft that transfers most (in many cases all) your wealth free of the estate tax. More importantly, your estate tax liability (whatever the amount) will be transferred, in effect to the insurance carrier.

When all the smoke clears, either your estate tax will be zero or paid 100 percent by tax-free insurance proceeds. It’s time for you and your professionals to get that new-time tax religion.

Want a head start on how to win the transfer/succession/estate tax game? Visit my Web site or call to discuss your specific concerns.

Conquer the Estate Tax Legally

Wednesday, April 8th, 2009

When it comes to the wealth-robbing estate tax, almost every reader of this column who calls me asks this or a similar question.

“Irv, can you help me avoid (or beat/or kill/or finesse/and many more variations) the estate tax?” Often, an obscenity or two are tossed into our conversation.

If you are worth about $6 million (or less), the answer to the question is almost always “Yes.” Worth more? Usually, “No.”

Let’s talk real numbers: Say Joe is worth $10 million and Jack, $20 million. Both are married. Joe’s estate tax damage (using 2011 rates) would be about $4 million and Jack’s a tragic $9.5 million.

The higher your wealth, the less your chance for killing the estate tax. Ah, but we can always — yes, always — entirely avoid the impact of the estate tax.

For example, if you are worth $8 million, we know how to get the full $8 million (all taxes paid in full) to your family, or, if you are worth $80 million, the entire $80 million to your family.

Yes, it can always be done, whether you’re single or married, young or old, and even insurable or uninsurable.

Let’s play the game together. Substitute your own numbers into the little example that follows: Suppose you are worth $12 million and married.

(a) Subtract $2 million ($1 million if single), which leaves $10 million;

(b) then 50 percent times $10 million gives you your bitter estate tax bite;

(c) add 55 percent for your worth in excess of the $10 million.

Now, here’s the secret for legally avoiding the estate tax: create tax-free wealth. There are two ways: charity and life insurance. Both — if you do them right — put you in a tax-free environment.

Here’s a real-life story of Joe (a 63-year old business owner from Nebraska and married to Mary, age 62), who winters in Florida. Joe and Mary are worth $23 million. Using our little example, the estate-tax monster would eat $11.05 million of their wealth.

We designed a comprehensive and coordinated succession plan and estate plan for Joe and Mary that included four significant strategies:

(1) an intentionally defective trust to transfer Joe’s business to his two business kids, tax-free;

(2) a family limited partnership for their investment assets (a stock and bond portfolio and real estate);

(3 and 4) using two different life-insurance strategies, which are described below.

A side note before continuing: Every case is different. A big factor for Joe and Mary was their health: excellent for their age.

Now, Strategy No. 3: Joe had $.8 million in his company’s 401(k) and $1.5 million in various IRAs, which we transferred into the 401(k), a tax-free transfer.

Then we used a strategy called the “Qualified Plan Rescue” (QPR) for the 401(k) that purchased $6.5 million of second-to-die life insurance on Joe and Mary.

Because of double taxation — first income tax and then estate tax — the $2.3 million in the 401(k) (without the QPR) would only net about $600,000 to Joe’s heirs. Sorry, but the tax collector would get the rest: $1.5 million.

The QPR allows the entire $6.5 million of life insurance to go to Joe’s and Mary’s heirs, tax-free. In effect, we turned $.6 million into $6.5 million. Neat!

One more point: We showed Joe how to invest his $2.1 million funds in his 401(k) in TIPs (“transfer insurance policies,” a form of senior settlements). TIPs earn in excess of 16 percent on average per year, without risk. Joe’s investments were averaging only 7% per year with stocks, bonds and mutual funds. TIP investments are the creative idea of a 14-year-old public company (trades on the NASDAQ) that has paid a 16.36% average annual return since it has been in business.Ask your professional to check out QPRs and TIPs.

Finally, Strategy No. 4: Joe and Mary needed an additional $5 million of life insurance. At their age (if you don’t use a QPR) the premiums are steep. We used a strategy called “premium financing” (PF) to buy $5 million of life insurance on Joe’s life. PF allows you to buy life insurance without paying your premiums in cash. Instead, premiums are paid by having a trust you create pay each premium by the trustee signing a nonrecourse note to the lending bank. Interest is added to the loan.

