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Building a financial foundation how taxes effect your wealth

Building a financial foundation how taxes effect your wealth. TingTing Lu 11/21/2015. Financial Concepts 101. Rule of 72. The Power of Compound Interest & TAX. TAXES. Taxation on Individuals in U.S. Federal Income Tax Social Security(6.2% up to $118,500, 12.4% after)

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Building a financial foundation how taxes effect your wealth

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  1. Building a financial foundation how taxes effect your wealth TingTing Lu 11/21/2015

  2. Financial Concepts 101

  3. Rule of 72

  4. The Power of Compound Interest & TAX

  5. TAXES

  6. Taxation on Individuals in U.S • Federal • Income Tax • Social Security(6.2% up to $118,500, 12.4% after) • & Medicare Tax (1.45%) • Capital Gains & Dividend Income Tax • Estate Tax • Excise Tax • State & Local Government • Income Tax • Property tax & Sales, use tax

  7. Historical Tax Bracket 2013 1985 1960

  8. 2013 &2014 Income Tax

  9. Standard or Itemized Deduction? – Use the larger one • Itemized Deduction: • Medical expense (7.5% AGI) • State & Local income tax • Personal property tax • Home mortgage interest • Charity contribution • Casualty or theft loss (10% AGI) • Job expenses and more • Etc. • Standard Deduction:

  10. Deduction from Gross Income • Educator expenses ($250/person) • Health Saving Account(HDHP $6450/ $3250) • Moving expense • Self-employed health insurance deduction • Self employed, Sep, Simple, Qualified Plans, IRA • Student loan Interest ($2500@ $150,000 AGI) • Tuition and fees ($4000 deduction, but not allowed if MAGI exceed $160K)

  11. Individual Income Tax Form 1040 $110,000($50,000+$60,000) +$300(Banking interest) -$20,000(401k$10k each) -$16,000(Business Loss) =$74,300(AGI) -$17,900(Itemized Deduction) -$11,400(3x$3,800) =$45,000(Taxable Income)$1,740=10%x$17,400 $4,140=15%x$27,600 =$5,880(Tax) -$1,000(Child Tax Credits) -$12,000(Federal Tax Withholding) =-$7,120(Federal Tax Refund) Gross Income- Qualified Deductions (Qualified plans 401k/IRA/SEP/SIMPLE,etc. -+Business Income or Loss =Adjusted Gross Income(AGI) - Itemized or Standard Deduction- Personal Exemptions=Taxable Income x Tax Rates (effective rate)=Tentative Tax - Tax Credits & Federal Tax Withholding=Federal Tax Liability (or Refund)

  12. Tax Rate & Government Spending

  13. INTRODUCTION: Historical Tax Rates Gross Public Debt: Total Pct. GDP & Avg. Tax Rate • Sources: Tax Foundation, Tax Data, U.S. Federal Individual Income Tax Rates History, 1913-2011; Treasury Direct, Historical Debt Outstanding – Annual (1929-2010); U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis, National Income and Product Accounts Table, Table 1.1.5. Gross Domestic Product (1929-2010); The White House Office of Management and Budget, Historical Tables for 2011-2016. Data includes actual historical data from 1929-2011 and projected data from 2012-2016. For an audience with a basic understanding of the financial industry. Not intended for use with the general public.

  14. INTRODUCTION: Historical Tax Rates Gross Public Debt: Total Pct. GDP & Avg. Tax Rate • Sources: Tax Foundation, Tax Data, U.S. Federal Individual Income Tax Rates History, 1913-2011; Treasury Direct, Historical Debt Outstanding – Annual (1929-2010); U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis, National Income and Product Accounts Table, Table 1.1.5. Gross Domestic Product (1929-2010); The White House Office of Management and Budget, Historical Tables for 2011-2016. Data includes actual historical data from 1929-2011 and projected data from 2012-2016.

