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Grandson Goes to Jail for Plundering Grandfather’s Estate

Financial abuse of the elderly is a crime. Michael Ostrowski, a 42-year-old from New York, was appointed as temporary guardian for his grandfather who has dementia. While serving as guardian, he misappropriated over $300,000 and lied to the probate court (we call that perjury) and insurance companies. He took $250,000 from his grandfather’s bank account and did not file a 2006 federal income tax return.

This is an Al Capone story. Remember the notorious gangster in the Prohibition-Era Chicago? He is perhaps most infamous for his alleged involvement in the St. Valentine’s Day Massacre in which 7 victims were murdered, not to mention scores of other crimes. What did he go to jail for? Income tax evasion.

The thieving grandson in our story was charged by the U.S. attorney with mail fraud, conspiracy, interstate transportation of stolen property, receipt, possession, concealment and disposition of stolen property having crossed a state boundary; engaging in a monetary transaction in property derived from specified unlawful activity; and failure to file an income tax return. He pleaded guilty to all these items.

Michael was sentenced to two years in prison followed by 3 years of supervised release. He was ordered to pay restitution in the amount of $100,459 to MassHealth and $85,751 to the IRS. The Judge also ordered forfeiture of $179,000 and the things he had purchased with his ill-gotten gains: a Sony Bravia flat-panel television, a 39mm semi-automatic assault rifle; and a $37,000 GMC Sierra pickup truck.

Since the grandfather was in Massachusetts, and Ostrowski took the stolen money back to New York where he lived, the diversity of jurisdictions made it eligible to be a federal matter. Not filing an income tax return is also a federal charge. So the fed’s involvement was necessary. But there is no mention of state involvement for the mismanagement, amounting to fraud, by means of the Power of Attorney.

Financial abuse of the elderly is a huge problem. The National Center on Elder Abuse (NCEA) published a report and recommendations entitled “Forgotten Victims of Elder Financial Crime and Abuse.” They describe many challenges. “Many elderly victims fail to report crimes or abuse to the police or even to their own families out of shame or embarrassment.”

Law enforcement personnel sometimes fail to recognize crimes when they see them. When abuse involves the misuse of legal documents, (e.g. the forging of wills or powers of attorney, or inducing mentally incapacitated persons to transfer titles of their homes), it is often viewed as a “civil matter.” Investigators may be well into cases before it occurs to them to find out if victims are being over medicated or under-medicated (homicide cases involving victims who are poisoned or starved for financial gain are becoming increasingly common).

Unless these patterns are recognized, victims may be dead and cremated before the investigator makes the connection.”

Financial crimes are often very difficult to prove. Important documents may have been destroyed.. Many victims do not make good witnesses owing to the same dementia that rendered them susceptible to abuse in the first place.

Investigating and prosecuting financial crimes is very time-consuming and labor intensive. These property crimes are often viewed as “less serious” than violent crime.

What is the answer? Some commentators suggest that there needs to be more up-front monitoring, instead of punishing people after the fact. The durable power of attorney is popular technique for incapacity planning. But it comes with grave danger of abuse. However, the use of a power of attorney allows complete control of the principal’s assets. Special care should be given to granting the agent the authority to make gifts.

Here are some steps that could help: 1) require registration of powers of attorney in the same jurisdiction in which a guardianship action would be brought so there is notice of who is acting for whom; 2) once the principal becomes incapacitated, require the agent to file an annual accounting; 3) require an agent to produce an accounting on the death of the principal. The flexibility of the durable power of attorney and its usefulness in avoiding guardianship are very important. But the power is so broad and sweeping that abuse is rampant. What other fiduciary is permitted to act without providing accountings?

True, any of these steps make the duties of the honest agent more burdensome. It is ever so. Good people do not need laws to tell them to act responsibly. The law needs to prevent the bad people from abusing the elderly.

- Patti S. Spencer, Esq. is a nationally recognized Trust & Estates attorney, expert witness, and author.

Source:   pennsylvaniafiduciarylitigation.com

Posted by Steven Maimes, The Trust Advisor

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WSJ: Facebook Targets $96 Billion Value

Facebook Inc. pulled back the curtain on how much it thinks it is worth, targeting a valuation as rich as $96 billion in what would be a record debut for an American company.

The filing starts the clock for Facebook’s executives to persuade investors ahead of a scheduled May 18 initial public offering that the social network deserves such a lofty price. Eight-year-old Facebook would become the most valuable U.S. technology company at the time of an IPO, exceeding Google Inc.’s $23 billion valuation in 2004.

At nearly $100 billion, it would also rival the current market values of more established companies including Amazon.com Inc. and McDonald’s Corp.,  and longtime tech giants like Hewlett-PackardCo., despite having a fraction of the revenue—or profit.

Currently, the largest valuation for a U.S. company at the time of an IPO was United Parcel Service, in 1999, at $60.2 billion, according to Dealogic.

Facebook’s IPO will be a watershed moment for Silicon Valley, spawning a new generation of millionaires, and a handful of billionaires, including founder and Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg, whose stake is worth as much as $18.7 billion. It will also stand out even among the wave of high-profile Internet IPOs in the past year from companies such as LinkedIn Corp. and Zynga Inc.

But while the social network is growing rapidly—more than 900 million people now use the site—there are questions whether its trajectory is slowing. Its revenue in the latest quarter rose 45% from a year ago, but fell 6% from the previous three months.

Among Facebook’s challenges will be convincing skeptical marketers that ads on its site lead to people buying products. In addition, Facebook lags in the fast-growing mobile market, where Google has gained significant influence with its Android software. And Facebook has little presence in China, home to the world’s largest population of Internet users.

“The bigger issue [with Facebook] is the core business,” said Morningstar analyst Rick Summer. “There’s still no good understanding for what advertisers are paying for.”

A lot is also riding on investors who bought into Facebook at outsize valuations, believing the company would continue its rapid growth. Facebook said Thursday it is targeting an initial stock price of $28 to $35. Some investors had expected an even higher value and had earlier this year bid up Facebook’s stock on private-company stock exchanges like SharesPost, where the social network’s shares last cleared at more than $44.

If Facebook ends up going public at the lower end of its price range—suggesting a valuation of $77 billion—that would mean an immediate loss for investors like Kevin Landis of San Jose, Calif., tech investment fund Firsthand Capital. Mr. Landis bought shares of Facebook on the secondary market for $31 to $32 a share over the past year and agreed not to sell the shares for six months after the IPO.

“I’ve been surprised before, but I’ll be surprised again if it ends up pricing at that low end of that range,” said Mr. Landis. He adds he isn’t worried yet, partly because the low range may be a tactic to build excitement for the IPO.

Facebook will narrow down a specific price before its first day of trading on May 18, by which time investor interest could cause bankers to raise the price even higher.

With the pricing, Facebook is anticipated to raise as much as $13.6 billion, above earlier expectations of $10 billion. In a regulatory filing, Facebook said the company would seek to sell 337.4 million shares, with about half of those being sold by founders, employees and investors.

The only U.S. issuers that have raised more money in an IPO were Visa Inc.at $19.7 billion in 2008 and General Motors Co. at $18.1 billion in 2010.

Mr. Zuckerberg, who founded Facebook in his Harvard University dorm room in 2004, is selling 30.2 million shares in the offering that could pocket him over $1 billion. Facebook says he is selling to pay taxes on his stake in the company. He would be left with as much as $17.6 billion worth of shares. Mr. Zuckerberg will also control approximately 57.3% of the voting power of Facebook’s outstanding stock following the offering.

