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Weathering Tough Times Drought Management Considerations

Weathering Tough Times Drought Management Considerations. What Are Your Goals?. Protecting your equity? Minimizing losses? Staying in production agriculture? Orderly liquidation?. What Is Your Ability To Tolerate RISK?. Personally?? (time and tolerance)

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Weathering Tough Times Drought Management Considerations

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  1. Weathering Tough TimesDrought Management Considerations

  2. What Are Your Goals? • Protecting your equity? • Minimizing losses? • Staying in production agriculture? • Orderly liquidation?

  3. What Is Your Ability To Tolerate RISK? • Personally?? (time and tolerance) • Financially?? (position and constraints)

  4. Identify Problem(s) • Are you able to pay bills and debts when due? • Would you be able to pay them given an extended repayment period? • Does the farm/ranch typically generate income for family use? • Could the money tied up in the farm earn more in another investment?

  5. Identify Problem(s) • Do you have sufficient savings to weather several years of severe crop or livestock losses? • Would you be able to borrow money to cover cash shortfalls in an emergency?

  6. Take Stock of Your Situation... • Financial statements • Farm cost of production by enterprise

  7. Now, You’re Ready To... • Evaluate options and potential outcomes • Cash flow • Profitability • Solvency • Tax • Look ahead • 6 months • 1 year • 5 years

  8. Strategy: Buy Feed or Hay • Increases production costs • Reduces income earned per cow • Equity position is slowed or reduced • Increases tax deductible expenses • Potentially reducing tax liability • Decreased income • NOL that can be carried back or forward

  9. Strategy: Renting Additional Pasture • Able to maintain herd • Longer term commitment • Increases outflows • Reduces earnings • Increases tax deductions • If net negative farm income, equity will decrease

  10. Strategy: Calf or Cow Sales • Reduce forage use and stretch forage supplies • Early weaning • Early or additional culling of cows • Additional complications • Poor calf crops • Poor herd reproductive performance

  11. Sell Now or Later? Increase in Cow Value Needed to Justify Waiting to Sell 2 mths 5 mths 1 year 181 No losses 64 69 83 89 101 Losses = $20 per cow 139 151 133 Losses = $70 per cow 219 231 Losses = $150 per cow 213 5 % opportunity cost on funds. Five month and one year projections includes additional net earnings from renting out land (or cost savings from not leasing land) of $2,400 per year.

  12. Strategy: Adjust Family and Farm Withdrawals • Living within a budget • Minimize spending • Pay down debt • Delay investments

  13. Strategy: Adjust Family and Farm Withdrawals • Outcomes • Reduces cash outflow • Retain more farm earnings, increase owner equity • May increase future demands on farm income

  14. Strategy: Adjust Family and Farm Withdrawals • Reduction in family withdrawals • No impact on farm profitability. • No impact on farm income tax. Could reduce itemized deductions.

  15. Strategy: Adjust Family and Farm Withdrawals • Reduction in farm withdrawals • May increase farm profitability in short run, decrease it in long run • Fewer deductible expenses, more income tax, but more after-tax profit

  16. Strategy: Control Costs • Negotiate input purchases • Fixed asset utilization • Consider leasing versus owning • Consider share lease rather than cash lease

  17. Strategy: Control Costs • Outcomes: • Less cash outflow • Increased profitability • If result is positive net farm income, owner equity increases • Less deductible expenses, more income tax, but likely more after-tax profit

  18. Strategy: Increase Returns • Improve marketing techniques • Improve production practices • Use underutilized resources

  19. Strategy: Increase Returns • Outcomes • More cash inflow • Increased profitability • If result is positive net farm income, owner equity increases • More income, more income tax, but likely more after-tax profit

  20. Strategy: Change Enterprise Mix • Review farm plan enterprise by enterprise • Budgets for new alternatives should be evaluated with whole farm plan • Goals • Facilities, equipment • Skills • Market

  21. Strategy: Change Enterprise Mix • Impact on cash flow, profitability, taxes paid depends on enterprise selected • Risk environment changes

  22. Trading Land Paymentsfor Rental Payments Annual principal and interest payments with a 30 year loan Interest Rate Land Price 8% 9% 10% $300/a $29 $30 $32 $400/a $36 $40 $43 $500/a $45 $49 $54 $600/a $54 $59 $65

  23. Strategy:Change Asset Ownership • Use leases to combine and effectively use resources--land, labor, capital and management--of both parties • short term, long term • cash, share • flexible • sale/leaseback • Risk environment changes

  24. Strategy:Change Asset Ownership • Outcomes • More cash now • Decreased outflows in long run (and increased profit) if cost of custom hire, renting or leasing is less than fixed ownership costs, including loan payments

  25. Strategy: Supplemental Income • Recapture of depreciation taxed at ordinary income tax rates. Capital gains taxed at 15% (or 5% is individual is in lower tax bracket) • More cash • Decreased profitability if time away from farm leads to decrease in productivity

  26. Strategy: Supplemental Income • If off-farm income offsets any change in farm profitability and is invested in farm, owner equity increases • More income, more income tax, greater after-tax income and cash flow

  27. Strategy: Reschedule Debt • Spread principal payments over a longer period • Defer principal payments • Must have willing lender • Increases length of time obligated • Could be paid off in original time frame if loan permits early payoff without penalty

