Doctors’ Newsletter Samples
(Financial, Legal, Business, Tax, Retirement)
Capital Gain Instead Of Ordinary Income!
A New Way To Get Huge Tax Savings At Retirement For Doctors Who Plan In Advance
Unincorporated sole practitioners get the best tax deal at retirement. When they sell their practices, the amount allocated to goodwill (often the biggest value in a practice sale) is treated as capital gain and taxed at a low tax rate. Incorporated doctors are not so fortunate, because they do not own their practices. The corporation owns the practice, and the doctor owns stock in the corporation. That results in a double tax: (1) first to the corporation in its 35% bracket, and (2) when what remains is passed out to the doctor, it is taxed again on the doctor's personal return. The Tax Court (in the case of an incorporated accounting practice) has now given us the answer to this problem. The crucial issue is to be able to demonstrate that the goodwill is personal to the doctor and does not belong to the corporation. The Tax Court closely examined this issue, and most doctors (both sole practitioners and group practices) should be able to structure their affairs to meet the standards set by the Court. This Newsletter (and several more to follow) are devoted to these issues and the steps you could take (ideally years in advance) to allow your tax adviser to treat most of what you collect at retirement as low-taxed capital gain. This Tax Court case, in combination with an old IRS Revenue Ruling, could help incorporated and unincorporated doctors cut their tax on retirement.Here Is a Best Short-Term Practice Building
Buy A Retiring Doctor's Practice At A Fair Price
By "fair price" I mean that the practice revenues you expect to retain will provide enough profit to (1) pay the purchase price (typically 5-7 years) and (2) reasonably compensate you for the extra work you are doing. If the seller's office is nearby, work in that office long enough to have a good transition and then close one of the offices and consolidate both practices into one location. The idea is that you can retain most of the seller's revenues but only a fraction of the expenses. This is the fastest way to move to a higher profit plateau, and it keeps the retiring doctor from selling to a young doctor who could be a stronger competitor.Why We May Be 3-1/2 Years into a 10—15 Year Weak Stock Market
Some Investment Steps To Consider
As measured by the Dow Jones Industrial Average, the stock market reached its all time high 3-1/2 years ago in January, 2000. It has been bouncing around below that level ever since. Twentieth century market history is a sea of alternating long periods of strong and then weak markets unrelated to how the economy was performing. For example, the last 35 years of the century had two remarkably symmetrical, but opposite, stock market periods. In the FIRST 17 YEARS from 1964 to 1981, the market gained a grand total of ONE MEASLY POINT:| Dow | |
| December 31, 1964 | 874.1 |
| December 31, 1981 | 875.0 |
| Dow | |
| December 31, 1981 | 875.0 |
| December 31, 1999 | 11,497.0 |
| 20th Cent. Waves | DOW | Full Period Change |
| 1900-1920 | 66.1 to 72.0 | +9% (20 years) |
| 1920-Sep.'29 | 72.1 to 381.2 | +430% (9 years) |
| Sep.'29-1948 | 381.2 to 177.3 | -54% (19 years) |
| 1948-1964 | 177.3 to 874.1 | +393% (16 years) |
| 1964-1981 | 874.1 to 875 | +0% (17 years) |
| 1981-1999 | 875.0 to 11,479 | +1214% (18 years) |
| 1999-? | 11,479 to ? | ?% (? years) |
