Posts tagged ‘credit debt’

You can apply for income tax relief for up to $2 million (or $1 million if married and filing separately) in debt that is cancelled, or forgiven, by your mortgage lender on your primary residence. The law has been extended through 2012 under the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act. Tax Relief

If you have lost your home through foreclosure or have restructured your mortgage loan, you may qualify for this tax relief under the extended tax law called the Mortgage Forgiveness Debt Relief Act of 2007. The claim can be made by using IRS Form 982.

There are two qualifying factors that must be met on the mortgage debt exclusion: 1) it must be your primary home, and 2) the debt must have been used to buy, build, or make substantial improvements to the residence to which the mortgage applies. Certain business or farm property may also qualify for tax-free treatment, so check with your accountant or tax attorney in this situation.

When a lender forgives debt, it is typically a taxable event. You would receive a 1099-C (Cancellation of Debt) and the income would be claimed on Line 21 on your personal 1040 income tax Form. (IRS Publication 525)

While mortgages for second homes and rental properties do not qualify for the exclusion, some or all of this debt might qualify for other exclusions if you are insolvent at the time the debt was settled.

Canceled credit debt does not have to be included in income if it was a gift, or if the individual is insolvent, or in a bankruptcy case. The exclusion for insolvency is particularly important in this case, because it will likely apply to borrowers with home equity loans or mortgages on second homes and rental properties, and will be helpful in this situation. This is an important point for borrowers whose property has dropped in value below what is owed on the mortgage.

According to the IRS, “A debtor is insolvent when, and to the extent, the debtor’s liabilities exceed the FMV (fair market value) of the assets. Determine the debtor’s liabilities and the FMV (fair market value) of the assets immediately before the cancellation of the debtor’s debt to determine whether or not the debtor is insolvent and the amount by which the debtor is insolvent.”  (IRS Publication 908)

The value of all of your assets and all of the liabilities you owe have to be calculated to figure out if you are insolvent, and by what amount, so as always, check with your professional accountant to see how you can best take advantage of these tax relief measures for exclusions of cancelled or settled credit  and mortgage debts.

REMINDER:

Corporate tax returns are due March 15th and extension deadline filing is September 15th

Personal tax returns are due April 15th and extension deadline filing is October 15th

It is a little known fact that more millionaires were made during The Great Depression than in any other era in U.S. history. Want to know how that happened so you can cash in on the economic crisis looming on the horizon?

 

I did a lot of research work to find the real facts, not just the historical data we are spoon-fed by the media about how hard the depression was on the masses and how hard the President worked to turn the U.S. economy around. It takes digging through piles of research documents including the copyright and patent office files and the Library of Congress to find a lot of the data. However, you can also find a lot of information on the internet if you dig deep enough.

 

There is one golden nugget in this history lesson that can enable you to make tons of money when our country is in a recession (like right now) because a recession is exactly the same thing as a depression except it doesn’t last as long and the damage is not so bad. So bear with me while I give you a short history lesson that contains this golden nugget.

 

It is important to know that the Great Depression actually started a few years before the 1929 stock market crash and lasted until World War II brought the country out of the Depression.

 

In the years before 1929, as more and more credit was extended to businesses and individuals the economy was tipping over the edge from available cash to way too much credit debt. When the amount of extended credit reached a critical mass and companies could no longer pay the credit bills, the companies crashed (the 1929 debacle.) When workers lost their jobs they could not pay their credit debts and the housing market and banking industries crashed.

 

All the business enterprises that were bought and sold during the depression by people with liquid cash are too numerous to mention, but because of the war effort, those with liquid cash who bought land, homes, companies, or invested in the stocks of the companies that made products that were in demand by our government for the war effort made millions. These industries included such products as:

1 – Metals: steel, iron and aluminum
2 – Communications: radios and parts
3 – Transportation: Aircraft, Tanks, boats and vehicles (and their parts)
4 – Armaments: Guns and munitions
5 – Boots, clothing, belts, backpacks, hats, blankets, tents and cots (and the textiles to make them)
6 – Containers
7 – Shipping – Truck Transportation – Railways
8 – Oil and petroleum and stocks in those oil wells (the Texas oil boom was a biggie!)

 

A few of the well known companies that changed hands during that period were John Deere, Douglas Aircraft, Reynolds Metals, Ericsson, and even the Goudy Gum Company – they were the first gum company to issue baseball cards with gum.

 

Some of the oppressive laws that our government passed during the 1930s were an effort to take money from the large number of people who had liquid cash and were using it to buy companies (or stocks in companies) as well as property. The government wanted to take it away from the people who had been smart enough to stash away liquid cash and not get into credit debt, and use it to fund the war effort as well as re-distribute it to the destitute families.

 

A word of caution here – Be careful to protect your cash. There are many banks that are in trouble, and while some have failed, many are on the government’s “likely to fail” list. How safe is your bank? You owe it to yourself to find out.

