Posts Tagged ‘investments’

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.

Selling Your Business To Your Kids Is A Tax No-No

Monday, April 13th, 2009

About once a month I get a call from a reader (call him Joe) of this column who wants to sell his business (call it Success Co.) to his kids.

A short conversation with the caller explains why such a sale is a terrible idea — for Joe, and for the kids.

Let’s start with the kids, in this case Joe’s son, Steve, who wants to buy Success Co. for $1 million.

Follow these strangling tax numbers: Steve must earn about $1.66 to have $1 left to pay to Joe (40 percent in income tax on $1.66 is 66 cents in tax). Steve pays the full $1 to Joe. Steve cannot deduct any portion of this $1 because the purchase of stock (Success Co. or any other stock) is simply a nondeductible capital expenditure.

If Success Co. is a C corporation, any interest paid by Steve (in addition to the principal stock purchase amount) is generally not deductible. Steve could deduct this interest against portfolio income (interest and dividends on other investments).

Rarely do the kids have such investments. But Steve can make all the interest deductible simply by electing S corporation status.

What about Joe? Steve pays Joe that $1 (plus interest). Joe must pay a capital gains tax (typically 15 percent) on the dollar and pay his top tax bracket (typically 40 percent, including State and Federal income taxes) on the interest income.

OK, Joe has 85 cents left after paying the capital gains tax on the $1. If Joe doesn’t spend that 85 cents (he usually has it at death), the tax collector gets up to 55 percent (using 2011 rates) for estate taxes. That’s another 47 cents, leaving Joe’s heirs with only 38 cents out of the $1.

Let’s review. Steve had to make $1.66 for Joe to leave his family 38 cents.

Or would you believe that would turn into $1,660,000 for Steve to make while Joe’s family only gets $380,000.

That’s lousy tax planning!

Joe and Steve can avoid these tragic tax results. So can you. How?

Apply the above $1 example to the price you want to get for your business if you sell to one or more of your kids. You’ll immediately notice that the IRS gets more out of the sale of your business than you or your family combined. The lesson is simple. Don’t sell your business to your kids.

Watch this column for the right way for you to get a lifetime flow of income for you (and your spouse if you are married) and transfer your business to your kids without the IRS getting into your pocket.

You’ll want to take a look at the following strategies: Electing S corporation status; use of an intentionally defective trust to transfer your business to your kids — tax-free (yet stay in control for as long as you live).

One more thing: Do not transfer your business (by sale or otherwise) to the kids without putting three other plans in place: (1) a lifetime tax plan, (2) a retirement plan and (3) an estate plan.

Want to learn more about how to shield yourself and your family from the IRS when you transfer your business? Browse my Web site at www.taxsecretsofthewealthy.com.

A Big valuation victory For Our Side

Monday, April 13th, 2009

I’d like to hug every judge who had a hand in this classic Tax Court decision: [Estate of Davis, 110 TC 35, 6/30/98]. Instead of giving all the dull facts and all the technical stuff in the case, this article deals with what the result means to you, the average business owner who someday must value your business for tax purposes.

You (Joe) operate your family business (Success Co.) as a corporation. The assets of Success Co. include a number of appreciated assets; for example, investments in stocks, land and buildings. Also many assets subject to deprecation — mostly equipment — are on the books for much less than their current value. Now suppose Success Co. is correctly valued at $5 million. The value of the various assets that Success Co. owes is $4 million, but has only a book value of $3 million. So, if Success Co. were to sell the assets or actually liquidated (neither Joe nor Success Co. intend to sell the assets or liquidate), there would be a $1 million profit. Say the tax (state and federal) on the profit would be $400,000. The question that faced the court was could the value of the corporation be reduced by $400,000 to $4.6 million? “Yes,” said the court, turning thumbs down on the IRS’s claim to ignore this built-in-gains discount (actually the potential tax due for an asset sale or corporate liquidation).

Applause! Applause! for the court. Think about it: That discount of $400,000 could save Joe about $210,000 in estate taxes.

As a practical matter, this case allows you to take three distinct valuation discounts: (1) a discount for lack of marketability; (2) discount for built-in gains of assets, even if you don’t intend to sell them or liquidate (technically a part of the marketability discount); and (3) a discount for minority interest if you are transferring 50 percent or less of your stock to one person (for example, Joe Gives 30 percent of his Success Co. stock to each of his two children). After these three discounts, a $5 million company may only be worth in the $3 million range for tax purposes. Or a $2 million discount, yielding estate tax savings of about $1.1 million. Truly a great victory!

Now a personal puff of pride for our office, which has a large valuation department. We have been taking similar discounts for built-in gains for years.

The right value of your business, whether transferring to your kids, for estate planning or for other purposes, is one of the most important tax-impact considerations in the law.

Do you have a business valuation problem — particularly if you want to transfer your business to another family member — that is driving you up the proverbial “tax wall?” Then you are welcome to call me (847-674-5295). Let’s chat about your exact situation.

You can win big-time by investing in others’ life insurance

Sunday, April 5th, 2009

The stock market is uncertain. Often net losses exceed net gains. So-called traditional safe investments — CDs, treasury bonds, municipal bonds and the like — offer only paltry 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 investments called life settlements. They also are often called Transferable Insurance Policy or TIP(s). The best way to understand how a TIP works is by an example.

Let’s say Joe, 68 years old, 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.

An investor (really 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.

This TIP (Joe’s) will pay you exactly $15,000 (includes your principal — amount invested — and profit) when Joe dies. The 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 stand tall in the profit shoes of the insurance companies. Neat!

As a TIP investor, you can enjoy:

• An average rate of return of 16.32% 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, keep 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: (1) The tax on your profit is deferred until you actually receive your principal and profit; (2) Your profit is taxed as ordinary income (profit earned by a qualified plan-profit-sharing, 401 (k), IRA and the like-are deferred until distributed).