Philanthropic Planning

Bg Philanthropic

If you are going to live, leave behind a legacy. Make an impact on the world that can never be erased.

Maya Angelou

Overview

Choate Wealth’s multi-disciplinary team of nonprofit, philanthropic, and private wealth management advisors works with individuals, families, private foundations, and other charitable entities to provide a coordinated and customizable suite of legal, investment, strategic, and administrative services. Our clients range in size and experience, from large institutional nonprofits and seasoned philanthropists to small family foundations and next generation donors. We regularly help our clients navigate everyday decisions, while also counseling them through periods of change and creating tailored approaches to achieve their charitable visions.

Client Story:

Sharpening Philanthropic Focus for Wealthy Donor

Building a Comprehensive Philanthropic Plan for Search Fund Investor

Administering a Multi-Generational Grant-Making Program

Coordinating a Global Family Office

Establishing a Single-Family Office for Ultra-High Net Worth Entrepreneur Family

Designing a Core Wealth Plan for Ultra High Net Worth Family

Client:
Wealthy client with unfocused charitable giving that lacked a cohesive strategy

Challenges:

  • Limited understanding of history of personal giving
  • Seeking to focus on underserved causes

Solutions:

  • Collected and analyzed several years’ worth of data on client’s charitable gifts
  • Identify areas of previous charitable focus
  • Compared against national philanthropic trends

Results:
Clear understanding of opportunities to maximize the impact

Refocus charitable giving going forward

Build strategic framework for private foundation

Client:
Very successful search fund investor and his family

Challenges:

  • Leave most of family net worth ($500M+) to charity
  • Ensure truly perpetual impact
  • No existing charitable plan

Solutions:

  • Choate implemented a charitable structure tailored to client’s needs, including a private foundation and a supporting organization
  • Developed and executing a program for annual gifts of privately held investments to charities over many years
  • Optimized charitable gifts of publicly traded stock post-SPAC acquisition while client is serving on the board of directors
  • Choate is serving as a back office for the charities
  • Lead ongoing discussions with family members and other team members about strategy and day-to-day execution

Results:
New charitable entities are up and running

Allow client to focus on desired impact of charitable giving

Client:
Second-generation trustees of a private foundation with a regular grant making program

Challenges:

  • No continuity between first-generation family trustees and second-generation slate of trustees
  • Poor engagement in decision-making process

Solutions:

  • Review historical grant making and documents to identify first-generation trustees charitable intentions
  • In-depth conversations with second-generation trustees to understand charitable goals
  • Met with charities that received grants to determine impact
  • Comparative analysis of similar private foundations and their strategic plans and metrics

Results:
Developed a new strategic framework and key metrics to help trustees understand how their programs make an impact, and modeled key questions they can ask grantees to make informed funding decisions

Client:
Family office with concentration of wealth in public company; access to unique investments; assets in Europe. Prior connection to Choate.

Challenges:

  • No existing estate plan
  • Serious privacy concerns

Solutions:

  • Bring in subject matter experts (PR, philanthropy, high-end real estate, local counsel in foreign jurisdictions)
  • Guide and implement impactful charitable giving through private foundation
  • Quarterback other service providers

Results:
Restructured existing family wealth vehicles for maximum tax and estate planning impact

Developing global philanthropic mission and improve tax efficiency of giving to offset taxable income

Ensuring privacy for the entire family

Challenges:
An ultra-high net worth family sought to create a brand new family office to help manage its rapidly increasing wealth, fueled by a highly profitable closely-held business.

Solutions:
We were hired to replace a family’s former estate planning attorney, whose expertise struggled to keep up with the family’s quickly evolving needs. We immediately recognized an opportunity to engineer a single-family office from the ground up that was customized to the family’s needs:

1. Create a family office structure

  • We began by creating a legal structure for the new family office, including several investment vehicles designed to pool existing family wealth. These new vehicles – which include series LLCs and special- purpose investment entities – provide a robust framework for pursuing the family’s investment interests. We help with all aspects of vehicle management and compliance, including complying with SEC rules for family offices.
  • This family office model proved to be very flexible, making it possible for the family to quickly deploy capital to take advantage of changes in the tax laws. For example, when the family’s advisors identified an attractive “qualified opportunity zone” investment, it took just a couple of days to fit that asset into the family’s overall investment portfolio in a tax-efficient manner.

2. Help build out a team

  • As the legal work was getting underway, the family was searching for a dedicated person to lead their new family office. Through our network, we helped the family locate a new family office director with an ideal background and the right cultural fit. Filling this critical role allowed the family to create a single point of contact for all family members regarding wealth planning, lifestyle and concierge services, and freed up other team members’ time to focus on their own specialties.

3. Implement high-impact, high-visibility philanthropy

  • With the right support structure in place, the family turned to one of its key priorities: high-impact, high-visibility philanthropy. We helped the family negotiate several “front page of the newspaper” charitable gifts with local institutions, transforming their charitable impact and securing prominent naming rights for the family in perpetuity.

Challenges:
A couple had done very little estate planning and needed help creating an updated plan reflecting their increased wealth, as well as advice on how best to transfer assets to their descendants in the most tax-efficient manner, and guidance on creating a shared family structure for charitable giving.

Solutions:

1. Create a core plan

  • As an initial step, Choate created a core plan for the clients that governs how their property will pass on death and who will make decisions for them if they are ever incapacitated. This plan consists of wills, revocable (changeable until death) trusts, health care proxies, and durable powers of an attorney. With their core plan in place, the clients were ready to engage in lifetime planning for charity and for their descendants.

2. Create a private foundation

  • To facilitate the family’s charitable giving now and into the future, Choate created a private foundation for the parents to control initially, inviting their children onto the board as they aged into maturity. With Choate’s help, the clients use their private foundation as a means of educating their children about investments and the family’s philanthropic goals, introducing the next generation to the family’s wealth in an altruistic environment.

3. Create generation-skipping trusts (which may also benefit the spouse)

  • To reduce the clients’ future estate taxes and leverage large lifetime gift tax exemptions, Choate created several generation-skipping irrevocable trusts for the clients, including trusts funded with gifts of private investments, preexisting and new insurance policies, and liquid assets. The funded trusts are out of the clients’ estates and will save the clients material estate taxes on death. Choate attorneys serve as trustees, subject to the family’s ability to remove and replace trustees at any time. Several trusts include one of the spouses as a potential beneficiary, providing a “safety valve” in case the clients ever feel that they over-gave to the next generation and need assets for their own future support.

4. Introduce additional planning techniques

  • Choate also helps the family take advantage of planning techniques that require no gift tax exemption, such as transfers to grantor retained annuity trusts (or “GRATs”). GRATs transfer the upside appreciation in assets to the next generation, entirely gift-tax-free, while the client retains the original principal. Examples of other tax free planning for the family include creating 529 plans for grandchildren’s education costs funded with annual exclusion gifts and direct payments of medical and tuition expenses for extended family members.