 

While your bank probably won’t reveal their rating if you ask, you can find out for yourself how safe you bank is by signing up to get my FREE Bank Ratings Report right here.

 

Name
Email
Company

 

These laws were later ruled unconstitutional, but the point is that the people with liquid cash were spending it in way that made them millions, especially in industries necessary to the war effort. Yes, the stock market crashed, but the stocks could still be bought at undervalued prices and those with cash invested at the bottom of the market.

 

The tactic to be learned from this is a simple one that the people who use my Money Management Software implement right away. They stash cash. In case you missed it, here is THE GOLDEN NUGGET: When it comes to money, the only thing you have to fear is having no liquid cash to get you through an economic crisis.

 

It is a great time to buy property, but there are many people who have too much of their money tied up in non-liquid investments. They are worth lots of money on paper, but can hardly pay their bills. And there are those who have lost a lot of their money invested in semi-liquid investments like the stock market and have little liquid cash that they could get their hands on within 30 minutes if an emergency presented itself. The frightening shape our current economy is in today has the same indicators that heralded the depression of the 1930′s. Not enough cash savings, too much corporate and personal credit debt, banks failing and having to be bailed out  and the mortgage crisis / real estate crash.

 

What should you be doing? My clients are getting rid of their credit debt and stashing liquid cash like crazy. They are sleeping well at night and will make it through whatever comes. As martin Weiss recommends, they are “protecting their cash like a junk yard dog.” Does that mean you should sit on your cash and do nothing to recover the losses you may have sustained? Absolutely not!

 

I highly recommend you buy and read Martin Weiss’ book:

The Ultimate Depression Survival Guide: Protect Your Savings, Boost Your Income, and Grow Wealthy Even in the Worst of Times
 

The Ultimate Depression Survival Guide

The Ultimate Depression Survival Guide

 

Find out how safe your bank is.

Learn where and how to buy gold and silver, and why you should.

Discover which small companies Martin thinks are the best to invest in and what price you should pay.

Get his book today and look to the future with confidence that you can weather the storm.

What are you doing to protect yourself in the economic recession / depression that is already underway? Leave a comment.

Do you need some debt relief? You are not alone. Here are 5 tips on reducing debt that you can do right now.

1 – Knock Off Using Credit

The place to start is by locking away the credit cards and figuring out how to cut expenses back to function within your income. Figure out ways to increase your income and instead,use only cash. This is the single most effective action you can take.

2 – Never Commit to Spending More Than Your Company’s Income

When you pay for an item with credit because you don’t have the cash, you are committing your business’ future income to pay the credit company. That’s the recipe for economic slavery. Evaluate whether or not the item will increase the company’s production of income. If the item will increase the business’ production of income, work out how to set aside the cash to pay for it over a short time period instead of whipping out the credit card. Find ways to increase the company’s income and use it to pay both current expenses and pay off credit debt.

3 – Pay More Than The Minimum Payment That’s Required

An effective way to reduce the debt every week is to take 10% to 15% off the top of the company’s income and use it to pay down the debt. Set a goal to pay at least 3 to 5 times the minimum required payment on each credit card and line of credit. Set aside some of the payment money every week before the statements arrive in the mail. It is less difficult to set aside a smaller amount over 4 weeks than to try to come up with a big chunk in one week.

Your debt reduction program should also include the strategy of paying more on the highest interest rate card. Another strategy is paying off the lowest balance cards as fast as possible. This will free up more cash to pay against the higher interest rate cards.

4 – Never Pay Late or Spend Over Your Limit

Never sabotage your debt reduction program by getting hit with $25 to $39 over-the-limit or late fees plus the interest on those fees. Plus, if you pay over 30 days late, your credit record carries that big black mark against you for 7 years – a whopper of a penalty.

Recently a Vice President of a U.S. bank appearing on the news stated that over 24 Billion dollars was paid in interest, late fees and over-limit fees last year on credit cards. I hope you don’t think the credit company minds too much if you go over your spending limit or mail your payment late. They collected billions because of it.

5 – Find Ways To Cut Expenses

A requirement of a debt reduction program is more cash as fast as possible to pay the debt off. Examine where your business’ income is going and reduce all unnecessary expenses that do not contribute to making more money. Before you spend, work out how much money each and every purchase is going to return to your company.

TIP: Continue promoting your your company and its products to everyone – this is one area you don’t want to stop spending on. Just make sure you are getting a handsome financial return on the promotional investment.

Correctly managing the money in a business to make sure it survives takes more than a program to reduce debt, but this is a great place to start. There are other steps in my money management software program that can be taken to increase the business’ income, pay bills on time, have savings for emergencies, increase profitability and pay yourself a bigger paycheck. Who doesn’t want that, right?

Sandra Simmons, President of Money Management Solutions, has years of experience helping professionals and private individuals manage their income to eliminate debt. Claim your FREE Debt Reduction Solutions Guide

© 2007 Sandra S. Simmons. All Rights Reserved.

Proudly powered by WordPress.
Copyright © Money Management Software Blog. All rights reserved.