 
Wishing
you a very Merry Christmas and the best for the new year!
Joe's practice focuses around Tax Returns, Financial Service, 401K roll overs,
Estate planning and Income Distribution Planning.
Joe holds the AICPA certification of "Personal Financial Specialist" and is a
member of the PFP "Personal Financial Planning section of the AICPA.
The
AICPAs Personal Financial Planning Section is the premier provider of information,
tools, advocacy and guidance for CPAs who specialize in providing estate, tax, retirement,
risk management and investment planning advice to individuals and closely held entities.
CPA e-mail should be sent to hicks.j@tx.rr.com
.
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Plan be worth-
What is my risk tolerance-
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Winter 2012
Office hours Monday through Thursday 10:00am
to 5:00pm by appointment
Friday - in and out of office, call before coming. Drop box by the door
Business phone answered most any time.
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Many
Tax Provisions Set to Expire at 2011 Year-End
December
22, 2011
Many
tax items are scheduled to expire at the end of the year, and it appears that any future
extension of these expiring provisions will have to be retroactive.
Individuals
While
most of the expiring incentives affect businesses, many individuals taxes will be
affected by the expirations. And the temporary extension of the 4.2% rate for the
employees portion of the taxif passed by Congress and signed by the
presidentwill expire Feb. 29. Without further legislative action, the rate will then
revert to the usual 6.2%.
Personal
credits allowed against regular tax and AMT (Sec. 26(a)).
Starting in 2012, nonrefundable credits generally cannot be used to offset alternative
minimum tax (AMT). A small list of exceptions applies, including the adoption credit (Sec.
23); the child tax credit (Sec. 24); the American opportunity tax credit (Sec. 25A(i));
the retirement savings credit (Sec. 25B); the residential energy-efficient property credit
(Sec. 25D); the nondepreciable property portion of the alternative motor vehicle credit
(Sec. 30B); and the nondepreciable property portion of the new qualified plug-in electric
drive motor vehicle credit (Sec. 30D).
Increased
AMT exemption (Sec. 55(d)).
The AMT patch amounts expire, and the AMT exemption reverts to its statutory
amount: $45,000 for married individuals filing jointly, less 25% of alternative minimum
taxable income exceeding $150,000; and $33,750 for unmarried individuals, less 25% of
alternative minimum taxable income exceeding $112,500.
Transit
pass parity with parking benefits (Sec. 132(f)).
The maximum amount an employee will be able to exclude from income for employer-provided
transit passes and transportation in a commuter highway vehicle for 2012 will be $125 per
month, down from $230 per month in 2011.
Other
expiring items affecting individuals include:
- Deductibility
of state and local sales tax instead of state income taxes on Schedule A (Sec. 164(b));
- The
expanded adoption credit (Sec. 36C) and adoption assistance program (Sec. 137) amounts;
- The
deduction of up to $250 for certain elementary and secondary school teacher expenses (Sec.
62(a)(2)(D));
- The
District of Columbia first-time homebuyer credit (Sec. 1400C);
- Deductibility
of mortgage insurance premiums as interest (Sec. 163(h));
- The
above-the-line deduction of up to $4,000 for qualified tuition and related expenses (Sec.
222);
- The
tax-free treatment of charitable distributions from IRAs (Sec. 408(d)(8)); and
- The
nonbusiness energy property credit (Sec. 25C).
The temporary 100% exclusion of gain from the sale of certain small business stock under
Sec. 1202(a) also expires after Dec. 31.
Businesses
Many
business tax incentives are also scheduled to expire at the end of the year. Perhaps the
most significant of these are the expiration of the allowance for 100% first-year bonus
depreciation (Sec. 168(k)) and the expiration of the increased deduction amounts under
Sec. 179. The Sec. 179 expensing limitation is reduced to $25,000 for 2012, and the
phaseout threshold amount is lowered to $200,000.
The
Sec. 41 research and development credit also expires at the end of the year, as does the
work opportunity tax credit (Sec. 51(c)) (but portions were extended for certain veterans
by the Three Percent Withholding Repeal and Job Creation Act, P.L. 112-56).
