Title: RETIREMENT PLANNING FOR THE SELF-EMPLOYED PROFESSIONAL OR BUSINESS OWNER
1RETIREMENT PLANNING FOR THE SELF-EMPLOYED
PROFESSIONAL OR BUSINESS OWNER
2Understanding the Market
3Hidden Cost of Business
- Business owners have sacrificed the steady income
they could have received as an employee. - They have missed the opportunity of a retirement
company pension which they might have enjoyed as
an employee. - They have exposed all their personal holdings to
the invasion of business creditors if things go
wrong. - They have assumed the risk, worry, and mental
strain of making and keeping a business
successful. - They have spent money, time, and energy to create
their business. - Even today this business needs their continuous
attention to produce a profit.
4THEY ARE THE BUSINESS
5Self-Employed Professional
- The self-employed professional has spent his
career building up his practice, staying abreast
of new and innovative procedures and theories. - The success in increasing and keeping his
clients is based on his knowledge, skills and
client rapport. - At retirement his business has an uncertain sale
value. - As professionals they do in most cases have
support from their professional association in
terms of benefits. - Only recently and varying from province to
province have they had the ability to
incorporate.
6Reality Check What has Changed Today
- Business Owner
- Professional
- Consultant
7Breaking The Ice 5 Questions
- What is important about money to you and your
family? - What is it about (key word from question) that
makes it so important? - What are the best and worst financial decisions
you ever made? What made them best and worst? - What worry could keep you awake at night?
- How has your outlook changed over the past yrs?
83 out of 4 Canadian small business owners have
not taken adequate steps to protect their
personal assets.
910 Tips for the Business Owners
- 1- Consider incorporating.
- 2- Not all debt is created equal.
- 3- Ensure sufficient personal liability coverage.
- 4- Ensure spouse is outside reach of creditors.
- 5- Make use of spousal RRSPs.
- 6- Consider moving personal assets to spouses
name. - 7- Have adequate life insurance to preserve the
business value, held personally with a family
class beneficiary. - 8- Place your retirement savings into an
insurance product with family class beneficiary. - 9- Get professional tax and legal advice.
- 10- Make a plan now.
10PRODUCTS
- DISCLAIMER The following information is being
presented on the understanding that it is
intended for seminar information only. The
presenter is not recommending a specific company
nor engaged for the purpose of providing legal,
accounting, nor taxation advice.
11Individual Pension PlanIPP
12What is an IPP
- Registered Defined Benefit Pension Plan
- Subject to the provisions of the Income Tax Act
- Sponsored by and funded by the employer
- Comprised of 1 plan member however spouse may be
added
13The IPP Candidate
- Individual business owner
- Professional of a professional corporation
- Executive of a private corporation
- Over age 40
- Already able to maximize RRSPs
- Earnings reported on a T4
14Features of the IPP
- Higher deductible contribution limits
- Contributions increase with age
- Creditor protection
- Contributions and fees deductible by employer
- Opportunity to fund for pre 2004 employment years
to 1991
152004 Contributions IPP vs RRSP
Age at plan entry in 2004 IPP Strategy RRSP Strategy IPP Advantage
40 67770 15500 52270
45 91600 15500 76100
50 117700 15500 102200
55 146370 15500 130870
60 177840 15500 162340
62 191360 15500 175860
65 203370 15500 187870
16IPP Contributions Next 5 years.
Contribution Year Age 45 in 2004
2005 18923
2006 20343
2007 21868
2008 23508
2009 25272
17At Retirement
- Life Income Fund (LIF)
- Locked-in Retirement Income Fund (LRIF)
- Annuitization
- Direct Payment of Pension
18On Death
- All assets of IPP available for transfer to
spouse, another beneficiary, or estate of plan
member
19On Termination Prior to Age 69
20Investment Options
- RRSP eligible investments
21Administration
- Mandatory funding
- Administration costs
- Accuarial costs including valuation every 3 years
22THE EXECUTIVE RETIREMENT ACCOUNT
23The Market
- Who can take advantage of the ERA concept?
- Business owner-managers
- Key employees
- Professionals of Prof Corp
24Executive Retirement Account (ERA)
- Share the benefits, not the ownership!
- Simple
- Effective
- Funded
25ERA
- Arrangement under which the costs and benefits of
permanent life insurance policy are shared - Employee is the only owner
- Employer is irrevocable beneficiary of the face
amount
26ERA - The Concept
Agreement
Employer
Employee
Fund
C.O.I.
27Structure
- Owner-Manager buys UL policy and makes annual
deposits to the fund - Names company irrevocable beneficiary of face
amount. - Company pays COI
- Fund value grows tax deferred-available for
retirement - Face amount tax free to company at death
28ERA - The Concept
Agreement
Employee
Employer
Fund Value Tax-deferred Savings.
C.O.I.
Funds for Employer/CDA
Funds for Retirement
29Taxation Issues
- During Employment Are there taxable benefits for
the employee? - At RetirementEmployer agrees to the beneficiary
change - Tax issue for employer
- Potential taxable benefit to the employee
- Terms of Agreement
30Retirement Income
- How will you access money
- - Policy loans tax free to ACB
- - Policy withdrawals pro-rated
- - Bank loan tax free cash flow
- Legal Issues Must have employer/employee
agreement
31Professional Small Business Owners Recent
Survey
- 3 out of 4 of Canadas small business owners have
not taken adequate steps to protect personal
assets from creditors. - 79 of small business owners said they would be
interested in an investment product which
protected their mutual funds from creditors. - 66 of this same group had never heard of
segregated funds.
32Segregated FundsWho Can Benefit
- Business owners of any size
- Professionals from all fields
- Consultants and contractors
33Seg funds cont
- More choice, flexibility and security - for you
and your clients. - The growth potential of leading funds, plus
- The security of insurance
34All segregated funds offer
- Death benefit and maturity guarantees
- The ability to bypass probate
- Potential creditor protection
35Which Clients Can Benefit?
- Clients planning their estate
- Investors wary of market risk
- Professionals, entrepreneurs and business owners
- Clients wanting to leverage
36A Clear Solution for Entrepreneurs
I am self-employed or have my own business and I
am interested in an investment product that would
protect my mutual funds from creditors.
I know that theres an insurance product that
could protect my personal assets.
You can meet their need with potential creditor
protection. You can meet their need with
investment guarantees
37Are we as Financial Advisors being responsible by
not offering these products?
- Is it not to our advantage to have the basic
understanding and application of as many
solutions as there are retirement and estate
questions.
38Summary
- Whether or not you actually offer any of the 3
products introduced is not necessarily the goal
of this presentation. This was strictly an
introduction to the less conventional options
available to the self employed and where they
could be used effectively with specific
individuals in retirement and estate planning. - Thank-you