All premium loans, plus accrued interest, will be paid out of the death benefits when Joe dies. The only costs paid by Joe are to the banks for initiating and maintaining the loan: about $60,000 paid the first year and an additional $180,000, which will be paid in small amounts each year to age 100.

Here a real economic home run: getting $5 million tax-free to Joe and Mary’s heirs for a small out-of-pocket cost of $240,000 (or less), which is paid over about a 30-year period.

No question about it, PF is the most inexpensive way to buy life insurance (whether you buy $5 million, $10 million or more). You must qualify to use PF: be credit worthy and worth a minimum of $5 million.

These subjects — QPR, TIPs and PF — always create a blizzard of questions. So, if you would like to get more information about a QPR (and/or TIPs), send me your birthday and your spouse’s birthday. Also the total value of all of your qualified plans: 401(k), IRAs, etc. (total should be $100,000 or more). Write “QPR” at the top of the page.

Interested in TIPs? Fax the estimated amount you may invest ($50,000 minimum).

You must be an accredited investor. Write “TIPs” at the top of the page.For all inquiries please include your name, your company name, home or business address, e-mail address and all phone numbers where you can be reached (home, business and cell).

Gaining wealth is easy when compared with human aspect of tax game

Saturday, March 28th, 2009

Recently, I read an article titled What Makes for Success? by Kemmons Wilson, the founder of Holiday Inn. He said, “It is great to attain wealth, but money is really just one way — and hardly the best way — to keep score.”

Interesting quote, huh?

Most readers of this column call me with tax problems because they have attained wealth (no doubt they have and do keep score with money) and they don’t want to share that wealth with the IRS — perfectly normal. Yet, it’s amazing. Once the reader realizes that we really do know how to pass their wealth — all of it and intact — to their family, the conversation turns to other ways that they might keep score. Sure, they are delighted to find there are legal ways to totally win the estate tax game. But they readily admit that they don’t know how to deal with the other problems (other ways to keep score).

The other problems fall into the general category of little kids, little problems; big kids, big problems.

Stuff like which of my kids should run the business? How do I treat the kids fairly? What about the non-business kids?

What happens if one (or more) of my kids get divorced? How do I take care of my wife (the second one who is 15 years — or more — younger than the caller)? The callers tell me about family problems, business problems and/or assorted personal problems. To me every word is important, even though I’ve listened to so many tales of woe before. But, although similar, each problem has its own peculiar twists and turns.

Let’s face it — stuff happens. After years of solving wealth transfer problems, business succession (usually the business is at center stage) and estate planning problems, experience has taught me that solving only the money problems can never yield a perfect plan.

The human stuff — your spouse and kids support your plan — must be solved too.

What about your son-in-law or daughter-in-law? I know. It sounds like cornball. But if you really want to win the game of life after you have won the money game (really the easy part), you must attempt to solve the human part, the emotional stuff.

Here’s my suggestion to start the process. Make two lists: the money-problem list and the human-problem list.

Solve the money problems first (usually you are home free if you solve these three money problems:

• maintain your lifestyle — and your spouse’s — for as long as you live;

transfer your business to the business kids — tax-free; and

• kill the estate tax.

Then, it’s easier to tackle the human-problem list. Interesting, many times solving the money problems also solve some (often all) of the human problems.

Finally, you must work with experienced professionals who know how to solve both problems: the money problems and the emotional human problems that come with accumulating wealth and trying to pass it on.

One more thing: Each piece of your plan must be part of a single comprehensive and integrated plan, all implemented at the same time. Piecemeal planning, based on my 50 years of experience, is a disaster that not only enriches the IRS, but fails to satisfy the normal human desires of a typical family and its business.

Charity and life insurance can help you conquer estate tax.

Thursday, March 26th, 2009

When it comes to the wealth-robbing estate tax, almost every reader of this column who calls me asks this or a similar question: “Irv, can you help me avoid (or beat, kill, finesse, etc.) the estate tax?” Often, an obscenity or two regarding how the caller feels about the estate tax is tossed in for good measure.

