wn nothing. Control everything.
Mastering this trust axiom is key to achieving the holy grail of
business owners and investor plebs alike: legally avoid capital gains
tax.
With a seller-selected trustee deferred trust, authorized by IRS
Codes, §§ 453 and 267(b), you may sell your business
or other property
to an independent trust in exchange for a installment
agreement. The trust beneficiaries are typically the seller's
family. The capital gains tax is not due until the trust
makes the installment payments which may be delayed up to, but not past
the seller's IRS expected lifespan.
When the trust turns around and sells to a third party for the same
price as the installment agreement, the trust has no gain, and no
capital gains tax. The trust retains and reinvests the sales
proceeds, including the capital gains tax otherwise owed and payable
immediately to the IRS.
The potentially multi-decade compounding gain on the trust-retained
capital gains taxes not only cover the capital gains tax, but builds an
additional fortune - even dwarfing the original sales gain (depending
on the trust ROI and duration) otherwise not
possible.
The team at Opes Trust - the managing director overseeing a Nevada
trust attorney, a CPA, and their paralegal, offers the most economical
deferred trust available. While other deferred trust
firms require the hiring of their own independent trustee at 1.5% of
all sales proceeds every year, Opes Trust offers sellers the option to
select their own trustee, authorized under IRS Code, section
267(b), like their trusted friend, in-law, or any other number
of trusted persons or professionals at low-to-no cost, saving their
trust
a fortune in compounded trustee fees.
Opes Trust also offers generational family trusts to save other taxes,
shield family wealth from governmental and private predators, and
providing upcoming generations with a strategic and carefully
orchestrated hand up in life, instead of the often soul spoiling hand
out.