Posted On: November 30, 2010

Estate Tax Likely to Return

It looks like the federal estate tax will be restored on January 1, 2011, and a lot of families are going to feel it, says a New York Estate Lawyer.

No one knows for sure, however, which is creating plenty of uncertainty when it comes to financial planning, especially for the retired, who may have to decide how much they can live on and how much they will have to give away as gifts to avoid being taxed.

The estate tax in 2009 allowed $3.5 million to be exempt, according to New York Estate Lawyers. The tax, should it return in 2011, will only allow a $1 million exemption, and rise from the old rate of 45 percent to a new rate of 55 percent.
New York Estate Lawyers have determined that that the easiest way to help ease the tax burden is giving the money away. As much as $13,000 a year can be given away to any number of people, and there is no gift tax involved. Spouses can combine it, making it $26,000 for each recipient. The money could also be put into a trust for the benefit of someone else.

There is still a chance that the lower 2009 rates will be restored, which will make those concerned about estate taxes a little happier. But an attorney told a New York Estate Lawyer, “There’s a very good chance that Congress will not act until spring.”

In such chaotic economic times, no one can be sure what tomorrow will bring. Keep ahead of future speculations by acquiring the services of a New York Estate Attorney. You’re going to need the best possible legal mind to order your estate or the estate of a loved one, and you’ll find it in a New York Estate Attorney.

Continue reading " Estate Tax Likely to Return " »

Posted On: November 25, 2010

Uncertainty’ Is the Big Word in Finance Today, New York Estate Lawyer Reports

That old saying about death and taxes being the only sure things may not be as sure as they it used to be, thanks to impending changes in U.S. tax law, a New York Estate Lawyer reports. It is still unknown whether Congress will do anything to extend or change the Bush-era tax cuts. Experts tell New York Estate Lawyers this makes planning details for business or finance quite a bit more difficult.

Since businesses do not know how much money will be available, they are afraid to hire. Investors in mom-and-pop organizations don’t know whether or not to sell their stocks before their taxes rise or to hold on to what they have. Estate planning has also become a thorny problem, since the estate tax may or may not return and even the level of taxation should it come back is unsure, New York Estate Lawyers say.

“’Uncertainty is the word of the month,” the CEO of a financial advisory firm which counsels small businesses told a New York Estate Lawyer. “How can you possibly make a decision when the future outside of your control is so cloudy.” The in-and-outs of financial law is tricky enough even without all the changes that new legislation can bring. It can take a great deal of time, effort, and skill just to keep abreast of the changes, let alone how to make them work so businesses can prosper and investors can make informed decisions.

These are the times that make New York Estate Attorneys so important. Your financial well-being is the well-being of your family. A New York Estate Attorney knows that and will make your family’s well-being a top priority.

Continue reading " Uncertainty’ Is the Big Word in Finance Today, New York Estate Lawyer Reports " »

Posted On: November 24, 2010

Credit Card Debt Hits Seniors Hard, Reports New York Estate Lawyer

The last twenty years has seen a great increase in bankruptcy, not only in number, but in the age of those affected by bankruptcy, a New York Estate Lawyer reports. In 2007, about 7% of those who filed for bankruptcy were over the age of 64. The number was only 2.1% in 1991. The median age for bankruptcy was 43 in 2007, and only 36.5 in 1991.
There are more elderly people than before, but not enough to account for the shift in bankruptcy. A new study suggests credit card debt is the problem. New York Estate Lawyers learned from data gathered by the Consumer Bankruptcy Project that two-thirds of the elderly directly attributed their bankruptcy to credit card interest and fees. Only 53% of the younger group blamed credit cards. The median credit card debt for the elderly was $27,213, while the median debt for the younger set was $15,499. 44.8% of the elder debtors carried at least five cards, while only 32.4% of the younger debtors had as many.
The study did not show that the elderly were more likely to spend without regard for the consequences. It showed that the elderly were less likely to have “problems controlling spending” than their younger counterparts.
Instead, the elderly preferred not to trouble friends and family when they had financial problems, so they turned to credit cards instead. The elderly were also less likely to ask their creditors to work with them before filing for bankruptcy, New York Estate Lawyers learned.
All the laws and regulations that surround money and finance can be a big problem – unless you enlist the help of a New York Estate Attorney. All that you’ve worked for years should be protected, and a New York Estate Attorney can help you do that.

