Don’t miss this in-depth tax, trust, and estate planning update. Recent trust and estate litigation cases will be examined, as well as trust and fiduciary state laws. Current UHNW tax audit practices will be addressed in addition to a discussion on how to manage the tax challenges that come along with states trying to tax beneficiaries who live in different locations than their trusts. Discover what to watch out for and what you should consider doing to protect the clients you serve.
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A private family trust company (PTC) often serves as an excellent governance framework and corporate structure for a virtual family office (VFO) by providing integrated, holistic oversight of fiduciary, investment, tax, philanthropic, governance, and other activity. Learn more about how and why families choose to form a VFO around their PTC, the concept of a VFO Manager, the benefits of a PTC-VFO structure, and roles within a typical structure.
There are several powerful market forces driving the growing interest in adopting collective investment trusts (CITs) as plan investment options. Given its flexibility and structures that can easily and quickly implement new investment strategies, it's unsurprising that CIT assets are rapidly increasing. With the growing attention and advantages of CITs, governance practices around CITs are emerging as factors that warrant considerations by plan fiduciaries when making plan investment option decisions.
Also known as a family trust company, a private trust company (PTC) is an entity that allows families to unbundle fiduciary services in furtherance of family and financial goals. In this overview and primer, learn more about the elements of the PTC structure, board roles and responsibilities, and when it makes sense to form a PTC.
Flexible trust planning has never been more important as a result of current and future health, political, economic, and tax uncertainty. Modern directed trusts are one of the best vehicles to provide wealth preservation along with flexibility intergenerationally. Whether the federal estate, gift and GST Tax exemptions are high, low or repealed altogether, trusts still make sense for a multitude of non-tax reasons.
40% of families now gift their assets through trusts compared to 12.5% in 1995. Directed trusts, special purpose entities, trust protector companies, and regulated and unregulated private trust companies have all played integral roles in the growing popularity of trusts. This session focused on the important reasons families are choosing these popular trust administration options and will provided a comparison of each option, including the advantages and disadvantages of each. By the end of this webcast, attendees will be able to:
A grantor retained annuity trust (“GRAT”) is an estate planning instrument that may be used to transfer wealth from the trust grantors to the trust beneficiaries. In this overview of GRATs, learn how annuity payment analysis works and the considerations the valuation analysts should keep in mind when it is time to estimate the fair market value of the underlying GRAT assets.
FOX’s annual estate planning webcast will lead participants through a thoughtful discussion of some of the most important topics and developments that were covered at the 55th Annual Heckerling Institute on Estate Planning. Key legislative, regulatory, and case law updates impacting ultra-high net worth families and their family offices will be covered. By the end of this webcast, attendees will be able to: Describe the most important developments that will impact family offices and ultra-high net worth families in tax and estate planning in 2021
Once the private trust company’s (PTC) governance structure is designed, the foundational operations and administration elements will be central to bringing the PTC to life. Three key elements toward that end include reducing PTC complexity through documentation and recordkeeping; maintaining the PTC through communications and compliance; and preparing the PTC for long-term success through the delegation of duties.
A solid governance structure is critical to any private trust company’s (PTC) long-term success. Through a thoughtful review that includes useful diagrams and outlines, learn the common elements of the PTC structure; the Board role and responsibilities; the Board attributes, composition, selection process, and succession planning; and additional considerations for selecting PTC committee members.