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Charitable planning can be one of the most satisfying areas in which an advisor
can practice. When your clients' interests and charitable organizations' interests
are in line, the results can be terrific. Charitable planning is a specialty,
however, with technical rules and an abundance of potential pitfalls. The purpose
of this article is to alert you to some of the pitfalls you may encounter,
enabling you to do a better job for your clients. In our experience helping
many clients fulfill their philanthropic objectives and in sharing experiences
with other advisors, we have come across some common traps for the unwary.
Disengage
Yourself From the Outcome
As human beings, advisors can sometimes lose sight of their biases.
If you hold yourself out as a charitable planner, sit on charitable
boards or have seen the positive results of charitable planning in other
clients' situations, it pays to remember to approach each client with a fresh
perspective and to stay objective. As advisors, your first duty is to your
clients. This responsibility as advisors means helping them uncover their
goals and priorities, including any charitable goals. The most successful
approaches endeavor to educate clients about the costs, benefits, risks and
rewards of charitable planning. Detailed explanations of the various planning
vehicles, illustrations and schedules can all aid in conveying this information.
It is important to discuss with your clients and agree upon assumptions,
including rates of return, inflation and life expectancy. Using software
that can predict the probability of what the client considers a successful
outcome is helpful. The client can then make an informed decision.
Consult
Other Experts
Charitable planning and implementation often cross many disciplines,
including law, accounting, investments, insurance and strategic
philanthropy. It is unlikely that there is even one advisor who possesses
genuine expertise in all of these areas, so for those who don't have all
these skills, there are teams. Teams can be formal business relationships
or informal alliances. Taking a team approach to charitable planning could
avert many of the errors discussed below.
Errors in Drafting
Trust companies, investment firms, charitable organizations, even
the IRS, distribute form documents for charitable vehicles. While
this may add value for a client or prospective donor, it is important that
the client retain an attorney experienced in charitable planning to draft
the document, rather than relying on a form to save expenses. Look out
for these provisions in charitable remainder trust (CRT) forms:
Trustee
Provisions
While many form-CRT documents do not name the client to serve as
trustee, generally there is nothing prohibiting the client from
serving as trustee of a CRT. In fact, most clients want to maintain control.
Thus, clients should be informed of this opportunity in evaluating trustee
options.
Charitable Remainder Beneficiary
Many forms do not permit the client to name more than one charitable remainder
beneficiary or to change the charitable beneficiary during the client's
life. The client's advisors should present these options.
In addition,
it is important for the client to decide whether he or she wants the
flexibility to ever name a private foundation as the remainder beneficiary.
This decision may affect the client's ability to take the income tax
deduction generated by the gift to the CRT. As a general rule, clients
may take deductions for gifts of appreciated property to public charitable
organizations up to 30 percent of the client's adjusted gross income
(AGI) in the year the gift is made. If the gift exceeds 30 percent
of the client's AGI, the client may carry the deduction forward over five
years. With gifts of marketable, appreciated securities to a private
foundation, a client may deduct gifts up to 20 percent of AGI per year
over six years. In the context of a CRT, if the trust prohibits a private
foundation from ever being named remainder beneficiary, then contributions
to the CRT will be subject to the higher 30 percent limitation.
When
a client is establishing a charitable remainder trust, the client's accountant
should prepare income tax projections to determine whether and how quickly
the client will use the income tax deduction. If the entire deduction at
the private foundation percentage limitations can be easily used, there
is no reason to restrict the remainder beneficiary to a public charitable
organization. While many clients will never establish a private foundation,
flexibility should be favored in irrevocable instruments unless there is
a countervailing reason. On the other hand, if the client's ability to use
the deduction may be compromised by the 20 percent limitation, it may be
better to prohibit private foundations. If property other than marketable
securities is to be contributed, the remainder beneficiary should be a public
organization; otherwise the deduction will be limited to cost basis.
Early
Distributions of Trust Principal
If a client wants to make a large current gift, but is concerned
about cash flow, accelerating the charitable remainder can be
a good strategy. Many form documents do not permit early distributions
to the remainder beneficiaries, so it must be custom-drafted. If a properly
drafted provision is included, the client can accelerate all or a portion
of the charitable remainder interest during the client's life.
