2013 06-19 us tax presentation

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© 2012 KPMG LLP, a Canadian limited liability partnership and a member firm of the KPMG network of independent member firms affiliated with KPMG International Cooperative (KPMG International), a Swiss entity. All rights reserved. Restrictions and Limitations 1 ANY TAX ADVICE IN THIS COMMUNICATION IS NOT INTENDED OR WRITTEN BY KPMG TO BE USED, AND CANNOT BE USED, BY A CLIENT OR ANY OTHER PERSON OR ENTITY FOR THE PURPOSE OF (i) AVOIDING PENALTIES THAT MAY BE IMPOSED ON ANY TAXPAYER OR (ii) PROMOTING, MARKETING OR RECOMMENDING TO ANOTHER PARTY ANY MATTERS ADDRESSED HEREIN. The information contained herein is of a general nature and is not intended to address the circumstances of any particular individual or entity. Although we endeavor to provide accurate and timely information, there can be no guarantee that such information is accurate as of the date it is received or that it will continue to be accurate in the future. No one should act on such information without appropriate professional advice after a thorough examination of the particular situation. Any advice herein is based on the facts provided to us and on current tax law including judicial and administrative interpretation. Tax law is subject to continual change, at times on a retroactive basis and may result in incremental taxes, interest, or penalties. Should the facts provided to us be incorrect or incomplete or should the law or its interpretation change, our advice may be inappropriate. We are not responsible for updating our advice for changes in law or interpretation after the date hereof. KPMG’s advice is for the sole use of KPMG’s client. The advice is based on the specific facts and circumstances and the scope of KPMG’s engagement and is not intended to be relied upon by any other person. KPMG disclaims any responsibility or liability for any reliance that any person other than the client may place on this advice.

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Page 1: 2013 06-19 us tax presentation

© 2012 KPMG LLP, a Canadian limited liability partnership and a member firm of the KPMG network of independent member firms affiliated with KPMG International Cooperative (KPMG International), a Swiss entity. All rights reserved.

Restrictions and Limitations

1

ANY TAX ADVICE IN THIS COMMUNICATION IS NOT INTENDED OR WRITTEN BY KPMG TO BE USED, AND CANNOT BE USED, BY A CLIENT OR ANY OTHER PERSON OR ENTITY FOR THE PURPOSE OF (i) AVOIDING PENALTIES THAT MAY BE IMPOSED ON ANY TAXPAYER OR (ii) PROMOTING, MARKETING OR RECOMMENDING TO ANOTHER PARTY ANY MATTERS ADDRESSED HEREIN.

The information contained herein is of a general nature and is not intended to address the circumstances of any particular individual or entity. Although we endeavor to provide accurate and timely information, there can be no guarantee that such information is accurate as of the date it is received or that it will continue to be accurate in the future. No one should act on such information without appropriate professional advice after a thorough examination of the particular situation.

Any advice herein is based on the facts provided to us and on current tax law including judicial and administrative interpretation. Tax law is subject to continual change, at times on a retroactive basis and may result in incremental taxes, interest, or penalties. Should the facts provided to us be incorrect or incomplete or should the law or its interpretation change, our advice may be inappropriate. We are not responsible for updating our advice for changes in law or interpretation after the date hereof.

KPMG’s advice is for the sole use of KPMG’s client. The advice is based on the specific facts and circumstances and the scope of KPMG’s engagement and is not intended to be relied upon by any other person. KPMG disclaims any responsibility or liability for any reliance that any person other than the client may place on this advice.

Page 2: 2013 06-19 us tax presentation

© 2012 KPMG LLP, a Canadian limited liability partnership and a member firm of the KPMG network of independent member firms affiliated with KPMG International Cooperative (KPMG International), a Swiss entity. All rights reserved.

2

US Vacation Property

  Estate tax is the biggest concern Canadians have

  No US estate tax if worldwide assets US$5,250,000 or less (because of Canada-US Treaty credit)

  If married, worldwide assets of first to die can be about US$10,000,000 without estate tax applying (because of Canada-US Treaty marital credit) if property transferred to surviving spouse (no estate tax if surviving spouse is a US citizen)

  Maximum rate is 40%

  US estate tax on first $1,000,000 is $345,800; any excess value is taxed at 40%

  The lifetime exemption amount for US citizens is $5,250,000 which is equivalent to

$2,045,800 of estate tax (the applicable credit amount)

  Canadians are allowed a pro-rata portion of the exemption amount based on US assets divided by worldwide assets

Page 3: 2013 06-19 us tax presentation

© 2012 KPMG LLP, a Canadian limited liability partnership and a member firm of the KPMG network of independent member firms affiliated with KPMG International Cooperative (KPMG International), a Swiss entity. All rights reserved.

