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- @285 CHAP ZZ
-
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- │ PROTECTING YOUR ASSETS FROM CREDITORS │
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-
- Starting a new business is almost always a highly risky
- proposition, and you should not overlook the grim fact
- that, if the business fails, you may be forced into
- bankruptcy and could lose everything except what the
- bankruptcy laws allow you to keep. This is one reason why
- many small businesses incorporate at the outset, since a
- corporation will generally limit your liability to business
- creditors to the amount you invest in the corporation, plus
- any loans you make to the corporation or any loans to the
- corporation from banks or other lenders, which you have
- agreed to guarantee.
-
- @IF120xx]NOTE re @NAME (a @ENTITY):
- @IF120xx]-----------------------------------------------------------
- @IF120xx]Accordingly, if you do incorporate, be very cautious before
- @IF121xx]PLANNING NOTE FOR YOUR CORPORATION:
- @IF121xx]-----------------------------------------------------------
- @IF121xx]@NAME is a corporation -- as a result,
- @IF121xx]we suggest that you exercise a great deal of caution before
- unnecessarily committing too much of your personal net worth
- to the business. For example, instead of putting a building
- or piece of land you own into the corporation, it may be
- better (and may save income taxes and, in some states,
- property taxes) for you to keep the property in your name
- and instead lease it to the corporation.
- -----------------------------------------------------------
- @CODE: CA
-
- (As an example, in California, transferring real estate to a
- corporation will usually be an event that will trigger a
- reassessment of the property for property tax purposes under
- Proposition 13. If the Prop 13 value before the transfer
- was very low compared to its actual value, such a transfer
- could result in a major increase in property taxes, since
- Prop 13 allows the local taxing authorities to reassess real
- estate at current value whenever there is a "change of
- ownership," such as a transfer to a corporation.)
- @CODE:OF
-
- An alternative to incorporating, in all but 2 states, Hawaii
- and Vermont, is to organize your business (if there are 2 or
- more owners) as a "limited liability company." An LLC is a
- business entity similar to a partnership, but it provides
- its owners limited liability, generally to the same extent
- as a corporation.
-
- PLANNING NOTE FOR @NAME:
- ------------------------------------------------------------
- @IF120xx]Be aware that, even if you incorporate, the leases or bank
- @IF121xx]Be aware that although you are incorporated, leases or bank
- loans that you may have to guarantee on behalf of the
- corporation could still wipe out your personal savings if
- the business "bellies up," and you have to make good on
- the guarantees to the landlord or the bank.
- ------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Thus, it often makes sense to have your corporation set up
- a tax-qualified pension or profit sharing plan and to have
- it contribute as much as possible to the plan on your
- behalf. Not only does this provide substantial tax savings
- and deferral, but federal law (and in many cases, state law
- as well) will protect your account under such a plan from
- your creditors or the corporation's creditors -- except, of
- course, from your spouse in a divorce, or, in some instances,
- from the IRS, if you owe money to the Infernal Revenue
- Service.
-
- Then if, over a period of years, you are able to build up a
- significant retirement fund in your company's pension or
- profit sharing plan, you can rest reasonably assured that
- the failure of the business or a disastrous lawsuit will
- not touch that nest egg, with regard to most types of
- creditors.
-
- If you are going into a particularly risky kind of business,
- and "betting the ranch" on it, it may be a very good idea
- to spend a few hundred dollars up front, consulting a
- bankruptcy lawyer, who can outline to you what types of
- assets you will be able retain if the worst case scenario
- unfolds, and you do have to file for bankruptcy. Most
- states provide that varying amounts of assets, such as a
- certain amount of equity in your home, a car of a certain
- value, life insurance or annuity policies, tools of your
- trade, and sometimes a number of other specified assets,
- may be retained by you if you go through bankruptcy. You
- will want to know up front what your state's laws are on
- such matters so you can structure your affairs so that you
- take full advantage of any such bankruptcy "loopholes" if
- worse comes to worst. Also, if you don't wait until things
- are already looking shaky, you may often be able to protect
- yourself from creditors by putting a large part of your
- personal assets in your spouse's name, as a gift (if you
- have a strong marriage and feel you can trust your spouse
- not to take the money and run off with the local tennis
- pro). A good bankruptcy attorney can also counsel you on
- whether such a spousal transfer can be made workable (i.e.,
- non-fraudulent) -- if you are a trusting soul.