Various
other tax credits aimed at businesses also expire:
- The
credit for plug-in electric vehicles (Sec. 30);
- The
plug-in electric vehicle conversion credit (Sec. 30B(i));
- The
alternative fuel (nonhydrogen) vehicle refueling property credit (Sec. 30C);
- The
alcohol fuels income tax credit (Secs. 40(e) and (h));
- The
alcohol fuel mixture excise tax credit (Sec. 6426(b));
- The
biodiesel and renewable diesel fuel credits (Sec. 40A);
- The
biodiesel excise tax credit (Sec. 6426(c));
- The
alternative fuel and alternative fuel mixture excise tax credits (Secs. 6426(d) and (e));
- The
refined coal production facility credit (placed-in-service date) (Sec. 45(d));
- The
Indian employment tax credit (Sec. 45A);
- The
new markets tax credit (Sec. 45D);
- The
railroad track maintenance credit (Sec. 45G);
- The
new energy-efficient homes credit (Sec. 45L);
- The
energy-efficient appliances credit (Sec. 45M);
- The
mine rescue team training credit (Sec. 45N);
- The
military reservist employer wage credit (Sec. 45P); and
- The
American Samoa economic development credit (P.L. 109-432).
Expiring deductions and special depreciation rules (in addition to the expiration of 100%
bonus depreciation) include:
- 15-year
straight-line cost recovery for qualified leasehold improvements, qualified restaurant
buildings and improvements, and qualified retail improvements (Sec. 168(e)(3)(E));
- Seven-year
recovery period for motorsports entertainment complexes (Sec. 168(i)(15));
- Accelerated
depreciation for certain Indian reservation property (Sec. 168(j));
- Special
rules for charitable contributions of real property for conservation purposes (Sec.
170(b));
- Charitable
deduction for food inventory contributions (Sec. 170(e)(3)(C));
- Increased
charitable deduction for contributions of book inventory to public schools (Sec.
170(e)(3)(D));
- Increased
charitable deduction for corporate contributions of computer equipment to schools (Sec.
170(e)(6));
- The
election to expense advanced mine safety equipment (Sec. 179E);
- Special
film and television production expensing rules (Sec. 181);
- Brownfields
environmental remediation expensing (Sec. 198);
- The
deduction for domestic production activities in Puerto Rico (Sec. 199(d)(8)); and
- Suspension
of 100%-of-net-income limitation on percentage depletion for oil and gas from marginal
wells (Sec. 613A(c)).
Finally, a number of other special business incentives and other tax items expire,
including:
- Grants
in lieu of tax credits for specified energy property (Sec. 48(d));
- Qualified
zone academy bonds (allocation of limitation) (Sec. 54E);
- Low-income
housing credit special treatment of military housing allowances (Sec. 142(d));
- Modified
tax treatment of certain payments to controlling tax-exempt organizations (Sec. 512(b));
- Special
treatment of dividends from regulated investment companies (Secs. 871 and 881);
- Regulated
investment company treatment under FIRPTA (Sec. 897(h));
- Subpart
F active financing income exceptions (Secs. 953(e) and 954(h));
- Foreign
personal holding company lookthrough rules for payments between related controlled foreign
corporations (Sec. 954(c));
- Basis
adjustments for S corporation charitable contributions of property (Sec. 1367(a));
- Reduced
S corporation recognition period for built-in gains tax (Sec. 1374(d));
- Various
Empowerment Zone tax incentives (Secs. 1202, 1391, 1394, 1396, 1397A and 1397B);
- District
of Columbia investment incentives (Secs. 1400, 1400A and 1400B);
- Definition
of gross estate for regulated investment company stock owned by nonresident noncitizens
(Sec. 2105(d)); and
- Disclosure
of prisoner return information to certain prison officials (Sec. 6103(k)).
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What
is a CPA Personal Financial Specialist?
A
Personal Financial Specialist (PFS) is a Certified Public Accountant (CPA) who meets the
financial planning requirements established by the American Institute of Certified Public
Accountants (AICPA). The credential is awarded only to CPAs who demonstrate the requisite
experience, education, examination, and ethical standards established by the AICPA.
What
are the requirements?
In
order to obtain the PFS credential, an applicant must:
- Be a CPA in good standing
- Be a member in good standing with the AICPA
- Earn a minimum of 80 hours of personal financial planning
education
- Pass a comprehensive Personal Financial Planning exam
- Have at least two years (or 3,000 hours equivalent) of
full-time financial planning business experience
- Agree to be bound by the AICPA Code of Professional Conduct
- Meet continuing education requirements
In addition Joe has passed the 66 & 7 securities exams and is insurance
licensed in the State of Texas |
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to our Location
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information can always be found at the IRS Web site, http://www.irs.gov.
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