It likely will be the beginning of December at the earliest before Congress decides if the IRA charitable rollover is going to be reinstituted for 2014. But there remains another philanthropic use of an IRA distribution that generates significant tax benefits—and provides a novel approach you can take with donors.
Many donors who have been doing the IRA rollover have investments that have done very well this year. They may be interested in capturing that appreciation but don't want to have to pay the capital-gain tax that can now be as high as 23.8 percent. That's a whole lot of profit down the government drain.
So rather than waiting to see if the rollover is reinstituted, a creative and charitable strategy is to receive the IRA distribution—and make a separate gift to charity using appreciated stock that equals the distribution amount. Then the distribution can be invested, either in repurchasing the same stock or in other investments. The benefits are legion: