Stocks & Bonds

A gift of publicly traded securities could be right for you if:
- You own publicly traded securities that you have owned for at least one year.
- Some of these securities have increased in value since you bought them.
- Some of these securities may provide you with little or no income.
- You would like to make a gift to Walnut Hill School for the Arts.
How it Works
- You transfer shares of one or more publicly traded securities, such as stock, bonds, and mutual funds, to Walnut Hill.
- The two most common ways to give publicly traded securities are to make an outright gift of your securities or to make a gift of your securities and receive payments for life.
How Your Gift Helps
Your gifts to Walnut Hill School for the Arts help to educate talented, accomplished, and intellectually engaged young artists from all over the world. It will provide Walnut Hill with the resources to . . .
- develop new arts programming, enhance our facilities, and recruit talented and dedicated faculty;
- promote our core values of community, creativity, excellence, growth, and respect;
- invest in today’s Walnut Hill students, and those of future generations to come.
Stocks & Bonds Details
- What are publicly traded securities?
- Are mutual fund shares publicly traded securities?
- Tax benefits of contributing publicly traded securities
- Income tax benefit
- Capital gains tax benefit
- Should I give my securities or sell them and give the proceeds?
- What is the advantage of giving appreciated stock instead of cash?
- Should I make a gift of securities that have lost value?
- What happens if I give securities that I bought less than one year ago?
- Is it easy to make a gift of publicly traded securities?
- Give securities and receive payments for life
What are publicly traded securities?
Are mutual fund shares publicly traded securities?
Tax benefits of contributing publicly traded securities
Income tax benefit
Capital gains tax benefit
Should I give my securities or sell them and give the proceeds?
What is the advantage of giving appreciated stock instead of cash?
Should I make a gift of securities that have lost value?
What happens if I give securities that I bought less than one year ago?
Is it easy to make a gift of publicly traded securities?
Give securities and receive payments for life
Example
Beverly Alford would like to make a $10,000 gift to Walnut Hill School for the Arts. While she could write a check for this amount, she will be able to save even more in taxes by giving stock worth $10,000 instead. After reviewing her plans with her investment advisor, she decides to give shares of Poptropica Corporation worth $10,000. She paid just $1,000 for these shares when she bought them 20 years ago.
Benefits
- Beverly will earn an immediate income tax charitable deduction of $10,000, which will save her $3,700 (37% tax), provided she itemizes.
- Beverly may deduct up to 30% of her adjusted gross income in the year of her gift, with a five-year carry-forward period.
- She will avoid tax on $9,000 of capital gain, which will save her an additional $1,800 (20% tax).
- She will gain the satisfaction of making a $10,000 gift to Walnut Hill School for the Arts.
