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Monday, November 12, 2012

IRS Small Business Audit Areas

The IRS has announced selected business areas it is prioritizing for audit this upcoming fiscal year. The IRS is increasingly focused on small business underreporting, which it considers responsible for the majority of a $450 billion tax gap. Here are the areas:
1.      Fringe benefits, especially use of company cars
The IRS is finding that employers are not correctly reporting employees’ personal use of company vehicles on Forms W-2.
2.      Higher income taxpayers
The IRS will focus on self-employed taxpayers with gross receipts (that is, before expenses) of more than $1 million.
3.      Form 1099-K matching

Forms 1099-K report payments from credit cards and payment clearinghouses (such as PayPal). The IRS granted a reprieve for 2012, but it announced that it will start Form 1099-K matching in 2013.

4.      The small business employee health insurance tax credit

The IRS wants to make sure that small business employers and tax exempts are complying with credit eligibility requirements.
5.      International transactions
The IRS has announced its third voluntary foreign bank account initiative and intends to look for offshore transactions.
6.      Partnership returns reporting losses  
This is a new area of emphasis. Expect the IRS to look into partnerships reporting large losses.
7.      S corporations reporting losses and reasonable officer compensation

The IRS will be looking at S corporations claiming losses, looking for losses taken in excess of shareholder basis.

The IRS is also interested in profitable S corporations reporting little or no salary to officers.
8.      Proper worker classification
The IRS is interested in employer treatment of worker versus independent contractor status. The IRS thinks there is significant noncompliance in this area.

Thursday, November 8, 2012

“ROB”-ing a 401(k) Plan

A CPA acquaintance from New Jersey came into town and spent a couple of days at the office. Why? Well, maybe he wanted to get away from New Jersey. Actually, he wanted to take a look at some of the policies and procedures we utilize. He only recently purchased his own practice.
He said something that surprised me, and which I thought we could discuss this week. He funded his accounting practice by using his 401(k) funds. This technique is sometimes referred to as “rollover for business startup.” The acronym is “ROBS.” Catchy, eh?

What do I think about ROBS? Frankly, I am a bit uncomfortable with them. There is the issue of concentrating your retirement monies in a venture also intended to provide current income. Should it fail both income and retirement monies vanish. I am financially conservative, as you can guess.
The second issue is technical: there are a number of ways this structure can run afoul of some very technical requirements. You have tax law, you have ERISA, you have … well, you have enough to cause concern.
Let’s give this CPA acquaintance a name. We will call him “Garry,” mostly because his name actually is Garry. Here is what Garry did:
(1)    Garry created a corporation. The corporation had no assets, no employees, no business operations, no shareholders. Accountants call this a “shell” corporation.
(2)    The corporation adopted a retirement plan. The plan allowed for participants to invest the entirety of their account in employer stock.
(3)    Garry became an employee of the corporation.
(4)    Garry rolled-over his 401(k) (or a portion thereof) to the newly-created retirement plan.
(5)    Garry had the plan purchase the employer stock.
(6)    The corporation now had cash, which …
(7)    The corporation used to purchase an accounting practice.
What can possibly go wrong? Here are several areas:
(1)    You need a solid valuation for the 401(k) purchase of the employer stock. I would not want to go into the IRS with only a rough calculation on the back of an envelope. The trustee of the plan has fiduciary responsibility. Granted Garry is both the fiduciary and beneficiary, but he still has responsibilities as trustee.
(2)    The workforce has to be able to participate in the plan.
a.       This is a qualified plan. There are nondiscrimination requirements, same as any other qualified plan.
b.      This is not a problem for a one-man shop. What will Garry do when he hires, however?
                                                               i.      Here is what he better do: amend the plan to prohibit further investment in employer stock. Future employees will not be allowed to invest in Garry’s accounting firm stock.
(3)    There is a fiduciary standard for investment diversification.
a.       You can see the problem.
                                                               i.      Maybe Garry can open a second accounting office. You know, diversify.
(4)    Garry is paying for all this. Some brokers will charge over $5,000 to set up a ROBS.
a.       Oh, there are also ongoing annual charges. The plan will have an annual Form 5500 filing requirement, for example.
b.      There may also be periodic valuations, requiring Garry to pay a valuation expert.
                                                               i.      Why? Because Garry has a difficult-to-value asset in a qualified plan. Difficult-to-value does not mean Garry gets a free pass on valuing the asset. It does mean that it is going to cost him.
(5)    These transactions have caught the attention of the IRS. This does not mean that his transaction will be audited, challenged or voided, but it does mean that he has walked into a spotlight.
a.       Garry had to gauge his IRS risk-tolerance as well as his financial diversification risk-tolerance.
Are ROBS considered “out there” tax-wise? Actually, no. There are tens of thousands of these structures and their businesses up and running. Garry is in good company. And while the IRS has scowled, that doesn’t mean that ROBS are not viable under the tax code and ERISA. It does mean that Garry should be careful, though. Professional advice is imperative.

