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November, 2006 Technical Newsletter
Provided by Leimberg Information Services
See
other issues.
Do Roth IRA Conversions Offer
a Brand-NUA Opportunity?
This makes it two in a row
for Michael J. Jones, CPA, the newest member of our LISI Commentator
team. Yesterday's release on "No-Roth 401(k) Left Behind Program should have
said, "Mike Jones and Bob Keebler's No-Roth 401(k) Left Behind Program!"
Mea culpa - and with deep
apologies to Mike for this oversight!
Michael J. Jones,
CPA is a partner in Thompson Jones LLP, in Monterey, California and
holds CPA licenses in California and Minnesota. He is a consultant in the
areas of wealth transfer strategy, trust and probate matters, and family
business transitions.
Mike is the
author of The Pension Answer Book: Special Supplement on the Final Regulations
Governing Minimum Required Distributions (Panel Publishers, June 2002). He
serves on the Editorial Advisory Board of Trusts and Estates as Chair,
Retirement Benefits Committee.
Please join us
in welcoming Mike Jones who shares a warning with LISI members about some NUA
ideas out there!
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY:
This is a warning about a
highly aggressive technique that should be avoided.
FACTS:
NEW WAY TO TAKE
YOUR FIRST STEP:
Beginning after 2007, Roth
IRA conversions of eligible retirement plans other than IRAs need not take the
intermediate step of first being transferred to an IRA.
This new rule is found in
section 824 of the Pension Protection Act of 2006 ("PPA"). Among the
retirement plans that fall within the definition of "eligible retirement
plans" are qualified retirement plans maintained by employers.
Old Rule Example:
Allen has a 401(k) account
with his former employer. Allen has retired, and wants to convert his account
to a Roth IRA during a tax year when he satisfies all requirements for a Roth
IRA conversion.
Before he makes the
conversion, he must first transfer or roll over his 401(k) account to a
traditional IRA.
Only after he has
transferred or rolled his 401(k) account to a traditional IRA account may
Allen convert the traditional IRA to a Roth IRA.
New Rule Example:
Beginning after 2007, Allen
may convert his 401(k) account directly to a Roth IRA. Allen does not need to
first transfer or roll it over to a traditional IRA.
Enter: NUA
One species of eligible
retirement plan account that may be directly converted to a Roth IRA is an
account that holds employer securities. A classic example is an Employee
Stock Ownership Plan, or ESOP, but other types of profit sharing accounts may
also hold employer stock.
Net Unrealized
Appreciation, or NUA, is just the unrealized gain on employer securities in
the hands of the plan trustee as of the date distributed to the plan
participant.
NUA Example.
Beth is a participant in a
retirement plan. Over many years, the trustee of her plan account has
purchased 1,000 shares of employer stock at a total cost of $40,000.
Beth retires and receives
the employer stock in a qualifying lump sum distribution at a time when the
stock is worth $100,000.
Her NUA is $60,000
($100,000 value minus $40,000 cost basis).
Special Tax Rule for NUA
Assuming Beth and the
employer plan meet all of the NUA requirements:
1.
She is required to pay a current income tax ONLY on the $40,000
trustee's cost basis and not on the full $100,000 value; and
2.
Whenever she chooses to sell the NUA stock, up to $60,000 of gain is
classified as capital gains, taxed at long-term rates (her income tax basis is
$40,000).
3.
Any gain over that depends on her holding period, counting from the
date of distribution.
Effect of Traditional IRA Rollover
If Beth rolls over or
transfers her employer securities to a traditional IRA, or, alternatively,
sells the NUA stock and rolls over the sales proceeds, the special tax rule
for NUA is lost.
The rollover does not
trigger current taxation of any part of the gain on the employer stock rolled
over, whether transferred, or sold and then transferred.
However, all subsequent
distributions from the IRA will be taxed at ordinary income tax rates.
