The rich get ready for higher taxes under a President Clinton

(Bloomberg) — For wealthy Americans, a big win by Hillary Clinton on Nov. 8 could get pretty expensive.

Clinton is proposing higher taxes on Americans who make more than $250,000, including a 4% “fair share surcharge” on incomes over $5 million a year. She’s also trying to limit the ability of the rich to lower their tax bills through clever planning.

This has made the election a hot topic at accounting and advisory firms that cater to the wealthy. The election “dominates the conversations we have with clients today,” said Brian Andrew, chief investment officer at Johnson Financial Group.

Changing tax laws is easier said than done. Even if Clinton defeats Donald Trump, she’ll probably be negotiating any tax bills with a House of Representatives still controlled by Republicans. Democrats would get free rein to set tax policy only if a big Clinton win helps them gain control of both the Senate, which is teetering, and the House. The likeliest scenario is divided government, in which the House will thwart any substantial tax increase, said Joe Heider, founder of Cirrus Wealth Management in Cleveland.

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Still, “there’s a growing concern [among Republicans] that this could become a wave election,” Heider said.

Clinton proposes raising revenue by $1.4 trillion over the next decade. Almost all of that burden falls on the top 1% of taxpayers, according to the Tax Policy Center. The after-tax income of the top 1% would fall by an average of 7%. Trump, by contrast, would cut taxes by $6.2 trillion over the next 10 years, with the top 1% getting almost half that benefit and a 13.5% boost to their after-tax income.

Advisers to the wealthy are ready to take evasive action if Democrats make big gains.

“We have to be quick enough to pull the trigger after Nov. 8,” said Alan Kufeld, a CPA and tax partner at PKF O’Connor Davies, who says most of his clients have a net worth of $25 million to $1 billion. “You have to have a plan that is very fluid.”

The rich tend to have more financial flexibility than other taxpayers. If taxes look like they’re going up, they have a few cards they can play. One common tactic is being smart about when to receive income and when to recognize losses and take deductions. To cut the taxes you owe next April 15, for example, you can try delaying income to future years while taking as many deductions and losses as you can this year.

But a big win by Democrats could turn that conventional strategy on its head, said Richard Rampell, a CPA and principal at MBAF in Palm Beach, Florida. Instead of trying to minimize this year’s tax bill, you might try to take as much income as possible in 2016 – for example, by selling a winning stock – rather than risk paying higher taxes on that money in 2017 or 2018.

There's a huge question mark hanging over all these tax matters. When would any tax increase be implemented? Ordinarily, a tax bill passed in 2017 would go into effect in 2018, giving the wealthy plenty of time to prepare. The biggest fear is a tax increase passed in 2017 that's retroactive to the beginning of the year, said Michael Kassab, chief investment officer at Calamos Wealth Management.

Changing tax laws is easier said than done. Even if Clinton wins, she’ll probably be dealing with a Republican-controlled House.

It’s happened before. In 1993, a tax bill passed at the beginning of Bill Clinton’s administration affected earnings that same year. If it happens again, the wealthy may have only the last several weeks of 2016 to get ready for higher taxes.

“There really is no way to know,” said Brittney Saks, a partner at PwC based in Chicago. “It’s that uncertainty that’s making people uncomfortable.”

If Clinton gets her plan through, taxes would get both more complicated and harder to avoid. She has proposed new rates on capital gains, so that taxpayers pay higher rates if they hold an investment for less than six years. She’d also give people less flexibility to lower their tax bills with common strategies. For example, she would limit the ability of the wealthy to itemize deductions, with the exception of charitable deductions. She'd also require a minimum effective tax rate of 30% on incomes over $1 million — the Buffett Rule, named after billionaire investor Warren Buffett, a Clinton supporter, who declared it isn't right that his secretary should pay a higher tax rate than he does.

Municipal bonds should remain a tried-and-true method for wealthy investors to lower their tax burden. While munis tend to yield less than other bonds, their income generally isn’t taxed. If capital gains tax rates go up, Heider said, investors might also think about investments they can buy and hold for longer periods of time, such as real estate.

There’s good reason to wait and see what actually passes Congress.

“Even if Hillary Clinton is elected president, and even if there is a Democratic Congress, it’s not so easy to change the tax laws,” said Paul Ambrose Jr., a law partner at Cullen & Dykman in Hackensack, New Jersey, who specializes in estate tax planning. It might not be easy to get lawmakers, worried about their own political futures, to go along with a tax increase.

IRS by Bloomberg News 4
Signage for the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) stands outside the IRS headquarters building in Washington, D.C., U.S., on Wednesday, Feb. 17, 2016. Taxpayers have until Monday, April 18 to file their 2015 tax returns and pay any tax owed. Photographer: Andrew Harrer/Bloomberg

And not every wealthy person would be affected by a tax hike.

“Just because tax rates may go up next year, it doesn’t mean your tax rate is going up,” said Tim Steffen, director of financial planning at Baird. For example, Clinton’s proposals largely spare high-earning professionals if they have few taxable investments and few deductions.

So while advisers are vigilant, they’re warning clients not to make any big moves until the political future is clearer. Most of all, they say, people shouldn’t let worries about taxes override sound strategies.

“Basic economics should always drive decisions,” Heider said. “Tax benefits, or tax avoidance, should always be secondary.”

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