Showing posts with label Louisville accounting firms news. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Louisville accounting firms news. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 12, 2016

New Email Phishing Scam

The IRS has been alerted to a new email phishing scam.

The emails appear to be from the IRS Taxpayer Advocate Service and include a bogus case number and the following message:

“Your reported 2013 income is flagged for review due to a document processing error. Your case has been forwarded to the Taxpayer Advocate Service for resolution assistance. To avoid delays processing your 2013 filing contact the Taxpayer Advocate Service for resolution assistance.”

The recipient is directed to click on links that supposedly provide information about the "advocate" assigned to their case or that let them "review reported income."  The links lead to web pages that solicit personal information.

Taxpayers who get these messages should not respond to the email or click on the links. Instead, they should forward the scam emails to the IRS at phishing@irs.gov. For more information, visit the IRS's Report Phishing web page.

The Taxpayer Advocate Service is a legitimate IRS organization that helps taxpayers resolve federal tax issues that have not been resolved through the normal IRS channels. The IRS, including TAS, does not initiate contact with taxpayers by email, texting or any social media.

Thursday, March 26, 2015

Yes, Virginia, it IS taking longer to do your taxes this year:-)

Tax season is supposed to be over on April 15. But among certain groups—especially the wealthy—filing for an extension until Oct. 15 is now routine, according to Bloomberg Business and Neikirk, Mahoney & Smith CPAs.

In 2011, 11 million taxpayers filed for an extension; two years later, 13 million did, an increase of almost 20 percent. At the end of September 2014, more than 25 percent of those who had filed for an extension were still working on their filings. We're not just procrastinators. It has gotten harder to file on time. Here’s why:

1. You don't have the forms you need.

The more complicated your investments, the more likely it is that you won't have everything you need to file your taxes by April 15. Often, private equity, venture capital, and hedge funds are structured as partnerships, which means their earnings generate so-called “Schedule K-1” forms, which sometimes take until late summer to arrive.

Christine Freeland, a certified public accountant in Chandler, Ariz., says brokers are putting more of her clients in energy or real estate partnerships instead of (or in addition to) mutual funds, which means more K-1s. Some clients don't even know how many K-1s they'll be getting, she says, and they think their return is ready until they receive an additional K-1 in the mail. Sometimes the partnerships—which have to finish their own returns before they can issue K-1 forms—get extensions, although they must file by Sept. 15.

Simpler investments that generate 1099 forms can slow down the process, too. Brokerage statements have to be out by Feb. 15, but many note that the information may not be final. One of Freeland's clients once handed her a corrected brokerage statement that hadn't arrived until April 15.

2. You're waiting on other people.

The more middlemen standing between you and your tax forms, the greater the chances of delay. According to Bill Zatorski of accounting firm PwC, a common sticking point for wealthy taxpayers is data from funds of funds, hedge funds that invest in hedge funds. A fund of funds can’t send you a K-1 until it receives K-1s, or other needed forms, from all the various funds it holds.

Adding to the delay, says Kevin Meehan of Wealth Enhancement Group, is that investors rarely hold funds or other investments directly. Everything gets funneled through brokerages. You wait for your brokerage, which is waiting for your fund-of-funds, which is awaiting forms for all the funds it holds. An extension until Oct. 15 is only a partial solution for taxpayers with late tax forms: They still must pay an estimate of what they owe by April 15, even if the full return comes later.

3. The tax code is more complicated.

If all else fails, blame Congress. Taxpayers already must follow different rules for wages, capital gains, and two types of dividends—those that get taxed at a lower tax rate and those that don’t meet the “qualified” criteria. In 2013, yet another tax category was added, a 3.8 percent net investment income tax on married couples earning more than $250,000 per year.

Under a 2010 law, taxpayers also now must report all their overseas holdings—a process that sometimes requires the close reading of K-1 footnotes, Zatorski says. Finally, there’s the alternative minimum tax, or AMT, a parallel tax system designed to limit the deductions that wealthier Americans can take. Plenty of those affected aren’t particularly wealthy. About 4.2 million people were ensnared by the AMT in 2014, the Tax Policy Center estimates, up 8 percent from the year before. The AMT alone can almost double how long it takes to fill out a tax return, the National Taxpayer Advocate says.

Wednesday, November 26, 2014

CVC Investing Showing Growth

by Mark Lennon, Crunchbase

Corporate venture capital has always been dubiously titled ‘dumb money’, supposedly less interested in financial performance and only willing to make bets on strategically aligned startups. 

