Tag: IRA

Conference Call: What you need to know about the SECURE Act

New IRA rules benefit the living, but not so much their survivors. The May 2019 SECURE Act restricts the tax-advantage IRAs that were benefiting spouses, children, and even grandchildren. In a conference call today with McManus & Associates clients, the firm’s Founding Principal John O. McManus educates on the Act’s changes to IRAs and how estate planning strategies should be modified as a result. Listen to the discussion by hitting play, and review an overview of the discussion with the outline below.

1.    The SECURE Act is here.

The Setting Up Every Community for Retirement Enhancement (SECURE) Act was introduced to the U.S. House of Representatives by Rep. Richard Neal (D-MA) as H.R. 1994, where it was passed by a 417-3 vote in May, 2019. It was then attached to the Senate’s end-of-year appropriations act, and thereafter signed into law by President Trump right before the end of the year. It has officially taken effect with the start of 2020.

2.    The SECURE Act is being pitched as a means of making retirement more attainable for more Americans.

Lawmakers have prominently highlighted the delay of the beginning age for required minimum distributions from 70½ to 72 and the elimination of the prohibition on contributions to an IRA after age 70½.

3.    The touted benefits of the SECURE Act are derived from the termination of the “stretch” (at a potential cost to your family).

To offset the budgetary impact of these modifications, the Act ends the “stretch” provision of IRAs and 401(k) plans. This means that, with some exceptions, the distributions of IRAs and other qualified retirement plans must be made to beneficiaries within 10 years of the death of the participant, instead of over the beneficiary’s lifetime.

4.    This change now demands a shift in the estate planning best practices.

The benefits of designating grandchildren or significantly younger children as the beneficiaries of retirement accounts, rather than older, financially independent children, are significantly diminished because they will no longer benefit from tax-deferred growth over the course of their (longer) lifetimes.

5.    There are now increased concerns about the use of “conduit trusts” under a Will or Revocable Trust.

If you have implemented a conduit trust as part of your estate plan, the lump sum distribution of the retirement account in the tenth year exposes the net proceeds to marital issues, litigation, creditors, and other attacks.

6.    Consider an accumulation trust instead.

In most cases, it continues to be advisable to deploy an accumulation trust under a Will or Revocable Trust in order to best secure the proceeds of the retirement account from vulnerabilities.

7.    Charitable Remainder Trusts and retirement accounts.

Such trusts can help to reduce the tax consequences of a large income event when the account is required to terminate and, if the estate is subject to estate or inheritance tax, a deduction is available because a charity is the beneficiary when the Trust ends.

8.    Life Insurance as a means of mitigating the income tax fallout.

Life insurance can provide liquidity to pay the income tax at the final distribution in the tenth year or, in the case of a Charitable Remainder Trust, help to ensure that a legacy passes down to the grandchildren.

9.    Preparing heirs for the inheritance.

Since the SECURE Act so clearly affects your youngest, perhaps least financially independent heirs, these changes may present a teachable moment to better educate them about exposure to wealth they may inherit, issues that can dramatically impact an estate plan, and the importance of developing financial responsibility and other productive habits.

10. Review the benefits of a Roth IRA.

For many, especially those who may not need required minimum distributions for quality of life expenses, it may be worth performing a tax analysis to determine whether conversion to a Roth IRA will have a more meaningful wealth transfer impact for heirs.

McManus Weighs in on Self-Directed IRAs for NerdWallet

Andrea Coombes, whose stories on retirement, investing, taxes and other topics have appeared in the Wall Street Journal, MarketWatch, San Francisco Chronicle and other outlets, recently wrote an article on an investing strategy for the bold-hearted. Her piece, “Self-Directed IRAs: An Option for Expert Investors,” sheds light on the benefits and risks of self-directed IRAs.

Coombes spoke with McManus & Associated Founding Principal John O. McManus for his take. From the story:

The two main reasons investors take on the risks of self-directed IRAs are higher expected returns and the opportunity for diversification.