Chris Baggini, a fund manager for the Berwyn, Penn.-based Turner Investment Partners, said he plans to buy stock in the Facebook IPO and thinks even if the company prices on the high end of its range, it would be a discount. He anticipates Facebook will be worth $200 billion within four years.

Second Life: Eduardo Saverin

“We already have a business model out there that’s similar to what their business model is going to look like and that’s Google,” said Mr. Baggini, who calls Facebook’s business “incredible.”

Others were more cautious. To sustain Facebook’s valuation, Jed Williams, an analyst with BIA Kelsey, said the company would need to grow revenue at 41% each year in the next five years.

Morningstar’s Mr. Summer said the only way to justify even the low end of Facebook’s valuation would require the company to make $40 billion in revenue within the next six to seven years, while maintaining the same profit margins. Facebook’s revenue in 2011 was $3.7 billion and profit margin was 27%.

The company will also need to expand into other areas like e-commerce or payments in order to support its valuation, analysts said. Right now, Facebook’s payments business is limited to social game companies, with Zynga making the bulk of those payments.

Facebook’s ad business, which accounted for 85% of the company’s total revenue last year, has been tricky as the social network has struggled to balance the needs of advertisers, who want more room for display ads on the site, while trying to maintain the quality of the experience for users, who dislike ads.

Facebook is also trying to find new ways for advertisers to cough up big bucks, since much of the advertising on the site can be done free through brand pages that accumulate fans. In March, Facebook made its biggest push to get advertisers to pay through a product called “Reach Generator,” which helps advertisers reach 75% of their fans on the site.

Facebook also has limited ways to make money off its mobile app, despite more than half of its 900 million users accessing the site through the app. Facebook also has limited mobile advertising. Last month, however, the social network agreed to pay $1 billion to acquire mobile photo-sharing app Instagram.

Hussein Fazal, CEO of Facebook ad company Adparlor Inc., said the amount advertisers pay for every 1,000 people who view an ad is relatively low on Facebook, at 25 cents to 30 cents. Mr. Fazal said it will be a challenge for Facebook to increase those rates, but they could increase the volume of ads if the company expands its ads into areas like mobile, he said.

Meanwhile, Facebook has said international markets are essential sources for significant growth. But the social network is mostly blocked in China, leaving hundreds of millions of Internet users out of reach.

Facebook is likely about two weeks away from a final pricing and the first trading of its shares on the Nasdaq Stock Market, under the symbol FB. The “roadshow,” where the company pitches its shares to investors, is expected to begin Monday with group lunch meetings for investors planned in New York, Boston and Palo Alto, Calif., hotels.

Facebook Chief Operating Officer Sheryl Sandberg and Chief Financial Officer David Ebersman will handle most of the investor meetings on the roadshow, said people familiar with the matter. Mr. Zuckerberg will make just a few appearances, they said.

On Thursday, however, Mr. Zuckerberg appeared in a video for investors. Wearing jeans and a T-shirt, the 27-year-old discussed why he decided to start the social network.

“I grew up with the Internet, when I was in middle school I was using search engines like Google and Yahoo,” he said. “I thought it was the most amazing thing. Now you have access to all this information. The thing that was missing was just people.”

Morgan Stanley, J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. and Goldman Sachs Group Inc. are the lead underwriters. Bank of America Merrill Lynch, Barclays PLC, Allen & Co., Citigroup Inc., Credit Suisse Group AG and Deutsche Bank Securities are the other bookrunners on the IPO, in addition to which 24 firms are co-managers.

Source:  wsj.com

Posted by Steven Maimes, The Trust Advisor

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FolioDynamix Receives MMI Industry Leadership Awards for Top Wealth Management Technology Innovation and Advisory Solutions All-Star Achievement

FolioDynamix, a leading provider of web-based technology, content and services for managing the full investment and wealth advisory lifecycle, today announced that its industry recognition continues as the company has been named a recipient of two MMI 2012 Industry Leadership Awards — one for wealth management technology innovation and one for all-star achievement. The annual awards program, sponsored by Money Management Institute, is designed to recognize thought leadership and innovation in the wealth management industry.

FolioDynamix received the Advisory Solutions Technology Innovation of the Year Award for its release of FDx SingleSight Version 6.1. This latest release of FolioDynamix’ wealth management software platform includes enhanced dashboards and business process management (BPM) workflows for increased visibility and active management of multiple account types, full integration to FDx Connect, the FolioDynamix model exchange hub, and enhanced modeling and account program functionality that creates a highly configurable sponsor investment program set, allowing for flexible multi-program management in a single, enterprise-wide platform.

The release of FolioDynamix FDx SingleSight 6.1 was cited by clients and partners as a major game changer in rep-as-pm and rep-as-advisor trading tools and for providing enhanced unified management account (UMA) overlay management tools — helping many firms in the managed account industry achieve significant growth in assets under management (AUM) in 2011.

In addition, Aaron Schumm, senior vice president of products for FolioDynamix, was awarded the Advisory Solutions All-Star Achiever Award for his thought leadership and active participation in establishing new guidelines and leading innovation in the wealth management industry.

“We are very pleased that FolioDynamix is gaining recognition for its thought leadership and innovation in wealth management, and the fact that we were selected for these awards over much larger firms is a testament to the success we are enabling for our clients,” said Joseph Mrak, president and CEO of FolioDynamix. “MMI is a premier industry association, and we applaud them for investing the resources in identifying and promoting the best new success stories in the industry so that wealth management firms can stay on the leading edge of innovation.”

FolioDynamix offers a complete enterprise wealth management technology platform on which wealth management firms can support the entire fee-based advisory lifecycle — from proposal generation to trading and rebalancing to performance reporting and governance — across all accounts. As a result, firms can accelerate business growth and realize greater operational efficiency, more active compliance, increased advisor productivity and improved client service.

About FolioDynamix

Bringing innovation, insight and agility to the wealth management and investment advisor communities, FolioDynamix offers the most comprehensive web-based technology platform for managing the full wealth advisory lifecycle — including proposal and onboarding, research, model management, portfolio accounting, trade order management, operations, reporting, and performance analytics — across all account types. Unlike other wealth management technology platforms, FDx SingleSight is completely developed, hosted and supported by FolioDynamix — eliminating silos and empowering advisors with a single platform to manage all customer accounts. The platform provides broker dealers, banks, custodians and service providers with leading-edge technology to attract and retain top advisors, accelerate client acquisition and gain end-to-end visibility into all assets under management for improved efficiency, better compliance, and enhanced client service. Visit www.foliodynamix.com .

Source:  FolioDynamix

Posted by Steven Maimes, The Trust Advisor

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Well Known Elite RIAs Band Together to Form aRIA – The Alliance for RIAs

aRIA (The Alliance for RIAs) Group is a new “think-tank” industry group which will convene regularly, offering ideas for advisors considering ways to enhance their firms’ enterprise value.

Six elite RIA firms announced the formation of a new council focused on in-organic growth in the independent advisory space. Conceived and managed by John Furey of Advisor Growth Strategies, LLC, this group, which collectively advises on $18 billion of client assets, will meet regularly and release thought leadership of interest to both independent and wire-house advisors reviewing their long-term growth strategies.

