Emotional ties to stock, mixing business with charity, and locking in the exemptionHello from the Peninsula Community Foundation!
Every year, the Giving USA study, released in June, reports the status of charitable giving in America. The good news is that total donations were generally higher however when adjusted for inflation, 2023 numbers were down. It’s been more difficult for our region’s charities to meet the needs of the people they serve. This is relevant to your clients because for many of them, philanthropy is an important part of financial plans and family traditions. |
In this issue, we’re sharing insights to help with your client conversations about charitable giving.
Happy summer!
- As an advisor, you’ve certainly experienced clients’ emotions impacting their decisions! Confronting mortality, addressing complex family relationships, and discussing money all come with financial planning’s often rocky terrain. The community foundation can help when you encounter a charitably-minded client who is devoted to a particular stock and may be reluctant to take the tax-savvy step of giving it to charity.
- "Doing well by doing good” is a popular notion in corporate giving programs. Many of your clients may be in positions to influence corporate giving strategies. The community foundation can support you as you advise clients about avoiding tax pitfalls and conflicts of interest as clients and their work colleagues create charitable giving strategies that align with business purposes.
- If it feels like the topic of the estate tax exemption sunset is heating up, you are right! More and more of your clients are becoming aware of the change in the law that is slated to occur at the end of 2025 unless legislation intervenes. Be sure you know the basics about how this change could impact your clients, including the ways charitable giving and the community foundation can fit into smart planning.
Happy summer!
Michael Monteith
CEO, Peninsula Community Foundation of Virginia
CEO, Peninsula Community Foundation of Virginia
Gifts of appreciated stock: Picking favoritesLast week I was having lunch with one of my favorite account holders. They described to me a conversation they were having with their financial advisor about a stock that they have owned for many years. Their advisor had suggested they sell a portion of this stock and donate it to their Donor Advised Fund at the Community Foundation. The problem was that my account holder has owned this stock for a very long time and it has sentimental value as well as financial value.
As you know, donating highly-appreciated stock to a fund at our community foundation offers significant advantages for your clients over making cash gifts. Communicating this benefit, however, can be challenging when clients have emotional attachments to their shares. |
How can you overcome this hurdle and help optimize your clients' charitable giving strategies?
Start by understanding the reasons a client might be reluctant to part with certain stocks in the first place:
Here’s why this can be such an effective strategy:
As you share this strategy with a client, be sure to acknowledge the emotional value of the stock and emphasize the client’s opportunity to maintain ownership in the company. Building on this, you can show the client how the tax benefits of giving stock allow the client to make an even bigger difference than if they’d given cash instead.
Start by understanding the reasons a client might be reluctant to part with certain stocks in the first place:
- Legacy: "These shares have been in my family for generations."
- Professional: "I worked at this company for decades; it's the source of my wealth."
- Simple preference: “I just love this stock.”
Here’s why this can be such an effective strategy:
- Maximize tax deductions: Publicly-traded securities are typically deductible at fair market value. The tax savings your client realizes when tax time rolls around could potentially help fund a repurchase of the stock.
- Reset cost basis: A repurchase transaction effectively resets the cost basis of the stock in the client’s personal portfolio to its current market price, potentially reducing future capital gains taxes.
- Emotional satisfaction: Clients can support charities while maintaining their shareholder status in the company they like.
- Community impact: The community foundation can sell the donated shares tax-free, thereby maximizing the proceeds flowing into the client’s fund, and the fund in turn can be used to support the client’s favorite causes.
As you share this strategy with a client, be sure to acknowledge the emotional value of the stock and emphasize the client’s opportunity to maintain ownership in the company. Building on this, you can show the client how the tax benefits of giving stock allow the client to make an even bigger difference than if they’d given cash instead.
Mixing business and charity: Keep it ethical, legal, and transparentYour clients who are corporate executives have likely wondered at some point about the benefits of aligning their companies with philanthropy, whether specific causes or particular organizations.
In general, a community engagement strategy can be good for business, if well-executed. For example, almost half of consumers view a brand favorably when the brand supports a charitable cause. Community engagement programs can help with employee retention, too. But what are the risks involved in mixing business with charity? In the spirit of aligning doing good with doing well, some companies would love to set up their own nonprofit |
organizations as “charitable arms” of their enterprises. Corporate leadership may like the idea of efficiency, control, and tight alignment between the company’s offerings and the charity’s mission. For example, a company that makes swimming pools might think it’s a great idea to set up a charity to build swimming pools at community centers to give more kids access to water sports. The company would like to donate tax-deductible dollars to the charity and ask its suppliers and customers to do the same. The company’s executives would serve on the board of the charity, and the charity would purchase swimming pools from the company to carry out its mission.
Is this a good idea?
No. This strategy plays fast and loose with the rules. Beyond setting up an obvious conflict of interest, this practice would mean that a company effectively would be using charitable funds to benefit itself. This is not a “charitable purpose” in the eyes of the IRS and could result in the loss of the charity’s tax exemption. Plus, if the news got out about this structure, the company could suffer reputational damage.
The company, its executives, and the community are all better off if the company pursues more transparent and ethical charitable strategies such as establishing a corporate fund at the community foundation, setting up a volunteer program for employees, establishing a matching gifts program, or aligning with wholly-independent charities on cause-related marketing partnerships.
Reach out to us to learn more about effective corporate philanthropy strategies. We are here to help as you work with your clients to achieve their charitable goals both at home and in the workplace.
Is this a good idea?
No. This strategy plays fast and loose with the rules. Beyond setting up an obvious conflict of interest, this practice would mean that a company effectively would be using charitable funds to benefit itself. This is not a “charitable purpose” in the eyes of the IRS and could result in the loss of the charity’s tax exemption. Plus, if the news got out about this structure, the company could suffer reputational damage.
The company, its executives, and the community are all better off if the company pursues more transparent and ethical charitable strategies such as establishing a corporate fund at the community foundation, setting up a volunteer program for employees, establishing a matching gifts program, or aligning with wholly-independent charities on cause-related marketing partnerships.
Reach out to us to learn more about effective corporate philanthropy strategies. We are here to help as you work with your clients to achieve their charitable goals both at home and in the workplace.
Planning for a sunset: Lock in a higher exemption, unlock a legacyWithout legislation to prevent it, the sunsetting of current estate tax laws at the end of 2025 will dramatically reduce the federal estate tax exemption from $13.61 million per person in 2024 to approximately $7 million in 2026 (this includes adjustments for inflation). This change would affect many high net-worth individuals and families, likely exposing many more estates to federal estate taxes.
It is impossible to predict whether or not legislation will prevent the sunset. Even so, it is important for advisors to prepare for client discussions and start considering estate planning strategies now, especially techniques that incorporate multi-generational gifts and charitable planning. Indeed, for a client who is charitably-inclined, making larger lifetime |
gifts to charity and arranging for charitable bequests will help reduce the client’s taxable estate because of the charitable estate and gift tax deduction. Donor-advised, field-of-interest, designated, unrestricted, and endowment funds at the Peninsula Community Foundation are flexible and effective charitable recipients of both lifetime and estate gifts.
For some clients, you may wish to begin exploring a comprehensive, multi-generational wealth transfer plan, potentially using key tax-planning vehicles:
For some clients, you may wish to begin exploring a comprehensive, multi-generational wealth transfer plan, potentially using key tax-planning vehicles:
- Charitable lead trust: Charitable lead trusts (CLTs) may be particularly effective in the current environment. These trusts can provide income to your client’s fund at the community foundation for a set period of time, with the remaining assets passing to family members. Right now, the higher exemption allows for potentially significant initial funding of such trusts. This is because the value of the remainder interest counts toward the client’s estate and gift tax exemption.
- Generation-skipping trust: A generation-skipping trust is an irrevocable trust that can benefit a client’s grandchildren and later generations. This trust utilizes a client’s generation-skipping transfer (GST) tax exemption (which parallels the estate and gift tax exemption). This type of trust could allow a client to take advantage of the higher exemption before it potentially decreases in 2026. It is possible under some states’ laws for these trusts to go on for many generations in a “dynasty” format, such that each generation benefits from the trust’s income (and potentially principal for health and education) without the trust’s assets being included in the beneficiaries’ estates for estate tax purposes.
- Multi-generational fund at the community foundation: Alongside a charitable lead trust or generation-skipping trust, or as a standalone, a client can establish a donor-advised fund at the community foundation that can function much like a family foundation, with successive generations serving as advisors, or the community foundation stepping in after the first or second generation, to recommend grants from the fund to carry on a tradition of supporting the causes that have been most important to the client during the client’s lifetime.
The team at the community foundation is a resource and sounding board as you serve your philanthropic clients. We understand the charitable side of the equation and are happy to serve as a secondary source as you manage the primary relationship with your clients. This newsletter is provided for informational purposes only. It is not intended as legal, accounting, or financial planning advice.
For more information about establishing a fund, please contact [email protected]/757.327.0862