|
Table of Contents
May 2001
New Report
Shows How Super-Wealthy Give
Planning Matters
Gift
Planner Turned Financial Advisor Discusses Ultra-Wealthy
For a high quality Adobe Acrobat file of a recent issue, please click below to download .pdf files viewable with Adobe's Acrobat Reader.
Give & Take:
May
2001
(with graphics,
356 KB)
If you need a copy of Acrobat Reader just click on the Adobe icon below and visit Adobe's site for your free plugin.

|
Planning
Matters
The economic turmoil in recent months has left
many savers and investors shaken. As consumer confidence erodes,
so has “contributor confidence” among some prospective major donors.
Historically, the stock
market and interest rates have moved in a counter-cyclical fashion
— as interest rates fell the stock market often rose and vice
versa.This general trend is illustrated in Charts 1 and 2.
Recently, however, both
interest rates and stock prices have been trending downward simultaneously,
leaving many traditional investors and savers confused.
| Chart 1 |
Chart 2 |
 |
 |
What to do now?
For the philanthropically inclined, now may be an ideal time to
“give out of the market.” Properly planned gifts may meet both
personal and philanthropic objectives. Some donors may feel as
though they are “locked” in to the stock market. If they were
to sell now they would incur a capital gains tax of up to 20%
on the remaining gains. Other individuals may be facing declining
returns on their money market accounts or certificates of deposit.
Some are experiencing both of these financial dilemmas at the
same time.
Gift planning options that
may help individuals in these situations include the funding of
charitable remainder trusts with highly appreciated, but potentially
declining, assets. With a CRT, a donor can lock in a fixed or
variable income based on today’s full current value of the assets
to help produce cash flow for personal needs, while also fulfilling
philanthropic obligations.
Charitable
gift annuities are another attractive option. Consider the thousands
of donors who are experiencing lower rates of return
on CDs, money market and savings accounts. While yields have generally
been declining over the past year, gift annuity rates have remained
high and, therefore, should be increasingly appealing. Organizations
and institutions with sound gift annuity programs may find that
older donors may be particularly responsive to gift annuity promotions
made at this time, especially in light of lower recommended gift
annuity rates set to go into effect on July 1. While some may
have indicated they are waiting for stock values to go back up
before funding an annuity, at some point, fear of further declines
may outweigh hope for recovery of losses and that is time many
will move to complete their gift annuity. It is important to keep
this option in front of donors to as great an extent as possible
as one never knows when the “decision point” will come for a potential
donor.
Additional benefits of such
gifts may include current income tax savings, plus payments that
may be largely taxed at rates less than other income, depending
upon the circumstances.
The key for successful gift
planners will be to identify arrangements that best match potential
donors’ needs in light of ever changing economic conditions and
personal circumstances.
Next
|