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A New Outlook on the “Trust Fund Baby”
June 19th, 2013
Many wealthy people worry about the potentially corrosive effect of making their children superrich. Not Larry Ellison. The Oracle founder and CEO, the third richest man in the United States — worth $43 billion, according to FORBES’ latest estima…
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Have “The Talk” Before It’s Too Late
May 1st, 2013
For many parents, it is easier to talk to their children about sex than money. And there are few touchier subjects for wealthy families than the topic of inheritance. Don’t we all dread certain “talks” we’re supposed to have with our children…
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Categories: Estate Planning
Mind the Details with Inherited IRAs
March 27th, 2013
Let's say that someone who is not your spouse recently died and named you as their IRA beneficiary. You now have what the IRS calls an “inherited IRA.” When you inherit money, once you receive it you can usually decide where it goes from the…
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Decanting a Bottle of Wine …or an Irrevocable Trust?
March 21st, 2013
"It's like decanting a bottle of wine; you pour the wine into a new bottle to air it out," says Mark Haranzo, a partner at law firm Withers Bergman. In trust terms, you pour the assets of an old trust into a brand-new trust that essent…
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Inherited Stock and Cost Basis
March 11th, 2013
I just inherited some stock from my uncle, and I know that he bought the stock for more than the present cost. Should I find the original cost, or do I use the cost as of the date I inherited the stock? If you ask any accountant or business owner, ca…
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Categories: Estate Planning
Disinheritance Challenges in Ann Arbor
February 14th, 2013
As cruel as it sounds to disinherit a child, people have their reasons. Sometimes there is no relationship. Other parents might feel the adult is well-off and does not need an inheritance. Estate planning largely involves the process of distributing…
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The Inheritance Blues – Whitney Houston Estate
November 1st, 2012
The chief risk is always that the money will impact a kids’ motivation and self-reliance. “Ideally one would set aside enough funds to allow our family members to do anything they could do, but not so much that they could do nothing.” You give…
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