Continue reading " Credit Card Debt Hits Seniors Hard, Reports New York Estate Lawyer " »

Posted On: November 22, 2010

Estate Tax Will Make a Financial Mess, Reports New York Estate Lawyer

An American Business Family Foundation study shows that more jobs could be lost – as many as 1.5 million – if the United States Congress allows the federal estate tax to return.

The Economic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act caused the estate tax to expire at the end of 2009, according to New York Estate Lawyers. That same act will allow the return of the tax – at a rate of 55% for all assets over $1 million. The study says that if the estate tax returned at a 65% rate, more than 1.6 million jobs would be lost. If Congress merely allows the estate tax to return at the pre-Economic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act rate of 55%, between 1.4 million and 1.5 million jobs would be lost.

New York Estate Lawyers have found a number of national agricultural organizations, including the National Cattlemen’s Beef Association and the American Sheep Industry Association have tried to get U.S. Senate support to pass permanent estate tax relief legislation that will help preserve jobs.

“This is significant to family farms not only in Missouri, but the entire country,” the executive vice president of Missouri Cattlemen’s Association told a New York Estate Lawyer. “It is extremely important to call your congressmen and let them know how important it is to extend the current estate tax provisions.” Congress has yet to reach a decision about the estate tax and other tax laws set to expire at the end of the year and are on recess as of this writing.

Even when they don’t constantly change, estate law can be very complex. You need someone like a New York Estate Attorney to help you navigate the complexity. Everything you and your family have worked for over the years is a very important factor and you should trust it to someone like a New York Estate Attorney who knows how to make the law work for you, rather than against you.

Continue reading " Estate Tax Will Make a Financial Mess, Reports New York Estate Lawyer " »

Posted On: November 19, 2010

Wealthier Clients Present a Quandary to Life Insurers, New York Estate Lawyer Reports

Life insurance has generally had fairly good treatment from tax laws over years, thanks to a reputation for protecting widows and orphans, a New York Estate Lawyer reports. It was the contention of the life insurance companies that their policies kept people from becoming poor when the family breadwinner died unexpectedly.

Gradually, however, the clientele of life insurance policies have become wealthier. Now the companies are selling their policies to wealthier Americans, often as a part of complex estate-tax plans. The clientele is changing, and so is the traditional role of life insurance. Congress is always looking for more revenue and it may turn to life insurance companies, citing their traditional offense of helping orphans and widows is no longer valid.

New York Estate Lawyers have found no current legislation or proposals before Congress to change tax law for life insurers. It is very likely that any such attempt would be opposed by insurance companies – and any increase in taxes in a bad economy will always face a stiff battle.

The number of American families that own life insurance has been dropping for a while, in terms of percentage. Thirty percent don’t have any life insurance at all, which is a four-decade high, New York Estate Lawyers have learned. Some even believe permanent life insurance has become nothing more than a way for the rich to hide their money from gift taxes, estate taxes and death taxes.

Your estate and everything you or your loved ones have ever worked for are at the mercy of very complex estate laws. Let a New York Estate Attorney help you unravel the complexity. The skill of a New York Estate Attorney can make a big difference to both you and your heirs.

Continue reading " Wealthier Clients Present a Quandary to Life Insurers, New York Estate Lawyer Reports " »

Posted On: November 15, 2010

Hedge Fund Wife Takes Advantage of Lack of Pre-Nup, Reports New York Estate Lawyer

The wife of one of the nation’s most prominent hedge fund owners, has taken over the hedge fund’s offices to give space to her own company – built for entertainment, not money management, sources tell a New York Estate Lawyer.

