Friday, October 24, 2014

Are these tax avoidance strategies for you?

Are these tax avoidance strategies right for you?
Check these year-end tricks to see if you can save this year. You may be able to divest a large, low-basis holding. You may be able to cut the AMT. There are several layers to the tax in US, so you need to see your accountant/planner/advisor to get started avoiding taxes. Your Congress person can probably help with a little non-quid-pro-quo giving. They write (with lobbyist’s help) the tax code. The Supremes have made it almost impossible to ‘bribe’ your representative, so go for it. In fact, your profitable corporation can just rent a post office box in the Caymans and lower its taxes to 0% like  Boeing, General Electric, and Verizon, and 24 others.

How can you avoid income tax in retirement?
Stop adding money to your employer retirement plan! You have been converting the low rates that the rich pay on capital gains (15%) into income taxes that hit 25-35%. Switch to a low-cost Roth IRA and pay nothing on that money in retirement. If your retirement income is not subject to income tax then you are more likely to pay $0 on your Social Security benefits. Contrary to popular myth, benefits are taxable if you have other income. You may be able to avoid paying income tax later by converting your taxable IRA to a Roth now in years when you have lower income.
Other tax-avoidance strategies require more work: borrow from your assets without repayment, use your legal entities to borrow cash, offset taxes with tax losses, cash value life insurance, etc.

Is a Roth IRA conversion right for you?
Conversions of deductible 401k or rollover IRA to a Roth IRA have increased 800% recently. Why? Each $1 you already put into those accounts could grow to $46 by retirement and if they were in a Roth, you would have 25-30% MORE because the $46 is all tax-FREE. Yes, you have to pay tax on the $1 plus earnings now, but those with higher incomes see the enormous benefits and are going for it.

What is the best way to transfer your pension when your job is over?
If you are leaving your employer for another or for self-employment, there are important benefits to consider. Your advisor/broker may not know them all or may be receive a bonus for one way. Taxes are involved too. SEC regulators are concerned about advisors’ sales practices. Mistakes can cost you. Look before you leap. Know the best for YOU. http://www.finra.org/Investors/ProtectYourself/InvestorAlerts/RetirementAccounts/P436001

Youth consult family and friends for financial advice
Members of Gen Y, those born between about 1980 and 2000, are more likely to rely on personal connections for their financial advice than older generations, according to a new TIAA-CREF survey. They are more likely to value online tools and calculators (74 percent versus 57 present of the general population), seminars (68 percent versus 53 percent) or webinars (67 percent versus 54 percent) as channels for advice. They are more likely than the general population to involve their parents (47 percent versus 19 percent), extended family (22 percent versus 14 percent) and other trusted adults (31 percent versus 21 percent) in their search for advice. 

Social Security benefits up by 1.7%
Make sure your account benefit calculation is correct by checking online. If you don’t have an account yet, create a personalized Social Security accounts online at socialsecurity.gov/myaccount. You can see your benefit information at any time. Make sure you will have enough income when SS benefits are reduced in 2033. Create your own tax-FREE income security: http://www.amazon.com/Forget-Social-Security-Medicare-Lifestyle/dp/1466394285

I just saved $840 on my car insurance—made $840 an hour
When I got my auto renewal policy bill today, they had raised my cost about $400. Last year they raised it by about $300. I decided to shop for a new deal. It took me 1 hour to save $840 after entering my info at two competitor’s online sites. One wanted $2,949 for a year. WOW. Another insurer told me to wait 5 minutes for a phone rep. I hung up. My vehicles are old—’98 and ’05, but I still carry collision and comprehensive. I don’t carry their PIP medical since I have a good health policy and it pays first anyway. I declined rental and towing and life insurance and disability just like before. I charged it on my card and downloaded my policy and proof of insurance. The new carrier is A++ and 2nd largest in US. In one hour I added $840 to my Wealth Reserve. http://www.amazon.com/Insiders-Guides-Discount-Financial-Services/dp/143480593X

