CSI WME Exam 2 case guide for understanding tax returns, with learning objectives, case-priority cues, planning traps, and next-step review.
Understanding Tax Returns is Chapter 8, part of the CSI WME Exam 2 topic Family Law, Risk Management and Tax Planning, weighted at 14%. Study it as a case-priority lesson: WME Exam 2 questions usually test whether you can extract the relevant facts, rank the client issue, identify missing information, and choose the strongest next step before selecting a product or tactic.
| Concept | What to know for WME Exam 2 review |
|---|---|
| Case fact | Identify the tax-return detail that is most relevant to the planning question in the case |
| Priority cue | Distinguish interest income, dividend income, and capital gains when analyzing after-tax outcomes |
| Missing fact | Recognize whether a deduction or a credit would be more relevant to the stated planning issue |
| Constraint cue | Use a simplified tax summary to identify the most material after-tax planning implication |
| Next-step cue | Determine whether the client’s employment benefits create a tax-planning opportunity or complication |
| Risk cue | Choose the best interpretation of how a proposed transaction would affect the client’s taxable position when the needed facts are provided |
| Tax or legal cue | Identify when the tax issue is significant enough to change the order of planning priorities |
| Product-fit cue | Recognize when a client tax question exceeds high-level planning and should be referred for specialist advice |
WME Exam 2 fact patterns are case-based, so a correct answer often depends on which fact matters most, not just which product or rule is familiar. The stronger answer identifies the dominant client issue, checks whether a fact is missing, then selects the planning, tax, retirement, estate, investment, product, or monitoring step that best follows from the case.
Read each case for the issue being tested: discovery, cash flow, risk capacity, borrowing, family law, tax, insurance, retirement income, estate transfer, asset allocation, equity or debt role, managed-product fit, performance review, or rebalancing. A technically correct answer can still be wrong if it solves a lower-priority problem.
| If the case shows… | Prefer an answer that… |
|---|---|
| several goals or constraints | ranks the priority before choosing a product, account, or strategy |
| missing or inconsistent facts | gathers or clarifies information before implementation |
| calculation data | uses the calculation to support a planning decision, not as an isolated exercise |
| product or portfolio proposal | connects risk capacity, objective, tax, liquidity, time horizon, and monitoring to the recommendation |
Start by writing a three-line case summary: client situation, objective, and dominant constraint. Then decide whether the question is testing tax return interpretation, marginal rates, deductions, credits, attribution, timing, and after-tax case priorities. That classification keeps you from over-weighting whichever product fact appears last in the stem.
For WME Exam 2, sequence matters. A good case answer often follows this order: gather facts, rank goals, identify constraints, test feasibility, choose the next planning step, document the rationale, and identify monitoring triggers. Skipping a step can make a good-sounding answer too aggressive.
| Review question | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| What is the case really asking the advisor to decide? | The exam often gives extra facts that distract from the primary client issue. |
| Which fact is missing or most important? | Missing information can block implementation even when the proposed tactic sounds reasonable. |
| What is the first defensible next step? | Case questions often reward sequencing, not just end-state recommendations. |
| What follow-up must be documented or monitored? | The answer should remain defensible after implementation, review, or client change. |
After each practice set, tag misses by first failed step: facts missed, wrong priority, wrong interpretation, calculation without purpose, product-fit error, tax effect missed, estate or retirement issue missed, or weak monitoring step.
For final review, summarize this section in three lines: the case fact that controls the answer, the priority it creates, and the next step that makes the best answer stronger than the nearest distractor.
Return to the WME Exam 2 guide for the full topic table, or use the WME Exam 2 Cheat Sheet for case workflow, formulas, priority cues, and final review prompts.