Sherpa Wealth Strategies Financial Planner in Bend, Oregon

Shield Your Wealth With Asset Protection Strategies

This article was selected for you by Brian Stallcop, CFP®

Key Takeaways

  • Asset protection planning seeks to stop lawsuits from happening in the first place by making it hard for creditors to get at wealth.
  • Transparency is crucial to effective asset protection planning.
  • A multipronged approach with plenty of flexibility can help make asset protection especially effective.
Do You Need a Personal Umbrella Policy? from Sherpa Wealth Strategies in Bend Oregon

If you’re a high-income professional or
entrepreneur—or if you simply have a
substantial net worth—you probably realize
that in today’s litigious culture, you’re an
attractive target for unfounded or frivolous
lawsuits.

But what have you done to actually reduce
the risk of losing your wealth if you get sued?
In our experience, far too many affluent
individuals and families don’t act to protect
their assets, livelihoods and lifestyles.

The good news: There are many strategies
that can help safeguard your wealth against
those who would unjustly seek to take it.
Here’s a look at the world of asset protection
planning and how you might be able to
harness it for your advantage.

Shield Your Wealth with Asset Protection Strategies - Sherpa Wealth Strategies

The aim of asset protection planning

 

For starters, it’s helpful to know that there’s no formal body of law called asset protection planning. Instead, it’s a series of strategies and tools that are part of the category known as legal risk planning—which itself falls under the broader umbrella of risk management (see Exhibit 1).

Exhibit 1 Risk Management - Sherpa Wealth Strategies

Despite being a smorgasbord of strategies, asset protection planning focuses on realizing two main outcomes:

1. Discourage and deter lawsuits.

If possible, you want to eliminate or mitigate litigation before it even begins. The most potent asset protection plans we’ve seen are never even contested. Litigation is avoided or everything is settled before there are any judgments.

2. Motivate creditors to agree to a settlement that’s favorable to you.

If a lawsuit does move forward, you want to minimize any loss of wealth. When there are judgments, for
example, a powerful plan can make it extremely challenging for a creditor to collect the money from you should the creditor win in court. If a creditor is highly uncertain about the ability to collect, the odds of a settlement that’s favorable to you can rise significantly. Add in the time involved dealing with the courts and attorneys—and the associated financial costs—and you can see how smart asset protection planning motivates a creditor to settle or perhaps even walk away with nothing.

First steps

As valuable as asset protection planning can be, it probably should not be your first line of defense for safeguarding assets. Before taking steps to legally insulate your wealth, consider options such as:

• Increasing your personal umbrella policy to equal or exceed your net worth if possible. This is usually a highly effective and relatively inexpensive risk management solution.

• Getting high-quality business liability insurance if you are an entrepreneur.

Tips for effective asset protection planning

 

True asset protection planning doesn’t seek to “hide” wealth. It should be done transparently and out in the open in order to be effective. The fact is that you want creditors (or anyone else who might try to take your assets) to clearly see what you have done. If they can easily grasp how difficult a legal path they’ll likely have to take to get to your wealth, they may be much more motivated to settle for anything they can get.

Watch out: Some so-called asset protection strategies are promoted with the idea of secrecy. These strategies aren’t true asset protection solutions—they’re probably more akin to offshore tax evasion strategies that could land you in serious trouble with the IRS.

You also may need to adequately justify to governmental authorities, a judge or a jury any asset protection planning actions you take in order for your strategies to be effective. That can be tricky. For example, except in bankruptcy cases, the law is generally not very accommodating of the idea of insulating assets from legitimate creditors. However, doing asset protection planning because you want to pass wealth to your heirs is often seen by the powers that be as a viable explanation.

Another vital step: Implement these strategies before you need them—or even think you may need them. Put a plan in place after trouble arises (or even shortly before a lawsuit that seems imminent) with the intent of dodging creditors, and you might find your strategy negated by a judge. Worse, you potentially could be charged with contempt, fraud or civil conspiracy for engaging in “fraudulent conveyance.”

Note: Because evidence of intent is nearly impossible to prove, judges typically look for badges of fraud, such as:

  • Was the asset transfer to an insider, such as a family member?
  • Did the person become insolvent because of the asset transfer?
  • Was the asset transfer hidden from current or potential creditors?
  • Was there a claim at the time of the asset transfer?
  • Was there the threat of litigation before the asset transfer?
  • Are the assets still available for use after the transfer?

Three key asset protection planning factors

There are three other important aspects of asset protection planning to keep in mind as you explore your options:

1. Be flexible. Your asset protection plan should be modifiable, to the extent possible, so you can adapt it as laws and circumstances change.

2. Use multiple asset protection strategies. Redundancies tend to increase your ability to effectively insulate your wealth. What’s more, you can tackle asset protection in multiple ways. For example, some estate planning strategies—the primary goal of which is to transfer wealth to heirs—also provide creditor protections. Therefore, implementing an estate plan can potentially be one way to strengthen asset protection efforts.

3. Be cost-effective. Asset protection solutions’ upfront costs include initial planning and implementation. Some strategies have ongoing costs as well. Get a good handle on the full range of costs before you move forward in order to determine whether the benefits justify the expenses.

Finding high-quality guidance

When creating an asset protection plan, it’s crucial to work with an expert you trust. As noted, there are many different types of protection solutions out there—some of which are on more solid legal ground than others. What’s more, there are no designations that you can use to identify professionals who offer asset protection planning. Ultimately, you need to find someone who is highly capable and can clearly show how a proposed solution is likely to succeed in a variety of circumstances. Ideally, that expert will be able to share actual examples of how solutions they have implemented in the past have generated the desired outcomes.

Shield Your Wealth with Asset Protection Strategies - Sherpa Wealth Strategies

The need to review asset protection plans

Like any fundamental component of a broad wealth management plan, an asset protection plan is not a “set it once and forget it” type of solution. If you have a plan in place, you need to revisit it regularly to determine whether it’s still correctly positioned to pursue the outcomes you seek.

The reason: Asset protection planning is regularly in a state of flux. Changes in laws and regulations can make existing strategies less (or more) effective, while also setting the stage for novel approaches. Meanwhile, asset protection planning experts are constantly seeking ways to shield the wealth of the affluent—while creditors and their professionals are always looking for ways to collect.

Clearly, you can’t create an asset protection plan and then let it sit in a drawer or on a hard drive for the rest of your life! Commit to revisiting your plan whenever major circumstances change—such as when new tax laws are introduced or your own personal or professional wealth situation changes. If you haven’t revisited your plan for more than five years, chances are it’s time to do so.

Next steps

If you’re wondering whether your asset protection plan is still structured to pursue your specific goals, consider stress testing it by asking your advisor to review how it is likely to behave in various scenarios you might face. A stress test is a formal process that assesses the probability of an existing plan, strategy or product delivering the results you think it will and want it to. Stress testing can also be an excellent way to put a plan, strategy or product that you’re considering implementing “through its paces.”

Ultimately, a stress test can help you determine that the asset protection you have in place is just what you need. Conversely, it might reveal that you could benefit by making adjustments to your existing setup. In either case, you’ll know what’s needed to help you shield your wealth.

ACKNOWLEDGMENT: This report was published by the VFO Inner Circle, a global financial concierge group working with affluent individuals and families, and is distributed with its permission. Copyright 2023 by AES Nation, LLC.

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