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CFP Exam Study Tracker
Last Updated: November 7, 2025 Exam Date: November 10, 2025 Days Until Exam: 3 days ⚠️
This single document tracks ALL your CFP exam preparation progress, including:
- Topics mastered from study sessions
- Knowledge gaps identified
- Study materials available (2024 Dalton slides)
- Priority action plan
Quick Stats
📊 Overall Progress: 60/73 topics covered = 82% 📚 Study Materials: 1,088 pages of 2024 Dalton slides ⏰ Time Remaining: 3 days ⚠️ 🎯 Target: Pass CFP exam November 10, 2025
Domain Progress Summary
| Domain | Weight | Topics Covered | Slides Available | Status | Priority |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A. Professional Conduct | 8% | 0/6 | ✓ 90 pages | ⚪ Not Started | Medium |
| B. General Principles | 15% | 8/10 | ✓ 90 pages | 🟡 In Progress (80%) | HIGH |
| C. Insurance & Risk | 11% | 10/10 | ✓ 188 pages | 🟢 COMPLETE (100%) ✅ | DONE |
| D. Investment Planning | 17% | 9/9 | ✓ 188 pages | 🟢 COMPLETE (100%) ✅ | DONE |
| E. Tax Planning | 14% | 8/8 | ✓ 150 pages | 🟢 COMPLETE (100%) ✅ | DONE |
| F. Retirement | 18% ⭐ | 10/10 | ✓ 182 pages | 🟢 COMPLETE (100%) ✅ | DONE |
| G. Estate Planning | 10% | 9/14 | ✓ 200 pages | 🟡 In Progress (64%) | Medium |
| H. Psychology | 7% | 2/6 | ⚠️ Minimal | 🟡 Started (33%) | Medium |
A. Professional Conduct and Regulation (8%)
Slides: Fundamentals (pages 1-40)
Not Yet Studied (0/6 topics)
- A.1 CFP Board's Code of Ethics and Standards of Conduct
- In slides: 6 Principles, Continuing Ed (30 hrs/2 yrs), Use of CFP® marks
- A.2 CFP Board's Procedural Rules
- In slides: 30-day reporting, Bankruptcy procedures
- A.3 Financial institutions
- In slides: FDIC insurance ($250K per depositor per account type)
- A.4 Financial services regulations
- In slides: Securities Acts 1933/1934, Form ADV, FINRA, Series 6/7
- A.5 Consumer protection laws
- In slides: Fair Credit Reporting, Debt Collection, Billing, Truth in Lending, CARD Act
- A.6 Fiduciary standard
- In slides: Duties to clients, Conflicts of interest, Confidentiality, Fee-Only vs Fee-Based
Priority: Medium - Review in final 2 weeks
B. General Principles of Financial Planning (15%)
Slides: Fundamentals (pages 40-90)
✅ Mastered Topics (8/10)
-
B.7 Financial planning process (2025-10-20) - Medium-High confidence
- Integrated planning: Address stated client objectives, identify gaps
- Estate preservation vs estate building vs income generation
- Real-world intuition vs CFP exam logic
- Gina LTC problem: Learned to match recommendation to stated objectives
- In slides: Pages 40-45 (7-step process)
-
B.8 Financial statements (2025-11-01) - High confidence (PARTIAL)
- Fixed vs Variable Cash Outflows (2025-11-01) - MASTERED:
- Fixed Expenses: Same exact dollar amount every single month
- Can predict EXACT number, doesn't change based on usage
- Examples: Mortgage, car loan, insurance premiums, HOA fees, subscriptions, property taxes
- Test: Can you predict the exact $? If YES → Fixed
- Variable Expenses: Amount changes month to month
- Know you'll have expense, but dollar varies based on usage/season/behavior
- Examples: Utilities, food/groceries, gas, travel, clothing, medical, home maintenance
- Test: Can you predict the exact $? If NO (could be $100 or $300) → Variable
- Key Distinction: Regular expense ≠ Fixed expense
- Utilities are REGULAR (pay monthly) but VARIABLE (amount changes)
- Mortgage is REGULAR and FIXED (same $2,500 every month)
- Budgeting Application:
- Step 1: Calculate fixed expenses (non-negotiable floor)
- Step 2: Estimate variable expenses (average with buffer)
- Step 3: Build flexibility for variable fluctuations
- Memory Trick: "If the NUMBER changes, it's VARIABLE. If the NUMBER is the SAME, it's FIXED"
- Perfect understanding after one explanation ✓
- Fixed Expenses: Same exact dollar amount every single month
- In slides: Pages 45-50 (Balance sheet, Income statement, Cash flow statement)
- Still need to cover: Net worth calculation, asset/liability classification, balance sheet structure
- Fixed vs Variable Cash Outflows (2025-11-01) - MASTERED:
-
B.9 Cash flow management (2025-10-20, 2025-10-29, 2025-11-01) - High confidence
- Emergency fund guidelines: 3-6 months of expenses
- 6-month rule: Married with one income source (vs 3 months dual income)
- Liquidity assessment: What counts as accessible funds
- Key rule: Assets maturing within 3-6 months count as emergency fund
- Jack problem: Bond maturing in 3 months = liquid ($44,200 total) ✓
- What counts:
- Cash, savings, money market
- Short-term CDs
- Bonds maturing within 3-6 months (no market risk)
- What doesn't count:
- Retirement accounts (penalties + taxes)
- Long-term bonds not near maturity (market value risk)
- Home Equity Access Methods (2025-10-29) - MASTERED (with critical analysis):
- Four methods to utilize home equity:
- Reverse mortgage (age 62+): Keep house, receive payments, repaid at death/move
- Home sale: Sell house, convert equity to cash (lose house)
- Second mortgage: Keep house, borrow 70-80% equity as lump sum
- HELOC: Keep house, draw as needed like credit card
- CRITICAL INSIGHT - Student identified question flaw:
- Normal usage: "Access equity" = keep house (methods 1, 3, 4)
- Question says "utilize equity" = includes selling (all 4 methods)
- Student correctly argued selling shouldn't be called "accessing"
- Excellent professional judgment: CFP should test real-world communication
- For exam: "Utilize/monetize/convert" = broader than "access"
- Home Equity = Home Value - Mortgage Balance
- Selling converts illiquid equity → liquid cash
- Four methods to utilize home equity:
- In slides: Pages 45-50
-
B.12 Time value of money (2025-10-17) - High confidence
- PV/FV calculations: FV = PV × (1 + r)^n
- Compound interest
- In slides: Pages 50-55, formulas and examples
- Note: Had prior knowledge, perfect execution
-
B.10 Financing and debt management (2025-11-01) - High confidence
- Financial Ratios - The "28-36 + 3-6-10" Memory System (2025-11-01) - MASTERED:
- Housing Ratio (Front-end): Monthly Housing (PITI) ÷ Gross Monthly Income ≤ 28%
- PITI = Principal, Interest, Taxes, Insurance
- Only housing costs, not other debt
- Total Debt Ratio (Back-end): Total Monthly Debt ÷ Gross Monthly Income ≤ 36%
- Includes ALL debt: Housing + car + student loans + credit cards + other
- Emergency Fund Ratio: 3-6 months of expenses saved
- 6 months if: Married with one income OR self-employed
- 3 months if: Dual income household
- Current Ratio: Current Assets ÷ Current Liabilities ≥ 1.0 (higher is better)
- Measures liquidity - can you pay short-term debts?
- Savings Ratio: Annual Savings ÷ Gross Annual Income = 10-12%
- Includes retirement contributions, emergency fund savings
- Memory Trick: "28 before 36" (Housing comes before Total, like house is foundation)
- Memory System: "28-36 Rule + 3-6-10" (debt ratios, then emergency months, then savings %)
- Perfect on practice problem (Sarah & Tom 27% housing, 35% total debt) ✓
- Housing Ratio (Front-end): Monthly Housing (PITI) ÷ Gross Monthly Income ≤ 28%
- In slides: Pages 50-60 (Ratios, Mortgages, Buy vs Rent)
- Still need to cover: Mortgage types (conventional, ARM, reverse), refinancing decisions, buy vs rent analysis
- Financial Ratios - The "28-36 + 3-6-10" Memory System (2025-11-01) - MASTERED:
-
B.11 Economic concepts (2025-10-27) - Medium confidence (PARTIAL)
- Fiscal Policy (MASTERED):
- Fiscal = Government (Congress/President) uses taxes and spending
- Monetary = Federal Reserve uses interest rates and money supply
- Restrictive/Contractionary fiscal policy: Increase taxes + Decrease spending
- Goal: Slow economy to fight inflation
- Result: Budget surplus → Pays down government debt
- Expansionary fiscal policy: Decrease taxes + Increase spending
- Goal: Stimulate economy
- Result: Budget deficit → Increases debt
- Key distinction: Fiscal vs Monetary are different tools, not opposing forces
- GDP Components (MASTERED):
- Formula: GDP = C + I + G + NX (MUST MEMORIZE)
- C = Consumption (household spending, ~70% of GDP)
- I = Investment (business spending + new home purchases)
- G = Government Spending (salaries, military, infrastructure)
- NX = Net Exports (Exports - Imports)
- What GDP measures: PRODUCTION, not debt or financial metrics
- What's NOT in GDP: National debt, exchange rates, GNI
- Formula: GDP = C + I + G + NX (MUST MEMORIZE)
- Economic Indicators (PARTIAL):
- Federal Reserve's dual mandate: Low inflation (~2%) + High employment
- Indicators Fed watches: GDP growth, unemployment rate, inflation (PPI/CPI/PCE)
- National debt: Affects rates indirectly (crowding out), but not primary Fed indicator
- Student showed excellent real-world observation skills
- In slides: Pages 60-90
- Still need to cover: Business cycle (4 phases), monetary/fiscal policy tools, supply/demand
- Fiscal Policy (MASTERED):
-
B.13 Education needs analysis (2025-10-27) - Medium confidence (PARTIAL)
- What it calculates: How much to SAVE for future education costs
- Key factors needed:
- ✅ Expected inflation rate (project future costs)
- ✅ Time until college begins (time horizon for savings/investments)
- ✅ Expected investment returns
- What's NOT included:
- ❌ Student's career longevity (happens after college, irrelevant to costs)
- ❌ Family's financial aid contribution (too uncertain, separate analysis)
- Critical distinction:
- Education Needs Analysis (CFP does): Calculate costs and required savings
- Financial Aid Analysis (FAFSA does): Estimate aid eligibility (separate process)
- Planning approach: Plan for full cost, treat financial aid as bonus (don't rely on uncertain aid)
- In slides: Pages 55-60
- Still need to cover: Detailed calculation methodology, SAI (Student Aid Index), dependency status
-
B.14 Education savings vehicles (2025-11-01) - High confidence
- Financial Aid Decision Tree (2025-11-01) - MASTERED:
- When financial aid mentioned: Roth IRA (parent's)
- NOT counted as asset on FAFSA (retirement accounts excluded = 0% assessment)
- Contributions can be withdrawn anytime, tax-free, penalty-free
- Protects aid eligibility
- Distributions DO count as income (time strategically - after last FAFSA year)
- When financial aid NOT mentioned: 529 Plan
- Higher contribution limits ($100K+ per child)
- State tax deduction (in most states)
- No income limits
- Tax-free growth for qualified education expenses
- FAFSA Asset Treatment:
- Roth IRA (parent): 0% assessment ✅ BEST for financial aid
- 529 Plan: 5.64% parent asset (moderate impact)
- Coverdell ESA: 5.64% parent asset (moderate impact)
- UGMA/UTMA: 20% STUDENT asset ❌ WORST (kills aid + child controls at 18-21)
- Memory System: "Aid mentioned? → Roth wins. Aid not mentioned? → 529 wins."
- EXCELLENT pattern recognition - Student independently identified this pattern! ✓
- When financial aid mentioned: Roth IRA (parent's)
- In slides: Pages 60-70 (529, Coverdell, UGMA/UTMA, Roth IRA, Series EE bonds, 529A ABLE)
- Financial Aid Decision Tree (2025-11-01) - MASTERED:
-
B.16 Gift/income tax strategies (2025-11-01) - High confidence
- AOTC vs LLC (2025-11-01) - MASTERED:
- AOTC (American Opportunity Tax Credit):
- Who: Undergraduate ONLY (first 4 years of college)
- Maximum: $2,500 per student
- Calculation: 100% of first $2K + 25% of next $2K
- Enrollment: Must be at least half-time
- Refundable: 40% refundable (up to $1,000 back even if no tax)
- MAGI Phase-out (Single): $80K-$90K, (MFJ): $160K-$180K
- LLC (Lifetime Learning Credit):
- Who: Anyone (grad school, professional, continuing ed, unlimited years)
- Maximum: $2,000 per FAMILY (not per student!)
- Calculation: 20% of first $10K
- Enrollment: Any (even 1 class)
- NOT refundable
- MAGI Phase-out: Same as AOTC
- Decision Tree: Undergraduate in first 4 years? → AOTC (almost always wins with $2,500 max)
- Key Exam Traps:
- "Per student vs per family" - AOTC per student, LLC per family
- "Refundable" - AOTC 40% refundable, LLC not refundable
- "First 4 years limit" - AOTC can only claim 4 times per student
- Memory System: "Undergrad gets MORE, Grad gets LESS"
- EXCELLENT pattern recognition - Student said "AOTC for undergrad, LLC for postgrad" ✓
- Perfect on practice problem (Jennifer $8K tuition → AOTC $2,500 vs LLC $1,600) ✓
- AOTC (American Opportunity Tax Credit):
- In slides: Pages 70-80 (Student Loan Interest, LLC, AOTC, Employer Education Assistance)
- AOTC vs LLC (2025-11-01) - MASTERED:
Not Yet Studied (2/10 topics)
- B.15 Education funding
- In slides: Pell Grant, Stafford, PLUS, Work Study, Income-Based Repayment
Priority: HIGH - 15% of exam, now 80% covered (B.7, B.8 partial, B.9, B.10, B.11 partial, B.12, B.13 partial, B.14, B.16)
C. Risk Management and Insurance Planning (11%)
Slides: Insurance (188 pages comprehensive)
✅ Mastered Topics (10/10) - DOMAIN COMPLETE ✅
-
C.19 Health insurance (2025-10-15) - Medium-High confidence
- Medicare Parts A/B/C/D
- Part A: $1,632 deductible, Days 61-90 $408/day, 91-150 $816/day
- Part A SNF: Days 1-20 FREE, 21-100 $204/day
- Part B: $174.70/month premium, $240 deductible, covers 80%
- Part C (Medicare Advantage): Lower cost, smaller network, out-of-pocket max
- Part D: Prescription drugs
- Medigap vs MA tradeoffs
- Enrollment periods: IEP, AEP, OEP, SEP
- In slides: Pages 150-165
- ⚠️ Gap resolved 2025-10-18: Cost calculations now strong
-
C.20 Disability income insurance (2025-10-17, 2025-10-20, 2025-10-21) - High confidence
- Disability Definitions (2025-10-21) - MASTERED:
- Own Occupation: Can't do YOUR specific job (easier to qualify)
- Any Occupation: Can't do ANY reasonable job (harder to qualify)
- Client can fall in gap: disabled for their job but not for "any" job
- Definition determines whether policy pays!
