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July 20, 2010
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North Carolina Asset Protection News

 

The Pension Protection Act 2005

The Pension Protection Act (H.R. 2830) will fix outdated pension rules to help ensure employers properly and adequately fund their worker pension plans, provide meaningful new disclosure to workers about the status of their pension plan, protect taxpayers from a possible multi-billion dollar taxpayer bailout, and make common sense modifications to encourage greater personal savings for retirement and other needs.

Ensuring Employers Fund Their Pension Promises to Workers:

  • Provides a permanent interest rate based on a modified “yield curve” for employers to more accurately measure current pension liabilities as they come due.
  • Requires employers to make sufficient contributions to plans in order to meet a 100 percent funding target, phased in over five years for companies for plans that are, in general, funded above 90 percent under current law; companies with plans funded below 90 percent must meet the new 100 percent target immediately.  The phase-in of the 100 percent target begins in 2007.
  • Requires employers to make additional contributions to erase funding shortfalls over seven years.
  • Triggers accelerated contributions if a plan’s funded status falls below 60 percent, with a five-year phase-in. 
  • Reduces the smoothing of interest rates to protect plans against market and funding volatility.
  • Prohibits employers from using credit balances if their plans are funded at less than 80 percent.
  • Permits employers to make additional maximum deductible contributions of up to 150 percent of current liability. 

Contact a North Carolina Asset Protection lawyer today and get a free consultation!

 
Did You Know?    
 
 
Going off-shore with asset protection is becoming very common
Asset Protection can involve utilization of out of country corps., banks, partnerships, ,trusts, funds, management firms, to legally safeguard assets, plan for the future, minimize taxes and get involved in globally investing opportunities.

 


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News about Asset Protection cases in North Carolina and nationwide:

Critical Asset Identification Is Still Not Complete
In October 1998, a month before agencies’ initial CIP plans were due, CIAO issued its Vulnerability Assessment Framework. The framework was intende...
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Integrated Financial Management Systems
Financial management systems must be designed with effective and efficient interrelationships between software, hardware, personnel, procedures, co...
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Department Licenses State's First Group Captive For Fourteen Of New York’s Major Financial Institutions
        Superintendent of Insurance Gregory V. Serio today announced that the State Insurance Department has lic...
Read more >


More Asset Protection News >

 
 

Asset Protection Lawyers.com Terms

 


Today's Terms

Portfolio

Definition:
A collection of securities assembled for an investment goal.

Trustee

Definition:
The person who receives legal title to the assets in the trust but is legally obligated to hold, manage, and invest the trust assets for the benefit of the beneficiaries. The trustee's duties are set by the trust agreement and by law.

Tax exempt entity

Definition:
To hold the protected assets. The stock in this tax exempt entity can be held by an asset protection trust. As a result, the stock does not show up on the balance sheet of the taxpayer and the income from the assets is likewise off the tax return of the protected client.

More Asset Protection Lawyers.com Terms >

 

Asset Protection Resources

 


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Asset Protection Hot Topics

 
Topics Related to Asset Protection:

  • Trusts
  • Wills
  • Uniform Probate Code
  • Gift Tax
  • Dynasty Trust
  • Annuities

More Asset Protection Law Topics >

North Carolina Asset-Protection Attorney

 
If you live in the following cities and need an Asset-Protection attorney you should contact our Asset-Protection Attorney as soon as possible:

  • Apex
  • Asheboro
  • Asheville
  • Burlington
  • Cary
  • Chapel Hill
  • Charlotte
  • Clayton
  • Concord
  • Durham
  • Elizabeth City
  • Fayetteville
  • Fort Bragg
  • Garner
  • Gastonia
  • Goldsboro
  • Greensboro
  • Greenville
  • Henderson
  • Hickory
  • High Point
  • Jacksonville
  • Kernersville
  • Lenoir
  • Lexington
  • Lincolnton
  • Lumberton
  • Matthews
  • Monroe
  • Morganton
  • Mount Airy
  • Raeford
  • Raleigh
  • Reidsville
  • Sanford
  • Statesville
  • Thomasville
  • Wake Forest
  • Wilmington
  • Wilson
  • Winston Salem


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