“This is a special group of individuals and firms coming together to highlight growth strategy options for advisors looking to materially increase their firm’s enterprise value”

The group members include Brent Brodeski, CEO of Savant Capital; John Burns, Principal at Exencial; Ron Carson, CEO of Carson Wealth Management Group; Jeff Concepcion, CEO of Stratos Wealth Planning; Matt Cooper, President of Beacon Pointe Wealth Advisors; and Neal Simon, CEO of Highline Wealth Management.

The group aims to make clear that advisors have many alternatives to growth versus going it alone, joining a roll-up/consolidator operation, or attempting to execute on recruiting or acquisition strategies themselves. Each participant in the study group is fully independent of private equity or venture capital and therefore free to operate under a purely synergistic framework, rather than simply looking for a good financial “deal.”

“This is a special group of individuals and firms coming together to highlight growth strategy options for advisors looking to materially increase their firm’s enterprise value,” says John Furey, Principal at Advisor Growth Strategies, LLC. “Each firm associated with the group has a proven track record of success in the industry, and aims to raise awareness of the different options advisors have when focusing on growth of their practices.” The group was chosen because of each individual’s proven track record of integrating outside advisors.

“This is a group coming together to share ideas in the spirit of continuous improvement within the independent RIA channel,” says Brent Brodeski, CEO of Savant Capital. “We’ve all been successful in our own right, and now it is time to disperse that knowledge to advisors who are seeking greater certainty and control.”

Beacon Pointe’s Matt Cooper summarizes the intentions of the group, “This is a study group in every sense, meant to share best practices with one another as well as those who want a look behind the curtain at how we’ve built our businesses. Our findings and collaboration will provide more options to advisors looking to join forces with like-minded wholly independent firms, while giving them and their clients greater peace of mind.”

Ron Carson, CEO of Carson Wealth Management Group, continues, “The RIA landscape is undergoing positive change unlike at any other point in our history. Investors are being educated about the vast array of benefits associated with being in the care of an RIA firm, and advisors should know their options for becoming part of such a firm as well.”

The first in a series of white-papers will be released in early Q3 of 2012. Also participating in the inaugural discussion were Weitz Funds’ Sean Mihal and MarketCounsel’s Brian Hamburger.

About Advisor Growth Strategies

Advisor Growth Strategies, LLC (AGS) is a leading consulting firm serving the wealth management industry. AGS provides customized business management solutions for independent firms seeking to aggressively grow their business and for financial advisors in transition. Our services include strategic planning, recruiting and acquisition programming, compensation design, and succession planning. We serve established independent advisors, large breakaway advisor teams, and institutional level corporations. On the web at: www.advisorgrowthllc.com

About aRIA

aRIA, the alliance for RIAs, is a “think-tank” study group comprised of six elite RIA firms that collectively manage more than $18 billion in client assets and Advisor Growth Strategies, a leading consulting firm serving the wealth management industry. The group offers insight for advisors considering ways to enhance their firms’ enterprise value. Members include Brent Brodeski, CEO of Savant Capital; John Burns, Principal at Exencial; Ron Carson, CEO of Carson Wealth Management Group; Jeff Concepcion, CEO of Stratos Wealth Planning; Matt Cooper, President of Beacon Pointe Wealth Advisors; Neal Simon, CEO of Highline Wealth Management and John Furey, Principal of Advisor Growth Strategies, LLC.

The group meets regularly, releasing thought leadership pieces of interest to both independent and wire-house advisors interested in exploring long-term growth strategies.

Source:  Businesswire

Posted by Steven Maimes, The Trust Advisor

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NYTimes: How Apple Sidesteps Billions in Taxes

Apple, the world’s most profitable technology company, doesn’t design iPhones here. It doesn’t run AppleCare customer service from this city. And it doesn’t manufacture MacBooks or iPads anywhere nearby.

Yet, with a handful of employees in a small office here in Reno, Apple has done something central to its corporate strategy: it has avoided millions of dollars in taxes in California and 20 other states.

Apple’s headquarters are in Cupertino, Calif. By putting an office in Reno, just 200 miles away, to collect and invest the company’s profits, Apple sidesteps state income taxes on some of those gains.

California’s corporate tax rate is 8.84 percent. Nevada’s? Zero.

Setting up an office in Reno is just one of many legal methods Apple uses to reduce its worldwide tax bill by billions of dollars each year. As it has in Nevada, Apple has created subsidiaries in low-tax places like Ireland, the Netherlands, Luxembourg and the British Virgin Islands — some little more than a letterbox or an anonymous office — that help cut the taxes it pays around the world.

Almost every major corporation tries to minimize its taxes, of course. For Apple, the savings are especially alluring because the company’s profits are so high. Wall Street analysts predict Apple could earn up to $45.6 billion in its current fiscal year — which would be a record for any American business.

Apple serves as a window on how technology giants have taken advantage of tax codes written for an industrial age and ill-suited to today’s digital economy. Some profits at companies like Apple, Google, Amazon, Hewlett-Packard and Microsoft derive not from physical goods but from royalties on intellectual property, like the patents on software that makes devices work. Other times, the products themselves are digital, like downloaded songs. It is much easier for businesses with royalties and digital products to move profits to low-tax countries than it is, say, for grocery stores or automakers. A downloaded application, unlike a car, can be sold from anywhere.

The growing digital economy presents a conundrum for lawmakers overseeing corporate taxation: although technology is now one of the nation’s largest and most valued industries, many tech companies are among the least taxed, according to government and corporate data. Over the last two years, the 71 technology companies in the Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index — including Apple, Google, Yahoo and Dell — reported paying worldwide cash taxes at a rate that, on average, was a third less than other S.& P. companies’. (Cash taxes may include payments for multiple years.)

Even among tech companies, Apple’s rates are low. And while the company has remade industries, ignited economic growth and delighted customers, it has also devised corporate strategies that take advantage of gaps in the tax code, according to former executives who helped create those strategies.

Apple, for instance, was among the first tech companies to designate overseas salespeople in high-tax countries in a manner that allowed them to sell on behalf of low-tax subsidiaries on other continents, sidestepping income taxes, according to former executives. Apple was a pioneer of an accounting technique known as the “Double Irish With a Dutch Sandwich,” which reduces taxes by routing profits through Irish subsidiaries and the Netherlands and then to the Caribbean. Today, that tactic is used by hundreds of other corporations — some of which directly imitated Apple’s methods, say accountants at those companies.

Without such tactics, Apple’s federal tax bill in the United States most likely would have been $2.4 billion higher last year, according to a recent study by a former Treasury Department economist, Martin A. Sullivan. As it stands, the company paid cash taxes of $3.3 billion around the world on its reported profits of $34.2 billion last year, a tax rate of 9.8 percent. (Apple does not disclose what portion of those payments was in the United States, or what portion is assigned to previous or future years.)

By comparison, Wal-Mart last year paid worldwide cash taxes of $5.9 billion on its booked profits of $24.4 billion, a tax rate of 24 percent, which is about average for non-tech companies.

Apple’s domestic tax bill has piqued particular curiosity among corporate tax experts because although the company is based in the United States, its profits — on paper, at least — are largely foreign. While Apple contracts out much of the manufacturing and assembly of its products to other companies overseas, the majority of Apple’s executives, product designers, marketers, employees, research and development, and retail stores are in the United States. Tax experts say it is therefore reasonable to expect that most of Apple’s profits would be American as well. The nation’s tax code is based on the concept that a company “earns” income where value is created, rather than where products are sold.

