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Showing posts with label Hidden Offshore Assets. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hidden Offshore Assets. Show all posts

December 15, 2011

IRS Releases Guidance on Foreign Financial Asset Reporting


The Internal Revenue Service in coming days will release a new information reporting form that taxpayers will use  starting this coming tax filing season to report specified foreign financial assets for tax year 2011.

Form 8938 (Statement of Specified Foreign Financial Assets) will be filed by taxpayers with specific types and amounts of foreign financial assets or foreign accounts. It is important for taxpayers to determine whether they are subject to this new requirement because the law imposes significant penalties for failing to comply.

The Form 8938 filing requirement was enacted in 2010 to improve tax compliance by U.S. taxpayers with offshore financial accounts. Individuals who may have to file Form 8938 are U.S. citizens and residents, nonresidents who elect to file a joint income tax return and certain nonresidents who live in a U.S. territory.
Form 8938 is required when the total value of specified foreign assets exceeds certain thresholds.  For example, a married couple living in the U.S. and filing a joint tax return would not file Form 8938 unless their total specified foreign assets exceed $100,000 on the last day of the tax year or more than $150,000 at any time during the tax year.

The thresholds for taxpayers who reside abroad are higher. For example in this case, a married couple residing abroad and filing a joint return would not file Form 8938 unless the value of specified foreign assets exceeds $400,000 on the last day of the tax year or more than $600,000 at any time during the year.

Instructions for Form 8938 explain the thresholds for reporting, what constitutes a specified foreign financial asset, how to determine the total value of relevant assets, what assets are exempted, and what information must be provided.

Form 8938 is not required of individuals who do not have an income tax return filing requirement.

The new Form 8938 filing requirement does not replace or otherwise affect a taxpayer’s obligation to file an FBAR (Report of Foreign Bank and Financial Accounts).  For more go to the FBAR page on this website.

Failing to file Form 8938 when required could result in a $10,000 penalty, with an additional penalty up to $50,000 for continued failure to file after IRS notification.  A 40 percent penalty on any understatement of tax attributable to non-disclosed assets can also be imposed. Special statute of limitation rules apply to Form 8938, which are also explained in the instructions.

Form 8938, the form’s instructions, regulations implementing this new foreign asset reporting, and other information to help taxpayers determine if they are required to file Form 8938 can be found on the FATCA page of irs.gov.

See TD 9567.

November 25, 2011

How Many Wealthy People are there in the US and the World?

Private Wealth Magazine has published an article that sets worth the number of individuals in the US and the world that are worth $30 million US or more.  Surprisingly there are not as many (if there figures are correct) as you might think.  There are 62,950 in the US with 10,390 are those located in California.  That's not a lot considering there are over 300 Million residents in the USA.  There are 42,525 in Asia.

READ THE ARTICLE AND STATISTICS HERE

November 21, 2011

Ex-UBS banker sentenced for aiding U.S. tax evasion


A former senior UBS banker who helped the U.S. government expand its crackdown on offshore tax evasion was sentenced to five years probation on Friday for advising wealthy Americans on ways to hide their money from U.S. tax authorities. Renzo Gadola, who worked at Swiss bank UBS AG from 1995 to 2008, pleaded guilty in December to charges of conspiracy to defraud the United States. Almost immediately after his arrest on Nov. 8, 2010, Gadola started cooperating with U.S. officials, providing key insight into other bankers and Swiss financial institutions offering offshore banking services, according to prosecutors. He is currently out on bail.
U.S. authorities, who suspect tens of thousands of Americans are using Swiss banks to avoid paying billions of dollars in taxes, are conducting a widening criminal investigation into scores of Swiss banks and international banks with Swiss operations. Banks under investigation include Credit Suisse, HSBC Holdings Plc and Basler Kantonalbank, a large Swiss cantonal, or regional, bank, according to U.S. judicial sources. Cantonal banks are largely government-owned in Switzerland.
Gadola turned over the names of bankers and participated in recorded conversations with clients, according to an unsealed government document filed last week requesting leniency in his sentencing. 
The case against Gadola, an investment adviser based in Switzerland, highlighted how some bankers continued to help wealthy Americans conceal money from the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) even amid a U.S. probe into UBS that mushroomed into a major international judicial and diplomatic affair. In 2009, UBS paid $780 million to settle criminal charges from the U.S. Department of Justice that it helped thousands of wealthy Americans evade taxes. UBS ultimately agreed to disclose 4,450 client names and ended its U.S. cross-border banking business. The bank was accused by federal prosecutors of helping some 17,000 American clients with $20 billion in assets hide their accounts from the IRS.
Gadola's case involved a Mississippi client who kept $445,000 in a safe deposit box before transferring it first to UBS and then to a Basler Kantonalbank account. The unidentified client said he wanted to declare the money under a voluntary disclosure program launched by the IRS, but Gadola advised against it, arguing the money would go undetected by officials. 
Martin Lack, a former senior UBS banker, was indicted in August for selling offshore tax evasion services. Lack, a Swiss national, is a fugitive. Lack was Gadola's business partner after Gadola left UBS, and the two worked to help American clients hide money in Swiss cantonal banks following the crackdown on UBS, according to people briefed on the matter.

