Valuation Discounts Considered in Gift and Estate Planning With a look forward to December 31, 2025, when the current lifetime exclusion levels for estate taxes are slated to sunset, wealth planners and their clients have much to discuss. Valuation and estate planning professionals have a key opportunity to strategize and develop the best plans for family businesses and high-net-worth individuals. With a look forward to December 31, 2025, when the current lifetime exclusion levels for estate taxes are slated to sunset, wealth planners and their clients have much to discuss. They have a key opportunity to strategize and develop the…
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Avoid Traps with a Timely Appraisal New basis-consistency requirements make defensible valuations of inherited property even more important. Informed taxpayers are aware that only the wealthiest individuals should have concerns about the federal estate and gift tax, for gifts given and decedents dying in 2018 through 2025. Thanks to the legislation known as the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA), P.L. 115-97, the basic exclusion amount is more than $11 million per individual ($22 million for married couples), indexed for inflation. Now, estate planners are spending less time and using fewer resources trying to avoid federal estate taxes for clients.…
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On Business Valuations The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) changes many aspects of how business analysts perform valuations. Upon passing of the TCJA, Jim Hitchner moved quickly to gather and disseminate information about the TCJA and its effect on business valuation. He has written two comprehensive articles in Issues 72 and 73 of Financial Valuation and Litigation Expert. The information in this article summarizes some of the main points expressed in those publications.
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Under the new FASB rules, financial statement preparers are provided an option to reclassify stranded tax effects within accumulated other comprehensive income in each period in which the effect of the change in the U.S. federal corporate income tax rate in the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (or portion thereof) is recorded. To read the full article in the Journal of Accountancy, click: FASB Addresses Stranded Income Tax Effects of New Tax Law.
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A Run-Down on What is Changing President Donald Trump signed the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) presented to him by Congress on December 22, 2017. Debate on the provisions of the bill dominated the last quarter of 2017. It was first presented on November 2, 2017 by Texas Congressman Kevin Brady, chair of The House Ways and Means Committee. Two weeks later, November 16, the House passed the Bill and forwarded it on to the Senate. The Senate Finance Committee passed its own version of a tax reform Bill and the full Senate voted 51 to 49 to pass…
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Qualified charitable distributions can offer a tax-saving opportunity, and they may be more advantageous to consider under the new tax law. QCDs, which are available only for certain clients, count toward required minimum distributions and are excluded from income. To read the full article in InvestmentNews, click: Why Aren’t Clients Using QCDs? Help Them!
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Help Clients Plan for the New Pass-Through Tax Deduction The new tax law includes a 20% deduction for some pass-through business income, but the specifics will vary depending on a client’s circumstances. The rules are fairly straightforward for clients with taxable income under certain thresholds: $157,500 for individuals and $315,000 for joint filers. To read the full article in ThinkAdvisor, click: The New 20% Pass-Through Tax Deduction: An Advisor’s Guide.
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Now that the status quo of tax planning has been upended by the passage of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017, wills, trusts, and portfolios are all due for a once-over and advisors are bracing to make sense of some of the most sweeping tax changes in decades. To read the full article in FinancialPlanning, click: Avoid “Dangerous” Planning Generalizations After New Tax Law.