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Gift Planning

Planned Giving

Find out what types of assets make the best planned gifts. Learn about gifts of cash, securities and property.

Bob and Mary Are Giving Smarter and Achieving Their Dreams...Find Out How You Can Too!

Couple posing with two dogs

Bob and Mary first met at Two-Bit Flicks, a 25-cent movie night held on Fridays in Brighton Lecture Hall. When the spring formal hosted by the women's dorm came around, Mary asked Bob to go with her. It was their first "official" date.


The rest, as the saying goes, is history. Or in Bob and Mary's case, it is natural history. That's because Emporia State also introduced them to a lifelong passion for the natural sciences.


Bob and Mary feel Emporia State was the catalyst for the life they've built together. Mary became a science educator for 6th, 7th, 8th and 9th grade students. Bob founded and served as director of the Great Plains Nature Center and became a renowned nature photographer.


Now they want others to have the same opportunity they did. They want to help students come to ESU and discover a passion they can follow for the rest of their lives.


Bob and Mary found a simple and easy way to achieve this dream. When they set up their trust, they named Emporia State as a beneficiary.


What's your dream?


Learn how easy it is to make your dream a reality by naming Emporia State University in your will or trust. Contact Angela Fullen, Director of Planned Giving at the Emporia State University Foundation. She can answer your questions or help you get started. If you have already named Emporia State in your will or trust, let us know. We will make sure your gift does everything you want it to do.


"I would encourage anyone, if they are thinking about doing something like this, to contact the Foundation. For us, it has been a great experience." - Mary Butel


Getting Started is Easy

Not sure how to take the first step? We've got just the thing you need. Download your free Will and Estate Planning Guide. This guide is an easy way to get started on, or update, your estate plan. It will help you explore your options at your own pace. It's free, easy and yours to keep.


Download your copy today or contact Angela Fullen to request a printed copy.



Image of Angela Fullen

Angela Fullen
Director of Planned Giving
Telephone: 620-341-6465
[email protected]

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Friday April 26, 2024

Case of the Week

Lucky Lucy Lindstrom's Unitrust

Case:

Lucy Lindstrom finished college and headed west. She started as a financial analyst with a large company in Seattle. After just four years, she became a Registered Investment Advisor and began advising clients. Lucy also managed her own investments. With her keen insight into financial markets, Lucy soon began to move from traditional stocks and bonds into futures and commodities markets. Lucy realized that "shorting" financial stocks was going to be a bonanza. She was so successful in the down market that she now only manages her own large personal portfolio.

Somewhat late in life, Lucy discovered the wonderful world of philanthropy. She volunteered at her favorite charity and has learned that giving a helping hand to someone in need is even more gratifying than making another million in the futures market. After reading in a charity's weekly enewsletter about a charitable remainder trust, Lucy called Clara Johnson, a gift planner at her favorite charity.

Lucy suggested that she would transfer $5,000,000 of securities to a 5% net plus makeup unitrust (NIMCRUT). She would serve as trustee, make the investments and the charity would be the remainder recipient. Since Lucy normally earns 18% per year on her futures and commodities investments, she feels that it would be easy to make the unitrust grow to $10,000,000 or more.

Question:

Would this plan work? May Lucy serve as trustee? Is it permissible to invest unitrust assets in the futures market?

Solution:

With a potential $10,000,000 gift from the unitrust, gift planner Clara Johnson wants to make this plan work. However, there are several potential obstacles. First, it is permissible for Lucy to serve as trustee. The trust document can include provisions to appoint an independent special trustee to handle hard-to-value assets or for other necessary purposes. The charity or a corporate trustee could be successor trustee. Second, a trust administration company can be hired to do the accounting and unitrust tax returns. This service is usually available for a reasonable 20 to 40 basis points per year.

The key issue is the unitrust investments. Unitrusts are generally subject to Sec. 4944 rules on investments that may jeopardize the charitable remainder. A CRT is subject to the private foundation rules. Section 4944 imposes a tax on the investments that jeopardize the carrying out of any of the exempt purposes of a private foundation. Section 53.4944-1(a)(2)(i) states that an investment shall be considered jeopardizing if the foundation managers have failed to exercise ordinary business care and prudence under the facts and circumstances prevailing at the time the investment is made. While no category of investments shall be treated as a per se violation, certain types of investments (such as investments in futures, options, puts and calls) require close scrutiny to determine whether the foundation managers have met the requisite standard of care and prudence.

However, in PLR 200218038 (note that a PLR is not legal tax precedent), the Service permitted a private foundation to use four brokers to invest in futures and commodities. Lucy's plan is clearly somewhat aggressive, but if she is willing to use methods for her futures and commodities investments that reduce risk to the "ordinary business care and prudence" standard, her plan may be acceptable.

A better solution is to use a combined investment strategy. Lucy will be investing both the unitrust assets and her personal portfolio. Since she knows that some investments are riskier than others, she uses her personal assets for most of the risky investments, and her unitrust is invested in less risky securities that meet the prudent investor standards.

Lucy used that method very successfully. Her unitrust with "conservative" futures and commodities investments averaged a 14% return, while her personal portfolio produced a greater return with greater risk and volatility. Lucy considers herself "lucky" that she now has a large personal portfolio, a large unitrust and a warm feeling from helping others.

Published December 30, 2022

Previous Articles

Stock Unitrust Payouts to Donors

The Values-Based Charitable Remainder Trust

The Values-Based Lead Trust

Including Children in Charitable Plans

The Gas Guzzler's Deduction, Part 3

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