NH Business Review May 22, 2020

Page 25

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MAY 22 - J U N E 4, 2020

Estate planning in a crisis Coronavirus has created opportunities worth evaluating

BY SCOTT LAVALLEY

The coronavirus crisis has cascaded through pretty much all areas of the financial world, leaving very few businesses unscathed. Uncertainty has always been the enemy of financial stability, and unfortunately, foundational questions about how long the recovery will take and what the future will look like post-crisis do not have clear answers. Understandably, this is a cause of worry and concern for many. We remain ever conscious of the devastating impact Covid-19 has had on families and our community, but if we allow ourselves to focus on a few areas of our lives that we can control, this crisis has created some estate and financial planning opportunities worth evaluating.

Unified credit While not a new opportunity, the unified credit against estate and gift tax remains a valuable estate-reduction tool that will likely be diminished in the not too distant future. In simple terms, the unified credit is the amount that an individual can pass to others during life or at death without generating any estate or gift tax and is currently $11,580,000 per person. On Jan. 1, 2026 (unless extended), the unified credit will automatically be reduced to approximately 50% of what it is today (with inflation adjustments). It is possible that due to the cost of the coronavirus bailout and/or if there is a change in the political leadership after the presidential election in November, the timetable for reduction in the unified credit may be accelerated. What’s more, the available credit could possibly be reduced by even more than 50%. This is all to say that if there is a concern about the impact of future estate tax on your estate, it makes sense to review options for utilizing your unified credit and consider making gifts today as opposed to waiting. Perhaps, at the very least, it may make sense for a married couple to utilize at least one available unified credit for a current gift. Finally, leveraging a unified credit today with advanced planning discount techniques and potentially reduced asset values as discussed below may provide a very valuable “once in a lifetime” opportunity to reduce future estate tax.

Reduced valuations For closely held business owners who wish to pass their business to the next generation, there is an opportunity today to gift all or a portion of your business,

today, at a value substantially lower than what it would have been pre-crisis. The chaos created in the financial marketplace will likely have a negative impact, at least temporarily, on most businesses and their resulting value. Future revenue and profit projections may be justifiably reduced from previous levels due to economic uncertainties resulting from Covid-19. Staffing challenges, temporary closings, shifting customer habits and supply chain disruptions all add to the uncertainty of many businesses’ future outlooks, thereby introducing a higher degree of risk (in valuation parlance, more risk results in a higher discount rate from which to apply to a business’s prospects). Finally, the market pricing of publicly traded businesses has come down substantially off their pre-crisis high. All these factors can lead to a lower valuation, which is very beneficial when attempting to transfer a business to the next generation with the minimum gift and estate tax impact.

Leverage low interest rates Today’s low rates make many advanced estate-planning “discount” techniques, such as Grantor Retained Annuity Trusts, Charitable Lead Annuity Trusts, intrafamily loans and Intentionally Defective Grantor Trusts, more attractive. The discount element that many of these techniques utilize is dependent on the government’s Sect. 7520 rate, which is closely tied to the one-month average of the market yields from marketable obligations, such as T-bills with maturities of three to nine years. For many of the discount planning techniques, the lower the Sect. 7520 rate, the greater the discount the technique provides.

‘Bargain price’ transfers The reduced value of stock portfolios and other assets, such as real estate, may provide an opportunity to gift at a reduced value. Again, nobody knows what the future will bring as far as the performance of the stock market, but the hope is that the market downturn is short-lived and that the market will recover and flourish in the future. Gifting at today’s lower values does present an opportunity to efficiently transfer assets out of your estate, while at the same time preserving estate tax credits and exclusions. Scott LaValley, managing director-financial planning for Baldwin & Clarke Advisory Services, can be reached at scottl@bcasi.net.

WEBINAR Marketing challenges in a rebounding economy Thursday, May 28, 2020 at 11 a.m. Maximize your marketing efforts as New Hampshire begins to reopen. This free webinar will cover public relations, content marketing, video, social media, email and paid advertising trends that marketers are succeeding with as businesses begin to welcome customers back.

Go to nhbr.com/nh-business-review-webinars/ to register and to watch our archived webinars. Sponsorship opportunities available — call 413-5154.


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Articles inside

Q&A Interview

3min
page 33

Recovery providers worry about meeting needs

3min
page 30

Hospitals adapt to changing workforce needs

4min
page 30

Work-at-home world faces increased data security risks

8min
pages 26-27

Estate planning in a crisis

3min
page 25

Uncertainty and turmoil do not mean ‘catastrophic’

4min
page 24

College-bound teens feeling impact of Covid-19

3min
page 22

Systemic change and ‘Future Shock’

2min
page 21

How health insurers are responding to Covid-19

3min
page 21

Intervention won’t lead to economic recovery

3min
page 20

Can New Hampshire really limit out-of-staters?

3min
page 20

Localities fear ‘long-term, significant’ fiscal impacts

5min
pages 1, 16

Helping nonprofits manage disruption

7min
pages 1, 15

Other irregular commencements

3min
page 14

Giving strategies to help NH through the crisis

3min
page 13

The benefits of Covid-19

3min
page 12

If you let them, will they reopen?

10min
pages 10-11

Life after Labor Day

3min
page 9

Controlled Fluidics reverse-engineers its way into the PPE market

1min
page 6

New Hampshire’s Covid unemployment rate tops 17%

1min
page 6

Business owners share worries with Shaheen over PPP provisions

2min
page 4

Bicycle shops’ inventory

2min
page 3

Lukewarm reception for Covid liability protection

2min
page 3
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