The Rise of Check Kiting and Other Check Fraud

Close up of woman's hand pressing keys on keypad of automated teller machine (ATM)

While the use of paper checks has greatly diminished, thieves still view them as a source for stealing revenue. In fact, the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network warns that many thieves are returning to old-fashioned financial theft like check kiting. That’s one reason why the U.S. Postal Service urges us to not send checks through the mail, where they may be vulnerable.

“Check kiting” is a type of check fraud to be aware of. It relies on “float time.” That’s the period of delay between when a check is deposited in a bank and when the bank collects the related funds. In recent years, float time has narrowed, but it hasn’t disappeared. Unethical employees can use float time to falsely inflate an account balance, allowing checks that would otherwise bounce to clear. This type of crime usually involves multiple banks or multiple accounts in the same bank.

Strategies for Thwarting Check Fraud

Here are five strategies you can implement to keep people from using your company’s accounts for fraudulent activity, including check kiting.

1. Educate employees about bank fraud. Teach them to recognize fraudulent transactions and related red flags. Workers who are aware of suspicious activities can bolster management’s commitment to preventing fraud.

2. Rotate key accounting roles. Segregate accounting duties. By rotating tasks among staffers, if possible, you can help uncover ongoing schemes and limit opportunities to steal.

3. Reconcile bank accounts daily. Make sure someone trustworthy, who isn’t involved in issuing payments, reconciles every company bank account.

4. Maintain control of paper checks. Store blank checks in a locked cabinet or safe and periodically inventory the blank check stock. Also limit who’s allowed to order new checks.

5. Go digital. The most effective way to prevent check fraud is to stop using paper checks altogether. Consider replacing them with ACH payments or another form of electronic payments.

Tighten Up

The bottom line is, it’s a mistake to assume that check fraud is too old-fashioned to attract the attention of thieves.

Vigilance in your banking processes can help thwart it. For help tightening your internal controls, contact the office.

408-252-1800

Added Protection for Your Personal and Financial Information

Business protection secure and encryption internet technology concept. Businessman use smart pad with Virtual screen with padlock icons. Business technology background.

Protection is key when guarding your personal and financial information from fraudsters. That’s why the IRS offers a vital tool, the Identity Protection Personal ID Number (IP PIN). The IP PIN is a six-digit number you can apply for voluntarily. It’s known only to you and the IRS. It’s valid for one year, and you’ll automatically be given a new one after expiration.

To apply for an IP PIN, you must have a Social Security Number or Individual Taxpayer ID Number. You also must verify your identity to the IRS.

Suppose you file your tax return with an incorrect IP PIN. The return will be rejected, or the IRS will reach out to validate the information.

For more on IP PINs: https://www.irs.gov/identity-theft-fraud-scams/frequently-asked-questions-about-the-identity-protection-personal-identification-number-ip-pin

Photo by Photo by Chayantorn Tongmorn from Freerange Stock

An IRA Withdrawal Strategy with Tax-Reducing Power

Money and coins coming out of a wallet.

As the year winds to a close, your chance to lower your 2024 tax bill also winds down. If you’re age 70½ or older, you may want to make a qualified charitable distribution (QCD) from your IRA before year end. Normally, distributions from a traditional IRA are taxable. But the amount of your QCD is removed from your taxable income, which may preserve your eligibility for other tax breaks. It also can fulfill your annual required minimum distribution, if applicable.

A QCD can’t be claimed as a charitable contribution deduction. But, depending on your other potential itemized deductions, the standard deduction may save you more tax.

If you’re eligible, you can make a QCD up to $105,000 in 2024. For your QCD to be tax-free, it must be paid from your IRA custodian or trustee directly to an IRS-approved charity. Don’t take chances. Contact the office to nail down the details.

408-252-1800

Joseling Torrez Promoted to Manager

official headshot of Joseling Torrez

We are pleased to announce that Joseling Torrez has been promoted to the role of Manager, effective September 1st, 2024. Since joining the firm in 2019, she has consistently excelled in various areas, demonstrating an outstanding commitment to accuracy, timeliness, and efficiency. Joseling embodies the strong sense of ownership we strive for at Wheeler, and her willingness to support her colleagues makes her a true team player.

Congratulations to Joseling on this well-deserved promotion.

Are You Aware of the Business Credits and Other Tax Benefits Available?

women researching business credits for their business

It’s a challenging time for many businesses. Therefore, any help you can get, such as tax incentives and sales tax exemptions, can make a big difference. Unfortunately, these benefits often go unclaimed because businesses don’t know about them or erroneously think they’re ineligible.

1. Statutory Incentives

Some credits are available “as of right.” That is, if your business meets the specified requirements, you just need to claim the benefit on a timely filed tax return to receive it.