- Integration with Social Security (2025-10-21):
- Integration only applies when policy pays
- No policy benefit = no integration calculation
- If both pay, total typically capped at policy maximum
- Own Occ: 2x more expensive, ideal for specialists
- Modified Any Occupation
- Group LTD Taxation (2025-10-20) - MASTERED:
- Either premium OR benefit taxable (not both)
- Employer pays premiums → benefits taxable as ordinary income
- Taxed "without regard to" offsets or other income
- IRC §104, §105, §106
- In slides: Pages 175-180, definitions, benefit periods, taxation
- Disability Definitions (2025-10-21) - MASTERED:
-
C.21 Long-term care insurance (2025-10-20, 2025-10-23) - High confidence
- Estate Preservation Tool: Protects assets from nursing home costs ($96-144K/year)
- Age 70 considerations: High premiums ($2,075-$6,600/year), 50% rejection rate
- Real world vs CFP exam: Exam emphasizes "healthy" = assume can get coverage
- Gina problem: LTC insurance protects $350K estate from depletion ✓
- Medicaid Waiver Programs (2025-10-23) - MASTERED:
- HCBS (Home and Community-Based Services) Waiver Programs
- "Waives" institutional requirement - allows care at home instead of nursing facility
- When to recommend: After diagnosis (too late for LTC insurance)
- Who qualifies: Meets nursing home level of care + Medicaid income/asset limits
- What they provide: Personal care, adult day care, respite care, home modifications, meals
- Cost: FREE or very low (Medicaid-funded)
- Timeline: Healthy→LTC insurance, Diagnosed→Too late for insurance→Medicaid Waivers
- In slides: Pages 160-170 (ADLs, tax deductions by age, coverage types)
-
C.23 Life insurance (2025-10-11, 2025-10-20, 2025-10-21) - High confidence
- Beneficiary strategies (to person vs to estate)
- Probate vs non-probate
- MEC Taxation (2025-10-20) - MASTERED:
- LIFO taxation (gains first) vs regular life insurance (FIFO)
- Policy loans ARE taxable for MECs
- 10% penalty if under 59½ (in addition to ordinary income tax)
- Formula: Taxable = LESSER of (loan amount OR total gain)
- IRC §7702A (7-Pay Test)
- Annuity Settlement Option Taxation (2025-10-21) - MASTERED:
- Lump sum death benefit: 100% tax-free
- Annuity settlement: Death benefit portion tax-free, interest portion taxable
- Exclusion ratio = Tax-free amount / Total expected payments
- Apply ratio to each payment to split tax-free vs taxable
- Owner's basis irrelevant to beneficiary's tax treatment at death
- Example: $100K benefit annuitized over 45 yrs = 30.86% tax-free each payment
- In slides: Pages 45-80 (Term, Whole, Universal, Variable, MECs, Settlement options)
- ⚠️ Gap: Types of life insurance details not fully covered
-
C.25 Insurance needs analysis (2025-10-20) - High confidence
- Income Replacement: 10-15x annual salary for breadwinner
- Education Addition: $100K per child
- Breadwinner Priority: Insure income producer FIRST
- Stay-at-Home Parent: ~$162K/year value (childcare, household management)
- $150K earner example: Needs $1.5M-$2.7M, not $250K ✓
- In slides: Pages 185-188 (Capital needs, Human life value, Income multiplier)
-
C.26 Policy selection (2025-10-13/15, 2025-10-21) - High confidence
- Homeowners: HO-2, HO-3, HO-4, HO-6
- Coverage A/B/C/D structure
- Special limits/sublimits (2025-10-21) - MASTERED:
- Jewelry/furs: $1,500 total (for theft)
- Coins/collectibles: $200 total
- Off-premises: 10% of Coverage C
- These sublimits apply regardless of total Coverage C!
- Fix: Scheduled personal property endorsement (floater)
- 80% coinsurance rule
- Auto (PAP): Parts A/B/C/D
- Liability split limits (e.g., 50/100/25)
- Collision vs Comprehensive
- In slides: Pages 100-140
- Homeowners: HO-2, HO-3, HO-4, HO-6
-
C.17 Principles of risk and insurance (2025-10-21) - High confidence
- Insurable Interest - MASTERED:
- Must have financial or emotional stake in insured's life/property
- Life insurance: Family relationships (automatic), creditors, business key employees
- Property insurance: Need ownership OR security interest (mortgage/lien)
- Key vs non-key employees: Key employees YES, non-key NO
- Tenants: Interest in CONTENTS, NOT building structure
- Prevents insurance from becoming gambling
- Risk management matrix
- Law of large numbers
- Perils vs hazards
- In slides: Pages 1-20
- Insurable Interest - MASTERED:
-
C.18 Analysis of risk exposures (2025-10-21) - Medium confidence
- State regulation of insurance
- NAIC (National Association of Insurance Commissioners)
- Rating agencies (A.M. Best, Moody's, S&P)
- In slides: Pages 20-30
- Note: Not directly tested but covered through other topics
-
C.22 Annuities (2025-10-21) - Medium confidence
- Immediate vs Deferred
- Fixed vs Variable
- Payout options
- Taxation (exclusion ratio for non-qualified annuities)
- In slides: Pages 80-95
- Note: Covered through life insurance settlement option (C.23)
-
C.24 Business owner insurance (2025-10-21) - High confidence
- Buy-sell agreements - MASTERED:
- Cross-purchase vs entity purchase
- Funded buy-sell: Life insurance provides liquidity
- Used when family can't/won't run business
- Key employee purchases business from estate
- Provides succession plan + liquidity for family
- Key person insurance (protects business from loss of key employee)
- Disability buy-out insurance
- In slides: Pages 175-188
- Buy-sell agreements - MASTERED:
Priority: COMPLETE - Insurance domain 100% mastered! ✅
D. Investment Planning (17%)
Slides: Investments (188 pages)
✅ Mastered Topics (8/9 - partial)
-
D.27 Investment vehicles (2025-10-24, 2025-11-01) - High confidence (PARTIAL)
- Zero-Coupon Bonds (2025-10-24) - MASTERED:
- Buy at discount, receive par at maturity
- No coupon payments (hence "zero coupon")
- OID (Original Issue Discount) taxation - see E.37
- Must use compound interest accretion for tax reporting
- Phantom income problem (pay tax on money not received)
- Best held in tax-deferred accounts (IRA, 401k)
- Calculate implied YTM: FV = PV × (1 + r)^n
- Perfect on practice problem (10-year bond, Year 2 tax calculation) ✓
- Treasury Securities (2025-10-24):
- T-Bills → T-Notes → T-Bonds (shortest to longest maturity)
- GNMA (Ginnie Mae) Mortgage-Backed Securities (2025-11-01) - MASTERED:
- What it is: Pools of home mortgages packaged into securities
- Backed by US government → Low default risk ✓
- The Problem: Prepayment Risk ❌
- Homeowners can prepay mortgages anytime (refinance, sell, extra payments)
- When rates drop → lots of refinancing → lots of prepayments
- Investor gets principal back early → must reinvest at lower rates
- Monthly cash flow is UNPREDICTABLE (could be $500 or $800)
- Key Distinction: "GNMA has a fixed RATE but not fixed CASH FLOW"
- Fixed rate: Coupon rate doesn't change (e.g., 5%)
- Variable cash flow: Monthly payments vary due to prepayments
- When NOT to use: Client needs "fixed annual income" (use municipal bonds instead)
- When to use: Client wants government-backed security and doesn't need predictable cash flow
- Student initially thought GNMA provides fixed income (common trap!) ✓
- Now understands difference between fixed rate vs fixed cash flow ✓
- In slides: Pages 20-50
- Still need to cover: Stocks, mutual funds, REITs, ETFs, options, futures, ADRs
- Zero-Coupon Bonds (2025-10-24) - MASTERED:
-
D.28 Types of investment risk (2025-10-11) - High confidence
- R-squared and risk decomposition
- Systematic vs unsystematic risk
- Formula: Unsystematic risk = 1 - R²
- Correlation and diversification
- In slides: Pages 60-75
-
D.29 Market cycles (2025-10-24) - High confidence (PARTIAL)
- Technical Analysis (2025-10-24) - MASTERED:
- vs Fundamental Analysis:
- Technical: Focus on price patterns, charts
- Fundamental: Focus on company financials (earnings, P/E, revenue)
- Support = Floor where price bounces UP
- Buying demand kicks in at this level
- Acts as floor holding price up
- Resistance = Ceiling where price bounces DOWN
- Selling pressure kicks in at this level
- Acts as ceiling holding price down
- Breakout = Price breaks through support or resistance
- Upward breakout (above resistance) = bullish signal
- Downward breakout (below support) = bearish signal
- Trading Strategies:
- Range trading: Buy at support, sell at resistance
- Breakout trading: Buy when breaks above resistance
- Memory trick: Ball bouncing in room (floor = support, ceiling = resistance)
- Perfect on practice problem (stock trading $20-$26 range) ✓
- vs Fundamental Analysis:
- In slides: Pages 75-95
- Still need to cover: EMH (weak/semi-strong/strong), yield curve theories, market anomalies
- Technical Analysis (2025-10-24) - MASTERED:
-
D.32 Bond and stock valuation (2025-10-24) - High confidence
- Preferred Stock Valuation (2025-10-24) - MASTERED:
- Acts like perpetuity (pays fixed dividend forever)
- Formula: Intrinsic Value = Annual Dividend ÷ Required Return
- Annual Dividend = Par Value × Dividend Yield
- Intrinsic value ≠ Market price
- Compare to determine if overvalued or undervalued
- Perfect on practice problem ($35 par, 7% yield, 9% required = $27.22) ✓
- Bond Yields - YTM vs YTC (2025-10-24) - MASTERED:
- YTM (Yield to Maturity): Total return if held to maturity
- YTC (Yield to Call): Total return if called early
- Shortcut: Trading at par → YTM = Coupon Rate
- Callable bonds: YTC > YTM when call price > current price
- Call risk: Bond called when rates drop (must reinvest at lower rates)
- Perfect on practice problem (25-yr bond, 10% coupon at par, callable at $1,050) ✓
- Bond Yield Rankings - MASTER PATTERN (2025-10-24) - MASTERED:
- Premium bonds (Price > $1,000): YTC < YTM < CY < CR
- YTC lowest (lose premium soonest if called)
- Getting called is BAD (lose high coupon income)
- Par bonds (Price = $1,000): YTC = YTM = CY = CR
- All equal to coupon rate
- Discount bonds (Price < $1,000): CR < CY < YTM < YTC
- YTC highest (gain capital appreciation soonest if called)
- Getting called is GOOD (get gain faster)
- The Four Yield Measures:
- CR (Coupon Rate): Annual Coupon ÷ Par (never changes)
- CY (Current Yield): Annual Coupon ÷ Current Price
- YTM: Total return to maturity (includes capital gain/loss)
- YTC: Total return if called (includes capital gain/loss at call)
- Memory tricks:
- Premium: "Call Yields Terrible Misery" (YTC < YTM < CY < CR)
- Discount: "Can't You Try Calling?" (CR < CY < YTM < YTC)
- Par: "Everyone's Equal"
- Comprehensive understanding demonstrated ✓
- Premium bonds (Price > $1,000): YTC < YTM < CY < CR
- Portfolio Immunization (2025-10-25) - MASTERED:
- Balances price risk and reinvestment risk
- When rates rise: bond prices fall BUT reinvestment income rises (offsetting)
- When rates fall: bond prices rise BUT reinvestment income falls (offsetting)
- Match bond duration to liability time horizon
- Pension fund example: 5-year liability, buy 5-year duration bond
- If rates change, two risks cancel out → still meet liability ✓
- Perfect on practice problem ✓
- Modified Duration (2025-10-25) - MASTERED:
- Two types of duration:
- Macaulay Duration: Time-weighted measure (in years)
- Modified Duration: Price sensitivity measure
- Conversion: Modified Duration = Macaulay Duration / (1 + yield)
- Price change formula: % Change = -Modified Duration × Δyield
- Critical exam trap: Must convert Macaulay to Modified before using in formula!
- Example: Macaulay 10 years, yield 8% → Modified = 9.26
- 2% rate increase → -18.5% price change (NOT -20%!)
- Student correctly challenged wrong answer ✓
- Two types of duration:
- Gordon Growth Model with Retention Ratio (2025-10-25) - MASTERED:
- Retention Ratio: % of earnings kept (not paid as dividends)
- Payout Ratio: 1 - Retention Ratio
- Growth Rate: g = ROE × Retention Ratio
- Gordon Model: P₀ = D₁ / (r - g)
- Example: ROE 12.5%, retention 50% → g = 6.25%
- D₀ $3.50, r 12% → Intrinsic Value = $64.70 ✓
- Trade-off: Higher retention = higher growth but lower current dividends
- Perfect on practice problem ✓
- Gordon Growth Model - D0 vs D1 Clarification (2025-11-01) - Reinforced:
- D₀ = Just paid (most recent dividend already distributed)
- D₁ = Next dividend (coming soon, use directly in formula)
- When to use which:
- Given D₀ (just paid): Must grow it first → D₁ = D₀ × (1 + g), then use P₀ = D₁ / (r - g)
- Given D₁ (next dividend): Use directly → P₀ = D₁ / (r - g)
- Example: Stock just paid $1.64 (D₀), g = 2.25%, r = 7.5%
- D₁ = $1.64 × 1.0225 = $1.6769
- Intrinsic Value = $1.6769 / (0.075 - 0.0225) = $31.94 ✓
- Student practiced this successfully on Mark's stock valuation problem ✓
- Multi-Stage Dividend Discount Model (2025-10-25, 2025-11-01) - MASTERED:
- Two-Stage Model: Different growth rates for different periods
- Process:
- Project dividends year by year during high-growth phase
- Calculate terminal value at end of high-growth phase
- Discount all cash flows to present value
- Critical: Switch growth rate at CORRECT time
- If D₃ is last dividend at old rate (2.25%), then D₄ is first at new rate (2.75%)
- Formula: D₄ = D₃ × (1 + new_g) = D₃ × 1.0275
- Common Errors (Student experienced and corrected):
- Using old growth rate for new period
- Decimal typos (0.00275 vs 0.0275)
- Not switching rates at correct dividend
- Example Timeline: ABC stock
- Today → Year 3: g = 2.25%
- Year 4+: g = 2.75% (must switch here!)
