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Knowing all the facts can certainly change the response to circumstances.
Knowing all the facts can certainly change the response to circumstances.
Even with proper forewarning, the effect under the “single bonus” method can result in the plan losing its luster in the eyes of the participant when tax time rolls around.
These grantor/intentionally-defective/irrevocable/lay in the house that Jack built/life insurance trusts turn the idiom on its head by allowing, from at least a tax perspective, a taxpayer to have it both ways.
In the personal context there hovers about the discussion of tax-deductible costs for coverage the possibility of holding life insurance in a qualified plan.
In a low interest rate environment, many policies that are held in trust may be under-performing and do not have the underlying guarantees to ensure that the policy does not lapse prematurely and that the primary objectives for the insurance planning are obtained.
The sad truth is that if your clients do not take the time to plan correctly the government is poised to do it for them poorly when the need arises.
The difference is that they have no ownership interest; and therein lies the sales opportunity.
But a disparity in age always seems to create a fly in the ointment when it comes time to do some business transition planning.
There’ll be a change in the weather
And a change in the sea
And from now on there’ll be a change in me
My walk will be different
My talk and my name –
It was a bit before my time, but you can go on YouTube and call up the sultry singer, Julie London, performing the Overstreet/Higgins song, There’ll Be Some Changes Made. And if a business redemption agreement could carry a tune, this is what most would be singing in response to the recent United States Supreme Court decision in the case of Connelly v. United States.
The Connelly brothers owned a building supply company and had a business transition agreement where, upon death, the company would redeem and retire the shares of the deceased at an agreed price. The company owned life insurance on both to fund the redemption.
Both assumed, along with just about everyone else, that the receipt of the death benefits from the company-owned policy would not inflate the fair-market-value of the business for death tax purposes. Rather, any increase would be offset by the company’s obligation to purchase the deceased owner’s interest.
SCOTUS did not agree. The Court of Last Resort ruled unanimously that a business’s obligation to redeem a deceased owner’s interest is not necessarily a liability that reduces the business’s value for purposes of the federal estate tax. Consequently, death benefits received on a company-owned policy increased the business’s fair-market-value by the same amount, any agreement to redeem the insured’s interest notwithstanding!
It is worth reviewing the first three pages of the Connelly decision HERE. Then call with any questions you have concerning clients and their current business transition plans, and those who are or should be implementing buy-out arrangements. Contact Tom Virkler at 706-614-3796 or tom@cpsadvancedmarkets.com
For What It’s Worth: As it will do, YouTube will call up related Julie London videos including the old Marlboro commercial in which she sings and lights her partner’s cigarette in a rather come-hither manner, quickly getting the whole viewing audience smokin’. Connelly v. U.S. may soon make redemption agreements about as scarce as those cigarette television ads!
In our everyday talk we depend on idioms more than we realize. These expressions, whose understood meaning have nothing to do with their strict definitions, allow us to make a point more quickly, more directly, or more diplomatically. And the world of common playing cards is a fruitful source of often-used idioms.
Consider: Having someone at a distinct advantage suggests that we hold all the cards. And it is to our benefit if we don’t overplay our hand. We keep our intentions hidden by holding those cards close to our vest, or by keeping an ace up our sleeve. Closing the deal might require that we lay all our cards on the table with the risk that all might still collapse like a house of cards.
Taxes are an irritating presence in our lives. It often seems the IRS is playing against us with a stacked deck.
And a wise advisor who can assist in this will generate tax savings using the previously unrealized funds to pay premiums for much-needed insurance coverage.
And while we must play the hand we are dealt, a good carrier marketing piece is available to help your client, through a simple line-by-line review of their Form 1040, to play future hands more profitably and, perhaps, replay a past hand finding tax savings in an earlier filed return.
Available upon request, the brochure guides you and your clients through their Form 1040 (based on the 2023 versions) allowing for assurance that all available deductions were taken last year and providing suggestions how taxes might be reduced for the current year.
Contact Tom Virkler at 706-614-3796 or tom@cpsadvancedmarkets.com about access to the brochure and arrangements for a scheduled call with you, your clients, and – if needed – clients’ legal and tax advisors.
For What It’s Worth: During the 1930s the U.S. Playing Card Company produced a deck with five suits for use when playing contract bridge, all to introduce new strategic possibilities to the popular game. The fifth suit was eagles, and the color was green. But the increased complexity proved unpopular, even among more talon-ted players, so the upper-deck was discontinued.