State and federal tax credits and exemptions are designed as incentives for businesses to engage in certain activities or invest in specific economically distressed areas. Here are a few:

Work Opportunity Tax Credit (WOTC). The WOTC is a federal credit ranging from $2,400 to $9,600 per eligible new hire from certain disadvantaged groups. Examples include convicted felons, welfare recipients, veterans and workers with disabilities. Other steps must also be taken, such as completing paperwork.

State and federal research and development tax credits. These credits may be available to an eligible business that invests in developing new products or techniques, improving processes, or developing software for internal use, regardless of size. The federal “increasing research activities” credit is generally equal to 20% of the amount by which the business increases qualified research expenditures, compared to a base amount.

The credit is available even to businesses with no income tax liability and may be carried forward to offset taxable income in future years. If eligible, a start-up company can claim the federal research credit against up to $500,000 in employer-paid payroll taxes.

Empowerment zone incentives. Certain tax breaks are available to companies that operate in federally designated, economically distressed “empowerment zones.” Tax credits may be worth up to $3,000 for each eligible employee.

Industry-based and investment credits. Many states and other jurisdictions offer tax credits and other incentives to attract certain types of businesses, such as manufacturing or film and television production. Jurisdictions may also offer investment tax credits for capital investments within their borders.

2. Discretionary Incentives

Discretionary tax breaks must be negotiated with government representatives. Typically, these incentives are intended to persuade a business to stay in or relocate to a certain state or locality.

To secure these incentives, a business must show it’ll bring benefits to the jurisdiction, such as job creation and revenue generation. Discretionary incentives may include income and payroll tax credits, property tax abatements and utility rate reductions.

3. Sales Tax Exemptions

States with sales taxes provide exemptions for some business purchases. Common exemptions include purchases by:

  • Retailers for the purpose of resale,
  • Manufacturers of equipment, raw materials or components used in the manufacturing process,
  • Specific tax-exempt entities, and
  • Agricultural businesses that buy such items as farming equipment and fuel, feed, seeds, fertilizer, and chemical sprays.

Businesses should familiarize themselves with the exemptions available where they do business and what it takes to qualify. For example, they may need to prove to the sellers that they have a resale or exemption certificate.

Don't Miss These Opportunities

Every year, a vast amount of tax credits and incentives aren’t claimed because businesses are unaware of them or erroneously believe they’re ineligible. Many more examples exist. Contact the office for help ensuring that your business receives all the tax breaks it deserves.

(408) 252-1800

Educational Benefit: An Benefit with Magnetic Power

education benefits and school library

Employers seeking to attract new recruits and retain talent should consider offering educational assistance programs to their employees. The plans aren’t new, but they temporarily offer greater flexibility in how they work.

Through Dec. 31, 2025, the funds can be used to help employees pay their federal student loan debts. According to the U.S. Dept. of Education, the average borrower in 2024 has federal student loan debt of $37,850. Student loan payments can be made directly to employees or lenders. These tax-free benefits are limited to $5,250 per employee, per year. Benefits that exceed that amount are taxable as wages.

If your company doesn’t offer an educational assistance program benefit, it might be a good idea to consider establishing one while this additional feature is still in force. In today’s tight labor market, fringe benefits like this one may be a magnet that gives your company an advantage. To learn more about adding this program to your benefit package: https://www.irs.gov/newsroom/employer-offered-educational-assistance-programs-can-help-pay-for-college

Don’t Wait Until the Last Minute to File Your Extended Return!

Woman filing extended return

If you requested an extension to file your 2023 tax return, you probably know that the deadline to file your extended return is coming up soon, on Oct. 15. If you have the information you need, consider filing now.

There’s no advantage to waiting, and last-minute filing may lead to worry. If you’re concerned about paying any tax owed, the IRS offers short- and long-term payment plans, as well as installment agreements, to taxpayers who qualify. It’s important to act quickly if you owe because any amount that was due April 15 accrues interest until the balance is paid. As soon as possible, gather your 2023 tax year records and contact the office for an extended return preparation appointment or to ask any questions you may have.

(408) 252-1800

Home Sale: Failure to Plan may Raise Your Tax Bill

Selling your home and handing over the keys

As the saying goes, there’s nothing certain in life except for death and taxes. But when it comes to selling your home, proactive tax planning can help you reduce your federal income tax bill.

A Costly Mistake to Avoid

Let’s say Tom is a soon-to-be married homeowner who’s looking to sell his principal residence. If certain tests are met, an unmarried individual may be able to exclude up to $250,000 of taxable gain.

Just before the wedding, Tom sells the home he’d purchased 20 years earlier. The home had appreciated by $500,000. He and his future wife, Stacy, plan to move into her much smaller fixer-upper home after the wedding.

