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Corporate Accountants Pty Ltd | Caboolture 4510 newsletter

Is Housing At Turning Point?

 

IS HOUSING HEADING TO A TURNING POINT?

The following is a long read: but a very worthwhile one.

Although I am not necessarily in agreement with everything said, I am prodded by the article to recall the 1987 stock market crash and its long, drawn out fight to recovery.

I was an executive in the stockbroking industry when it all hit the fan and the lead up was eerily similar to what’s going on now. Basically the message is no different than it was in 1987 and the following few years: don’t believe those who say there are signs of recovery every second day – move out; keep only those shares which are producing high after-tax yields in fundamentally good sectors and look elsewhere with the rest of your investment dollars.

Cheers
Bob Lamont
Director Principal

Corporate Accountants

Is housing heading to a turning point?

I heard the other day that the CIA has inducted exposure to Australian equities as an unofficial form of torture. Since January 2009 I have warned of the risk of painful "dead-cat-bounces" in the sharemarket. In May 2010, I argued that there was every chance the 2007-08 crash would resemble its 1987 predecessor, and be followed by a protracted period of poor and volatile returns:

"2007 is looking eerily similar to 1987, at least judging by the equities market performance thus far...The bad news for equities investors is that it took until almost 1997 for the market to consistently recover its post-crash peak. Here's to hoping it does not take 10 years for the ASX to breach 6,800pts. (Note the 'dead-cat-bounce' in 1994.)"

In 2011 the Aussie sharemarket is still 37 per cent below its 2007 apogee with countless false dawns heralded by stock spruikers as the beginning of a new year of double digit returns. It is an instructive exercise to troll back through either Business Spectator or the Australian Financial Review's "annual predictions" of where the sharemarket will be in 12 months hence. It does not look pretty: according to the All Ordinaries Price Index, shares have delivered no net capital returns since 2005 (see chart).

Global shares have not been much better, and super funds, with their unnecessarily high weights to all forms of equities, have not protected investors. In fact, according to Super Ratings, the average "balanced" or "conservative balanced" super fund has underperformed inflation over the last five years--that is, they have delivered negative "real" returns. The numbers look even worse if you allocated to any of the "growth" options offered by your super fund. Before inflation, the average five year return has been 0.5 per cent to 1.3 per cent per annum (after inflation, returns are substantially negative).

Australian cash and fixed-income have been safe harbours during this turbulent time. Yet as the European sovereign debt crisis continues to rock the world, the risk is that the RBA temporarily "looks past" brewing inflation pressures, as many are calling on them to do, and cuts interest rates.

In this respect, US investors have the worst of all possible outcomes: high inflation; low growth; low interest rates; and an extraordinarily volatile equities market. Many smart observers are recommending investors seek out "inflation hedges" in our increasingly stagflationary world, such as gold, commodities and even bricks and mortar. After years of selling their gold reserves, central banks are back buying again. And only yesterday Bloomberg published an article with the headline "London Home Prices Surge as Investors Turn to Property Amid Market Turmoil."

The inversion of the yield curve that I have been talking about regularly here has started reducing the term deposit rates offered by Australian banks. The concomitant benefit is that the price of fixed-rate home loans has also declined. If the RBA loses its nerve and cuts its official cash rate, I think we will see more capital shifted back into housing given its demonstrated value as a (relatively) safe store of wealth. This is one of the internal inconsistencies the extreme bears face: a recession means home loan rates are going to plunge, which will only help house prices in the unique Australian market where almost all debt is variable-rate.

While the Aussie sharemarket is still nearly 40 per cent below its 2007 peaks, Australian house prices are about 10.3 per cent above their pre-GFC highs. Notwithstanding this, we have had effectively no house price growth in nearly one-and-a-half years while household disposable incomes have, according to the ABS, raced ahead at an 7-8 per cent per annum rate.

As other wise-heads have observed as we bounce from one crisis to the next, bad news sells and many cannot help themselves when it comes to peddling the end of the world. The online editors at the Sydney Morning Herald are a case in point, and especially fond of promoting doom-and-gloom.

For example, last month RP Data-Rismark reported that house prices in Australia's largest city, Sydney, had risen despite national values falling. The SMH nevertheless focussed on the national findings and subordinated the Sydney results, running with the headline "Prices fall faster in July" when, in fact, Sydney prices had actually appreciated slightly.

