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IRS approves donor-managed investment account technique.


In Letter Ruling 200445023, the IRS An abbreviation for the Internal Revenue Service, a federal agency charged with the responsibility of administering and enforcing internal revenue laws.  approved the donor-managed investment account (DMIA DMIA Document Management Industries Association
DMIA Diosdado Macapagal International Airport (Philippines)
DMIA Des Moines, Iowa
), a new charitable giving technique that generates an immediate income tax deduction Tax deduction

An expense that a taxpayer is allowed to deduct from taxable income.


tax deduction

See deduction.
 in the year of contribution and allows donors to manage contributed assets actively, without the administrative cost administrative cost Managed care A cost incurred by the 'business' end of a health care facility or university–eg, staffing and personnel costs, nursing home and hospital administration, insurance, and overhead expenses. Cf Indirect costs.  and complications of operating a private foundation.

Types of Charitable Giving

Charitable giving has long been an attractive component of financial planning Financial planning

Evaluating the investing and financing options available to a firm. Planning includes attempting to make optimal decisions, projecting the consequences of these decisions for the firm in the form of a financial plan, and then comparing future performance against
 for high-net-worth individuals with philanthropic objectives. Under the income and gift tax charitable deductions of Sees. 170 and 2522, taxpayers can benefit their favorite charities and also reduce taxable income Under the federal tax law, gross income reduced by adjustments and allowable deductions. It is the income against which tax rates are applied to compute an individual or entity's tax liability. The essence of taxable income is the accrual of some gain, profit, or benefit to a taxpayer. . Until recently, aside from using charitable remainder trusts charitable remainder trust (Charitable Remainder Irrevocable Unitrust) n. a form of trust in which the donor (trustor or settlor) places substantial funds or assets into an irrevocable trust (a trust in which the basic terms cannot be changed or the gift withdrawn)  and other split-interest techniques, there have generally been three ways to make charitable contributions:

1. Making direct gifts to the charitable organization This article is about charitable organizations. For other uses of the word charity, see Charity.
A charitable organization (also known as a charity) is an organization with charitable purposes only.
;

2. Contributing to a donor-advised fund; and

3. Establishing a private foundation.

For the first two alternatives, the donor retains little or no control over the management of contributed assets. Donor-advised funds (e.g., commercial products offered at various brokerage firms and funds within a community foundation) are hybrids between outright gifts and private foundations. Although immensely popular, they limit a donor's investment options to publicly traded stocks and bonds and, in the case of commercial products, to a small selection of mutual funds. Also, a donor has only advisory, nonbinding control over the ultimate disposition of his or her contributions.

In donating to a private foundation, the donor has maximum control over contributed assets, but is subject to certain start-up costs and reduced percentage limits on deductions (i.e., 30% of adjusted gross income for cash contributions, rather than the 50% limit applicable to gifts to public charities and donor-advised funds), as well as the administrative burdens of tax compliance and grantmaking.

How DMIAs Work

A DMIA caters to charitably inclined individuals who want to make a substantial charitable gift of at least $200,000, but have more confidence in their own (or their financial adviser's) money management skills than in the skills of foundation managers. Just as donor-advised funds provide a middle ground between outright gifts to a public charity and use of private foundations, DMIAs provide an alternative to donor-advised funds and private foundations.

So-called "venture philanthropists" who have ambitions of making a much larger charitable gift than their current financial resources allow, are the intended consumers of this planned giving Planned Giving is an area of fundraising that refers to several specific gift types that can be funded with cash or property. These gift vehicles are based on United States tax law.  product. Of course, individuals can manage their assets on their own without using a DMIA and simply grow their wealth, paying income taxes on an accumulation from year to year until they are ready to contribute to charity. However, the most significant advantage of a DMIA is that the assets contributed are income tax free, which substantially enhances their growth potential.

In a DMIA transaction, the donor and the donee The recipient of a gift. An individual to whom a power of appointment is conveyed.


donee n. a person or entity receiving an outright gift or donation.


DONEE.
 charitable organization (qualified under Sees. 170 and 2522) agree to an irrevocable transfer of assets The conveyance of something of value from one person, place, or situation to another.

The law recognizes that persons are generally entitled to transfer their assets to whomever they wish and for whatever reason. The most common means of transfer are wills, trusts, and gifts.
 to an investment account titled in the charity's name, for the charity's sole benefit. In surrendering all ownership and beneficial interest in the transferred property, the donor (or the donor's financial adviser) is permitted to manage the account's investments, subject to a limited power of attorney allowing the donor to act as the investment manager for a fixed term.

