Captive Insurance but Be Careful. Lance Wallach, expert witness.

Most business owners want to: build wealth and maximize the value of what is left behind for heirs; protect their wealth to insure that what they have spent a lifetime building isn’t eaten away by taxes, inflation and/or the cost of medical care; distribute their wealth so that their loved ones may be taken care of, and see to it that their assets and possessions go where they want them to go in the time frame they want this to happen. This is the essence of estate planning.

Eventually the business owner leaves the business. If a family member or employee can buy the established business, planning needs to be done years in advance for the best possible results.

If an outside buyer is desired, the company should be positioned so that, if a favorable opportunity arises or an unfortunate event occurs, the company is completely ready for transition. In other words, the business should be ready for sale versus up for sale.

Determining the value of a business is an art. There are no fixed rules, just general guidelines. All characteristics of the business must be considered. The value, however, is ultimately what a buyer will pay considering all relevant circumstances and bargaining at arms length. This is referred to as the fair market value.

Non-cash Payment

Today’s would-be sellers are seeing attractive purchase prices offered in currencies other than cash. The purchase might be part cash, and the remainder an unsecured promissory note. But cash is the only sure thing.

Should the business falter, the remainder of the purchase price may evaporate or become subject to litigation. A sale to the highest bidder is not always the most appropriate sale.

Make Plans for the Future

Most small business owners are so busy running the company they fail to plan for the eventual transfer of the business. By not planning, they jeopardize the futures of the business and, possibly, of his or her family. We are often consulted at this time, but, at this point, it is almost too late to help.

Succession and estate planning involves various questions of tax, law and business planning. The business owner(s) should make the final decisions after being provided with various types of information. If planning is done early, the process is not difficult and the results are maximized. No one plans to fail, but many fail to plan.

How to Use a Captive Insurer to Save Money

Small companies have been copying a method to control insurance costs and reduce taxes that used to be the domain of large businesses: setting up insurance companies to provide coverage when they think outside insurers are charging too much or coverage is simply unavailable. A small company can also use this as a tax reduction strategy, with the ability to get money back tax free.

Often, they are starting what is called “a captive insurance company”— an insurer founded to write coverage for the company, companies, or people who founded it.

Here’s how a captive insurer usually works. The parent business creates a captive so that it has a self-funded option for buying insurance, whereby the parent business provides the reserves to back the policies. The company then either retains that risk or pays reinsurers to take it. The price for coverage is set by the parent business; reinsurance costs, if any, are a factor.

In the event of a loss, the business pays claims from its captive, or the reinsurer pays the captive. A captive insurance company would be an insurance subsidiary that is owned by its parent(s).

The Better Way for Large Tax Deductions

There are a number of significant advantages that may be obtained through sharing a large captive (“Group Captive”) with other companies. The most important is that you can significantly decrease the cost of insurance for your insureds, as compared to a standalone captive, through this arrangement. The second advantage is that Group Captives do not require any capital commitment.

By sharing a large captive you only pay a pro rata fee to cover all General and Administrative expenses of the insurance company. The cost for administration is very low per insured as compared to forming and operating a traditional stand alone captive insurance company. By renting a large captive, loans to its insureds (your company) can be legally made. So you can make a tax deductible contribution, and then take back money tax free. Sharing a large captive requires no significant financial commitment beyond the payment of premiums.

Operation of a standalone captive insurance company may not achieve similar cost saving results that a small business could obtain through sharing a large captive. More importantly, group captives require little or no maintenance by the insureds, and can be implemented in a fraction of the time as compared to stand-alone captives.

If you do this correctly, you can reduce insurance costs and obtain a large tax deduction, with the ability to get money back tax free.

Business Succession with a Captive, Be Careful - Slippery Rock Gazette February 17, 2008
Business Succession Planning; Facilitating the Sale of the Business How captive insurers can reduce taxes and insurance costs By Lance Wallach, Industry Consultant.

