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Posts Tagged ‘Financial Planning’
Tuesday, December 28th, 2010
The president and Congress have finally agreed on a tax law…for now. President Obama signed a tax plan that includes new guidelines for the estate tax, but only for the next two years. Congress will have to revisit the tax plan before 2013.
The law includes a historically high exemption of $5 million per individual, and anything over that threshold will be taxed at a historically low rate of 35 percent. Furthermore, the law once against marries the gift tax to the estate tax, so the exemption and tax rate for gifts made after Dec. 31, 2010 will be equal to the applicable estate taxation.
Additionally, the estates of post-Dec. 31, 2010 decedents have the option to transfer any remainder of $5 million exemption to their surviving spouse.
But what matters for the estates of those who died this year is the decision between taking advantage of the zero-percent tax rate of 2010, or electing to file the final tax returns under the new 2011 law.
While a zero-percent tax rate is awfully attractive, under the 2010 law, heirs are required to pay capital gains on inherited assets over $1.3 million, or surviving spouses inheriting over $3 million. Under the 2011 law, these inheritances would be covered under the $5 million exemption.
Any change in rules can be confusing, but if you have questions about handling a 2010 estate or planning your estate for the next two years under the new tax law, I urge you to get in touch with your estate planning attorney.
James D. Perry
Tags: Anaheim, California, Estate Planning, Estate Planning Lawyer, Estate Tax, estates, Financial Planning, Garden Grove, Gifting, Orange, Orange County, Santa Ana, Tustin Posted in Estate Planning, Estate Tax, Financial Planning | No Comments »
Tuesday, December 21st, 2010
2010 has been a financially rough year for much of America. But many non-profit organizations still say they’ve seen a small increase in charitable giving this year over 2009 numbers.
If you’re in the financial position to give this year, you have a lot of opportunities to do so. Solicitations are everywhere, including direct mail, in churches and community centers, and outside shopping malls and stores. The question then becomes how to divvy up your charitable resources.
The New York Times’ Ron Lieber suggests you first examine “Why” you want to give before tackling the “Where” and “When.”
Why do you give? Do you have a personal connection to a particular charitable cause or feel a responsibility for supporting an organization’s mission? We can all agree that breast cancer research is important, but if it hasn’t touched your life, perhaps you’d rather support animal welfare or after-school education programs.
Once you’ve decided what causes you want to support, you’ll need to determine exactly to what organizations you’re going to give.
Do your research on charitable organizations to see who will use your money most efficiently. Websites such as Guide Star and Charity Navigator provide givers with tools to make informed decisions and tips for charitable giving.
Finally, if you want to give, don’t make a hasty decision just because the deadline for 2010 charitable tax deductions is looming. If you feel you can’t make an informed decision this month, you might want to just roll over your charitable budget into 2011 where you can spread the wealth throughout the year.
‘Tis the season for giving. But, give with purpose and put your money to good use.
James D. Perry
Tags: Anaheim, California, Estate Planning Lawyer, Estate Tax, Financial Planning, Garden Grove, Gifting, Orange, Orange County, Santa Ana, Tustin Posted in Estate Tax, Financial Planning, Gifting | No Comments »
Tuesday, December 14th, 2010
Christmas may be coming early for estate planners with Congress finally making moves to answer our tax questions.
Last year, Congress hemmed and hawed over the estate tax, but ultimately failed to act. On Jan. 1 of this year, the tax lapsed for one year per Bush-era tax cuts, but was expected to return in 2011 at Clinton-era levels: 55 percent tax rate with the first $1 million in property exempted.
All year, we’ve been waiting to hear whether the government would reinstate the tax, at what rate, and when it would go into effect.
The current bill in the Senate represents a compromise struck by President Obama and Republican leadership. It reinstates the estate tax on Jan. 1, 2011 at a 35 percent rate and a $5 million exemption per individual for two years. In 2013, the law would sunset and we’ll be looking at a 55 percent rate and $1 million exemption.