-
- Aside from the risks of owning a business, many people are
- also becoming increasingly concerned about protecting their
- savings from the long-term debasement of the value of the
- U.S. currency, thanks to periodic bouts of inflation, and
- the "twin towers": a towering, ever-growing federal budget
- deficit and a massive trade deficit, which have, in recent
- years, led to a major decline in the value of the U.S.
- dollar vs. the currencies of other important industrialized
- countries, such as Japan, Germany, Switzerland and several
- other major European countries.
-
- OFFICIAL inflation rates are relatively low as of this
- writing, in 1996. (But do you know of anything, other than
- your income, that has been going up in price by only 3% or
- so in recent years? Like taxes, or government spending?)
- For example, energy prices for things like heating oil have
- jumped about 20% in the first few months of 1996, but the
- "official" government figures only showed about a 2% rise
- in such items. (Don't try calling your heating oil supplier
- and asking why your cost of heating oil went up 20%, while
- the government says heating oil only went up by 2% -- your
- supplier will probably tell you to buy your heating oil
- from the government, if you don't like the price increase.)
-
- The Federal Reserve appears to be pumping huge amounts of
- new money into the financial system, trying to revive a
- still rather weak economy, prior to the 1996 elections.
- Meanwhile, deficits continue and the national debt continues
- to grow, like a spreading oil slick.
-
- If past history is any guide, this massive pump-priming
- may help stimulate the economy in the short run, but in 18
- to 24 months down the road, there is a very good probability
- that it will reignite the fires of inflation. Commodity
- prices are showing increases almost across the board, with
- some experts predicting that, with increasing demand from
- rapidly growing middle classes in huge countries like India
- and China, commodity prices, especially for foods and grains,
- will go "parabolic" by the end of the decade. Just when we
- thought we had finally put a stake through the ugly heart
- of the inflation virus, it may come back to bite us, and
- not necessarily in the neck. However, experts have a way
- of being wrong much of the time....
-
- If the deteriorating financial condition of the U.S. and
- the "American peso" concerns you, you may want to protect
- yourself from future restrictions the government may place
- on investing in foreign currencies or on investing your
- funds abroad, while at the same time investing in a
- relatively safe and stable foreign currency. One good
- way to do this may be to put some of your long-term
- savings in a Swiss bank, perhaps denominated in Swiss
- francs (or in another strong currency, such as the Dutch
- guilder, Japanese yen, or the German mark).
-
- Both Switzerland and Germany, in particular, have been
- fanatically determined for many years to keep inflation
- as low as humanly possible, even at the cost of economic
- growth, and it doesn't seem likely that they will change
- those deeply-ingrained habits any time soon and start
- printing money like Haiti or Russia -- or our own Federal
- Reserve.
-
- Some financial advisers feel that the major Swiss banks are
- also much safer places to deposit money than U.S. banks,
- since Swiss banks generally maintain much larger financial
- reserves and are operated much more conservatively than
- banks in this country. This is not to say, of course, that
- Swiss banks don't occasionally go broke; or that the FDIC
- won't pay off the first $100,000 of your deposits if your
- money is in a U.S. bank, like they have -- so far -- in the
- case of the failures of hundreds of American banks. But
- some of the larger Swiss banks, such as Union Bank of
- Switzerland, are extremely well capitalized and very
- conservatively run, and thus are likely to weather any
- but the most severe global depression. Which is more than
- you can say about many U.S. banks -- even if you believe
- an increasingly bankrupt federal government will once
- again bail out the FDIC next time the U.S. banking
- industry goes on a new lending binge, as it has shown a
- penchant for doing in the past (on Third World loans, oil
- patch loans, bad real estate loans, LBO financing, etc.) --
- or gets too deeply into some of the latest "easy money"
- games the banks are now playing: massive, speculative
- "interest rate swaps", and borrowing short-term to "invest"
- long-term in government bonds and notes, shorting Japanese
- bonds to invest in higher-yielding U.S. and Third World
- debt, etc.).
-
- In addition, Swiss banks offer considerable advantages if
- you wish to invest in gold or silver bullion or gold coins,
- since their charges for executing transactions and storing
- precious metals for you are often only a fraction of what
- American banks and precious metals dealers charge for the
- same services. At present, you can buy gold bullion from
- Union bank of Switzerland at a small premium over the
- market price of gold, and they will buy it back from you
- at a minimum price of $360 any time in the next few years.
