Sunday, May 31, 2009
Blog Article on the Truths and Myths of Alzheimer's Disease
Friday, May 15, 2009
Wolfram Alpha Launches Tonight
Thursday, May 14, 2009
High End Estate Tax Savings Strategies Being Eyed by White House
A recent Wall Street Journal article, Estate-Tax Strategies Could Survive Curbs, reports that the Obama administration is proposing to curtail the use of two estate planning techniques typically employed by high net worth individuals. The two techniques are the grantor retained annuity trust (GRAT) and the family limited partnership (FLP).
A GRAT is an irrevocable trust in which the grantor retains the right to receive an annuity for a term of years with the balance at the end going to designated beneficiaries. If the grantor survives the term, neither the assets nor any appreciation is included in the grantor’s taxable estate. On the other hand, if the grantor dies before the end of the annuity term, all of the assets are included in the grantor’s gross estate at the fair market value as of date of death. Since the technique only works if the grantor survives, some GRATs contain short annuity terms. The White House is proposing the imposition of a minimum 10 year annuity term. Even if that were to happen, wealthy individuals would no doubt continue to look at the GRAT as an option, because their estate would be no worse off even if they fail to survive the term. Nonetheless, a minimum 10 year term would certainly dissuade the very elderly from using this technique.
The FLP is sometimes used to transfer family wealth from one generation to the next at a discounted value. Valuation discounts usually exist because of lack of control and marketability. The FLP has been under attack by the IRS for years. The WSJ article indicates that the Obama administration does not like the situations where discounts are based upon restrictions that the family has the ability and intention to later remove.Filing Deadline For Private Foundations
Wednesday, May 13, 2009
CRAT, CRUT, CLAT, CLUT, GRIT, GRAT and GRUT…What Does It All Mean?
No area of law practice has created more acronyms than estate planning. The following is a brief description of these irrevocable trusts.
CRAT – Charitable Remainder Annuity Trust – A trust where payments are made to an income beneficiary for a set term with the remainder going to charity. The income beneficiary, a private person(s), will receive at least an annual distribution of not less than five percent (5%) nor more than fifty percent (50%) of the initial net fair market value of the trust. The payments to the income beneficiary are a set amount.
CRUT – Charitable Remainder Unitrust – A trust where payments are made to an income beneficiary for a set term with the remainder going to charity. Instead of a fixed sum, the income beneficiary receives a fixed percentage of not less than five percent (5%) nor more than fifty percent (50%) of the initial net fair market value of the trust. The trust must be valued annually.
CLAT – Charitable Lead Annuity Trust – The reverse of a CRAT, where the charitable interest comes first and the charity gets the income for a set term and the grantor's heirs receive the remainder interest after the expiration of the term.
CLUT – Charitable Lead Unitrust – The reverse of a CRUT, where the charitable interest comes first and the charity gets the income for a set term and the grantor's heirs receive the remainder interest after the expiration of the term.
GRIT – Grantor Retained Interest Trust - An irrevocable gifting trust for high net worth individuals. There is a transfer of property to a trust for a specified period of years. The Grantor retains a qualified annuity interest or unitrust interest in the trust. When the trust term ends, the trust terminates and all of the assets are distributed to the beneficiaries.
GRAT – Grantor Retained Annuity Trust - An irrevocable split interest trust in which the grantor retains the right to receive an annuity with a set amount for a term of years with the balance remaining at the end going to designated beneficiaries.
GRUT – Grantor Retained Unitrust - the right to receive annual amounts that are a fixed percentage of the FMV of the trust determined annually.A Charitable Alternative to Cashing in Your Life Insurance
In our prior post, we addressed the possibility of a life settlement as an alternative to taking the cash surrender value of an unneeded life insurance policy. Another alternative is gifting the policy to a charity and taking an income tax charitable deduction. The charity becomes the beneficiary of the policy and the ownership is transferred to the charity as well.
If you do not need an income tax charitable deduction and you do not want to part with the ownership of the policy, you can simply designate the charity as the beneficiary of the policy. Your estate will receive an estate tax charitable deduction for the death benefit passing to the charity.
The Life Settlement Alternative
If a life insurance policy is no longer needed, then most people elect to take the cash surrender value.
An alternative is to sell the policy to an institution through a life settlement. Life settlement companies will be interested in the type of policy, the amount of the policy, and the insured’s life expectancy. If the circumstances are good, the policy can be sold for many times over the cash surrender value.
Ohio Charitable Trusts Need to be Registered
All charitable trusts established or active in Ohio are required to register with the Ohio Attorney General’s Charitable Law Section. The registration form is filed with a copy of the instrument creating the charitable organization and the IRS letter granting exempt status.
In addition to the registration requirement, the charity must file an annual report, attaching a copy of IRS Form 990. The filing deadline is the same date as the Form 990 filing deadline, i.e., the fifteenth day of the fifth month following the close of the fiscal year end. If the Form 990 is on extension, the registration deadline is automatically extended. One does not want to file the financial report late. The Attorney General assesses a $200 late fee.
529 Savings Plan Briefing
On the heels of the recent high ranking of the Ohio CollegeAdvantage 529 Savings Plan, Investment News is reporting that Jacqueline Williams, the executive director of the Ohio Tuition Trust Authority is leaving to become director of New America Foundation’s College Savings Initiative, effective June 1. There is no word yet on who might take her place.
Back in the "good news" category, PR Newswire reports that according to Savingforcollege.com's newest 529 Fee Comparison Study, the Ohio CollegeAdvantage 529 Savings Plan is the lowest-cost, nationally-sold 529 plan.
Wednesday, May 06, 2009
Skip your IRA minimum distribution for 2009
Is your IRA suffering due to the stock market? You can skip taking a required minimum distribution (RMD) for 2009.