If I search out "housing" or "house prices" on the SMH's website, recent headlines include, "Sydney housing in dire trouble", "Housing out of reach for many", "Housing shortage a myth, bears claim", "Domino effect shows as gloom spreads to housing", "House prices to stagnate as debt binges end", and "House prices to slide further in 2012".

Now contextualise these claims against the hard fact that Australian capital city dwelling prices are merely 2.9 per cent lower than their level of 12 months ago. That is substantially less than some of the more savage daily swings in the sharemarket. Including rents, total gross returns realised by property investors have been positive!

A more balanced analysis is that while the housing market is certainly soft, it is not collapsing, and, if truth really be known, we are seeing some partial, leading indicators that imply the market may be finding a base.

The near-term outlook is, as I have been at pains to emphasise for the last 12-18 months now, heavily dependent on the course of interest rates, and, it would more recently appear, community perceptions of such.

The conviction households have held that they would be smashed with at least 2-3 rate hikes this year has exacerbated the subdued conditions. But the hikes have not materialised, and economists, the financial markets, and journalists are all talking about the prospect of cuts, or at least rates remaining on hold for an extended period.

Combined with a falling currency (currently down nearly 10 per cent from its recent highs at just 1.018 US cents), which will help exporters and ex-pat demand for local homes, it is plausible that Australia's housing market is rapidly approaching a turning point.

The final judge of this matter will, of course, be the house price data. But today it is instructive to review some of the aforementioned leading indicators. I would highlight three in particular.

The first chart below shows the monthly number of AFG housing finance applications, which in August hit its highest level in 19 months. (AFG is Australia's largest mortgage broker and accounts for about 10 per cent of the market.) The three month moving average is also trending up solidly following the flood-induced trough in January.

The second chart of interest illustrates the share of first time buyers as a proportion of all borrowers. According to AFG, this hit  a low of 9.5 per cent in June 2010 and has gradually increased since to 13.8 per cent in August 2011 (the enormous protrusion in the middle of the chart depicts the stimulatory effects of the government's first time buyer boost). That is to say, there is some early evidence that first time buyers are returning to the market given the improvement in housing affordability (ie, lower house prices in concert with robust disposable income growth).

The final chart shows weekly auction clearance rates for Sydney, Melbourne and a weighted-average of all capital cities (noting that the auction sales mechanism is more common in the two biggest conurbations). What we can draw from this is that since the second quarter of 2011 clearance-rates have stabilised at slightly above 50 per cent in Sydney and Melbourne, and slightly below this level across the combined capital cities. That is, there is no sign of a continued deterioration.

The housing market probably needs a little more time to get accustomed to the striking change in interest rate expectations (ie, from several hikes to no hikes, or even cuts, if you believe AMP, Deutsche Bank, Goldman Sachs, Westpac or Macquarie). For what it is worth, I have not altered my own views, and still expect the next move to be up. But set against the cacophony of voices calling for easier monetary policy, my own opinions are likely irrelevant for overall consumer behaviour (having said that, consumers have had similarly hawkish perspectives to this point).

The next major marker will be the August house price index data. This will be a crucial guide to whether Australia's housing market is experiencing an accelerating decline, as folks like the perennial doomsayer Steve Keen would have us believe, or treading water, as I think is much more likely.

Published: Tuesday, September 20, 2011

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Referral Rewards Program

 

REFERRAL REWARDS PROGRAM

At Corporate Accountants we appreciate the referrals regularly received from our very satisfied clients and colleagues. We wish to continue growing our business by word of mouth, and we also want to acknowledge those referrals received with our Referral Rewards Program.

As a way of thanking those people that take the time to refer new business clients to us we are very excited to announce the launch of the Corporate Accountants Client Referral Rewards Program.

How does it work?

When a person provides Corporate Accountants with a referral to a new business client, that person qualifies to earn “Corporate Accountants Rewards Dollars”.

The Rewards Dollars that can be earned are based on a dollar by dollar value. (For example, for every dollar the new clients spends on our services, the referring client will receive up to $0.50 out of every dollar spent.)

Number of Referred Clients
Credit earned for every dollar spent
1 to 3 New Clients $0.50
3 to 6 New Clients $0.40
6 to 10 New Clients $0.30
10 to 20 New Clients $0.20
20 + New Clients $0.10

The Rewards Dollars can be used on any services that Corporate Accountants offer.

  • Technology and Innovation
  • Pro-Active Tax Planning
  • Business Development Strategies
  • Website Design
  • Internet Marketing Strategies
  • Preparation of financial statements
  • Superannuation fund audits
  • BSA reports and audits
  • Preparation and lodgement of income tax returns
  • Advice on structuring businesses appropriately
  • Establishment of trusts, unit trusts, hybrid trusts, joint ventures, partnerships, limited partnerships, private & public companies, super funds, deeds of agreement, assignment, etc, management agreements, mortgages, Division 7A loan agreements and repayment schedules
  • Advice on debt financing.
  • Accounting and bookkeeping advice
  • Tax advice, with an emphasis on tax minimisation
  • Exit strategies – the best way to sell/retire
  • Succession planning
  • Due diligence – advice to potential business purchasers
  • Business Valuations
  • General advice on planning in business
  • Creating budgets

Clients who have generated Rewards Dollars from providing a referral will receive a voucher in the mail along with having it keep on recorded with Corporate Accountants to insure that the Rewards Dollars are used and not forgotten.

Cheers
Bob Lamont
Director Principal

Corporate Accountants

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End Of Year Tax Tips

 

STEPS FOR BUSINESS GROWTH

END OF TAX TIPS

Nothing much changes from year to year unless the Treasurer sweetens his May Budget for small business. This year, nothing much at all!

WARNING

A common misconception is that the Budget announced that you can get an immediate $5000 deduction for a new business motor vehicle and you’ll be able to immediately write off equipment costing up to $5000.

WRONG! WRONG! WRONG! WRONG!

Please be warned that these concessions will only apply to purchases made AFTER July 1, 2012.

Now for the tips for business

If your business is selling product, have an end of financial year sale. The trading stock remaining on your shelf is counted towards your assessable profit.

If you charge fees for your services, don’t send out invoices in June. This strategy applies equally whether you use accruals or cash accounting methods.

If you retail or wholesale product and usually send credit customers a monthly statement, don’t send a statement in June. This strategy applies equally whether you use accruals or cash accounting methods.

If you use the cash accounting method, draw cheques to your suppliers before June 30. These cheques will be reconciled to your bank statement as having been paid in June despite not being sent until July. (This is one advantage using cheques rather than or as well as using Bpay offers small business).

If you are a retailer or wholesaler order trading stock in June for delivery in July. If you use the cash method pay before June 30 (or draw your cheque); if you use the accruals accounting method, the invoices you receive will be counted as expenses this year, not next. But remember not to take delivery until July otherwise the stock will form part of the stock take.

Pre-pay leases, rent, interest, insurance and other regular expenses 13 months ahead. In other words make payment for June 2011 and the next 12 months in one hit. If you can’t pay 13 months, pay 2, 3, 4, 5 or whatever your cash flow allows.

Superannuation. If you’re under 49, the maximum allowable contribution is $25,000. If you’re 50 or over, the maximum is $50,000. Be bloody careful – these limits apply to ALL super contributions made on your behalf and there are harsh penalties if too much is contributed!

Another warning…..the Budget announced a bit of relief for people who inadvertently contribute too much. This concession applies from 1 July 2011, not this financial year!!

In years like this when business is facing tough economic conditions, it’s common for people to say there is no need for end of year tax planning because profits are down.

This is not very clever thinking. One of the best pieces of advice I can give you when it comes to tax planning is this: Why pay today what you can defer until tomorrow?

Tax for 2012 financial year is not due for payment for a lot of you until May 2013. If you can lock in low taxes for 2010-11 due in May 2012 and have a good year in 2011-12 then keeping those tax liabilities low will enhance your cash flow position for the next 2 years from about now! If by good tax-planning now, you can lock in a loss to be carried forward, then all the better for those coming 2 years!

General tips for taxpayers

Really there’s not much individual taxpayers can do unless they are:-

  • Subcontractors
  • Investors
Subcontractors

Believe it or not, you subbies are in business. What I said above for end of year tax planning for business goes equally for you!

Share Investors

If you have a share portfolio, have a look for some crook performers, then sell them off in June. This will lock in a capital loss.

If you sold shares or any other assets at a capital gain during the year, the loss will help reduce your CGT. If not, you will be able to carry the capital loss forward to use to reduce taxable capital gain in future years.

To take this line of thinking further, if you are really keen to own the shares why not consider selling them at the end of June and buying them back in July. You will have locked in the useable capital loss! And using online brokers is as cheap as!

If you are the trustee of a self-managed super fund, consider selling underperforming shares you own personally into the superfund. You will lock in a capital loss for yourself and will have them held in a concessionally taxed environment if they come good in the future.

Property Investors

Bring forward your deductible expenses where possible – repairs, insurance, commissions, rates, interest can be paid 13 months in advance.

Make sure if your house is less than 40 years old to get a Quantity Surveyor to report on what it cost to build your place. Two percent of that cost can be written off (depreciated) every year – and that can be substantial! (You will need a Quantity Surveyor unless you can show receipts to show exactly what your property cost.)

WARNING…..Be careful not to confuse “repairs & maintenance” with “improvements”. The former is an expense; the latter is a capital item and must be depreciated.


Cheers
Bob Lamont
Director Principal

Corporate Accountants

 

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Steps For Business Growth

 

STEPS FOR BUSINESS GROWTH

This article from Peter Switzer's panel of experts is short & sweet.....but it might just get you thinking about how to approach any business downturn you might be having.

Corporate Accountants has successfully moved to Suite 9 Kingsgate Centre in Caboolture. We are on the carpark level overlooking the lake.

See you there soon.

Bob Lamont.



STEPS FOR BUSINESS GROWTH

by Lesley Ann Grimoldby


My partner and I are trying to grow our business but growth is painfully slow. We seem to take as many steps back as we do forward. We are both very clear on what we want, but it seems elusive. How do we get from here to there?

Both having a clear picture of where you want the business to go and what it will look like when it is there is the primary pre-requisite.

The second is having a plan or a strategy – in fact a strategy for each key area – marketing, sales, operations, financial, staffing, and so on - all of which operate within the context of your bigger picture. We call this strategic work. It is the work you do on the business as opposed to the work you do in the business. Not doing this work, not dedicating at least one hour a day to it, is negligent and delinquent. Saying you don’t have time to do it is like saying you don’t have time to stop and fill your car with petrol. Like your car, the business will stay in one spot with a lot of people in it who only look like they are going somewhere.

The third step is action. Determine what has to be done and do it.

Start planning the actions you need to take and spend time each day fuelling your business to get where you want it to go. It often helps to create a set of timelines to show when you will tackle and complete each action within the strategy areas.


Published: Monday, May 30, 2011
 

Cheers,
Corporate Accountants

 

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2011 Tax Analysis


 

 2011 TAX ANALYSIS

Well it’s that time of year again. The end of the financial year is just around the corner and its crunch time for any tax planning you should be considering.

For a fixed fee of $250 including GST, we can assess your current situation, estimate your likely tax for the year and provide solutions to minimize your tax payable.

All we need is an up to date, profit & loss. If we are doing your work on a monthly basis, we’ll already have this.

If you would like us to go ahead, please print and sign the attached authority document and return it to us
(and an up to date profit & loss if we don’t have it).

I can’t stress the importance of tax planning enough. Too often I see clients that pay more tax then they should for lack of a little planning.

Cheers,
Corporate Accountants

 

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Happy News – It's A Girl


 

HAPPY NEWS – IT’S A GIRL

The team at Corporate Accountants wish to congratulate our Stephen Healy and his lovely wife Kimberley on the safe arrival today of their first child.

Emma Healy was born today Monday 28th March

Mother & daughter are doing well – We’re not sure about father!


Cheers,
Corporate Accountants

 

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March 2011 Newsletter


 

MARCH 2011 NEWSLETTER

NEW ERA

Yes, we’re on the threshold of a new era. We’ve changed our name to reflect our focus on finding solutions for business; and Stephen is going to be getting used to sleep deprivation. Wife Kimberly gave birth to a beautiful, healthy baby girl, Emma Maree Healy, on 28th March.

NEW HOME FOR A NEW NAME

We expect to be in our new home in early May. We’ll be in the Kingsgate Professional Centre in the middle of Caboolture. Suite 9 is the basement suite opening onto the car park on Elliott Street, overlooking the Lakes. Kingsgate is directly opposite the big Moreton Bay fig and NAB, on the corner of King Street and Morayfield Road.

