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  • AtricleZine - How to Finance a Business For Your Son or Daughter

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    a small business corporation. Your loss is fully deductible against ordinary income, rather than a limited capital loss.

    And you can claim a maximum Section 1244 loss of $100,000 (joint return) in a single year or $50,000 on a single return

    The maximum amount you can claim as a Section 1244 loss in a single year is $100,000 on a joint return or $50,000 on a single return.

    So instead of a gift, a loan or a bank surety, you

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    First, how not to go about it:

    A cash loan is not the way to go.

    Neither is signing as surety for a bank loan

    A gift of the amount required? Again, not the best approach

    But these are the three most common but wrong ways by which parents try to help their children get started in business.

    So what is the best way?

    For US residents and citizens, Internal Revenue Code 1244 provides the answer.

    If you give your daughter $50,000 say to start a new venture, and the business goes belly up with the loss of the $50,000, there is no way that the IRS will allow you to claim this loss as a deduction.

    Or suppose you loan her business $50,000. Again, if things do not work out, the business will keep paying you the interest until it runs out of cash, leaving you with a worthless note.

    Tax-wise, you have a capital loss, which is deductible at the pitiful rate of only $3,000 per year against your ordinary income. Or you can use the loss to offset capital gains.

    The same sad tax fate, a capital loss, results if you sign as surety and must pay Sue's $50,000 loan from the bank.

    Tax-wise, a gift to your daughter is even worse. The $50,000 is hers. As a result, the tax loss is hers, not yours. Under the circumstances, chances are that Sue has little or no income, and the loss is almost totally wasted.

    Note too that a loan or a bank surety is often questioned by the IRS. Why? The IRS contends that the $50,000 was a gift because you never intended to try to collect in the first place. You had no reasonable expectation of being repaid is the way the IRS puts it.

    But now let’s look at IRS Section 1244 – the right way.

    Section 1244 allows you to claim an immediate deduction for a loss on stock in a small business corporation. Your loss is fully deductible against ordinary income, rather than a limited capital loss.

    And you can claim a maximum Section 1244 loss of $100,000 (joint return) in a single year or $50,000 on a single return

    The maximum amount you can claim as a Section 1244 loss in a single year is $100,000 on a joint return or $50,000 on a single return.

    So instead of a gift, a loan or a bank surety, you

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    ur daughter $50,000 say to start a new venture, and the business goes belly up with the loss of the $50,000, there is no way that the IRS will allow you to claim this loss as a deduction.

    Or suppose you loan her business $50,000. Again, if things do not work out, the business will keep paying you the interest until it runs out of cash, leaving you with a worthless note.

    Tax-wise, you have a capital loss, which is deductible at the pitiful rate of only $3,000 per year against your ordinary income. Or you can use the loss to offset capital gains.

    The same sad tax fate, a capital loss, results if you sign as surety and must pay Sue's $50,000 loan from the bank.

    Tax-wise, a gift to your daughter is even worse. The $50,000 is hers. As a result, the tax loss is hers, not yours. Under the circumstances, chances are that Sue has little or no income, and the loss is almost totally wasted.

    Note too that a loan or a bank surety is often questioned by the IRS. Why? The IRS contends that the $50,000 was a gift because you never intended to try to collect in the first place. You had no reasonable expectation of being repaid is the way the IRS puts it.

    But now let’s look at IRS Section 1244 – the right way.

    Section 1244 allows you to claim an immediate deduction for a loss on stock in a small business corporation. Your loss is fully deductible against ordinary income, rather than a limited capital loss.

    And you can claim a maximum Section 1244 loss of $100,000 (joint return) in a single year or $50,000 on a single return

    The maximum amount you can claim as a Section 1244 loss in a single year is $100,000 on a joint return or $50,000 on a single return.

    So instead of a gift, a loan or a bank surety, you

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    he pitiful rate of only $3,000 per year against your ordinary income. Or you can use the loss to offset capital gains.

    The same sad tax fate, a capital loss, results if you sign as surety and must pay Sue's $50,000 loan from the bank.

    Tax-wise, a gift to your daughter is even worse. The $50,000 is hers. As a result, the tax loss is hers, not yours. Under the circumstances, chances are that Sue has little or no income, and the loss is almost totally wasted.

    Note too that a loan or a bank surety is often questioned by the IRS. Why? The IRS contends that the $50,000 was a gift because you never intended to try to collect in the first place. You had no reasonable expectation of being repaid is the way the IRS puts it.

    But now let’s look at IRS Section 1244 – the right way.

    Section 1244 allows you to claim an immediate deduction for a loss on stock in a small business corporation. Your loss is fully deductible against ordinary income, rather than a limited capital loss.

    And you can claim a maximum Section 1244 loss of $100,000 (joint return) in a single year or $50,000 on a single return

    The maximum amount you can claim as a Section 1244 loss in a single year is $100,000 on a joint return or $50,000 on a single return.

    So instead of a gift, a loan or a bank surety, you

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    loss is almost totally wasted.

    Note too that a loan or a bank surety is often questioned by the IRS. Why? The IRS contends that the $50,000 was a gift because you never intended to try to collect in the first place. You had no reasonable expectation of being repaid is the way the IRS puts it.

    But now let’s look at IRS Section 1244 – the right way.

    Section 1244 allows you to claim an immediate deduction for a loss on stock in a small business corporation. Your loss is fully deductible against ordinary income, rather than a limited capital loss.

    And you can claim a maximum Section 1244 loss of $100,000 (joint return) in a single year or $50,000 on a single return

    The maximum amount you can claim as a Section 1244 loss in a single year is $100,000 on a joint return or $50,000 on a single return.

    So instead of a gift, a loan or a bank surety, you

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    a small business corporation. Your loss is fully deductible against ordinary income, rather than a limited capital loss.

    And you can claim a maximum Section 1244 loss of $100,000 (joint return) in a single year or $50,000 on a single return

    The maximum amount you can claim as a Section 1244 loss in a single year is $100,000 on a joint return or $50,000 on a single return.

    So instead of a gift, a loan or a bank surety, you and your daughter set up a corporation for her new business. You get $50,000 of stock in the corporation that qualifies for Section 1244 treatment. Your daughter, who runs the business, draws a salary

    If the business succeeds, your daughter can gradually buy back your stock (or, better yet, you can gift it to her) over time. Any profit you make on the buyback will be a low-taxed capital gain.

    If the business fails, your loss will be fully deductible under Section 1244 (up to the $100,000/$50,000 limits).

    Here's another nice thing about Section 1244: The tax benefits are easy to get. The beneficial tax treatment is automatic and no written plan is necessary.

    A final point: Section 1244 is the way to go not only for your kids, but also for your spouse who might want to start a new business. And the same strategy applies if you want to venture into something new while keeping your present business.

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