SSRRS Posted Friday at 07:41 PM Posted Friday at 07:41 PM Hi, Does anyone see anything wrong with a DB plan sponsored by an s corp, the owner needs cash to make the contribution so he will contribute from his personal brokerage account (and not from the corp account).? Thank you
Peter Gulia Posted Friday at 09:04 PM Posted Friday at 09:04 PM The shareholder might want his lawyer’s, accountant’s, and actuary’s collaborative advice about whether it makes sense for the shareholder to loan money to the corporation, or contribute new capital to the corporation. If either transaction makes sense, the corporation then might have money to pay a contribution to the pension plan. This is not advice to anyone. Peter Gulia PC Fiduciary Guidance Counsel Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 215-732-1552 Peter@FiduciaryGuidanceCounsel.com
Bri Posted Friday at 09:53 PM Posted Friday at 09:53 PM I would approach it as, that should be a company check for the deposit. Where the company got the money from, I don't mind hearing/seeing/speaking no evil as to how. So that I can at least apply a standard of reasonableness CuseFan and Jakyasar 2
CuseFan Posted 5 hours ago Posted 5 hours ago No can do - as @Bri states - company contribution/check, as that is where any deduction occurs and where an IRS auditor would be looking to substantiate. Beyond that, plan sponsor and his accountant can figure out the details to make that happen. Jakyasar and Bill Presson 2 Kenneth M. Prell, CEBS, ERPA Vice President, BPAS Actuarial & Pension Services kprell@bpas.com
Jakyasar Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago Agree with Bri and Cusefan. Lending money to the corporation for pension purposes is a very common practice. As the sponsor is a corporation, all contributions must come directly from the sponsor and no one else. QKA, QKC, QPA, CBS - I used to be indecisive about pensions but now I am not so sure
Dougsbpc Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago We have had this happen in the past. Of course it is best to have the shareholder make a loan to the corporation and then have the corporation fund the plan. However, some years ago the same thing happened and the CPA recorded it as a shareholder loan on the books of the corporation and did not seem to be very concerned that the loan proceeds came from the 100% shareholder.
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now