If you are worth around $6 million or less, the answer is almost always yes. If you are worth more, the answer is usually no.

Let’s talk real numbers. Consider that taxpayer Joe is worth $10 million and his neighbor Jack is worth $20 million. Both men are married. Joe’s estate tax estimate, using 2011 rates, would be around $4 million.

Jack’s would top out at a tragic $9.5 million.

The higher your wealth, the lower your chance for avoiding the estate tax.

But there are ways to entirely avoid the impact of the estate tax.

If, for example, you are worth $8 million, there are ways to get the full $8 million (all taxes paid in full) to your family. Similarly, if you are worth $80 million, the entire $80 million can go to your family. It can always be done, whether you’re single or married, young or old, or even insurable or uninsurable.

Let’s play the game together.

Substitute your own numbers into the little example that follows.

Suppose you are worth $12 million and married. First, subtract $2 million ($1 million if you’re single), which leaves $10 million. Multiply $10 million by 50 percent to get your bitter estate tax bite. Finally, add 55 percent for your worth in excess of the $10 million.

Now, here’s the secret for legally avoiding the estate tax and creating tax-free wealth. There are two ways: charity and life insurance. If you do them right, both put you in a tax-free environment.

Here’s a real-life story of Joe.

He’s a 63-year-old business owner from Nebraska who winters in Florida and is married to Mary, 62. Joe and Mary are worth $23 million. Using our little example above, the estate tax monster would eat $11.05 million of their wealth.

We designed a comprehensive and coordinated succession plan and estate plan for Joe and Mary that included four significant strategies: an intentionally defective trust to transfer Joe’s business to his kids tax-free, a family limited partnership for their investment assets (a stock and bond portfolio and real estate), and the two different life insurance strategies, which are described below.

A side note before continuing: Every case is different. Different people have various businesses situations and factors. A big factor for Joe and Mary was their excellent health for their age. So insurance was front and center.

Now, to the third strategy: Joe had $600,000 in his company’s 401(k) and $1.5 million in various IRAs, which we transferred into the 401(k), a tax-free transfer. Then we created a subtrust for the 401(k) that purchased $6.5 million of second-to-die life insurance on Joe and Mary. Because of double taxation, first income tax and then estate tax, the $2.1 million in the 401(k) without the subtrust would net only about $600,000 for Joe’s heirs. Sorry, but the tax collector would get the rest, $1.5 million.

The subtrust allows the entire $6.5 million of life insurance to go to Joe and Mary’s heirs tax-free. In effect, we turned $600,000 into $6.5 million. Neat!

One more point: We showed Joe how to invest his $2.1 million in his 401(k) in TIPs, or transfer insurance policies, a form of senior settlements.

TIPs earn in excess of 16 percent on average per year, without risk. Joe’s investments were averaging only 7 percent per year with stocks, bonds and mutual funds

Ask your professional to check out subtrusts and TIPs.

The final strategy: Joe and Mary needed an additional $5 million of life insurance. At their ages — if you don’t use a subtrust — the premiums are steep. We used a strategy called premium financing, or PF, to buy $5 million of life insurance on Joe’s life. PF allows you to buy life insurance without paying your premiums in cash. Instead, premiums are paid though a trust you create that pay each premium by the trustee signing a nonrecourse note to the lending bank.

Interest is added to the loan.

All premium loans, plus accrued interest, will be paid out of the death benefits when Joe dies. The only costs paid by Joe are to the banks for initiating and maintaining the loan equaling about $60,000 paid the first year and an additional $180,000, which will be paid in small amounts each year to age 100.

It’s an economic home run that nets $5 million tax-free to Joe and Mary’s heirs for a small out-of-pocket cost of $240,000 or less, which is paid over a 30-year period.

No question about it, PF is the most inexpensive way to buy life insurance (whether you buy $5 million, $10 million or more). You must qualify to use PF, be creditworthy and be worth a minimum of $5 million.