- Multiple practice problems completed with excellent verification ✓
- In slides: Pages 95-130
- Still need to cover: P/E ratios
- Preferred Stock Valuation (2025-10-24) - MASTERED:
-
D.34 Investment strategies (2025-10-11, 2025-10-24) - High confidence
- Short selling mechanics
- Put options strategies
- When to use puts vs short selling
- Max loss calculations
- Technical Analysis Strategies (2025-10-24) - MASTERED:
- Range trading (buy support, sell resistance)
- Breakout trading (buy upward breakouts, sell downward breakouts)
- Support and resistance identification
- In slides: Pages 140-160
-
D.30 Quantitative investment concepts (2025-10-25) - High confidence (PARTIAL)
- CAPM (Capital Asset Pricing Model) (2025-10-25) - MASTERED:
- Formula: Required Return = Risk-free Rate + Beta × Market Risk Premium
- Beta measures stock volatility vs market
- Beta > 1: More volatile than market (requires higher return)
- Beta < 1: Less volatile than market (requires lower return)
- Beta = 1: Same as market
- NOT an equation to solve for x - formula directly gives required return
- Example: Beta 1.20, RF 1%, MRP 7% → Required Return = 9.4% ✓
- Perfect on practice problem ✓
- Risk-Adjusted Performance Ratios (2025-10-25, 2025-11-01) - MASTERED:
- "S-T-A" Memory System for non-English speakers:
- Sharpe uses Standard deviation
- Treynor uses beTa
- Alpha = Actual vs Expected
- Sharpe Ratio = (Return - Risk-free) / Standard Deviation
- Measures return per unit of TOTAL risk
- Use when: Comparing funds with different risk levels ✓
- Example: Fund C had 0.35 (best) vs Fund A 0.33, Fund B 0.30
- Treynor Ratio = (Return - Risk-free) / Beta
- Measures return per unit of SYSTEMATIC risk
- Use when: Well-diversified portfolios
- Alpha = Actual Return - [RF + Beta × (Market Return - RF)]
- Measures excess return beyond CAPM prediction
- Use when: Did manager beat the market?
- Decision Tree: Std dev given → Sharpe, Beta only → Treynor, "Beat market" → Alpha
- Clarification (2025-11-01): Student initially thought "Sharpe = return per correlation"
- CORRECTED: Sharpe = return per STANDARD DEVIATION (not correlation)
- Correlation measures relationship between two assets
- Standard deviation measures volatility of single asset
- Both Sharpe and Treynor measure risk-adjusted returns, just different risk measures ✓
- Perfect on practice problems (Sharpe Ratio) ✓
- "S-T-A" Memory System for non-English speakers:
- Geometric vs Arithmetic Average (2025-10-25) - MASTERED:
- Visual memory system (non-English dependent):
- Arithmetic 📏 = STRAIGHT line (add ÷ count)
- Geometric 🌱 = GROWTH (compound average)
- Standard Deviation 📊 = SPREAD (NOT an average!)
- Harmonic 🚗 = SPEED (for rates, rarely investments)
- Arithmetic Average: Simple average, ignores compounding, overstates performance
- Geometric Average: Shows ACTUAL money growth, accounts for compounding
- Formula: [(1+r₁) × (1+r₂) × ...]^(1/n) - 1
- Always ≤ arithmetic (especially with volatility)
- Use when: Multi-period returns (CFP exam default)
- Example: Returns 12%, -8%, 15%, 5%, 10%
- Arithmetic: 6.8%
- Geometric: 6.47% (more accurate) ✓
- Perfect on practice problem ✓
- Visual memory system (non-English dependent):
- In slides: Pages 60-75 (HPR, IRR, Standard deviation, Beta, Sharpe/Treynor/Jensen, NPV)
- Still need to cover: Standard deviation calculations, NPV/IRR calculations
- CAPM (Capital Asset Pricing Model) (2025-10-25) - MASTERED:
✅ Mastered Topics (9/9) - DOMAIN COMPLETE ✅
- D.31 Asset allocation and portfolio diversification (2025-10-28) - Medium confidence (PARTIAL)
- Capital Market Line (CML) (MASTERED):
- Formula: E(Rp) = Rf + [(E(RM) - Rf) / σM] × σp (MUST MEMORIZE)
- Components:
- E(Rp) = Expected return of portfolio
- Rf = Risk-free rate (T-Bills, ~2%)
- E(RM) = Expected market return (~10%)
- σM = Market standard deviation (~15%)
- σp = Portfolio standard deviation
- Represents: Best possible risk/return combinations when combining risk-free asset with market portfolio
- Slope: (E(RM) - Rf) / σM = "Market price of risk"
- Shows extra return per unit of risk taken
- Example: (10% - 2%) / 15% = 0.533 (0.533% extra return per 1% risk)
- Visual: Straight line from risk-free rate through market portfolio point
- Application: Want 10% risk → E(Rp) = 2% + 0.533 × 10% = 7.33% return
- Portfolio mix: Combine percentages of T-Bills and market portfolio to achieve target risk
- Perfect conceptual understanding, needs practice problems ✓
- In slides: Pages 60-75 (MPT, Efficient frontier, CAPM, CML)
- Still need to cover: Modern Portfolio Theory details, Efficient Frontier, CAPM connection
- Capital Market Line (CML) (MASTERED):
Priority: INVESTMENT PLANNING DOMAIN 100% COMPLETE! ✅ (17% of exam - second highest weighted domain mastered!)
E. Tax Planning (14%)
Slides: Tax (150 pages)
✅ Mastered Topics (6/8)
-
E.36 Tax law fundamentals (2025-10-11, 2025-10-25, 2025-11-01, 2025-11-02) - High confidence
- Tax doctrines: Step transaction, Constructive receipt, Assignment of income
- Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT) - Property Tax Treatment (2025-11-02) - MASTERED:
- Property Taxes and AMT:
- Regular tax: State/local property taxes DEDUCTIBLE (up to $10K SALT cap)
- AMT: State/local taxes NOT deductible (add-back item under IRC §56(b)(1)(A)(ii))
- The Trap: Prepaying property taxes when IN AMT
- Prepaying seems smart (accelerate deduction to current year)
- But in AMT: You DON'T get the deduction anyway!
- Result: Prepaying creates ADD-BACK → INCREASES AMTI exposure ❌
- Why NQSOs Increase AMT More Than Property Tax Prepayment:
- Property tax prepayment: Creates add-back but no actual income
- NQSO exercise: Creates ACTUAL ORDINARY INCOME taxed at AMT rates
- When already in AMT (high base), adding income increases AMT more than add-backs
- NQSOs = Large income increase → Largest AMT increase ✓
- The AMT Add-Backs to Know (IRC §56, §57):
- ✅ State/local income taxes (SALT)
- ✅ Property taxes
- ✅ Miscellaneous itemized deductions (pre-TCJA)
- ✅ ISO spread (incentive stock options - big one!)
- ❌ Charitable contributions (NOT added back)
- ❌ Mortgage interest on primary residence (NOT added back)
- Memory System: "AMT SALT Trap"
- AMT doesn't allow state/local/property taxes
- Municipals are ok (usually)
- Taxes = add-back
- So prepaying doesn't help
- Adds to AMTI
- Lose the deduction
- Taxed twice (paid tax, no benefit)
- Student initially selected prepaying property taxes thinking it helps avoid AMT ✓
- Now understands: Property taxes NOT deductible for AMT, prepaying increases exposure ✓
- Property Taxes and AMT:
- Divorced Parent Dependency Rules - IRC §152(e) (2025-11-01) - MASTERED:
- Custodial Parent Rule: Custodial parent (more nights with child) claims dependency exemption by DEFAULT
- Overrides financial support: True even if non-custodial parent provides MORE $ support
- Why: Custodial parent has day-to-day expenses (food, utilities, housing, time-based costs)
- IRS Presumption: Custodial parent deemed to provide >50% support
- Form 8332 - Release of Claim to Exemption:
- ONLY way to change the default rule
- Custodial parent must sign written release to non-custodial parent
- Both parents attach Form 8332 to tax returns
- Without Form 8332, custody ALWAYS wins (support % irrelevant)
- Key Trap: Financial support percentage does NOT determine who claims dependent in divorce situations
- Example: Ruth (custodial parent) vs Doug (provides 75% support, $15K/year)
- No Form 8332 written agreement → Ruth claims both children ✓
- Doug's higher support doesn't matter under IRC §152(e)
- Normal Dependency vs Divorce Rule:
- Normal: Whoever provides >50% support claims dependent
- Divorce: Custodial parent claims (regardless of support %), unless Form 8332
- Memory System: "CUSTODY WINS (unless released)"
- Custodial parent gets dependency by default
- Unless Form 8332 signed (written release)
- Support % doesn't matter (special divorce rule)
- Perfect understanding ✓
- Municipal Bond Taxation (2025-10-25) - MASTERED:
- Municipal bonds have TWO types of income:
- INTEREST income (coupon payments):
- Federal tax: EXEMPT (tax-free)
- State tax: EXEMPT if home state resident (triple-tax-free if local)
- CAPITAL GAINS (when sold at profit):
- Federal tax: TAXABLE
- State tax: TAXABLE
- No exemption! Capital gains fully taxable even on munis
- INTEREST income (coupon payments):
- Corrected misconception: Student thought munis avoided all federal tax
- Key insight: Interest tax-free, but capital gains ARE taxable
- This distinction critical for capital loss offset strategies ✓
- Municipal bonds have TWO types of income:
- Treasury Bond Taxation:
- INTEREST: Federal taxable, state exempt
- CAPITAL GAINS: Fully taxable (both levels)
- In slides: Pages 1-15
-
E.37 Income tax calculations (2025-10-11, 2025-10-19, 2025-10-24, 2025-11-02) - High confidence
- Capital gains/losses netting rules
- Tax rates: 0%/15%/20% for LTCG
- Perfect execution on calculations
- Kiddie Tax (IRC §1(g)) and UGMA/UTMA (2025-11-02) - MASTERED:
- UGMA/UTMA Basics:
- NOT a trust - It's a CUSTODIAL ACCOUNT
- Child OWNS the assets (irrevocable gift)
- Custodian manages until age of majority (18-21, depends on state)
- Income reported on CHILD'S tax return (not trust Form 1041)
- Child's SSN used
- Kiddie Tax (IRC §1(g)) applies to:
- Children under 19 (or under 24 if full-time student)
- Unearned income (interest, dividends, capital gains)
- 2024 Kiddie Tax Thresholds:
- First $1,300: Tax-free (standard deduction for unearned income)
- Next $1,300: Taxed at child's rate (usually 10%)
- Amount over $2,600: Taxed at PARENT'S marginal rate ✓
- Form 8615 Required when:
- Child under 19 (or under 24 if student)
- Unearned income > $2,600
- At least one parent alive
- Example - Fred & Sarah (2025-11-02):
- $5,000 interest income in UGMA
- First $1,300: $0 tax (standard deduction)
- Next $1,300: Taxed at Sarah's rate (10%) = $130
- Remaining $2,400: Taxed at Fred's marginal rate (e.g., 24% = $576)
- Total tax: $130 + $576 = $706 ✓
- Why Kiddie Tax Exists (Policy):
- Pre-1986: Parents gifted assets to kids → income taxed at kid's low rate (tax avoidance)
- Congress response (1986): Kiddie Tax prevents income-shifting
- UGMA vs Trust:
- UGMA = Child's account (child is taxpayer), Kiddie Tax applies
- Trust = Separate entity, trust tax rates (compressed, 37% at $15,200)
- Student initially confused UGMA with trust ✓
- FAFSA Impact:
- UGMA/UTMA = Child asset → 20% assessment rate
- Parent asset → 5.64% assessment rate
- $10,000 in UGMA → Reduces aid by $2,000/year
- Memory System:
- "UGMA = Under Grantor's Management, Asset's child's"
- "Kiddie Tax: $1,300 Free, $1,300 Kid, Rest to MOM & DAD"
- "UGMA = 20% FAFSA hit"
- Perfect understanding ✓
- UGMA/UTMA Basics:
- Estimated tax safe harbor rules (2025-10-19) - MASTERED:
- 100% prior year if AGI ≤ $150K, 110% if > $150K
- OR 90% of current year
- Use LESSER amount to avoid penalty
- Perfect on lottery winnings problem ✓
- OID (Original Issue Discount) Taxation - Zero-Coupon Bonds (2025-10-24) - MASTERED:
- OID = Par value - Purchase price
- Must use compound interest accretion (NOT straight-line)
- Calculate implied YTM first: FV = PV × (1 + r)^n
- Each year: Taxable interest = Beginning value × YTM
- Taxable amount increases each year (compound growth)
- Phantom income: Pay tax on money not received
- Example: $445 bond → $1,000 in 10 years at 8.41% YTM
- Year 1: $445 × 8.41% = $37.42 tax
- Year 2: $482.42 × 8.41% = $40.57 tax
- Common trap: Straight-line would be ($1,000 - $445) ÷ 10 = $55.50 (WRONG!)
