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#1
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Warren Buffett's sister gives Northwestern a $101 Mil gift
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'06 E320 CDI '17 Corvette Stingray Vert |
#2
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Go Mildcats! uh . . . Wildcats!
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#3
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Her tax bill just got cut in half......and I'm just guessing, but I think her gift was appreciated stock. Not a check. A hundred mil. Very generous.
I have a client who gave 1 million to his alma mater...in three installments...in highly appreciated company stock. A piker by Buffett standards, but hey, you can't take it with you. |
#4
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Quote:
RE: appreciated stock - I pity the poor bastids that haven't given any thought to the taxes they're in for on their Berkshire-Hathaway stock owned for 3-4 decades @ age 70.5 IRA-RMDs and whenever they sell some. ![]()
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'06 E320 CDI '17 Corvette Stingray Vert |
#5
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Quote:
As to gifting, I would say it all depends.... on the size of your estate for one thing. As you know, gifting during life transfers the donor's basis; "gifting' at death gets a step up to current value. If H/W's combined assets are less than $10,860,000, holding to death beats the tax man out of gain....forever. (This is the so-called "trust fund loophole" bantered about recently by Democrats.) OTOH, back in the 90's, when the stock market was roaring like a Saturn V rocket, I was POA & co-executor for an elderly woman. She had plenty of assets & to save estate taxes, I gifted up to the amount of the unified credit..either 600 or 650k in those days. The top rate, which she fell in was 55% then. Of course, the two heirs, grandsons, went to their own investment advisors, who promptly turned around & sold the stock, then put them in mutual funds. I'm sure they took quite a (two-fold) haircut. ![]() |
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