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Tax Moves You Must Make Before the End of the Year (Accounting Today)

Taxes Going Up- Obama Victory means you need to act now

November 12, 2012


By Margaret Collins


(Bloomberg) The race is on for wealthy Americans to save on taxes before January 1.

 
President Barack Obama’s re-election means his administration will push to let tax cuts enacted during the George W. Bush era expire for high earners, as scheduled, at year-end. Obama wants to increase the top federal income tax rate to 39.6 percent from 35 percent, boost rates on long-term capital gains to as much as 23.8 percent, and shrink exemptions from estate-and-gift taxes.
“If you have to put a movie title on what’s going to happen from now until the end of the year it would be: ‘The Fast and the Furious,’” said Jeff Saccacio, a personal financial services partner at New York-based PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP. “The wise, smart people are preparing themselves for a sunset of the Bush tax cuts.”
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Wealthy investors have about a month and a half to examine their investment gains and losses left over from previous years, as well as to consider ways to move income into 2012 and transfer assets to heirs, Saccacio said. Now is the time to start running the calculations, he said.
“Acceleration of investment income is clear,” said Elda Di Re, partner and personal financial services area leader for Ernst & Young LLP in New York. “If anyone was planning on realizing a gain in the next two to three years on either securities or real estate, there’s a considerable amount of money to be saved.”
The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index, which is up 64 percent since Obama took office in 2009, lost 2.4 percent yesterday to 1,394.53, its lowest level since August.
Capital Gains
An investor who sells $100 of stock with a cost basis of $20 in 2012 would see proceeds—after capital gains taxes—of $88, according to an analysis by J.P. Morgan Private Bank. Next year, if Congress doesn’t act, earnings from the sale would drop to $80.96 if rates rise to 23.8 percent. That means the stock price would need to rise by at least 9 percent for an investor to be better off selling in 2013.
Investors shouldn’t accelerate sales of securities just to avoid a higher tax rate, said Saccacio, who is based in Los Angeles. They should consider how long they planned to hold stocks and whether they need to rebalance. Those who decide to sell at current capital gains rates can re-invest in the securities if they remain attractive without violating so-called wash-sale rules under the Internal Revenue Service code that apply to stocks sold at a loss, he said.
Bonuses, Dividends
Closely held businesses that have a choice to pay bonuses or dividends in 2012 or 2013 should do so before year-end, said Joanne E. Johnson, wealth adviser and managing director at New York-based JPMorgan Chase & Co.’s private bank unit. The tax rate on dividends may jump to as much as 43.4 percent next year from 15 percent now with the expiration of Bush-era tax cuts and levies set to take effect from the health-care law.
Employees who have a choice to receive their bonus this year should do so and consider exercising stock options that are set to expire, she said.
While the election provided some clarity, wealthy taxpayers still must be prepared for the unexpected before Dec. 31, Johnson said. “We don’t know what the compromises are going to be,” she said.
Fiscal Cliff
Democrats maintained control of the U.S. Senate in the election results last week as Republicans kept their majority in the House of Representatives. That ensures continued resistance to Obama’s determination to raise taxes for the wealthiest Americans in the effort to reduce the U.S. budget deficit.
Lawmakers may have to address the so-called fiscal cliff of tax increases and spending cuts that would start in January if Congress doesn’t act in a lame-duck session set to begin this month.
House Speaker John Boehner told reporters last week that Republicans are “willing to accept new revenue under the right conditions.” He cited ideas Democrats already have rejected: restructuring entitlement programs and relying on revenue generated by economic growth from a tax-code overhaul.
Some tax-rate increases scheduled to take effect next year don’t depend on fiscal-cliff negotiations, said Di Re of Ernst & Young. The 2010 health-care law, which Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney had vowed to repeal, applies a 3.8 percent surtax on unearned income such as realized capital gains, dividends and interest in 2013 for married couples making more than $250,000 and individuals earning at least $200,000.
Payroll TaxThe law also increases the Medicare payroll tax levied on wages by 0.9 percentage points for high earners.
Wealthy taxpayers with large carryover losses remaining from 2008 and 2009 may not want to rush to sell securities before year-end, Saccacio said. They may have enough losses to offset future gains even with higher tax rates, he said.
When capital losses exceed gains, the extra generally can be deducted on individuals’ tax returns and used to reduce other income, such as wages, up to an annual limit of $3,000, according to the IRS. If the total loss is more than the cap, the unused portion may be carried over to following years.
The Obama victory also may lead some millionaires who were hesitating to take advantage of current rules on gifts to fund trusts they’ve set up, said Linda Beerman, manager of the wealth strategies group at Atlantic Trust. The firm is the private wealth-management unit of Atlanta-based Invesco Ltd.
Estate Tax
Legislation enacted in 2010 raised the lifetime estate-and- gift-tax exclusion for 2011 and 2012. This year individuals can transfer up to $5.12 million—or $10.24 million for married couples—free of estate and gift taxes. Those levels are scheduled to expire at the end of 2012 and Obama wants to set the estate tax threshold at $3.5 million while dropping the gift-tax exemption to $1 million as it was in 2009.
“People are really rushing here at the end to take advantage of it,” Beerman said.
Wealthy families should consider setting up trusts under current rules that can benefit grandchildren or future generations and set them up in states such as Delaware, which let the entities exist in perpetuity, said Johnson of JPMorgan. The Obama administration has proposed curtailing the benefits of such trusts as well as limiting discounts taken when transferring illiquid assets in its most recent budget proposal.
Decisions about making charitable contributions this year are more complicated, Beerman said. While deductions for donations probably will be more valuable next year if rates are higher, limits on itemized deductions for those with higher incomes are scheduled to be reinstated next year, she said.
“They need to start crunching some numbers,” PwC’s Saccacio said of wealthy taxpayers. “This year, year-end tax planning takes on a heightened significance given the fact that we’re going to have this jump in rates next year unless we have an 11th-hour adjustment.”

