RESOURCES HUB article Sell More Insurance
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Sell More Insurance

  • To compensate children not receiving business interests, in order to
    avoid conflict with children receiving the business interests. Insurance
    can be the “big equalizer”.
  • To fund payment of estate tax (e.g. a survivorship policy combined with
    by pass/QTIP trust planning to hold business on death of owner/active
    spouse).
  • On the active spouse’s life, to compensate surviving spouse for loss of
    income resulting from death of active spouse.
  • On the active spouse’s life, to compensate the surviving spouse for
    loss of assets if the business is bequeathed to the children in the
    business on first spouse’s (i.e., active business spouse’s) death.
  • On the active spouse’s life to pay estate tax so that the business can
    be transferred and bequeathed to the children in the business on first
    spouse’s (i.e., active business spouse’s) death.
  • On the active spouse’s life as key-person protection to help pull the
    business through the tough time of loosing an active principal, hire a
    replacement executive, pay headhunter fees and training costs, help the
    business survive the loss of a rainmaker, etc.
  • To fund a stock redemption purchase of a deceased shareholder’s
    shares.
  • To fund a stock cross-purchase of a deceased shareholder’s shares by
    the surviving shareholder.
  • To diversify the assets of the principal of a closely held business and
    accumulate wealth outside of the business.
  • Insurance held in an irrevocable live insurance trust to provide a
    means of growing an asset which is protected from the liability and/or
    malpractice claims of the business.
  • As a perquisite for employees.
  • To cover the estate tax cost gap if the business owner dies before the
    grantor retained annuity trusts (“GRAT”), or sales to defective grantor
    trusts (“IDIT”), or other estate planning techniques are effective.
    Example: Business owner’s estate planner includes a five and ten year GRAT
    to shift a significant portion of the value of the closely held business to
    her heirs. Use 5 and 10-year term policies to fund the estate tax cost if
    the grantor dies before each GRAT terminates.
  • Protect the often overlooked risk that more than one shareholder will
    die/retire/become disabled, etc. in one year. Most shareholder agreements
    ignore the risk of multiple payouts. A combination of disability buyout
    and life insurance may address this.
  • Use disability insurance to coordinate with the salary and benefits
    continuation period under the shareholders’ agreement.
  • Use disability buy out insurance to fund the payment of the repurchase
    of shares from a disabled shareholder.
  • Use life insurance to offset the risk that the overly aggressive or
    improperly documented gifts of business interests will be successfully
    challenged by the IRS on audit. If gifts are not reported on a gift tax
    return and “adequately disclosed”, the period in which the IRS can audit
    those gifts (statute of limitations) never ends.
  • Use life insurance as key person insurance to insure the lives of the
    younger generation members who are taking over the closely held
    business.
  • Use a new life insurance policy to replace an existing insurance
    policy/plan tainted by the transfer for value rule. The transfer-for-value
    rule, in its simplest application, is triggered where a life insurance
    policy is traded or sold for something of value. The result will be that
    the proceeds will be taxable as ordinary income upon receipt.
  • Use a new 3-year term life insurance policy to cover the risk of dying
    within three years of transferring an existing life insurance policy to an
    insurance trust (in which case, the transferred insurance will be in your
    estate absent from a provision qualifying it for the marital deduction).

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