SELL YOUR COMPANY
AND PAY NO TAX!
By: Richard
M. Colombik, JD, CPA
Richard M. Colombik
& Associates, P.C.
630-250-5700
www.colombik.com
Your business
has matured, or your real estate has appreciated, time to cash out and
sell. It has taken a long time, and since you have held your shares
or real estate for greater than one year, the gain qualifies for long-term
capital gain taxation. A 15% federal tax rate; not bad!
Yet, 15% of
a $10,000,000 gain is $1,500,000. With a $20,000,000 gain it is
$3,000,000. That is an awful lot of money.
Is there a
way you can still sell the company and legally not pay any taxes today?
Can you not
pay taxes without running afoul of the Internal Revenue Service?
You spoke with
your accountant and your attorney, but they are telling you how great
it is that you are cashing out and capital gain rates are low, so why
not pay the tax?
But if you
pay $1,500,000 of tax, on a $10,000,000 gain, you have less money to
invest, than if you did not have to pay the tax. The investment
return on $1,500,000 at a municipal bond rate, now about 4%, is $60,000
a year. Ten years of investment return, without compounding interest
on $1,500,000, is $600,000. Do you want to give away that much
money?
Is there really
a legal way to avoid the tax???
Yes!
How?
A well established,
IRS approved technique, that is in the Internal Revenue Code, case law,
revenue rulings and treasury regulations is available. It is a
version of a conventional insurance product, an annuity, and it is normally
done privately, not through a commercial firm. Hence, it is called
a Private Annuity.
Let?s address
what an annuity is and how it works.
First, most
people are familiar with an insurance product called an annuity.
An annuity is a contract, generally with an insurance company, where
you provide the company a sum of money. The insurance company
agrees to make payments back to you over a set time frame. You
would decide when the payments would start and how the long the time
period they would continue for. You would also decide if the payments
would be measured by your life span, or by the life of yourself and
another, such as your spouse.
You would first
select a starting date for the annuity payments to be made to you.
If the payments begin immediately, this type of annuity is called an
immediate annuity. The payments, however, could begin at any point
in time you agree to, such as in five years, ten years, next week or
next month.
Next, you would
select how long the payments would continue for. If you want the
payments to continue for your life, the term is referred to as a single
life annuity. If you selected the measuring period for payments
to be you and a spouse, the term is referred to as a joint life annuity.
You could also select a specific time period, or a term certain, such
as ten years, twenty years or whatever term of years you require.
Each variable
as to the starting date, the amount of time the annuity will be paid
for, a certain term, versus a life time, a guaranteed return versus
a variable term, all will affect the amount of each payment you receive.
Annuities are
approved within IRC §72. It allows a person to transfer property
to another and receive back a stream of payments. Each payment
that you receive from the annuity company will contain two or sometimes
three components. The components are:
return
of principal (your cost basis);
capital
gain (depending on the property transferred); and
interest
or investment income.
Now that you
know this exists, why does this device allow your sale to incur no immediate
income tax?
What makes
this work is two factors:
- The creation of
an annuity usually is not a taxable event.
- Every payment of
the annuity has a fixed fractional component that consists of your taxable
gain, a portion that is your return of capital, and a portion that is
ordinary income.
Let?s apply
this to your hypothetical sale.
You transfer
$10,000,000 of stock or other asset, which cost you $100,000 (for example),
for a $10,000,000 annuity. At this point, you have a promise
to have money paid to you, but you have not received any money.
The company or party you transferred your shares or other assets to,
?the annuity company?, now owes you a $10,000,000 annuity.
Therefore, the annuity company?s cost basis in your shares or other
assets is $10,000,000, the amount they owe you.
The annuity
company now sells your shares or assets to the seller that you have
previously negotiated with to buy your shares or assets for $10,000,000.
The annuity company, not you personally, sells the assets for $10,000,000.
As the annuity company has a $10,000,000 basis, the amount it owes you,
the annuity company has no taxable gain as it sold the assets for the
same amount it agreed to pay you for such assets, $10,000,000.
You would have
no taxable gain, as the annuity company has not yet paid you for the
assets! Hence, the sale occurred, no tax has been paid and
$10,000,000 will be invested, with the principal and earnings available
to make annuity payments to you!
In a conventional
annuity, you would make a transfer of cash to an insurance company in
exchange for the insurance company?s promise to pay you back the funds,
with earnings in the future, the annuity. With a business or other asset
sale, you would transfer your company shares or other assets to a private
annuity company, possibly owned or controlled by younger generation
family members, in exchange for the annuity company?s promise to pay
you back the funds with earnings in the future. The promise and
annuity contract would be similar, whether the transfer is to a publicly
held insurance company or a private annuity company. But, with
a private annuity company, not only income tax savings can accrue, but
with the proper structure, estate tax savings can occur as well!
Also, a commercial annuity company will not generally accept closely
held corporate stock or real estate as a vehicle to fund an annuity.
A few words
of caution:
- The annuity must
be properly written;
- The interest rate,
fair market value, must be per IRS tables;
- The transfer of
assets and control must be actually made; and
- You can not control
the annuity company.
If you follow
the appropriate steps, have the transaction drafted by a tax law firm
familiar with how the structure operates, you can accomplish many goals,
save tax to boot, and not have the IRS looking over your shoulder!
Tax Planning
is not dead, but the IRS is trying to make it hard to find available
vehicles, but also the firms that are able to navigate their way through
the murky waters of the Internal Revenue Code!
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