Issue: #  49   JANUARY 2013
Bautis Financial
Dear ,
 

Welcome to January 2013 issue of The Wealth Chronicle!

THE FISCAL CLIFF: AN UPDATE

   

In the past two newsletters my feature stories were about the "fiscal cliff" and how things were playing out. The cliff is the combination of tax increases, spending cuts, and the hitting of the debt ceiling limit all happening early 2013. Washington reached a last minute agreement on January 1st to tackle the tax aspect of the cliff. This is a blog post I wrote for The Prime Move, a Hoboken Real Estate website on how Washington and finance meet.

http://theprimemove.com/financials/why-your-paycheck-brings-a-little-less-money-these-days/

Congress and President Obama are in the middle of facing a number of serious economic issues: the fiscal cliff, the debt ceiling, a downgraded credit rating, the budget deficit, sequestration, entitlement reform, taxes, spending, high unemployment and a fragile recovery from the recession. Unfortunately for the country, the two branches and the two political parties have been reluctant to agree on many meaningful solutions. Remember, the Democrats control the White House and Senate, and the Republicans control the House of Representatives.

Last year Congress and the President reached a contentious deal to raise the debt ceiling, which is the legal limit the federal government can go into debt, currently over $16 trillion dollars. Because the government keeps spending more every year, it keeps having to raise the debt ceiling.

But because the debt is a serious problem, the two sides agreed to force themselves to confront it in a future deal. Through something called sequestration, the Democrats agreed to face spending cuts to their favorite government programs, and the Republicans agreed to face letting their favorite tax cuts expire.

The debt ceiling deal created the so-called fiscal cliff, where the tax hikes and spending cuts set to happen on January 1 of this year would have threatened the recovery from the recession. President Obama, Senate Democrats and House Republicans did reach a deal to stall going over the cliff (technically we did go over, because they only enacted the deal on January 3rd despite having negotiated since the fall). Here are some of the details:

- The top individual tax rate rises to 39.6% for families with income above $450,000 and individuals above $400,000. Rates for everyone else will stay the same. The 39.6% is a return to Clinton-era rates, and buck the Bush-era tax cuts, which had lowered the top rate to 35%. President Obama compromised with Congressional Republicans, moving from his original position that the rate hikes should affect households making over $250,000.

- The tax on capital gains and dividends - income earned from investing - will rise to 20% for people who pass the $450,000/$400,000 threshold, and will remain at 15% for everyone else.

- People who inherit estates can still exempt the first $5 million from their tax bills, but they'll have to pay more on the rest, with that rate increasing from 35% to 40%.

- Workers will see less money in their paychecks, because the rate the federal government withholds for Social Security will revert to 6.2%, after it had been 4.2% for the past two years. The government had lowered the rate to encourage more consumer spending, thinking that would boost the sagging economy.

- The current rates for various child, educational, and earned income credits will remain for the next five years.

Just as President Obama compromised on the threshold for income tax increases, House Republicans compromised on spending cuts. The fiscal cliff deal pushes back sequestration - though the Republicans had wanted significant cuts now, they agreed to postpone them for two months.

Which means Congress and the President will have to make another deal soon, around the same time they'll have to consider raising the debt ceiling again. If that deal is anything like their recent ones, expect it to be messy, minimal and move the heavy lifting to another time. Stay tuned to The Prime Move for updates on how any future deals will affect your finances

Read the entire 157 page deal - http://www.businessinsider.com/breaking-full-text-of-the-157-page-bill-to-avert-the-fiscal-cliff-2013-1

 

Guest Post - 1099's 5 Key Reporting Changes

The following is a guest post by Andrew Pogogeff, Senior Partner of Pogogeff & Co. a NJ CPA firm.

 

According to the IRS, under-reporting of income is the biggest contributing factor to the IRS tax gap--the amount owed by individuals and businesses versus the amount that was actually paid in taxes. In 2006, the most recent year for which data are available, under-reporting across taxpayer categories accounted for an estimated $376 billion of the gross tax gap.

 

Overall, the IRS found that compliance is highest where there is third-party information reporting (1099 forms used to report taxable income earned that is not considered salary and wages) and/or withholding (W-2 forms). In the case of W-2 forms, the IRS found that a net of only 1% of wage and salary income was misreported; however, amounts subject to little or no information reporting had a 56 percent net misreporting rate in 2006.

 

In an effort to close that tax gap, the IRS has changed some reporting requirements for 1099s for tax year 2012. Here are some of those key changes:

 

1. 1099-MISC. Starting in 2012, compensation of $600 or more paid in a calendar year to an H-2A visa agricultural worker who did not give you a valid taxpayer identification number must be reported on 1099-MISC. You must also withhold federal income tax under the backup withholding rules. However, if the worker does furnish a valid taxpayer identification number, then report the payments on Form W-

2.

2.  1099-B. New boxes have been added to Form 1099-B for reporting the stock or other symbol (box 1d), quantity sold (box 1e), whether basis is being reported to the IRS (box 6b), and state income tax withheld (boxes 13-15). Other boxes on the form have been moved or renumbered. In addition, brokers must report on Form 1099-B sales of covered securities by an S corporation if the S corporation acquired the covered securities after 2011.

