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Dec 21, 2011 2:00 PM
Estate Tax Alternate Valuation Method
IRS issues revised proposed regulations
Though typically assets are valued for federal estate tax purposes as of the date of death (DOD), Section 2032(a) provides that, generally, if the estate so elects, "In the case of property distributed, sold, exchanged, or otherwise disposed of, within 6 months after the decedent’s death such property shall be valued as of the date of distribution, sale, exchange, or other disposition. In the case of property not distributed, sold, exchanged, or otherwise disposed of, within 6 months after the decedent’s death such property shall be valued as of the date 6 months after the decedent’s death."
2008 Proposed Regulations
In 2008, the Treasury issued proposed regulations attempting to codify the rule that “changes in value due to post-death events other than market conditions” may not be taken into account for alternate valuation method purposes. The Treasury was targeting post-death transactions designed to artificially reduce the value of a decedent’s taxable assets as of the alternate valuation date (AVD), transactions such as subjecting assets to restrictions on transfer and distributing a partial interest in a wholly-owned property, both of which depress the value of the estate’s (remaining) interest without regard to general market conditions.1
New Approach
The Treasury has now withdrawn the 2008 proposed regulations and issued new ones dealing with the AVM.2 The withdrawn 2008 proposed regulations dealt with frowned-upon post-death events by ignoring them for valuation purposes. Commentators criticized this approach, because it required executors to obtain valuations of hypothetical assets. The 2011 proposed regulations take a different approach: A transaction that changes the asset’s value by more than 5 percent closes the AVM period, and the “alternate value” of the affected asset will be its value immediately before the transfer.
Issues Clarified
Here are other issues that the new proposed regulations clarify:
Events that count as a distribution. They provide much greater detail than any previous version regarding what events and transactions fall within the definition of “distributed, sold, exchanged or otherwise disposed of,” that is, what transactions trigger closing of the AVM period. The list now explicitly includes some corporate transactions (such as contributing assets to a newly incorporated entity or a merger) whenever the transaction to reduces the value of the estate’s holdings by more than five percent—regardless of whether the transaction is income-taxable.3 Prior versions seemed to treat an entity reorganization as closing the AVM period only if it was income-taxable.
When assets are distributed. Under the IRC and prior versions of the regulations, it wasn’t always clear to practitioners what it meant for an asset to be “distributed.” An executor could “distribute” an estate-owned asset out of the estate, but what did the term mean as applied to joint property passing by right of survivorship or retirement benefits?
Questions regarding inherited IRAs. The regulations also answer other questions regarding inherited IRAs. For example, the division of an inherited IRA left to multiple beneficiaries into separate inherited IRAs for each beneficiary isn’t a “distribution” that triggers closing of the AVM period.6 A distribution from the inherited retirement plan closes the AVM period with respect to that distribution, but not as to the rest of the account—unless the distribution alters the fair market value of the total asset. If the sum of the value of the distribution and the value of the remaining account is less than the value of the account before the distribution, the distribution closes the AVM period for the entire account.7
Beneficiary’s ability to sell or dispose of assets inside retirement plan. Finally, and most importantly, the regulation confirms that assets can be “sold or disposed of,” inside a retirement plan, by a beneficiary of the plan. If a beneficiary of (for example) an inherited IRA causes an asset to be sold “inside” the IRA within six months after the decedent’s death, the sale date is the AVD for the sold asset. An executor can’t simply value the retirement plan on the DOD and then do so again six months later—the estate tax return preparer will need to determine what purchases and sales took place inside the account during the AVM period.8
Remaining Question
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| GSTs | Family Offices |
| Private Foundations | Life Insurance |
| 2010 Tax Act News | Industry Trends Surveys |
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