November 4, 2011

SWISS GOVERNMENT OFFERS TO MAKE DEAL WITH IRS

Reuters reports the Swiss government has offered to pay a $10 Billion dollar penalty to the IRS  and US Justice Department for civil penalties in connection with its alleged  co - conspirator activities which allowed US taxpayers to avoid paying taxes on their income and secret assets held abroad.  This article shows how strong the current IRS effort to get foreign bank to reveal information on their US account holders actually is.

The IRS will not accept the proposed settlement unless the names of all US depositors and details of their accounts are included in the deal.  Read More Here.

October 2, 2011

If You Failed to Enter the IRS Offshore Disclosure Program (At Risk Taxpayers)

You should immediately seek competent legal and tax advice on how best to proceed  with filing your past tax returns and IRS foreign asset reporting forms now that the September 9, 2011 deadline has passed, if you failed to enter the Program.

Most delinquent t taxpayers  that have not disclose their foreign assets, filed the special IRS Offshore Forms, or have not filed their tax returns for past years probably do not face criminal action, but may incur horrendous penalties which grow worse the longer they wait to come forward.  You alternatives are now fewer than they used to be but there are still steps you can take.

There are no clear preferable courses of action but if you talk with a professional and learn your alternatives, it will help you make a decision on planning your future course of action.  Best to talk with an  experienced  tax attorney in any event to give yourself the privacy and confidentiality of attorney-client privilege. Contact us to make an appointment for a phone or skype consultation to discuss your individual situation and create a strategy to proceed.  Offshore Disclosure Email.

To read more about the IRS General Disclosure Program click here.

August 27, 2011

Quiet or Silent Disclosure May Not be Best Way to Go With Respect to Foreign Financial Accounts, Foreign corps, trusts, and partnerships

Forbes Magazine Article Does not recommend that taxpayers try "silent or quiet" disclosure to reveal their offshore bank accounts, financial accounts, foreign corporations, foreign partnerships or foreign trusts. The IRS says they are looking for individuals who are attempting to file past special foreign asset reporting forms and will hit them with the maximum penalties and possible criminal prosecution. Click Here to Read Article.

The IRS has extended the deadline for entering the 2011 Voluntary Offshore Disclosure Program to 9/9/11 from the original deadline of 8/31/11.   This will avoid the possible huge penalties which can be incurred if a taxpayer attempts to silently or quietly disclose.

August 25, 2011

WHEN ARE FOREIGN PENSION PLAN CONTRIBUTIONS TAXABLE ON US TAX RETURNS?


US expatriates working for foreign employers may participate in foreign pension plans. These plans normally have beneficial tax treatment under local law. Unfortunately, these foreign arrangements generally do not meet the US "qualification rules". As a result, the beneficial treatment under local law is often not available to US citizens working abroad..

US QUALIFIED DEFERRED COMPENSATION

US employer sponsored pension plans qualify for special tax treatment under the Internal Revenue Code: tax deductible contributions for the employer; earnings in the plan are tax exempt; and the employee is not taxed until the benefits are received upon retirement or withdrawal of those pension funds. These tax benefits are not available unless the plan meets the specific requirements of the Internal Revenue Code.

NON-QUALIFIED DEFERRED COMPENSATION

The determination of when amounts deferred under a non-qualified deferred compensation arrangement are includible in the gross income of the taxpayer depends on the facts and circumstances of the arrangement and which Code section applies to those facts.