So we’ll be centrally located and easy to find. All four of the major banks, a Coles/Kmart shopping centre, the Caboolture Post Office, the Courthouse, Queensland Government Housing, the Moreton Council and the Office of Fair Trading are within spitting distance as are lots of professional practices in law, medicine, optometry, accounting and financial planning.

NEW WEBSITE FOR A NEW NAME

Yes, and we’ve decided to create a new, fresh looking website to complement our new name and new home too. It should be up and running soon. The old website served us very well over the years but it was sometimes criticized for being too big and wordy. This time, more images, fewer words but a strong message:

Most accountants are happy to report your position. Our focus is to improve your position.


A REMINDER OF THE FOCUS OF OUR SERVICES

I’ve said it before that probably the greatest frustration I have in practice is that people think of accountants as people who “do” their tax. Absolutely, I have every right to be called an expert in tax planning and have the runs on the board to prove it.

But I have more to offer business – as do Stephen Healy and Barry Brown, the other qualified people here. Corporate Accountants are Business Developers. This description takes account of our abilities in business analysis, reporting and giving spot-on advice on critical issues such as cash flow, costing, productivity, creating and meeting Key Performance Indicators (KPI’s), and understanding and using financial and management ratios.

It’s not “academic” balderdash. No major, successful business in the world operates without continual reporting of these kinds of things by managerial staff! Woolworths can tell you to a fraction of a cent the contribution that a can of baked beans makes to its cash flow and profitability, believe me.

Is it too confronting for me to say that if you run a cruddy business, you’ll never need to test our ability at minimizing the tax you pay?

Available are a number of copyright reports we can provide. All you have to do is ask.

  • Monthly/Quarterly Performance Analysis
  • Productivity Report
  • Costing Report
  • Business Valuation
  • Tax Analysis (Projections)
  • Cash Flow Report
  • Business Health Report

TALKING ABOUT SUCCESS!

When we think of multi-national success we think Coca Cola. True?

And why not? There are 1.7 billion servings every day, 20 million customers every week and 300 global bottling partners like Australia’s Amatil.

It’s no accident. Coca Cola has a very focused management – its projections on volume growth (3-4% pa), revenue growth (5-6% pa), operating profit growth (6-8% pa) and Earnings Per Share (EPS) growth (8-9% pa) go out as far as 2020 – Volume Sales 145 billion; Consumer Spend ($1,100 billion). And they’ll meet these projections, you could bet London to a brick!

The company believes in diversification. They offer 14 billion dollar brands, many of which we in Australia have never heard of. One third of revenues come from emerging markets – Latin America, China, India, Turkey, the Philippines, Russia, and Africa at large and their product portfolio captures the full non-alcoholic ready-to-drink market all over – sparkling soft drink, water, energy, tea, coffee and variants.

Interestingly, two of the smallest markets for Coca Cola are India and China (the biggest per head of population is Mexico!). Yet 4 of the top-selling brands in India belong to the Coca Cola company, the projected teenage population in India in 2020 is 172 million, China 121 million and the US just 31 million. The most popular soft drink in China is a mixture of orange pulp and coconut milk but Coca Cola which ranks 8th in this emerging market behind Yum Brands (KFC, Pizza Hut, Taco Bell), Colgate, Unilever and others including L’Oreal and Nestle is confident that immense growth is imminent with their own version of this strange brew and the acclimatisation of the youthful Chinese palate to Western soft drinks.

Diversification is one lesson for us. Leverage is the other: market power through brand awareness. Coca Cola’s success is all about focused management, as I said – leaving nothing to chance.

The energetic pursuit of sustained market share and profitability: this is what we should all strive for in business!

SHARES

The Australian share market has underperformed. At time of writing it had rallied off something of a “crash” in the face of floods, Yasi and the Japanese tsunami. The All Ords was creeping back towards the 5,000 mark.

To measure the behaviour of our market against other world markets you should first understand GDP. Gross Domestic Product is the measure of the movement of money within an economy, whether it be retail sales, wages, pensions, exports or imports, production dollars, distribution dollars, exchange dollars.

