Archive for the ‘Tax Services’ Category

Making Your Family Business Your Legacy

Thursday, April 19th, 2012

Planning crucial to successful transition of family-owned companies

By Jason Thompson, Partner and Director of Valuation and Litigation Services

Like any successful entrepreneur, most business owners look upon their company as not just their livelihood, but as part of their identity. As they approach retirement, it’s a natural instinct to want to protect that legacy and pass it on to worthy successors. This desire can be complicated when the business in question is family-owned.

The thought of relinquishing control to the next generation of the family may seem reasonable when you’re looking far down the road. But when the day actually arrives, control is often the last “asset” owners are willing to part with.

Sponsel CPA Group has extensive experience with assisting the successful transition of family-owned businesses. Many of these clients are first-generation owners, but we also have some that are in the fourth generation of ownership succession.

The statistics can be alarming: most family businesses do not survive through the third generation of owners.

The initial generation of owners are often the most “transition” challenged, as they have no experience “passing the baton.” Subsequent generations tend to better understand the challenge of ownership transition because they have personally lived through that experience. They know what a successful transition looks like, and what pitfalls to avoid.

The challenge of successful family business ownership compounds when there are multiple generations and multiple lines of family descendants.

A succession strategy must address numerous areas, including management transition, financial transactions related to ownership transfers, and the ultimate question: when will control actually transfer?

In some cases, companies are transferred via “gifting” of shares of ownership from one generation to another. Right now is an excellent time to take advantage of the historically high limit of the Lifetime Gift Tax Exemption, currently at $5,120,000. Given the political turmoil in Washington, the future of this exemption amount is highly uncertain.

In addition to gifting, there are other strategies that can be utilized to transfer wealth while retaining control of the business. These options can be beneficial because value is transferred out of the owner’s estate, but he/she maintains control of the asset transferred – in this case, the family business.

If you are family-owned company and desire to perpetuate the enterprise, Sponsel CPA Group recommends the following steps:

  1. Communicate your exact desires directly with the future generation of owners, often and openly.
  2. Seek their feedback and reaction to your family succession plan for the business.
  3. Start the process early – at least 10 years before the elder generation wants to retire.
  4. Be open-minded about the direction the company may take after transition. The next generation could have more energy and inclination for implementing major changes to the business model.
  5. Provide the future business operators the benefit of your experience, but allow them to make their own mistakes – so long as they’re not fatal!
  6. Use professional advisors to assist in counseling sessions designed to discuss difficult issues and the financial aspects of the business, both in good times and economically challenging ones.
  7. Develop a plan to address family members who are not involved in the business.
  8. Actively engage in the process – before, during and after transition.

Often we encounter older business owners who do not have a succession plan in place because of a misguided desire to avoid family conflict. In fact, the opposite is true: dealing with the issue of transition while you are still among the living is more beneficial to familial harmony than leaving yours heirs to speculate what you wanted after you are gone.

Unfortunately, we have seen many families permanently and tragically divided over the settlement of estate and business ownership issues.

Become proactive in working with your trusted advisor (CPA, attorney, etc.) to develop a succession plan. Conduct family meetings to explain and implement a plan that is best for your family-owned company’s situation. And take the necessary steps to ensure your business becomes your lasting legacy.

If we can be of any assistance in helping your business with succession issues, please call Jason Thompson in our Valuation and Litigation Services department at (317) 608-6694 or email jthompson@sponselcpagroup.com.

Keeping You Informed on Indiana’s Tax Changes

Friday, December 9th, 2011

By Jennifer McNett, CPA
Manager, Tax Services

In 2011, Indiana’s lawmakers made several changes that affect income, sales and use taxes. Do any of these changes benefit or burden you? Here’s a quick summary of some of the key changes.

Several of the deductions that had been allowed on federal income tax returns in recent years will need to be added back on your Indiana return for 2011. Some of these include:

  • Deduction for distribution from an individual retirement plan paid directly to a charity.

  • Deduction for qualified tuition and fees.

  • Expenses of elementary and secondary school teachers.

  • Excess depreciation deduction for qualified leasehold improvement property classified as 15-year property (Indiana returns to treating as 39-year property).

  • Previously tax-exempt interest income from state and local obligations from outside Indiana (acquired after 12-31-11).

On the upside, there are some new deductions/credits available. These include:

  • A deduction of $1,000 per dependent who was enrolled in a private school or home-schooled (K-12) for tuition, fees, computer software, textbooks and school supplies.