However, Apple’s accountants have found legal ways to allocate about 70 percent of its profits overseas, where tax rates are often much lower, according to corporate filings.

Neither the government nor corporations make tax returns public, and a company’s taxable income often differs from the profits disclosed in annual reports. Companies report their cash outlays for income taxes in their annual Form 10-K, but it is impossible from those numbers to determine precisely how much, in total, corporations pay to governments. In Apple’s last annual disclosure, the company listed its worldwide taxes — which includes cash taxes paid as well as deferred taxes and other charges — at $8.3 billion, an effective tax rate of almost a quarter of profits.

However, tax analysts and scholars said that figure most likely overstated how much the company would hand to governments because it included sums that might never be paid. “The information on 10-Ks is fiction for most companies,” said Kimberly Clausing, an economist at Reed College who specializes in multinational taxation. “But for tech companies it goes from fiction to farcical.”

Apple, in a statement, said it “has conducted all of its business with the highest of ethical standards, complying with applicable laws and accounting rules.” It added, “We are incredibly proud of all of Apple’s contributions.”

Apple “pays an enormous amount of taxes, which help our local, state and federal governments,” the statement also said. “In the first half of fiscal year 2012, our U.S. operations have generated almost $5 billion in federal and state income taxes, including income taxes withheld on employee stock gains, making us among the top payers of U.S. income tax.”

The statement did not specify how it arrived at $5 billion, nor did it address the issue of deferred taxes, which the company may pay in future years or decide to defer indefinitely. The $5 billion figure appears to include taxes ultimately owed by Apple employees.

The sums paid by Apple and other tech corporations is a point of contention in the company’s backyard.

A mile and a half from Apple’s Cupertino headquarters is De Anza College, a community college that Steve Wozniak, one of Apple’s founders, attended from 1969 to 1974. Because of California’s state budget crisis, De Anza has cut more than a thousand courses and 8 percent of its faculty since 2008.

Now, De Anza faces a budget gap so large that it is confronting a “death spiral,” the school’s president, Brian Murphy, wrote to the faculty in January. Apple, of course, is not responsible for the state’s financial shortfall, which has numerous causes. But the company’s tax policies are seen by officials like Mr. Murphy as symptomatic of why the crisis exists.

“I just don’t understand it,” he said in an interview. “I’ll bet every person at Apple has a connection to De Anza. Their kids swim in our pool. Their cousins take classes here. They drive past it every day, for Pete’s sake.

“But then they do everything they can to pay as few taxes as possible.”

Escaping State Taxes

In 2006, as Apple’s bank accounts and stock price were rising, company executives came here to Reno and established a subsidiary named Braeburn Capital to manage and invest the company’s cash. Braeburn is a variety of apple that is simultaneously sweet and tart.

Today, Braeburn’s offices are down a narrow hallway inside a bland building that sits across from an abandoned restaurant. Inside, there are posters of candy-colored iPods and a large Apple insignia, as well as a handful of desks and computer terminals.

When someone in the United States buys an iPhone, iPad or other Apple product, a portion of the profits from that sale is often deposited into accounts controlled by Braeburn, and then invested in stocks, bonds or other financial instruments, say company executives. Then, when those investments turn a profit, some of it is shielded from tax authorities in California by virtue of Braeburn’s Nevada address.

Since founding Braeburn, Apple has earned more than $2.5 billion in interest and dividend income on its cash reserves and investments around the globe. If Braeburn were located in Cupertino, where Apple’s top executives work, a portion of the domestic income would be taxed at California’s 8.84 percent corporate income tax rate.

But in Nevada there is no state corporate income tax and no capital gains tax.

What’s more, Braeburn allows Apple to lower its taxes in other states — including Florida, New Jersey and New Mexico — because many of those jurisdictions use formulas that reduce what is owed when a company’s financial management occurs elsewhere. Apple does not disclose what portion of cash taxes is paid to states, but the company reported that it owed $762 million in state income taxes nationwide last year. That effective state tax rate is higher than the rate of many other tech companies, but as Ms. Clausing and other tax analysts have noted, such figures are often not reliable guides to what is actually paid.

Dozens of other companies, including Cisco, Harley-Davidson and Microsoft, have also set up Nevada subsidiaries that bypass taxes in other states. Hundreds of other corporations reap similar savings by locating offices in Delaware.

But some in California are unhappy that Apple and other California-based companies have moved financial operations to tax-free states — particularly since lawmakers have offered them tax breaks to keep them in the state.

In 1996, 1999 and 2000, for instance, the California Legislature increased the state’s research and development tax credit, permitting hundreds of companies, including Apple, to avoid billions in state taxes, according to legislative analysts. Apple has reported tax savings of $412 million from research and development credits of all sorts since 1996.

Then, in 2009, after an intense lobbying campaign led by Apple, Cisco, Oracle, Intel and other companies, the California Legislature reduced taxes for corporations based in California but operating in other states or nations. Legislative analysts say the change will eventually cost the state government about $1.5 billion a year.

Such lost revenue is one reason California now faces a budget crisis, with a shortfall of more than $9.2 billion in the coming fiscal year alone. The state has cut some health care programs, significantly raised tuition at state universities, cut services to the disabled and proposed a $4.8 billion reduction in spending on kindergarten and other grades.

Apple declined to comment on its Nevada operations. Privately, some executives said it was unfair to criticize the company for reducing its tax bill when thousands of other companies acted similarly. If Apple volunteered to pay more in taxes, it would put itself at a competitive disadvantage, they argued, and do a disservice to its shareholders.

Indeed, Apple’s decisions have yielded benefits. After announcing one of the best quarters in its history last week, the company said it had net profits of $24.7 billion on revenues of $85.5 billion in the first half of the fiscal year, and more than $110 billion in the bank, according to company filings.

A Global Tax Strategy

Every second of every hour, millions of times each day, in living rooms and at cash registers, consumers click the “Buy” button on iTunes or hand over payment for an Apple product.

And with that, an international financial engine kicks into gear, moving money across continents in the blink of an eye. While Apple’s Reno office helps the company avoid state taxes, its international subsidiaries — particularly the company’s assignment of sales and patent royalties to other nations — help reduce taxes owed to the American and other governments.

For instance, one of Apple’s subsidiaries in Luxembourg, named iTunes S.à r.l., has just a few dozen employees, according to corporate documents filed in that nation and a current executive. The only indication of the subsidiary’s presence outside is a letterbox with a lopsided slip of paper reading “ITUNES SARL.”

Luxembourg has just half a million residents. But when customers across Europe, Africa or the Middle East — and potentially elsewhere — download a song, television show or app, the sale is recorded in this small country, according to current and former executives. In 2011, iTunes S.à r.l.’s revenue exceeded $1 billion, according to an Apple executive, representing roughly 20 percent of iTunes’s worldwide sales.

The advantages of Luxembourg are simple, say Apple executives. The country has promised to tax the payments collected by Apple and numerous other tech corporations at low rates if they route transactions through Luxembourg. Taxes that would have otherwise gone to the governments of Britain, France, the United States and dozens of other nations go to Luxembourg instead, at discounted rates.

“We set up in Luxembourg because of the favorable taxes,” said Robert Hatta, who helped oversee Apple’s iTunes retail marketing and sales for European markets until 2007. “Downloads are different from tractors or steel because there’s nothing you can touch, so it doesn’t matter if your computer is in France or England. If you’re buying from Luxembourg, it’s a relationship with Luxembourg.”