IRC § 402(b) Plans

Employer sponsored non-qualified funded deferred compensation plans are generally governed by the provisions of IRC § 402(b). US employees who participate in such a plan are taxed on the amount of the contributions made by the employer (once the benefits are vested or not subject to a substantial risk of forfeiture). If the employee is a "highly compensated" (compensation exceeds $105,000 or part of the top 20% of employees) the employee is taxed on both the contribution and the growth in the plan each year (to the extent the benefits are vested. (Non-Highly compensated employees are not taxed on the growth in the plan, but are taxed when the benefits are distributed.)
IRC § 409A

The provisions of IRC § 409A apply to deferred compensation plans not covered by IRC § 402(b), plans covered by a tax treaty or foreign pension plans that are available on a broad base to the employer's employees (but only to the extent of non-elective deferrals and employer contributions as limited by US rules).

Under IRC § 409A, if the deferred compensation arrangement does not meet the requirements of IRC § 409A, the employee will be subject to normal income tax, a 20% penalty tax and an interest charge. To meet the rules of IRC § 409A, the plan must provide that distributions from the deferred compensation plan are only allowed on separation from service, death, a specified time (or under a fixed schedule), change in control of a corporation, occurrence of an unforeseeable emergency, or if the participant becomes disabled.

The plan may not allow for the acceleration of benefits, except as provided by regulations. The plan must provide that compensation for services performed during a tax year may be deferred at the participant's election only if the election to defer is made no later than the close of the preceding tax year, or at such other time as provided in regulations.

The actual time and manner of distributions must be specified at the time of initial deferral.

INCOME TAX TREATY-PENSIONS

The normal US income tax rules may be altered by applicable treaty provisions; for example, the United States and the United Kingdom Income Tax Treaty. While the treaty does not specifically provide that each country's qualified plans will be treated as qualified plans by the other country, the treaty effectively provides for such a result with tax deferrals and tax reductions, but subject to certain limits.

In the context of a US citizen employed in the UK and participating in a pension plan established by the UK employer, the rules are that the employee may deduct (or exclude) contributions made by or on behalf of the individual to the plan; and benefits accrued under the plan are not taxable income. The Treaty further provides that the deduction (or exclusion) rule only applies to the extent the contributions or benefits qualify for tax relief in the UK and that such relief may not exceed the reliefs that would be allowed in the US under its domestic rules.

With respect to distributions the general rule under the Treaty is that a pension received by a resident of one country is only taxable by the country of residence. For Lump Sum payments, the general rule is that only the country of the situs of the pension plan may tax the distribution. However, as in most US treaties, the US retains the right to tax its citizens as if the treaty were not in force; with the result that the US retains its right to tax its citizens on both periodic distributions as well as lump sum distributions. Double taxation is avoided through the use of the foreign tax credit rules.

HOW TO TREAT CONTRIBUTIONS  TO YOUR FOREIGN PENSION PLAN

Where a US citizen employee participates in a foreign pension plan, it is likely that the plan will not have met the US qualification rules. Thus, the employee will be subject to US tax on the contributions to the plan and the growth in the plan. For employees that live in a jurisdiction that imposes an income tax at rates higher than the US rate, it is likely that the employee will have generated a pool of "excess foreign tax credits". These credits may be used to offset the US tax on foreign sourced income and therefore may be used to reduce (or eliminate) the US tax that may currently arise on the deferred compensation.

If the employee has "excess foreign tax credits", (and provided the deferred compensation is "foreign sourced income"), the current US tax on such income may be partially or fully offset.  Another possibility is for the US taxpayer to make a claim under an applicable treaty (if the country of employment has a Tax Treaty with the US).. If there is a treaty with proper pension provisions, and  the contributions to the plan have not exceeded the US plan limitations, the contributions to the plan and the growth in the plan should not be subject to current US income tax.  If there is no treaty with the country the expat is living in, then there is no deferral of pension contributions by a foreign employer.

An expat taxpayer has the choice of using excess foreign tax credits or invoking an applicable tax treaty to avoid having to pay current US income tax on contributions and the growth in the foreign deferred compensation scheme. Whether to use excess credits or to invoke the treaty will depend on a number of factors such as which may vary each particular situation.

TAX REPORTING:

There are a number of reporting requirements that may apply in addition to the individual's income tax return. This may include certain foreign trust  reporting returns (form 3520 and 3520A), as well as the Treasury report on Foreign Bank and Financial Accounts which is form TD F 90-22.1. This report must be filed when your foreign accounts(when combined together at their highest balances during the year) exceed $10,000 and covers not only bank accounts but arrangements outside the US that are virtually any type of financial account. This form must be filed by June 30 of each year, and there are no extensions. Substantial penalties (including criminal penalties) may apply.