If you compare the behaviour of the Australian share market over the past ten years, you will see that it outdid GDP growth marginally – about 1%. In the US, UK and Germany GDP grew at higher levels than the share market but in Brazil, Russia and India, it blasted GDP out of the water. In China although the share market saw positive growth unlike the US and UK, the GDP belittled it.

The past three years (since the Global Financial Crisis) have been a disaster for shares world wide. GDP growth in Brazil, India, China and to a lesser extent Australia was positive. In the US, GDP growth was negligible, in the UK and to a lesser extent Germany down, in Russia, very slim. And the share markets in Russia, China, US, UK, Germany and Australia tanked – Australia down nearly 10% (GDP up around 3%) and China down nearly 20% (GDP up around 10%).

The question on everybody’s lips is why? China takes all the commodities we can dig out of the ground, its economy is continuing to grow at 9-10% and yet, the Aussie market had dropped 10% in the 3 years to December 31st. Strange, isn’t it? Sure the Reserve Bank has all but killed credit-funded retail spending in Australia (except for Queensland home goods after the floods) and there are signs of deflation in some pricing in Australia like white goods, clothes and milk (the first two because of the strength of the Aussie dollar, also down to our relatively high interest rates). This has put some retail stocks like Myer and Harvey Norman under pressure but it seems to me that once investors take stock of the solid growth prospects in an economy fired up by the commodities boom, they’ll return to the market. The price of oil, the looming mining tax and the mooted carbon tax won’t really impact too badly on the profits to be made by miners at the record world prices being paid for iron ore, coal and gas.

The share market looks to have life left in it, even against attractive short and medium term fixed interest rates of around 3-3.5% above projected inflation and increasing yields on residential rental property. An All Ords of 5,500 by Xmas?

INTEREST RATES

Where are interest rates headed? Many economists are saying that they’ll stay where they are until much later in the year because of the huge drop Australia-wide in consumer spending and in the stalling of the residential building industry. I can’t see much wrong with those sentiments but there is an elephant in the room!

Imported inflation is that elephant. Hamish Douglass, famous head of Magellan Asset Management and member of the Foreign Review Board among other things is warning that growing inflation in emerging exporting economies will be imported into Australia increasing our inflation rate. Interesting concept and it’s already happening in America.

If he’s right then he reckons the Aussie dollar will fall to around the 70-80 cents US mark, itself feeding inflation. (The strength of the Aussie is instrumental in keeping inflation in the 2-3% band so critical in the Reserve Bank’s thinking)

So the question becomes in Douglass’s scenario, how will the Reserve Bank react? It can’t regulate imported inflation so will it change the 2-3% band it’s enforced by cranking up interest rates for two and a half decades to 3-4% or 4-5%?

And what of the chances of all this fanning a wages breakout to add to the one just around the corner in the mining industry where they are still suffering grievous skills shortages.

EXIT FEES

The Gillard Government has delivered a free kick to the Big Banks with the banning of exit fees on home loans after July 1st. Small lenders which invariably offer lower interest rates than the Biggies use exit fees to discourage borrowers from jumping ship so they act as a sort of back-ended insurance for them. Now they’ll have to front-end their expenses in managing loans and that will mean the end of their cheaper rates.

To illustrate my point, see if you can get the 6.88% variable rate (no introductory one year discount stuff) that we can get for you from one of the Biggies!

My view is that the Government should walk all over the Loan Mortgage Insurance industry. That’s the real cost in borrowers swapping lenders. The cover is not transferable and it can be as much as $10,000!

AND TALKING ABOUT INSURANCE

I recently came across some interesting statistics I’ll share with you.

Each year 48,000 Australians will have a stroke and 16,000 of them will die within 12 months.

In 2005-2006, I was one of the 48,000. I was a spring chicken of 57 and had a number of small and a couple of big strokes. As I was wheeled into surgery to have a chunk of my left-side carotid artery removed, I gained comfort in knowing my wife would be okay – I carried about $1 million in insurance. And then I became one of the 16,000 who died within 12 months – I croaked while on the table. Lucky it was there that I decided to exit - they pulled me back, thankfully.

There are two lessons to be learned from my experience. First, lead a healthy lifestyle: I now have at least one day off a week, eat properly, drink less grog and get regular exercise. Second, once you’ve had a stroke, you can forget trying to get insurance to protect your family!

