Lou S.
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Everything posted by Lou S.
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Plan match formula is 50% of all deferrals (including catch-up) and has only one HCE. Assume no earnings to make it easier. The inital ADP refund is calcualted as $5,000 but $1,000 is recharaterized as catch-up eligible and retained by the plan so the ADP refund of excess contributions is $4,000. The Plan also fails the ACP test and needs correction of an additional $5,000 for the match to pass. - the plan's ACP correction is method in the document is to refund the excess aggregate contribution to HCEs however any match "related to excess contributions" is forfieted. The related match on the intial refund amount is $2,500 (half the $5,000) but the related match on the actual amount distributed would only be $2,000 (half the $4,000 ADP correction). So for the excess aggregate contribution would the plan refund $2,500 and forfeit $2,500 or refund $3,000 and forfeit $2,000? Any thoughts?
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I'm sure this is not comprehensive but... 415 & 401(a)(17) are prorated while 402(g) is not. This can lead to some interesting results if SPY is less 5 month or less and someone maxes out deferral.
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term with more than 500 and no allocation, yes zero EBAR.
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I believe you need to pro-rate beween taxabale and non-taxable recovery but I don't have an exact cite for you off hand.
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forfeiture buy-back -what happens to taxes paid?
Lou S. replied to AKconsult's topic in 401(k) Plans
He pays back the gross amount. Depending on where the funds come from he may have an after tax basis in the plan. -
The last 2 DB plans we submitted took about 8 months to get a DL. neither was PBGC. In the past we we gave out all PBGC and IRS notices to participants and the same time (unless timing of dates conflicted for some reason) usually with a caveat that distributions would be after IRS DL.
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Yes. The correction is outlined in EPCRS under the final 415 regs. For some reason the IRS eliminated the ability to automatically correct the 415 excess by refunding employee deferrals, although the method for correcting under EPCRS is identical to pre-415 regs as far as I can tell.
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DB Plan Overpays lump sum & Participant Rolls into IRA
Lou S. replied to a topic in IRAs and Roth IRAs
Thanks for the reply! How did you arive at the $250 for penalties and interest? Rough estimate of $1,000 * 6% * 4 years. edit: Oh and the $250 is just the estomated excise tax, penalties and interest for late pyament to the IRS would be on top of that. Presumably the first payment should have been 4/15/2008 for the 2007 Excess IRA contribution. -
DB Plan Overpays lump sum & Participant Rolls into IRA
Lou S. replied to a topic in IRAs and Roth IRAs
Probably not the best advice but if the money was rolled in 2007 doesn't she have an excess anount for 2007, 2008, 2009 and 2010 already? I would write the plan and tell them that due to thier error she now owes an excise tax of approximately $250 plus penalties and interest and will now need to consult with qualified tax counsel. She would be happy to return the overpaid funds if the trustees of the plan will agree to pay any IRS taxes, penalties and interest due to the Plan's error as well as paying for all attorney and accountant costs incured in filing the late returns. I'd also request the plan trustee indemnify her against any and all loss she may experience due this error by the plan. Furthermore since 2007 is likely these funds have declined in value if invested in the stock market, I would also mention that the funds returned will be net of any investment loss experiences since December 2007 as well as the cost of the accounting to detrmine such loss. -
Contribution from Stock Market
Lou S. replied to Madison71's topic in Defined Benefit Plans, Including Cash Balance
From what you are describing, I don't see any problems. -
Top Heavy and change in NRA
Lou S. replied to AndyH's topic in Defined Benefit Plans, Including Cash Balance
Excellent question. I wish I had an excellent answer to give you. Did the plan add a subsidized ERA benefit at age 55 that might effect this? Can you treat it like a "wear-away" to avoid the anti-cut back rule on the TH Min benefit? That is greater of pre-amendment age 55 TH-minimum actuarially increased to age 62 or age 62 TH min with all TH service? Not sure if that is the correct way but that's probably how we would handle it. -
I think it is probably a deduction issue under 404(h)(1)© which still limits the deduction to 25% of pay.
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2010 Roth Conversion - In Service from 401(k)
Lou S. replied to Lou S.'s topic in IRAs and Roth IRAs
Thanks. Always fun to find out some quikry state law conflicts with federal law. -
Ok so I have this client with some interesting technical questions that I'm not sure of the answers on. The 401(k) plan allows for in-service distributions at age 59 1/2 so a participant (of age) can elect an in-service rollover to an IRA. The questions I have are can they roll directly to ROTH-IRA now? I'm pretty sure that is now a simple yes under current law. If they do roll directly to ROTH-IRA, can they elect to defer the taxes to 2011 & 2012 as they can under conversions? or is it all taxable in 2010? If all taxable in 2010 under 1st option, can they roll directly to Traditional-IRA (in 2010) then convert to ROTH-IRA (also in 2010) and take advantage of the 2 year tax spread? On a somewhat related note, since the conversion limits no longer apply after 2009, does that mean there is a loophole in the contribution limits for ROTH-IRA contributons? Effectively you can make a non-deductible IRA contribution for 2009 (on say 4/15/2010) and the immediately (say on 4/15/2010) convert your "2009 non-deductible traditional IRA contribution" to a ROTH-IRA. And you could keep doing this annually until the law changes. Am I missing something?
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Every group is different. Some employers get "better" results with the TPG some get "better" results without the TPG.
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I would argue no since the "plan" never had any assets.
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1. The salary deferral can not be mandatory. However the contributions you are refering to are commonly called Davis-Bacon contributions and are employer contributions not employee deferrals. If you chose to make employee deferrals they would be in addition to the prevailing wage contributions. 2. Yes 3. Yes 4. Sort of, it is usually mandated by the plan doc and the prevailing wage jobs it is attached to. But sometimes there are additional employer contributions that are sometimes offset by prevailing wage contributions.
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If the plan allows for catch-ups than not only can you recharaterize, you must recharaterize.
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6 to 9 months has been our recent experience.
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It can be done if it is in the document. years ago we had a client in a balance forward plan that had a similar provision in the document because he was afriad his employees might leave and take their pension distribution to start up a business in competion with him.
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When can 401(k) be added to a profit sharing plan?
Lou S. replied to ombskid's topic in 401(k) Plans
Yes, but you'll be subject to nondiscrimination testing. You can elect prior year testing and effectively allow the HCEs to put in 5% of pay but that will probably limit you for 2010 unless you immediately amend to current year testing for 2010 and use that for at least 5 years. It is too late to add a safe-harbor for 2009 and you need at least 3 months of deferral. -
I would say yes and SMM is required. I imagine everyone is in their own rate group so that when you fail it is easy to chose who gets more than the gateway to pass, no? An SMM will avoid that pesty situtaion where ees share info on contributions and one ee wants to know why Jill got 8% of pay but she only got 5% of pay when the SPD says that all NHCEs are in the same group.
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I remember when cross-testing first became somewhat popular. At the time most practitioners said the IRS is going to kill this but much to the surprise of many of us not only did they not kill it they blessed it in the regs. If it goes away I'm sure some small plans will terminate but it's not like this is the first time IRS policy had impacted employer decisions.
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Employer deposits the PS contribution in increments
Lou S. replied to jkharvey's topic in Correction of Plan Defects
It falls under a BRF failure. I'm not sure what the proper correction is though. -
Anything is possible but we are proceeding with the assumption that they are due 12/31/09.