It also gives the executor of a 2010 estate a choice on whether to file their last tax returns under the 2010 or the 2011 rules. Because of 2010 changes to capital gains taxes, which value assets at their original acquisition cost rather than today’s assessed value, some estates may fare better under the 2011 rules than the 2010 rules.
The Senate bill has already met some opposition from House Democrats who would rather see a 45 percent rate and a $3.5 million exemption – as it was in 2009. But Congress-watchers warn that such an amendment would surely be rejected by the Senate.
The new year is only 16 days away (as of Dec. 15). Here’s hoping Santa brings us some tax predictability in 2011.
James D. Perry
Tags: Anaheim, California, Estate Planning, Estate Tax, Financial Planning, Garden Grove, Orange, Orange County, Santa Ana, Tustin Posted in Estate Planning, Estate Tax, Financial Planning | No Comments »
Wednesday, November 24th, 2010
News of MetLife jumping ship on the long-term care insurance market has left people panicking or shrugging their shoulders. Either the fear is growing over how to handle future costs of long-term care, or people are continuing to deny that they’ll ever need it. This week, we’re looking at some of the realities of long-term care insurance from the eyes of a Long Term Care Insurance broker and a Certified Financial Planner.
Don Burkhead, a long-term care insurance broker says that one of the reasons people don’t invest in long-term care insurance is because they think, “This can’t happen to me.”
“Over the last ten years I have seen a steady decline in the number of companies offering LTCI,” he says. “It is a very difficult insurance for companies to profitably underwrite due to the unpredictability and changes in the previous assumptions about future costs, longevity and claim rates.”
Fortunately for me, I listened to Don eight or nine years ago and purchased a long-term care policy for myself from Genworth Insurance. I received my premium renewal notice this week, and for the ninth straight year, I had no increase. Unfortunately, according to Don, that may change next year. Genworth has put in for an 18% increase for some California policyholders with the state insurance commissioner.
Certified Financial Planner Delia Fernandez points out that every type of insurance has rising premiums, unless you buy a fixed-premium life insurance policy. She believes that people are much more sensitive toward LTC premiums rising “because it can be so scary to think about not being able to afford the coverage right when you need it the most.”
Yes, long-term care insurance can be expensive, and premiums are going up. In fact, in the past, claims were unpredictable and insurance companies were grossly undercharging for the value of coverage. Meanwhile, health care costs are rising each year.
Delia suggests you run two scenarios when planning your retirement: one where you live to 100 with no long-term care costs, and the other where you expect to need at least 3 years or more of long term care at about $60,000 per year. If you can still afford to retire with that $180,000 figure looming, you probably don’t need to worry. But if you can’t, Fernandez suggests you consider your alternatives.
Just like any insurance plan, — be it health, life, home, or car insurance – the contrast between the premiums and the actual costs associated is stark. No matter how you slice it, long-term care insurance is likely going to be cheaper than out-of-pocket costs for care.
If you are thinking about LTC insurance, be sure to work with a good agent who understands the market and providers in your area. Clearly some companies are more committed to the LTC market than others.
James D. Perry
Tags: Anaheim, California, Financial Planning, Garden Grove, Insurance, Long-Term Care, Orange, Orange County, Santa Ana, Tustin Posted in Elder Care, Financial Planning, Long-Term Care | No Comments »
Monday, November 15th, 2010
There has been much news in recent days about the need for Long Term Care (LTC) Insurance and the recent reports of large increases in premiums and big insurance companies announcing that they will not sell any new policies.
The subject deserves more time and space than one blog article, so today I will touch on the need. I will follow this blog next week with interviews with Long Term Care Insurance Brokers and Financial Planners discussing the problems the LTC insurance industry is going through.
People are living longer these days, but the human body still continues to break down. As such, more and more seniors – an estimated 9 million in 2008 – need long-term care. But do you need long-term care insurance? It’s a smart way to defray the enormous costs of care, but really, it depends.
