Estate Tax Planning Trusts: A Comprehensive Guide

The purpose of estate tax planning is to maximize the assets you pass on to future generations by minimizing gift and estate taxes. Estate-tax strategies revolve around the use of...
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Tax Deferral Strategy: Comparing the Big Three

You can defer capital gain taxes with a Charitable Remainder Trust, Opportunity Zone, or Exchange Fund. CRTs get the best returns. Which is right for you?
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Solar Tax Incentives vs. Oil and Gas Well Investments: A Comprehensive Comparison

Taking advantage of solar tax incentives and investing in oil and gas wells are two popular strategies for offsetting ordinary income tax. How do you know which one is right...
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QSBS Stacking Options

The Qualified Small Business Stock exemption, or QSBS, is the best tax break around. As a result of Congress’s push early in the new millennium to encourage Americans to start...
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How Valur Works With Advisors: A Client’s Journey

Valur can help advisors and their clients identify, understand and implement tax and estate-planning trusts to create more wealth.
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Nominal Definition

Nominal is a term used to describe a category or group of items. It is typically used to refer to categories of items that do not have numerical values and are not ordered in any way. For example, a person’s gender (e.g. male or female) is a nominal category, as is a person’s eye color (e.g. blue, brown, green, hazel).

However, this term might have different implications according to the situation:

  1. In Economics: A nominal value is a value that is not adjusted for inflation.
  2. In Statistics: A nominal variable is a type of data that is used to label or categorize different items or observations.
  3. In Computer Science: Nominal is a term used to describe a data type that can only take on certain values within a set range.

What is a Nominal Rate of Interest?

A nominal rate of interest is the rate of return before fees, taxes, or other costs are taken into account. It is expressed as a percentage of the original amount invested and is the rate of interest that a lender or investor can expect to earn.

How Does It Work?

Nominal interest is calculated by multiplying the principal amount by the nominal rate of interest and the time period over which interest is being calculated. For example, if you invest $100 at an annual nominal rate of 5%, then after one year you would have earned $5 in interest.

Nominal Example

An example of a situation in which people might come across the nominal rate of interest is when opening a savings account. Banks will advertise the nominal rate of interest on their accounts, which is the rate of return before any fees or taxes are taken into account. In this case, the nominal rate of interest is a good indicator of the potential return on investment.

Next Steps

Explore our tax planning tools to reduce taxable income and evaluate what trust is best for you, according to your situation. Or you can access more of our glossary terms to know more!

About Valur

We built a platform to give everyone access to the tax and wealth-building tools of the ultra-rich like Mark Zuckerberg and Phil Knight. We make it simple and seamless for our customers to take advantage of these hard-to-access tax-advantaged structures so you can build your wealth more efficiently at less than half the cost of competitors. From picking the best strategy to taking care of all the setup and ongoing overhead, we make it easy and have helped create more than $500m in wealth for our customers.

Mani Mahadevan

Mani Mahadevan

Founder & CEO

Mani is the founder and CEO of Valur. He brings deep financial and strategic expertise from his prior roles at McKinsey & Company and Goldman Sachs. Mani earned his degree from the University of Michigan and launched Valur in 2020 to transform how individuals and advisors approach tax planning.

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