As an expert witness Lance Wallach's side has never lost a case. People need to be careful of 419 Welfare Benefit Plans, 412i plans, Section 79 plans and Captive Insurance Plans. Most of these plans are sold by insurance agents. If you are in an abusive, listed or similar transaction plan you need to file under IRS 6707a. The participant files form 8886, and the salesmen or accountant who signs the tax returns files form 8918 if they got paid over $10,000. They are called Material Advisors and face a minimum $100,000 fine. Some plans are offshore which could involve FBAR or OVDI filings. If you have money overseas you probably need to file for IRS tax amnesty. If you want to reduce the tax we suggest that you first file and then opt out. For more information Google Lance Wallach.

The information provided herein is not intended as legal, accounting, financial, or any other type of advice for any specific individual or other entity. You should contact an appropriate professional for any such advice.





9 comments:

  1. FBAR/OVDI LANCE WALLACH
    FBAR Foreign Bank Account Reporting The IRS is assessing huge penalties for undisclosed foreign bank accounts, assets & income. Click for more info FBAR FILING DEADLING HAS BEEN EXTENDED

    Tuesday, February 18, 2014
    FBAR-What are You Hiding
    The collapse of Swiss bank secrecy, the IRS settlement with UBS, the criminal investigation of HSBC and the related IRS voluntary disclosure program all have put foreign bank accounts in the spotlight. Tens of thousands, if not hundreds of thousands, of U.S. taxpayers have foreign bank accounts. Some of those taxpayers opened their foreign bank account in order to hide money or the earnings in the account from the IRS.
    However, the majority of taxpayers with foreign bank accounts never intended to hide their foreign accounts from the IRS. Some just inherited the foreign account from a relative who lived abroad at some point in their lives. Other taxpayers lived abroad themselves and opened a bank account in a foreign country as a matter of convenience or necessity. Still other U.S. taxpayers with foreign accounts never even lived in the United States but are U.S. citizens, and therefore are subject to U.S. reporting requirements, simply because one or both of their parents were U.S. citizens.
    Regardless of why the foreign account was created or acquired, any U.S. person with an interest in, or signatory authority over, a foreign financial account must file a Report of Foreign Bank Accounts (FBAR) with the United States Treasury Department. The IRS recently has stepped up enforcement against taxpayers who fail to file FBARs. The basic penalty for a simple, non-willful failure to file a FBAR is $10,000 per year for 2005 and later years. (Prior to 2005, there was no penalty at all for non-willful violations.) However, if the IRS can prove that the taxpayer willfully failed to file a FBAR, or willfully filed a false FBAR, the penalties are much higher. The taxpayer can be subject to criminal prosecution and, for 2005 and later years, the IRS can impose crippling civil penalties of up to 50% of the highest balance in the foreign account for each year that the violation continues. (Prior to 2005, the penalty for a willful violation was capped at $100,000 per year.)
    If the IRS catches a taxpayer who failed to file a FBAR, the IRS will either refer the case for prosecution or attempt to assert a penalty based on some percentage of the highest balance in the foreign account. In fact, even taxpayers who approach the IRS and voluntarily disclose the existence of their foreign account will be charged a penalty based on a percentage of the highest balance in the foreign account. Taxpayers who voluntarily disclosed their foreign account prior to October 15, 2009 are being charged a 20% penalty. Taxpayers who make a voluntary disclosure after October 15, 2009 are still being accepted into the voluntary disclosure program, but they will be charged a penalty of at least 20%, and probably more, of the highest balance in the foreign account.
    Any penalty that is based on a percentage of the balance in the foreign account is premised on the idea that the FBAR vio

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  2. Money talks, and it says, 'Penny-pincher'
    Published: September 5, 2013 2:40 PM
    Lance Wallach is a ’Vette vet who has
    Lance Wallach is a ’Vette vet who has a lot of drive. (Credit: Handout)
    Until I was in fifth grade we lived in Queensbridge, a low-income housing project in Queens. My father, a teacher, and mother, who worked as a secretary and went to Queens College at night, had very little money.
    After my mother earned her master's degree, graduating Phi Beta Kappa, she got a job teaching in Sea Cliff. My father had 35 children in his class in Brownsville, Brooklyn, and my...

