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Estate Planning - Asset Accumulation and Preservation,
An Overview
Estate Planning - Asset Accumulation and Preservation,
An Overview
By: Steven
B. Kray, Esq. and Certified Public Accountant
I. Benefits of Planning
an Estate with a Living Trust
III. How to
Effect Tax Free Transfers of Wealth
I. Benefits of Planning
an Estate With a Living Trust
Living Trusts are Recommended by Most Professionals
Most financial planners and estate planning attorneys
are recommending the use of the "Living Trust", also known as the "Inter-Vivos
Trust", as part of a comprehensive estate plan. In states like California,
the living trust will in most cases avoid the need for judicial intervention
(known as probate) in the administration of an estate and the increased
costs resulting therefrom.
Living Trusts Work Well in Moderate Sized Estates
These types of trusts are generally justified for
estates of single persons with $300,000 or more in assets and for estates
of married persons with assets, including life insurance at face value,
of $500,000 or more.
Traditional Benefits from Using Living Trusts
The primary purpose of the Living Trust is to:
-
Avoid probate for both single and married persons.
-
Avoid losing a $1.0 million exemption from estate
taxes for married persons (which will gradually increase to: (i)
$1,500,000 for estates of decedents dying in 2004-2005; (ii) $2,000,000
for estates of decedents dying in 2006-2008; (iii) $3,500,000 for estates
of decedents dying in 2009, (iv) unlimited for decedent's dying in 2010,
and (v) thereafter $1.0 million).
-
Select trustees, whether trust companies or trusted
individuals with whom you have confidence, to care for your estate and
financial well-being when you are not able to handle these affairs, due
to incapacity or infirmity, and for the benefit of our natural heirs, upon
death.
Probate is the court process of supervising
and administering estates. In California, estates must pay statutory probate
fees for attorneys and executors that are based on the gross value of the
estate (without any reduction for debts or mortgages) that starts at 4%
of the estate value (for each the attorney and executor) and drops to 1%
for estate values in excess of $1.0 million.
In addition, because of probate court involvement,
there will naturally be additional attorney and executor fees called Extraordinary
Fees, that are incurred when the estate needs permission to sell property
and/or take action to protect or defend assets of the estate. It must also
be noted that judicial involvement will also mean that all of your financial
and personal matters that are revealed in court become part of the public
record and therefore available to the press and the general public. (Many
members of the press maintain a daily presence at court houses just to
scoop the next interesting probate, divorce, family dispute or other litigation
matter on file.)
Other Planning Benefits of Living Trusts
However, there are other little talked about benefits
that are available when having a Living Trust and a comprehensive estate
plan, that, depending upon your situation, can be substantial. These include:
-
Protecting assets from creditors.
-
Giving assets to a disabled or handicapped child
by the creation of a Special Needs Trust, who otherwise is able to obtain
state aid in order not to lose the state aid that might be available.
-
Avoiding estate taxation of life insurance proceeds
(which contrary to popular belief are generally taxable in one's estate),
which can reduce the insurance proceeds available to your children by up
to 50%.
-
Pass property to children, in trust for the benefit
of grandchildren, in an attempt to avoid an estate and gift tax at the
death of the children, to the extent authorized under the generation skipping
transfer tax rules.
Estate Taxes are a Second Tax, After You Have
Paid Your Income Taxes
Most people are confused about estate taxes. Everyone
is familiar with income taxes. Every April 15 we are required to pay income
taxes. What we have left, AFTER paying income taxes, will be subject to
a federal death tax, a second tax, called the estate tax.