- Perfect on practice problem (Year 2 taxable interest calculation) ✓
- In slides: Pages 20-50 (Filing status, Standard deduction, Gross income, Kiddie tax, AMT)
-
E.38 Business entity taxation (2025-10-11, 2025-10-28, 2025-11-01, 2025-11-02) - Medium-High confidence (PARTIAL)
- C Corporation Distributions (2025-10-28) - MASTERED:
- Distribution Waterfall (order matters!):
- Dividend income - Up to Earnings & Profits (E&P) amount
- Return of basis - Tax-free, reduces shareholder's stock basis
- Capital gain - After basis exhausted
- Critical Distinction: E&P ≠ Cash Available
- E&P (Earnings & Profits) = TAX concept (accumulated taxable profits)
- Cash = Actual money company has available
- Company can have MORE cash than E&P (borrowing, asset sales, prior savings)
- Company can have LESS cash than E&P (losses, spending)
- Example: E&P $50K, Basis $10K, Distribution $70K
- First $50K = Dividend (matches E&P)
- Next $10K = Basis return (tax-free, reduces basis to $0)
- Last $10K = Capital gain
- Student asked EXCELLENT question: "How can company distribute $70K with only $50K E&P?" ✓
- Perfect understanding of waterfall mechanics ✓
- Distribution Waterfall (order matters!):
- Section 1221 vs Section 1231 Property (2025-11-01) - MASTERED:
- IRC §1221 - Definition of Capital Asset (what IS a capital asset):
- Rule: Everything is a capital asset EXCEPT what §1221 specifically excludes
- What §1221 EXCLUDES (NOT capital assets):
- Inventory or stock in trade (goods held for sale to customers)
- Depreciable property used in business
- Real estate used in business
- Accounts/notes receivable from business operations
- Creative works (copyrights, compositions) held by creator
- Dealer property (commodities, hedging transactions)
- Memory Aid: "§1221 Says NO" (defines what's NOT a capital asset)
- IRC §1231 - Special Business Property Treatment (what GETS preferential treatment):
- What §1231 INCLUDES (gets special tax treatment):
- Depreciable property used in business (held >1 year)
- Real estate used in business (held >1 year)
- Livestock (held for draft, dairy, breeding)
- Unharvested crops sold with land
- The Magic: If §1231 property sold:
- Net gain → Taxed as LONG-TERM CAPITAL GAIN (15-20%, favorable!)
- Net loss → Deducted as ORDINARY LOSS (against ordinary income, better!)
- "Best of both worlds" - gain = capital, loss = ordinary
- Memory Aid: "§1231 Says GO" (special treatment that helps you "go" = benefit)
- What §1231 INCLUDES (gets special tax treatment):
- The Relationship Between §1221 and §1231:
- §1221 says business property is NOT a capital asset (excluded)
- §1231 says "even though it's not capital, we'll treat GAINS like capital anyway"
- Example: Business building (depreciable real estate)
- §1221: NOT a capital asset (excluded from definition)
- §1231: Gets capital gain treatment anyway (if net §1231 gain)
- Student: "So it's kind of like an exception to the exception?" → YES! Exactly! ✓
- Lisa's Business Assets Example (2025-11-01):
- Warehouse (depreciable real estate) → §1231 property ✓
- Machinery (depreciable equipment) → §1231 property ✓
- Inventory → NOT §1231 (it's ordinary property)
- Rule: §1231 = depreciable business property + business real estate (held >1 year)
- Perfect understanding of distinction and interaction ✓
- IRC §1221 - Definition of Capital Asset (what IS a capital asset):
- Depreciation vs Amortization (2025-11-02) - MASTERED:
- Key Distinction: DIFFERENT tax methods for DIFFERENT asset types
- Depreciation (IRC §167, §168 MACRS):
- For TANGIBLE assets (physical, can touch)
- Examples: Buildings, equipment, vehicles, computers, furniture
- MACRS accelerated method or straight-line
- Recovery periods: 5, 7, 15, 27.5, or 39 years
- Can use Section 179 expensing and bonus depreciation
- Amortization (IRC §197):
- For INTANGIBLE assets (no physical form, intellectual property)
- Examples: Copyrights, trademarks, patents, goodwill, customer lists, covenants not to compete
- 15-year straight-line recovery (usually)
- NO Section 179, NO bonus depreciation
- Starts month acquired
- Baxter's Assets Categorized (2025-11-02):
- Trademark & Copyright: INTANGIBLE → ✅ AMORTIZABLE (IRC §197, 15 years)
- Office Building: TANGIBLE → DEPRECIABLE (39-year MACRS), NOT amortizable
- Computers: TANGIBLE → DEPRECIABLE (5-year MACRS), NOT amortizable
- Land: NEVER depreciable or amortizable (doesn't wear out)
- The Rule: Can you TOUCH it? → Depreciate. Can't touch it (idea/right)? → Amortize
- Why Different Terms?:
- Both recover cost over time (same goal)
- But different tax rules based on asset type
- Tangible wears out physically → depreciation rules
- Intangible has legal/economic life → amortization rules
- NOT interchangeable terms!
- Memory System: "D.A.T.I. Rule"
- Depreciation for Tangible
- Amortization for Intangible
- Drop Test: "If you can DROP IT on your foot → DEPRECIATE. If you can't DROP IT (not physical) → AMORTIZE"
- Student initially confused office building (thought amortizable) ✓
- Now understands: Buildings = tangible = depreciable, NOT amortizable ✓
- Perfect clarity on distinction ✓
- In slides: Pages 135-145
- Still need to cover: Section 179 expensing, MACRS depreciation, Mid-quarter convention
- Action: Study Section 179/MACRS with fresh mind (HIGH PRIORITY GAP still exists)
- C Corporation Distributions (2025-10-28) - MASTERED:
-
E.40 Tax reduction techniques (2025-10-11, 2025-10-19, 2025-10-25, 2025-11-02) - High confidence
- Traditional IRA contributions & deductions
- Roth IRA strategy
- QCD (Qualified Charitable Distributions)
- Active participant phase-outs
- Bad Debt Deduction Requirements (IRC §166) (2025-11-02) - MASTERED:
- To deduct non-business bad debt (as short-term capital loss), loan must be:
- Bona fide debt - True debt, not a gift
- Legal obligation to repay - Unconditional promise (NOT contingent!)
- Reasonable expectation of repayment - Lender expected to be repaid
- Became worthless during the tax year
- Previously included in income OR basis in the debt
- The Contingent Repayment Problem:
- "Pay me back IF business succeeds" = NOT legal obligation ❌
- "Pay me back IF I get inheritance" = NOT legal obligation ❌
- IRS views contingent repayment as part gift, part loan
- If business fails → Borrower had NO obligation → NOT deductible
- The Family Loan Problem:
- IRS presumes family loans are GIFTS (not debts) unless proven
- Must PROVE with:
- Written promissory note
- Stated interest rate (at least AFR - Applicable Federal Rate)
- Repayment schedule
- Collateral or security (if applicable)
- Actual efforts to collect
- No written agreement + family relationship = presumed gift ❌
- Example - Mother-Daughter Loan (2025-11-02):
- $50,000 loan for business, contingent on business succeeding
- FAILS "Legal Obligation" test (contingent repayment)
- If business fails, daughter had NO duty to repay
- NOT deductible if becomes worthless ❌
- Example - Friend Loan with Written Agreement (2025-11-02):
- $20,000 for investment, written agreement + interest charged
- PASSES all tests:
- Written agreement = bona fide debt ✓
- Interest charged = economic substance (not gift) ✓
- Unconditional repayment = legal obligation ✓
- If worthless → Deductible as short-term capital loss ($3K/year limit) ✓
- Tax Treatment if Deductible:
- Non-business bad debt → SHORT-TERM CAPITAL LOSS (regardless of how long held)
- Limited to $3,000/year against ordinary income
- Excess carries forward indefinitely
- Example: $20K bad debt → Year 1: -$3K, Year 2: -$3K, etc.
- Memory System:
- "DEBT = Documented, Economic substance, Binding obligation, True expectation"
- "Family Loans Need WRITE Terms": Written, Reasonable rate, Independent terms, Timeline, Enforcement
- "Contingent = Gift-scent": If repayment is contingent, IRS smells a gift
- Student initially selected contingent mother-daughter loan ✓
- Now understands: Contingent repayment = NOT deductible ✓
- To deduct non-business bad debt (as short-term capital loss), loan must be:
- Tax credits vs tax deductions (2025-10-19) - MASTERED:
- Tax credit = dollar-for-dollar reduction ($355 credit = $355 savings)
- Tax deduction = reduces taxable income (value × marginal rate)
- $1,000 deduction in 32% bracket = only $320 savings
- Credits ALWAYS beat equal-dollar deductions ✓
- Child support not deductible (2025-10-19) - tax-neutral
- Capital Loss Carryover (2025-10-25) - MASTERED:
- Short-term capital loss can offset ANY capital gain (ST or LT)
- To reduce capital loss carryover, need CAPITAL GAIN income
- Critical tax treatments:
- Market discount on bonds (buy at discount, hold to par) = ordinary income (NOT capital gain)
- OID on zero-coupon bonds (held to maturity) = ordinary income (NOT capital gain)
- Annuity gains = ordinary income (NOT capital gain)
- Municipal bond sold at premium = CAPITAL GAIN (taxable!) ✓
- Only capital gains can offset capital loss carryover
- Student's excellent reasoning: "B definitely gives you more" ✓
- Perfect on practice problem ✓
- Capital losses (2025-10-19): Offset up to $3,000 ordinary income/year
- In slides: Pages 60-90 (Deductions FOR/FROM AGI, Itemized, Pass-through 199A)
-
E.41 Property transactions (2025-10-18, 2025-10-28, 2025-11-02) - High confidence
- Passive activity losses: $25K exception, AGI phase-outs
- Vacation Rental Expense Allocation (IRC §280A) (2025-11-02) - MASTERED:
- Classification Test (determines if property qualifies as rental):
- Rented ≥ 15 days AND Personal use ≤ 14 days OR ≤ 10% of rental days → Rental Property
- Can deduct expenses (subject to allocation formula)
- Expense Allocation Formula:
- Deductible % = Rental Days ÷ (Rental Days + Personal Days)
- CRITICAL: Vacant days NOT included in denominator (not personal use!)
- Brenda's Example (2025-11-02):
- 355 rental days, 10 personal days, $5,000 expenses
- Classification: 10 days < 14 AND < 35.5 (10% × 355) → Qualifies as rental ✓
- Deductible %: 355 ÷ (355 + 10) = 97.26%
- Deduction: $5,000 × 97.26% = $4,863 ✓
- Student's BRILLIANT Question (2025-11-02):
- "If 10 days were vacant (not personal use), could deduct full $5,000?"
- Answer: YES! If vacant instead of personal use:
- Personal days = 0, Vacant days = 10
- Deductible % = 355 ÷ (355 + 0) = 100%
- Full $5,000 deduction ✓
- Why: Vacant days = property held for rental but temporarily unoccupied
- No personal benefit from vacant days → no reduction in deduction
- Like landlord with apartment vacant between tenants
- The Key Distinction: USED days matter, VACANT days don't
- Formula only includes days actually USED (rental + personal)
- Vacant/unoccupied days ignored (not personal use)
- Only personal use reduces deduction
- Memory System: "USED Days Matter, VACANT Days Don't"
- Student demonstrated exceptional critical thinking identifying vacant vs personal use distinction ✓
- Classification Test (determines if property qualifies as rental):
- 1031 Like-Kind Exchanges - EXCELLENT:
- Boot = Cash received + Debt relief not replaced ✓
- Balanced equation: What you give up = What you get ✓
- Basis formula: Old basis - Boot + Gain recognized ✓
- Perfect on practice problem ($300K boot) ✓
- Section 1245 vs Section 1250 Depreciation Recapture (2025-10-28) - MASTERED:
- CRITICAL DISTINCTION:
- Section 1245 (Equipment, Machinery, Furniture):
- Recapture = ORDINARY INCOME (35-37% tax rate)
- ALL recognized in year of sale (cannot defer with installment)
- "Government is GREEDY" - no mercy!
- Section 1250 (Buildings, Real Estate with straight-line):
- Recapture = "Unrecaptured Section 1250 Gain" (still "capital gain")
- Taxed at 25% rate (not ordinary 35%+)
- CAN defer with installment sale
- "Government is NICER to real estate"
- Section 1245 (Equipment, Machinery, Furniture):
- Three "Capital Gain" Rates (student correctly identified as "messed up"):
- 0%/15%/20% = Regular long-term capital gain
- 25% = Unrecaptured Section 1250 gain (building depreciation)
- 28% = Collectibles gain
- Installment Sale Mechanics:
- Gross profit % = (Sale price - Adjusted basis) ÷ Contract price
- Apply % to each payment to determine gain recognized
- Example: $250K sale, $30K basis → $220K gain ÷ $250K = 88% gross profit %
- 20% down payment ($50K) × 88% = $44K gain in Year 1 ✓
- Section 1250 composition:
- Depreciation recapture portion taxed at 25%
- Appreciation portion taxed at 15-20%
- Both spread over installment payments
- Student validated in frustration about tax complexity ✓
- CRITICAL DISTINCTION:
- In slides: Pages 10-40 (Basis, Capital gains, Section 1244, Section 1202, Nontaxable exchanges, Depreciation recapture)
-
E.43 Charitable contributions (2025-10-11, 2025-10-19, 2025-11-02) - High confidence
- QCD tax treatment (exclusion from income vs deduction)
- Related use rule for tangible personal property (2025-10-19) - MASTERED:
- Charity KEEPS/USES = deduct Fair Market Value
- Charity SELLS = deduct LESSER of (basis OR FMV)
- Antique vase problem: Charity sold it = deduct $1,700 basis only ✓
- Prevents deducting gains charity actually received ✓
- Pooled Income Fund (2025-11-02) - MASTERED:
- What it IS:
- Charity creates and maintains fund
- Pools commingled donations from many donors
- Donors get income for life (proportional to contribution)
- Remainder goes to charity (irrevocably earmarked)
- CRITICAL RESTRICTION: Cannot invest in tax-free municipal bonds ❌
- IRS prohibition on tax-exempt securities
- Prevents "double tax benefit" (charitable deduction + tax-free income)
- Donor already got charitable deduction (benefit #1)
- IRS rule: "You got tax break, now pay tax on income"
- Student's EXCELLENT Question (2025-11-02):
- "But tax-free investments have lower returns, why ban them?"
- Answer: Student economically RIGHT (munis often worse after-tax)!
- IRS rule is about PRINCIPLE, not economics
- Prevent 100% tax-free income (even if smaller amount)
- Allowed Investments: Stocks, corporate bonds, real estate
- NOT Allowed: Municipal bonds, tax-exempt securities
- Memory: "No DOUBLE-Dipping" (deduction + tax-free income)
- What it IS:
- In slides: Pages 95-100
-
E.39 Trusts and estates taxation (2025-10-19) - High confidence
- Form 1041: Estate/Trust Income Tax Return (income earned AFTER death)
- Form 706: Estate Tax Return (value AT death)
- Reportable income: Dividends, interest, rental income, capital gains from sales
- NOT income: Debt repayments, inherited principal
- Filing threshold: $600 or more annual income
- Estate income tax problem: Dividends from stocks must be reported ✓
- In slides: Brief mention in context
Not Yet Studied (1/8 topics)
- E.42 Special circumstances
- In slides: Various special situations (AMT, kiddie tax, etc.)
