Trump administration scrapping estate-tax rule affecting wealthy business owners

The regulation would have eliminated business-valuation discounts used to reduce estate and gift taxes.
OCT 05, 2017

The Treasury Department is withdrawing a proposed regulation that would have changed how wealthy business owners can pass on businesses to children and other heirs. Currently, individuals are able to discount valuations of stakes in family-controlled businesses in order to reduce the taxes due upon transfer of that entity during one's lifetime or at death. A 40% levy is applied to estate values exceeding $5.49 million. The rule, proposed in the waning months of the Obama administration under Section 2704 of the tax code, would have eliminated such business-valuation discounts and, in the process, a key tax-planning strategy used by the super wealthy. "Treasury and the IRS currently believe that these proposed regulations should be withdrawn in their entirety," Treasury Secretary Stephen Mnuchin wrote in a document published Monday that lays out areas identified as tax regulatory burdens. The Treasury and Internal Revenue Service plan to publish a withdrawal of the proposed regulation "shortly" in the Federal Register, according to the document, which called the rule "unworkable." The Obama administration's primary aim was to prevent a tax strategy allowing wealthy individuals to put marketable securities into a business like a limited partnership, and transfer those securities at a discounted valuation. "The IRS thought that was gaming the system. They really bristled at that," said Richard Behrendt, an estate planning attorney at Behrendt Law. However, critics of the regulation believed it to be overly broad, thereby hurting family businesses in order to curb the abuse, Mr. Behrendt said. A repeal of the federal estate tax, as has been proposed by congressional Republicans and the Trump administration as part of a tax-reform package, would also have meant scrapping the regulation.

Latest News

LPL names Emily Field as chief people officer amid Commonwealth integration push
LPL names Emily Field as chief people officer amid Commonwealth integration push

The McKinsey veteran brings her expertise as LPL targets a lofty 90% advisor retention rate from its acquisition and integration of the $300 billion RIA.

Court rejects Perfection Bakeries' $2M pension credit in key ERISA case
Court rejects Perfection Bakeries' $2M pension credit in key ERISA case

An appeals court sided with a pension fund, ruling Perfection Bakeries must apply a $2M credit earlier in its withdrawal liability calculation.

Milton seeks Sanctuary in break for independence, reunites with former Merrill colleague
Milton seeks Sanctuary in break for independence, reunites with former Merrill colleague

Veteran advisor managing $400M launches firm through strategic partnership.

Osaic nabs two advisor teams from LPL in North Carolina
Osaic nabs two advisor teams from LPL in North Carolina

The giant hybrid RIA's latest East Coast move adds $175 million in recruited assets as it looks to offset broader advisor attrition.

Fintech bytes: Altruist launches new subscription service for RIA custody
Fintech bytes: Altruist launches new subscription service for RIA custody

Also, Nitrogen has added Indivisible Partners to its integration network, while Wealthtender unveiled an AI-focused update to help boost advisors' online presence.

SPONSORED How advisors can build for high-net-worth complexity

Orion's Tom Wilson on delivering coordinated, high-touch service in a world where returns alone no longer set you apart.

SPONSORED RILAs bring stability, growth during volatile markets

Barely a decade old, registered index-linked annuities have quickly surged in popularity, thanks to their unique blend of protection and growth potential—an appealing option for investors looking to chart a steadier course through today's choppy market waters, says Myles Lambert, Brighthouse Financial.