We are each given a credit against this tax that
currently allows each of us to pass, by gifts during our lifetimes and
at death, $1.0 million. As noted above, this credit will gradually increase
the size of estates that can avoid estate taxes (but
not gift taxes) from $1.0 million,
increasing to (i) $1,500,000 for estates of decedents dying in 2004-2005;
(ii) $2,000,000 for estates of decedents dying in 2006-2008; (iii) $3,500,000
for estates of decedents dying in 2009, (iv) unlimited for decedent's dying
in 2010, and (v) thereafter $1.0 million. In
addition, we are able to gift during our lifetimes not more than $10,000
per year (which amount is now indexed and will increase by inflation)
to any person, which gift does not apply against our lifetime $1.0 million
exemption. Since 1999, this $10,000 per year per person exemption will
also increase as it will be indexed for inflation and rounded to the next
lowest multiple of $1,000.
Techniques to Reduce Estate and Gift Taxes: Gifting; Entities
to Retain Control over Property; Valuation Discounts and Fractionalized
Ownership of Property
The problem with gifting is that once gifted the property typically
is no loner subject to continuing control by the donor, that can
create other problems. In order to solve these problems sophisticated
estate planning techniques call for the formation of trusts or entities
(irrevocable trusts, family limited partnerships or LLCs) to avoid giving
control over the property being gifted away. The property gifted
is a share, unit, or percentage interest in a larger property, where
the control to manage and control the property is vested in a trustee,
general partner or manager. A significant by-product of these sophisticated
techniques is that when a "fractionalized" interest, such as a minority
share of stock, a minority partner interest is gifted, the value of the
"fractionalized" interest that has been transferred by law a lower
value than the actual percentage ownership that the same interest represents
of the entire asset or entity. These reductions in value are typically
called "valuation discounts".
The Internal Revenue Service ("IRS") must take into account these valuation
discounts, which reduce the value of the "taxable gift" and therefore also
reduce the gift or estate taxes payable. Anytime that property is owned
by more than one person or entity, there is "fractionalized ownership",
and therefore the value of each partner's interest for estate and gift
tax purposes is less than the value percentage ownership attributed to
the entire property. The sum of the parts is less than the whole. A fractional
ownership interest of less than 50% will generally be subject to a greater
valuation discount than a 50% ownership interest.
In a community property state, husbands and wives are therefore automatically
entitled to valuation discounts with respect to their property holdings.
Unmarried couples, unmarried partners, and single persons who own property
interests as partners" or "tenants in common" are also entitled to these
valuation discounts. Estate planners who do not understand sophisticated
estate planning may miss these planning opportunities when drafting the
most simple estate plans.
The valuation discounts are real and the IRS must recognize them. The
IRS will argue that these same valuation discounts must also reduce
a taxpayer's income tax deduction when making gifts of fractionalized interests
to a charity. The IRS may challenge the size of the valuation discounts
relative to the size of the fractional interests being transferred, however,
there are acceptable and conservative valuation discounts that a taxpayer
can take to avoid these challenges.
Not all Living Trusts are Alike
There is no standard form for a Living Trust. It is true that they all
tend to look alike and generally consist of 25 to 40 pages of legal text.
Through proper drafting, a trust can address an almost unlimited variety
of client concerns. These include tax savings techniques, techniques that
enhance and take full advantage of available valuation discounts, the proper
handling of children from a former marriage, the proper handling of a parent's
estate, the ability to take care of a parent or third party without having
to make a gift of trust assets, the use of generation skipping trusts to
save estate taxes, the use of college trusts and life insurance trusts
to save estate taxes, the need for creditor planning and the ability to
protect assets from claims of creditors, and other issues.
"Form-book" trusts which can cost the client as
much as a "tailored" trusts, are generally limited in features because
they do not address the unique concerns of the client and/or may be missing
provisions that can solve problems that may not be known at the time of
drafting, but that may crop up later down the road.
Special Planning Opportunities and Planning
for Unmarried Couples and "Partners"
The typical "Husband and Wife" estate plan through
the use of a properly tailored living trust can without material additional
costs, incorporate the following planning provisions and tax savings techniques:
allowthe
taxpayers to take valuation discounts to reduce estate taxes; transition
retirement plan monies to heirs so that income taxes are deferrable over
the lifetime of the beneficiary; andprotect bequests from creditors
of the Trust beneficiaries, achieve basic creditor protection for one spouse
protecting the spouse from the creditors of the other spouse.
