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ASSET PROTECTION PLANNING
Developing a successful financial plan to provide for your financial security and for your children's education requires two key ingredients. First, you must create a program for building wealth. That means utilizing available savings and investment strategies to accumulate investment capital and then managing your funds in the most efficient and productive manner. Techniques for accomplishing these objectives have always been the centerpiece of traditional financial planning. Books, magazines, television shows and daily seminars offer an abundance of advice on a variety of savings and investment vehicles such as mutual funds, annuities, IRA's, 401 K plans, and investment real estate. The second ingredient of every successful financial plan is a program for PROTECTING wealth. If your objectives are to provide for the needs of your family and to build a nest-egg for your retirement, building wealth is only one side of the equation. The other side is making sure that everything you have put together over the years remains safely intact and is there for you when you need it. Strategies for PROTECTING wealth, known as Asset Protection, are designed to address particular dangers which pose a threat to your financial security. These dangers are primarily lawsuits and claims against you which can arise from many possible sources. In the area of asset protection planning, the Law Offices of Afshin A. Asher, Inc. will utilize advanced strategies to position assets beyond the reach of law suits and creditors. By implementing sophisticated planning techniques, we can protect our clients' assets from creditors and lawsuits while, at the same time, allowing them to retain control over the assets and the income which they produce. THE LAWSUIT DANGERMore than nineteen million lawsuits are filed in this country every year. Millions of people lose everything they own because of business problems, medical bills, divorce, IRS disputes, accidents and a host of other financial disasters. Additionally, anyone who has retirement savings is an attractive and visible target for frivolous lawsuits directed at "deep pocket" defendants.
A lawsuit from any one of these sources, justified or not, can easily wipe out a lifetime's worth of work and savings. Ask yourself what happens if you lost everything you own. Are you prepared to start all over again? For most people the answer is certainly no. And that's why a sound financial and business plan always incorporates essential asset protection features.
WHAT IS ASSET PROTECTION PLANNING?
Asset protection planning is the method
of preparing for the possibility of future lawsuits by rearranging the
ownership of assets so that they are beyond the reach of potential
creditors. It can act as a form of supplementary insurance in an
overall strategy to protect you from the risks associated with
businesses and professions; however, insurance policies have limits
and exclusions.
Asset protection planning is used to
protect assets that would otherwise be at risk. Asset protection
planning can be done to differing degrees. In general, the more
complex the planning, the more effective the protection. However,
complex plans generally cost more and contain more restrictions. DO YOU NEED ASSET PROTECTION
PLANNING? If you have enough assets to require
estate planning to avoid death taxes, then you probably have enough
assets to require planning to protect them from lawsuits before death.
It is a personal decision based upon your aversion to risks. WHAT ASSETS CAN YOU PROTECT? The simplest form of asset protection
planning involves the ownership of “exempt” property that state
law considers unreachable by creditors. Each state has its own laws
defining exempt and non-exempt property. Certain property may be
entirely exempt while the exemption for other property may be limited
to a certain dollar amount. Examples of exempt property include:
Social security and other such benefits
including life insurance may also be exempt property. Some states
exempt all or a portion of one’s home and adjoining land. If property is not exempt from your
creditors, you may want to consider a simple form of asset protection
planning: an outright transfer of the property to family members.
Valuable assets may be transferred to a spouse or relative to insulate
them from claims of potential creditors. Intra-family transfers can
also often constitute effective estate planning. Transferring the
ownership of assets now can protect them from creditors during your
lifetime and from the tax collector at death. Intra-family transfers should not be
made before considering all ramifications and risks. The disadvantages
include:
ARE MY RETIREMENT ASSETS PROTECTED
FROM CREDITORS? Federal law provides that creditors
cannot reach the assets held by so-called qualified retirement plans.
This includes pension, profit sharing, and 401(k) plans. Self-employed
plans and Individual Retirement Accounts may be protected from
creditors depending upon your state’s laws. HOW CAN YOU PROTECT YOUR ASSETS WHEN
STARTING A BUSINESS? If you begin a business without
incorporating it, then all of your personal and business assets will be
at risk for all debts and claims against the business. This is also the
case if two or more people run the business as a general partnership. In
order to protect your personal assets from the risks of the business, an
asset protection form of ownership needs to be utilized. The choices
available in most states include: PARTNERSHIPS AND TRUSTS During the past few years, the family limited
partnership has been touted as the leading asset
protection device. As the states have permitted the formation of limited
liability companies, they, too, have been viewed as a
favorable ownership form for asset protection. It is much more difficult for creditors
to reach business or investment assets that have been transferred to
these limited liability entities. In most states, a judgment creditor of
a limited liability entity cannot attach a partnership’s assets or
foreclose on a partner’s interest in order to satisfy his claim.
Instead, a creditor is only entitled to a “charging order,” which
may limit their claim to partnership distributions. Asset protection trusts are another asset
protection planning tool. The laws of Delaware and Alaska now authorize
these trusts. There are a number of tax haven countries that are also
used to form “off-shore” trusts.
These countries have laws that are favorable to the creation of
these trusts and can insulate the trust’s assets from creditors. FRAUDULENT TRANSFERS Asset protection planning is considered to be both legal and ethical if it takes place before any event has occurred that could result in a claim against you. If you have already committed an act that could result in a claim or if you have been sued, then it is too late. Any asset transfers at that time (without adequate consideration) may be considered a fraud upon creditors; in which case, the law would not respect the transfers. For more information regarding these strategies, please contact the Law Offices of Afshin A. Asher, Inc. |
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