Your Family Business And Your Estate |
|
As Penn State professor William Rothwell ominously points out in
the forward to Exit Right: A Guided Tour of Succession Planning
for Families in Business Together, more than 40% of the people
who run the closely held operations that comprise 80% of the
North American economy will retire by 2007. Those businesses
will either be sold to a third party or management team, closed
down, or passed on to the next generation. In this article I
will focus on passing the business on to the next generation.
Tax laws still favor home ownership with mortgage interest as a
tax-deductible expense. The government has also encouraged the
passing of a business from one generation to the next with
several favorable estate and gift tax rulings. Estate planning
attorneys have utilized IRS ruling 5960 to minimize the estate
and gift tax owed for a business either gifted to or inherited
by the next generation. The business is often placed in one or
more LLC's and divided up into minority pieces to take advantage
of very substantial and legal minority discounts, often as high
as 40%. As is often the case, a business owner will have, for
example, 4 children. Two sons will be actively involved in
running the businesses and two daughters have built lives
totally separate from the business. Because 85% of the value of
the estate is tied up in the value of the business, to be "fair"
the business is gifted and willed to the four siblings in almost
equal proportion. Because the sons are running the business,
they will get slightly more of the business and slightly less of
the remaining estate. This gives them majority interest in the
business. After dad leaves the business, the two sons will
continue to run and grow the business without any input or
participation from their two sisters. Typically the business
does not pay any dividends and the two sisters' portions are
non-liquid because there is not a good market for selling
minority stakes in a privately held business. Also, there is
generally a very restrictive buy sell agreement that favors the
majority holders. The sisters have no idea what the "fair value"
of the business is and the only indication they have ever gotten
is an official IRS gift tax or estate tax return with 40%
discounts applied. If the enterprise value were, for example,
$50 million and the two sisters owned a combined 40%, you would
think that they had an asset worth $20 million. The only
document they have seen, however, is the gift or estate return,
valuing their portion at only 60% of that number, or $12
million. The brothers feel entitled to the lions share because
Ann and Julie had nothing to do with building this business. The
brothers pay themselves big salaries and benefits and pay out
little of no dividends. They may approach the sisters with gift
tax return and restrictive buy sell agreement in hand and offer
to generously buy out the sisters for a combined 8 million,
because that is "all the company can afford to pay." After this
transaction takes place, let's look at the result of how dad's
estate was fairly divided. Originally the brothers were left
with 60% of the $50 million business, or $30 million and a minor
portion of the remaining estate. The sisters were left with 40%
of the business, or $20 million and the bulk of the remaining
estate of $10 million. That appears to be fair. However, the
buyout of the sisters for a combined $8 million results in an
effective estate distribution of $42 million to the brothers and
$18 million to the sisters. This is not what dad intended, but
it happens all the time. This is a very complex and emotional
issue and there are no simple answers. Generally, dad had his
identity tied up in the business and wants it to live on through
his sons after he is gone. This is a noble, yet impractical
thought if all the siblings are not actively involved in the
business. The children often inherit the restrictive buy sell
agreements that favor the brothers running the business and
scare off investors that may have been interested in a minority
stake in the business. Much of the value from a privately held
business is derived from the benefits of working in the
business. There is the very real concern that the integrity of
the gift or estate tax business valuations will be compromised
if the sisters are bought out at a price approaching a pro-rated
division of total enterprise value. Unfortunately, in most
cases, nothing is done and as a result there are literally
hundreds of billions of dollars of minority interests in
privately held business that are providing little return or no
return to their owners. We are working with estate planning
attorneys, tax accountants and investors to come up with
solutions. One of the keys to unlocking the liquidity in these
minority interests is for the business owner to recognize this
situation prior to building his estate plan. Unfortunately, we
are often brought in after the fact and a fair outcome then is
contingent upon the majority owners honoring dad's original
intent of fairness and working toward that end.
Featured Business Listings
Homefund Corporation (Listing Id 180)
Canadian online mortgage brokers - homefund.com - delivers Canada's leading professional source for residential and commercial mortgage financing -...
"For Sale"
|


















Looking to buy or sell from an agent? Jump straight to our 

