A 55 year old executive is considering retiring and asks your opinion whether it would be better for him to gift $500,000 ( in cash) to his only daughter or invest the $500,000 and bequeath the $500,000 plus earnings to his daughter in his will. The executive is healthy and expects to live at least another 20 years. His entire estate is expected to be in excess of the exclusion amount. What advice would you give the executive? Explain your reasoning including any assumptions as to taxes, earnings rates on investments, spending patterns, potential changes in tax law, and so on. Would your answer be different if he wanted to give stock which has significantly appreciated since he purchased it? In the alternative, how might the annual gift tax exclusion be used to transfer value to his daughter?
A 55 year old executive is considering retiring and asks your opinion whether it would be better for him to gift $500,000 ( in cash) to his only daughter or invest the $500,000 and bequeath the $500,000 plus earnings to his daughter in his will. The executive is healthy and expects to live at least another 20 years. His entire estate is expected to be in excess of the exclusion amount. What advice would you give the executive? Explain your reasoning including any assumptions as to taxes, earnings rates on investments, spending patterns, potential changes in tax law, and so on. Would your answer be different if he wanted to give stock which has significantly appreciated since he purchased it? In the alternative, how might the annual gift tax exclusion be used to transfer value to his daughter?
Trending now
This is a popular solution!
Step by step
Solved in 2 steps