The agreement specifies the types of assets the account can hold (e.g., equities, mutual funds, fixed-income securities Fixed-income securities

Investments that have specific interest rates, such as bonds.
, on- and offshore hedge funds and real estate investment trusts). Also, it can set investment performance benchmarks, as well as consequences for not meeting them (e.g., triggering an automatic termination of the agreement). The agreement gives the charity the right to withdraw any or all of the assets and the power to terminate the agreement at any time, for any reason.

The donor is prohibited from engaging in any acts of self-dealing that involve the account assets. Additionally, the donor cannot borrow against the account assets or commingle commingle

to mingle together, e.g. cattle mingling with deer.
 them with other assets other assets

Assets of relatively small value. For financial reporting purposes, firms frequently combine small assets into a single category rather than listing each item separately.
.

Letter Ruling 200445023

The ruling request, which was based on the arrangement described above, asked whether such contributions would qualify for an income tax deduction under Sec. 170 and a gift tax deduction under Sec. 2522.

In general, to qualify under Sec. 170, the donor must make a voluntary gift of his or her entire interest in the donated property to a qualifying organization. For the gift tax deduction under Sec. 2522, the donor must part with all dominion and control over the donated property, relinquishing any power to direct the gift's disposition or manner of enjoyment. Given the law described above, the IRS concluded that the donor's contribution would qualify for both charitable deductions, because the transfer was voluntary, gratuitous and complete.

Income tax: The donor's retained investment management right was not deemed to be a substantial right in the contributed property; thus, it did not constitute a retained partial interest under Sec. 170(f)(3) (A), which would foil the income tax deduction. The Service cited Rev. Rul. 75-66, in which a taxpayer transferred 800 acres of real estate to the Federal government, retaining lifetime rights to use and maintain paths on the property to train his hunting dog. The retained right was deemed insubstantial and did not trump the deductibility of the gift for income tax purposes under Regs. Sec. 1.170A-7(b)(1)(i).

Gift tax: For gift tax purposes, the Service reiterated its finding that the right to manage the investments is not a retained interest Retained interest (also colloquially known as a payout penalty) is future, currently unpaid, interest that some lenders add to the remaining principal of a loan to determine a payout figure in the event that the loan is terminated before the completion of the original term.  in the donated property that would deny the gift tax deduction under Sec. 2522(c)(2). It then considered whether the gift depended on some act or triggering event Triggering Event

A certain milestone or event that a participant in a qualified plan must experience in order to be eligible to receive a distribution from a qualified plan.
. If so, no deduction would be allowable, unless the possibility that the gift will not occur is "so remote as to be negligible"; see Regs. Sec. 25.2522(c)-3(b).

In a DMIA arrangement, although the donor has the right to direct the account's investment policy for a fixed term, the charity has the ultimate power to terminate the agreement. Consequently, the Service ruled that the gift would not be contingent on a condition precedent condition precedent n. 1) in a contract, an event which must take place before a party to a contract must perform or do their part. 2) in a deed to real property, an event which has to occur before the title (or other right) to the property will actually be in the  under Regs. Sec. 25.2522(c)-3(b)(1), allowing the gift tax charitable deduction.

Planned Giving

Charitably inclined individuals ought to consider their giving alternatives carefully before signing up for a DMIA. They should question the importance of retaining investment management control over the assets contributed and growing them tax free for the charity's benefit. After all, if the donor waits to contribute until the assets grow to a certain level, the deduction will be greater (which may reduce the donor's income tax) and, if he or she contributes the long-term appreciated assets directly to the charitable organization, there will be no capital gain.

The commonality that hybrid charitable giving techniques--such as donor-advised funds and DMIAs--seem to share is their profitability to the money management industry. Donoradvised funds have been created at most major brokerage firms across the U.S.; DMIAs may become just as popular among independent money managers and financial advisers, who would then have one more way to keep assets under management Assets Under Management (AUM) is a term used by financial services companies in the mutual fund and money management or investment management business to gauge how much money they are managing. .

Also, in the case of the letter ruling, the DMIA fee (reportedly a sliding scale of less than 1% of assets under management for the charity's benefit) of the Connecticut-based consulting firm is payable by the charitable beneficiaries, not by the donors. Because the charities will be paying the fee, they need to consider the consequences of accepting a DMIA as a gift, particularly from a donor-relations point of view.

FROM ELIZABETH E. NAM, J.D., NEW YORK New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
, NY
COPYRIGHT 2005 American Institute of CPA's
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2005, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:Nam, Elizabeth E.
Publication:The Tax Adviser
Date:Apr 1, 2005
Words:1243
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