Posts Tagged ‘redemption’

Don’t Get Stuck In These IRS Tax Traps

Wednesday, April 8th, 2009

If you own a business and your estate plan uses or intends to use any of the four commonly used techniques (actually tax traps) discussed in this article, you will unnecessarily enrich the IRS.

Guaranteed!

Let’s set-up the typical family-business situation we see at least 100 times every year. Joe, who is married to Mary, owns Success Co. Sam, their son, runs the business and someday will replace Joe. They have other children who are not active in the business.

The traps are listed here in order of the most serious and most frequent blunder.

The marital deduction. After Joe’s death, Mary will own Success Co. or a large portion of it in her own name or in some kind of marital trust. That’s great, when Joe dies. No estate tax. But when Mary goes, the IRS gets its pound of flesh. Remember, the marital deduction only defers tax; it’s not intended to be a tax saver.

A Section 303 redemption. Success Co. can redeem as much of Joe’s stock as necessary, free of any income or capital- gains tax to pay Joe’s (or Mary’s) death taxes and other estate costs. Sounds good. But the fact is, the money that comes out of Success Co. goes straight to the IRS.

Section 6166. Because Success Co. is a major asset in Joe’s (or Mary’s) estate, the estate tax can be paid in installments for up to 15 years with interest at a very low rate. Not only does the IRS get the estate tax, it now gets (even though a low percentage) interest to boot.

Normally this column tells you what to do to win the tax game, as opposed to telling you what not to do. OK, then. Here’s what you must do to check your estate plan and know it’s right for you and your family:

• The strategies you use must be initiated during your life (such as gifts, a grantor retained annuity trust or a family limited partnership), not at death (the three traps described in this article).

• When the entire plan is in place, your advisor should show you clearly that your total wealth will go to your family without being reduced in value by even one dime of estate taxes.

• Your advisor must get you into some kind of tax-free environment, such as an irrevocable life-insurance trust or some kind of charitable trust, immediately.

• You control your assets for as long as you live (or at least as long as you want) with the use of voting/nonvoting stock, a family limited partnership or various trusts.

• Finally, your assets are protected from creditors and lawsuits.

A smart way to transfer your business

Friday, April 3rd, 2009

This article is about an old IRS letter ruling that is one of my favorites. It might be labeled “The lazy man’s way to plan your business transfer.“

The ruling shows you how to take advantage of some favorable tax law while avoiding pitfalls. Good stuff!

Well, there is one slight problem to using the technique: You must drop dead before your family can enjoy the benefits of Letter Ruling 9116031.

But wait, hold the phone. The ruling has one redeeming quality. Really!

First, the facts: Joe, his wife, Mary, and their children owned all the stock in a family business. Joe died in 1990 and Mary inherited all of his stock.

(Note: Mary’s tax basis — for computing capital gains — is the fair market value (FMV) of the stock on the day Joe died. For example, if the FMV was $1 million and she sold it for $1 million, there would be no capital gains tax.)

The fact that Joe’s tax basis, while he was alive, was $25,000, is immaterial. Mary immediately sold all of her stock back to the corporation.

Here’s the general rule: When you or any member of your family sells stock back to your corporation (called a redemption), the redemption is usually taxed as a dividend — a tax disaster.

But there is a special tax-saving exception for a family member who has owned the stock for 10 years or more: If he/she divests all interest in the company (including any position as an officer or director), the redemption is treated as a sale (gets favorable capital gains treatment, instead of being a dividend).

Since Mary sold all (stock she owned before Joe died and stock she inherited from him) of her interest in the corporation, the purchase by the corporation of her shares was considered a bona fide sale (redemption) and not a dividend — a big tax victory.

When all the smoke cleared, not only had Mary escaped a big dividend income tax bill, but she had succeeded in effectively transferring the business to her children. How? Since the kids now owned all the remaining issued and outstanding stock, they owned 100 percent of the business.

To sum up: Mary walked off with a near-tax-free capital gain, (the price paid to Mary for the stock was a bit more than the exact FMV of the stock inherited from Joe) while the kids walked off with the business.

A fantastic tax result.

Stop and think about your own business succession plan for a moment. Isn’t that the result you want — a fantastic tax-free (for income, gift and estate taxes) result? Yes, you can get that tax-free result every time.

More often than not, succession plans are implemented during life, which means there is a second issue (the first issue is tax-free): control.

The typical business owner wants control of his business for as long as he lives. So, when you sit down with your professional advisors, make sure you accomplish a perfect solution to the two key issues: (1) a tax-free transfer and (2) keeping control for as long as you live.

If any other result is offered (no matter how good or smart it sounds), get a second opinion.