An Apple spokesman declined to comment on the Luxembourg operations.

Downloadable goods illustrate how modern tax systems have become increasingly ill equipped for an economy dominated by electronic commerce. Apple, say former executives, has been particularly talented at identifying legal tax loopholes and hiring accountants who, as much as iPhone designers, are known for their innovation. In the 1980s, for instance, Apple was among the first major corporations to designate overseas distributors as “commissionaires,” rather than retailers, said Michael Rashkin, Apple’s first director of tax policy, who helped set up the system before leaving in 1999.

To customers the designation was virtually unnoticeable. But because commissionaires never technically take possession of inventory — which would require them to recognize taxes — the structure allowed a salesman in high-tax Germany, for example, to sell computers on behalf of a subsidiary in low-tax Singapore. Hence, most of those profits would be taxed at Singaporean, rather than German, rates.

The Double Irish

In the late 1980s, Apple was among the pioneers in creating a tax structure — known as the Double Irish — that allowed the company to move profits into tax havens around the world, said Tim Jenkins, who helped set up the system as an Apple European finance manager until 1994.

Apple created two Irish subsidiaries — today named Apple Operations International and Apple Sales International — and built a glass-encased factory amid the green fields of Cork. The Irish government offered Apple tax breaks in exchange for jobs, according to former executives with knowledge of the relationship.

But the bigger advantage was that the arrangement allowed Apple to send royalties on patents developed in California to Ireland. The transfer was internal, and simply moved funds from one part of the company to a subsidiary overseas. But as a result, some profits were taxed at the Irish rate of approximately 12.5 percent, rather than at the American statutory rate of 35 percent. In 2004, Ireland, a nation of less than 5 million, was home to more than one-third of Apple’s worldwide revenues, according to company filings. (Apple has not released more recent estimates.)

Moreover, the second Irish subsidiary — the “Double” — allowed other profits to flow to tax-free companies in the Caribbean. Apple has assigned partial ownership of its Irish subsidiaries to Baldwin Holdings Unlimited in the British Virgin Islands, a tax haven, according to documents filed there and in Ireland. Baldwin Holdings has no listed offices or telephone number, and its only listed director is Peter Oppenheimer, Apple’s chief financial officer, who lives and works in Cupertino. Baldwin apples are known for their hardiness while traveling.

Finally, because of Ireland’s treaties with European nations, some of Apple’s profits could travel virtually tax-free through the Netherlands — the Dutch Sandwich — which made them essentially invisible to outside observers and tax authorities.

Robert Promm, Apple’s controller in the mid-1990s, called the strategy “the worst-kept secret in Europe.”

It is unclear precisely how Apple’s overseas finances now function. In 2006, the company reorganized its Irish divisions as unlimited corporations, which have few requirements to disclose financial information.

However, tax experts say that strategies like the Double Irish help explain how Apple has managed to keep its international taxes to 3.2 percent of foreign profits last year, to 2.2 percent in 2010, and in the single digits for the last half-decade, according to the company’s corporate filings.

Apple declined to comment on its operations in Ireland, the Netherlands and the British Virgin Islands.

Apple reported in its last annual disclosures that $24 billion — or 70 percent — of its total $34.2 billion in pretax profits were earned abroad, and 30 percent were earned in the United States. But Mr. Sullivan, the former Treasury Department economist who today writes for the trade publication Tax Analysts, said that “given that all of the marketing and products are designed here, and the patents were created in California, that number should probably be at least 50 percent.”

If profits were evenly divided between the United States and foreign countries, Apple’s federal tax bill would have increased by about $2.4 billion last year, he said, because a larger amount of its profits would have been subject to the United States’ higher corporate income tax rate.

“Apple, like many other multinationals, is using perfectly legal methods to keep a significant portion of their profits out of the hands of the I.R.S.,” Mr. Sullivan said. “And when America’s most profitable companies pay less, the general public has to pay more.”

Other tax experts, like Edward D. Kleinbard, former chief of staff of the Congressional Joint Committee on Taxation, have reached similar conclusions.

“This tax avoidance strategy used by Apple and other multinationals doesn’t just minimize the companies’ U.S. taxes,” said Mr. Kleinbard, now a professor of tax law at the University of Southern California. “It’s German tax and French tax and tax in the U.K. and elsewhere.”

One downside for companies using such strategies is that when money is sent overseas, it cannot be returned to the United States without incurring a new tax bill.

However, that might change. Apple, which holds $74 billion offshore, last year aligned itself with more than four dozen companies and organizations urging Congress for a “repatriation holiday” that would permit American businesses to bring money home without owing large taxes. The coalition, which includes Google, Microsoft and Pfizer, has hired dozens of lobbyists to push for the measure, which has not yet come up for vote. The tax break would cost the federal government $79 billion over the next decade, according to a Congressional report.

Fallout in California

In one of his last public appearances before his death, Steven P. Jobs, Apple’s chief executive, addressed Cupertino’s City Council last June, seeking approval to build a new headquarters.

Most of the Council was effusive in its praise of the proposal. But one councilwoman, Kris Wang, had questions.

How will residents benefit? she asked. Perhaps Apple could provide free wireless Internet to Cupertino, she suggested, something Google had done in neighboring Mountain View.

“See, I’m a simpleton; I’ve always had this view that we pay taxes, and the city should do those things,” Mr. Jobs replied, according to a video of the meeting. “That’s why we pay taxes. Now, if we can get out of paying taxes, I’ll be glad to put up Wi-Fi.”

He suggested that, if the City Council were unhappy, perhaps Apple could move. The company is Cupertino’s largest taxpayer, with more than $8 million in property taxes assessed by local officials last year.

Ms. Wang dropped her suggestion.

Cupertino, Ms. Wang said in an interview, has real financial problems. “We’re proud to have Apple here,” said Ms. Wang, who has since left the Council. “But how do you get them to feel more connected?”

Other residents argue that Apple does enough as Cupertino’s largest employer and that tech companies, in general, have buoyed California’s economy. Apple’s workers eat in local restaurants, serve on local boards and donate to local causes. Silicon Valley’s many millionaires pay personal state income taxes. In its statement, Apple said its “international growth is creating jobs domestically, since we oversee most of our operations from California.”

“The vast majority of our global work force remains in the U.S.,” the statement continued, “with more than 47,000 full-time employees in all 50 states.”

Moreover, Apple has given nearby Stanford University more than $50 million in the last two years. The company has also donated $50 million to an African aid organization. In its statement, Apple said: “We have contributed to many charitable causes but have never sought publicity for doing so. Our focus has been on doing the right thing, not getting credit for it. In 2011, we dramatically expanded the number of deserving organizations we support by initiating a matching gift program for our employees.”

Still, some, including De Anza College’s president, Mr. Murphy, say the philanthropy and job creation do not offset Apple’s and other companies’ decisions to circumvent taxes. Within 20 minutes of the financially ailing school are the global headquarters of Google, Facebook, Intel, Hewlett-Packard and Cisco.

“When it comes time for all these companies — Google and Apple and Facebook and the rest — to pay their fair share, there’s a knee-jerk resistance,” Mr. Murphy said. “They’re philosophically antitax, and it’s decimating the state.”

“But I’m not complaining,” he added. “We can’t afford to upset these guys. We need every dollar we can get.”