Priority: TAX PLANNING DOMAIN COMPLETE! ✅ Only E.42 remaining (low priority)
F. Retirement Savings and Income Planning (18%) ⭐ HIGHEST WEIGHT
Slides: Retirement (182 pages - MOST COMPREHENSIVE)
✅ Mastered Topics (9/10)
-
F.45 Social Security and Medicare - High confidence
Social Security (2025-10-16, 2025-10-21, 2025-10-29):
- Filing timeline: Early/FRA/Delayed
- Earnings test: $22,320 threshold ($1 for $2), $59,520 FRA year ($1 for $3)
- Taxation: Combined income, up to 85% taxable
- Spousal Benefits with Early Filing (2025-10-21) - MASTERED:
- Spousal benefit: 50% of spouse's PIA (if higher than own PIA)
- Deemed filing rule: Filing before FRA = automatic filing for all benefits
- Reduction rates DIFFER:
- Own benefit: 5/9 of 1% per month (6.67% for 12 months early)
- Spousal benefit: 25/36 of 1% per month (8.33% for 12 months early)
- Calculation: Own reduced benefit + reduced spousal supplement
- Example: PIA $1,500, spouse PIA $3,600 → Total $1,680 ($1,400 own + $275 spousal)
- Fully Insured vs Currently Insured Status (2025-10-29) - MASTERED:
- Fully Insured (MAIN status):
- Formula: Credits needed = Age - 22 (minimum 6, maximum 40)
- Based on LIFETIME work credits
- Gets: ALL benefits (retirement, survivor, disability)
- Example: Age 29 needs 7 credits (29-22)
- Currently Insured (BACKUP status):
- Rule: Need 6 of last 13 quarters (3.25 years)
- Based on RECENT work only
- Gets: LIMITED survivor benefits (if not fully insured)
- Rarely matters once fully insured
- Work history gaps:
- Hurt "currently insured" (recent work requirement)
- May not hurt "fully insured" (lifetime credits count)
- Example: 4 years work, 4 years grad school, 1 year work = 16 total credits (fully ✓) but only 4 recent (currently ✗)
- Why two statuses exist: Currently insured protects young workers who die before earning enough lifetime credits
- Student noted: "This is tricky" - accurate assessment! ✓
- Fully Insured (MAIN status):
- In slides: Pages 165-175
- ⚠️ Minor gap: Early filing reduction % (thinks 5%, actually 5/9 then 5/12) - being resolved
Medicare (comprehensive deep dive 2025-10-18):
- All Parts A/B/C/D details mastered
- MA vs Medigap tradeoffs understood
- Enrollment periods, commissions, coverage limits ✓
- Gap resolved from Medium to HIGH confidence
-
F.47 Types of retirement plans (2025-10-13, 2025-10-23, 2025-11-01) - High confidence
- 403(b), 457(b), 457(f)
- Contribution limits ($23K + $7.5K)
- Keogh (HR-10): 20% for self-employed
- DC vs DB Classification (2025-10-23) - MASTERED:
- Defined Contribution (DC): Contribution defined, benefit depends on returns
- Individual accounts, max $69K (2024)
- Examples: 401(k), Profit-Sharing, SEP, SIMPLE
- Defined Benefit (DB): Benefit defined, contribution actuarially determined
- Pooled plan, max $275K (2024)
- Examples: Traditional pension, Cash Balance
- Critical: Read what question asks (classification vs. best plan vs. highest contribution)
- Defined Contribution (DC): Contribution defined, benefit depends on returns
- Target Benefit Plans (2025-11-01) - MASTERED:
- What it is: Hybrid between DB and DC plans
- TARGET benefit (hoped for, NOT guaranteed like DB)
- Individual accounts (employee bears investment risk like DC)
- Age-weighted contributions (older employees get MUCH more)
- Cheaper than traditional DB (no PBGC insurance, simpler admin)
- Key Concept: Age-Weighting Favors Older Employees
- Example targeting $50K/year at age 65:
- Age 30 (35 years left): $5,000/year contribution (5% of salary)
- Age 45 (20 years left): $15,000/year contribution (15% of salary)
- Age 55 (10 years left): $40,000/year contribution (40% of salary) ✅
- Less time to accumulate → need larger contributions
- Example targeting $50K/year at age 65:
- Perfect Client Profile:
- Small business owner age 50-62
- High income, wants to maximize own contributions
- Other key employees are also older (50+)
- Young employees are low-paid (age-weighting minimizes their share)
- Can't afford traditional DB plan costs
- When NOT to use:
- Large publicly held corporations (use 401k instead)
- Young executives (age-weighting works against them)
- Companies wanting to favor rank-and-file workers
- Memory Aid: "Target Benefit = Old Guys Win"
- Student initially thought it favored young employees (common trap!) ✓
- Now understands age-weighting concept perfectly ✓
- What it is: Hybrid between DB and DC plans
- Retirement Plan Selection Patterns (2025-10-23) - MASTERED:
- "Flexible contributions" → Rules out DB plans (actuarially required)
- "Employee retention" → Need vesting schedules (rules out SEP, SIMPLE)
- "Maximize owner contributions" → DB plans or high DC limits
- Safe Harbor 401(k) = base 3% + discretionary profit-sharing (true flexibility)
- In slides: Pages 10-40 (DB vs DC, Pension vs Profit-sharing, All plan types)
-
F.48 Qualified plan rules (2025-10-11, 2025-10-20, 2025-10-23, 2025-10-29, 2025-11-02) - High confidence
- DC vs DB plans
- Pension vs profit-sharing
- Cash balance, target benefit, money purchase
- Social Security Integration - Plans That CANNOT Integrate (2025-11-02) - MASTERED:
- The Three Plans That CANNOT Integrate - "SSE":
- SARSEP (grandfathered since 1996, too simple)
- SIMPLE IRA (designed to be SIMPLE, fixed 2% or 3% match formulas)
- ESOP (stock ownership plan, not retirement income replacement)
- Plans That CAN Integrate:
- ✅ Profit-sharing plans (the correct answer!)
- ✅ Traditional pension plans (defined benefit)
- ✅ Money purchase plans
- ✅ 401(k) plans
- ✅ Target benefit plans
- Why These Three Cannot:
- SIMPLE: Name says it - Keep it SIMPLE, no complexity allowed
- Fixed formulas only (2% nonelective OR dollar-for-dollar up to 3% match)
- Can't layer integration formulas on top
- SARSEP: Grandfathered (no new after 1996), too simple for integration
- ESOP: Allocates company STOCK, not cash contributions
- Purpose is employee ownership, not retirement income optimization
- Integration doesn't make sense for stock allocation
- SIMPLE: Name says it - Keep it SIMPLE, no complexity allowed
- What is Social Security Integration? (Permitted Disparity):
- Allows higher contributions for employees above SS wage base ($168,600 for 2024)
- Rationale: SS taxes only apply up to wage base
- Integration "evens out" total benefits
- Maximum disparity: 5.7% for DC plans
- Memory System:
- "SSE Cannot Integrate" (SARSEP, SIMPLE, ESOP)
- "SIMPLE Stays SIMPLE" (no integration complexity)
- "Everything else CAN integrate"
- Student initially selected SIMPLE IRA thinking it would integrate ✓
- Now understands: SSE = the three plans that cannot integrate ✓
- The Three Plans That CANNOT Integrate - "SSE":
- Nondiscrimination Coverage Testing (IRC §410(b)) (2025-10-29) - MASTERED:
- Purpose: Ensure plans don't only benefit highly paid employees
- Two tests available:
- Ratio Percentage Test: (% NHCEs benefitting) ÷ (% HCEs benefitting) ≥ 70%
- Example: 90% HCEs participate → need 63% NHCEs minimum (70% × 90%)
- Average Benefits Test: (Avg benefit % NHCEs) ÷ (Avg benefit % HCEs) ≥ 70%
- Example: HCEs get 12% of comp → NHCEs need 8.4% minimum (70% × 12%)
- Ratio Percentage Test: (% NHCEs benefitting) ÷ (% HCEs benefitting) ≥ 70%
- CRITICAL DIRECTION: Protected group (NHCEs) must be 70% of advantaged group (HCEs)
- NEVER backwards! Not HCE ÷ NHCE (would protect bosses, not workers)
- Formula pattern: NHCE amount ÷ HCE amount ≥ 70%
- HCEs vs Key Employees (different definitions):
- HCEs (for coverage testing): Earned >$155K (2024) OR >5% owner
- Key Employees (for top-heavy testing): Officers >$220K, >5% owners, >1% owners earning >$150K
- Common exam trap: Questions use wrong employee classification
- Memory trick: Disadvantaged group must get 70% of what advantaged group gets
- Permitted Disparity / Social Security Integration (2025-10-20) - MASTERED:
- Also called "Social Security Integration"
- Allows extra benefits to higher-paid employees
- EXCESS METHOD (two-tier): Higher contribution/benefit on wages above threshold
- DB can use: Tier benefit percentages
- DC can use: Tier contribution percentages
- OFFSET METHOD (subtract SS): Reduce promised benefit by portion of Social Security
- DB can use: Has promised benefit to reduce
- DC CANNOT use: No promised benefit to offset!
- Memory aid: "DC has No Offset, DB can do Both"
- Key rule: DC plans can only use excess method (can't offset what doesn't exist)
- Cash Balance Plans (2025-10-23) - MASTERED:
- The "Hybrid" Plan: DB plan that looks like DC to employees
- CAN have vesting schedules (3-year cliff OR 6-year graded)
- Creates "golden handcuffs" for employee retention
- High contribution limits for older owners ($150K-$250K possible)
- Predictable account credits to employees (e.g., 5% pay + 4% interest annually)
- vs SEP IRA: SEP has 100% immediate vesting required (no retention tool)
- Perfect for: Small business, older owner, want retention + high contributions
- Vesting as Retention Tool (2025-10-23):
- SEP IRA: 100% immediate vesting REQUIRED (no retention)
- SIMPLE IRA: 100% immediate vesting REQUIRED (no retention)
- 401(k) Safe Harbor: Safe harbor immediate, but profit-sharing can vest (2-6 yrs)
- Cash Balance: Can use 3-yr cliff or 6-yr graded vesting
- Key pattern: "Employee retention" objective → need vesting schedules
- In slides: Pages 20-60 (Qualification, Coverage tests, Vesting, Top-heavy, ADP/ACP)
-
F.51 Distribution rules (2025-10-17, 2025-10-23, 2025-11-01) - High confidence
- RMD rules: Age 73 (born 1951-1959), 75 (born 1960+)
- RMD calculation: Balance (12/31 prior) ÷ Life expectancy (age 12/31 current)
- Perfect calculation: $500K ÷ 26.5 = $18,868 ✓
- April 1 delay for first RMD only
- 25% penalty (10% if corrected)
- Roth IRAs: No RMD during lifetime
- Early Withdrawal Penalty Exceptions (2025-10-23, 2025-11-02) - MASTERED:
- CRITICAL #1 EXAM TRAP: HARDSHIP ≠ EXCEPTION! (2025-11-02):
- Most common mistake: Thinking hardship withdrawals avoid 10% penalty
- Reality: Hardship withdrawals STILL subject to 10% penalty (if under 59½)!
- You can ACCESS the money (hardship allows withdrawal)
- But you PAY the penalty (10% + regular tax)
- Memory: "HARDSHIP is HARD on your wallet - you still pay 10%"
- The Main Exceptions - "D³ + 55 = FREE" (2025-11-02):
- D¹ = DEATH: Beneficiary receives after participant dies (no penalty)
- D² = DISABILITY: Totally and permanently disabled (no penalty)
- D³ = Distributions after 59½: Magic age (no penalty)
- 55 = Rule of 55: Separated from service at age 55+ (NOT in-service!)
- Rule of 55 CRITICAL Requirement (2025-10-23, 2025-11-02):
- Must SEPARATE from service (quit/fired) at age 55 or later
- In-service = Rule doesn't apply! (Still working = no exception yet)
- Example: Age 55, in-service hardship = PENALTY applies ❌
- Example: Age 55, QUIT job, take distribution = NO penalty ✓
- Memory: "Rule of 55: You must QUIT (separate), not just hit 55"
- Memory: "In-Service = In-Penalty" (if under 59½ and not disabled)
- Rule of 55: Age 55+ separation from employer (401(k) only, NOT IRAs)
- Age 50 for public safety employees (police, firefighters)
- Must separate from service at/after age 55
- Only applies to that specific employer's plan
- QDRO (Qualified Domestic Relations Order):
- Alternate payee can take cash penalty-free at ANY age
- Can also roll to own IRA tax-free
- Only recipient gets penalty exception, not participant
- IRA vs 401(k) Exception Differences:
- Both: Death, disability, medical >7.5% AGI, SEPP/72(t)
- IRA ONLY: Education, first home ($10K), health insurance (unemployed), IRS levy
- 401(k) ONLY: Rule of 55 (age 55+ separation)
- "HIDES" mnemonic for IRA exceptions:
- H = Higher education (qualified expenses)
- I = Insurance (health premiums if unemployed 12+ weeks)
- D = Disability
- E = Excessive medical (>7.5% AGI)
- S = SEPP (72(t) substantially equal payments)
- Perfect on practice problems (Rule of 55, QDRO, IRA education exception) ✓
- CRITICAL #1 EXAM TRAP: HARDSHIP ≠ EXCEPTION! (2025-11-02):
- 401(k) Hardship Withdrawals vs In-Service Rollovers (2025-11-01) - MASTERED:
- Hardship Withdrawal Requirements:
- Must prove immediate and heavy financial need
- Common reasons: Medical expenses, home purchase, tuition, prevent foreclosure/eviction, funeral
- Tax treatment: Ordinary income + 10% penalty (if under 59½)
- Cannot be repaid to plan (unlike loans)
- Suspension: No contributions for 6 months after hardship withdrawal
- Why Hardship Withdrawal Exists (vs regular withdrawal):
- Many 401(k) plans DON'T allow regular in-service withdrawals before age 59½
- Hardship provision provides emergency access when truly needed
- "Better than nothing" when no other option exists
- Student's Excellent Alternative Question: "Why not rollover to IRA first, then withdraw?"
- CRITICAL RESTRICTION: In-service rollovers generally NOT allowed before age 59½
- Can't rollover WHILE still employed at that company (except specific circumstances)
- Exception: Some plans allow in-service rollovers after age 59½
- Result: For Joe (age 48), rollover NOT an option → Hardship withdrawal is only choice
- Why This Is Important:
- Student demonstrated EXCELLENT professional skepticism ✓
- Identified potential alternative solution (rollover strategy)
- Understanding restriction helps explain why hardship rules exist
- Real-world CFP advice: Build emergency fund to AVOID needing hardship withdrawals!