“If you understand investments, particularly in certain segments, you can take advantage of higher yields and maybe less volatility,” says John O. McManus, who has invested in real estate and other assets through a self-directed IRA for about 15 years. McManus founded the estate-planning firm McManus & Associates in New York and New Providence, New Jersey.

His self-directed IRA also lets McManus invest in companies that aren’t publicly traded, which “a mutual fund will not allow you to do,” he says. But, he warns, “This is not a game for the unsophisticated.”

Head over to NerdWallet to learn more about the advantages and drawbacks of self-directed IRAs. For guidance on your overall wealth management strategy, contact McManus & Associates at 908-898-0100.

Bankrate Relays Investment Ideas from McManus in Feature Slideshow

bankrate logoBankrate, which has more than 2.75 million readers, recently turned to McManus & Associates Founding Principal John O. McManus for advice on investments and IRAs. His thoughts are included in the publication’s feature slideshow, “Traditional or Roth IRA: Find out which IRA is better-suited for high-return investments.” From the slideshow:

Pay upfront, watch Roth explode later

Do you benefit from having an extra-long time horizon? Then going full throttle in the Roth IRA is apropos, says John O. McManus, founding principal of McManus & Associates in New York City.

“If you can take a long-term view, opt for a Roth IRA and take an aggressive approach with asset allocation and investing,” he says. “Roth IRAs buy you a lot more time to allow the market to recover, absent the mandatory distributions of traditional IRAs. Create a self-directed Roth IRA and pour significant capital in it to build horsepower. Then smartly pursue alternative investments to generate the biggest returns,” he says.

“Private equity and real estate are the 2 best areas where real leverage can be achieved with a Roth IRA. The idea is to pay your taxes up front, then really watch returns from your investments explode.”

“Wills, Trusts, and Estates Prof Blog” Highlights Latest Advice from McManus & Associates

Gerry W. Beyer

Gerry W. Beyer

Gerry Beyer, Professor of Law at Texas Tech Univ. School of Law, recently shared on his blog financial tactics and maintenance items related to estate planning to apply before 2014. “Wills, Trusts, and Estates Prof Blog” is a member of the Law Professor Blogs Network sponsored by Wolters Kluwer, and the list of tactics and maintenance items originally came from McManus & Associates. Here are the 10 estate planning questions to ask yourself before 2013:

  1. Should I change my estate plan before laws change in 2014?Jigsawquestion
  2. Is your partnership validly maintained?
  3. If making gifts to loved ones, are you exceeding your exemption amount?
  4. Are you employing the most current estate planning strategies?
  5. Are you making the most of income tax deductions?
  6. Do the fiduciaries named in your estate planning documents still reflect your wishes?
  7. Are you using the best strategies when making year-end charitable gifts?
  8. Are your cash donations from an IRA to charity being properly made?
  9. Should you consider using a GRAT or a QPRT?
  10. How should you harvest capital gains and time long-term losses?

Don’t miss our next free educational conference call, which will be held this month! Contact us for details at 908-898-0100.

New Jersey Newsroom: “A tax tip that can save you thousands”

Warren Boroson

Warren Boroson – author of more than 20 books, including “J.K. Lasser’s How to Pick Stocks Like Warren Buffett,” and whose articles have appeared in publications like Reader’s Digest and New York Times Magazine – recently turned to McManus & Associates Founding Principal and top AV-rated Attorney John O. McManus to talk strategies for the looming Fiscal Cliff and rising taxes that 2013 will likely bring.

Boroson’s article “A tax tip that can save you thousands,” published by New Jersey Newsroom, is based on John’s foresight and guidance. Here’s an excerpt:

The gift tax exemption will likely be reduced next year, so something that well-to-do people should consider doing, McManus suggests, is setting up a trust to put assets into, to protect those assets from Uncle Sam. These trusts will give you “flexibility, control, and access.”

To learn more about what you can expect in terms of gift-tax rates and tax benefits “when the battle about the so-called Fiscal Cliff is over,” check out Boroson’s full column to read John’s expert insight: http://www.newjerseynewsroom.com/economy/a-tax-tip-that-can-save-you-thousands