Archive for August 2009

The International Tax Gap

August 30, 2009

From IRS.gov

Find resources on this page pertaining to the international tax gap — the difference between the amount of tax that taxpayers should pay and the amount that is paid voluntarily and on time. The tax gap can also be thought of as the sum of non-compliance with the tax law.

International Tax Gap Series

August 2009 – Self-Employment Tax for Businesses Abroad
June 2009 – U.S. Citizens Performing Services in Foreign and International Airspace
May 2009 – Departing Aliens and the Sailing Permit
April 2009 – Reaching Out to Americans Abroad
February 2009 – Taxation of Nonresident Aliens
January 2009 – Foreign Housing Exclusion or Deduction
December 2008 – Gifts from Foreign Persons
November 2008 – Tax Treaties Can Affect Your Income Tax
October 2008 – Taxation of International Pensions and Annuities
September 2008 – U.S. Tax Withholding on Effectively Connected Income Allocable to Foreign Partners
August 2008 – Foreign Trust Reporting Requirements
July 2008 – Withholding of Tax on Dispositions of U.S. Real Property Interests
June 2008 – Foreign Tax Credit
May 2008 – Foreign Earned Income Exclusion
April 2008 – Moving To or From a United States (U.S.) Territory/Possession
March 2008 – U.S. Tax Withholding on Payments to Foreign Persons
February 2008 – The Tax Gap and International Taxpayers – Filing Requirements

Voluntary Disclosure – Foreign Accounts

August 29, 2009

From IRS.gov

Taxpayers with unreported income relating to offshore transactions who wish to voluntarily disclose the information to the IRS can find information on the process.

For a complete understanding of the voluntary disclosure procedures, see Internal Revenue Manual (IRM) 9.5.11.9

Taxpayers wanting to participate in the IRS voluntary disclosure process should call the phone number associated with the state in which they reside. See Contact IRS About Voluntary Disclosure. (Updated 7/29/09)

See also Voluntary Disclosure: Questions and Answers re: the voluntary disclosure process and undisclosed offshore accounts (Updated 8/25/2009).

Information and Issues on Foreign Bank Account Reporting

August 28, 2009

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

Gifting Stock Shares In A Down Economy

August 28, 2009

Here is an article on gifting stock shares in a down economy.   It is an excellent planning opportunity.

 

http://www.journalofaccountancy.com/Issues/2009/Sep/20091835

Risk exists for another Madoff-type scam

August 27, 2009

MSNBC.com

WASHINGTON – Monday brought some closure to Bernard Madoff’s victims, who were swindled out of $65 billion in the largest recorded financial fraud — a scheme that was exposed in part because the plummeting stock market led investors to demand repayment of money that was long gone.

With Madoff on his way to jail, attention is shifting to the next fraud — and to the agency responsible for preventing it.

The Securities and Exchange Commission lost credibility when it emerged that a tipster had been trying to blow the whistle on Madoff for years but had been brushed off repeatedly. Since Madoff’s case came to light, the agency has announced a series of changes it hopes will improve enforcement, making it easier to detect and root out fraud before it approaches this massive scale.

But obstacles remain, including the finding in a recent oversight report that agency lawyers lack necessary support staff and resources. And even with the benefit of hindsight, experts say, eliminating fraud is about as likely as eliminating greed.

Here are some questions and answers about what the SEC is doing to shore up its examination and enforcement actions, and how far these changes will go to prevent the next Madoff-style scandal.

Q: Could a Madoff-style fraud happen again?

A: Of course it could. Enforcement is by definition a backward-looking process, with officials exposing and punishing wrongdoing only after it’s been committed. As far as the SEC knows, there are more Madoffs starting up right now.

But officials say fraud on Madoff’s scale is unlikely because he was an uncommonly talented crook, quietly gaining the trust of investors, regulators and power brokers over decades in the financial world.

Q: Does that mean they’re not doing anything to stop the next Madoff?

A: Regulators are doing quite a bit to prevent similar Ponzi schemes from bilking more investors.

The examinations division, which is responsible for day-to-day oversight, will be improving examiners’ expertise in fraud detection and in complex financial products, looking more closely at firms deemed more likely to commit fraud and improving handling of tips and complaints. That’s according to a speech this month by Lori Richards, who directs the SEC’s Office of Inspections and Examinations.

SEC Chairman Mary Schapiro has installed a new director of the Division of Enforcement: Robert Khuzami, a former federal prosecutor. He has launched efforts to improve the SEC’s enforcement capabilities, including streamlining key processes, and advocates pouring vast resources into hiring new staff.

Testifying before Congress in May, Khuzami said, “Not a day goes by that I don’t think about how we can stop the next big fraud.”