Planning for Unmarried Couples or Partners should
take advantage of fractional ownership and valuation discount techniques,
and annual tax free gifting through irrevocable trusts. While these areas
of planning are more complicated, substantial tax savings and planning
opportunities are available to unmarried couples or partners.
Conclusions
The desire to avoid estate taxes and probate will
generally create interest among people to pursue estate planning. There
are other benefits that can be realized in addition to peace of mind by
taking the time to address one's estate planning concerns.
II. Life Insurance
Policies, Variable Annuities and How to Own Them
There is so much confusion about Life Insurance,
whether to buy whole life or term, and how it can be made excludable from
estate taxes.
Whole Life vs. Term
There are objective factors to evaluate to determine
whether or not you are a better candidate for whole life or term insurance.
In order to understand how to evaluate these factors, you first need to
understand the difference between whole life and term insurance.
Whole life policies in most cases are a combination
of decreasing term insurance (a policy that each year decreases in the
amount of the insured death benefit that is payable upon a death) and an
investment in an annuity-type of investment. Each annual premium is allocated
between the cost of term insurance, expenses chargeable to administer the
policy, and the remaining balance, if any, is allocated to an investment
account.
The type of whole life policy will determine how
the investment account is to be invested. Those policies referred to as
"variable annuity contracts" invest their investment accounts in mutual
fund type of investments, and allow the policy owner to direct and configure
the investment portfolio account to any of the investments within the family
of funds generally being administered by the insurance company. Other forms
of contracts include "fixed rate" contracts and "money market" contracts.
Most "money market" contracts carry a minimum rate of return, even though
the actual rate will fluctuate with money market rates.
The cash value of the whole life policy grows
as a function of the increases in value of the policy's investment account.
Because term insurance becomes increasingly more expensive as your age
increases, the term insurance benefit payable upon a death, decreases.
These decreases in term death benefit are usually made up by the increases
in value of the investment account.
Straight term policies generally do not contain
an investment account or a cash accumulation. Because the cost of term
insurance will go up with increases in age, a straight annually renewable
term policy will increase in cost each year. Insurance companies therefore
provide other options to straight term, such as 5, 10 or 15 year fixed
premium term, or deceasing term, wherein the policy premium stays the same,
but the death benefit payable each year decreases. This is typical of "mortgage
insurance," and the term portion of whole life policies.
Both whole life and term policies offer other
policy terms and benefits, to distinguish insurance companies and their
products from each other. Many policies, including term and whole life,
retain the right to increase the premiums for the term portion of the policy,
if the insurance company suffers "actuarial losses". As a result, the annual
premium that is generally quoted (in the case of a term insurance) and
the investment accumulation projected (in the case of a whole life) may
not be accurate if a higher charge for the term portion of the policies
are imposed, as authorized. Hopefully your agent will be able to explain
that their insurance company has never imposed or taken advantage of their
ability to charge the higher term rates. Many policies also offer a disability
benefit called "waiver of premium" that will pay the annual policy premiums
if the insured becomes disabled.
Whole life policies are in one sense "tax shelters"
in that the investment account earns income and appreciates on a tax deferred
and potentially a "tax free" basis. If you cash out the policy you will
then have to pay the government the income taxes attributable to the accumulated
interest. However if you hold the policy until death, the entire death
benefit and investment account will be paid to your beneficiaries, free
of income tax. Please however recall the prior discussion that compares
income tax with the estate and gift tax. The life insurance policy may
still be subject to an estate or gift tax, unless other forms of planning
have been implemented.
On its face, whole life policies sound much better
than term policies. Whole life policies generally pay a return that generally
rival T-Bill rates and under variable annuity contracts appreciate similar
to mutual funds. As noted, the accumulation under a whole life policy is
tax deferred and potentially tax free. In addition the owner of the policy
is given the right to borrow against the investment account at a very reasonable
rate of interest. What a great way to save. However, there is a catch!
