April 6, 2020
www.KiperWA.com
Girl Scout Troop 848 is making cards of encouragement. If you have someone who needs a lift in spirits let us know.
Congress Approves Economic Relief Plan for Individuals and Businesses.

Provided by: Garrett Watson, Taylor LaJoie, Huaquan LI, Daniel Burn

On Friday afternoon, the  Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security (CARES) Act  passed the House of Representatives by a voice vote. The President then signed the bill into law. The bill builds upon earlier versions of the CARES Act and is intended to be a third round of federal government support in the wake of the coronavirus public health crisis and associated economic fallout, succeeding the  $8.3 billion  in public health support passed two weeks ago and the  Families First Coronavirus Response Act . It is the product of negotiations between Democrats and Republicans for a bipartisan response to the crisis.
The CARES Act builds on the two former pieces of legislation by providing more robust support to both individuals and businesses, including changes to tax policy.

Key Updates

  • Unemployment insurance provisions now include an additional $600 per week payment to each recipient for up to four months, and extend UI benefits to self-employed workers, independent contractors, and those with limited work history. The federal government will provide temporary full funding of the first week of regular unemployment for states with no waiting period and extend UI benefits for an additional 13 weeks through December 31, 2020 after state UI benefits end.

  • The proposed recovery rebates will use 2019 tax returns (2018 if the taxpayer has not filed in 2019) to determine the advanced rebate amount and reconcile the rebate based on 2020 income. This means that taxpayers who receive a smaller rebate than they are eligible for based on 2020 income will receive the difference after filing a 2020 tax return, but overpayments of rebates due to a higher income in 2020 will not be clawed back.

  • Employers are eligible for a 50 percent refundable payroll tax credit on wages paid up to $10,000 during the crisis. The credit would be available to employers whose businesses were disrupted due to virus shutdowns and those that had a decrease in gross receipts of 50 percent or more when compared to the same quarter last year. The credit can be claimed for employees who are retained but not currently working due to the crisis for firms with more than 100 employees, and for all employee wages for firms with 100 or fewer employees.

  • Certain employer payments of student loans on behalf of employees are excluded from taxable income. Employers may contribute up to $5,250 annually toward student loans, and the payments would be excluded from an employee’s income.
The Faustian Bargain
By Scott Minered, Global CIO
March 27,2020

“In Goethe’s 1831 drama Faust, the devil persuades a bankrupt emperor to print and spend vast quantities of paper money as a short-term fix for his country’s fiscal problems. As a consequence, the empire ultimately unravels and descends into chaos. Today, governments that have relied upon quantitative easing (QE) instead of undertaking necessary structural reforms have arguably entered into the grandest Faustian bargain in financial history."*

With the global economy slipping into recession and many economists estimating second-quarter gross domestic product (GDP) growth in the United States will fall by 15 percent or more, the world is being confronted with the worst downturn since the 1930s.

In the post-Keynesian era, the standard policy solution to a business cycle downturn has been for governments to temporarily offset any decline in demand with increased fiscal stimulus and easy money. This prescription has provided for smaller and less frequent slowdowns. The ultimate consequence is that businesses and households have been carrying larger debt loads and smaller cash reserves, confident that policymakers will restrain the severity of the consequences created by any shock to the economy.

This process of accumulating larger debt balances after each successive downturn is often referred to as the great debt super cycle. Over the past decades, the successful use of Keynesian stabilization policies has increasingly raised the confidence of investors and creditors alike that government can successfully truncate the downside of any recession.

The massive debt accumulation by U.S. households following accommodative monetary policy and easy credit led to the housing bubble. The collapse of this bubble destabilized the global financial system and could only be halted with unorthodox monetary policy and fiscal programs that led to partial or total nationalization of many financial institutions and manufacturers.
Stay Home, Stay Healthy.

This message has been delivered loud and clear. Many companies have been quick to adopt to the hands off environment that we are currently in. I have used the following services and found them to be a quick safe way to get food in my house:

Kroger Free Pickup Delivery $9.95 No minimums
Meijer Pickup 4.95 Delivery $9.95 No minimums
Aldi Free Pickup Deliveries over 35.00 free (first 3)
Walmart Free Pickup Deliveries 9.95 Minimum 35.00 order

If you are new to any of the online grocery services, give me a call. I will gladly walk you through the process.

I have also found that CVS offers 1-2 day deliveries.

If you have any helpful hints or places to recommend to others, please let me know. We would be happy to share them.
Find Your Financial Tranquility
Kiper Wealth Advisors
14300 Willow Grove Circle
Louisville, KY 40245
(502)380-9191
KIPER WEALTH ADVISORS ESTABLISHED 2003.

Kiper Wealth Advisors is a full service Financial Advisory firm, located in Louisville, KY.

 For over a decade we have been helping families and small businesses organize, simplify and achieve their financial goals.  

Kiper Wealth Advisors is proud to be locally owned and operated.   

Securities offered through Parkland Securities LLC member FINRA/SIPC 
Advisory services offered through Sigma Planning Corporation, a Registered Investment Advisor 
Kiper Wealth Advisors is independent from Parkland Securities LLC and Sigma Planning Corp