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  3. ibution Health Plans: Let the Buyer Beware Opinion by ...
    www.blaisdellinsurance.com/pdfs/Group/DEFINE~1.PDF‎
    Defined Contribution Health Plans: Let the Buyer Beware. Opinion by Lance Wallach, CLU, ChFC, CIMC and Ronald H. Snyder, JD, MAAA, EA. Health care ...
    You've visited this page 2 times. Last visit: 3/6/14
    Money talks, and it says, 'Penny-pincher' - Newsday
    www.newsday.com › Lifestyle‎
    Newsday
    Sep 5, 2013 - Lance Wallach is a 'Vette vet who has a lot of drive. (Credit: Handout). Until I was in fifth grade we lived in Queensbridge, a low-income housing ...
    You've visited this page 2 times. Last visit: 3/12/14
    As an expert witness Lance Wallach side has never lost a case
    expertwitnesslancewallch.blogspot.com/‎
    Jan 7, 2014 - Share to TwitterShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest. Labels: lance wallach expert witness, sea Nine, VEBA. United States Of America, Oct. 9th ...
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    Reporting by U.S. Persons Holding Foreign Financia
    lancewallach.org/‎
    Lance Wallach. www.vebaplan.org. www.TaxAudit419.com. IRS Form 8938. FATCA requires any U.S. person holding foreign financial assets

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  4. Post navigation← Previous
    Lance Wallach and his associates provide Expert Witness Services
    Posted on January 9, 2014
    Lance Wallach Financial Group is a group of Expert Witness, Consulting, and Advisory Services provided by Lance Wallach and associates. Lance has impeccable credentials and 35 years of extensive professional experience addressing insurance, financial planning, pension plan, welfare benefit plan, and tax matters.

    Lance Wallach and his associates provide Expert Witness Services in federal courts, state courts, and arbitration venues throughout the United States. Lance also provides Consulting and Advisory Services to clients for non-litigation matters. She addresses technical and complex issues involving:
    Insurance and Annuity Matters
    §412(i) and §412(e)(3) Defined Benefit Pension Plans
    §419(e) and §419A(f)(6) Welfare Benefit Plans, and VEBA Plans
    Financial Planning
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    This entry was posted in Uncategorized by Admin. Bookmark the permalink.
    0 THOUGHTS ON “LANCE WALLACH AND HIS ASSOCIATES PROVIDE EXPERT WITNESS SERVICES”
    lance on March 17, 2014 at 1:28 pm said:
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    Taxaudit419.com
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    Lance Wallach

    Lance Wallach, Managing Director, is the
    nation’s leading expert on employee benefit plans,
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    Mr. Wallach is a member of the AICPA faculty of
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    * The AICPA’s “The team approach to Tax,
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    * “The CPA’s Guide to Life Insurance” by
    Bisk CPEasy

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  5. Expert Witness

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    Abusive Tax Shelter, Listed Transaction, Reportable Transaction Expert Witness
    Lance Wallach, CLU, CHFC
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    Lance Wallach is the nation's leading expert on 419 and 412i plans, captive insurance, abusive insurance plans, listed transactions, reportable transactions, section 79 plans, IRC 6707A, 8886 form filing, abusive tax shelters, and more.


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  6. 412i-419 Plans
    419 & 412i benefit plan,abusive tax shelters, Lance Wallach Expert Witness

    Friday, March 28, 2014
    IRS tax relief firm, Lance Wallach, speaking: IRS tax relief firm, Lance Wallach, speaking: Help...
    IRS tax relief firm, Lance Wallach, speaking: IRS tax relief firm, Lance Wallach, speaking: Help...: IRS tax relief firm, Lance Wallach, speaking: Help with Common IRS Problems: welfare benefit pla... : Help with Common IRS Problems: welfare...