Whole life policies are not profitable if you
cancel them in their first seven (7) to ten (10) years of ownership. Insurance
companies charge hefty penalties, loads, early termination fees, and other
administration charges in the early years of the policy. In addition, there
are a good number of lesser known companies that through smoke and mirrors
cause the policy to have abnormally high loads and administration charges,
to the point that they never reach the point of providing a viable investment.
Some of these companies may even tout themselves as being the most solvent
and most secure for your investment. However upon a closer examination
the profitability of some insurance companies may be because their policy
holders can never make a fair return on their investment accounts, which
are continually being assessed administration charges, that make the insurance
company extremely profitable and secure.
From strictly a number crunch prospective, there
is a good amount of analysis to support that you can do much better financially
if you buy annual renewable term insurance and invest the difference between
the reduced premium cost of the annual term insurance relative to the higher
premium cost for a whole life policy. This is mockingly referred to by
many insurance agents as "buying term and investing the difference." My
own experience is that few people ever invest the difference wisely, which
lends support to the arguments by most agents in favor of a whole life
policy.
If you did in fact buy a term policy or a decreasing
term policy and invest the difference in a tax free or tax deferred investment,
such as a tax deferred annuity, you would generate most of the benefits
of a whole life insurance policy, with much less load and less risk. Tax
deferred annuities are allowed to accumulate income on a tax deferred basis.
This means that you will have to pay taxes when you reach an age that you
can withdraw the funds. Early withdrawals are subject to penalties, and
borrowing may not be permitted. However, a whole life policy will not be
subject to income taxes on the investment account upon the death of the
insured, whereas, an tax deferred annuity does not offer this tax benefit.
Term may be the clear choice if you own a property
or business that you know can and will liquidate into cash when needed
in the future and you do not need the discipline and forced savings offered
by a whole life premium. Your ownership of the appreciating asset becomes
your investment account, that can convert to cash. You can also purchase
some whole life and some term insurance, where the term policy will supplement
the death benefit of the whole life policy to make sure that there is sufficient
cash available to handle expenses if your are gone.
My advice to clients is to maintain a balanced
portfolio, one that has investments in stocks, bonds, mutual funds, whole
life insurance, and term insurance. The real issue is whether or not you
can afford the expense of maintaining a "balanced portfolio". Therefore
if you have to cut, you may want to consider buying a term policy that
can be converted into whole life, when you have more money to invest.
How to Own the Insurance
Generally as between a husband and wife, all assets
passing between the two of them, at any time, can transfer free of gift
and estate taxes. It is only at the death of both husband and wife, that
an gift or estate tax will be assessed. If this is to happen, the government
will be your children's partner in any death benefit payable from your
life insurance, unless you have planned otherwise.
The most typical mechanism to hold life insurance
that will avoid estate taxes is to hold it in an irrevocable life insurance
trust. These trusts, if properly formed and funded, would become both the
owner of the insurance policy and the beneficiary, thereby keeping the
death benefits out of your and your spouse's estate.
Funding to pay the insurance premiums can be accomplished
by gifts to the trust. The gifts can either be subject to gift tax, or
within gift tax free and within the annual exclusions for gifts of $10,000
per year per child, provided that the ultimate beneficiary of the trust
(i.e. children or grandchildren) have the right to demand a distribution
of the gifted cash within a period of a few weeks from the date the gift
is made. If they do not demand a distribution, then the gifted monies are
will be used to pay the insurance premiums. Other methods of funding include
loans to the trust, or split dollar loan arrangements (typically in the
form of corporate loans) whereby when the death benefit becomes payable,
the lender of the monies will be paid off, with or without interest.
Another new mechanism that is becoming popular
is to own the insurance in a family partnership, whereby the insured and/or
the insured's spouse and the children are partners and gifts of policy
premiums are made directly to the children who then contribute the monies
to the partnership.
