Berkshire Giveaway

by Kenneth Hoffman in , ,


Someday, the financial wizards who run things on Wall Street will realize there's "paper to be stacked" opening an Investor Hall of Fame. (Hey, the Rock and Roll Hall makes $40 million a year, and it's in Cleveland.) And when they do, they'll have to dedicate an entire wing to Warren Buffett. The so-called "Oracle of Omaha" has become a rock star among money managers. His chart-topping net worth soared by $37 million per day last year. And his annual Berkshire Hathaway shareholder meeting attracted 40,000 attendees this spring, making it the Burning Man Festival for the cocktail set.

Buffett affects a folksy style, posing for photos with a ukelele and quipping that Wall Street is the only place where people drive Rolls-Royces to get advice from people who ride the subway. But he didn't get to be #2 on the Forbes 400 by being dumb — and this is true with taxes, too. Buffett has made headlines criticizing the carnival of confusion that passes for the "Internal Revenue Code" for taxing his secretary at a higher rate than it taxes him. But his actions show a keen grasp of the power of smart tax planning.

Let's take a look at Buffett's charitable giving. Now, there's no doubt that his motives are sincere — he's pledged to give a whopping 99% of his fortune to charity. But his generosity may have the side benefit of saving him $30 billion or more in tax.

So far this year, Buffett has donated $2.8 billion, including $2.1 billion to the Gates Foundation, $215 million to the Susan Thompson Buffett Foundation, and $150 million each to the Howard G. Buffett Foundation, the Sherwood Foundation, and the NoVo Foundation. But those gifts didn't really "cost" him $2.8 billion. That's because he didn't give cash — he gave Berkshire Hathaway stock. Donating appreciated stock lets Buffett deduct the fair market value of that stock at the time of the gift, even though his "cost basis" — or actual investment in it — is likely to be far, far less. Giving away appreciated stock also lets him avoid tax on the appreciation in that stock.

Let's say Buffett's basis in this year's gift stock was an even billion dollars. (It's probably even less, but who's counting?) If Buffet had sold the stock at a $1.8 billion gain, then given cash, he would have had to pay $712,800,000 in regular tax, plus another $68,400,000 in "net investment income tax." Giving appreciated stock directly, then letting the charities sell it, boosts his largesse by nearly $800 million — money that Buffett evidently thinks his charities can spend better than the folks in Washington.

Buffett probably won't ever "retire" in the go-fishing-in-Florida-and-eat-dinner-at-4 sense of the word. But at some point, he'll get promoted to that great boardroom in the sky. That's when his charity will really sidestep our friends at the IRS. Buffett could set up his heirs for generations to come. But with a 40% estate tax, leaving his current net worth of $58.5 billion to family would cost $23.4 billion in tax. Leaving his wealth to charity avoids that hit. And it spares the rest of us decades of reality TV about spoiled, dissolute heirs — their gilded lifestyles, their trips to rehab, and their endless Paris Hilton-esque shenanigans.

We realize you don't have billions to give like Buffett. But if you're one of the millions of Americans who admire his business wisdom, take a lesson from his tax wisdom as well. And call us before you make any sort of major gift, to your church, your college, or your community. We'll help you structure it to squeeze out the maximum advantage. You can be sure Warren Buffett would approve!

Let's Talk! For a deeper conversation on our services, or to become a client, call Kenneth Hoffman at (954) 591-8290 Monday - Friday for a no cost consultation, or drop me a note.

Kenneth Hoffman of K.R. Hoffman & Co., LLC is a highly sought after tax and business counselor. As a trusted senior advisor and counselor working closely with Entrepreneurs, Professionals and Select Individuals, Mr. Hoffman provides counsel to his clients who are navigating through the complexity of today's business, tax, and accounting challenges.

Click here to schedule an appointment with Kenneth Hoffman.

If you found this article helpful, I invite you to leave a comment and  please share it on twitter, facebook or your favorite social media site and  with your friends, family and colleagues. Thank you.

I truly value your business and I appreciate your referrals. Refer your family, friends, acquaintances, and business colleagues to KR Hoffman & Co., LLC. 

Follow us on Twitter at @TaxReturnCoach, and let us know how we're doing.


Really?

by Kenneth Hoffman in , ,


Why did Willie Sutton rob banks? Because that's where the money is, of course. Why does the IRS focus its attention on income taxes? Same reason! For fiscal 2014, they expect to collect $3 trillion in taxes: $1.4 trillion in individual income taxes, $1.0 trillion in Social Security and Medicare, $332.7 billion in corporate income tax, $154 billion in transportation and excise taxes, and "just" $15 billion in gift & estate taxes. Three trillion dollars sounds like it ought to be enough to finance the government. But of course it's not. So our friends in Washington are constantly searching for more change in the national couch cushions. (Value-added tax, anyone? Carbon tax?) And now it looks like they may have found the mother lode. Would you believe they're finally coming after your frequent flyer miles?