  • A credit of 50% (limited to the current year tax liability) of the contribution to a Scholarship Granting Organization, such as the Educational CHOICE Charitable Trust or other approved SGOs.

Some other changes to note include:

  • Eliminated the net operating loss carryback after 12-31-11 for corporations and individuals.

  • Extended the time to protest an assessment from 45 days to 60 days.

  • Now allow voluntary withholding of state and local taxes from payments for unemployment compensation.

  • Eliminated the health benefit plan tax credit for employers providing health insurance to certain employees.

  • Eliminated the small employer qualified wellness program credit for employers offering a qualified wellness program to employees.

If you would like additional information on any of these changes, please contact Jennifer McNett at 317.613.7857 or jmcnett@sponselcpagroup.com.

IRS introduces an app for smartphones.

Wednesday, January 26th, 2011

 

Taxpayers can check the status of their refund and other information.

Click the link to check out an article in the Journal of Accountancy:

http://www.journalofaccountancy.com/Web/20113791.htm

The New Tax Law: What Does it Mean for You?

Tuesday, January 4th, 2011

In case you missed our update from Nick Hopkins back in December …here it is again:

On Dec. 17, President Obama signed into law the Tax Relief, Unemployment Insurance Reauthorization and Job Creation Act of 2010. This sweeping tax package includes, among many other items, an extension of the Bush-era tax cuts for two years; estate tax relief; a two-year “patch” of the alternative minimum tax (AMT); a two-percentage-point cut in employee-paid payroll taxes and in self-employment tax for 2011; new incentives to invest in machinery and equipment; and a host of retroactively resuscitated and extended tax breaks for individuals and businesses. Here’s a look at key elements of the package:
• Current income tax rates will remain in place for two years (2011 and 2012), with a top rate of 35% on ordinary income and 15% on qualified dividends and long-term capital gains.
• Employees and self-employed workers will receive a reduction of two percentage points in Social Security payroll tax in 2011, lowering the rate from 6.2% to 4.2% for employees, and from 12.4% to 10.4% for the self-employed.
• A two-year AMT “patch” for 2010 and 2011 will keep the AMT exemption near current levels and allow personal credits to offset AMT. Without this patch, an estimated 21 million additional taxpayers would have owed AMT for 2010.
• Key tax credits for working families that were enacted or expanded in the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (the “stimulus package”) will be retained. Specifically, the new law extends the $1,000 child tax credit and maintains its expanded refundability for two years; extends rules expanding the earned income tax credit (EITC) for larger families and married couples; and extends the higher education tax credit (the American Opportunity tax credit) and its partial refundability for two years.
• Businesses can write off 100% of their equipment and machinery purchases, effective for property placed in service after Sept. 8, 2010, through Dec. 31, 2011. For property placed in service in 2012, the new law provides for 50% additional first-year depreciation.
• Many of the “traditional” tax extenders will be extended for two years, retroactively to 2010 through the end of 2011. Among many others, the extended provisions include the election to take an itemized deduction for state and local general sales taxes in lieu of the itemized deduction for state and local income taxes; the $250 above-the-line deduction for certain expenses of elementary and secondary school teachers; and the research credit.
• After a one-year hiatus, the estate tax will be reinstated for 2011 and 2012, with a top rate of 35%. The exemption amount will be $5 million per individual in 2011 and will be indexed to inflation in following years. The estates of people who died in 2010 can choose to follow either 2010 or 2011 rules.
• Omitted from the new law: Repeal of a controversial expansion of Form 1099 reporting requirements.
• Also not included: Extension of the Build America Bonds program, which permits states and localities to issue federally subsidized municipal bonds.

Inside Indiana Business Reports On Better Ways to Provide Accounting Services

Thursday, March 18th, 2010

As some of you may have seen over the weekend, I was a guest on Gerry Dick’s Inside Indiana Business TV show. First of all, let me say “thank you” to Gerry and his team for inviting me to be a guest.

Gerry asked me why I am not focused on retirement, why after over three decades in the business did I choose to launch a new company.  The answer was quite simple – I knew there was a better and different way to provide accounting services.   Please view the entire video and my interview with Gerry Dick.

Sponsel CPA Group, located in downtown Indianapolis, is one of the region’s most experienced full service accounting firms. Providing much more than traditional accounting services, Sponsel CPA Group specializes in Entrepreneurial Services, Auditing and Assurance, Valuation and Litigation, Mergers and Acquisitions, Tax Services, Financial Planning/Wealth Management , Employee Benefit Plan Administration and Technology Services.