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How can a non qualified retirement
plan for physicians work? (This is a rough overview so you can understand the
general concept )
1. A Non-Qualified
Plan is defined by the IRS as a plan for which the IRS does not require
reporting. As such, it does not require the physician to provide matching
contributions for employees.
This
means the physician can defer as much money as the physician can afford into
their own independent and separate retirement plan. (as opposed to a
Qualified Retirement Plan).
2. So now let’s look at one
such plan. Before you read the details that follow, please note the basic
premise of this plan. You can put $1,000,000 to work for you on Day One (1) to
start earning interest – rather than starting your retirement plan with
increments of say $5000 a month ($3000 after taxes). Think of it like a snow
ball. You can start with a $3000 snowball rolling down the hill or you can
start with a $1,000,000 snowball rolling down the hill. Which one will grow
faster?
3. Let’s say the physician
wants to contribute $60,000 a year to retirement. ($5,000 a month) then these
are the basic steps.
4. The clinic is provided a
loan; let’s say for $1,000,000 from a lending institution. (We know lending
institutions already structured for this.)
5. The clinic is responsible for
making the interest payment (6% Simple Interest). This will be $60,000 for the
year and will be paid as an expense of the clinic.
6. The cost to the clinic
will be $60,000 of which $24,000 is tax deductible - so actual costs are
$36,000.
7. The physician may have to
pay income tax on the $36,000 so the maximum potential out-of-pocket cash for
the physician would be roughly $14,000.
8. Since the loan is between
the clinic and the physician, the physicians CPA will help to determine
reporting requirements.
9. The physician will then
place the $1,000,000 in an indexed annuity that will generate a return of 7%
compounding interest. This is VERY conservative. Our estimates are based on
the annuity being maintained for 20 years. Since the indexed annuity is based
on average stock market returns, then a 10% return can be expected if the
indexed annuity is maintained for 20 years. If the physician invested the
money in a
zero coupon bond, then the return will be a minimum of 12%.
10. The lending institution
will not require a personal guarantee from the physician if a UCC filing is
submitted against the clinic BUT not the clinic’s receivables. The lending
institution will also attach to the indexed annuity or the zero coupon bond as
secondary protection for their loan.
11. At the end of a 20 year
term, and after only $14,000 per year out of pocket, the $1,000,000 will go
back to the bank and the physician will walk away with the compounded
interest. (Click the link to see full details).
RECAP: $14,400 (+
income tax) per year will net you $2,125,684
in 20 years.
7% compounding return will net the physician $2,125,684
10% compounding return will net the physician $4,983,499
12% compounding return will net the physician $7,902,293
12. Now let’s consider the
alternative. The physician pays $60,000 per year out of pocket and invests in
the same indexed annuity with compounding interest. The results are as
follows:
RECAP: $60,000 (+
income tax) per year will net you $1,626,274 in 20 years.
7% compounding
return will net the physician $1,626,274
10% compounding
return will net the physician $2,411,893
12% compounding
return will net the physician $3,191,103
These are amazing returns. If you
would like to find out more, then simply email us your contact information and
we will have the lending institution promptly contact you. The group that
contacts you will have many ‘satisfied customer’ references – available upon
request.
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