Blog #129: Leveraged Executive Bonus Plan with
Bank-Funding of the Income Tax (Part 3 of 3)

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Summary of Part 1 and Part 2

As you will recall from Blog #127, Hawthorne Construction, Inc., has decided that part of a new benefit plan for Alex Demas will include a Leveraged Executive Bonus Plan funded with $2,875,000 of indexed universal life (IUL).  The policy is max-funded with five level premiums of $100,000 financed with deductible bonuses by the company paid to Alex.  Alex will pay the annual income tax on each bonus with funds from a bank loan secured by the cash value of the IUL.

We integrated data from the illustration in Blog #127 into an overall wealth evaluation using our Wealthy and Wise® System which developed some amazing results for Alex and his wife, Ana.

In Blog #128, we introduced an incentive feature called “Controlled Executive Bonus” where we added a condition to Alex’s bonus arrangement that the bonuses must be repaid if he voluntarily leaves the firm during the next 10 years.

Part of the analysis in Blog #127 includes the conversion of $500,000 in IRA assets to a Roth IRA.  The income tax generated by the conversion is paid by a withdrawal for their liquid assets — it is not an out-of-pocket cost.  As a result, Alex and Ana consider the income tax to be an investment, not a cost, as it is the key to an increase in their long-range net worth of almost $8 million.

Note:  Any future contribution to a retirement plan by Alex and/or Ana should likely be directed to a Roth IRA.

Part 3 of the Series

How about Inherited IRAs vs. Inherited Roth IRAs for heirs?

Alex and Ana’s daughter, Lexie, is currently age 15.  Let’s assume she inherits the retirement plan in 50 years at her parents’ joint life expectancy of ages 89/89, which will be Lexie’s age 65.

Below is the comparison of Lexie’s Inherited IRA vs. her Inherited Roth IRA.

Inherited IRA vs. Inherited Roth IRA
Lexie Demas at age 65
Assumed Yield 7.00%

blog-129-img-2-Inherited-IRA-vs-Inherited-Roth-IRA-image

The reason for the discrepancy between the two options?  By Alex and Ana’s joint life expectancy, the required minimum distributions (RMDs) from the IRA result in an initial value for Lexie’s Inherited IRA of $4,470,813 which produces after tax cash flow for her retirement of $6,471,304.  The Roth, with no RMDs, develops an initial value for Lexie’s Inherited Roth IRA of $14,728,531 which produces after tax cash flow for her retirement of $30,455,562 — 470% greater than the Inherited IRA.  This alone is reason enough for Alex and Ana to convert the IRA to a Roth IRA.

If you are not including the giant impact on heirs of inheriting a Roth IRA in your presentations, you are missing out on a major benefit for your clients that they likely have never considered or been shown.

Click here to review the Inherited IRA vs Inherited Roth IRA comparison from the InsMark Illustration System.

Source of the Inherited IRA and Inherited Roth IRA Calculations

Three calculators from the InsMark Illustration System (InsCalc tab) were used:

  • Inherited IRA Calculator
  • Inherited Roth IRA Calculator
  • Comparison of Inherited IRAs

Derived from the Wealthy and Wise evaluation in Blog #127, we used the Defined Contribution Transfer Tax (Summary) report in Scenario 1 and the Roth Defined Contribution Transfer Tax (Summary) report in Scenario 3 to establish the beginning values of Lexie’s inherited retirement plan.

Click here to review those Wealthy and Wise reports.  The value I used as the initial balance for Lexie’s Inherited IRA ($4,470,813) is at her parents’ ages 89/89 in Column (4) on Page 2.  The value I used as the initial balance for Lexie’s Inherited Roth IRA ($14,728,531) is at her parents’ ages 89/89 in Column (4) on Page 4.

This data from the Wealthy and Wise reports was entered into each plan’s respective calculator (IRA Calculator and Roth IRA Calculator) on the InsCalc tab in the InsMark Illustration System (“IIS”).  The results of each were then easily imported into the Comparison of Inherited IRAs Calculator in the same location which is source of the graphic image above.  The IIS Workbook with all three calculators is available below.

Note:  If you would like to review these two Wealthy and Wise evaluations in the context of Blog #127, go to the section entitled System Workbook Files in Blog #127 and request that we email that Wealthy and Wise Workbook to you using the email address indicated at that location.

Conclusion

The benefits for Lexie Demas all stem from the power of the Leveraged Executive Bonus Plan featured in this three-part series of bank-funded income tax on the bonuses.  Without the introduction of that plan’s benefits into the Wealthy and Wise analysis for her parents, none of the features described in Blogs #127, #128, and #129 would be present.

Here is a short summary of the three Blogs in the series:

Blog #127:

Hawthorne Construction, Inc., deducts the bonuses paid to Alex resulting in an annual after tax cost of $65,000 a year for five years.

Alex is rewarded with an executive fringe benefit which, at no personal cost, provides:

  • Pre-retirement, tax free death benefit of $2 million+ for his family;
  • After tax retirement cash flow totaling $4.8 million;
  • Residual policy cash value of $1.7 million.
  • Residual policy death benefit of $1.8 million.

Blog #128:

Hawthorne Construction, Inc., adds a Controlled Bonus feature to Alex’s benefit plan which provides it with near certainty of Alex’s employment for at least the next 10 years.

Blog #129:

A major result of the Roth conversion (outlined in Blog #127) results in a benefit to Alex and Ana’s daughter, Lexie, of an inheritance of an after tax income stream totaling over $30 million through her age 85.  (The Inherited IRA and the Inherited Roth are both subject to RMDs.  As a result, either inherited account is exhausted by Lexie’s age 85.)

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Important Note #1:  The hypothetical life insurance illustrations associated with this Blog assumes the nonguaranteed values shown continue in all years.  This is not likely, and actual results may be more or less favorable.  Actual illustrations are not valid unless accompanied by a basic illustration from the issuing life insurance company.

Important Note #2:  Many of you are rightly concerned about the potential tax bomb in life insurance that can accidentally be triggered by a careless policyowner.  Click here to read Blog #51: Avoiding the Tax Bomb in Life Insurance.

Important Note #3:  The information in this Blog is for educational purposes only.  In all cases, the approval of a client’s legal and tax advisers must be secured regarding the implementation or modification of any planning technique as well as the applicability and consequences of new cases, rulings, or legislation upon existing or impending plans.

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Blog #128: Leveraged Executive Bonus Plan with Bank-Funding of the Income Tax (Part 2 of 3)

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