Posted: Thu Nov 04, 2010 3:02 am
Ok - so a guy I play soccer with is a financial planner. Normally I avoid these guys like the plague, but I like this guy so I decided to let him come over and give his pitch.
So I am technically incorporated and my work contracts me through my company (I work remote in Toronto, HQ is in NYC). Being a founder of a company has its perks!
In the past I have explained how this structure has enormous tax benefits. You can basically leave your retirement money in the corporation and pay far less tax.
The problem I have, it is more of a Canadian problem, is that investments generating passive income in a corporation are taxed at 47%.
So bear with me as I get technical here...
One way to tax shelter your money (according to the Financial Planner) is to use life insurance. Basically you:
-invest $x each month from your corp into a life insurance policy (via a premium)
-money within LI can be invested without taxation (though the LI product has to meet certain "growth profiles".... i.e. you can't then go and put it in a hedgefund, basically hockey stick or S-curve)
-the problem is then basically this - how do you withdraw from a "death benefit" without dying
-well, the insurance company works with a bank. The bank gives you a line of credit for basically the death benefit you have built up via premiums and returns/yields. You can withdraw from a line of credit tax free! So you have created an investment/withdrawal loop with zero taxation within the corp
-then when you die, the bank gets paid first and whatever is left is transfered to whomever is next of kin
-interest is simply tacked onto the loan
Sooooo, given there is some good brains in this forum, I thought I'd try and get some opinions on this setup (note I'm not sure if this concept works in the US... or if it even has to since capital gains is much friendlier in the US invested from within a corp).
At first I thought it was very clever, then I realize the huge risk is interest rates. Because your retirement income is in the shape of a loan, interest rates could crush you. In fact they'd be doubly penalizing to you, inflation + your loan effectively shrinks.
But you are saving massive amounts of income early on because you are now paying minimal income. Which means you could retire even earlier.
So I am technically incorporated and my work contracts me through my company (I work remote in Toronto, HQ is in NYC). Being a founder of a company has its perks!
In the past I have explained how this structure has enormous tax benefits. You can basically leave your retirement money in the corporation and pay far less tax.
The problem I have, it is more of a Canadian problem, is that investments generating passive income in a corporation are taxed at 47%.
So bear with me as I get technical here...
One way to tax shelter your money (according to the Financial Planner) is to use life insurance. Basically you:
-invest $x each month from your corp into a life insurance policy (via a premium)
-money within LI can be invested without taxation (though the LI product has to meet certain "growth profiles".... i.e. you can't then go and put it in a hedgefund, basically hockey stick or S-curve)
-the problem is then basically this - how do you withdraw from a "death benefit" without dying
-well, the insurance company works with a bank. The bank gives you a line of credit for basically the death benefit you have built up via premiums and returns/yields. You can withdraw from a line of credit tax free! So you have created an investment/withdrawal loop with zero taxation within the corp
-then when you die, the bank gets paid first and whatever is left is transfered to whomever is next of kin
-interest is simply tacked onto the loan
Sooooo, given there is some good brains in this forum, I thought I'd try and get some opinions on this setup (note I'm not sure if this concept works in the US... or if it even has to since capital gains is much friendlier in the US invested from within a corp).
At first I thought it was very clever, then I realize the huge risk is interest rates. Because your retirement income is in the shape of a loan, interest rates could crush you. In fact they'd be doubly penalizing to you, inflation + your loan effectively shrinks.
But you are saving massive amounts of income early on because you are now paying minimal income. Which means you could retire even earlier.