Investments

Can't Buy Me Love

Heiress Huguette Clark, who was born in 1906 and died last May at 104, was America's last living link to the 1890s "Gilded Age." Her father, William A. Clark, was Montana's "Copper King" and, according to her New York Times obituary, "once bought himself a United States Senate seat as casually as another man might buy a pair of shoes." Huguette grew up in a 121-room mansion, at the corner of New York's Fifth Avenue and 77th Street, that cost three times as much as Yankee Stadium. But her life soon took an odd turn. She married, for just a year at age 22, then got a quickie Reno divorce. (Her husband claimed they never even consummated the marriage.) Then she and her mother withdrew almost completely from view. The last known photograph of her was taken in 1930, and she rarely appeared in public after her mother's death in 1963.

Clark may have been shy, but she was no miser. She spent most of her life in a 42-room coop at Fifth Avenue and 72nd Street, said to be the largest park-view apartment in the city, and worth

IRS Strikes Out

Next week marks Major League Baseball's 2011 "Midsummer Classic" — the All-Star Game between fan favorites from the rival National and American leagues. Baseball is making the usual headlines on the field this year, with tight races in most divisions. And it's making headlines off the field, too — especially in Los Angeles, where Dodgers owners Frank McCourt and his wife Jamie are contesting an especially bitter divorce.

Frank McCourt is decidedly behind the count in this at-bat. He's accused of borrowing more than he could afford to buy the team in the first place, then using the team as a personal ATM to finance an extravagant lifestyle. That lifestyle included seven homes costing just over $99 million — two houses on Cape Cod, two houses next door to each other on Malibu's famed "Millionaire's Beach," two more houses next door to each other in LA's affluent Holmby Hills neighborhood (right down the street from the Playboy Mansion), and a $6 million condo in Vail.

Time IS Money So Get The Best Return On Your Investment

Have you ever reached the end of the day and wondered where all your time went? Playing catch-up to retrieve wasted time is what keeps many business owners welded to their business premises way outside of ‘normal’ business hours.

For many business owners a number of their customers, suppliers and employees are likely to be friends as well as business acquaintances. This overlap of private and business relationship can lead to requests for assistance or for special deals that can make serious inroads on their time. A lot of small business operators go slowly broke doing work for friends at discounted rates or for free. ‘Discounted rates’ translates as ‘at less than your market value’ and that means more hours you have to put in to make up for the lost profit.

Watch out for taxes if you sell your life insurance contract

The IRS has issued two new rulings addressing the sale and surrender of life insurance contracts from the point of view of policyholders and the investors. In this down economy, it can make good economic sense to sell an insurance policy that is no longer needed, or maybe can no longer be afforded.

The sale of an insurance policy is the sale of an asset; however, the gain could be either ordinary income (taxed like wages) or capital gain income (generally a lower tax rate). You will also need to take into account your investment in the policy (your tax basis).

Now, this discussion does not pertain to someone selling their insurance policy when they are either chronically ill or terminally ill. In those circumstances special exclusions generally will apply.

There are three situations under which you may be selling your policy.

  1. Surrender of the policy to the issuer for cash value.
  2. Sale of the policy with cash surrender value to an unrelated person.
  3. Sale of the policy with no cash surrender value to an unrelated person.

Here are the examples for each situation which demonstrate how the tax bite is determined.