The first frequent-flyer program took off back in 1972. Since then, nearly every airline has launched one, and hotel chains have climbed aboard, too. Loyalty programs are so popular that over half of all credit card purchases made in the U.S. are made with cards tied to loyalty programs. That's especially astonishing when you consider how cramped the airlines have made their seats and how many "junk fees" they've loaded up on — for checked bags, overhead bin space, curbside check-in . . . the list goes on and on. (Michael O'Leary, head of Ireland's Ryanair, actually proposed charging to use the loo.)
 

The IRS recognizes six kinds of frequent flyer miles, and taxes them according to how you receive them. These include:

  1. Miles awarded for travel (nontaxable)
  2. Miles awarded for credit card use (nontaxable)
  3. Miles awarded in connection with business travel (nontaxable but mainly because it would be too hard to track)
  4. Miles awarded for opening an account (taxable)
  5. Miles awarded for putting money in a mutual fund (which reduces your tax basis in the fund)
  6. Miles awarded as prizes (taxable)

For the most part, those rules make sense. (Would it really be worth the hassle to require business travelers to report the value of frequent-flyer points they redeem for personal travel?) But now it appears that change is on the radar. Last August, the Service released its 2013-2014 "Priority Guidance Plan" that included a project modifying the accounting rules for loyalty programs. And last month, a group of four major travel associations sent a letter to Treasury Secretary Jack Lew urging him to reject any changes to those rules.
 

It may be that changing the way the IRS treats loyalty programs at the airline level doesn't necessarily mean taxing the awards they grant their members. But does anyone doubt that airlines — who now charge for luxuries like pillows and blankets — will pass any new tax costs through to passengers? (If we're lucky, the new tax will arrive as late as your last flight did!)

We realize the prospect of taxing your frequent flyer miles doesn't keep you awake at night. But make no mistake about it, Washington is looking for new ways to pay for government. Pilots never take off without filing a flight plan — so why would you try to manage your finances without a tax plan? Call us for that plan, and you might be upgrading your next seat to first class!


Let's Talk! For a deeper conversation on our services, or to become a client, call Kenneth Hoffman at (954) 591-8290 Monday - Friday for a no cost consultation, or drop me a note.

Kenneth Hoffman of K.R. Hoffman & Co., LLC is a highly sought after tax and business counselor. As a trusted senior advisor and counselor working closely with Entrepreneurs, Professionals and Select Individuals, Mr. Hoffman provides counsel to his clients who are navigating through the complexity of today's business, tax, and accounting challenges.

Click here to schedule an appointment with Kenneth Hoffman.

If you found this article helpful, I invite you to leave a comment and  please share it on twitter, facebook or your favorite social media site and  with your friends, family and colleagues. Thank you.

I truly value your business and I appreciate your referrals. Refer your family, friends, acquaintances, and business colleagues to KR Hoffman & Co., LLC. 

Follow us on Twitter at @TaxReturnCoach, and let us know how we're doing.


Eight Tips for Deducting Charitable Contributions

by Kenneth Hoffman in , , ,


Charitable contributions made to qualified organizations may help lower your tax bill. The IRS has put together the following eight tips to help ensure your contributions pay off on your tax return.

   1. If your goal is a legitimate tax deduction, then you must be giving to a qualified organization. Also, you cannot deduct contributions made to specific individuals, political organizations and candidates. See IRS Publication 526, Charitable Contributions, for rules on what constitutes a qualified organization.

     2. To deduct a charitable contribution, you must file Form 1040 and itemize deductions on Schedule A.

     3. If you receive a benefit because of your contribution such as merchandise, tickets to a ball game or other goods and services, then you can deduct only the amount that exceeds the fair market value of the benefit received.

     4. Donations of stock or other non-cash property are usually valued at the fair market value of the property. Clothing and household items must generally be in good used condition or better to be deductible. Special rules apply to vehicle donations.

     5. Fair market value is generally the price at which property would change hands between a willing buyer and a willing seller, neither having to buy or sell, and both having reasonable knowledge of all the relevant facts.

     6. Regardless of the amount, to deduct a contribution of cash, check, or other monetary gift, you must maintain a bank record, payroll deduction records or a written communication from the organization containing the name of the organization, the date of the contribution and amount of the contribution. For text message donations, a telephone bill will meet the record-keeping requirement if it shows the name of the receiving organization, the date of the contribution, and the amount given.

