Family Business Planning in High Gear
Posted by Robert Louis on 18 Nov 2009 | Tagged as: Family Business
The combination of continued low interest rates, a struggling economy and uncertainty about taxes makes planning important right now.
IRS interest rates used in valuing various kinds of gifting techniques fell again in November, making the use of Grantor Retained Annuity Trusts, for example, more valuable. And compared to the situation a few years ago, they are far more effective. Many commentators suggest that interest rates will begin to rise, and it’s difficult to see how they could go any lower. Eventually, we’ll return to an interest rate regime that is closer to normal, if we still know what normal is. The hope is that rates don’t fly past normal to the levels seen in the late 1970s. But for now, methods of transferring business interests, which are generally done within family units, are more efficient with the current historic low rates.
Valuations of business interests are also low right now. Few businesses have escaped the economic downturn. A valuation done now will certainly emphasize the most recent past, and that will lead to lower valuations. Lower valuations mean that more business interests can be transferred within the constraints of the limits imposed by the federal gift tax. Lower interest rates also lead to lower valuations. Many believe that the recession has ended, and that there is reason for belief that next year will bring a strong recovery. That is, of course, similar to what President Hoover said in 1930, but perhaps history won’t repeat. But right now, for most businesses, valuations have probably hit lows that won’t be seen again for many years. So healthy businesses suffering a cyclical downturn are ideal candidates for transfers right now.
The bizarre result enacted into the federal estate tax law, repeal for 2010 and then a return of the tax at higher rates and a lower exemption in 2011, is now about six weeks away. No one believed that this taxation scheme made any sense, or that Congress wouldn’t fix it long before now. We now hear discussion of a one-year fix in the statute, continuing the 2009 law into 2010. But that needs to happen soon. And, although there have been some general proposals regarding changes in the federal estate, gift and income tax law, we have yet to see anything really concrete from the administration. It might be that change is coming in 2010, but for now we have the existing law, with many good planning techniques, intact. So, for a third reason, balancing the certainty of current law against the uncertain future, now is the time for family business planning.
Reprinted from the Legal Intelligencer
Comments Off