Do you really need an advisor or broker to help with your financials?
As a former manager of advisors and brokers at banks and security firms, I see a change in the way you can obtain help. First, determine how your salesperson gets paid. This helps you understand how they can help you. All licensed staff work for firms that only offer products that provide them with revenue. You are offered what the firm sells NOT what you might need. Vanguard and TIAA-CREF operate differently. Their products don’t pay commissions, so most firms don’t sell their products, but you can.  
In the last 30 years, products like low-cost mutual funds, discount brokerage and useable information have become available to everyone. Personal service can be obtained just for the asking. For instance, Vanguard provides free or low-cost advice, brokerage and trustee services even for small account customers.
Advisors that charge you by the hour may have lower-priced products. Your employer’s pension plan is more likely to offer lower cost products too. Costs are spread over your group so you pay less.
Also, you can now learn enough on your own to succeed by paying less: http://www.amazon.com/The-Best-Predictor-Investment-Success/dp/1502524082

How much would a US election cost you?
If you could buy an election (thanks to Supreme Court), how much would it cost you? In the previous midterms, in 2010, the top 0.26% of donors gave 68% of all individual political contributions, according to the nonpartisan Center for Responsive Politics. Much of that went to GOP candidates. Tom Steyer, hedge fund croupier, spent $20 millions so far. Bloomberg spent $11 mil and Uline owner, $5 mil.
These billionaires are NOT counting on alleged “voters with fake IDs” either.

GOP crazies backed by Supremes agree to suppress vote
If you can’t win with centrist policies, keep 600,000 Dems from voting. Supremes 5 old guys sided with voter suppression in TX. The law sets out seven forms of approved ID — a list that includes concealed handgun licenses ($150 credit card only) but not college picture ID, which are accepted in other states with similar measures. Dissenters called this decision "unconstitutional burden on the right to vote" and the equivalent of a poll tax in finding that the Republican-led Texas Legislature purposely discriminated against minority voters in Texas. TX has never found case of voter fraud.
Stephen F. Austin, Founder of Texas, would not been allowed to vote in TX under this law. Voter fraud to change outcome does NOT happen in US study finds.

DEM crazies
Cut budget by 7.6 Billion a year—jobs from greater demand—lower income inequality
Raise the minimum wage to the same level as in Reagan’s time—$10.10 per hour and take people off food stamps. That is the proposal DEMs are making now and confirmed by the CBO—nonpartisan Congress analyst. Can Congress vote on anything?
At Costco, hourly workers make an average of more than $20 an hour — well above the national average of $11.39 for a retail sales worker — according to a 2013 Businessweek story. For employees who put in 40 hours per week, that works out to about $43,000 a year. In addition, Businessweek reports that 88% of Costco's 185,000 employees have company-sponsored health care.
Why doesn’t GOP see the facts—good pay equals more money to buy equals more profit

Our hard-earned wages going to waste
Congress spent $25 billions of our taxes on stupid projects while running up the deficit. According to the GAO, during a three-year period more than 57,000 employees were placed on leave for 30 days or more, costing taxpayers $775 million in salary alone. Pentagon to destroy $16 billion in ammunition that it deems no longer useful at of cost of $1 billion just to destroy the ammo. Both Dems and GOP guilty of this despicable behavior. You won’t believe the things they wasted our money on. Wastebook 2014
But they won’t fix our bridges and roads because Obama proposed it.

Pope tries to move older churchmen
Francis warned bishops against what he called "hostile rigidity" in their thinking on these topicshis remarks earning a five-minute standing ovation. Catholic bishops rejected a landmark change Saturday in the rigid stance on gays and divorcees, revealing enormous gaps within the church at the end of a two-week meeting. The synod's final statement failed to include remarkably conciliatory language revealed a week ago that would have welcomed the "gifts and qualities" of gay Catholics and called on pastors to "avoid any language or behavior" that could discriminate against divorced Catholics.
Change is coming, Mr Scalia.