CVC investing, however, has grown significantly over the past few years and many leading tech companies are diversifying their investments by operating autonomous VC funds that look more and more like traditional private VCs. 

In 2013, both the number and size of CVC investments has continued to rise. In October 2013, 48 venture funding rounds valued at over $719M included CVC investor participation. This represented a 14% participation rate, the highest month in the CrunchBase dataset. Read full article

Monday, September 8, 2014

2014 Statistics of Income Bulletin is available

WASHINGTON — The Internal Revenue Service today announced that the summer 2014 issue of the Statistics of Income Bulletin is available at IRS.gov. 


The Statistics of Income (SOI) Division produces the online Bulletin on a quarterly basis. Articles provide the most recent data available from various tax and information returns filed by U.S. taxpayers. This issue includes articles on the following topics:


Foreign-Controlled Domestic Corporations, 2011. Foreign-controlled domestic corporations (76,793) accounted for a small share (1.3 percent) of all U.S. corporation income tax returns filed for tax year 2011. Collectively, these corporations produced 16.2 percent ($4.6 trillion) of the total receipts reported by all U.S. corporation income tax returns for the year; however, a small portion of these corporations accounted for most of this amount. 


FCDCs accounted for 14.4 percent ($11.7 trillion) of the total assets reported by U.S. corporations for 2011.  

Municipal Bonds, 2011. The municipal bond market was still dominated by the more than 21,000 tax-exempt governmental bonds issued in 2011, raising $297.3 billion in proceeds for public projects, such as schools, transportation infrastructure, and utilities. Tax-exempt bond proceeds totaled nearly $384.3 billion, accounting for almost all (98.4 percent) municipal bond proceeds for the year.


SOI Bulletin articles are available for download at IRS.gov/taxstats. For more information about these data, write to the Director, Statistics of Income (SOI) Division, RAS:S, Internal Revenue Service, 1111 Constitution Avenue NW, (K-Room 4112), Washington, DC 20224.


If you have any questions, contact Michael Maier at http://nmscpas.com/contact or call (502) 896-2999.

Related Items:          

SOI Bulletin: Summer 2014

Historical Tables and Appendix

Tax Statistics

Monday, June 17, 2013

FASB, AICPA Partner to Simplify Accounting for Small Businesses

The American Institute of Certified Public Accountants and the Financial Accounting Standards Board, trade groups that manage and supervise standards used in the accounting profession, has announced that it is has created a “framework” that would simplify accounting for such companies. It would differ from the “generally accepted accounting principles,” or GAAP, that public companies must follow in a number of ways, large and small.

The goal is to make accounting-related life for small businesses (companies that are not publicly traded) easier to manage. Click here to read more

Thursday, January 12, 2012

Will this be The Winter of Our Discontent?

     With apologies to Shakespeare this is a little preview of some of the emerging economic concerns that will start to focus the mind before the winter months give way. Much of what we will be dealing with in the months to come will be extensions of what we have been wrestling with for the past three years but there are some new issues that are rearing their ugly heads and that will complicate the
strategies that have been in place thus far.
     The three to focus on for the moment are inflation threats, the impact of long term unemployment and the impact of a new Congress with more deficit hawks than before. Up to this point the strategy from Congress, the Executive branch and the Federal Reserve has been basically in sync and focused on economic pump priming. There has been no real concern over inflation as deflation had seemed more
imminent only a few months ago. The issue of employment has been front and center for the entire recession although there has clearly been a limit as to  what could practically be done. The deficit hand wringing was universal but very few in Congress had anything approaching a mandate to do something about all this.
     Now there is some evidence developing that will force a new look at the inflation threat in the future. Reports from the regional Fed banks in Philadelphia and New York show that manufacturers are universally reporting an expectation of higher priced inputs and when that hits the economy there will be increased price pressure.
    The employment situation is vexing and there is about to be a real crisis for
those who have been without jobs for the longest period of time. Getting this group back into the work force will be a major undertaking. The deficit hawks will be put to the test but there has already been a rejection of the budget for next year.

Tuesday, December 20, 2011

IRS Issues Final Regs on EITC Due Diligence

The IRS on Monday issued final regulations with the due-diligence requirements for tax return preparers who prepare tax returns on which taxpayers claim the earned income tax credit (EITC). The new rules require tax return preparers to submit Form 8867, Paid Preparer’s Earned Income Credit Checklist, to the IRS.