Tuesday, November 6, 2012

Do You File Taxes With South Carolina?

Heads up if you file tax returns with South Carolina.

On October 26 the S.C. Department of Revenue announced that approximately 3.6 million social security numbers and almost 400,000 credit and debit card numbers were compromised.  



Government officials emphasized that no public funds were accessed or put at risk. No word from government officials on your whether your private funds were put at risk, though.

On October 10 the S.C. Division of Information Technology informed the Department of Revenue of a potential cyber attack. On October 16, investigators discovered two attempts to hack the system in early September. They later discovered that a previous attempt was made in late August. Government officials believe they have closed the vulnerability in the system.

If you have filed a South Carolina tax return since 1998, please visit protectmyid.com/scdor or call 1- 866-578-5422 to determine if your information is affected. If so, you can immediately enroll for free in one year of identity protection service with Experian.

Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Happy Halloween



Amost forgot. Time to clear here and pass out candy.

Barriers to Tax Reform

The New York Times ran an article yesterday titled “The Real Barrier to Tax Reform” written by Bruce Bartlett. I have no issue with Mr. Bartlett, although I rarely read The New York Times. Nonetheless, what caught my eye is the following table of “tax expenditures”:

These “expenditures” make it difficult to raise enough “revenues” to cover whatever the government’s spending binge of the moment is.
I can see how reasonable people may debate the tenth – accelerated depreciation – as an expenditure. Instead look at categories such as the 401(k), medical insurance and employer-provided pension plans.
 A couple of observations on this:
(1)   Since when are monies taken from us as taxes to be called “revenues?”
(2)   Since when are monies we keep to be called “expenditures?”
There is an odor of bad fish with the vocabulary. Apple has revenues, as they have something I want and am willing to pay for. The government - not so much. This damage to the language is itself a barrier to tax reform.
Oh, you may be wondering about “exclusion of net imputed rental income.” Here is the concept: if you rented out your home rather than lived in it, someone would pay you rent. The government would then tax you on your rent. So, by living in your home rather than renting it out, you are costing the government money.
You, dear homeowner-living-in-your-home, are an “expenditure.”
Bruce Bartlett "The Real Barrier to Tax Reform"

Tuesday, October 30, 2012

Michael Bennett and an FBI Sting

Here is another former-NFL-player goes wrong tax story: Michael Bennett has been convicted of wire fraud and will serve 15 months in prison.
Who is Michael Bennett? He was drafted by the Minnesota Vikings in the first round of the 2001 draft. He was a Pro Bowl player. He was in the NFL until 2010, although he was a backup player for much of the time. Still, he earned millions of dollars from football. May we be so lucky.
How did he get arrested? It has to do with identity theft and tax refund fraud in North Miami. South Florida is a hotbed for tax refund fraud, and the FBI was operating a tax-refund and check-cashing storefront. It sounds like the business was quite lucrative, as the FBI was charging fees ranging from 35% to 45% of the face value of the checks. People would go the store and cash fraudulently-obtained checks, presenting false identification and sometimes forging the victim’s signature on the back of the check.
There was one ring of seven people which cashed approximately $500,000 of refund checks. The FBI caught the conversations and transactions on tape. Sadly, two former NFL players were in this crowd. Perhaps that is how we get to Michael Bennett.


In walks Bennett. He is not part of the tax-refund ring, but he does want to borrow money. He wants to borrow $200,000. I can understand. Surely many of us have been returning from lunch and decided to stop in at the cash-and-dash to borrow a couple of hundred grand. Bennett presents a bank statement showing that he had buckets of bucks at UBS, and the statement is accepted as “collateral” for a loan. On April 30, 2012 Bennett picked up a $150,000 check. He was supposed to pay back $280,000 after three months.
NOTE: Yes, I wrote the amounts correctly.
There was no money in his account, of course. Bennett admitted to altering his UBS statement to make it look like he had a lot of money there. He was arrested for wire fraud. He has until January 18, 2013 to begin serving his sentence.

Sunday, October 28, 2012

A TIGTA Report on IRS Contractor Payments

The Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration (TIGTA) has released a new report titled “Deficiencies Continue to Exist in Verifying Contractor Labor Charges Prior to Payment.”
What happened is that the IRS received appropriations from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009. You may remember this Act by another name – the “Stimulus.” TIGTA was auditing certain expenditures and also reviewing IRS internal controls over contract review, approval and payment.
TIGTA selected a statistical sample of $1 million in labor charges. What did it find?
(1)   The IRS could not document $394,430 of invoiced labor hours that were paid.
(2)   The labor rates paid were not verified to the contract for the qualification level of the individual paid.
(3)   Although the IRS verified the qualification and experience of key contract personnel, they did not do so for other personnel. The IRS was supposed to do this by the contract.

My Take: I am glad that someone is keeping an eye on these expenditures. An error rate of 39.4% is not too reassuring, however.