US expatriates working for foreign employers may participate in foreign pension plans. These plans normally have beneficial tax treatment under local law. Unfortunately, these foreign arrangements generally do not meet the US "qualification rules". As a result, the beneficial treatment under local law is often not available to US citizens working abroad..

US QUALIFIED DEFERRED COMPENSATION

US employer sponsored pension plans qualify for special tax treatment under the Internal Revenue Code: tax deductible contributions for the employer; earnings in the plan are tax exempt; and the employee is not taxed until the benefits are received upon retirement or withdrawal of those pension funds. These tax benefits are not available unless the plan meets the specific requirements of the Internal Revenue Code.

NON-QUALIFIED DEFERRED COMPENSATION

The determination of when amounts deferred under a non-qualified deferred compensation arrangement are includible in the gross income of the taxpayer depends on the facts and circumstances of the arrangement and which Code section applies to those facts.

IRC § 402(b) Plans

Employer sponsored non-qualified funded deferred compensation plans are generally governed by the provisions of IRC § 402(b). US employees who participate in such a plan are taxed on the amount of the contributions made by the employer (once the benefits are vested or not subject to a substantial risk of forfeiture). If the employee is a "highly compensated" (compensation exceeds $105,000 or part of the top 20% of employees) the employee is taxed on both the contribution and the growth in the plan each year (to the extent the benefits are vested. (Non-Highly compensated employees are not taxed on the growth in the plan, but are taxed when the benefits are distributed.)
IRC § 409A

The provisions of IRC § 409A apply to deferred compensation plans not covered by IRC § 402(b), plans covered by a tax treaty or foreign pension plans that are available on a broad base to the employer's employees (but only to the extent of non-elective deferrals and employer contributions as limited by US rules).

Under IRC § 409A, if the deferred compensation arrangement does not meet the requirements of IRC § 409A, the employee will be subject to normal income tax, a 20% penalty tax and an interest charge. To meet the rules of IRC § 409A, the plan must provide that distributions from the deferred compensation plan are only allowed on separation from service, death, a specified time (or under a fixed schedule), change in control of a corporation, occurrence of an unforeseeable emergency, or if the participant becomes disabled.

The plan may not allow for the acceleration of benefits, except as provided by regulations. The plan must provide that compensation for services performed during a tax year may be deferred at the participant's election only if the election to defer is made no later than the close of the preceding tax year, or at such other time as provided in regulations.

The actual time and manner of distributions must be specified at the time of initial deferral.

INCOME TAX TREATY-PENSIONS

The normal US income tax rules may be altered by applicable treaty provisions; for example, the United States and the United Kingdom Income Tax Treaty. While the treaty does not specifically provide that each country's qualified plans will be treated as qualified plans by the other country, the treaty effectively provides for such a result with tax deferrals and tax reductions, but subject to certain limits.

In the context of a US citizen employed in the UK and participating in a pension plan established by the UK employer, the rules are that the employee may deduct (or exclude) contributions made by or on behalf of the individual to the plan; and benefits accrued under the plan are not taxable income. The Treaty further provides that the deduction (or exclusion) rule only applies to the extent the contributions or benefits qualify for tax relief in the UK and that such relief may not exceed the reliefs that would be allowed in the US under its domestic rules.

With respect to distributions the general rule under the Treaty is that a pension received by a resident of one country is only taxable by the country of residence. For Lump Sum payments, the general rule is that only the country of the situs of the pension plan may tax the distribution. However, as in most US treaties, the US retains the right to tax its citizens as if the treaty were not in force; with the result that the US retains its right to tax its citizens on both periodic distributions as well as lump sum distributions. Double taxation is avoided through the use of the foreign tax credit rules.

HOW TO TREAT CONTRIBUTIONS  TO YOUR FOREIGN PENSION PLAN

Where a US citizen employee participates in a foreign pension plan, it is likely that the plan will not have met the US qualification rules. Thus, the employee will be subject to US tax on the contributions to the plan and the growth in the plan. For employees that live in a jurisdiction that imposes an income tax at rates higher than the US rate, it is likely that the employee will have generated a pool of "excess foreign tax credits". These credits may be used to offset the US tax on foreign sourced income and therefore may be used to reduce (or eliminate) the US tax that may currently arise on the deferred compensation.