There are a variety of forms of trusts and partnership
arrangements that can be used to own and acquire life insurance. Here again,
the cost to form an entity, and the benefits desired therefrom are important
factors that must be evaluated before settling on any form of entity. For
example, should the surviving spouse have any access to the death benefits?
What happens if under a trust or partnership arrangement a child withdraws
or retains the sums contributed for his or her benefit, leaving insufficient
money to pay for the insurance? Is it better just to have the children
own the policy without a trust or partnership, it is certainly cheaper.
In addition, you may want to leave the grandchildren
as the ultimate beneficiaries, which will require a document that handles
the "generation skipping transfer tax", when gifts are made directly to
grandchildren, or when gifts are made in trust for children, and upon their
death to grandchildren. This is a tax that is imposed when transfers attempt
to skip a generation, and avoid the imposition of estate taxes in the next
successive generation. The tax laws cannot prevent you from skipping the
next generation and leaving property to your grandchildren, however, they
impose a tax at the maximum estate tax rates for skips that in the aggregate
exceed $1.0 million. Although commencing in 1999 this $1.0 million generation
skipping tax exemption will be indexed for inflation and therefore increase,
it is important to understand the significance of, and therefore be able
to plan around, this additional tax that will be imposed if you attempt
to leave property to grandchildren, in order to avoid your children having
to pay an estate tax at their death.
Finally, the form of ownership of the life insurance
may be properly integrated into an Asset Protection & Preservation
plan, or can be used to solve liquidation problems to acquire the shares
or assets of a business, upon a death or retirement, or to achieve some
other charitable, tax savings or estate planning goal or objective.
III. How
to Effect Tax Free Transfers of Wealth
As we are all painfully aware, the IRS is anxious
to collect an income tax at the time we earn income and an estate tax or
gift tax at the time that we attempt to pass assets to our natural heirs,
at death or during our lifetimes. The often quoted Unites States Court
of Appeals Justice Learned Hand made it clear that as taxpayers we have
every legal right to structure our affairs in a manner that will mitigate
the tax burdens placed upon us. Some may consider these techniques as "loopholes"
in the tax laws. However, similar to the techniques discussed in Asset
Protection & Preservation - Domestic & Foreign , these
techniques are nothing more than creative applications of traditional forms
of doing business, selection and formation of entities, and entering into
contracts.
I again refer you to our Lead Article Asset
Protection & Preservation - Domestic & Foreign and to Limited
Liability Companies, Corporations, Partnerships, Business Trusts, Retirement
Plans, and Domestic and Foreign Spendthrift Trusts for a better
understanding of how traditional forms of doing business can affect and
interface with planning techniques to avoid income and estate taxes.
The most basic structures that are recommended
and generally needed in most any estate that suffers income and estate
tax burdens include the Living Trust and the Irrevocable Life Insurance
Trust, discussed above. If you are still interested in greater savings,
then the next areas to explore involve mechanisms that shift "income",
asset "appreciation" and assets at "discounted" values to others.
In the case of income shifting objectives, techniques
used to achieve these objectives generally include the establishment of
entities to own income producing assets, such as real properties, businesses,
etc., that can pass-through desired levels of taxable income to the targeted
recipients. You must note that Congress has imposed a "kiddie" tax, among
other pitfalls, to make it very difficult to shift this income and tax
burden. The "kiddie" tax will tax all income earned by a child under age
14 at the parent's tax rate. Other obstacles to shift income require some
form of economic substance and compliance with applicable tax rules and
regulations when implementing the transactions that cause the transfer.
The Family Limited Partnership has recently
been promoted as a most favored form of entity that achieves both economic
substance, ease in compliance with tax rules and regulations, and enables
the parent or transferor of the asset to control both the underlying asset
and the income received therefrom, without necessarily violating the myriad
of Internal Revenue Code pitfalls. The Family Limited Partnership can not
only be used as a device to shift the income tax burden, but can also be
used to shift both assets and asset appreciation and therefore reduce the
estate and gift taxes attributable to that asset and eliminate the estate
and gift taxes attributable to the asset "appreciation".