3.  1099-C. The titles for boxes 1, 2, and 6 on Form 1099-C have changed. Box 1 is now Date of Identifiable Event; box 2 is now Amount of Debt Discharged; and box 6 is now Identifiable Event Code, and requires the entry of a code for the identifiable event. See Box 6--Identifiable Event Code. For 2012, all codes are optional except for Code A--Bankruptcy.

4.  1099-DIV. Exempt-interest dividends from a mutual fund or other regulated investment company (RIC) are now reported on Form 1099-DIV and are no longer reported on Form 1099-INT, Interest Income. Also, boxes 12 through 14 have been added to Form 1099-DIV to report state income tax withheld.

5.  1099-INT. Exempt-interest dividends from a mutual fund or other regulated investment company (RIC) are no longer reported on Form 1099-INT. Instead, those amounts are reported on Form 1099-DIV, Dividends and Distributions. In addition, boxes 11 through 13 have been added to Form 1099-INT to report state income tax withheld.

 

If you need help with 1099s this year, don't hesitate to give Andrew and his team a call.

 

  

Andrew Pogogeff
201-592-0006
Andrew.pogogeff@pogandco.com
http://www.pogandco.com/

 

Winter Key Planning Deadlines 

 

THE WATERCOOLER: 

  

The Fiscal Cliff deal is being heralded as a saving grace for middle-income taxpayers. But like most other bills that go through Washington there was extra "stuff" in the bill. You can read here about other industries which received "gifts" in the deal. http://news.yahoo.com/cliff-deal-helps-hollywood-railroads-rum-producers-015235196--abc-news-politics.html

French Taxes

French President Francois Hollande wants to raise France's income tax on its highest earners to 75%, from 41%. French actor Gerard Depardieu, you may know him best from   the movie My Father the Hero, isn't going to take it. He moved to Belgium in protest and has denounced his French citizenship and been given a Russian passport. (Russia has a flat tax of 13%). A couple years ago a presidential campaign was run on the flat tax campaign which seemed to make some sense; I'm talking about Steve Forbes and not Herman Cain.

 

Super Bowl Trivia

During the weeks leading up to the Super Bowl the radio station WFAN runs a trivia contest where when a contestant answers four questions in a row correctly then win a trip for two to the Super Bowl. While I can't offer free Super Bowl tickets see how many of the below questions about the Super Bowl you can answer correctly.   Email me your answers.

  1. Who is the only coach to win three Super Bowls with three different starting quarterbacks?
  2. Who is the first player to earn Super Bowl rings with three different teams?
  3. True or False: The Super Bowl has never gone to overtime.
  4. Who said, "Even when I was little, I was big." This is a man whose Super Bowl ring size is the largest of any player in the history of the event!
  5.  In the 2008 NFL draft two players with the same last name were taken #1 and #2. Who are they?

 

MAILBAG 

 

"I am planning to retire, should I pay off the mortgage?"

 

I was recently asked this question earlier this month at a workshop I hosted, pertaining to retirement income planning, at the Cresskill Public Library. The old philosophy was if you have a mortgage, you still should be working. An Investopedia article from October 2012 says that the new trend of carrying debt into retirement could be the new normal, as cost of living and healthcare skyrocket, little financial planning, unforeseen emergencies, and less desire to downsize overtakes boomer's retirement plans. The Record, a northern New Jersey newspaper, also ran an article last year on this topic; The Record reported that paying off the mortgage before retiring makes sense.  

 

Of course removing mortgage debt before you retire will make things easier, however I think if you properly plan and account for the mortgage expense it is OK to retire with one. In The Record article above an AARP representative states that the mortgage is a predictable expense and because of that it should be eliminated before retiring. I tend to disagree with her statement. Because the mortgage payment is predictable, it can better be planned for than if it was a variable expense. Now if you retire with a mortgage and do not put a plan together that details where your income is going to come to pay for this expense, once you stop working, then all bets are off.

  

 

Please contact me if you have any questions about the articles above or about your personal or business finances.

  

Sincerely,

Marc Bautis
Wealth Manager

 

office: 201-842-7655
cell:    201-221-6895
fax:     201-754-9760
Disclaimer:The information contained in this newsletter is for information purposes only and may not be suitable for your specific financial situation.  You should consult a financial advisor before making any investment decisions relating to the information contained in this newsletter

What's Inside?
The Fiscal Cliff - A Mini Deal
1099's 5 Key Reporting Changes
Watercooler
Mailbag
Marc Headshow w Skyline, 9-2011
MEET MARC  

Marc Bautis is a Wealth Manager specializing in working with young families as well as retirees and those nearing retirement. He understands that everyone wants to not only protect their principal, but also be sure that their money lasts.  He is committed and proud to deliver independent advice, always in the interest of his clients.

Marc is the creator of the Retirement Fitness Challenge™,  a program designed to be sure his clients enjoy the retirement years as they have always envisioned them.  Marc's program is designed to prevent outliving your money but also to minimize expenses during retirement and find the best time to start taking Social Security benefits.   Marc is also the author of a recent book The Retirement Fitness Challenge: Shape Up Your Finances and Make Your Money Last a Lifetime, which is available on Amazon.com.

Marc is a graduate of Seton Hall University.  He is a Bergen County native, from Lyndhurst, where much of his extended family still resides. He currently lives in Hasbrouck Heights with his wife Katie, new daughter Charlotte and Old English Bulldog, Winnie.

 

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