|
Business
Ownership
Every business owner will eventually get out of the
business. In
the absence of a child or other relative who can take
his or her place, an owner needs to plan for the sale of
his or her ownership interest.
Ownership in a small business often has little market
appeal to anyone other than those already involved in
the business. Consequently, the obvious buyers are the
remaining owners.
A buy-sell agreement guarantees a buyer for a retiring
or deceased owners interest in a business, thereby
allowing the owner (or the owners heirs) to recover his
or her investment. The agreement also fosters the
continuation of the business by not allowing the
departing owners interest to fall into the hands of
outsiders - persons who may not be qualified to run the
business or who may be incompatible with the remaining
owners
UNDER A TYPICAL AGREEMENT,
THESE CONDITIONS APPLY:
* If an owner wishes to retire, he or she must first
offer to sell the interest to his or her associates, or
to the business itself, before selling to a third party.
* Upon the death of an owner, the surviving owners or
the business must buy, and the estate must sell , his or
her interest.
* The purchase price is fixed or the agreement contains
a formula to determine the price.
STOCK REDEMPTION OR
CROSS-PURCHASE:
Stockholders implementing a buy-sell arrangement must
generally chose between a stock redemption plan and a
cross-purchasing agreement. Under a stock redemption
plan, the corporation agrees to redeem the shares of a
stockholder at his or her retirement, death or, perhaps,
disability. The redeemed shares become treasury stock.
To fund the redemption, the corporation owns and is
beneficiary of a life policy insuring each stockholder.
Under a cross-purchase agreement, the stockholders agree
to purchase the share of a withdrawing or deceased
stockholder. To fund the purchase, each stockholder owns
and is beneficiary of a policy on the life of every
other stockholder.
There are no fixed rules for determining which type of
buy-sell agreement is most appropriate for stockholders'
particular needs and objectives. However, each type of
arrangement has advantages that the stockholders need to
consider.
Business
Insurance Plans Advantages
HERE
ARE SOME ADVANTAGES OF A STOCK REDEMPTION PLAN:
* Only one insurance policy is in force per stockholder.
* Policy cash values are available to the corporation;
these values are not subject to creditors of the
stockholders.
* The plan avoids transfer-for-value problems because a
deceased or withdrawing stockholder has no ownership
interest in policies that insure the remaining
stockholders.
* The premiums are paid by the corporation (for a sub-S
corporation) and are usually charged to the stockholders
according to their relative ownership interest. Thus, an
older stockholder with greater shares contributes more
toward the premium insuring his life, reducing the
burden on younger, less-paid minority owners.
* Because life insurance is an after-tax purchase, a
stock redemption plan can be more cost-effective than a
cross-purchase agreement if the corporate tax bracket is
lower than the stockholders' tax brackets.
A CROSS-PURCHASE AGREEMENT
OFFERS THESE ADVANTAGES:
* Stockholders who are buying achieve a step-up in basis
equal to the price they pay for the withdrawing or
decease owners shares. This is an important advantage
for a C corporation or an S corporation on an accrual
basis.
* Policy cash values are available to the stockholders.
These value are not subject to creditors of the
corporation.
* The agreement avoids the imposition of the alternative
minimum tax (AMT), which may occur when a C corporation
receives tax-free death proceeds under a stock
redemption plan.
* The agreement may avoid unintended shifting of control
that can occur with redemption.
* The search for a lower bracket taxpayer favors a
cross-purchase plan if the stockholders are in lower tax
brackets then that of the corporation.
WHAT ABOUT A TRUSTEED
CROSS-PURCHASE AGREEMENT?
A major disadvantage of the traditional cross-purchase
plan is the need for numerous policies when the
corporation has more that two stockholders. For example:
with five stockholders, twenty policies would be needed,
four on each life. Funding the agreement with many small
policies rather that one large policy on each owner is
likely to result in higher costs and add confusion to
the transaction.
A trusteed cross-purchase arrangement eliminates the
need for multiple policies on each stockholders life,
avoids the AMT, and provides the remaining stockholders
with a stepped-up basis. For the benefit of the
stockholders as a whole, a trust owns one insurance
policy on each stockholder. Premium notices are sent to
the corporation, which pays the premiums and then
charges the salary or dividend account of each
stockholder in proportion to his or her percentage of
ownership.
At the death of a stockholder, the trustee collects the
insurance proceeds and pays the purchase price to the
decedents estate in exchange for a bill of sale of the
stock to the remaining stockholders.
AGREEMENT MAY ESTABLISH ESTATE
TAX VALUE:
A deceased stockholders ownership interest is included
in his or her gross estate for federal estate tax
purposes. The purchase price under a buy-sell agreement
establishes the value of that interest if (1) the heirs
are obligated to sell the interest, (2) the agreement
contains either a fixed price or a formula of
determining the price, (3) the agreement prohibits
owners from disposing of their interest in a lifetime
sale without first offering it to the owners at no more
than the contract price, and (4) the fixed price or
pricing formula was fair and adequate when the agreement
was made.
|