She’s known for her flamboyant ways, and the analysts at the hedge fund don’t even seem to notice anymore, even when she wears a low-cut leather dress in her husband’s (and her own) New York office.

“Eighteen years and no prenup means family office,” she told a New York Estate Lawyer.
That’s just the way this particular hedge fund wife is – often unpredictable. She has trained her pet pig to play the piano and dance in circles (for which it is rewarded with a Cheerio). She will play soccer in a ballgown, and has now taken space in the office of one of New York’s biggest hedge fund, because that’s just the kind of thing she does.
She told a New York Estate Lawyer, “Obviously, my husband’s made the money, but we’ve been together 18 years, and the person behind the person isn’t usually seen. So the money I’m using I’ve earned.”

She rises at 4 a.m. every morning and maintains an optimistic attitude that has probably helped her husband attain the status he carries today.

Money can be a touchy subject, especially when it involves millions of dollars. Yet, even if it doesn’t, you should consider a New York Estate Attorney help you protect what you do have. You want your money to go where you want it to go and a New York Estate Attorney can make sure your wishes are followed.

Continue reading " Hedge Fund Wife Takes Advantage of Lack of Pre-Nup, Reports New York Estate Lawyer " »

Posted On: November 11, 2010

Jackson Estate Begins Work on ‘Planet Michael’, Says New York Estate Lawyer

New York Estate Lawyers have learned of a licensing deal between a Los Angeles company and the estate of Michael Jackson to create an online virtual world that will be known as “Planet Michael”.

The digital world will be part of the Entropia Universe, a massively multiplayer online game that currently has about 100,000 active users, run by a Swedish company.
The estate will work with the game publisher to get the game prepared for a late 2011 release, according to New York Estate Lawyers. It will allow fans to collect and trade virtual Jackson paraphernalia and earn credits by successfully passing challenges based on his music and dance moves.

This virtual world, like many others, will allow players to use real money to enrich their virtual accounts.

The CEO of the game publisher said the game play will focus on Jackson’s dance moves and will follow his belief in nonviolence, which will set it apart from other popular online multiplayer games. Charitable contributions will allow be enabled in the game.

“With Michael Jackson, we’re aiming at different game play,” he told a New York Estate Lawyer.

Jackson’s estate has grown a great deal since his sudden death on June 25, 2009 at the age of 50. A multiyear record deal based on unreleased recordings and a movie based on concert rehearsal footage has raised the estate’s assets by more than $250 million in the year since his death.

Estates, whether large or small, need the hand of experience to guide them. New York Estate Attorneys have such experience. There are so many laws to follow when it comes to estates and the management of money, which is why a New York Estate Attorney is so important.

Continue reading " Jackson Estate Begins Work on ‘Planet Michael’, Says New York Estate Lawyer " »

Posted On: November 9, 2010

Estate Tax Likely to Return

It looks like the federal estate tax will be restored on January 1, 2011, and a lot of families are going to feel it, says a New York Estate Lawyer.

No one knows for sure, however, which is creating plenty of uncertainty when it comes to financial planning, especially for the retired, who may have to decide how much they can live on and how much they will have to give away as gifts to avoid being taxed.

The estate tax in 2009 allowed $3.5 million to be exempt, according to New York Estate Lawyers. The tax, should it return in 2011, will only allow a $1 million exemption, and rise from the old rate of 45 percent to a new rate of 55 percent.
New York Estate Lawyers have determined that that the easiest way to help ease the tax burden is giving the money away. As much as $13,000 a year can be given away to any number of people, and there is no gift tax involved. Spouses can combine it, making it $26,000 for each recipient. The money could also be put into a trust for the benefit of someone else.

There is still a chance that the lower 2009 rates will be restored, which will make those concerned about estate taxes a little happier. But an attorney told a New York Estate Lawyer, “There’s a very good chance that Congress will not act until spring.”

In such chaotic economic times, no one can be sure what tomorrow will bring. Keep ahead of future speculations by acquiring the services of a New York Estate Attorney. You’re going to need the best possible legal mind to order your estate or the estate of a loved one, and you’ll find it in a New York Estate Attorney.

