Surgent's Handbook for Mastering Basis, Distributions, and Loss Limitation Issues for S Corporations, LLCs, and Partnerships - Webcast
Overview
The most difficult concepts to master when dealing with flow-through business entities are the basis and distribution concepts. Major error and malpractice issues occur if the CPA does not fully understand the impact of these rules. This course is designed to focus on the practical applications of these rules.
OSCPA has partnered with the Washington Society of CPAs for this event.
Highlights
- Timely coverage of breaking tax legislation
- Applicable coverage of any basis considerations within any recent tax legislation
- Passthrough basis calculations required as attachments to certain individual returns
- Executor's form for disclosing basis in certain distributed property; what about the basis of a property distribution from a trust?
- How 179 limitations affect basis and how tax-benefit rule is applied
- Basis implications of personal assets converted to business use
- How to calculate basis of inherited qualified and joint tenancy property
- Tax basis capital account reporting requirements
- S corporations: Beware of final IRS regulations regarding "open debt"; determine how to calculate basis; worksheets are included; understand the effect of stock basis and debt basis and IRS's recent focus on "at-risk basis" for shareholders; recognize how AAA applies or doesn't apply to S corporations; learn to apply the complex basis ordering rules and special elections that can have a big tax result; discuss loss limitation rules in depth; when you can have a taxable dividend in an S corporation; understand distributions of cash and property; understand the post-termination transition rules, and temporary post-termination rules for eligible corporations, which will be important for S corps returning to C corps
- LLCs and partnerships: Learn the detailed rules of 704 for preventing the shifting of tax consequences among partners or members; learn to calculate basis under 704 & for "at-risk" under 465; recognize how recourse, nonrecourse, and qualified nonrecourse debt can create significantly different tax results; learn the difference between basis and "at-risk basis"; review 754 step-up in basis rules; the economic effect equivalence test or "dumb-but-lucky" rule; learn to apply the complex rules of distribution of cash vs. property, and the basis treatment of charitable contributions and foreign taxes paid
Prerequisites
Experience in business taxation
Designed For
Accounting and Financial Professionals who prepare both individual and flow-through business entity tax returns and need a thorough grasp of these significant issues.
Objectives
- Determine initial basis and organizing tax-free under 351 and 721
- Understand what affects basis and how to treat distributions
- Pass the four loss limitation hurdles to deduct pass-through losses
Leader(s):
Leader Bios
Pamela Davis-Vaughn, Surgent CPE
Pamela (Pam) J. Davis-Vaughn, sometimes known as the Fabulous Tax Babe, loves providing accounting, tax, and consulting services to clients across the United States from her office in Dallas, Texas. Her experience as an entrepreneur covers organic farming in upstate New York, a direct mail and printing business in Dallas, and working in the oil fields in Kansas, Oklahoma, Arkansas, and Texas. She has also worked as a CFO in the Telecom industry, a tax and accounting manager for a large independent oil and gas company, and a CFO of a direct mail and printing company. Pam has taught CPE for several years as well as designed and taught multi-state tax classes for Division 1 schools in Texas. She has also authored books and articles on multi-state tax. She worked at KPMG in Multi-State Tax as well as the M&A Department and another regional public accounting firm in Dallas. She holds a BS degree in Business and Accounting from the University of Kansas and an MBA from Wichita State University. Pam has also completed post-graduate work in international tax at New York University. She holds a license to practice in Kansas, Texas, and New York.
Revised (11/21/23)
Non-Member Price $330.00
Member Price $280.00