How will estate taxes be paid if I leave no provision in my Will?
There are taxes even in death. If you have no estate tax provision in your Will, state laws intervene. Learn more in this week’s Tax Tip.
There are taxes even in death. If you have no estate tax provision in your Will, state laws intervene. Learn more in this week’s Tax Tip.
Scary Fact: 41% of households headed by someone aged 55 to 64 had no retirement savings. Learn the steps you should take now in this week’s Financial Tip.
In today’s Marietta Daily Journal, Bil Lako, CFP®, explains how simplicity in your finances can provide you with more flexibility. Read the Article
Corporations can use corporate-owned life insurance policies to fund nonqualified deferred compensation plans. Learn more in this week’s Business Tip.
Your financial adviser should not only manage your portfolio for investment returns, but for tax efficiency as well. While tax loss harvesting is often considered at the end of the year, this classic strategy can and should be used by advisers throughout the year to help control their clients’ tax liability. By working closely with our clients and their tax advisers, our experts are able to keep in mind other income that could be offset by tax loss selling.
If you are disabled and unable to work, you may be eligible for a government-sponsored disability insurance program. Learn more in this week’s Insurance Tip.
Your cash tips are subject to income, Medicare and Social Security taxes, so they’re a frequent audit item by the IRS. We explain in this week’s Tax Tip.
New rules offer students more protection when excess financial aid is added to a prepaid college debit or credit card. We explain in this week’s Financial Tip.
Our experts discuss the theory of “simplification rarely makes for bad advice” when it comes to your finances in retirement.
Indices closed in green territory on Monday, even though several stocks finished off peak levels as momentum faded in the late afternoon. West Texas Intermediate crude oil tacked on 2.5% to settle at $49.19 a barrel. Stocks continued to trade into the green zone on Tuesday with Technology stocks leading the way. The positive moves came in anticipation of Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen’s semiannual testimony before the House Financial Services Committee in Washington. Midweek, investors proceeded with caution ahead of the Brexit referendum vote, when U.K. citizens would vote on whether to leave the European Union. Existing home sales ticked up in May with sales increasing by 1.8% from April’s revised level and also up by 4.5% from May 2015. On another note, crude oil took a breather amid a smaller-than-expected decrease in inventories. Energy Information Administration data showed reserves dipped by 900,000 barrels over the past week versus an expected decline of 1.7 million barrels. West Texas Intermediate crude oil shed 1.4% today to settle at $49.13 a barrel. The markets closed on a positive note on Thursday with Financial and Energy companies leading the way ahead of the final count of the Brexit referendum vote in the U.K. Labor Department data showed initial jobless claims decreased last week, dipping by 18,000 to 259,000, versus expectations of 270,000. Additionally, new home sales declined in May as Commerce Department figures showed sales fell by 6% to a 551,000 annualized rate versus 586,000 in April. On Friday, stocks sold off on news of the Brexit voting results. The pro-exit vote weighed on the U.S. financial markets and oil prices. West Texas Intermediate crude oil shed 4.9% to settle at $47.64 a barrel. Consumer confidence dipped in June, with a final measure of 93.5, down 0.8 point from the preliminary reading, and 1.2 points off of May’s result.