3

Example #1

  Michael has worldwide assets valued at $7,000,000   Vacation home in US valued at $2,000,000

  Shares of Apple valued at $1,000,000

Estate Tax on $3,000,000 On first $1,000,000 $ 345,800

On $2,000,000 at 40% 800,000 Total estate tax before credits 1,145,800

Treaty credit is 3/7 x $2,045,800 < 876,771 > Net estate tax payable $ 269,029

  If married an additional $876,771 credit available (or $269,029 in this example)   If not married or transfer property to children then estate tax will be payable

because worldwide assets > $5,250,000   If married and property to spouse then no estate tax because worldwide assets <

$10,000,000

  In many cases surviving spouse will sell before death

Page 4: 2013 06-19 us tax presentation

© 2012 KPMG LLP, a Canadian limited liability partnership and a member firm of the KPMG network of independent member firms affiliated with KPMG International Cooperative (KPMG International), a Swiss entity. All rights reserved.

4

Example #2

  George owns a home in Arizona valued at $4,000,000   George has worldwide assets valued at $20,000,000

  George dies and leaves his assets to his spouse, Gina

Estate Tax on George’s Death

On first $1,000,000 $ 345,800 On $3,000,000 at 40% 1,200,000

Total estate tax before credits 1,545,800 Treaty credit is 4/20 x $2,045,800 < 409,160 >

Treaty Marital Credit < 409,160>

Net estate tax payable $727,480

Page 5: 2013 06-19 us tax presentation

© 2012 KPMG LLP, a Canadian limited liability partnership and a member firm of the KPMG network of independent member firms affiliated with KPMG International Cooperative (KPMG International), a Swiss entity. All rights reserved.

5

Alternatives to Minimize or Eliminate US Estate Tax Exposure

  Play the odds   Spouse with lower worldwide assets buys US assets (with own funds)

  Joint ownership (each with own funds)   Sell after first to die

  Canadian company (if mostly rental)   Non-recourse debt (never actually use)

  Life insurance   Donation to US charity

  Canadian Trust (properly structured)   Canadian Limited Partnership (with US check-the-box election)

  Minimize assets of surviving spouse with spouse trust (with no general power of appointment)

  Transfer US property to trust for surviving spouse (with no general power of appointment); structure to qualify for treaty marital credit

Page 6: 2013 06-19 us tax presentation

© 2012 KPMG LLP, a Canadian limited liability partnership and a member firm of the KPMG network of independent member firms affiliated with KPMG International Cooperative (KPMG International), a Swiss entity. All rights reserved.

6

Canadian Trust for US Vacation Property

  Establish trust before looking for property   One spouse is the settlor

  The other spouse is the life beneficiary   The settlor is neither a beneficiary nor a trustee

  The trust is settled with cash   Children are the remainder beneficiaries

  Pay rent after beneficiary spouse dies   Individual capital gains rate on gain

  Can avoid 21-year rule if structure as spouse trust   Settlor has to part with the cash

  Need to be married

  No US estate tax

Page 7: 2013 06-19 us tax presentation

© 2012 KPMG LLP, a Canadian limited liability partnership and a member firm of the KPMG network of independent member firms affiliated with KPMG International Cooperative (KPMG International), a Swiss entity. All rights reserved.

7

Canadian Limited Partnership for US Vacation Property

  Elect to treat partnership as corporation for US tax purposes (check-the-box election)

  Avoids US estate tax (property is owned by Canadian corporation for US tax purposes)

  No shareholder benefit rules because partnership for Canadian tax purposes

  Need some type of “business” in the partnership (e.g., stock portfolio, LP interests or rental income)

  Corporate tax rate on capital gains realized

  Can transfer property already owned to the Canadian limited partnership but preference is to set up before purchase

Page 8: 2013 06-19 us tax presentation

© 2012 KPMG LLP, a Canadian limited liability partnership and a member firm of the KPMG network of independent member firms affiliated with KPMG International Cooperative (KPMG International), a Swiss entity. All rights reserved.

8

US Citizens Resident in Canada

  Born in the US = US citizen

  Can renounce US citizenship

  Possible retroactive determination of loss of citizenship (depends on facts)

  Subject to US income tax, estate tax, gift tax and generation skipping transfer tax on worldwide income/assets

  File US tax returns, all related forms and foreign bank account reporting forms

  Estate planning should take into account US citizenship

Page 9: 2013 06-19 us tax presentation

© 2012 KPMG LLP, a Canadian limited liability partnership and a member firm of the KPMG network of independent member firms affiliated with KPMG International Cooperative (KPMG International), a Swiss entity. All rights reserved.