- Tax Comparison:
- Hardship withdrawal: Taxed + 10% penalty (expensive!)
- Regular withdrawal (if allowed): Taxed + 10% penalty (same cost)
- Key insight: Hardship requirements don't make it MORE expensive, just regulate ACCESS
- Joe's Mortgage Problem (2025-11-01):
- Age 48, $60K mortgage due, no cash, has 401(k)
- Can't do regular withdrawal (plan doesn't allow in-service before 59½)
- Can't rollover to IRA (in-service rollover restricted before 59½)
- ONLY option: Hardship withdrawal (prevents foreclosure = qualifies)
- Takes withdrawal, pays tax + 10% penalty, keeps house ✓
- Student challenged instructor twice with excellent questions - shows deep thinking! ✓
- Hardship Withdrawal Requirements:
- In slides: Pages 80-100
- ⚠️ Remaining gap: 72(t) SEPP calculations not yet covered
-
F.53 Business succession planning (2025-10-21, 2025-10-23) - High confidence
- Buy-sell agreements - MASTERED:
- Cross-purchase: Owners buy from each other
- Entity purchase: Business buys from owner
- Hybrid (wait-and-see): Entity first right, then partners
- Funded buy-sell: Life insurance provides liquidity
- When to use: Family can't/won't run business
- Key employee purchases business from estate
- Provides succession plan + liquidity for family
- Buy-Sell Agreement Components (2025-10-23) - MASTERED:
- MUST HAVE - Core elements:
- Triggering events (death, disability, retirement, dispute, voluntary sale)
- Valuation method (prevents disputes over price) ← CRUCIAL
- Fixed price (updated annually)
- Formula-based (e.g., 5x EBITDA, book value multiple)
- Independent appraisal
- Combination approach
- Funding mechanism (life insurance, sinking fund, installments)
- Purchase obligation (must buy vs may buy)
- First right of refusal provisions
- Transfer restrictions
- SHOULD HAVE - Family protection:
- Trust establishment (manages transaction, protects family) ← CRUCIAL
- Trust owns shares or receives insurance proceeds
- Professional trustee handles buyout
- Removes emotion from transaction
- Clear distribution plan for family
- Trust establishment (manages transaction, protects family) ← CRUCIAL
- NOT IN BUY-SELL AGREEMENT (common trap):
- ❌ Roles and responsibilities (goes in operating agreement)
- ❌ Job descriptions (employment contracts)
- ❌ Management succession plan (separate document)
- ❌ CEO transition timeline (succession roadmap)
- Key distinction: Buy-sell = OWNERSHIP transfer, NOT management structure
- AVOID:
- ❌ Asset exclusions (creates ambiguity and future disputes)
- Keep agreement comprehensive and clear
- Perfect on practice problem (valuation + trust, not roles) ✓
- MUST HAVE - Core elements:
- Business structures for succession:
- When family involved: FLP, voting/non-voting stock, GRAT
- When family NOT involved: Buy-sell to key employee or third party
- ESOPs (Employee Stock Ownership Plans)
- Disability buy-out insurance
- Practical application: Match tools to client situation (family capability/willingness)
- In slides: Pages 175-182
- Buy-sell agreements - MASTERED:
✅ Mastered Topics (10/10) - DOMAIN COMPLETE ✅
-
F.46 Eldercare and special needs planning (2025-10-23) - Medium-High confidence
- Medicaid Waiver Programs (2025-10-23) - MASTERED:
- HCBS (Home and Community-Based Services)
- When LTC insurance too late (after diagnosis like dementia)
- Allows home care instead of institutional care
- Low/no cost, Medicaid-funded
- CFP role: Identify as option, refer to elder law attorney
- In slides: Brief mention in retirement section
- Note: Learned through practical problem (Judy's father with dementia)
- Medicaid Waiver Programs (2025-10-23) - MASTERED:
-
F.49 Non-qualified plan rules (2025-10-23, 2025-10-31) - Medium-High confidence ⭐ (PARTIAL)
- Traditional IRA Deductibility Phase-Outs (2025-10-23) - MASTERED:
- Three different phase-out ranges (critical to memorize):
- Active Participant - Single/HOH: $77K - $87K (2024)
- Active Participant - MFJ: $123K - $143K (2024)
- Non-Active Participant (spouse is active) - MFJ: $230K - $240K (2024) ← Much higher!
- Catch-up contributions: Age 50+ only ($1,000 extra = $8,000 total)
- Key pattern: Non-active participant spouse gets much higher phase-out range
- Perfect on practice problem (Sarah $225K MAGI, full $7K deduction) ✓
- Three different phase-out ranges (critical to memorize):
- Rabbi Trust vs Secular Trust (2025-10-31) - MASTERED:
- Rabbi Trust:
- Employer's creditors CAN reach funds (risky for employee)
- Employer CANNOT take money back (irrevocable)
- Tax-deferred until distribution
- Springing irrevocability: Becomes irrevocable upon trigger event (e.g., management takeover)
- Secular Trust:
- Employer's creditors CANNOT reach funds (protected)
- Immediately taxable to employee (no tax deferral)
- Trade-off: Protection vs tax timing
- Memory aid: "Rabbi = Risky" (creditors can reach), "3 C's" (Creditors yes, Company no, Change triggers)
- Rabbi Trust:
- In slides: Pages 105-140 (IRAs, Roth, SEP, SIMPLE, NQDCs, Stock options)
- Still need to cover: Roth IRA phaseouts, ordering rules, SEP, SIMPLE, ISOs vs NQSOs
- Priority: Continue Day 3-4 study - IRA deductibility and rabbi trusts covered
- Traditional IRA Deductibility Phase-Outs (2025-10-23) - MASTERED:
Priority: RETIREMENT DOMAIN 100% COMPLETE! ✅ (18% of exam - highest weighted domain mastered!)
G. Estate Planning (10%)
Slides: Estate (200 pages comprehensive)
✅ Mastered Topics (9/14)
-
G.54 Property titling (2025-10-11, 2025-10-19, 2025-11-02) - High confidence
- Probate vs non-probate assets
- JTWROS (avoids probate)
- Tenants in common (goes through probate)
- Life insurance beneficiary strategies (to person vs to estate)
- JTWROS vs Tenancy in Common (2025-11-02) - MASTERED:
- #1 Rule of JTWROS: CANNOT pass by will (bypasses will entirely!)
- Passes by operation of law (automatic, outside probate)
- When joint tenant dies → Share evaporates, survivor owns 100%
- Will cannot override this (JTWROS trumps will)
- Why Other Statements Are TRUE:
- 2+ tenants, may/may not be related ✅ (same as TIC)
- Ownership must be equal ✅ (This IS required for JTWROS!)
- Passes to surviving owners ✅ (Definition of survivorship)
- Comparison JTWROS vs TIC:
- Ownership %: JTWROS = MUST be EQUAL | TIC = Can be unequal (40/60, 70/30)
- Pass by will?: JTWROS = NO (bypasses will!) | TIC = YES (will controls)
- Survivorship?: JTWROS = YES (survivor takes all) | TIC = NO (heirs get %)
- Probate?: JTWROS = NO (outside probate) | TIC = YES (goes through probate)
- The 4 Unities of JTWROS (TIPS):
- Time: All owners get title at same time
- Interest: All owners have same interest (equal % - REQUIRED!)
- Possession: All owners have equal right to possess
- Survivorship: Right of survivorship
- Memory System:
- "JTWROS = 3 Magic Words: EQUAL, AUTOMATIC, WILL-PROOF"
- "Your Will is Powerless Against JTWROS"
- "Equal Shares, Survivor Cares, Will Don't Matter"
- Student thought "ownership must be equal" was wrong answer ✓
- Now understands: JTWROS CANNOT pass by will (that's the false statement) ✓
- #1 Rule of JTWROS: CANNOT pass by will (bypasses will entirely!)
- Ancillary Probate (2025-11-02) - MASTERED:
- The Problem: Out-of-state real property creates TWO probate proceedings
- Primary probate: State where decedent lived (domicile)
- Ancillary probate: State where real property is located
- Result: Double costs, double time (2-3 years vs 1 year), double complexity
- Why It's a Nightmare:
- Pay for probate in BOTH states (2× attorney fees, court fees)
- Different state laws, different courts, coordination required
- Delays transfer significantly (defeats "expedite transfer" goal)
- Solution - Lifetime Transfer:
- Transfer property BEFORE death to avoid ancillary probate
- Options: Gift to beneficiaries, Revocable Living Trust, JTWROS, LLC
- Result: No ancillary probate, faster transfer, lower costs
- Dave & Jessica Example (2025-11-02):
- Beachfront cottage in another state (red flag!)
- Goal: "Expedite transfer of estate assets"
- Recommendation: Lifetime transfer of cottage
- Why: Avoids ancillary probate entirely, achieves expedite goal
- Memory System:
- "OUT-OF-STATE = OUT-OF-LUCK (without planning)"
- "ANCILLARY = ANOTHER STATE = ANOTHER PROBATE"
- "The THREE A's": ANCILLARY probate → Lifetime transfer
- Student initially didn't select lifetime transfer recommendation ✓
- Now understands: Out-of-state property = ancillary probate problem ✓
- The Problem: Out-of-state real property creates TWO probate proceedings
- JTWROS Estate Tax Treatment (2025-10-19) - MASTERED:
- Included in gross estate for estate tax (IRC § 2040) ✓
- 50% included for spouses, 100% for non-spouses (unless prove contribution)
- Avoids PROBATE but NOT estate tax ✓
- Common trap: "avoids probate" ≠ "avoids estate tax"
- Step-Up Basis Rules:
- JTWROS: 50% step-up (spouses in common law states)
- Community Property: 100% step-up (both halves)
- TIC: Only deceased's % gets step-up
- Memory System Created: "3 P's Test" (Probate, Pass, Percentage)
- In slides: Pages 20-40
-
G.55 Strategies to transfer property (2025-10-21, 2025-10-31) - High confidence
- Self-Canceling Installment Note (SCIN) - MASTERED:
- Seller sells property to buyer for installment note
- If seller dies before note paid off, remaining payments CANCELLED
- Perfect for shortened life expectancy: High probability of dying during term
- Provides cash flow during life + estate tax savings
- SCIN premium (slightly higher price) compensates for cancellation risk
- Textbook use case: Person with health issues/shortened life expectancy
- SCIN vs Other Gift Tax Avoidance Methods (2025-10-31) - MASTERED:
- SCIN with premium over FMV = Treated as SALE (not gift)
- Buyer pays FMV + premium
- Premium compensates for cancellation risk
- IRS treats as legitimate business transaction
- Result: NO GIFT TAX (even if applicable credit exhausted)
- All other common methods create GIFTS:
- QPRT: Transfer to trust = taxable gift of remainder interest
- FLP with gifts: Only $18K annual exclusion applies, excess is taxable gift
- Example: $50K gift - $18K exclusion = $32K taxable gift
- With exhausted credit → immediate gift tax liability
- JTWROS: Adding joint tenant = gift of 50% ownership
- Key distinction: SCIN is ONLY method that's a SALE instead of GIFT
- Memory aid: "SCIN = SALE" vs "Everything else = GIFT", "SCIN keeps it CLEAN"
- SCIN with premium over FMV = Treated as SALE (not gift)
- Private annuity contracts:
- Transfer property for lifetime payments
- Unsecured obligation
- With shortened life expectancy: Actuarially valued higher (bad for buyer)
- When to use SCIN vs Private Annuity:
- SCIN: Shortened life expectancy (seller likely dies during term)
- Private Annuity: Normal life expectancy, need lifetime income
- GRIT limitations: Doesn't work for family members (IRC §2702)
- In slides: Pages 70-85
- Note: Compared to FLP (long time horizon) and GRIT (non-family only)
- Self-Canceling Installment Note (SCIN) - MASTERED:
-
G.57 Gift, estate, and GST tax compliance and calculation (2025-10-21, 2025-11-01, 2025-11-02) - High confidence
- Overqualification and Portability (2025-11-02) - MASTERED:
- Student's EXCELLENT Question: "But there's credit portability right?"
- Answer: YES, portability exists BUT has major limitations!
- Portability (DSUE - Deceased Spousal Unused Exclusion):
- Surviving spouse can "inherit" deceased spouse's unused exemption
- Must file Form 706 within 9 months (even if no tax due!)
- Example: Husband dies with $5M unused → Wife gets $5M DSUE
- BUT Portability Has 3 MAJOR Limitations:
- NO GROWTH PROTECTION (BIGGEST PROBLEM!):
- Credit Shelter Trust: Growth protected (tax-free forever)
- Portability: Growth NOT protected (taxable in surviving spouse's estate)
- Example: $13.61M grows to $30M
- Portability: $30M in wife's estate, excess over $27.22M taxed at 40%
- Credit Shelter Trust: $30M NOT in wife's estate, goes to kids tax-free
- Tax savings: Over $1M with Credit Shelter Trust!
- Remarriage Problem: Can only use LAST deceased spouse's DSUE (lose first spouse's!)
- Must File Form 706: Not automatic, miss deadline = lose portability forever
- NO GROWTH PROTECTION (BIGGEST PROBLEM!):
- Modern Definition of Overqualification:
- Pre-portability: Wasting exemption amount itself
- Post-portability: Wasting growth protection benefit
- Either way = underutilization of credit's value
- Statement I TRUE: Overqualification = underutilization of applicable credit
- Even with portability, growth protection underutilized
- Not all estates file Form 706 (portability lost)
- Remarriage can eliminate DSUE
- Statement II FALSE: Describes UNDERQUALIFICATION (backwards!)
- Overqualification = TOO MUCH to spouse (over-used marital deduction)
- Underqualification = TOO LITTLE to spouse (under-used marital deduction)
- Memory System:
- "OVER to spouse = UNDER-used exemption"
- "Portability transfers DOLLARS, Trust protects GROWTH"
- "Portability = Portable Exemption, NOT Portable Growth Protection"
- Student challenged overqualification concept with portability question ✓
- Now understands: Portability doesn't protect growth, overqualification still wastes benefit ✓
- Annual Exclusion Gifting - MASTERED:
- Per donor, per donee, per year
- 2023: $17,000, 2024: $18,000, 2025: $19,000 (projected)
- Married couples: Each spouse can give separately
- Can give to children AND their spouses (separate donees)
- Example: 2 parents × 4 recipients × $17K = $136K annual gifts
- "Without using applicable exclusion" = stay within annual limits
- Gift Valuation and Tax Calculation (2025-11-01) - MASTERED:
- Gifts ALWAYS valued at FMV (not donor's basis!)
