The Trump family used this strategy to save on taxes

The Trump family used this strategy to save on taxes
A type of trust known as a GRAT reportedly helped the Trumps save hundreds of millions of dollars in gift and estate taxes
OCT 05, 2018
President Donald J. Trump and his family supposedly saved on taxes by using a particular kind of trust — a grantor-retained annuity trust, or GRAT. Just what is a GRAT and why is it used? At a high level, GRATs are complex vehicles used to transfer wealth in a tax-efficient way. Uber-wealthy families often use GRATs to remove wealth from their estate and transfer it to their children, who inherit that wealth tax-free. In Mr. Trump's case, his parents transferred properties such as apartment complexes in two GRATs, one in his father Fred's name and the other his mother Mary's name, according to an investigative report published Tuesday by the New York Times. The Trump family is hardly alone. Other business titans — such as the Walton family of Wal-Mart fame, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg, casino czar Sheldon Adelson and Goldman Sachs chairman Lloyd Blankfein — reportedly have also set up trusts of this type. Here's how the vehicle works. GRATs are also known as split-interest trusts. The interest in an asset is split between the original owner (the grantor) and the beneficiary over a set number of years. The transfer can be short term (maybe two years) or longer term (10 or 20 years, for example). The typical GRAT strategy is to put an asset into the trust that is likely to appreciate greatly in value, according to estate planners. The grantor receives annuity income — a combination of principal plus an interest rate set by the Treasury Department — over the GRAT's term, and the beneficiary receives the remaining value tax-free. Here's a high-level illustration: The grantor puts $10 million worth of Apple stock into a GRAT with a five-year term and a 3% interest rate. The grantor would get $2 million in principal and $60,000 in interest payments every year for five years. Let's say the Apple stock grew to $20 million over that time. The beneficiary would get a total of $9.7 million ($20 million - $10.3 million) tax-free. Such a strategy would have saved Mr. Trump and his siblings more than $5 million in taxes back in 1999, when Fred Trump died. However, there is ample room to game the system — by purposely low-balling the value of an asset, estate planners said. Let's say the grantor has real estate worth $50 million, but says the asset is only worth $10 million when it goes into the trust. The beneficiary will get a much bigger tax-free transfer in this scenario — roughly $30 million more than in the prior example. "If you can fudge the value, you're going to leave a big tax-free remainder that passes to your kids," said Richard Behrendt, an estate planning attorney who worked at the Internal Revenue Service for more than a decade. Indeed, the New York Times investigation found the Trump family was able to dodge hundreds of millions of dollars by "submitting tax returns that grossly undervalued" real estate assets. In one example, the Trumps valued 25 apartment complexes at $41.4 million in 1995; banks valued those same properties at $900 million in 2004, according to the Times. Charlie Douglas, an estate planner, said there is a risk to using GRATs — if the grantor dies before the end of the trust's term. "If the grantor dies during the term of the GRAT, the whole thing is brought back into the estate, and I didn't achieve anything for estate-tax purposes when I die," Mr. Douglas said. "The grantor has to outlive the term of the GRAT." This is often why the wealthy opt for shorter-term GRATs rather than longer ones, estate planners said. Indeed, the Trumps opted for two-year GRATs, according to the Times.

Latest News

SEC charges Chicago-based investment adviser with overbilling clients more than $2.5M in fees
SEC charges Chicago-based investment adviser with overbilling clients more than $2.5M in fees

Eliseo Prisno, a former Merrill advisor, allegedly collected unapproved fees from Filipino clients by secretly accessing their accounts at two separate brokerages.

Apella Wealth comes to Washington with Independence Wealth Advisors
Apella Wealth comes to Washington with Independence Wealth Advisors

The Harford, Connecticut-based RIA is expanding into a new market in the mid-Atlantic region while crossing another billion-dollar milestone.

Citi's Sieg sees rich clients pivoting from US to UK
Citi's Sieg sees rich clients pivoting from US to UK

The Wall Street giant's global wealth head says affluent clients are shifting away from America amid growing fallout from President Donald Trump's hardline politics.

US employment report reactions: Overall better than expected, but concerns with underlying data
US employment report reactions: Overall better than expected, but concerns with underlying data

Chief economists, advisors, and chief investment officers share their reactions to the June US employment report.

Creative Planning's Peter Mallouk slams 'offensive' congressional stock trading
Creative Planning's Peter Mallouk slams 'offensive' congressional stock trading

"This shouldn’t be hard to ban, but neither party will do it. So offensive to the people they serve," RIA titan Peter Mallouk said in a post that referenced Nancy Pelosi's reported stock gains.

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.