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Valuation Discounts
Legal Tax Angles:
How to Save Taxes Without Going to Jail
The assets in your estate must be valued by the executor
or administrator of your estate based on their “fair market value” at the date
of your death or on an alternate valuation date six months later. Fair market
value (FMV) is generally defined as the price that would be paid by a willing
buyer to a willing seller, neither being under any compulsion to buy or sell
and both having full knowledge of the facts relating to the asset.
The FMV of a stock listed on the New York Stock Exchange
would be the price at which the security could be sold on the date of death or
the alternative valuation date. That price is based on the fact that the buyer
will be a minority shareholder, with little power to influence the affairs of
the corporation. If someone had enough money to buy a controlling interest in a
corporation listed on a major stock exchange, the buyer would have to pay a
premium because of the added value of the controlling interest.
With a family owned corporation, the situation is
reversed. Usually, the value of the business is based on the sale of a
controlling interest in the corporation. The buyer would be able to select the
board of directors, officers and employees of the company. If the buyer so
desired, he could even force a liquidation of the company and a sale of it’s
assets with a distribution of the proceeds. Where a minority interest is being
valued, there is a discount from the price of the shares of the total company
because the minority shareholder would not have any control over the operations
of the business. In some cases, there are legal restrictions on the transfer of
shares without the consent of the corporation, which reduces the value of the
minority shares even further.
In the case of a limited partnership (LP) or limited
liability company (LLC), the ownership interest is very similar to that of a
minority shareholder in a corporation that has restrictions on the transfer of
shares - even if the interest is a majority interest. With the LP or LLC, the
partners can’t be forced to accept anyone else as a partner or member. The
transfer of the partnership or LLC interest is restricted and therefore is
worth less than the assets owned by the enterprise. Thus, it’s possible to have
a partnership or LLC with $100,000 worth of readily marketable bonds or cash
but an 80% interest in the partnership or LLC might require a discount factor
of up to 30%. Thus, the FMV of the partnership interest is not $80,000 but is
only $56,000. In some cases, the discounts can be as much as 40% from the value
of the assets owned by the partnership or LLC.
By organizing some of your family assets into a limited
partnership or LLC, you can reduce the value of your estate by 20% to 40%.
With a valuation discount of 40%, the FMV of a $1 million estate would be
reduced to $600,000 and that value would be offset by the lifetime equivalent
exemption. With a couple, an estate of $3.3 million could be arranged so that
there would be no estate tax.
The IRS has been trying for the past ten years to find some way to deter
taxpayers from using valuation discounts of family controlled entities to
reduce their estate and/or gift taxes. Thus far, the courts have sided with
the taxpayers in most of the cases. Even so, the IRS has a reputation for
persistence and if they can't find a way to eliminate an effective tax saving
device through the courts, they often turn to the Congress to make changes in
the law.
Vern Jacobs
Copyright, 2003
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