This shifting of income and asset appreciation
occurs because the Family Limited Partnership is a "pass-through" tax entity.
This means that income earned and the asset appreciation of the assets
owned by the partnership are allocable among the partners in accordance
with their percentage ownership of the partnership, unless stated otherwise
in the partnership agreement. An important aspect to the tax planning involved
in the formation of a Family Limited Partnership focuses on how to convey,
free from income and gift tax, a greater partnership percentage to those
family members targeted for allocation by discounting the value of the
Family Limited Partnership interests being conveyed, because of their minority
and non marketable status (vis-a-vis the value of the assets owned by the
Family Limited Partnership).
Along with a transfer of the underlying interest
in the Family Limited Partnership, will be a transfer of the income and
asset appreciation attributable to the interests being transferred. In
some cases a gift tax or income tax is payable, in others, the available
unified credit, or annual exemption, can offset the cash flow impact of
any taxes. There are a variety of techniques available to depress the value
of an asset, so that when sold or gifted, its value for tax purposes will
be reduced, in order to cause a lower tax liability. The techniques generally
acceptable under the Internal Revenue Code to depress asset values must,
in most cases, pass scrutiny under specific objective tests, before the
IRS will recognize the technique and related transaction as "arms-length",
and before the IRS will consider allowing the taxpayer to use the depressed
or reduced fair market value for purposes of the gift or transaction. Use
of these sophisticated techniques requires legal counsel that is knowledgeable
of the rules and regulations that affect all aspects of the "pass-through"
entity and all transactions in connection therewith, including both state
and federal laws, in addition to applicable federal, state and local tax
laws (income tax, gift tax, estate tax, sales tax, real property tax, etc.).
An increasingly used estate planning tool is generally
referred to as the Residence GRIT (grantor retained interest
trust), or the Qualified Personal Residence Trust also referred to as a
QPRT.
This technology incorporates use of grantor annuity trusts, or "GRATs"
(grantor retained annuity trusts). In the QPRT, the personal residence
of the grantors is contributed to a trust, generally established for the
benefit of the grantor's child or children. The grantor will retain certain
rights in the personal residence, any replacement residence, or any proceeds
from the sale of that residence, for a specified term that is usually the
estimated actuarial life expectancy of the grantor. Because of this retained
interest, the IRS (IRS) will only tax the gift to the trust on the
basis of the fair market value of the residence less the actuarial value
of the "retained interest", which is always a percentage of the value of
the residence. The longer the term of the "retained interest" the lower
the taxable gift will be. However, if the grantor does not survive the
expiration of the term, then under the Internal Revenue Code (IRC),
the transaction and trust will be treated for estate tax purposes as if
it never occurred. Therefore, a term (or a joint term) should be selected
that the grantor and in the case of a joint term, his or her spouse) believes
they can and will survive. There are other issues assuming survival of
the Residence GRIT term, such as where will the grantors live after the
expiration of the term, and how to protect the "retained interest" from
creditors. However, these issues can be resolved by use of competent and
creative legal counsel.
Another mechanism, that is similar to the Residence
GRIT, is a plain GRAT. The GRAT is very similar to the Residence
GRIT, except that the "retained interest" is an annuity interest, pays
to the grantor periodic cash payments. The GRAT must therefore own an asset
that generates cash flow that is sufficient to make the periodic cash payments
to the grantor, consistent with applicable IRC regulations. In most other
respects the GRAT is similar to the Residence GRIT. In fact that the Residence
GRIT under a QPRT will convert into a GRAT upon a violation of specific
rules and regulations that include rules that limit the use of the personal
residence to only the grantor and his or her spouse.