As an unmarried taxpayer, Tom can exclude $250,000 of the gain from his home sale, leaving a taxable gain of $250,000 ($500,000 minus the $250,000 federal home sale gain exclusion). He owes 15% federal income tax on the gain, plus the 3.8% net investment income tax and state income tax.

Instead, suppose that Tom and Stacy had taken the time to seek tax planning advice. Their tax advisor would have let them know that the home sale gain exclusion for married couples is $500,000 if various tests are met, including that both spouses have resided in the home as their principal residence for at least two years.

Rather than sell Tom’s house before the wedding, they might have kept it and lived in it as a married couple for two years. That would have allowed them to avoid the full $500,000 in taxable gain and the resulting taxes when they later sold it. Even if Stacy had sold her fixer-upper home before the wedding, the gain would likely have been much smaller and may have been fully sheltered with her $250,000 home sale gain exclusion.

Slow Down and Seek Advice

Proactive tax planning is generally worth the effort, especially if you have a lot at stake and/or tax rates increase. Even if you don’t need advice on the subject of home sales, other issues may be much more complicated and a lack of knowledge could lead to costly mistakes. Contact the office to get the best tax planning results for your circumstances.

(408) 252-1800

Business Succession Plan and Estate Planning Should Be Inseparable

Business woman succession planning

If you’re a business owner, your company is likely your most valuable asset. To ensure it survives after you’re gone, you first need a succession plan that will provide a smooth transition of the business to one or more of your children (assuming you want to keep it in the family). In addition, you need an estate plan that effectively addresses the tax impact of transferring your ownership interests to the next generation.

Consider Who’ll Take the Reins

If you’re like many business owners, you may dream of the day you can transfer ownership to your children. A succession plan can provide a smooth transition of power when you retire and be used in the event of unexpected death before retirement.

Typically, a succession plan will outline the structure going forward and prepare for the eventual transfer of ownership interests in the business, whether through selling, gifting or a combination of the two. Make sure the plan is in writing. Identify training opportunities and special compensation arrangements for your successors. Include in the plan financial details reflecting assets, liabilities and current value, and update the plan periodically. Also, coordinate your succession plan with your estate plan.

Ensure Key Estate Planning Documents Are in Place

A comprehensive estate plan should be supported by several key documents, starting with a basic will. A will specifies how your assets will be distributed to designated beneficiaries and meets other objectives. Without a will or having assets otherwise titled, your business and other assets will be distributed under the prevailing state law, regardless of your wishes.

A financial power of attorney (POA) appoints someone to manage your affairs in case you become incapacitated and allows this “attorney-in-fact” to conduct business transactions. (Other important documents include health care powers of attorney and advanced directives.)

Make Use of Tax Breaks

If you own significant business assets, consider taking maximum advantage of currently available federal estate tax breaks. These include the unlimited marital deduction and the federal gift and estate tax exemption, which in 2024 shields up to $13.61 million. Some states also impose their own state estate or inheritance taxes.

You may be able to minimize federal and state taxes by using trusts or setting up a family limited partnership (FLP). With a tax-favored FLP, assets are removed from your taxable estate and limited partner interests can be gifted to loved ones, often at a discounted value.

Bypass Potential Family Conflicts

As you develop your succession and estate plans, you may face family challenges. Unfortunately, elevating one child to run the business and leaving another out, or giving someone a secondary role, may create hard feelings.

One estate planning strategy is to attempt to even things out. For example, let’s say that you own a business valued at $5 million and you have $5 million in other assets. You might give $5 million in business assets to the child who’s taking the helm of your business and give other assets worth $5 million to the child who isn’t active (or is less active) in the business.

Relax and Enjoy a Smooth Transition

There’s no universal plan for family business succession. What’s right depends on your circumstances and goals. Contact the office for help.

(408) 252-1800

Medicare Premiums may Lead to Tax Savings

If you pay Medicare premiums for health insurance, you may be able to combine them with other qualifying expenses and claim them as an itemized deduction for medical expenses on your tax return. This includes amounts for “Medigap” insurance and Medicare Advantage plans, which cover some costs that Medicare Parts A and B don’t cover.

Generally, you can deduct medical expenses only if you itemize deductions and only to the extent that total qualifying health care expenses exceeded 7.5% of your adjusted gross income. But, if you’re self-employed people or a shareholder-employees of an S corporation, you can generally claim an above-the-line deduction for your health insurance premiums, including Medicare premiums. That means it’s not necessary for you to itemize deductions to get the tax savings.

Contact the office with questions about claiming medical expense deductions on your personal tax return. Also, be sure to ask for help identifying an optimal overall tax-planning strategy based on your personal circumstances.

408-252-1800