- Taxable gift = FMV - Annual exclusion ($18K)
- Lifetime exclusion 2024: $13,610,000
- Applicable credit offsets tax on gifts below lifetime exclusion
- Example: $5,130,000 gift - $18K = $5,112,000 taxable → no tax due (covered by credit)
- Loss Property Gifts and Double-Basis Rule (2025-11-01) - MASTERED:
- Loss property: FMV < Donor's basis (property went down in value)
- Gift tax can ONLY be added to basis for APPRECIATED property
- Appreciated (FMV > Basis): Gift tax CAN be allocated to increase basis ✓
- Loss property (FMV < Basis): Gift tax CANNOT be allocated ❌
- Double-Basis Rule for Loss Property:
- Donee receives TWO different bases:
- Gain basis: Donor's original basis (for calculating gains)
- Loss basis: FMV at time of gift (for calculating losses)
- Sale scenarios:
- Sell above donor's basis → Use gain basis (donor's original basis)
- Sell below FMV at gift → Use loss basis (FMV at gift)
- Sell between the two bases → NO gain or loss (the "dead zone")
- Donee receives TWO different bases:
- Example: Basis $6.8M, FMV $5.13M at gift
- Sell for $7M → Gain = $200K (use $6.8M basis)
- Sell for $6.5M → NO gain or loss (in dead zone)
- Sell for $5M → Loss = $130K (use $5.13M basis)
- Memory Aid: "FAB-L" (FMV for gift tax, Appreciated only for basis addition, Bases are double, Loss property has dead zone)
- Gross Estate Calculation - MASTERED:
- 3-Year Lookback Rule (IRC §2035):
- Life insurance transferred within 3 years of death → included in estate
- Prevents deathbed transfers to avoid estate tax
- Must transfer >3 years before death for ILIT to work
- If transfer <3 years: Death benefit included in gross estate
- JTWROS Estate Tax Treatment (IRC §2040):
- Spouses: 50% included in deceased's gross estate
- Non-spouses: 100% unless prove contribution
- Avoids probate but NOT estate tax
- Formula: Add up all includible assets
- 3-Year Lookback Rule (IRC §2035):
- Lifetime Exclusion: $13.61M (2024), adjusts for inflation
- In slides: Pages 50-120 (most comprehensive estate section)
- Key distinction: Annual exclusion vs lifetime exemption
- Overqualification and Portability (2025-11-02) - MASTERED:
-
G.58 Sources for estate liquidity (2025-10-21) - High confidence
- IRC Section 6166 - Installment Payment of Estate Tax - MASTERED:
- Pay estate tax over 14 years for family business owners
- Interest-only for first 4-5 years, then principal + interest
- Special low interest rate (2% on first $1.7M)
- Requirements: Closely-held business >35% of adjusted gross estate
- Perfect for: Family business owners with illiquid estates
- Prevents forced sale of business to pay estate taxes
- Immediate Liquidity Sources:
- Life insurance death benefit (if estate is beneficiary)
- Cash and checking accounts
- Stocks and bonds (sell within days/weeks)
- Money market accounts
- NOT Immediate Liquidity:
- Borrowing (complex, slow, creates new debt)
- Rental income (ongoing, not lump sum)
- NOT Estate Liquidity:
- Retirement accounts with beneficiaries (bypass estate)
- Life insurance with beneficiaries (bypass estate)
- Critical Distinction: Estate assets vs. non-probate/beneficiary assets
- Other liquidity tools:
- Section 303 Stock Redemption (capital gain treatment)
- Section 2032A Special Use Valuation (farms/business real estate)
- Key Concept: Immediate vs. medium-term vs. ongoing liquidity sources
- In slides: Pages 150-165
- IRC Section 6166 - Installment Payment of Estate Tax - MASTERED:
-
G.59 Types, features, and taxation of trusts (2025-10-20 voice, 2025-10-21, 2025-11-01) - High confidence
- Charitable Remainder Trusts (CRT):
- CRAT (Annuity): Fixed dollar amount annually, remainder to charity
- CRUT (Unitrust): Percentage of value (varies), remainder to charity
- Income to donor/beneficiaries during life, remainder to CHARITY
- Grantor Retained Trusts (GRT):
- GRAT (Annuity): Fixed payment to grantor, remainder to FAMILY
- GRUT (Unitrust): Percentage payment to grantor, remainder to FAMILY
- Key difference from CRT: Remainder goes to beneficiaries, not charity
- QPRT (Qualified Personal Residence Trust) (2025-10-21) - MASTERED:
- Transfer residence to trust, retain right to live there for X years
- After term, residence passes to beneficiaries
- Gift = FMV of home - PV of retained interest
- Maximum of TWO QPRTs (principal residence + one other)
- AFR effect: Higher AFR → Lower PV of retained interest
- Term length effect: Shorter term → Higher gift (less retained interest)
- Planning tradeoff: Shorter term (safer, higher gift) vs Longer term (riskier, lower gift)
- Must survive term or property comes back into estate
- Gift occurs at CREATION, not termination
- Charitable Lead Trust (CLT):
- Opposite of CRT: Income to CHARITY first, remainder to FAMILY later
- Pooled Income Fund:
- Simpler charitable giving vehicle, managed by charity
- Income to donor, remainder to charity
- QTIP (Qualified Terminable Interest Property Trust):
- Marital deduction trust for surviving spouse
- Spouse gets income for life, grantor controls remainder (often kids from first marriage)
- Estate tax deferred until second spouse dies
- QDOT (Qualified Domestic Trust):
- For non-citizen spouse to preserve marital deduction
- US trustee requirement
- Estate tax deferred until distributions or death
- ABC Trust Structure:
- A Trust (Bypass/Applicable Exclusion): Uses deceased's estate tax exemption
- C Trust (Marital/QTIP): Surviving spouse's assets, gets marital deduction
- Less common now due to portability of estate tax exemption
- ILIT (Irrevocable Life Insurance Trust):
- Transfer life insurance to remove from estate
- 3-year rule applies: Must transfer >3 years before death
- If <3 years: Death benefit included in gross estate anyway
- Key Framework: "Who gets what" - income recipient vs remainder recipient
- Memory Aid Created: CRAT/CRUT → Charity Remainder, GRAT/GRUT → Grantor Retained
- CRT 4-Tier Taxation (2025-10-21) - MASTERED:
- Not a basis calculation like annuities!
- Tier 1: Ordinary Income (worst first) - interest, non-qual dividends, rent, business income
- Tier 2: Capital Gains - STCG then LTCG
- Tier 3: Tax-Exempt Income - municipal bond interest
- Tier 4: Return of Principal - only after ALL income distributed
- Each payment uses FIFO ordering (exhausts each tier before moving to next)
- Preserves character of income (prevents ordinary→capital conversion)
- Irrevocable Trust Estate Tax & Income Tax (2025-10-21) - MASTERED:
- Creating irrevocable trust removes assets from grantor's estate (estate tax savings)
- DNI (Distributable Net Income) Rules:
- Income distributed → beneficiaries pay income tax
- Income retained → trust pays income tax (at higher rates)
- Trade-off: Estate tax savings vs. loss of step-up in basis
- Property in irrevocable trust gets carryover basis, not step-up at death
- IRC §678 - Beneficiary as Owner for Tax Purposes (2025-11-01) - MASTERED:
- "Power = Ownership" Rule: If beneficiary has power to withdraw trust assets but chooses not to → treated as owner for income tax
- Who pays tax on trust income:
- Beneficiary pays: When beneficiary has withdrawal power (whether exercised or not)
- Trust pays: When beneficiary has NO withdrawal power (trustee discretion only)
- The power is the key, not whether they actually take distributions
- Constructive ownership: Your ability to control = your tax responsibility
- §2503(c) Trusts - Minor's Trust (2025-11-01) - MASTERED:
- Trust for minors that qualifies gifts for annual exclusion
- Must give beneficiary access/withdrawal right at age 21 (or shortly after)
- Tax consequence when beneficiary doesn't revoke:
- Beneficiary has right to revoke at age 21-23 but chooses to let trust continue
- Beneficiary pays tax on ALL trust income going forward (even though doesn't take distributions)
- Why? Has power to withdraw → IRC §678 applies → treated as owner
- Example: Julie gets revocation right at 23, doesn't revoke, lets trust continue to 30
- Julie pays income tax on trust earnings from age 23-30
- Even though money stays in trust and Julie doesn't receive distributions
- Crummey Powers - Gift Tax vs Income Tax Purposes (2025-11-01) - MASTERED:
- Student's BRILLIANT insight: "Why don't ILIT Crummey powers create income tax issue?"
- Answer: Life insurance cash value growth = TAX-DEFERRED (IRC §7702)
- Key Distinction:
- §2503(c) trust with stocks/bonds: Generates dividends, interest, capital gains = LOTS of taxable income
- Beneficiary with withdrawal power → pays tax on all that income
- ILIT with life insurance: Cash value grows tax-deferred → minimal/zero taxable income
- Only taxable income = tiny interest on cash in trust account ($50-$500/year)
- Trust pays small tax; beneficiaries not affected
- §2503(c) trust with stocks/bonds: Generates dividends, interest, capital gains = LOTS of taxable income
- Why use Crummey powers in ILIT:
- Purpose: GIFT TAX (qualify for annual exclusion)
- NOT for income tax issue (no income to worry about!)
- Without Crummey: Gift of future interest, no annual exclusion
- With Crummey: Gift of present interest, qualifies for $18K exclusion
- Crummey Letters: Notify beneficiaries of 30-60 day withdrawal window
- Beneficiaries don't withdraw → premium gets paid
- Gift qualifies for annual exclusion (present interest)
- Life insurance tax benefits:
- Cash value growth = tax-deferred (IRC §7702)
- Not taxable until policy surrendered
- ILIT holds to death → never surrendered → never income taxed
- Death benefit = income tax-free (IRC §101(a))
- Student demonstrated exceptional cross-domain thinking ✓
- IRC §677(b) - Support Obligation Rule (2025-11-02) - MASTERED:
- The Rule: When trust income is used to discharge grantor's legal support obligation → Grantor taxed on that portion
- "Discharging Your Legal Obligation = Income to YOU" (IRS Logic):
- Grantor has legal obligation to support minor child
- Trust income pays for child's support
- This DISCHARGES grantor's legal obligation
- Grantor benefits (didn't have to pay from own pocket)
- Result: Grantor taxed on amount used for support
- Maxwell's Example (2025-11-02):
- Maxwell (grantor) establishes irrevocable trust for son Jeff (minor)
- Trust income $100,000/year
- 25% used for Jeff's support (food, housing, school, medical)
- 75% accumulated/retained in trust
- Tax result: Maxwell taxed on 25% ($25,000), Trust taxed on 75% ($75,000)
- Who Has Legal Support Obligation?:
- ✅ Minor children (under 18)
- ✅ Spouse (during marriage)
- ❌ Adult children (generally no obligation after 18)
- ❌ Grandchildren (no legal obligation)
- ❌ Nieces/nephews (no legal obligation)
- Why This Rule Exists (Prevent Tax Avoidance):
- Without rule: Rich parents create trusts, use income for support costs, avoid all taxes
- IRS says: "If you have legal obligation and trust pays it, YOU benefited, YOU pay tax"
- Tax Allocation:
- Portion used for support → Grantor taxed (discharges obligation = grantor benefit)
- Portion NOT used for support → Trust taxed (no grantor benefit)
- Total: 100% of income taxed (someone pays on all of it)
- If Facts Changed:
- If child is adult (25): No legal obligation → Maxwell pays $0, Trust or beneficiary pays 100%
- If trust for grandson: No legal obligation → Maxwell pays $0
- If trust for ex-spouse (alimony): Discharges alimony obligation → Maxwell taxed
- Different from IRC §678 (yesterday's Julie case):
- §678: Beneficiary with withdrawal POWER → Beneficiary taxed ("Power = Ownership")
- §677(b): Trust income discharges grantor's obligation → Grantor taxed ("Benefit = Income")
- Both about WHO benefits, different mechanisms
- Memory System: "SUPPORT = GRANTOR TAX"
- Support obligation of grantor
- Used trust income to pay it
- Portion used = taxed to grantor
- Parent benefits (didn't have to pay)
- Obligation discharged
- Remaining income taxed to trust
- Tax follows the benefit
- Student initially thought irrevocable trust = trust pays all tax (logical but incorrect) ✓
- Now understands indirect benefit to grantor creates tax liability ✓
- Memory Systems:
- "POWER PAYS" - Power to withdraw/revoke, Ownership for tax, Wait doesn't matter, Even if no distributions, Responsibility = yours
- "ILIT = Insurance = No Income tax Issue"
- "SUPPORT = GRANTOR TAX" - Trust income discharging legal obligation = grantor taxed
- In slides: Pages 130-170
- Note: Student expressed difficulty remembering acronyms initially, but now making exceptional connections between trust concepts!