Still in vogue are charitable trusts, called charitable
remainder trusts, that receive tax deductible gifts of property and offer
the client or charitable grantor an annuity or monthly cash payment (in
the form of a GRIT or a GRAT) for the rest and remainder of his, her or
their lives. The plan in many cases includes the purchase of a life insurance
product by using the current income "tax savings" generated from the charitable
gift and tax deduction. The policy is purchased to benefit the natural
heirs of charitable grantor(s), in order to replenish their inheritance
that had been previously gifted to the charitable trust. If and when this
form of planning works, it benefits everyone, the charity, the grantor,
the heirs of the grantor and the attorneys and accountants who get paid
to structure the plan and prepare the documents.
Since most any type of entities and/or contract
relationships (assuming their implementation is achieved consistent with
the necessary pre-requisites of economic substance), are available to achieve
a variety of income and estate tax savings objectives, it will be up to
your legal counsel or tax advisor to help you understand the nature and
significance of each entity and/or relationship, and to help you to select
the plan that meets all of your criteria that also maintains compliance
with applicable rules and regulations. Once you commence sophisticated
estate and tax planning, as with asset protection and preservation techniques,
there are no "canned" formats to achieve your ultimate objectives. At that
point, estate and tax planning and asset protection and preservation planning
may become one and the same. The unique nature of your financial holdings,
their tax basis, your family situation, anticipated inheritance, your trade
or business, among other factors, and your unique family, tax, economic
and creditor objectives and concerns must be integrated into a tailored
plan, that can achieve your ultimate goals and objectives.
IV. Asset
Accumulation and Preservation
This formidable topic can only be briefly addressed
in this small amount of space. As alluded to in other parts of this Article,
a balanced portfolio is most practical. Each type of investment creates
its own tax consequence, risk of depreciation and benefit of appreciation
and/or interest income. There are generally no magic answers or secrets
that are being withheld that you can possible become privy to by hiring
the right investment advisor. If you do come across an advisor or salesman
trying to sell you one, ask yourself, "Why is he or she sharing with me
such an opportunity?"
I know that if I had the secret to making millions,
I would not be busy sharing it with others, I would be working my closest
friends and families to generate the millions.
Recognize that the investment markets are "smart".
Unless you are on the "inside", and/or are willing to risk going to jail,
you have to assume that you will not find the lucky tip of the century.
There are laws that put people in jail if they share inside information,
or use inside information for their own benefit.
As far as investment advice is concerned, when
Warren Buffet speaks, people listen. You should too. Alternatively, find
a broker or investment advisor who has the ability to evaluate investments
in a similar manner.
This not to say that the quick kill or lucky investment
will not pan out. Just understand the risks relative to the loss opportunities
of making sound investments.
As attorneys, we have seen the asset accumulations
and appreciations come through:
-
inheritance
-
incentive employee stock compensation arrangements
-
high risk oil and gas investments
-
venture capital
-
lucky stock picks
-
becoming a "superstar" or best selling author or
musician
-
the lawsuit judgment in the sky
-
sale of one's business through an IPO, or in a private
sale
-
a golden parachute to a company executive
-
steady savings and sound investment
-
development and sale or licensing of new technology
or business idea
-
working a new business opportunity
-
convincing others to invest in a great business opportunity
-
brokerage of a business deal
-
real estate transactions from the "go-go" real estate
days, when President Reagan deregulated the savings and loan industry,
among others
You may want to add to this list and evaluate
where your own potential for asset appreciation and accumulation can be
found. My recommendation is that you highlight the ones that you can easily
do, and do them. This will always be steady
savings and sound investment. With
respect any others that may be within reach, pick those closest to your
personality and talent and develop a business plan. You have to have a
good attitude and be able to enjoy pursuing the plan.
Try to stay away from emotional investments or
pursuits, unless in your heart it feels good whether or not it is profitable.
And of course, as you develop your plan and can
foresee the need for asset protection and tax planning, engage me to advise
you.
Good Luck.
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AssetLaw is a proprietary mark of Stephens &
Kray
Changes last made on: January
1, 2002