  15. Where to Save Money

  16. Tax Advantage Plans

  17. Employer Sponsored Retirement Plans • 401(k): employer-sponsored profit-sharing plans • 403(b): public education organizations, some non-profit employers, Tax Sheltered Annuity plans (TSA) • 457: government and certain non-governmental employers. • The key difference is unlike a 401(k) plan, there is no 10% penalty for withdrawal before the age of 59 1/2. • SEP IRA: Simplified Employee Pension Individual Retirement Account • SIMPLE IRA: Savings Incentive Match Plan for Employees IRA

  18. Tradition retirement plans (401k/403b,IRA etc) • Tax deductible, tax deferred growth; • 591/2 • RMD (701/2) ; • Tax at distribution (principle and return); • Contribution limit: • 401k/403b: $18,000 ($23,000 if age>50) • SEP: Min(25% Compensation, $52,000) • IRA: $5500 ($6500 if age>50)

  19. ROTH (Roth 401k, Roth IRA, Roth Conversion) • Pay tax now, • Tax free forever (growth and distribution) • Phase-out for Roth IRA: $183,000--$193,000 • Contribution limit: (Combined with Traditional) • Roth 401k: $18,000 ($23,000 if age>50) • Roth IRA: $5500 ($6500 if age>50)

  20. IUL vs. S&P 500 Index

  21. Investment Tax S&P 500 Index Fund, $100K, 1976-2013 Tax Benefit: $4.8M Tax Impact: 35% - 50% Taxable: $3.3M * 25% income tax rate and 15% capital gain tax rate apply. Assume 5% state tax rate.

  22. The Picture Tax? Probation? Life? Return? Asset? Risk? LTC? Safety? Tax Now? Growth? Tax Free? Longevity? Tax Later? Save? Fin. Aid?

  23. Family Financial Needs Emergency Fund 3 to 6 mo. expense Health Insurance Mortgage Down payment – how much Fixed or Adjusted? 15 or 30 years loan? Disability Insurance Life Insurance How much? What Type? Education fund Financial Aid EFC 529? Prepaid? Long Term Care Retirement plan Growth/Safety/Longevity Estate Planning Living Trust Irrevocable Trust

  24. 529 Parents’ Asset

  25. Wall Street Journal Talks About Life insurance

  26. And Don’t Forget… • Mortgage • Business • CAN SAVE YOUR TAX!

  27. There are Two Tax Systems in the U.S. One for employees and the other for business owners or self-employed Deductions as an employee: Deductions as a business owner: See IRS code Section 162(a) “There shall be allowed as a deduction, all the ordinary and necessary expenses paid or incurred during the taxable year in carrying on any trade or business.” • Mortgage Interest • Property Taxes • Medical ExpensesONLY the part that exceeds 7.5% of your income • Gifts to Charity • IRA Contributions

  28. Common Deductions for Business Owners • Children’s allowances – paid as wages can be used for: clothes, presents, college, weddings, food, etc. • SEP retirement contributions • Home insurance, repairs, utilities, furniture. • Travel / vacation expenses • Boats, motor homes or airplanes. • Meals out, theater tickets ( for business use), golf, entertainment, etc. • Parties at home or away. • AND MUCH, MUCH, MORE !!! • Mortgage interest or rent • Depreciation of your vehicle • Loss when you sell a vehicle • State and local income taxes • 100% of all medical expenses. Insurance premiums, deductibles, prescriptions, braces, contacts,etc. • Life Insurance • Computers, printers, scanners, VCR. • Any purchases you make for your work, or related to your work. • Cell phones, Internet access, DSL

  29. Why Would the IRS Give You These Deductions? • 32% of GDP comes from self-employed. • 96% of inventions started in some ones garage or basement. In America, we are given the incentive to become entrepreneurs and grow the country’s productivity. By design, even the tax code helps us get started in business, making this “The Land of Opportunity.”

  30. ... Many Happy Income Tax Returns • The majority of Americans will get a tax refund at more than $2,000 a year, and the key to using it wisely is developing a spending plan for the money before it comes in the mailbox. • Creating an Emergency Fund • Eliminating Credit Card Debt • Buy Life Insurance • Saving for Education • Saving for Retirement • Just Say No to Tax Refunds

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