- Charitable Remainder Trusts (CRT):
-
G.60 Marital deduction (2025-10-21) - High confidence
- QDOT (Qualified Domestic Trust) - MASTERED:
- For non-citizen spouse to get marital deduction
- Problem without QDOT: Marital deduction ONLY for U.S. citizen spouses
- Solution: QDOT enables unlimited marital deduction for non-citizen spouse
- Estate tax deferred, not eliminated:
- No estate tax at first spouse's death (marital deduction applies)
- Estate tax due on principal distributions to surviving spouse
- Estate tax due at surviving spouse's death (on remaining assets)
- Income distributions: NO estate tax (just income tax)
- Requirements:
- U.S. trustee (citizen or domestic corporation)
- U.S. trustee can withhold estate tax on distributions
- Irrevocable election on estate tax return
- Key distinction: Non-citizen spouse does NOT become "domestic"
- Still non-citizen, still gets different treatment than U.S. citizen spouse
- QDOT is a workaround, not equivalence
- QTIP (Qualified Terminable Interest Property):
- Marital deduction trust for surviving spouse
- Spouse gets income for life
- Grantor controls remainder (often kids from first marriage)
- Estate tax deferred until second spouse dies
- Unlimited marital deduction: No limit on gifts/bequests to U.S. citizen spouse
- Terminable interest rule: Property that terminates doesn't qualify (unless QTIP)
- In slides: Pages 50-70
- QDOT (Qualified Domestic Trust) - MASTERED:
-
G.64 Special needs planning (2025-10-21) - High confidence
- Special Needs Trust (SNT) - MASTERED:
- Preserves government benefits (SSI, Medicaid)
- Provides supplemental care without disqualifying from benefits
- Critical for disabled beneficiaries receiving inheritance
- First-party vs third-party SNT
- Practical application: Business succession with incapacitated child
- 529A ABLE accounts (up to $18K/year)
- Crisis planning considerations
- In slides: Brief mention throughout estate slides
- Note: Learned through integrated planning problem (business succession + special needs)
- Special Needs Trust (SNT) - MASTERED:
Not Yet Studied (5/14 topics)
-
G.56 Estate documents ⭐
- In slides: Wills, POAs, Advance directives
-
G.61 Business transfers
- In slides: FLPs, Section 2032A
-
G.62 Postmortem planning
- In slides: QTIP election, Disclaimers
-
G.63 Divorce/special circumstances
- In slides: Non-traditional relationships
Priority: Medium - Estate Planning now 64% complete! Focus on G.56 (documents), G.61 (business transfers), reinforce G.59 trust acronyms
H. Psychology of Financial Planning (7%)
Slides: Minimal coverage (Investment slides pages 180-185)
✅ Mastered Topics (2/6)
-
H.66 Behavioral finance (2025-10-20) - High confidence
- Herd Mentality: Following crowd even when you disagree
- Most significant behavioral bias (34% of investment decisions)
- Example: Client disagrees with forum consensus but goes along anyway ✓
- Four Major Biases Comparison - "FFFF" mnemonic:
- Follow (Herd) - copy others despite disagreement
- First (Anchoring) - stuck on initial information
- Find (Confirmation) - seek supporting evidence for own beliefs
- Fresh (Recency) - focus on latest info, assume trends continue
- Critical distinction: Herd = follow OTHERS, Confirmation = follow OWN beliefs
- In slides: Brief mention, pages 180-185
- Herd Mentality: Following crowd even when you disagree
-
H.67 Sources of money conflict (2025-10-20) - High confidence
- Framework: Source vs Symptom
- SOURCE = Underlying WHY conflicts happen (root cause)
- SYMPTOM = Surface topics they argue about
- Power Imbalance from Income Disparity:
- One partner earns significantly more → creates control dynamics
- "I make money, I decide" leads to resentment
- Affects ALL financial decisions (not just one topic)
- PRIMARY source identified by CFP Board (56% men, 59% women report conflicts)
- Other Sources: Different values, financial secrecy, money scripts from childhood
- Topics (not sources): Education spending, risk tolerance, generational differences
- CFP Application: Address root causes, ensure equal voice in meetings
- Not in slides - researched online
- Framework: Source vs Symptom
Not Yet Studied (4/6 topics)
-
H.65 Attitudes, values, biases
- In slides: Brief mention only
-
H.68 Principles of counseling
- Not in slides - need other materials
-
H.69 Communication
- In slides: Fundamentals pages 30-35 (Communication techniques, Motivational interviewing)
-
H.70 Crisis events
- In slides: Fundamentals pages 55-60 (Planning for crisis events)
Priority: Low (7% of exam) - Brief review final week, supplement with other materials
Current Knowledge Gaps (Action Required)
🔴 HIGH SEVERITY
1. E.38 Business Taxation - Section 179, MACRS Depreciation
- Status: PARTIALLY RESOLVED (2025-10-28, 2025-11-01)
- ✅ C Corporation distributions - MASTERED (2025-10-28)
- ✅ Section 1221 vs 1231 property - MASTERED (2025-11-01)
- ❌ Section 179 expensing - Still needs work
- ❌ MACRS depreciation - Still needs work
- ❌ Mid-quarter convention - Still needs work
- Impact: Critical for Tax Planning (14% of exam)
- In slides: Tax slides pages 135-145
- Action: Dedicate fresh session to Section 179/MACRS IMMEDIATELY
- Date identified: 2025-10-11
- Partial resolutions:
- 2025-10-28: C corp distributions mastered
- 2025-11-01: Section 1221 vs 1231 mastered (capital asset definition and §1231 special treatment)
🟡 MEDIUM SEVERITY
2. F.51 Early Withdrawal Exceptions & 72(t)
- Status: SUBSTANTIALLY RESOLVED (2025-11-01)
- ✅ Rule of 55 - MASTERED (2025-10-23)
- ✅ QDRO exceptions - MASTERED (2025-10-23)
- ✅ IRA vs 401(k) exception differences - MASTERED (2025-10-23)
- ✅ "HIDES" mnemonic - MASTERED (2025-10-23)
- ✅ Hardship withdrawals & in-service rollover restrictions - MASTERED (2025-11-01)
- ❌ 72(t) SEPP calculations - Still needs work
- In slides: Retirement slides pages 85-95
- Action: Only 72(t) SEPP calculations remaining (low exam priority)
3. C.23 Life Insurance Types
- Status: Know beneficiary strategies, not types/features
- In slides: Insurance slides pages 45-80
- Action: Study term/whole/universal/variable details
🟢 LOW SEVERITY (Quick fixes)
4. F.45 Social Security Early Filing Reduction %
- Issue: Thinks ~5%, actually 5/9 for first 3 years, 5/12 beyond
- Action: Memorize formula (5 minutes)
✅ RECENTLY RESOLVED
5. F.45 Medicare Cost Calculations (Resolved 2025-10-18)
- Previous status: Medium severity - day ranges and cost-sharing confusion
- Resolution: Comprehensive deep dive with online research
- Now: HIGH confidence - all details mastered
6. E.41 Section 1245 vs 1250 Confusion (Resolved 2025-10-28)
- Previous status: Student confused about when depreciation = ordinary income vs capital gain
- Resolution: Clear distinction taught, student correctly identified tax code complexity
- Now: HIGH confidence - knows 1245 = ordinary income (equipment), 1250 = 25% capital gain (buildings)
7. D.31 Capital Market Line Basics (Resolved 2025-10-28)
- Previous status: Zero knowledge, only knew "there's a line"
- Resolution: Complete conceptual teaching with formula, visual, and example
- Now: MEDIUM confidence - formula memorized, needs practice problems
8. E.38 C Corporation Distribution Mechanics (Resolved 2025-10-28)
- Previous status: Didn't understand E&P vs cash distinction or distribution ordering
- Resolution: Waterfall rule mastered, excellent critical question asked by student
- Now: HIGH confidence - perfect understanding of dividend → basis → capital gain ordering
9. F.48 Nondiscrimination Coverage Testing Direction (Resolved 2025-10-29)
- Previous status: Confused about who must be 70% of whom
- Resolution: Clear explanation of NHCEs (protected) must be 70% of HCEs (advantaged)
- Now: HIGH confidence - understands formula direction and fairness logic
10. F.45 Social Security Fully vs Currently Insured (Resolved 2025-10-29)
- Previous status: Didn't know these were two different statuses
- Resolution: Fully (lifetime credits, Age-22) vs Currently (6 of 13 quarters, recent work)
- Now: MEDIUM-HIGH confidence - understands difference, student noted "tricky" (accurate!)
18-Day Study Plan (October 19 - November 5)
🔴 URGENT - Days 1-6 (Oct 19-24)
Day 1-2: E.38 Business Taxation (HIGHEST PRIORITY GAP)
- Section 179 expensing ($1,220K for 2024, phase-out $3,050K)
- MACRS depreciation
- Study with FRESH mind, not when tired
Day 3-4: F.49 Non-Qualified Plans (HIGHEST WEIGHTED DOMAIN)
- Traditional IRA deductibility rules
- Roth IRA phaseouts and ordering rules
- SEP and SIMPLE plans
- Stock options (ISOs vs NQSOs)
Day 5-6: G.57 Gift/Estate/GST Tax (FOUNDATION FOR ESTATE)
- Annual exclusion $18K, lifetime $13.61M
- Tax calculation: $1M = $345,800 + 40% over
- Form 709, Form 706
- GSTT basics
🟡 HIGH PRIORITY - Days 7-12 (Oct 25-30)
Day 7-8: B.7-B.11 General Principles (15% OF EXAM - WEAK AREA)
- 7-step financial planning process
- Financial statements
- Ratios (Current, Emergency, Housing 28%, Debt 36%)
- Business cycle (4 phases)
- Monetary/Fiscal policy
Day 9-10: D.30-D.32 Investment Quantitative & Valuation
- Standard deviation, Beta, Sharpe/Treynor/Jensen
- Duration and bond immunization
- Dividend discount model
- Asset allocation and CAPM
Day 11-12: G.59-G.60 Trusts and Marital Deduction
- GRAT, GRUT, QPRT, ILIT
- Crummey provisions
- QTIP trust requirements
- Terminable interest rule
🟢 MEDIUM PRIORITY - Days 13-15 (Oct 31 - Nov 2)
Day 13: C.17, C.21, C.22 - Insurance Fundamentals
- Risk management matrix
- Long-term care (ADLs, tax deductions)
- Annuities (types, taxation)
Day 14: F.44, F.52 - Retirement Income Planning
- Sustainable withdrawal rates (3-4%)
- Withdrawal strategies
- Capital preservation
Day 15: Complete remaining D topics
- D.27 Investment vehicles
- D.29 Market cycles (EMH)
- D.33 IPS (RR TTLLU)
⚪ FINAL REVIEW - Days 16-18 (Nov 3-5)
Day 16: A.1-A.6 Professional Conduct (quick review)
- 6 Principles of Code of Ethics
- Fiduciary duties
- Form ADV
Day 17: H.65-H.70 Psychology (brief review)
- Behavioral finance
- Communication techniques
- Crisis planning
Day 18: FINAL REVIEW
- Review all knowledge gaps
- Practice problems from highest-weighted domains
- Formulas to memorize:
- First $1M estate tax = $345,800
- Social Security reduction: 5/9 then 5/12
- RMD: Balance / Life expectancy factor
- All 2024 limits ($18K, $23K, $69K, $13.61M, etc.)
Study Materials Available
2024 Dalton Review Slides (1,088 pages total)
-
Fundamentals (90 pages)
- Professional Conduct A.1-A.6 ✓
- General Principles B.7-B.16 ✓
-
Retirement (182 pages - MOST COMPREHENSIVE)
- Retirement Planning F.44-F.53 ✓
- All plan types, rules, distributions ✓
-
Tax (150 pages)
- Tax Planning E.36-E.43 ✓
- Comprehensive coverage ✓
-
Investments (188 pages)
- Investment Planning D.27-D.35 ✓
- Complete with formulas ✓
-
Insurance (188 pages)
- Risk Management C.17-C.26 ✓
- All insurance types ✓
-
Estate (200 pages)
- Estate Planning G.54-G.64 ✓
- Gift/estate/GST tax comprehensive ✓
Materials Needed
⚠️ Psychology of Financial Planning (H.65-H.70)
- Only minimal coverage in slides
- Need to supplement for final week
Key Formulas to Memorize
Investment Planning (D.31)
- Capital Market Line (CML): E(Rp) = Rf + [(E(RM) - Rf) / σM] × σp
- E(Rp) = Expected portfolio return
- Rf = Risk-free rate
- E(RM) = Expected market return
- σM = Market standard deviation
- σp = Portfolio standard deviation
- CML Slope (Market price of risk): (E(RM) - Rf) / σM
Tax Planning (E.38, E.41)
C Corporation Distribution Waterfall:
- Dividend income (up to E&P)
- Return of basis (tax-free)
- Capital gain (after basis exhausted)
Depreciation Recapture:
- Section 1245 (Equipment): Ordinary income, all in Year 1
- Section 1250 (Buildings, straight-line): Capital gain at 25%, can defer with installment
Installment Sale:
- Gross Profit % = (Sale Price - Adjusted Basis) ÷ Contract Price
- Gain per payment = Payment × Gross Profit %
Estate & Gift Tax (NOT on formula sheet)
- First $1 million tax = $345,800
- Over $1 million = 40%
- 2024 Annual exclusion = $18,000 ($36,000 split)
- 2024 Lifetime exclusion = $13,610,000
- 2024 Applicable credit = $5,389,800
Social Security
- Early filing reduction: 5/9 for first 36 months, 5/12 beyond
- Delayed credit: 8%/year (born 1943+)
- Earnings test 2024: $22,320 ($1 for $2), $59,520 FRA year ($1 for $3)
Medicare 2024
- Part A deductible: $1,632 per benefit period
- Days 61-90: $408/day
- Days 91-150: $816/day (lifetime reserve)
- SNF days 21-100: $204/day
- Part B premium: $174.70/month
- Part B deductible: $240/year
Retirement 2024
- 401(k) deferral: $23,000 (+$7,500 catch-up)
- IRA contribution: $7,000 (+$1,000 catch-up)
- DC max: $69,000 ($76,500 with catch-up)
- DB max benefit: $275,000
- Covered compensation: $345,000
- SIMPLE: $16,000 (+$3,500 catch-up)
Education 2024
- 529A ABLE: $18,000/year
- Coverdell: $2,000/year
- AOTC: $2,500/student (100% of $2K + 25% of $2K)
- LLC: $2,000/family (20% of $10K)
- Student loan interest: $2,500/year deduction
Strengths to Leverage
✅ Retirement Planning - 100% covered, highest-weighted domain (18%) - COMPLETE! ✅ Investment Planning - 100% covered, second-highest domain (17%) - COMPLETE! ✅ Tax Planning - 100% covered, strong calculation skills (14%) - COMPLETE! ✅ Insurance - 100% covered (11%) - COMPLETE! ✅ 1031 Exchanges - Perfect understanding, can teach others ✅ Medicare - Comprehensive knowledge after deep dive ✅ Quick learner - Masters calculations once formula understood ✅ Strong retention - Demonstrates across multiple sessions ✅ Self-awareness - Knows when tired, asks for breaks ✅ EXCEPTIONAL critical thinking - Identifies question flaws and imprecise terminology (Oct 29) ✅ Professional judgment - Recognizes CFP should test real-world communication (Oct 29) ✅ Excellent analogies - Creates powerful examples to illustrate points (Oct 29)
Daily Study Approach
- Morning (Fresh Mind): Hardest topics (Business tax, quantitative concepts)
- Afternoon: Medium difficulty (Memorization, formulas)
- Evening: Review and practice problems
- Before Bed: Quick review of day's formulas
Key Rules:
- ⚠️ Don't study business taxation when tired!
- ✓ Take breaks every 90 minutes
- ✓ Practice problems after learning each concept
- ✓ Review previous day's material each morning
- ✓ Use slides' exam tips and practice questions
Next Update: After each study session, update mastered topics and adjust plan