Effect of Traditional IRA Rollover Followed by Roth IRA Conversion
If Beth rolls over her NUA
stock to a traditional IRA, and later converts that IRA to a Roth IRA during a
tax year when she satisfies all requirements for a Roth IRA conversion, she
will pay income taxes at ordinary income tax rates on the full $100,000
traditional IRA amount she converts (assume no change in stock value through
all of the steps). It makes no difference that the traditional IRA received
NUA-laden employer securities.
In short, Beth pays taxes
on $100,000 at ordinary income tax rates to fund a $100,000 Roth IRA
conversion.
Effect of Direct Roth IRA Conversion, Without Intervening Traditional IRA
Rollover
Now, suppose that Beth
converts her NUA-laden qualified plan account DIRECTLY to a Roth IRA during a
tax year when she satisfies all requirements for a Roth IRA conversion.
As amended by PPA, section
408A(d)(3)(A) of the Roth IRA conversion rules provide that gross income
includes "any amount which would be includible were it not part of a qualified
[Roth IRA] rollover contribution" and without regard to the rules of section
72.
In other words, the amount
to include in gross income as a result of the Roth IRA conversion is
determined just as though the converted eligible retirement account had been
distributed and there had been NO Roth IRA conversion.
Back to Our Example:
In Beth's case, we assumed
that the NUA requirements were satisfied. And, as already explained, in a
qualifying lump sum distribution, Beth pays income taxes ONLY on the $40,000
cost basis, unless she sells the stock and keeps the proceeds – which Beth has
not done.
So Beth pays income taxes
at ordinary income tax rates on only $40,000 to fund a $100,000 Roth IRA
conversion because:
1.
the new Roth IRA conversion rules permit direct conversion,
2.
the distribution of NUA is taxed just as though no Roth IRA conversion
occurred, and
3.
there has been no sale of the employer securities.
After that, distributions
from Roth IRAs are potentially tax-free, thus completely bypassing income
taxation of the $60,000 NUA amount.
COMMENT:
Too Good to Be True?
Over the past few decades,
we have seen some cases of aggressively marketed, so-called "abusive" tax
shelters. The lesson learned was that a pure reading of the Code that is
arguable technically correct does not necessarily yield a successful tax
avoidance strategy. Such transactions have undoubtedly inspired Circular
230's section 10.35.
In converting a non-IRA
retirement plan to a Roth IRA, Congress clearly and sensibly intended to
dispense with one intermediate step, that step being a transitory transfer to
a traditional IRA.
However,
it seems highly doubtful that Congress also intended
to provide a gaping opportunity to completely side-step NUA taxation.
WHAT CONGRESS NEEDS TO
DO - QUICKLY!
Perhaps it would be best if
Congress were to pass a technical correction to clarify its intention.
Without legislative clarification, it will be left either to the IRS or to the
courts to sort this out.
And if NUA is to be taxed
as part of a Roth IRA conversion, Congress should clarify whether converted
NUA will be taxed in one of two possible ways:
Possibility 1:
Tax NUA at capital gains
rates, as if the stock were sold and no Roth IRA conversion occurred; or,
Possibility 2:
Tax NUA at ordinary income
tax rates, as if the stock were first transferred to a traditional IRA
subsequently converted to a Roth IRA.
CONCLUSION:
In the meantime,
practitioners should consider whether this technique should be avoided, being
better viewed as highly aggressive and perhaps incapable of passing the "smell
test."
HOPE THIS HELPS YOU HELP
0THERS MAKE A POSITIVE DIFFERENCE!
Mike Jones
Technical Editor -
Barry Picker
CITE AS:
Steve Leimberg's
Employee Benefits and Retirement Planning Newsletter # 390 (November 1, 2006)
at http://www.leimbergservices.com
Copyright 2006 Leimberg
Information Services, Inc. (LISI). Reproduction in Any Form or Forwarding to
Any Person Prohibited - Except With Specific Permission!
CITES:
IRC Section 408A(d)(3)(A).
Section 402(c)(6).
P.S.
Be sure to get a copy of
Barry Picker's great book, "Barry
Picker's Guide to Retirement Distribution Planning".
Your local EPC may have already purchased a
Leimberg membership on your behalf.
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