The agency also will introduce a new computer system intended to track and sift through the complaints that come in, which number between 750,000 and 1.5 million a year.

Q: That all sounds nice, but aren’t there some concrete loopholes the SEC needs to close to prevent future scams?

A: Madoff exploited the opportunity to act as both investment adviser and custodian of his clients’ assets. That meant there was no one to verify whether the assets existed, or whether he was making the trades he claimed.

The SEC proposed a new rule that would require third-party verification of the assets, effectively closing that loophole.

But closing loopholes doesn’t prevent future abuses, warns Laura Unger, a former commissioner and acting chairman of the SEC.

“Disclosure and rules are always changed after the crisis,” she says. “You’re hard-pressed to prevent the next thing before it happens because it’s always going to be something different.”

Q: With so many attempts at reform going on all at once, how can we be sure the SEC even understands where the problems were?

A: In August, SEC Inspector General David Kotz is expected to release a long-awaited investigation of the breakdowns that allowed Madoff to pull off his scam undetected. It will examine information sharing between the examination and enforcement divisions, and attempt to explain why a tipster with information on Madoff’s fraud was unable to attract the agency’s attention for over a decade.

Even before the formal recommendations come out, Schapiro has said she will address any weaknesses that come to her attention.

Q: Now that the SEC is stepping up its game, can investors rest easy?

A: Never.

Investors who want to feel safe misunderstand the agency’s role, says Unger, the former SEC commissioner. As more people have investments, “there’s this increasing sense that there’s no longer any risk in investing, that it’s like putting money in a bank,” she says.

But investments earn higher returns than savings accounts precisely because they carry risks — and fraud is one of those risks, Unger says.

“We can’t end fraud because we can’t end greed and stupidity,” she says. “But you can make an impact in reducing it and make other people sensitive and thoughtful about it.”

© 2009 MSNBC.com

4 smart ways to reduce your tax bill

August 27, 2009

After a bleak 2008, equities are looking up. But whatever the market, our trademark long-term portfolio can help you build a nest egg for a secure future.

NEW YORK (Fortune) — We spoke to several leading financial advisers about the strategies they were recommending their clients adopt to cut their taxes now and in the future.

Harvest your stock market losses

“We have been aggressively harvesting tax losses for our clients over the last year or two, and of course the market environment has assisted us with that,” says Gregg Fisher, president of financial advisory firm Gerstein Fisher.

“Those losses can be used to offset capital gains in the future, and if you think capital gains rates might be higher in the future, those losses become even more valuable,” he says.

And for clients who still like the battered stock they just sold, no problem. IRS rules allow an investor to buy the asset back after 31 days.

Cash in some winners

There’s also a tax strategy for those with gains in their portfolio.

A number of advisers are urging their more affluent clients to sell some of those appreciated assets in order to lock in the gain, and to pay the capital gains tax while it’s only 15%, before it rises to 20% in 2011.

These investors can also buy back the same shares after 31 days if they still want to own the stock.

Invest in municipal bonds

Many advisers are also recommending that clients put a bigger chunk of their cash into tax-free municipal bonds.

Although many states are facing severe financial difficulties because of the recession, “We like munis right now because even during the Great Depression the default rate was less than 4%, and we’re not in a Great Depression,” says Mark Brown, a managing partner at Brown & Tedstrom, a financial planning and advisory firm.

“In a normal recession, less than one-tenth of 1% has been the historical default rate.” He adds that their prices have fallen over the past six months, making them even more attractive.

Divide and conquer

Even as tax rates rise, you’ll probably be paying less on capital gains than on ordinary income.

Sean Cunniff, a research director in TowerGroup’s brokerage and wealth management service, is recommending that investors take advantage of that gap by favoring fixed-income investments (which pay interest that is taxed as ordinary income) in your tax-deferred accounts and putting equity investments with big potential long-term capital gains into taxable accounts.

September 15th deadline for partnerships, estates and trusts fast approaching

August 27, 2009

Just a reminder that partnerships, estates and trusts listed below have a new extended deadline for September 15th instead of October 15th as in previous years.

The new rule applies to business entities that file the following returns:

Form 1065 – US Return of Partnership Income

Form 1041 – US Income Tax Return of Estates and Trusts

Form 8804 – Annual Return for Partnership Withholding Tax (Section 1446)

In addition, corporation and S Corporation tax returns are due by September 15th.  These entities use Form 1120 and Form 1120S.

There are penalties, which can be significant, for failure to file these returns timely.

Please feel free to call me if you need assistance with meetings this deadline.

Here are some tax breaks that are set to expire in 2009.

August 24, 2009
  •  If you claim the standard deduction for 2009, you may also claim an additional deduction for real estate property taxes.