- (Contact the bank for exact details, which are subject to
- change.)
-
- It is also quite easy to open a Swiss bank account in a
- foreign currency, such as the Swiss franc or Deutschemark.
-
- Opening a Swiss bank account is quite simple (although many
- Swiss banks will not open a new account for amounts for
- less than $500). The major Swiss banks are very international
- in orientation, and the big ones, like Union Bank of
- Switzerland, or Swiss Credit Bank (Credit Suisse), will
- correspond with you in English and provide bank statements
- in English. However, the days of total bank secrecy and
- numbered Swiss accounts are pretty much over, so if you
- are looking squirrel some money and investment income away
- in a secret foreign bank account, you had better find
- another country, since Switzerland is no longer the refuge
- for questionable funds that it once was.
-
- To open a Swiss account by mail, simply do the following:
-
- . Write to one of the major Swiss banks mentioned above
- (you can contact one of their U.S. branches in New
- York, Los Angeles, San Francisco, or other major U.S.
- banking centers, to obtain the address of their Zurich
- headquarters).
-
- . Enclose a check in U.S. funds for at least $500, and
- tell them what kind of currency you want your account
- to be denominated in.
-
- . Specify the type of account you want to open -- a
- "current" account (like a U.S. checking account -- it
- pays no interest, but has no withdrawal restrictions)
- or a "deposit" account (like a savings account in a
- U.S. bank -- usually requires six months notice to
- withdraw more than a few thousand francs). (Deposit
- accounts at U.B.S. are paying about 3.25% at present,
- in 1996 -- which is better than a lot of U.S. savings
- accounts, and is in a stable, gold-backed currency, to
- boot.)
-
- . You should at the same time request information
- regarding the bank's withdrawal restrictions and
- interest rates for different kinds of accounts, and a
- description of their services and fees in connection
- with purchasing and storing precious metals and coins,
- if that interests you.
-
- The Swiss address for Union Bank of Switzerland is:
-
- Schweizerische BankGesellschaft
- (Union Bank of Switzerland)
- Bahnhofstrasse 45
- 8021 Zuerich
- Switzerland
-
- Note that Switzerland imposes a substantial withholding tax
- of 35% on interest credited to your Swiss bank account.
- However, you can apply for an annual refund of all but 5% of
- that tax under the U.S.-Swiss Income Tax Treaty, and that
- small tax can be taken as a credit on your U.S. income tax
- return, on Form 1116. When you open an interest-bearing
- Swiss account, ask the bank to send you a Form 82, which is
- a reasonably simple form (all in English) you can complete,
- notarize, and mail to the Swiss tax authorities for a refund
- of the most of the withholding tax. Note that the Swiss
- tax refund form will ask you about your U.S. tax ID number,
- where you file your federal income tax returns, and the
- Swiss government will undoubtedly share this information
- with the I.R.S..
-
- Remember also that you must report the existence of any
- foreign financial account on your U.S. income tax return
- and file Form TD F 90-22.1 with the Department of the
- Treasury by June 30 of each year if you had foreign
- accounts the prior year with a value of over $10,000 in
- total. Also, Schedule B of your Form 1040 requires you to
- answer "YES" or "NO" to the question of whether or not you
- had any foreign account(s) during the preceding tax year.
-
- Finally, note also that you will have to keep track of the
- "cost" of all the Swiss francs or other foreign currencies
- you purchase (or receive as interest payments). Our tax
- law treats all foreign currencies like commodities, so if
- you buy francs, guilders, yen or Deutschemarks, you will
- have a gain or loss on your "investment" when you sell them
- or convert them back into U.S. currency.
-
- ┌───────────────────────────────────────────────┐
- │ Swiss bank accounts are not just for shadowy │
- │ underworld types; nor are they are for every │
- │ investor. But if you like to hedge your bets │
- │ a little, it may help you to sleep somewhat │
- │ better at night while your government runs its│
- │ printing presses overtime, printing dollars │
- │ at a record rate, if you know that at least a │
- │ part of your savings are in a relatively safe │
- │ currency; thus, you may want to consider │
- │ putting some portion of your investment funds │
- │ into a Swiss account, in a sound currency. │
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