Impact of interest rate cuts on trusts and beneficiaries



The Fed’s closely watched moves around interest rates ripple across the U.S. economy, and trusts that don’t give clients much flexibility could sustain some damaging tides.

Fluctuations in the federal funds rate affect many of the distributions that trusts pay to beneficiaries based on the yield of fixed-income vehicles that help determine the amount of mandatory outlays from the entity, according to Cheri Stein, a partner with Southfield, Michigan-based registered investment advisory firm Plante Moran Wealth Management who is a managing director and senior trust officer with the firm’s trust arm. 

Adjustments to interest rates could pose consequences across many aspects of trusts that depend on them or use promissory notes, she said. And those mandatory income distributions may prove difficult to change for many estates.

“I think this is something that is really often overlooked,” Stein said, pointing out that lower bond yields inevitably lead to smaller mandatory distributions that are based on those fixed-income values. In the case of a trust with $2 million in assets in which bonds that historically yielded 5% drop to 2%, the lower interest rates would bring “a really significant decline” in the required payment to $20,000 instead of $50,000, she noted.

“Everyone is going to go and buy your bond,” she added. “When you’re making a distribution out of the trust, the income is exactly what the interest payment would be.”

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Preparing for pitfalls of mandatory income trusts

That structure has fallen out of favor in recent years. But the trusts in some clients’ estates could see an impact as Fed Chairman Jerome Powell and the central bank’s governors and regional presidents weigh inflation and unemployment amid the political pressure of President Donald Trump and his allies to slash interest rates further as a means of boosting the economy. With Wall Street anticipating further cuts in coming months, each Fed vote risks further volatility.

“That mandatory income feels a little bit dated, but we still see a lot of trusts that have that,” Stein said.

Problems can also arise around large purchases like homes or cars or other situations when beneficiaries may need smaller or bigger distributions at various times. Potential loans among parties can cause further issues. 

A unitrust structure or fixed distributions, as well as a fully discretionary entity, could address the potential pitfalls from lower outlays to beneficiaries, she noted. Other structures, such as a health, education, maintenance and support (HEMS) trust or provisions referred to as “best interest, comfort and well-being” clauses, could help the benefactor and beneficiaries set up payments to manage expenses. 

“Those kinds of things, I think, meet the needs of the beneficiary much better than these mandatory income distributions,” Stein said. “When we’re talking with people about planning with their trust, they’re always trying to envision these circumstances. And it can be really tricky.”

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Trusts not set in stone, but not easy to change

Additionally, interest rate shifts can leave their marks on certain intentionally defective irrevocable trusts, charitable remainder trusts or charitable lead trusts, grantor retained annuity trusts and qualified personal residence trusts. Depending on the jurisdiction of the trust, altering the structure or terms could require a nonjudicial settlement with each benefactor signing onto the agreement or taking a case to court, Stein said.

“Trusts are being drafted a little differently now, in a way that they’re not as impacted by changing interest rates,” she said. “It can be a little bit difficult to do that, and every state is a little bit different with their trust rules.”



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