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![]() Succession Planning
By Mark E. Battersby
An effectively developed succession plan can involve selling the business to provide a retirement nest egg, or continuation of the sign shop or business, with gradual changes in management and/or control, to ensure a source of retirement income or any combination thereof.
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For those who own a closely-held or family sign business, retirement is more than just a matter of deciding not to go to work anymore. In addition to ensuring there will be enough money to retire, sign business owners, shareholders and partners must decide what will happen to the business when they are no longer in control. An effectively developed succession plan can involve selling the business to provide a retirement nest egg, or continuation of the sign shop or business, with gradual changes in management and/or control, to ensure a source of retirement income or any combination thereof.
Planning Basics Although tax planning should never control any business decisions, a sign professional's estate taxes play a big role. Tax law changes in 2001 contained a one year elimination of the so-called "death tax." The estate tax rose from the grave at the end of 2010, with a Bush-era top rate of 35% and an applicable exclusion amount of $5 million ($5.12 million in 2012). In 2013, the death tax will revert to its antiquated, pre-2001 form. The applicable exclusion amount will plummet to $1,000,000, and the top marginal rate will leap twenty points to 55%. A 5% surtax will also return, to be levied on estates between $10 million and $17 million. This raises the top effective rate of the death tax to 60%.
Giving It Away
Unfortunately, while these gifting strategies may benefit the sign professional, none directly benefit the sign business. Other strategies for transferring the sign business do exist however; strategies that frequently include retaining control.
Flipping For FLPs First, a partnership with both general and limited partnership interests is created. Then, the business is transferred to this partnership. A general partnership interest is retained for the owner, allowing a continuation of control over the day-to-day operation of the business. Over time, the limited partnership interest is gifted to family members.
Buy/Sell Agreements When the triggering event occurs, the buyer is obligated to buy the interest from the seller, or the seller's estate, at its fair market value (FMV). The buyer can be a person, a group (such as co-owners), or the business itself. Price and sale terms are prearranged, which eliminates the need for a fire sale if the owner, partner or major shareholder becomes ill or dies.
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Selling It To The Employees
An Outright Sale The time to sell is optional -- now, at retirement, at death, or anytime in between. As long as the sale is for the full fair market value (FMV) of the business, it is not subject to gift tax or estate tax. Of course a sale that occurs before the seller's death may be subject to capital gains tax.
Liquidity Strategies = Cash A private annuity involves the sale of property in exchange for a promise to make payments for the rest of the seller's life. Here, ownership of the business is transferred to family members, or another party (the buyer). The buyer, in turn, makes an unsecured promise to make periodic payments for the rest of the seller's life (a single life annuity), or for the seller's life and the life of a second person (a joint and survivor annuity). A joint and survivor annuity provides payments until the death of the last survivor; that is, payments continue as long as either the husband or wife is still alive. Again, because a private annuity is a sale and not a gift, assets can be removed from an estate without incurring gift tax or estate tax. A self-canceling installment note (SCIN) permits the transfer of the business to a buyer in exchange for a promissory note. The buyer must make a series of payments to the seller under that note. A provision in the note states that upon the owner's death, the remaining payments will be canceled. SCINs provide for a lifetime income stream and avoidance of gift tax, and estate tax in a manner similar to private annuities. Unlike private annuities however, SCINs give a security interest in the transferred business.
Successfully Planning Succession
Obviously, business owners seeking a smooth and equitable transition of their interests should seek competent, experienced advisors to assist them in this matter. No matter how talented and earnest those professional advisors are, their limited specialties should never dictate the choices for the business or the owner, shareholder or partner's family. A tax lawyer can make compelling arguments for strategies that can minimize estate and gift taxes. A CPA can be very convincing when suggesting strategies for controlling income taxes. And it is a similar story with financial planning and insurance professionals. In fact, tax planning should never control any business decisions. Finally, succession planning isn't something that can done once and forgotten. To be complete and effective a succession plan must be continually revisited, reviewed and updated to reflect changes in the value of the sign operation, market conditions, and the owner, shareholder or partner's health, as well as the abilities and passion of the people the sign business will be passed to.
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