From the Hill to the Street: An insider s perspective. Not FDIC Insured Not Bank Guaranteed May Lose Value

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From the Hill to the Street: An insider s perspective Not FDIC Insured Not Bank Guaranteed May Lose Value

Eaton Vance Investment Managers From the Hill to the Street An Insiders Perspective Sponsored by: Tim Anselmi & Nathan Harrison Lincoln Financial Advisors, Corp. 25420 Kuykendahl Rd. Suite C300 Tomball, TX 77375 Securities and investment advisory services offered through Lincoln Financial Advisors, Corp., a broker/dealer (member SIPC) and a registered investment advisor. Insurance offered through Lincoln affiliates and other fine companies. Lincoln Financial Group is a marketing name for Lincoln National Corporation and its affiliates. CRN-2098148-042318 2

Disclosure Neither Andrew Friedman nor Jeff Bush is providing legal or tax advice as to the matters discussed herein. The discussion herein is general in nature and is provided for informational purposes only. There is no guarantee as to its accuracy or completeness. It is not intended and may not be regarded as legal or tax advice, and financial advisors and other recipients of this information may not rely upon it (including for purposes of avoiding tax penalties imposed by the IRS or state and local tax authorities). Advisors should consult with their firm s legal and tax counsel as to matters discussed herein. Clients should consult their own legal and tax counsel before entering into any investment, annuity, estate planning, or trust arrangement, and financial advisors should advise their clients to do so. 3 Copyright Andrew H. Friedman 2018. Printed by permission. All rights reserved.

Trump s Plan Increase economic growth through: Lower taxes Less government regulation of businesses Protect U.S. businesses and workers 4

Trump s Power Republican Congress Reverse Obama executive orders Check on Trump power: Senate filibuster rules Avoid through use of reconciliation procedure 5

Tax Reform - Enactment Process Senate able to use reconciliation procedure to pass tax bill with 51 votes as long as: Bill does not lose more than $1.5T in revenue over 10 years Bill does not lose any government revenue after 10 years. Had to eliminate or cap popular deductions to recoup some of the revenue lost from reduced tax rates. Tax reform has winners and losers. Effective date: January 1, 2018 6

Tax Reform - Individual Top ordinary income tax rate reduced from 39.6% to 37% for joint incomes > $600K (rather than $470K). All lower rates expire after 2025. Inflation index changed to chained CPI, resulting in greater bracket creep. No change to 20% maximum dividend / capital gains tax rate or to ACA 3.8% surtax on investment income. FIFO treatment for security sales not required. 7 Source for this slide and following tax reform slides: Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (December 2017)

Tax Reform - Individual Individual AMT: Exemption amount is increased from $84,500 to $109,400 (joint returns). Beginning of exemption phase-out increased from $160,000 to $1,000,000 (joint returns). Change is effective only through 2025. Wealth transfer: Unified lifetime estate / gift exclusion doubled to $11.2M through 2025. No change to stepped-up basis. 8

Tax Reform - Individual Doubles standard deduction to $24K ($12K for single filers). Possible adverse effect on charitable donations and real estate values. Repeals limitation on itemized deductions claimed by high income taxpayers (Pease limit). Child Tax Credit increased to $2,000 per child, $1,400 Refundable. State and local taxes: Individuals may deduct state and local taxes only up to $10K annually. Businesses may continue to deduct state and local taxes. 9

Tax Reform - Individual Mortgage interest: Reduces cap on mortgage loans for which interest is deductible from $1M to $750K. Existing indebtedness grandfathered. Eliminates deduction for interest on home equity loans, including existing indebtedness. Charitable contributions: Increases percentage of current year income from which contributions may be deducted from 50% to 60%. 10

Tax Reform - Individual Medical expenses: Reduces income threshold from 10% to 7.5% through 2019. Casualty losses: Repeals deduction for most casualty losses. Miscellaneous itemized deductions: Repeals miscellaneous itemized deductions, including deduction for investment fees and expenses. Differing treatment for mutual fund and SMA expenses. 11

Tax Reform - Individual 529 plans: Allows tax-favored distributions for elementary and secondary school expenses up to $10,000 per student annually. Retirement plans: No significant changes. Repeals ability to recharacterize Roth IRA conversion back to traditional IRA. Can still recharacterize a non-conversion contribution to traditional or Roth IRA before the return due date. Alimony payments: Repeals deduction for alimony payments. 12

Updated Tax Bracket - 2018 Tax Rates Single Filer Tax Brackets Married Filing Jointly Tax Brackets Married Filing Separately Tax Brackets Head of Household Tax Brackets 10% $0-$9,525 $0-$19,050 $0-$9,525 $0-$13,600 12% $9,525-$38,700 $19,050-$77,400 $9,525-$38,700 $13,600-$51,800 22% $38,700-$82,500 $77,400-$165,000 $38,700-$82,500 $51,800-$82,500 24% $82,500-$157,500 $165,000-$315,000 $82,500-$157,500 $82,500-$157,500 32% $157,500-$200,000 $315,000-$400,000 $157,500-$200,000 $157,500-$200,000 35% $200,000-$500,000 $400,000-$600,000 $200,000-$300,000 $200,000-$500,000 37% $500,000+ $600,000+ $300,000+ $500,000+ 13