Premiums this year cost individuals an annual average of $2,180, but the average rate this year for a private nursing home room is $229 per night, or $83,585 a year, and the average rate for a home healthcare aide is $21 per hour. The New York Times had an article last week (“Ignore Long-Term Care Planning at Your Peril”) reporting that some major long-term care insurance companies are looking to raise premiums by as much as 40 percent. And, the longer you wait the more likely rates will rise, and the older you get, more likely you’ll develop a so-called pre-existing condition that affects plan availability and premiums.
There is a misconception that Medicare will cover long-term care costs. While Medicare may pay for short-term nursing home stays in certain circumstances (for example, while you are convalescing after surgery or undergoing rehabilitation after a qualified hospital stay), it will not pay for long-term care. And, Medicaid will cover nursing home costs, but only after you’ve expended most of your own finances, and then your access and options in care providers becomes severely limited.
The new Class Act, passed under the health care bill, provides long-term care insurance through the government, but enrollment doesn’t start until 2012 and benefits aren’t likely to exceed $100 a day and then only after you’ve paid premiums for 5 years prior. However, it may be easier to qualify under the Class Act, as some private plans won’t cover care for certain pre-existing conditions.
One up-side is that there are tax breaks available for qualified long-term care insurance premiums where benefits received under such policies are tax-free.
So, how likely are you to need care to make purchasing an insurance plan worth it? It largely depends on your family’s health history and your financial situation. If you’re at risk for a serious illness that requires regular care, and you want to leave something to your children or grandchildren upon your death, it’s probably smart to at least investigate the specifics of a LTC policy.
Next time, update on the Long Term Care Policies and Insurance Companies.
James D. Perry
Tags: Anaheim, California, Elder Care, Estate Planning, Estate Planning Lawyer, Financial Planning, Garden Grove, Insurance, Long-Term Care, Medicare, Nursing Homes, Orange, Orange County, Probate, Santa Ana, Tustin Posted in Elder Care, Financial Planning, Long-Term Care, Medicare | No Comments »
Thursday, October 28th, 2010
Over my years of practice, I’ve seen an increase in the number of women looking to create an estate plan.
Estate planning is important for women because they have a greater likelihood of ending up alone later in life. Women have a longer life expectancy than men and tend to marry older men often making them the final word on disposition of family assets.
In my own case, I had the good fortune to convince my wife Patricia to marry me, despite the fact that I am six years older. As a bonus for me, she loves to cook and bought me my first order of “Grecian Formula” which “restores lost color to graying hair naturally.”
Deborah Jacobs, writing for Forbes Magazine, suggests that women ask themselves a few important questions to help them craft their best estate plan, inclusive of powers of attorney, guardianship, life insurance, wills, and trusts.
1. Whom can you trust? You should have a durable power of attorney giving a trusted family member or close friend the legal authority to make decisions for you should you become incapacitated due to mental illness, medical emergency, or accident.
2. Who would raise your children? It’s often the hardest question to ask because the thought of orphaning your children is so painful. But not asking the hard questions can leave your children at the mercy of the court. If you haven’t named a guardian, the court will need to name one. This can lead to a custody battle between relatives wanting to take the children, or, the reverse, no one may want to take them.
3. Do you have life insurance? Life insurance can help replace lost income when a spouse dies, or it may cover state or federal estate taxes. If you have life insurance through your employer or a pension plan, be sure to keep your beneficiary forms updated. You may want to designate a family member as the owner of the policy to avoid the proceeds being taxed as part of your estate.
4. Do you have assets of your own? The estate tax applies to each person individually. California is a community property state, so property that is used jointly in the marriage (e.g., the marital home or a joint bank account) is presumed to be community property. If you are trying to balance the tax burden, you may need to transfer title to one spouse individually. Otherwise, you may be rebutting the community property presumption in court.
