Posts Tagged ‘rate of return’

Tax Secrets of the Wealthy: These M7 Strategies Are Simply Magnificent

Wednesday, April 1st, 2009

More than 90 percent of contacts with readers of this column are specific questions or concerns involving the “Magnificent Seven” (M7). What are the M7?

Actually, they are seven separate strategies designed to answer the questions and at the same time to save huge amounts of estate tax or create huge amounts of wealth (usually tax-free).

Using just one M7 is fun. Two or more is party time.

So let’s visit with each M7 partygoer — first the specific questions, then the answer and the strategy (to eliminate any concerns). Remember: Each M7 you are about to meet represents a most popular strategy according to readers of my column in the past two years.

M7 No. 1 — “How can I get my family business (Success Co.) out of my estate, transfer it to my kids yet keep control for life?”

Create voting and non-voting stock, then transfer the non-voting stock to your business kids. Also use these strategies: a recapitalization to create the non-voting stock and an intentionally defective trust to transfer the stock. The voting stock, which you keep, maintains your control. All the strategies are tax-free — to you, your kids and Success Co.

M7 No. 2 — How can I earn large returns every year without risk?”

Invest in senior settlements/transferable insurance policies (TIPs). The average TIP rate of return per year is in the 12- to 14-percent range, available from a 14-year-old company that is public (on the NASDAQ). Minimum investment is $50,000 for qualified investors.

M7 No. 3 — “How can I avoid the double tax (income and estate) that hits all qualified plans (like an IRA, 401(k) profit-sharing)?”

Use a subtrust. It’s true: The tax collector can get up to 73 percent of your plan funds (that’s $730,000 per $1 million). Your family gets only $270,000. A subtrust allows you to use plan funds to buy life insurance (usually second-to-die). One reader turned $240,000 into $4.5 million of tax-free life insurance.

M7 No. 4 — “How do I know if my completed (or proposed) estate plan is done and done right?”

Easy. You must be able to answer “Yes” to both of these questions: (1) Do you have and will you continue to have absolute control of your business and other assets? And (2) Will all of your wealth pass intact — every penny of it — to your family when you die. “All” means if you, for example are worth $6 million, the entire $6 million (fill in your own net worth number) to your family. If you can’t answer ‘Yes’ to these two questions, get a second opinion from an independent professional.

M7 No. 5 — “I have significant excess cash or cash-like assets (municipal bonds, certificates of deposits, and the like). I’m conservative. Hate risk. Are there any tax-advantaged investments for me?”

Yes, conservative investment life insurance (CILI) that is really a conservation investment. The insurance company agrees to guarantee you that upon your death your heirs will receive the sum of the following: (1) All premiums you paid (say you paid $20,000 per year for 20 years. Your heirs will get back the entire $400,000), plus (2) a guaranteed rate of return on all premiums paid (usually around 3%), plus (3) the death benefit as a bonus (say $1 million, but could be more or less depending on your age and health). Get a personal quote. You’ll be delighted. And oh, yes, all earnings and the death benefit (all three items) are tax-free.

M7 No. 6. “Is there a way to reduce the value of my business for tax purposes?”

Absolutely! Take advantage of the three discounts allowed by the tax law: (1) lack of marketability, (2) minority interest and (3) non-voting stock is worth less than voting stock. Result, a $2 million business after discounts, is worth, (for tax purposes) in the $1.1 million to $1.2 million range.

M7 No. 7 — “Is there any way to finance the cost of life insurance to significantly reduce the out-of-pocket cost of the insurance?”

Yes, it’s called premium financing. The strategy is easiest to explain by example. A 60-year-old reader got $5 million of insurance with a total cost (to be paid over his life) of $368,000. A 56-year-old husband with a 56-year-old wife bought $5 million with a total projected outlay of only $79,000. You must be worth a minimum of $5 million (more is better) and be 65 years young or younger.

Of course, you want to get to know one or more of the M7 people better. More info. Maybe you have a question. Will the strategy work for you, your family and your business?

Here’s what to do: Contact me with the following: (1) identify the M7 strategy you want to learn about; (2) your name, address and all phone numbers where you can be reached; (3) your birthday and same for other family members if insurance is involved; (4) a short statement of your specific facts; (5) fax to 847-674-5299 or e-mail me at wealthy@blackmankallick.com with “M-7 query” in the subject line.

I’ll summarize the best responses (all identities to be withheld) in future columns.

Senior settlements an easy way to get high rate of return!

Friday, March 27th, 2009

When giving my tax-planning, wealth-building seminars, I usually ask the audience, “Do you know the ‘Rule of 72′ and how it works?”

Typically, about one-third of the people raise their hands.

Then I explain the wonderful, helpful Rule of 72:

“Write the number 72 on a piece of paper. Assume you can get a 10 percent rate of return.

Divide 10 into 72. You get 7.2.

What that means is your principal sum will double every 7.2 years.

“For example, $10,000 compounding for a period of 36 years will double exactly five times and give you $320,000.

Stop for a minute — do the simple math yourself. Fun, eh?”

But wait! What if that 10 percent return was subject to a 40 percent state and federal income tax? Then you would have only a 6 percent return — 72 divided by six means 12 years to double your money.

Now your $10,000 will double only three times over the same 36-year period ($10,000 to $20,000, $20,000 to $40,000, and $40,000 to $80,000).

Compare that $80,000 with $320,000 when tax-deferred (or tax-free). A huge difference.

So, now we know two factors that are measurably important to creating wealth: rate of return and tax deferment.

Let’s explore tax deferment first.