    LANCE WALLACH, CLU, ChFC
    68 Keswick Lane
    Plainview, New York 11803
    Phone: (516) 938-5007 / 935-7346
    Fax: (516)938-6330
    Email: lawallach@aol.com

    ~ National Society of Accountants Speaker of the Year
    Education:

    · Baruch College (CUNY), Baruch College Graduate School
    · The American College – Chartered Financial Consultant (ChFC)· The American College – Chartered Life Underwriter (CLU)

    Guest Lecturer for:
    · Baruch College (Taxes on Tuesdays); Long Island University, C.W. Post Graduate School of Accountancy.
    · Speaker at more than 70 conventions yearly, including the annual national conventions of the American Association of Attorney Certified Public Accountants, National Society of Accountants, National Network of Estate Planning Attorneys, National Association of Tax Practitioners, National Association of Enrolled Agents, National Association of Health Underwriters, American Society of Pension Actuaries, Employee Benefits Expo, Health Insurance Underwriters, NAPFA, NAIFA, FPA, NABA, ALPFA, various state CPA societies, Tax Institutes, as well a

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    The expert on IRS audits of 419e and 412i plans, 6707A, listed and reportable transactions,Section 79, captive insurance and abusive tax shelters
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    Section 79 Scams and Captive Insurance History
    JUNE 3, 2014 BY LANCEWALLACH
    When trying to understand how a product becomes a target of government scrutiny it helps to know its history. In the case of plans that fall under Internal Revenue Code Section 79, that history is complex.


    Insurance companies, agents, financial planners, and others have pushed abusive 419 and 412i plans for
    years. They claimed business owners could obtain large tax deductions. Insurance companies, agents and others earned very large life insurance commissions in the process. Eventually, the IRS cracked down on the unsuspecting business owners. Not only did they lose the tax deductions, but they were also fined, in addition to being charged penalties and interest. A skilled CPA with extensive IRS experience could usually eliminate the penalties and reduce the fines. Most accountants, tax attorneys and others have been unsuccessful in accomplishing this.
    After the business owner was assessed the fines and lost his tax deduction, he had another huge, unforeseen problem. The IRS then came back and fined him a huge amount of money for not telling on himself under IRC 6707A. If you participate in a listed or reportable transaction, you must alert the IRS or face a large fine. In essence, you must alert the IRS if you were in a transaction that has the possibility of tax avoidance or evasion. Not only must you file Form 8886 telling on yourself, but the form needs to be filed properly, and done every year that you are in the plan in any way at all, even if you are no longer m
    In "business"

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  9. Government Seeks Permanent Injunction Against Sea Nine Promoters

    On October 9, 2013, United States Attorneys for the Central District of California and the United States Department of Justice filed a complaint seeking to permanently enjoin Kenneth Elliott, Sea Nine Associates, and others from promoting participation in, or managing, voluntary employee beneficiary association (“VEBA”) plans. According to the government, the defendants promoted “a scheme in which [the defendants] sell to customers owning small, often closely-held companies, participation in VEBA plans … and claim that customers can, through the contributions their businesses make to VEBA plan administered or operated by the Defendants, fund for their employees (and more often than not themselves) a valuable insurance-oriented welfare benefit while claiming all of the VEBA contributions as a federal income tax deduction.” The government further alleges that the defendants “have continuted to falsely claim that the VEBA plans in fact comply with the tax laws, and manage and promote them to this day despite their documented knowledge of the illegality of the plans.”

    According to the complaint, Defendant Kenneth Elliott has admitted that there are over 200 participants in Sea Nine VEBA plans. The government claims that it has completed audits of 41 taxpayers and, in those audits, it has assessed nearly $13.875 million in tax deficiencies. In addition to stopping the defendants’ promotion of the plan, the government is asking the federal district court to order the defendants to produce a list of all of their customers, including names, addresses, and social security numbers

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