Business owners consideration for transfer of assets
When a business owner is young, he uses his blood and sweat in exchange for an income he works hard for.
Once he has built it to a reasonable size, he needs to have the following considerations.
1. Who is going to take over the business and the liabilities when the key person is taken out?
A friend of mine had a strong business and successful one for many years and were thriving. One day, during dinner, the partner choked and died suddenly on the spot. Since the partner was the one with all the connections and loans, when the partner passed, the liabilities were called on by the banks almost immediately. Customers trusted that particular partner but when my friend tried to salvage the business, the customers changed suppliers. Cashflow was very tight and eventually the funds dried up promptly. The business had to be closed and there were even outstanding payments that needs to be settled.
2. Who is going to take care of the family expenses?
As a business owner, your purpose of the business is really to take care of your family. However, when there are outstanding payments to be settled and frozen liquidity, the business dries up all the funds and usually the family might not be left with much.
For example, if your family needs $10,000 a month for expenses and you would like to provide them for a period of 20years, the total provision for the family will work out to be about $2.4mil.
3. Funding
Funding of the above scenarios can come from a variety of ways.
a) One is to keep and hold cash and wait for the sudden need to use the fund. However, it is the most ineffective use of funds.
b) The second is to use discounted dollars from your revenue of the business (This is exactly what Walt Disney did to access funds when no banker was willing to lend).
For example, if your revenue drops by 2-3%, will your business by badly affected? If your revenue grows by 2-3% more, will you call for a big celebration?
But what if we reposition that 2-3% wisely, that can protect the 100% of your revenue. Wouldn’t that make sense? And on top of that, after many years of funding, there can be another mountain of asset that you have created for yourself that is totally available for use for the future. Wouldn’t you like to be smart, just like Walt Disney did?
4. Legal aspect
Now that you have settled the above financial portion of your life, have you written your will and trust to solidify the decision of who will be the next person to take over which asset from you? Every asset class has pros and cons in distributing.
For example, illiquid assets like property and businesses should try to give to more than one party to avoid confusion and conflict.
What we can do for you is to combine the power of the finances and the legal aspects of planning your business so that it can continue to thrive for a very long time!