Source:  NY Times

Posted by Steven Maimes, The Trust Advisor

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Schwab Study Finds High Net Worth Investors Confident in Their Advisors Despite Feeling Less Optimism About Markets and Economy Than Independent Advisors

Independent investment advisors report more clients needing reassurance about markets; say evidence of a recovery and end to political gridlock would boost investing confidence

High net worth investors are not as bullish about the markets and the economy as independent advisors, but nonetheless have confidence in their advisors’ ability to meet their investment goals in the current environment, according to two new companion surveys released today by Charles Schwab Advisor Services. The first, the 11th semi-annual Independent Advisor Outlook Study, surveyed almost 900 RIAs representing $204 billion in assets under management, and found that 45 percent of independent advisors are bullish about the market in the six months. However, a second, first-time survey of 504 high net worth (HNW) investors found that only 29 percent are bullish about the market.

HNW investors however are confident in their advisors’ ability to meet their investing goals in the current market – only one-third (32%) believe it will be difficult for advisors to do so, and 25% feel it will be easy. Where investors do perceive that there are barriers to achieving primary investment goals, they point to the broader investing environment – not to the advisor specifically. The largest perceived barrier is a low return on investments in this market (57%), followed by market losses (37%). Conversely, almost three out of five (59%) independent advisors say they feel it will be difficult to meet their clients’ investment goals.

“It matters less whether clients are optimistic or pessimistic and more that they are realistic about the outcomes they are working towards. This is where advice really takes center stage – providing perspective and expertise within the context of an individual client’s long-term goals, which is what many RIAs do so well,” said Bernie Clark, executive vice president and head of Schwab Advisor Services. “Investors are bombarded daily with market and economic information, and advisors play a valuable role as trusted guides in helping clients separate the noise from the news and translating that information into tailored strategies that will help clients meet their long term goals.”

Women are key decision-makers in six of ten client relationships

For the first time, the Independent Advisor Outlook Study asked RIAs about the role of women in client relationships. According to surveyed advisors, women are part of decision-making around finances nearly 60 percent of the time, either as the primary or sole decision-maker (21%) or as part of a couple making decisions jointly (38%).

With regard to meeting with individual members of a couple separately, 79 percent of advisors feel it is not important at all, 13 percent consider it somewhat important and 8 percent see it as extremely important.

More than half of advisors do not think it is important for their firm’s advisors to match the demographic profile of their clients, but more than one-third consider it somewhat important (31%) or extremely important (4%). Almost half of all advisors report that there are no female advisors working at their firms.

Outlooks – markets, economy, investment choices

Advisors see more good news across broader economic trends over the next six months in comparison to the investors surveyed. Close to one-third (31%) of HNW investors think unemployment will increase, versus only 18 percent of advisors; 27 percent of HNW investors believe there will be another or a “double dip” recession in comparison to only 14 percent of advisors; and 60 percent of HNW investors see inflation increasing versus only 44 percent of advisors. In addition, advisors are twice as likely as HNW investors to believe energy prices will go down (16 percent versus 8 percent). The two groups are in sync on expectations for an increase in consumer spending (57% each) and that consumer savings will increase (33 percent for advisors and 30 percent for HNW investors).

While 45 percent of independent advisors are currently bullish on the market, up from 37 percent in the same study six months ago, they have not yet regained the 56 percent bullish level seen a year ago. More than two-thirds (67%) of advisors believe the S&P 500 will increase, up from 58 percent in the previous study but still below the 77 percent high reached a year ago.

Independent advisors plan to invest more in equities the next six months. Forty-one percent of advisors plan to invest more in domestic large cap, versus 32 percent six months ago, representing an all-time high for the Independent Advisor Outlook Study. Interest in domestic small cap is also up significantly, almost doubling over the past six months from 12 percent to 23 percent in the current study.

When asked about the investment vehicles they plan to invest in more in the next six months, independent advisors’ interest in ETFs has increased (34% compared to 26% six months ago), while interest in foreign currency dropped to 4% from 8%.

Independent advisors continue to see information technology (48%) and energy (37%) as leading market sectors over the next six months, although energy saw a drop of six percentage points from six months ago. Financials saw the most significant uptick in expectations for performance, with 27 percent of advisors indicating they expect this sector to perform best in the next six months versus 17 percent six months ago.

Demand for advice continues to grow

Over one-third (37%) of HNW investors say their desire for investment advice during the past four years has increased. When asked what words first come to mind about working with a financial advisor, investors stated knowledge (71%), advice (59%), investment performance (49%), trust (48%) and service (47%).

“High net worth investors are looking for a lot more from advisors than just performance,” said Clark. “Advisors who provide unbiased advice and have rich, honest dialogues with their clients about individual investment goals and challenges in the context of the broader investing landscape are best positioned to capitalize on this continued trend towards advice and to successfully grow their practices.”

What is driving investors to seek more advice? High net worth investors say they are worried about headline-grabbing risks at home and abroad, such as Federal government deficits (58%), political gridlock (57%), the economic crisis in Europe (54%) and uncertainty about taxes and inflation (41% and 37% respectively).

RIAs concur that clients are seeking support and guidance around these topics. Nine in ten independent advisors say they have discussed the economic crisis in Europe with their clients, and eight in ten have discussed Federal government deficits. Moreover, clients’ needs for reassurance have increased overall. Advisors indicated that in the past six months, over a quarter of their clients (27%) needed reassurance that they would meet their investment goals, which was up slightly (four percentage points) from six months ago when this study was last conducted and also year-over-year. Advisors also note that evidence of a market recovery (35%) and an end to political gridlock (30%) would boost investor confidence.

Almost all advisors (93%) reported gaining new clients over the past year. The biggest source of these new clients has been investors leaving full-service brokerage firms (39%). Other sources for new clients were DIY investors at 20 percent, banks at 10 percent and IBDs at 13 percent.

Additional Insights

The two surveys also yield insights on a number of other fronts related to the perspectives of independent investment advisors and HNW investors, including:

  • Primary investment goals and investment strategies from both the advisor and HNW investor point of view
  • Working relationships – HNW investors’ perspectives on the benefits of an advisor and RIA perspectives on why investors choose to work with them
  • Finding an advisor/getting referrals
  • Working with families and the next generation

These, and other detailed findings can be accessed in the full report available at www.aboutschwab.com/press/research/advisor_research.

Slides: Results of survey findings (PDF)

Source:  Schwab

Posted by Steven Maimes, The Trust Advisor

Permalink:   http://thetrustadvisor.com/headlines/schwab-study ‎

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MF Global’s Missing Customer Money All Accounted For: Trustee

Jon Corzine might not know where the money is, but somebody certainly does.

James Giddens, the trustee overseeing MF Global’s liquidation, told the Senate Banking Committee on Tuesday that he has now accounted for the $1.6 billion in customer funds that went missing following the brokerage firm’s collapse, adding that his analysis “is substantially concluded,” CNNMoney reports. Giddens team has been tracking down the funds ever since MF Global became the eighth-largest bankruptcy in U.S. history last October.

Giddens additionally pushed for broader restrictions on actions like those taken by the brokerage firm. The trustee argued for the creation of an insurance fund that would protect customers if a similar event ever occurred in the future, The New York Times reports. “With such a fund in existence,” Giddens said, “three-quarters of MF Global’s commodities customers would not have been subject to any loss and could have been made whole within days of the bankruptcy filing.”

Some action has already been taken by regulators in an attempt to ensure such a situation never repeats itself. The so-called MF Global rule, approved in December, will curb the use of customer funds within the brokerage industry.