9

Renouncing US Citizenship

  Need appointment at consulate (need prior legal advice)   Deemed disposition of assets at fair market value

  Immediate recognition of certain deferred compensation/pension amounts (including stock options, RRSP and non-US pensions)

  $668,000 tax-free capital gains (not for deferred compensation/pensions)

  US heirs subject to US estate and gift tax (forever)   Exception if:

-  < $2,000,000 net worth; and -  Filed last 5 years of tax returns; and

-  Average annual US tax liability less than $155,000   Exception if:

-  Dual from birth; and -  Reside in the other country; and

-  Not US resident in 10 of the last 15 years   Exception if:

-  Under age 18½

Page 10: 2013 06-19 us tax presentation

© 2012 KPMG LLP, a Canadian limited liability partnership and a member firm of the KPMG network of independent member firms affiliated with KPMG International Cooperative (KPMG International), a Swiss entity. All rights reserved.

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Renouncing US Citizenship - Planning

  Use $5,250,000 exemption to reduce net worth below $2,000,000

  Check dual from birth exception

  Check amount of gains

  Match timing of US and Canadian tax (e.g. withdraw RRSP, exercise stock options, reorganization of corporate structure)

  Retroactive determination of loss of citizenship

  Deal with children before age 18½

Page 11: 2013 06-19 us tax presentation

© 2012 KPMG LLP, a Canadian limited liability partnership and a member firm of the KPMG network of independent member firms affiliated with KPMG International Cooperative (KPMG International), a Swiss entity. All rights reserved.

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US Citizen with Residence with Accrued Gain

  In Canada can use principal residence exemption for main home or vacation home (not rental property)

  Gain in excess of $250,000 taxable in US

  Use lifetime gift tax exemption amount to transfer house with accrued gain to non-US citizen spouse before sale

  Current long term capital gains tax rate 20% in US; Canada is nil

  Structure will so house not bequeathed to US citizen spouse

Page 12: 2013 06-19 us tax presentation

© 2012 KPMG LLP, a Canadian limited liability partnership and a member firm of the KPMG network of independent member firms affiliated with KPMG International Cooperative (KPMG International), a Swiss entity. All rights reserved.

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US Citizen Estate Planning

  Reduce worldwide assets   Do not increase worldwide assets

  Estate freeze results in gift for US tax purposes -  Preferred shares deemed to have zero value unless fixed cumulative

dividend

  Use annual gift tax exemptions -  $14,000 to anyone

-  $143,000 to non-resident alien spouse   Pay tuition and medical expenses directly

  Establish trust in will of non-US spouse so that assets not included in estate of US surviving spouse

-  No general power of appointment

-  Spouse can’t be sole trustee with unlimited capital encroachment powers   Establish trust in will of US spouse (up to exemption amount) so that assets

not included in estate of US surviving spouse; keep increase in value out of US estate tax

  Use $5,250,000 lifetime gift tax exemption amount for assets that will increase in value

Page 13: 2013 06-19 us tax presentation

© 2012 KPMG LLP, a Canadian limited liability partnership and a member firm of the KPMG network of independent member firms affiliated with KPMG International Cooperative (KPMG International), a Swiss entity. All rights reserved.

13

Canadian Trusts with US Beneficiaries

  All income retained in trust is taxable to a US beneficiary when eventually distributed

  For US purposes cannot designate a distribution as a distribution of capital

  For US purposes current year income is distributed first, then accumulated income and finally capital

  Even if the beneficiary is only a capital beneficiary (trust law vs. tax law)

  Any accumulation distribution is treated as having been made over the term the trust existed

  US tax is calculated on the amount allocated to each year as if it was earned in that year

Page 14: 2013 06-19 us tax presentation

© 2012 KPMG LLP, a Canadian limited liability partnership and a member firm of the KPMG network of independent member firms affiliated with KPMG International Cooperative (KPMG International), a Swiss entity. All rights reserved.

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Accumulation Distribution Example

  Trust created 10 years ago with $1   Trust earned $10,000/year of dividend income

  Trust paid Canadian tax of $2500/year   Distribution of $75,000 in Year 11

US beneficiary reports $ 75,000

Gross-up for tax paid by trust 25,000 Income reported on US return $100,000

US tax calculation $ 35,000

Foreign tax credit 25,000

Net US tax owing $ 10,000

  Interest is charged on $1000/year of US tax for 10 years, 9 years, 8 years etc…in some cases the US tax plus interest is more than the distribution

Page 15: 2013 06-19 us tax presentation

© 2012 KPMG LLP, a Canadian limited liability partnership and a member firm of the KPMG network of independent member firms affiliated with KPMG International Cooperative (KPMG International), a Swiss entity. All rights reserved.