Continue reading " Estate Tax Likely to Return " »

Posted On: November 4, 2010

Private Collections May Complicate Estate Planning

New York Estate Lawyers have noticed something: Both financial planners and collectors do not tend to count the value of collections when it comes to looking at financial resources, including estate planning.

This often results in a parent instructing children to come and take the collection once the parent has passed on. If the collection is valuable and sold, the IRS is going to take note, which means the surviving children had better have some documentation that can prove they weren’t somehow circumventing tax law, a New York Estate Lawyer warns.

Should the collection be impossible to split equally between multiple children, that can be another problem. There is no way three people can split that classic car their father loved so much. Or they could not be especially interested in cars and decide to sell it and the rest of the collection – getting maybe 30 cents on the dollar for sale after taxes are paid.

Some New York Estate Lawyers suggest a life insurance policy for those who worry about their heirs paying massive taxes – some of these policies can actually pay the taxes, leaving the actual earnings, possessions included, to be used as the previous possessor intended without the government taking out a huge chunk.

Laws involving money and taxes and estates are extremely complicated. You don’t have to learn it all – let a New York Estate Attorney figure out the best way to insure your money goes where you want it to go. Don’t take chances with all that you’ve worked to earn your entire life, when a New York Estate Attorney is available to assist.

Continue reading " Private Collections May Complicate Estate Planning " »

Posted On: November 2, 2010

Americans Consider Married Gays as Families

For the first time since such things have been surveyed, a new book includes studies that determine a majority of Americans view same-sex couples as family, according to a New York Estate Lawyer. This inclusion also extends to a gay or lesbian couple, even if they are unmarried. The new publication also concludes that more people are willing to view homosexuality as a natural and inborn trait and its conclusion is corroborated by the New York Times.

That is not the end of the story, whoever. New York Estate Lawyers also noticed that some coverage of the study by the Associated Press also included this item of data: “There’s a solid core resisting this trend who are more willing to include pets in their definition than same-sex partners.” This solid core is about 30 percent. The lead researcher for the Associated Press commented upon this statistic to a New York Estate Lawyer: “The sheer idea that gay couples are given less status than pets should give us pause.”

Family matters are changing with the times, which means the law is going to have to change, as well. You’ll need a New York Estate Attorney to keep up with those changes. All families accumulate money and possessions over a lifetime together, and these things have to be properly deposed of when someone passes on. A New York Estate Attorney can untangle all the difficult legal matters to make sure you and your loved ones can follow the wishes of your family member, as he or she would have wished.

Continue reading " Americans Consider Married Gays as Families " »

Posted On: November 1, 2010

Family of Slain Woman May Benefit from Insurance Policy, Says New York Estate Lawyer

The killer has already gone to prison, but now the victim’s family is after the murderer’s mother, according to a New York Estate Lawyer. A Nassau Supreme Court justice has ruled the killer’s mother may use her homeowner’s insurance policies to pay up to $550,000 in damages should she lose the suit.

The 66-year-old mother is being sued by the family of the victim, a woman who was killed and dismembered by the defendant’s son in August 2006. Due to the judge’s ruling, if she loses the suit, her homeowners insurance policy will trigger, since the murder happened in her home. Her attorney told a New York Estate Lawyer that insurance will cover damages to the victim’s family for up to $250,000.

Should the damages be ruled to be even more than that, the company that covers the defendant’s excess homeowners insurance will pay an additional $300,000, according to the judge’s ruling. The company stated to New York Estate Lawyers that it should not have to pay, since the defendant did not inform them of the lawsuit. New York Estate Lawyers attempted to contact the insurance company, but there has been no response or comment thus far.
Matters of estate can be very complicated. Let a New York Estate Attorney unravel the details for you and give your property or the property of one of your loved ones some clarity. The expertise of a New York Estate Attorney will make everything a great deal easier.

Continue reading " Family of Slain Woman May Benefit from Insurance Policy, Says New York Estate Lawyer " »