Updated Tax Bracket 2018 Comparison 2018 Tax Rates - Standard Deduction $12,000 Single Taxpayers 2017 Tax Rates - Standard Deduction $6,350 10% 0 to $9,525 10% 0 to $9,325 12% $9,525 to $38,700 15% $9,325 to $37,950 22% $38,700 to $82,500 25% $37,950 to $91,900 24% $82,500 to $157,500 28% $91,900 to $191,650 32% $157,500 to $200,000 33% $191,650 to $416,700 35% $200,000 to $500,000 35% $416,700 to $418,400 37% Over $500,000 39.60% Over $418,400 14

Updated Tax Bracket 2018 Comparison Married Filing Jointly & Surviving Spouses 2018 Tax Rates - Standard Deduction $24,000 2017 Tax Rates - Standard Deduction $12,700 10% 0 to $19,050 10% 0 to $18,650 12% $19,050 to $77,400 15% $18,650 to $75,900 22% $77,400 to $165,000 25% $75,900 to $153,100 24% $165,000 to $315,000 28% $153,100 to $233,350 32% $315,000 to $400,000 33% $233,350 to $416,700 35% $400,000 to $600,000 35% $416,700 to $470,700 37% Over $600,000 39.60% Over $470,700 15

Tax Reform Business Income Reduces tax rate on C corporations from 35% to 21%. Eliminates corporate AMT. Lower tax rate has no expiration. 16

Tax Reform Pass-through Entities Owners of non-service business may deduct 20% of business income. Deduction available through 2025. Deduction permitted for owner of service business only if owner s joint taxable income < $315K, phasing out through $415K. Personal service businesses includes financial, brokerage, health, law, accounting, actuarial, or consulting services, but not engineering and architecture. Effective top tax rate for eligible pass-through income of 29.6%. 17

Tax Reform Pass-through Entities (cont d) Deduction cannot exceed greater of (i) 50% of owner s share of wages paid by entity, or (ii) sum of 25% of owner s share of wages paid plus 2.5% of the initial basis of depreciable tangible property used by the business. Limit does not apply if owner s joint taxable income < $315K, phasing out through $415K. Re-evaluate small 401(k) plans. Consider Roth option. MLPs treated as partnerships might claim deduction. 18

Tax Reform - Business Businesses may claim immediate deduction of capital expenditures made through 2022. Immediate deduction is phased out over four years after 2022. Small businesses may expense to $1 million. Expense deduction phases out beginning at $2.5 million. 19

Tax Reform - Business Businesses may not deduct net interest expense exceeding 30% of income. Exemption for real estate and businesses with receipts < $25M. Eliminates deduction for business entertainment expenses. Eliminates net operating loss carrybacks. Loss carryforwards may offset only up to 80% of taxable income in any given year. Curtail special tax provisions for insurance companies. 20

Tax Reduction - International Eliminates tax on repatriated future earnings. Deemed repatriation of existing overseas earnings, with cash taxed at 15.5% and illiquid assets at 8%, payable over 8 years. Curtails base erosion arrangements where U.S. business holds intangible asset in tax haven jurisdiction and claims U.S. tax deduction for payments made for asset s use. 21

Tax Reform Revenue Effects ($billion) Individual Business Tax rate reduction ($1,214.2) Rate reduction ($1,388.8) Repeal AMT ($637.1) 25% pass through ($414.5) Estate tax ($83.0) International $324.4 Revenue raisers $1,222.2 Revenue raisers $735.0 Total individual ($712.1) Total business ($743.9) Total revenue loss: ($1,456.0) 22 Source: Joint Committee on Taxation, Estimated Budget Effects of the Conference Agreement for H.R. 1, The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (December 2017).

Tax Reform Individual Business Winners Losers Winners Losers AMT payers High W-2 earners (perhaps a small benefit) Retail Technology/ pharmaceutical Large estates Large mortgages High state taxes Capital-intensive businesses Builders/mortgage /real estate Nonservice passthrough Personal service Pass-through U.S.-based multinational businesses Insurance companies 23 Note: State tax liability may increase as federal tax base increases.

Fiscal Realities 2016 Federal Spending ($3.9T) (in billions of dollars) Domestic $600 (16%) Defense $584 (15%) Mandatory Programs (Entitlements) $2,429 (63%) Interest $241 (6%) 24 Source: The Budget and Economic Outlook: Fiscal Years 2017 to 2027, Congressional Budget Office (Jan 2017).

Disclosure Investing in mutual funds is subject to stock market volatility. Income from investments in municipal funds may be subject to federal, state and local tax; a portion may be subject to federal alternative minimum tax. The ability to use certain tax-management techniques may be curtailed or eliminated in the future by tax legislation, regulations, administrative interpretations, or court decisions. Before investing, prospective investors should consider carefully a Fund's investment objectives, risks, charges, and expenses. A Fund's current prospectus and summary prospectus, contains this and other information about a Fund and is available through your financial advisor. Read the prospectus carefully before investing or sending money. Eaton Vance does not provide tax or legal advice. Prospective investors should consult with a tax or legal advisor before making any investment decision. 25 Copyright Andrew H. Friedman 2016. Printed by permission. All rights reserved.

Thank you. For more information please contact us at: Eaton Vance Distributors, Inc. Two International Place Boston, MA 02110 (800) 225-6265 Member FINRA/SIPC eatonvance.com/taxes 7851 1.26.18 26