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Captive Insurance_I told You So_The IRS is Looking For You

As I have been warning for the last few years some captive insurance plans are being looked at and audited. If you are in a captive, which may be legal, you still may have to file under IRS 6707A. Most people who file do it wrong and then you have compounded the problem by lying to the IRS. Make one mistake on the forms and you have another problem. On November 1, 2016, the Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”) issued Notice 2016-66 identifying certain transactions relating to small captive insurance companies as a “transaction of interest.” Prior to this notice, the IRS had identified certain small captives as amongst its list of “Dirty Dozen Tax Scams.” Also, the IRS has been actively examining captives and their owners and litigating cases in the U.S. Tax Court. The new “transaction of interest” designation throws small captive insurance company transactions into a tax reporting regime that can potentially lead to significant penalties and IRS income tax and promoter examinations. Under section 831(b) of the Internal Revenue Code (the “Code”), so-called small or “micro” captives can elect to exclude from income up to $1.2 million of premiums received ($2.2 million beginning in 2017) and only pay tax on their investment income. Also, the premiums are deducted by the insured as a business expense under section 162 of the Code. Notice 2016-66 states that small captives have the potential for tax avoidance or evasion and identifies certain small captives, and substantially similar transactions, as a “transaction of interest” in order to gather more information about why and how small captives are being formed and operated. Generally, small captives that constitute a “transaction of interest” are those that (1) have liabilities for covered losses and expenses in an amount less than 70 percent of the total premiums earned, or (2) provide premium payments as financing to an insured or related party in a transaction nontaxable to the recipient (e.g., loans). In either case, the period tested is the most recent 5-year taxable period. Each of the insureds, captives, and any material advisors must report the transaction to the IRS, including the IRS Office of Tax Shelter Analysis. Taxpayers will have to report the small captive “transaction of interest” annually by filing a Form 8886 with their tax returns beginning with the 2016 tax year, and will have to report separate Forms 8886 for each prior year, some forms due by January 30, 2017. See Treas. Reg. § 1.6011-4(e)(2)(i). Under section 6707A, each unfiled or late-filed Form 8886 is subject to a penalty in the amount of $50,000 or $10,000 for natural persons. Material advisors must also report the transaction of interest by filing Form 8918 (and are subject to additional list maintenance requirements). Under section 6707, an unfiled or late-filed Form 8918 is subject to a penalty in the amount of $50,000 (and further penalties for failure to timely supply the required list to the IRS upon request). According to the Notice, retroactive reporting is required for described captives that were formed on or after November 2, 2006 (not 2016), which is the date the “transaction of interest” regulations first went into effect. A material advisor could be the seller, insuarance agent or the accountant who files your tax return, etc. Finally, the Notice requires that transaction participants provide detailed information on the relevant disclosure forms. The disclosure information includes (1) whether liabilities incurred are less than 70 percent of premiums (minus certain dividends and loans); (2) whether any loan or other financing arrangement has occurred between the captive and related parties; (3) the captive’s jurisdiction; (4) a description of the types of coverage(s); (5) how the premium(s) was/were determined, including the names and contact information for any actuary or underwriter involved; (6) a description of the claims paid; and (7) a description of the captive’s assets. This detailed information should not be taken lightly as the IRS can treat an incomplete disclosure as nondisclosure and therefore, subject to penalties. Lance Wallach Ph.: (516)938-5007 Fax: (516)938-6330 www.vebaplan.com National Society of Accountants Speaker of The Year The information provided herein is not intended as legal, accounting, financial or any type of advice for any specific individual or other entity. You should contact an appropriate professional for any such advice.

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  1. IRS Increases Audits of Section 79, 419, 412i and Captive Insurance
    But this is not how the 831(b) captives are being sold; instead, clients are being shown illustrations where the life insurance is being purchased soon after the first premiums are paid to the captive (the advisers want their commissions now, not later), and the efficiency of the captive is being measured not in its effectiveness as a risk-management tool (it’s proper purpose) but rather as an investment and estate planning tool (the improper tax shelter purpose).
    In reviewing these transactions, the presence of the 831(b) captive is simply a sham. Premiums in these deals are rarely calculated based on anything like real-world risks, but the promoters are making a determination of how big of a deduction the client wants, and then “backing in” the premium amounts with the help of actuaries who will testify that a $500,000 premium for $2 million worth of terrorism insurance for a business in Lenexa, Kansas, is reasonable, and, oh, also that the world is flat, water is dry, hot is cold, and the sun comes up in the West.

    ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Lance Wallach
    Lance Wallach, National Society of Accountants Speaker of the Year and member of the AICPA faculty of teaching professionals, is a frequent speaker on retirement plans, abusive tax shelters, financial, international tax, and estate planning. He writes about 412(i), 419, Section79, FBAR and captive insurance plans. He speaks at more than ten conventions annually, writes for more than 50 publications, is quoted regularly in the press and has been featured on television and radio financial talk shows including NBC, National Public Radio’s “All Things Considered” and others.


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    Lance Wallach speaks and writes about benefit plans, and has authored numerous books for the AICPA, Bisk Total tape, and others. He can be reached at (516) 938-5007 or wallachinc@gmail.com. For more articles on this or other subjects, feel free to visit his website at www.taxadvisorexperts.org.

    Lance Wallach, the National Society of Accountants Speaker of the Year, speaks and writes extensively about retirement plans, Circular 230 problems and tax reduction strategies. He speaks at more than 40 conventions annually, writes for over 50 publications, is quoted regularly in the press, and has written numerous best-selling AICPA books, including Avoiding Circular 230 Malpractice Traps and Common Abusive Business Hot Spots. He does extensive expert witness work and has never lost a case. Contact him at 516.938.5007 or visit www.taxadvisorexperts.org.
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Captive Insurance Companies Association ("CICA")

The Captive Insurance Companies Association ("CICA"), a trade association representing the captive insurance industry, has issued a statement on section 831(b) companies with cautionary language: The traditional captive insurance company industry and CICA are extremely concerned about the misuse of small captives utilizing the IRC 831(b) election and the attendant publicity about "captives" being a tax avoidance device. Although there is nothing wrong with the utilization of the 831(b) election when a small captive insurance company is truly engaged in insuring the risk of its parent company/owner(s), the traditional captive insurance industry strongly opposes the utilization of small 831(b) captives primarily for tax sheltering purposes. In simple language, do 831(b)s right or don't do them at all!