 

  •  Whether you claim the standard deduction or itemize your deductions for 2009, you can deduct the sales tax you pay on a car or truck purchased by December 31, 2009 (but the deduction is phased out if your income is too high).

 

  • If you itemize your deductions for 2009, you can choose to deduct state and local sales taxes instead of claiming a deduction for state income taxes.

 

  • If you buy a principal residence by December 1, 2009 and haven’t owned a home during the prior three years, you are entitled to a tax credit of up to $8,000 (but again, there is a phase-out if your income is too high).

 

  • If you are age 70 ½ or over and own an IRA, you don’t have to withdraw any funds from your IRA in 2009 unless you wish to.

Offshore Tax-Avoidance and IRS Compliance Efforts

August 24, 2009
 
 
The IRS continues to uncover abusive tax-avoidance schemes involving offshore activity. Find information here pertaining to Union Bank of Switzerland (UBS).Aug. 19, 2009 Announcement and Documents

IRS to Receive Unprecedented Amount of Information in UBS Agreement (News Release 2009-75)

Excerpts from IRS Commissioner Doug Shulman’s Press Remarks

U.S.-Swiss Government Agreement |  Declarations |  Bank Agreement

Legal Actions to Date

Aug. 21, 2009 — Former UBS banker Bradley Birkenfeld was sentenced to 40 months in prison. Birkenfeld worked as a private banker for UBS AG and assisted an American billionaire real estate developer evade paying $7.2 million in taxes.

Aug. 20, 2009 — Hansruedi Schumacher and Matthias Rickenbach were indicted for conspiring to assist wealthy American clients conceal their assets by establishing sham offshore entities. Schumacher was an executive manager at Neue Zuercher Bank (NZB), a private Swiss bank. Rickenbach was a Swiss attorney who advised U.S. clients.

Feb. 18, 2009 — UBS AG, Switzerland’s largest bank, entered into a deferred prosecution agreement on charges of conspiring to defraud the United States by impeding the Internal Revenue Service (IRS).
 
Nov. 12, 2008 — Raoul Weil, a senior executive of a large Swiss bank, was charged with conspiring with other executives, managers, private bankers and clients of the banking firm to defraud the United States.
 
June 30, 2008 — The Justice Department filed papers seeking an order from a federal court in Miami, Fla., authorizing the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) to use a John Doe summons to request information from Zurich, Switzerland-based UBS AG about U.S. taxpayers who may be using Swiss bank accounts to evade federal income taxes.
 
May 13, 2008 — Banker Mario Staggl was indicted for conspiring with banker Bradley Birkenfeld to assist an American billionaire real estate developer evade paying $7.2 million in taxes by assisting in concealing $200 million of assets in Switzerland and Liechtenstein.

Dec. 12, 2007 — Igor Olenicoff, president and owner of Olen Properties Corporation, pleaded guilty to filing a false tax return for tax year 2002 related to foreign bank accounts he failed to disclose to the IRS. According to Olenicoff’s plea agreement, during the years 1992 through 2004, Olenicoff owned, controlled and had signatory authority over financial accounts outside of the United States.

UBS Clients Whose Names Were Given to IRS as a Result of the Deferred  Prosecution

Aug. 14, 2009 — John McCarthy was charged with failing to inform the government of a Swiss bank account as part of a scheme to move at least $1 million from the United States into Swiss bank accounts with the goal of avoiding the payment of federal income taxes.

July 28, 2009 — Jeffrey P. Chernick, of Stanfordville, N.Y., pleaded guilty to charges of filing a false tax return. Chernick, who owns a corporation which represents toy manufacturers in China and Hong Kong, accepted responsibility for concealing more than $8 million in Swiss bank accounts.

June 25, 2009 — UBS client, Steven Michael Rubinstein of Boca Raton, Fla., pleaded guilty to filing a false tax return for tax year 2004. On April 1, 2009, Rubinstein was charged with filing a false tax return that intentionally failed to disclose the existence of a Swiss bank account maintained by UBS of which he was the beneficial owner and failed to report any income earned on that account.
 
April 14, 2009 — Robert Moran, of Lighthouse Point, Fla., pleaded guilty to a criminal information charging him with filing a false income tax return. Moran accepted responsibility for concealing more than $3 million in assets in a secret bank account at UBS in Switzerland.
 

 

The State of Compliance – Foreign Holding Tax Forms

August 24, 2009

As reported in an article published by CNBC, All Overseas Bank Accounts More Vulnerable to IRS Scrutiny,  by Mark Koba, Senior Editor

“The IRS estimates as many as one million US taxpayers need to file foreign holding compliance forms in any given year,  but only about 20 percent currently do so.”