  28. Strategy: Reschedule Debt • Reduces cash outflow • Increases profitability in short run due to lower interest expenses, but decreases profitability in years to which debt is rescheduled • Less deductible interest expense, more income, more income tax (if not operating at a loss), more after-tax income

  29. Strategy: Restructure Debt • Principal or interest write-down • Tarnished reputation regarding repayment • Improves potential to remain solvent

  30. Strategy: Restructure Debt • Less cash outflow • Increases cash flow and profitability • Forgiven debt is taxable • Unless in bankruptcy or insolvent

  31. Strategy: Investment by Outsiders • Cash and/or equity infusion • Outcome • Increased inflows • Increased profitability if applied wisely • Improves potential to remain solvent • Future management and returns are shared • More record-keeping. Repayment of principal not deductible--more tax when investors repaid.

  32. Strategy: Liquidate • End the drain on equity • Must identify new occupation • Must decide what to do with proceeds • Impact on others • Tax repercussions • Depreciation recapture • Capital gains

  33. What Should You Do? • Develop written goals and prioritize them • Assess your willingness and ability to tolerate risk • Develop financial statements and analyze the current situation • Take corrective action when and where necessary, sooner rather than later! • Develop and implement a plan Call if you need assistance, at any stage!!!!

  34. 2006 Income Tax Issues Laws Applicable to Livestock Producers

  35. Tax Management Objectives • After tax profit maximization - general objective • Must consider tax as a cost, like any other cost of doing business • Minimizing taxes can result in over- investment • Tax management = minimum legal tax

  36. Tax Management Concepts • Depreciation = method of allocating cost • Tax vs management • Depreciation is a deferral • MACRS fixed life, fixed method • 1/2 year in year of purchase or sale • Except 40% rule mid-month convention • Section 179 expense election

  37. Depreciation Options • MACRS (Modified Accelerated Cost Recovery System) • GDS (General Depreciation System) • ADS (Alternative Depreciation System) • Sec 179 Expensing Election • Sport Utility Vehicles • Other Property

  38. Section 179 Expense Election • Purchased capital assets - depreciable • Fixed life: 5, 7,10,15, 20, 27.5 years • Up to $105,000 current depreciation expense ‘06 & ‘07 ($25,000 in ‘08) subject to limit > $420,000 property placed in service • Must not create a loss

  39. Section 179 Expense Election • Treated as depreciation subject to recapture, if • Converted to personal use • Business use is less than 50 percent • Pickup • GVWR > 6000 allowed • Cargo bed 6 ft or more in length

  40. Section 179 Expense Election • Sport Utility Vehicle’s • 2006 maximum $25,000 • GVRW > 6000 lbs & ≤ 14000 lbs

  41. Tax Management ToolsTo Level Income • Cash method of accounting • Accelerate taxable income or expenses • Pre-paid expenses up to 50% • Depreciation straight-line, accelerated • Income averaging • Net operating loss Carryback 5 years • Net operating loss Carryforward 20 years

  42. Cash Method • Easy to keep • Include in income in year when actually received • Include in expenses in year when actually paid • Postpone income and/or accelerate expenses

  43. Prepaid Expenses • Amount paid during the tax year for items not used until the next year. • Deduction for prepaid expenses is limited to 50% of other deductible farm expenses. • Exceptions: change in business practice or not a customary practice for the previous 3 years. • Farm related taxpayer: main home on farm or principal business is farming.

  44. Depreciation • Accelerated vs Straight Line vs Section 179 Deduction (expense election) • Quicker write off of depreciation in year when income is high • Slower write off of depreciation for periods of low income

  45. Income Averaging for Agriculture • Use Schedule J, Elected Farm Income • Schedule F, capital assets not land • Individual, Partner, & S Corp Shareholder • Not C Corporation, Estate, or Trust, • Elect any part or all farm income • Spread equally over last 3 years • Pay increase in income tax only • Does not change SE Tax or NOL

  46. Net Operating Loss • 1997 Net Operating Loss farm or business • Carry back losses to previous 2 tax years • Carry forward losses for 20 future years • 1998 Special Farm Rules allow losses • Carry back 5 previous tax years • Could generate immediate tax refunds

  47. Tax Basis Purchase, gift, or inheritance? • Purchase = Cost • Adj basis = Cost - depreciation • Gift = Donor’s tax basis • Inheritance = Fair market value (date of death)

  48. Recapture vs Capital Gain • Purchase cow • $500, 5 year life, straight line depreciation ($100/year) • After 2 years, adjusted basis = $300 • Alternative sale prices, tax implications • Sale price $300, no gain or loss • Sale price $400, $100 recapture ord. income • Sale price $600 • $200 recapture ordinary income • Capital gain = $100, marginal rate 5% or 15%

  49. Capital Gain Land, machinery, breeding livestock • Sale price in excess of purchase price • 5% capital gain tax rate for 10 % and 15% tax bracket (0 in ‘08) • 15% capital gain tax rate for 25% bracket and above • Tax shelters: Raised breeding livestock • Current deduction = cost of raising • Capital gain on sale

  50. Weather Related Sales of Livestock • 1997 Taxpayer Relief Act • Any weather related, not just drought • Eligible for Federal assistance • Declared by Secretary of Agriculture

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