If you have money in a qualified plan — 401(k), profit-sharing, IRA or other qualified plan — you are on the tax-deferred road. If you are the proud owner of a Roth IRA or the new Roth 401(k), you can wave your tax-free flag.

Now the hard part: the rate of return. How would you like to average more than a 16 percent rate of return per year? You can. The concept is called senior settlements, or SS.

Let me introduce you to senior settlements by quoting a May 18 article from The Wall Street Journal titled Moving the Market:

AIG (the insurance giant) has bought less than 1,500 policies since 2001, according to spokesman Wil Nans.

“The industry’s annual returns of 10 percent to 15 percent first attracted European and Asian investors. And a few years ago, Berkshire Hathaway Inc., the investment vehicle of billionaire investor Warren Buffett, began buying life settlements, according to securities filings.”

A senior settlement is simply the purchase of an existing insurance policy from a senior (65 or older) by an investor.

The selling senior, who no longer wants to pay premiums, gets a much larger price for the policy than by taking the cash surrender value from the insurance company. The senior wins. The investor wins by making a large profit without risk (the senior is sure to die).

Can you become one of the investors? Yes. A public company trading on the Nasdaq makes it easy. The average rate of return on senior settlements is 16.36 percent per year and has been more than 16 percent throughout the company’s 14-year operating history.

You can become a senior-settlement investor in one of three ways: taxable, tax-deferred or tax-free. Following are the most common possibilities:

Taxable. You use your own funds or funds you control, like your corporation or other business entities, family limited partnerships and any noncharitable trust.

Tax-deferred. Almost everyone can play this profitable game via a qualified plan. The trustees of pension plans or other plans that are not self-directed can join the profitable fun by investing the plan funds in senior settlements for the benefit of all participants.

Tax-free. A Roth IRA or Roth 401(k) can fatten your tax-free accumulations. Charitable entities — charitable remainder and lead trusts and family foundations — are a perfect fit.

As you can see, we have a very positive attitude toward the potential wealth-building power of senior settlements.

But since senior settlements are probably new to almost everyone reading these words, here’s a suggestion:

Show this column to you professional advisers — CPA, lawyer, banker, financial planner and others.

Discuss senior settlements from at least these two aspects concerning your investments (taxable or otherwise):

1. The next time you are about to make an investment, determine how senior settlements compare with other possible investment choices.

2. Compare existing investments with your long-term (don’t forget to apply the Rule of 72) and short-term (about three to five years) goals.

Rising interest rates may wound conservative investments

Friday, March 27th, 2009

It’s amazing how often the voice at the other end of the phone says something like, “Irv, I’m very conservative.”

Then they prove it. They tell me they have parked all or a large amount of their extra cash in what they consider conservative investments.

Most conservative investments are in low-yield, fixed-rate stuff like CDs or U.S. Treasury bonds. But municipal bonds are the hands-down favorite conservative investments.

Here’s a well-known fact: When inflation rears its ugly head, conservative investments are anything but conservative.

Consider just one additional value-eating bandit that walks hand in hand with inflation: interest rates.

Here are the three ways the bandit steals your hard-earned wealth when, for example, you are heavily invested in municipal bonds:

1. The value of the bonds goes down as interest rates go up.

2. You are locked into a low-interest rate until the bond matures or you sell it, probably at a painful loss.

3. Nasty inflation reduces not only the value of the interest you receive, but also the buying power of the already reduced value of the bond (see No. 1 above).

Here’s a quote from the Currency Options Hotline Operating Manual that drives home the devastating economic impact of inflation over time: “If you were somehow able to take one of today’s greenbacks (dollars) back in time to 1940, you would find it worth only about 6.5 cents.”

Sorry, but it looks like inflation — plus the falling value of the dollar against most foreign currencies — will be our rather unwelcome bedfellow for at least the foreseeable future.

What is a conservative investor to do?

Actually, we all know the answer: Find an investment vehicle that overcomes the three evils of rising interest rates.

First, let’s outline the attributes of such an investment; second, identify the investment; and finally, give an example of how the investment works.

Here are the attributes of the investment:

• A higher rate of return than on traditional conservative investments like CDs, Treasury bills and notes, and, of course, municipal bonds.

• The interest rate tends to go up as inflation goes up.

• Your investment will never go down in value and, in fact, will always guarantee you a profit.

• The interest earned and your investment profit are income tax-free.

• Your total investment when you die — original investment, interest earned and profit — escapes the clutches of the estate tax when properly structured.

And now — drumroll, please — the identity of the investment: a particular type of life insurance that I call conservative investment life insurance, or CILI.

Finally, let’s look at an example. (Note: This investment concept works for any age, but is typically used by an individual or a married couple who are 50 or older.)

Joe and his wife, Mary, are both 70. They buy a $1 million second-to-die CILI policy (it could be any amount) with an annual premium of $23,516.

The policy currently earns 5.7 percent.

The payoff on Joe and Mary’s investment comes after the second death. It is determined assuming that after 10 years — age 80 — Joe and Mary get hit by the same bus.

Their heirs, children and grandchildren would receive:

• Death benefit — $1 million.

• Premiums paid ($23,516 times 10 years) — 235,160.

• Interest earned on premiums paid (at 5.7 percent, but it would be higher if interest rates rise or lower if interest rates fall) — $75,411.

• Total amount tax-free to heirs — $1,310,571.

Next, suppose the couple’s second death happens at age 90. Their heirs would get $1,816,458 tax-free.

To summarize the investment:

1. You get your investment (premiums paid) back, dollar for dollar, plus earnings (5.7 percent here).

2. You get a guaranteed bonus, the death benefit ($1 million here).

3. It’s all tax-free (no income tax, no estate tax).