The news likely comes to as a relief to many nervous MF Global customers, who could only watch as former MF Global CEO Jon Corzine testified shortly after the firm’s collapse that he “simply [did] not know where the [lost customer] money” was. As recently as January, it was thought that the money may have simply “vaporized, ”following a Wall Street Journal report. In February, news came that large portions of the money had been traced to banks like JPMorgan Chase in the United Kingdom, as well as to other customer’s accounts.

But soon after those reports, it was additionally found that a MF Global employee received approval to move $165 million of the company’s funds from one of its accounts to another in a single minute, further raising suspicions that the firm may have inappropriately moved customer money in an effort to avoid collapse.

Even if the money has been found, it remains to be seen whether all of it will be returned in full to MF Global customers, although so far Giddens has recovered about 80 percent of customer losses, according to CNNMoney. That’s of particular concern to the large portion of MF Global clients that are farmers, since their livelihoods in many cases depends on the restitution of funds.

It’s unlikely that federal authorities will bring criminal charges against MF Global executives in connection with the lost funds. Giddens, for his part, has said he supports civil fines against Corzine and others.

See Huffingtonpost for a timeline of MF Global’s collapse -

Source:  Huffingtonpost

Posted by Steven Maimes, The Trust Advisor

Permalink:  http://thetrustadvisor.com/headlines/mf-globals

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Coupons: 3 Opinions Say Lawyers May Participate in Daily-Deal Websites

Ethics opinions issued recently by three state bar associations suggest that it’s OK for lawyers to jump on the deal-of-the-day coupon bandwagon. The concept is straightforward. A number of websites—Groupon is probably the best known—send subscribers emails offering discounts on various products and services, which the subscribers can purchase online. The deals include meals, spa treatments, fitness plans and home repair services. There is growing interest in offering legal services through these sites, as well.

But lawyers have been scared off by concerns about how website operators collect their fees from vendors. Typically, an operator receives a percentage of each coupon or daily deal at the time it is sold, regardless of whether a purchaser actually claims the service or whether a participating lawyer ever receives his or her fee. Any fee the lawyer does receive is reduced by the amount that goes to the website operator.

FEE-SPLITTING FEARS ALLAYED

The ethics question for lawyers is whether that kind of payment arrangement amounts to fee splitting with nonlawyers, which is prohibited by Rule 5.4 of the ABA Model Rules of Professional Conduct, as well as the ethics rules of all the states. (The Model Rules are the direct basis for professional conduct codes in every state except California.)

But opinions issued late last year by the South Carolina Bar, the North Carolina State Bar and the New York State Bar Association all concluded that the fee arrangements pass muster under their versions of Model Rule 5.4. Accordingly, they gave lawyers in those states the green light to participate in deal-based websites.

“If you had a literal reading of the rule, you might think daily-deal sites are a division of fees. But if you look at the purpose of the rule prohibiting fee sharing, you come to the conclusion this is not problematic,” says Will Hornsby Jr., staff counsel for the ABA Standing Committee on Delivery of Legal Services and an authority on ethics rules relating to lawyer advertising and marketing. And all three opinions “peeled the onion,” he says, to closely examine how daily-deal arrangements differ from fee sharing between lawyers and nonlawyers that is prohibited by the ethics rules.

The South Carolina Bar’s opinion, for instance, analyzed the fee-splitting question two ways to reach the same conclusion.

Under one analysis, the fee charged by the website operator amounts to payment of the reasonable cost of permitted advertising by a lawyer rather than sharing the lawyer’s fee, states South Carolina Advisory Opinion 11-05. “The fact that the charge for this form of advertising service is deducted up front by the company rather than invoiced and then paid from the lawyer’s operating account does not transform the transaction from the payment of advertising costs into an improper fee split,” the opinion states.

The alternate analysis takes the approach that the transaction does constitute fee splitting. But the arrangement still is permissible, states the opinion, “provided the website does not have the ability to exercise any control over the services which are to be subsequently rendered by the attorney.” Sharing fees with a nonlawyer “may be permitted where the circumstances do not suggest any encroachment on the lawyer’s independent judgment,” the opinion notes.

“I’m confident that kind of arrangement is not an improper sharing of fees with a nonlawyer,” says Michael J. Virzi, a legal writing instructor at the University of South Carolina in Columbia who chairs the state bar’s ethics advisory committee. “Say I recommend a lawyer because he will give me a kickback; then the consumer is not getting an honest recommendation. These websites aren’t really recommending anyone. They will take as many advertisements as there are lawyers who want to advertise.”

While the opinions agree that it is permissible for lawyers to participate in daily-deal websites, they all caution lawyers to use the sites carefully to avoid other potential ethics pitfalls.

One problem to avoid is the premature or improper formation of a lawyer-client relationship. A lawyer should run a conflicts check before under taking the representation and determine that he or she is competent to represent the client in the matter. If the lawyer determines that the relationship should not go forward for either of those reasons, the lawyer should give the coupon holder a full refund.

Lawyer communications related to coupon offers also must meet lawyer advertising requirements set forth in the state versions of Model Rules 7.1 and 7.2, the opinions state. “The offered discount must not be illusionary, but must represent an actual discount from an established fee for the named service. Otherwise the advertisement would be misleading,” states Opinion 897, issued by the New York bar on Dec. 13.

PROPRIETY CONCERNS

The opinions may be helping to carve out some new thinking about how law firms communicate their fee information to potential clients, says Ronald C. Minkoff, a partner at Frankfurt Kurnit Klein & Selz in New York City.

Traditionally, he notes, some in the profession have frowned on attorneys advertising discounted legal services. “There have been people who say that’s not appropriate,” says Minkoff, who heads up his firm’s professional responsibility group. “It makes us look like we’re in the bazaar, not practicing law. But courts say you’re allowed to do that. You’re letting people know what your prices are.”

Some ethics experts say deal-based advertising is appropriate for flat fees, but not retainers or legal services provided on an hourly basis. Minkoff disagrees. A lawyer could, he says, offer a $3,000 retainer for $1,500. “As long as the advertising is not misleading, it’s understood what the $1,500 will buy and you’re competent to do the work, I don’t see where it would be more of a problem than anything else.”

The opinions differ a bit on what should happen if the purchaser of a discount coupon for legal services doesn’t use it.

The North Carolina bar’s Formal Ethics Opinion 10 (issued Oct. 21) states that if a coupon purchaser fails to claim the legal service before the coupon’s expiration date, the lawyer must refund the payment. If the purchaser still wants to hire the lawyer after the coupon expires, the lawyer may charge his or her actual rate, crediting the client’s coupon payment toward the bill.

Alternatively, the New York opinion concludes that a lawyer “is entitled to treat the advance payment received as an earned retainer for being available to perform the offered service in a given time frame.” (The South Carolina opinion doesn’t address the issue specifically.)

Minkoff is surprised that the New York opinion doesn’t address the question of whether coupons should have expiration dates. “The notion of putting some kind of time pressure on a person to make a decision,” he says, “is not something that people would be happy with, with our rules.”

GOOD BUSINESS MODEL?

The practical question is whether online coupon advertising will catch on with lawyers.

Robin Lori, a marketing director based in Chicago, notes that using such services might be limited to one-time hits, rather than the repeat business most lawyers want. “I don’t necessarily think it would build a really great practice because you’re going in with the idea of discounting it from day one,” she says. But, she notes, younger legal consumers—who grew up with the Internet—might find coupon sites a desirable way to seek out legal services.

