What Beneficiaries Need To Know

What happens when an account owner passes away? What do beneficiaries need to do? Step into a beneficiary’s shoes to learn how to prepare your estate for smoother execution.

If your loved ones have invested, saved or insured themselves to any degree, you may be named as a beneficiary to one or more of their accounts, policies or assets in the event of their deaths. While we all hope “that day” never comes, we do need to know what to do financially if and when it does.

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Retirement Account Rollovers – The Tax Implications

When physicians consider rolling over retirement accounts, the tax implications should be factored into the decision.

The decision as to whether you should roll over your 401k plan to an IRA, another employer’s 401k plan, or simply to leave it where it is, involves several different factors, including long term investment cost and the availability of investment options within the plans. Both can impact the long term performance of your retirement plan. However, a critical factor that can have a big impact, both short and long term, are the tax implications of a rollover.  Understanding these implications is essential before making any decision regarding your 401k plan.

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Whose Lives Should a Physician Insure?

The Physician’s Life Insurance Primer – Should you own life insurance on others?

The primary reason most people own life insurance is to ensure that their loved ones will have the means to replace lost income and pay for their financial obligations in the event of their premature death. In fact, life insurance is a critical financial tool in any circumstance in which the premature death of an individual could result in a financial hardship on another. So, while owning it on your own life may be the best possible use of life insurance, you may want to consider all circumstances in which it could provide essential financial protection for you, your family or your business. Read more to learn more about who physicians should consider insuring.

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Life Insurance as Part of Your Tax Diversification Strategy

The Physician’s Life Insurance Primer Series: How life insurance fits in a savings and tax diversification strategy

For many people, life insurance forms the security foundation of their financial plan. While most financial planners recommend that life insurance be purchased for its protection, and not as a primary savings vehicle, few would argue that cash value life insurance doesn’t have some fairly unique and attractive savings features.  When these are considered in the context of a person’s overall savings and investment strategy, they may offer some advantages for physicians, especially for providing additional tax diversification of income sources.

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What’s Missing in Your Financial Plan?

As a physician, what key elements are missing in your plan to get on track and stay on course for financial success?

There’s no denying that physicians have a greater opportunity to earn a great living and build wealth than most people; however, they also face several challenges, such as the initial delay in starting their careers under a mountain of debt. Their ability to earn a high, six-figure income is their most valuable asset, but it must quickly be converted into capital that can be accumulated and preserved if they are to achieve financial independence within a shorter time horizon. Without a comprehensive financial plan to guide them in their financial decision, even high-earning physicians can fall well short of that goal.

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Why Physicians Need an Investment Coach

An investor’s own worst enemy is likely to be himself.  Why it is important to find a trusted advisor and sounding board.

If you believe some of the world’s greatest investors, such as Benjamin Graham and Warren Buffet, it’s not investments that cause people to lose money; rather, it’s people who cause people to lose their money. What is meant by that is investing with sound principles and intelligent practices will always have a greater likelihood of success.

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Estate Planning: You’re Never Too Young

 

Why physicians should begin with the end in mind and secure their estate plan early

It’s understandable why many physicians in their 40’s and 50’s are inordinately focused on their careers and on trying to accumulate assets; they’ve been playing catch up since they left training, and they have a shorter time horizon in which to achieve their most important goals. However, a common mistake most physicians make is to put off planning their estate until they’ve accumulated some wealth, not realizing that there is so much that can happen along the way which can have devastating consequences for their families. While there are a number of reasons why younger physicians tend to avoid facing these critical issues, the minimal time and expense it takes to address them, thus preventing unnecessary hardship and heartache, makes it almost inexcusable not to. 

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5 Things Financially Successful Physicians Do Differently

While all physicians face the same financial challenges early on in their careers, each one begins to make decisions about their financial future that will set them on an individual course largely determined by the consequences of their actions – or inaction.

Challenges not met early on with deliberate steps to overcome them can eventually become obstacles to financial success which can grow increasingly insurmountable in a shrinking time horizon.

Perhaps the biggest difference between financially successful physicians and those who struggle is the realization that there is not a minute to waste in setting the right course.

For younger physicians, the best course is the one followed by physicians who have achieved financial success.

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Taxes, Job Search and Malpractice Insurance Premiums

New Tax Legislation: How does it affect physicians?

The American Taxpayer Relief Act of 2012 was signed into law on January 2, 2012. It includes new tax rates, restrictions on itemized deductions and exemptions, and extensions of certain deductions and credits. This act affects physicians the same way it affects others who make salaries approaching the law’s new limits.

For example, the new tax rate for married-filing-jointly taxpayers who make more than $450,000 in 2013 will rise to 39.5%. For those with taxable income of more than $450,000, capital gains rates will increase to as much as 20%. On the other hand, if you are still in residency or fellowship, and you happen to have some money available to buy a house, you might want to do that soon. The zero-percent capital gains rate is still in place for those who make less than $72,500 (joint) or $36,250 (single).

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Physician Contracts, Disability Insurance and Investments

Contracts: Horrible Unexpected Results Of Casual Contracts

It’s tempting to trust your new employer and assume he or she has your best interests at heart. Employers are, after all, showing faith in you when they offer you a contract. However, it’s not uncommon for unexamined contracts to contain unintended pitfalls that make things go horribly wrong, sometimes long after you’ve been hired. That’s what happened to a physician in the Chicago area, as described in this article. How do you overcome contract dangers like this?

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