Issue # 3, March 2014                                                                                                       
Anyone, Anyone?
Bueller, Bueller? 
 

 

I was recently at the Transamerica Conference and the main speaker was Ben Stein.  Before he spoke, I was walking back to my hotel room and speaking to my 22-year-old daughter on her cell.  I was telling her that Ben Stein was about to speak.  She said, "Who?" I said, "You know, the political speechwriter for President Nixon and Ford, and longtime columnist for The Wall Street Journal."  There was silence at the other end.  I finally said, "anyone, anyone, Bueller, Bueller?"  At that exact moment, Ben Stein ran into me in the hallway of the hotel.  His response, "I am immortal."  Her response, "Oh, the guy from Ferris Bueller's Day Off and Win Ben Stein's Money."  Anyway you look at it, Ben has influenced many people.

 

Ben recently wrote a book called, How to Really Ruin your Financial Life and Portfolio.  It is a quick read and I agree with most of the suggestions, as they are things I preach to my clients.  There are 49 tips in total and here are some of the mishaps:

  • Trading frequently
  • Assume that current trends will continue forever
  • Sell when things are bleak, and stay the heck out of the market
  • Do not have a plan for your investing or for your financial life generally
  • Do it all yourself
  • Believe that those people you see on TV can actually tell the future
  • Believe in your heart that you can pick stocks

 

Do they sound familiar?  Ben will sell thousands of these books and a lot of people will read them and then put it on their bookshelves, and over time they will forget what they read.  Self-help financial books are great for affecting short-term behavior.  I believe for long-term benefits, one needs a coach, and that is where I come in. 

 

If you look at all great athletes, they all have coaches who help them stay focused over the long-term.  Athletes live and breathe their profession and use their coaches to win.  You don't hear of athletes excelling by just having read a self-help book.  My point here is that I am a financial coach.  I live and breathe my profession and I love helping people with their financial affairs.  I spend many hours trying to perfect my services so that you can achieve your goals and live your ideal life.

 

I may not have the notoriety and the mass appeal of Ben Stein, but I do know that I have a more personal and life long affect on my client's lives and I couldn't think of a better profession to be in.

 

 

 

Sincerely, 


William "Bill" Cummings, CPA
Cummings Financial Organization 
  

In This Edition
A Personal Message from Bill
Bill's New Book
Organizing Your Paperwork for Tax Season

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Bill Debuts New Book, 
"Bad Luck or 
Bad Business"

 

Click Here to buy on Amazon

 

In 13 Most Common Tax Mistakes Made by Business Owners, certified tax coach William G. Cummings, CPA, draws on his more than twenty-five years of experience helping businesses lower their obligation to the IRS.

 

His helpful, easy-to-understand advice stresses tax planning long before tax prep, and it covers pitfalls such as selecting the wrong business entity or retirement plan and missing the many allowed deductions available to business owners.  

f

Organizing Your Paperwork for Tax Season

If you haven't done it, now's the time.

  

How prepared are you to prepare your 1040? The earlier you compile and organize the relevant paperwork, the easier things may be for you (or the tax preparer working for you) this winter. Here are some tips to help you get ready:

   

As a first step, look at your 2012 return. Unless your job, living situation or financial situation has changed notably since you last filed your taxes, chances are you will need the same set of forms, schedules and receipts this year as you did last year. So open that manila folder (or online vault) and make or print a list of the items that accompanied your 2012 return. You should receive the TY 2013 versions of everything you need by early February at the latest.