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How to Deal with Potential US Beneficiaries of Canadian Trusts

  Do not include any US beneficiaries

  Do not make distributions to US beneficiaries

  Provide in trust that US beneficiaries not entitled to any distributions

  Distribute all trust income including capital gains every year

  Distribute all trust income including capital gains before beneficiary moves to the US

  Distribute all income including capital gains to Canadian beneficiaries in Year 1 and then distribute to US beneficiaries in Year 2

  Careful bookkeeping (tracking trust income and taxes paid each year) – in many cases enough Canadian tax was paid to eliminate US tax

  If records not available use “default method” to determine accumulation distribution – can improve result by making distributions over several years

Page 16: 2013 06-19 us tax presentation

© 2012 KPMG LLP, a Canadian limited liability partnership and a member firm of the KPMG network of independent member firms affiliated with KPMG International Cooperative (KPMG International), a Swiss entity. All rights reserved.

16

Provide Flexibility in Trusts

  Trust can move to another jurisdiction (i.e. to US if US beneficiaries)

  Trust can be split if some beneficiaries are in the US

  If US is a possibility provide that a court within the US is able to exercise primary supervision over the administration of the trust if trust to become US resident (need to meet court and control test to be considered a US resident trust)

  For 21-year rule (in order to have Canadian resident beneficiary):

-  Distributions can be made to entity wholly owned by beneficiary -  Beneficiary can transfer interest in trust to wholly owned entity

-  Create the entity (ULC) and make it one of the beneficiaries

Page 17: 2013 06-19 us tax presentation

© 2012 KPMG LLP, a Canadian limited liability partnership and a member firm of the KPMG network of independent member firms affiliated with KPMG International Cooperative (KPMG International), a Swiss entity. All rights reserved.

17

Alter Ego Trusts

  Do not use for US assets

  Canadian tax on death payable by trust

  US estate tax payable by settlor

  No offsetting credits in Canada because different taxpayers

  US will allow credit for Canadian tax on Canadian assets

  Ok to use if no estate tax payable

Page 18: 2013 06-19 us tax presentation

© 2012 KPMG LLP, a Canadian limited liability partnership and a member firm of the KPMG network of independent member firms affiliated with KPMG International Cooperative (KPMG International), a Swiss entity. All rights reserved.

18

Holding Companies

  US citizens do not benefit from holding companies

  US anti-deferral rules similar to FAPI

  No integration in US

  Consider ULC

  Restructure before death if US heir

  Restructure in estate if US heir (foreign estates are subject to less onerous US rules than trusts)

Page 19: 2013 06-19 us tax presentation

© 2012 KPMG LLP, a Canadian limited liability partnership and a member firm of the KPMG network of independent member firms affiliated with KPMG International Cooperative (KPMG International), a Swiss entity. All rights reserved.

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Delinquent US Filers

  Need to deal with the issue

  The issue won’t go away

  Fix it and then renounce if don’t want to be a US citizen

  IRS streamlined process simpler/less costly than Offshore Voluntary Disclosure Initiative

Page 20: 2013 06-19 us tax presentation

© 2012 KPMG LLP, a Canadian limited liability partnership and a member firm of the KPMG network of independent member firms affiliated with KPMG International Cooperative (KPMG International), a Swiss entity. All rights reserved.

20

Greencard Holders

  Greencard holder = US resident

  Even if greencard no longer valid for immigration

  Required to file US tax returns

  Expatriation rules apply if greencard held in 8 or more of the last 15 years at time of surrender

  Tie-break to Canada using treaty, surrender greencard at border or greencard confiscated = expatriation

  Deemed disposition of assets/recognition of pension value – same as US citizens renouncing

  Nexus application will identify greencard holder

Page 21: 2013 06-19 us tax presentation

© 2012 KPMG LLP, a Canadian limited liability partnership and a member firm of the KPMG network of independent member firms affiliated with KPMG International Cooperative (KPMG International), a Swiss entity. All rights reserved.

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Summary

  Determine US estate tax exposure

  Ask about US citizenship

  Ask about greencards

  Ask about US residents in family

  Lots of opportunities to plan for tax minimization but opportunities are better before death, expatriation, freeze, distribution, reorganization etc

Page 22: 2013 06-19 us tax presentation

Questions?

Page 23: 2013 06-19 us tax presentation

Thank You

Presentation by Benita Loughlin KPMG LLP

[email protected]

Page 24: 2013 06-19 us tax presentation

© 2012 KPMG LLP, a Canadian limited liability partnership and a member firm of the KPMG network of independent member firms affiliated with KPMG International Cooperative (KPMG International), a Swiss entity. All rights reserved. Printed in Canada The KPMG name, logo and "cutting through complexity" are registered trademarks or trademarks of KPMG International Cooperative (KPMG International).