Essential Planning for Seniors (Kiplingers)

6 Essential Documents for Alzheimer’s

Prepare these documents, and update older ones, while you still have the decision-making capacity to do so.

the Editors of Kiplinger’s Retirement Report, , , Kiplinger Washington Editors
Advance-planning documents can help ensure that all your financial and medical wishes are carried out to the letter. This is especially important when Alzheimer's disease and dementia come into play. It's essential to draw up these documents -- and update older ones -- while you still have the decision-making capacity to do so. If you don't have the appropriate documents, a court may step in and appoint a guardian for you. Because of the differences in state law and the complexities involved in ensuring that your instructions are airtight, see a lawyer for help in drawing up these documents.

Power of attorney for finances. This legal document allows another person to manage your finances on your behalf. Naming a competent, trustworthy agent is essential. Many seniors designate a family member for this task. You can build in checks and balances by requiring that the agent provide a periodic accounting to a third party, such as another relative or a lawyer. Or you can require that another individual sign off on any gifts of your property.
Powers of attorney should state the agent's authority to handle specific investment accounts, annuities and other assets -- details that aren't included in some off-the-shelf documents. Make sure the power of attorney is "durable," meaning that the agent's powers continue when the person creating the power of attorney becomes incapacitated.
Living trust. This document can provide detailed guidelines on how your property should be managed if you become incapacitated. You transfer your investments, real estate and other assets into the trust and name yourself as trustee, so you maintain control of the property. You also name one or more successor trustees to manage the property if you become incapacitated, and you include detailed instructions on how the money should be used if you are hospitalized or need long-term care.
After you die, the trust allows the successor trustee to transfer your property to your beneficiaries without having to go through probate. If you have a living trust, you still need a financial power of attorney to manage transactions that may fall outside the scope of the trust, such as dealing with credit card accounts. To provide checks and balances, it's best to name different individuals as your living trust's successor trustee and as your agent under a power of attorney.
Health care directives. A living will documents your wishes regarding life-sustaining treatment. Find living will forms for each state at www.caringinfo.org. Some states combine the living will with a health care power of attorney in one form.
The health care power of attorney allows you to appoint someone to make medical decisions for you if you become incapacitated. You also can include specific instructions on how your agent should make your health care decisions. Laws governing these documents can vary from state to state. Look at the American Bar Association's health care power of attorney guidance, titled Giving Someone a Power of Attorney for Your Health Care, at www.americanbar.org.
Also, seniors looking to include more details in their advance directives might consider the Five Wishes form, which meets legal requirements in more than 40 states. The form, available at www.agingwithdignity.org, allows users to designate a health care proxy and outline the care they want under various medical scenarios.
Standard will. The will identifies the individual's beneficiaries, who will receive the assets in the estate. It also names the executor, the person who manages the estate. The executor will have no legal authority until the person dies. Separately, individuals must designate beneficiaries of their retirement plans on the plan documents themselves; naming beneficiaries for retirement-plan assets in a will is not legally binding.
Letter of instruction. This document will provide your family the financial and other information they need if you become incapacitated. At the very least, the letter should list all of your investment accounts, insurance policies, loans, cemetery plot records, real estate holdings, military benefits, overseas assets and even frequent-flier memberships. It should also provide the location of important documents and the names of key contacts, such as your lawyer, financial adviser and insurance agent. Make sure to include the computer passwords for all of your online accounts.
Your letter also could direct heirs to cancel club memberships and to call current and past employers regarding company benefits and stock options. Include funeral instructions and information you would like in your obituary. You can place all of the documents in a binder. Consider using a booklet, the Family Love Letter (www.familyloveletter.com), as a guide. Make sure to note the location of any items you may have hidden.
Special needs trust. This trust is set up to provide for an incapacitated spouse if the well caregiver dies first. The amount put in the trust will be based on the expected cost of care over the individual's lifetime. Such trusts are drafted so that the assets are not considered to belong to the disabled person. That protects eligibility for certain government benefits, such as Medicaid benefits for nursing-home care, without requiring the ill patient to first spend down all assets. Assets could be spent on extras, such as special therapies, a geriatric care manager or a private nursing-home room. A trustee would make spending decisions.
 

© 2012 The Kiplinger Washington Editors, Inc.