How much can you invest in your pension?
IRS announced (IR-2014-99) that you can now sock away $18,000 in 2015, up from 17,500 in your 401(k), 403(b), and most 457 plans. Employees over age 50 can add another $6,000. IRA limits remain at $5,500. The deduction is phased out if the couple’s income is between $183,000 and $193,000. The income limit for the saver’s tax credit ($1-2,000) is $61,000 for married couples filing jointly. Tax credit means you could reduce your taxes by $2,000 dollar for dollar.

What does it cost to file a homeowner’s claim?
Insurers do not want to pay claims. If you file a small claim, not only do you have to pay the deductible first, you may get a big new premium bill next year. According to one study, your state may allow an increase of 30% or no increase at all. Premiums in 37 states increased by an average of 10 percent after filing a single claim. "There's a significant statistical correlation between making a claim and the likelihood of making an additional claim in the future,” insurers say. They need to offset the increased risk. Texas prohibits insurers from increasing premiums for first-time claims. But according to Amy Bach, executive director of the California-based nonprofit consumer advocacy group United Policyholders, this rationale doesn't hold water. "(There's a general feeling that) it's completely unfair that an insurance company is free to raise your rates because you had the gall to actually use your insurance," Bach says.

Is keyless entry (phone) to your home right for you?
Does it make sense to you that people would want an electronic gadget guarding their home? Yet you can try it for $250 and the price of the phone. One device tested did not work. The testers did not ask the local burglar to give it a try so you don’t know if hackers could take your home like they do your ID, bank or computer.
Please give me a break from the gadgets.

SCAMS           Why are we still paying $700 Billion a year for WWII deployments?
We are paying for 164,253 of our active-duty armed personnel to be in 150 countries around the world. We have about 50,000 in Japan and 50,000 in Germany.
Are we preparing for WWII again? There are 1,208,083[1] armed personnel in the United States. Our taxes pay for about HALF of the WORLD’s military expenditures every year. We have wasted $398.6 billion so far on the F-35 program—they can’t fly safely.
We just can’t afford to pay for everyone else’s defenses anymore.
Japan, Germany and S. Korea can pay for their own defenses.

What business marketing has done to the language—“anonymous” doesn’t mean anonymous now!
The Guardian revealed that Whisper, an app that promises to “anonymously share your thoughts and secrets”, is tracking its users including some who have asked not to be followed and storing their posts indefinitely while it trawls their messages to identify interesting stories to promote itself in the media.
“That’s exactly the kind of deceptive practice that the FTC should crack down on,” said Marc Rotenberg “It’s very important but there has to be more transparency and accountability. Companies that offer anonymity services should deliver them,” he said.

Check that debt collection scam before you pay their bill
Scammers use your public info to make a claim for past bills. Don’t trust what they say or write. Get proof. If they are legit, they must provide it by law. Scammers work by intimidation and harassment.

UBS is sticking with its recommendations that some clients buy risky Puerto Rico closed-end bond funds, despite hundreds of arbitration claims by investors, says an internal document. A UBS AG unit will pay $5.2 million in a settlement with Puerto Rico's financial institutions regulator over the firm's practices involving sales of Puerto Rico closed-end bond funds whose values later plunged.
Fines are not enough to keep clients safe.

Charlie Baker running for MA Gov gives donation to Christie who has NJ teacher pension head give money to Baker’s management fund.
Isn’t that quid pro quo bribe?

Corporations spending BIG on TV to win elections/propositions
In many states, TV ads are defining the winners and losers at election time. Voters may not have the true facts but now have their point of view thanks to big money.

Is your business easy prey for these common scams?
Based on a study of claims experience, insurers identified the following four common crime schemes in business:
1.   Billing and Vendor Schemes - Employees set up false vendor accounts and bill a company for non-existent parts or services.
2.   Check Tampering Schemes - Employees use company checks to pay themselves or reissue the company’s old outstanding checks and alter the payee to themselves.
3.   Payroll Schemes - Employees manipulate the amount on their check, or create duplicates of their check to cash more than once.
4.   Expense Reimbursement Schemes - Employees submit additional expenses that never occurred or were not of a business nature and are then reimbursed for those bogus expenses.

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