 

How much documentation is needed? If you don't freelance or own a business, your list may be short: W-2(s), 1099-INT(s), perhaps 1099-DIVs or 1099-Bs, a Form 1098 if you pay a mortgage, and maybe not much more. Independent contractors need their 1099-MISCs, and the self-employed need to compile every bit of documentation related to business expenses they can find: store and restaurant receipts, mileage records, utility bills, and so on.1

 

In totaling receipts, don't forget charitable donations. The IRS wants all of them to be documented. A taxpayer who donates $250 or more to a qualified charity needs a written acknowledgment of such a donation. If your own documentation is sufficiently detailed, you may deduct $0.14 for each mile driven on behalf of a volunteer effort for a qualified charity.1

 

Or medical expenses & out-of-pocket expenses. Collect receipts for any expense for which your employer doesn't reimburse you, and any medical bills that came your way last year.

 

If you're turning to a tax preparer, stand out by being considerate. If you present clean, neat and well-organized documentation to a preparer, that diligence and orderliness will matter. You might get better and speedier service as a result: you are telegraphing that you are a step removed from the clients with missing or inadequate paperwork.

 

Make sure you give your preparer your federal tax I.D. number (TIN), and remember that joint filers must supply TINs for each spouse. If you claim anyone as a dependent, you will need to supply your preparer with that person's federal tax I.D. number. Any dependent you claim has to have a TIN, and that goes for newborns, infants and children as well. So if your kids don't have Social Security numbers yet, apply for them now using Form SS-5 (available online or at your Social Security office). If you claim the Child & Dependent Care Tax Credit, you will need to show the TIN for the person or business that takes care of your kids while you work.1,3

 

While we're on the subject of taxes, some other questions are worth examining...

 

How long should you keep tax returns? The IRS statute of limitations for refunds is 3 years, but if you underreport taxable income, fail to file a return or file a claim for a loss from worthless securities or bad debt deduction, it wants you to keep them longer. You may have heard that keeping your returns for 7 years is wise; some CPAs and tax advisors will tell you to keep them for life. If the tax records are linked to assets, you will want to retain them for when you figure out the depreciation, amortization, or depletion deduction and the gain or loss. Insurers and creditors may want you to keep federal tax returns indefinitely.2

 

Can you use electronic files as records in audits? Yes. In fact, early in the audit process, the IRS may request accounting software backup files via Form 4564 (the Information Document Request). Form 4564 asks the taxpayer/preparer to supply the file to the IRS on a flash drive, CD or DVD, plus the necessary administrator username and password. Nothing is emailed. The IRS has the ability to read most tax prep software files. For more, search online for "Electronic Accounting Software Records FAQs." The IRS page should be the top result.4

 

How do you calculate cost basis for an investment? A whole article could be written about this, and there are many potential variables in the calculation. At the most basic level with regards to stock, the cost basis is original purchase price + any commission on the purchase.

 

So in simple terms, if you buy 200 shares of the Little Emerging Company @ $20 a share with a $100 commission, your cost basis = $4,100, or $20.50 per share. If you sell all 200 shares for $4,000 and incur another $100 commission linked to the sale, you lose $200 - the $3,900 you wind up with falls $200 short of your $4,100 cost basis.5

 

Numerous factors affect cost basis: stock splits, dividend reinvestment, how shares of a security are bought or gifted. Cost basis may also be "stepped up" when an asset is inherited. Since 2011, brokerages have been required to keep track of cost basis for stocks and mutual fund shares, and to report cost basis to investors (and the IRS) when such securities are sold.5

 

P.S.: this tax season is off to a late start. Business filers were able to send in federal tax returns starting January 13, but the start date for processing 1040 and 1041 forms was pushed back to January 31. Per federal law, the April 15 deadline for federal tax returns remains in place, as does the 6-month extension available for those who file IRS Form 4868.6,7

 

To learn more, click here.
William Cummings is an Investment Advisor Representative with securities and investment advisory services offered through Transamerica Financial Advisors, Inc. (TFA) Member FINRA, SIPC, and Registered Investment Advisor. Cummings Financial Organization, Inc. and TFA are not affiliated. Neither TFA nor its representatives provide legal, tax nor accounting advice. Persons who provide such advice do so in a capacity other than as a registered representative of TFA. 

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