In Minkoff’s view, coupon sites might be one more marketing approach worth trying. “There are plenty of lawyers who advertise and get strange people coming off the streets based on ads. That’s their business model,” he says.

“I couldn’t really see doing it myself personally. But in my view, if people think it can work and it makes legal services more accessible, then it’s a good thing.”

Source:  abajournal.com

Posted by Steven Maimes, The Trust Advisor

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Wealth Management a Top Priority for Banks

Wealth management is a top priority for many banks and financial firms across South Florida, and they court their high net worth clients in myriad ways.

Seated in a private room at Café L’Europe in Palm Beach, jeweler Judith Ripka munches on her Mandarin Chinese chicken salad and listens to Valerie Ramsey discuss her book, √Gracefully — Looking and Being Your Best at Any Age.

Ripka flew in from New York especially for the luncheon, hosted by Sabadell Bank & Trust for three dozen of its wealth management clients and guests, as part of its “Women’s Connoisseur Series.”

“This bank is a wonderful bank,” said Ripka, who bought a vacation home in Palm Beach two years ago and was referred to the bank by her real estate broker. “They understand their clients, but they care about the clients, too.”

Genteel as can be, the setting offers a peek at the perks of South Florida’s wealthy banking clients who entrust financial firms to invest their savings, build for their future and plan their estates.

Catering to those clients by giving top-notch service — even, in the case of Sabadell, chauffeuring one attendee who had broken her foot and couldn’t drive — is all part of the package.

“We really try to make it informative, useful information,” said Debra Vasilopoulos, regional president of Palm Beach County for Sabadell Bank & Trust, whose events also include a series of lectures by Johns Hopkins physicians. “In addition to our clients needs, we care about their well-being.”

Across South Florida, banks, trust companies and financial advisory firms of all sizes are focusing on wealth management as a key part of their financial repertoire.

“If you intend to deal with businesses and their owners and professionals and high net worth individuals, it’s essential that you be in the wealth management business,” said Mario Trueba, president and chief executive of Miami-based Sabadell United Bank, which bought failed Lydian Private Bank last year to convert it to its wealth management division, Sabadell Bank & Trust.

Investing for the wealthy has a rich history nationwide.

J.P. Morgan has been serving the upper crust for more than 160 years. Northern Trust bases its heritage, dating to 1889, on the wealth management business. Fiduciary Trust International of the South has managed money for high net worth individuals and foundations since 1931.

Major banks such as Wells Fargo also cite the segment as its utmost priority.

“The number one strategic initiative for all Wells Fargo is to grow our wealth management business,” said Jason Williams, Miami-based regional managing director of Wells Fargo Wealth Management. The mandate is spelled out in a booklet on the bank’s vision and values, which he carries in his jacket pocket.

Wealth management is defined as “financial services provided to wealthy clients, mainly individuals and their families,” said Alexander Camargo an analyst at Celent, a financial services research and consulting firm.

To enter the domain, wealth management firms require a minimum level of investable assets. Many banks segment their customers into tiers of wealth, defined differently by each bank. Celent defines the tiers as beginning with the mass market, those with liquid assets up to $250,000, followed by the mass affluent market, those with $250,000 to $1 million in investable assets, then high net worth clients of $1 million to $10 million, and lastly ultra high net worth investors above $10 million, Camargo said.

In South Florida, wealth management has weathered the economic downturn better than many other areas of banking and is the closest of any segment to being recession-proof, said Ken Thomas, a Miami-based economist and independent banking consultant.

It is also one of the three segments — along with the huge retail market and the international banking/trade finance business — that make South Florida one of the nation’s five most attractive areas for banking, he said.

Moreover, wealth management has the most growth potential of all three, Thomas said, which is why every institution wants in on the game.

“There is more demand for wealth management because the rich are getting richer,” he said. “And it is even more so in South Florida because we have access to more wealth because of the proximity to Latin America”

Indeed, as institutions compete for a slice of the lucrative pie, the competition for clients is fierce. And every institution touts its approach as best.

“The end consumer is demanding a holistic one-stop shop, and financial institutions are going to have to meet that demand to be successful into the future,” said Jeff Ransdell, managing director and market executive for the Southeast for Merrill Lynch Wealth Management, which is part of Bank of America.

Perhaps most of all, wealth management bankers and clients cite the importance of their relationship.

When Danny Toccin sold his portfolio of apartment buildings in 2005, he needed to find an alternative way of investing. So he interviewed various firms and divided his funds among four institutions, including Wescott Financial Advisory Group.

“I need a total comfort level,” said Toccin, 62, of Miami. “I am a micromanager by heart, and I want to know where I am, where we stand, where we are going. I also didn’t want to be a minnow in an ocean. I wanted to be somewhere I would be like a big fish in a lake.”

But after a while, he found he didn’t feel comfortable with the other three firms.

“With Wescott I have so much trust in them that I probably did something other investors wouldn’t do,” said Toccin, who has a wife, Ferne, and two grown children. “I put all my eggs in one basket because I have so much trust and there is so much transparency.”

Indeed, Wescott Chief Executive Grant Rawdin views the advisor/client relationship as very personal. The firm even has an industrial psychologist test prospective advisors for empathy before hiring them.

“It’s why I changed my career from being a tax and business lawyer to being a financial advisor,” said Rawdin, who divides his time between offices in Coral Gables and Philadelphia. “They close the door and they tell you things. You become a psychologist. Money leads into other intimate admissions and issues.”

Financial firms say they bring in new clients through referrals from other clients, attorneys and accountants, as well as from the networking bankers in the community.

For banks and financial firms, wealth management starts with devising a plan, and input from the client is paramount.

“We really want to get to know our clients.” said Alex Navarro, senior vice president and private financial advisor at SunTrust in Bal Harbour. “It’s like going to a financial doctor. We want the client to feel comfortable enough to disclose all their financial concerns so we can do a good job at addressing them. The financial advice is only as good as the information we get.”

In fact, analysts and bankers say that amid the turbulent stock market, clients have become more watchful of their investments.

“Consumers are more demanding now,” said Camargo of Celent. “They want to see their advisors more, they want their advisors to inform them of the risk more, and they want to know they are protected on the downside, so if the market crashes, they don’t lose their entire life savings.”

Going a step beyond is also de rigueur. Many South Florida institutions invite their high net worth clients to a range of seminars, sporting events and concerts that they sponsor, along with speaker-led luncheons and dinners.

J.P. Morgan Private Bank dedicates the 33rd floor at 1450 Brickell Ave. in Miami to its wealthy clients, a private client center unparalleled in cities other than New York, said Phil Conway, Southeast regional head of J.P. Morgan Private Bank.

The center offers lounges and private dining rooms, conference rooms with video capabilities, a sky-high view and a chance to see the bank’s extensive contemporary art collection, which was started by David Rockefeller.

J.P. Morgan also provides summer and winter reading lists to its private clients. Northern Trust hosts a literary society in Miami that meets regularly.

In February, UBS hosted an event in Miami with former presidents Bill Clinton and George W. Bush for its wealth management clients.

And Wells Fargo and Fiduciary Trust have met with clients on private retreats to discuss investing and estate planning, and to teach younger generations to be responsible stewards of their wealth.

 
Source:  miamiherald.com

Posted by Steven Maimes, The Trust Advisor

Permalink:  http://thetrustadvisor.com/headlines/wealth-management1

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