Doctors Betrayed by Traditional Financial Strategies, Part 2
In Part 1 of this article, you learned why the following strategies may not make sense for most physicians:
1. Not using a corporation (or using the wrong type of corporation).
2. Owning assets in your name, spouse’s name, or jointly with spouse.
3. Making a bet on traditional qualified retirement plans without hedging it.
Part 2 focuses on tax, investment, and insurance mistakes doctors make when following advice that is designed for tens of millions of average Americans. When professionals with significant tax, asset protection, and retirement challenges use tools designed for people who pay little or no tax and will never be sued, problems are bound to arise. More importantly, this segment of the article offers you some helpful hints to avoid these pitfalls. (For a copy of part 1 of this article, please email Mandell@ojmgroup.com)
Risk #4 – Paying Full Price when the Government Offers to Pay Half
Technically, the government (Internal Revenue Service) is not paying half of anything. However, if they offer you a tax deduction and your combined state, federal, and local marginal tax rate is close to 50 percent, you can think of a tax-deductible purchase as being half as expensive for you because the government will allow you to deduct this purchase. You must realize that nearly 50 percent of Americans do not pay any federal income tax. You can either look to advisors who can help you legally reduce any unnecessary taxes or you can let the system work for everyone else but you. Let’s look at an example of one simple way to use tax laws to your benefit.
Suggestion: Deduct Long-Term Care insurance (LTCi) through your Practice. More than 60 percent of American households will require some sort of Long-Term Care assistance. Doctors, more than any other segment of the population, realize that longer life expectancies and skyrocketing medical costs significantly increase the probability of a family facing an illness with devastating financial consequences. Without a shifting of risk through a long-term care insurance policy, you will have to pay for this assistance from your savings. You can cover your spouse through the practice even if he or she is not a physician or employee. With your own practice entity, you may receive a tax deduction for 100 percent of the premiums.
Unlike traditional retirement plans where contributions are tax-deductible and benefits are taxable, Long-Term Care insurance premiums can be tax-deductible and the benefits are 100 percent tax-free.
Mistake #5 – Using only Term Insurance Premiums
Some well-known advisors tout, “Buy term insurance and invest the difference.” This is excellent advice for the “average American” family who earns $49,000 per year, pays 12 percent in federal income taxes, and has no potential liability or estate tax risk whatsoever. This is a perfect example of good advice for most people being terrible advice for high-income dermatologists.
Most Americans pay very little tax on investment income and don’t care about asset protection, so the advice to disregard the tax-free accumulation and creditor protection benefits of cash value life insurance to maximize taxable investment accounts is fine for them. Beyond temporary income protection against the premature death of the breadwinner, the average American has little need for cash value life insurance. Do you agree with any of the following?
- I have no concern over lawsuits against me, my partners, my employees, or my family.
- I am not worried about 23 to 37 percent of my investment gains going to taxes.
- I don’t mind 40 to 70 percent of certain assets in my estate going to taxes when I die.
Does this sound like the typical dermatologist’s situation? Of course not. These completely different characteristics clearly illustrate how “off-the-rack” planning that is widely accepted by the media and the general population may not adequately help doctors address their unique challenges.
Suggestion: Buy Cash Value Life Insurance for Tax-Savings and Asset Protection. If you are skeptical of this advice, ask yourself whether you are skeptical because you did the calculations yourself (or reviewed a careful analysis by an expert) or because you have heard, “Buy term insurance and invest the difference” so many times that you have just accepted it as fact.
To spare you the pain of a long mathematical proof, let us offer the following analysis.
1. Mutual funds growing at 7 percent (taxable) are worth 4 to 5 percent (after taxes) to high income taxpayers like you versus 6 percent or more to average Americans.
2.Investment gains within cash value life insurance policies are tax deferred, and can be accessed tax-free.
3. For relatively healthy insureds, the annualized cost of all internal expenses within a life insurance policy range from 1 to 1.5 percent.
4. For families in high marginal tax brackets, the cost of the insurance policy is less than the cost of taxes on the same investment gains within mutual funds.
Without even factoring in the cost of the term insurance (which would reduce the total amount in the mutual fund portfolio), an appropriately structured cash value insurance policy outperforms buying term insurance and investing the difference. Yet another benefit is that life insurance is protected from creditors, and even from bankruptcy creditors, in many states. This is a benefit that may interest a physician’s family, but be seen as worthless to the average American family who has very little risk of a lawsuit.
EXAMPLE: Consider a 45-year-old healthy male who wants to invest $25,000 per year for 10 years before retirement and then withdraw funds from ages 65 to 84. Assume this individual’s tax rate on investments is 31 percent (50 percent from long-term gains and dividends, 50 percent from short-term gains, plus 6 percent state tax). Assume the gross pretax return of both taxable mutual fund investments and cash value life insurance is 6.45 percent per year.
• The individual who invests in mutual funds on a taxable basis will be able to withdraw $28,477 per year after taxes (without factoring in the costs of purchasing ANY term life insurance or the cost of creating legal structures for asset protection—which a doctor may need to do to protect assets from lawsuits).
• The individual who invests in cash value life insurance withdraws $48,343 per year (no taxes on policy withdrawals of basis and loans) and has more than $525,000 of life insurance protection.
In the example above, it is obvious that buying term and investing the difference in taxable investments was not better than investing in tax-efficient life insurance for a highly compensated dermatologist in a high tax bracket. n
The authors welcome your questions. Contact them at (877) 656-4362 or through their website www.ojmgroup.com.
To receive a free hardcopy of Wealth Protection Planning for Dermatologists, call 877-656-4362. Visit www.ojmbookstore.com and enter promotional code PRDERM13 for a free ebook download of Wealth Protection Planning for Kindle or iPad.
David B. Mandell, JD, MBA, is a former attorney, author of ten books for doctors, including Wealth Protection Planning for Dermatologists and principal of the financial planning firm OJM Group www.ojmgroup.com, where Michael Lewellen, CFP serves as Director of Financial Planning. They can be reached at 877-656-4362 or mandell@ojmgroup.com.
Disclosure:OJM Group, LLC. (“OJM”) is an SEC registered investment adviser with its principal place of business in the State of Ohio. OJM and its representatives are in compliance with the current notice filing and registration requirements imposed upon registered investment advisers by those states in which OJM maintains clients. OJM may only transact business in those states in which it is registered, or qualifies for an exemption or exclusion from registration requirements. For information pertaining to the registration status of OJM, please contact OJM or refer to the Investment Adviser Public Disclosure web site (www.adviserinfo.sec.gov). For additional information about OJM, including fees and services, send for our disclosure brochure as set forth on Form ADV using the contact information herein. Please read the disclosure statement carefully before you invest or send money.
This article contains general information that is not suitable for everyone. The information contained herein should not be construed as personalized legal or tax advice. There is no guarantee that the views and opinions expressed in this article will be appropriate for your particular circumstances. Tax law changes frequently, accordingly information presented herein is subject to change without notice. You should seek professional tax and legal advice before implementing any strategy discussed herein.
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