Consider
the following example: Joe sets up a 6 percent standard charitable remainder
unitrust, to which he contributes $1 million. This trust would pay Joe
$60,000 in year one. Assuming the trust principal also earns $60,000
in year one, the trust would pay him the same $60,000 in year two. If Joe
decides in year two that he would like to make a $20,000 outright charitable
gift, he could satisfy the gift with $20,000 of his other assets. But
if Joe doesn't want to part with $20,000 of his other assets, he could accelerate
a $20,000 portion of the remainder interest in his CRT. If he did so,
the trust principal at the end of year two would be $980,000 and Joe's year-three
payment would be $58,800. In this case, Joe is only out of pocket $1,200
in year two. In addition, as a result of his gift in year two, Joe would
receive an income tax deduction equal to the present value of his income
interest in the $20,000. The decreased principal will also diminish his
payments in future years.
If the opportunity to make a charitable gift
in this manner arises, take care that the transaction is conducted in such
a manner as to avoid self-dealing, as discussed below.
Investing and
Administrative Errors
In addition to skilled drafting, careful investment and administration
of charitable trusts are essential. Charitable trusts, like all
split-interest trusts, require a sound investment policy that balances
the interests of the life and remainder interests. The Prudent Investor
Rule charges the trustee to consider each investment in the context of
the whole portfolio and does not eliminate per se any particular investment.
In addition, complex tax rules apply to charitable trust investments
and cannot be overlooked. Here are some of the most common issues we
have come across in our practices:
An Ad Hoc Investment Approach
In many instances, a client may serve as trustee of a charitable trust. While
this may be technically possible and even desirable in many cases, it is
important that the client be cognizant of the fiduciary duties of trustee.
As trustee, the client cannot favor the life beneficiary over the remainder
beneficiary, and vice versa. In the case of a split-interest charitable
remainder trust, the state attorney general may intervene on behalf of
the charitable beneficiary to prevent the beneficiary's interests from
being compromised.
Thus, while a client may want and be able to serve as
trustee of his or her charitable trust, it is generally advisable for
the client to hire investment advisors experienced in investing charitable
trusts. Such an investment advisor will typically develop an asset allocation
and investment policy statement for the trust that addresses these issues
and prohibits improper investments. It is equally important for the investment
advisor to consult with the other members of the client's advisory team.
Lack
of Diversification
Most states impose a duty to diversify on trustees. Where the client
is serving as trustee, he or she may have a difficult time diversifying.
Where the charitable entity is funded with stock from the client's
business or with real estate that the client has owned for a long time,
diversification may be particularly difficult. The difficulty can stem
from internal causes (e.g., emotional attachment) or external causes
(e.g., stock trading restrictions or market conditions). In these cases,
it is even more important that the client work with advisors experienced
in such areas to develop a disciplined diversification plan as part
of the investment policy and asset allocation.
Unrelated Business
Taxable Income (UBTI)
An example of an improper investment is one that generates unrelated
business taxable income (UBTI). UBTI is most commonly created by
debt-financed income. The most common examples of UBTI are assets
purchased on margin; publicly traded limited partnerships, which
pass through debt-financed income; rental real property acquired
with debt; and alternative investments, such as hedge funds.
The consequences
of generating UBTI can be severe. If a CRT or supporting organization
recognizes even one dollar of UBTI, it would be taxable on all
its income for that year. If the year happens to be the year in which
the entity sells a large block of appreciated property (such as
the low basis property it originally received), the effect can be very
bad indeed. UBTI in a charitable lead trust (CLT) can severely
limit the trust's ability to deduct the income interest paid to a charitable
organization.
Self-Dealing
An excise tax is imposed on each act of "self-dealing" in which a charitable
trust or foundation engages. Self-dealing is typically a transaction
between the charitable entity and a "disqualified person." The term "disqualified
person" includes a substantial contributor to the entity; a foundation manager,
including an officer, director or trustee of the entity; and family
members of a contributor or foundation manager. An excise tax of
5 percent is charged to the disqualified person and an additional 2.5 percent
excise tax is levied on the foundation manager who knowingly participates
in an act of self-dealing.
The most common forms of self-dealing are transactions between
the client and the charitable entity that he or she established,
such as sales, loans, payment of unreasonable compensation and use of trust
property for the client's benefit. One less obvious potential act of self-dealing
is the satisfaction of a charitable pledge. Even if a pledge is not legally
binding, there is the possibility that the satisfaction of such a pledge with
charitable trust or foundation assets could be construed as self-dealing.
Be
a Better Planner
With care, you can use charitable planning to help your clients meet
their financial and philanthropic goals. You should understand
the costs and benefits of charitable planning to properly educate clients
about these techniques, and also be aware of the potential pitfalls to avoid
in implementation. Working in teams of advisors from different disciplines
with charitable experience is probably one of the best ways to serve clients
competently in this area.
Please call Thomas G. Crowley at 402-398-5511, or e-mail us at TCrowley@alegent.org,
for more information.
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