5. Is there money in the bank? If your spouse dies, you will not have access right away to his individual bank accounts. You want to be sure that there is enough money in joint accounts or separate accounts to which you have access to cover immediate expenses until the spouse’s estate is settled.
6. Should you shed assets to save taxes? Before you start giving away the farm, you need to make sure you have enough money for yourself to live and pay emergency or final expenses. You can give away as much as $13,000 individually per year tax free, $1 million over your lifetime. This year is an anomaly in estate taxation (0% on estates, 35% on gifts), but starting Jan. 1, 2011, unless Congress acts, you will be paying the death tax and the gift tax at a rate of 55%.
There are a great number of estate planning and financial planning vehicles you can employ to transfer assets prior to and after death and to lower your tax bill. Take stock of your goals and your financial reality, and then talk to your estate planning attorney.
James D. Perry
Tags: Anaheim, California, Estate Planning, Estate Planning Lawyer, Estate Tax, Financial Planning, Garden Grove, Orange, Orange County, Santa Ana, trusts, Tustin, wills Posted in Estate Planning, Financial Planning, wills | No Comments »
Wednesday, October 13th, 2010
2010 is not only the year to die; it’s also the year to give.
As it stands now, an individual can give away up to $13,000 tax free this year as part of his or her $1 million lifetime maximum. But anything over that $13,000 will only be taxed at a rate of 35% — an historic low.
There is still some trepidation among estate planning attorneys as to how to advise their clients to prepare for the 2011 estate tax. Congress hasn’t made any moves to reinstate the estate tax for this year or to write new laws governing the tax rates for the coming years, and with the 111th session coming to a close, it’s looking less and less likely that they will.
Until new laws are passed, or until Jan. 1 when the old laws return, millions of Americans are set to enjoy the benefit of a 0% estate tax rate for 2010.
But, on Jan. 1, the estate tax rate and the gift tax rate will jump to 55%. Traditionally, the estate tax and the gift tax rates have matched because Congress didn’t want people ducking the IRS by giving away their entire estates prior to their death.
Christmas is only 63 days away. This year, at least, giving away some of your fortune may also end up being a gift to yourself.
James D. Perry
Tags: Anaheim, California, Estate Planning, Estate Planning Lawyer, Estate Tax, Financial Planning, Garden Grove, Gifting, Orange, Orange County, Santa Ana, Tustin Posted in Estate Planning, Estate Tax, Financial Planning, Gifting | No Comments »
Thursday, September 30th, 2010
One of the most frequent questions I get from my clients is “Why should I spend the money to create a trust?”
The easiest answer to that question is that for the price you pay now, you save far more money down the road. But that answer doesn’t satisfy everyone. So here is one serious money-sucking situation that might make you think twice before dismissing your need for a trust.
In the event of your incapacity, the court may impose a conservatorship because the individual can no longer handle his or her own finances. Anytime you have to initiate court proceedings, you’re looking at a significant investment of time and money – more of both if the proceedings are contentious.
Also, nearly anyone can petition the court to become your conservator if they can show that you no longer have the capacity to manage your affairs. We have seen this most recently where an advocacy group for child actors, A Minor Consideration, petitioned the court to take control of the finances for the 14 children of OctoMom, Nadya Suleman. An Orange County judge has given the green light to the group to proceed with their case.
However, you might become incapacitated for any number of reasons in your life having nothing to do with the Hollywood scene, including dementia, illness, disease, or accident.
By creating a revocable living trust, you designate ahead of time a successor trustee who you want to be in charge of your affairs should you become incapacitated. Moreover, you can designate exactly what property that person can control and choose different individuals to manage multiple assets. Most people transfer the title to their house into a living trust so that the successor trustee would be able to manage the affairs of the home.
Your life is probably not as crazy as the OctoMom’s, and you may never have Lindsay Lohan or Britney Spears’ problems (both have battled conservator petitions in court), but you may one day be struck by Alzheimer’s disease, or an accident or illness resulting in a coma, any one of a number of mundane real life disasters that strike regular people.