There are definitely some traps for the unwary in life insurance. One is that insurance cover is with some policies stopped at a relatively early age. At nearly 64, I’m facing the prospect of having just the one life insurance policy left next year when I have made it to pension age. That’s after paying for cover – and not collecting! – for years on several policies with several life companies.

Another consideration is the trap in paying your premiums through your self-managed super fund. It may be that any premiums you pay as protection against disability will not be tax deductible.

AFSL holder HNW Planning Pty Ltd through which CPBMAC Financial Solutions Pty Ltd and Bob Lamont are licensed can arrange appropriate cover through any of 12 life insurance companies. Price, quality and appropriateness assured!

SELF-MANAGED SUPERANNUATION

Advertisements for industry super funds have had an unintended effect. They’ve highlighted to the general public that retail superannuation funds can be a rip-off – their fees and charges can be horrendous!

But those among the public who have one iota of grey matter will have deduced that somebody is paying for their massive staffs, taj mahals and advertising campaigns - and it isn’t the tooth fairy. So there are now over 600 thousand self-managed superannuation funds in Australia.

Research has shown that the main reason for this is that people want to take control of their own destiny. But there is also the feeling that retail funds are a rip-off and resentment that financial institutions are paid a fair whack in fees whether the fund is performing well or goings backwards.

I have very strong ideas on how your superannuation fund should be invested. The two critical considerations are your age and the market (or investment) cycle.

All you have to do is ask for an appointment to consider your options.

There is no doubt whatsoever that superannuation is the best way to invest in this country tax-effectively. Pro-active investment management, a very generous taxman and keeping abreast of the fundamentals in market cycles should mean your fund always makes inflation plus some.

Too many people including professional fund managers set their investments in stone and never make adjustments sensitive to changing economic circumstances. Too often professional fund managers see their fund assets go backwards and seem more adept at making excuses for their ineptitude than actually managing their funds well. This is especially true in so-called “balanced” funds!

TRUSTS RULE!

I noted during the past couple of months that some small legal firms are saying that since a recent court case, Bamford, discretionary trusts are no longer effective business entities and that people should use companies.

Rubbish. All that Bamford established was that there is a difference between the income of a trust defined by trust law and income defined by tax law. The solution is simple: make sure your trust deed defines income as assessable income under Tax Law and you won’t have any problems. (Most modern trust deeds I have seen do so anyway.)

Trusts continue to provide asset protection to business owners by placing a wall between their personal assets and unsecured business creditors. And they can prove very effective in making satisfactory tax arrangements.

UNPAID PRESENT ENTITLEMENTS

Talking about trusts, tax law has changed in an attempt to extract tax from individual beneficiaries if a trust distributes profits to a company and doesn’t actually pay the money across. These UPE’s or Unpaid Present Entitlements from 16 December 2009 will be treated as unfranked dividends paid to individual beneficiaries and taxable at personal rates not company rates.

Sounds bad, but the strategies we’ve used for years to get around Division 7A deemed dividends on shareholder loans from companies continue to apply.

PRO-ACTIVE DEFENDERS OF CLIENTS

Yes that is something Corporate Accountants will remain! Even though we’ve changed our name, we haven’t changed our willingness to take up the fight for clients with the ATO and other government institutions.

In the past year, we’ve gone to bat for clients from all over Australia wrongly assessed for tax on income earned in Iraq as security advisers. The two officials involved in the patently wrong assessments of up to $120 thousand have since “left” the ATO! And we’ve re-done several years’ financials and tax returns prepared by another firm. The ATO gave the company a substantial tax bill and penalties and was in the throes of winding it up and seeking payment by the director of outstanding PAYG withholding tax. Our reworked accounts had the ATO actually owing the director over $100,000. Also in another instance, we objected successfully to an assessment dating back to 2002 for a company saving it some $40,000 in assessed tax, interest and penalties.


CPBMAC Financial Solutions Pty Ltd is a Company Authorized Representative of AFSL holder HNW Planning. Pty Ltd and is an associate of Corporate Accountants Pty Ltd. Corporate Accountants Pty Ltd holds an Australian Credit Licence (Finance Broking) and Tax Agent Licence.


Author Bob Lamont holds qualifications in economics & commerce among others, has Diploma in Financial Services (Financial Planning) and is certified by the ASX to advise in equities.

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