If the employee has "excess foreign tax credits", (and provided the deferred compensation is "foreign sourced income"), the current US tax on such income may be partially or fully offset.  Another possibility is for the US taxpayer to make a claim under an applicable treaty (if the country of employment has a Tax Treaty with the US).. If there is a treaty with proper pension provisions, and  the contributions to the plan have not exceeded the US plan limitations, the contributions to the plan and the growth in the plan should not be subject to current US income tax.  If there is no treaty with the country the expat is living in, then there is no deferral of pension contributions by a foreign employer.

An expat taxpayer has the choice of using excess foreign tax credits or invoking an applicable tax treaty to avoid having to pay current US income tax on contributions and the growth in the foreign deferred compensation scheme. Whether to use excess credits or to invoke the treaty will depend on a number of factors such as which may vary each particular situation.

TAX REPORTING:

There are a number of reporting requirements that may apply in addition to the individual's income tax return. This may include certain foreign trust  reporting returns (form 3520 and 3520A), as well as the Treasury report on Foreign Bank and Financial Accounts which is form TD F 90-22.1. This report must be filed when your foreign accounts(when combined together at their highest balances during the year) exceed $10,000 and covers not only bank accounts but arrangements outside the US that are virtually any type of financial account. This form must be filed by June 30 of each year, and there are no extensions. Substantial penalties (including criminal penalties) may apply.

August 8, 2011

IRS Reminds Taxpayers that the Aug. 31 Deadline Is Fast Approaching for the Second Special Voluntary Disclosure Initiative of Offshore Accounts



WASHINGTON — U.S. taxpayers hiding income in undisclosed offshore accounts are running out of time to take advantage of a soon-to-expire opportunity to come forward and get their taxes current with the Internal Revenue Service.
The IRS today reminded taxpayers that the 2011 Offshore Voluntary Disclosure Initiative (OVDI) will expire on Aug. 31, 2011. Taxpayers who come forward voluntarily get a better deal than those who wait for the IRS to find their undisclosed accounts and income. New foreign account reporting requirements are being phased in over the next few years, making it ever tougher to hide income offshore. As importantly, the IRS continues its focus on banks and bankers worldwide that assist U.S. taxpayers with hiding assets overseas. 
“The time has come to get back into compliance with the U.S. tax system, because the risks of hiding money offshore keeps going up,” said IRS Commissioner Doug Shulman. “Our goal is to get people back into the system. The second voluntary initiative gives people a fair way to resolve their tax problems.”
The 2011 OVDI was announced on Feb. 8, 2011, and follows the 2009 Offshore Disclosure Program (OVDP).  The 2011 initiative offers clear benefits to encourage taxpayers to come forward rather than risk detection by the IRS. Taxpayers hiding assets offshore who do not come forward will face far higher penalties along with potential criminal charges.
For the 2011 initiative, there is a new penalty framework that requires individuals to pay a penalty of 25 percent of the amount in the foreign bank accounts in the year with the highest aggregate account balance covering the 2003 to 2010 time period. Some taxpayers will be eligible for 5 or 12.5 percent penalties in certain narrow circumstances.
Participants also must pay back-taxes and interest for up to eight years as well as paying accuracy-related and/or delinquency penalties. All original and amended tax returns must be filed by the deadline.
The IRS has made available the 2011 OVDI information in eight foreign languages for those taxpayers with undisclosed offshore accounts. The agency took this step to reach taxpayers whose primary language may not be English. These translations include the following languages: Chinese (Traditional andSimplified), FarsiGermanHindiKoreanRussianSpanish and Vietnamese
The IRS decision to open a second special disclosure initiative was based on the success of the first program and many more taxpayers coming forward after the program closed on Oct. 15, 2009. The first special disclosure initiative program closed with about 15,000 voluntary disclosures regarding accounts at banks in more than 60 countries. Many taxpayers came in after the first program closed.  These taxpayers were deemed eligible to take advantage of the special provisions of the second initiative.
Further details about this initiative are provided in a series of questions and answers.

June 3, 2011

IRS REVISES FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS ON 2011 VOLUNTARY OFFSHORE DISCLOSURE PROGRAM

The IRS on June 2, 2011, changed certain questions and answers on its Frequently Asked Questions page  which contains the rules to its 2011 Voluntary Offshore Disclosure Program. The new information provides some significant further guidance for those taxpayers trying to personally decide if they wish to enter the program.  Some of the additional information which is useful includes.

  • Procedures to get an extension of time beyond the original 8/31/11 deadline
  • Additional Questions and Answers (51.1 to 51.3) indicating factual situations when a taxpayer may elect to  Opt out of participating in the program because the civil penalties imposed outside of the program may be less than those imposed if the taxpayer chose to enter the program.