You and your estate planning attorney have tools available to prevent confusion in your family and keep them from fighting for control should you become incapacitated.
James D. Perry
Tags: Anaheim, California, Celebrities, Conservatorships, Elder Care, Estate Planning, Estate Planning Lawyer, Financial Planning, Garden Grove, octuplets, Orange, Orange County, Santa Ana, trusts, Tustin Posted in Estate Planning, Financial Planning, Living Trusts | No Comments »
Thursday, September 2nd, 2010
Late-in-life second marriages are becoming commonplace in American society, and with it, anxiety has been rising among stepchildren. Estate planning lawyers have had to pay greater attention to the particular concerns and needs of blended families because also becoming more common is the courtroom brawls between stepparents and stepchildren and stepsiblings.
The first concern I hear from clients is often related to the financial security of the parents. If Mom moved into Stepdad’s home, what’s to keep Stepdad’s kids from kicking her out of the house if Stepdad were to die first?
The second concern is for the adult children’s prospective inheritance from their natural parent. Many state elective share laws dictate that when a person dies, the spouse naturally inherits a certain share of the estate, which will certainly cut into how much, if any, is left to the decedent’s natural children after the spouse dies.
In California, community property laws can be both a blessing and a nightmare for the adult children of a blended family. On one hand, generally, a surviving spouse doesn’t have a claim over to any property or account kept separately and in the deceased’s name.
However, any property that was held jointly (i.e., homes, common bank accounts) is presumed to be community property and, unless that presumption is rebutted in court, it passes entirely to the surviving spouse. And, even separate property may pass in whole or in part to the surviving spouse if the deceased partner leaves no will.
Older adults bring a greater amount of personal wealth into new relationships and, experts say, they are more practical about the financial realities their late-in-life marriage presents.
A prenuptial or postnuptial agreement can keep Mom in the house owned by Stepdad until her death at which point it passes solely to his children. Keeping property separate in trust accounts can prevent it from being transmuted into community property. And a clause inserted into Dad’s will can ensure that the separate property in his name passes to his children, not his spouse upon his death.
After you die, you could either be rolling in your grave because of the nasty legal battle you left your blended family or resting in peace.
James D. Perry
Tags: Anaheim, blended families, California, Estate Planning, Estate Planning Lawyer, estates, Financial Planning, Garden Grove, Orange, Orange County, Probate, Santa Ana, trusts, Tustin, wills Posted in Estate Administration, Estate Planning, Financial Planning, Living Trusts, Living Wills, Probate, wills | No Comments »
Thursday, August 12th, 2010
Open the newspaper and on any given day you can find a cautionary tale of an elderly person losing thousands of dollars to his or her caretaker, a scam artist, or some final friend.
The sad fact is that the elderly make easy targets of financial abuse, and you may be their first line of defense against scammers. If you have a parent over the age of 70, you should have a conversation with him or her about what would happen if they could no longer manage money.
Approach your parent respectfully, asking permission to talk about the subject. Your parent is likely to feel vulnerable – relinquishing money means relinquishing control.
You’ll want your parent to sign a durable power of attorney. And, if your parent is already showing signs of mental impairment, you need to act fast. A durable power of attorney must be signed and notarized while your parent is still competent.
If possible, you should include the whole family in the conversation and decision-making. Put all agreements in writing so that there is no argument or second-guessing.
If you already are in charge of your parent’s bank accounts, try not to micromanage. If possible, keep just enough for monthly expenses in a joint checking account and protect the rest in another account. Pay the bills together or help your parent set up automatic bill-pay to prevent forgotten bills.
The change in power can be a tough, emotional transition, but you don’t want to put off protecting your loved ones.
James D. Perry
Tags: Anaheim, California, elder abuse scams, Elder Care, Financial Planning, Garden Grove, Orange, Orange County, Santa Ana, trusts, Tustin Posted in Elder Abuse, Elder Care, Financial Planning, Living Trusts | No Comments »
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