     7. To claim a deduction for contributions of cash or property equaling $250 or more you must have a bank record, payroll deduction records or a written acknowledgment from the qualified organization showing the amount of the cash and a description of any property contributed, and whether the organization provided any goods or services in exchange for the gift. One document may satisfy both the written communication requirement for monetary gifts and the written acknowledgement requirement for all contributions of $250 or more. If your total deduction for all noncash contributions for the year is over $500, you must complete and attach IRS Form 8283, Noncash Charitable Contributions, to your return.

     8. Taxpayers donating an item or a group of similar items valued at more than $5,000 must also complete Section B of Form 8283, which generally requires an appraisal by a qualified appraiser.

Kenneth Hoffman counsels Entrepreneurs, Professionals and Select Individuals in taking control of their taxes, and businesses. Discover how I can help you overcome your tax and business challenges. To start the conversation or to become a client, call Kenneth Hoffman at (954) 591-8290 Monday - Friday between 8:30 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. for a no cost consultation, or drop me a note.

If you found this article helpful,I invite you to leave a commit and  please share it on twitter, facebook or your favorite social media site and  with your friends, family and colleagues. Thank you.


Are Pastoral Accounts Income To Pastor?

by Kenneth Hoffman in , , ,


A recent Tax Court case held that amounts deposited into a “pastoral account” maintained by husband-and-wife pastors in the name of their unincorporated church were not deductible as charitable contributions. Gunkle v. Commissioner, TC Memo 2012-305(11/1/12), involved tax deficiencies levied against Bruce and Sherilyn Gunkle, two Texas ministers who formed and operated the City of Refuge Christian Fellowship (“CRCF”).

Bruce was a graduate of the US Naval Academy with a masters degree in theology from Antioch University. He and his wife served as pastors and conducted religious services for CRCF during the taxable year in question. Some 17 years earlier, Bruce had formed, and for a number of years headed, a qualified section 501(c)(3) organization with a similar name.

Acting on the advice of promoters (the Gardners) who were subsequently enjoined by a federal court from participation in an abusive tax shelter program promising unwarranted tax benefits from the use of a device they called a “corporation sole,” Bruce terminated his tax-exempt charity and formed CRCF as a corporation sole. This action was taken to permit the new entity to operate without interference by the government and corporate directors. Bruce and his wife took vows of poverty and CRCF agreed to “provide for all their needs as Apostle and as pastors of the church.” Those needs were to be met through funds placed by CRCF in a bank account known as their pastoral account. Deposits to the account were made by church members and nonmembers, and Bruce’s Social Security checks were also deposited therein.

The Gunkles had full control over that account, and wrote all of the checks drawn on the account, many of which were for groceries, car payments and other personal expenses. On their 2007 income tax returns, they did not report any income from CRCF. They claimed a deduction of $13,917 for charitable contributions, of which $8,926 was claimed for contributions to CRCF. That tax return was prepared and signed by Frederick Gardner, who had apparently masterminded the corporation sole scheme for CRCF.

The arrangement didn’t work out as planned. IRS disallowed the claimed charitable deductions, and charged the Gunkles with $63,000+ in unreported income The Tax Court agreed. Amounts deposited in the pastoral account were held taxable to the Gunkles as income, and the charitable deductions were disallowed because they retained control of those funds and benefited from them. They claimed, but failed to show, that CRCF had characteristics of a religious order. On top of all that, the court upheld the imposition of a penalty of $3,252.40 under Code §6662(a).

The Court noted that in very similar circumstances it held that deposits made into the account of a purported church were includable in the taxpayers' gross income where the taxpayers were the owners of the bank accounts, exercised complete control over the funds in the accounts, and used those funds for personal expenditures.

Source: Charitable Gift Planning News, Issue 2012-17 (Nov. 3, 2012)

Kenneth Hoffman counsels Entrepreneurs, Professionals and Select Individuals in taking control of their taxes, and businesses. Discover how I can help you overcome your tax and business challenges. To start the conversation or to become a client, call Kenneth Hoffman at (954) 591-8290 Monday - Friday between 8:30 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. for a no cost consultation, or drop me a note.

If you found this article helpful, I invite you to leave a commit and  please share it on twitter, facebook or your favorite social media site and  with your friends, family and colleagues. Thank you.


2011 Charitable Contributions

by Kenneth Hoffman in


Donors must deliver checks on or by December 31 in order to claim a charitable contribution deduction for 2011. Checks that are placed in the church offering during the first worship service in 2012 will not qualify for a charitable contribution deduction in 2011, even if the check is predated to 2011 or was actually written in 2011. However, checks that are written, mailed, and postmarked in 2011 will be deductible in 2011 though they are not received by a church until 2012.