Displaying items by tag: taxes

Thursday, 18 January 2018 11:35

Apple’s Big US Investment

(San Francisco)

In what appears to be the first big American reinvestment on the back of the new US tax package, Apple has announced that it will invest $30 bn in the US and pay its $38 bn tax bill. It will expand US operations and add 20,000 new jobs. The company will also give all of its more than 120,000 employees a $2,500 stock bonus. President Trump commented on the news that “I promised that my policies would allow companies like Apple to bring massive amounts of money back to the United States”.


FINSUM: This is why we thought the lowering of corporate taxes was a good idea, and we are very happy to hear that Apple will pay its bill and invest more in the US. As an aside, we do sort of feel like Apple is using this investment as PR fodder to combat against the battery/performance scandal.

Published in Eq: Large Cap
Wednesday, 17 January 2018 10:55

The Tax Package’s Big Negative for Bonds

(New York)

Stock investors may be in for some big upside surprises while bond investors’ hearts may sink. The new tax regime may have a major unintended consequence for bond markets. With the new lower corporate tax rate, many multinationals are likely to repatriate hundreds of billions of Dollars. For the last several years, much of that money has been parked in Treasuries and other bonds. But with the ability and likelihood of reshoring, companies are likely to pull huge amounts of capital out of bonds and put it into stock buybacks and dividends. This could be a big plus for equities, but bond markets could sink as massive amounts of capital are withdrawn.


FINSUM: This is the first convincing argument we have heard for why any fundamental force, outside of the Fed, could bring about a bond bear market.

Published in Bonds: Total Market
Wednesday, 17 January 2018 10:51

RIAs On Mission to Expand Tax Loophole

(Washington)

RIAs are furious about one aspect of the broader tax package passed last month. That is the way the government puts limits on the amount of income and type of entity that can use the new lower tax rate for pass through entities. RIAs say the new rules discriminate against RIAs that are not set up as C Corps. There is already a major movement to get the rule changed being led by Savant Capital Management. “We believe RIAs deserve the same tax treatment as other business owners” says TD Ameritrade.


FINSUM: We noticed before the new package got passed that it seemed to very deliberately exclude some sectors. Hard to judge the chances of this push succeeding.

Published in Wealth Management
Wednesday, 17 January 2018 10:45

Goldman Posts First Loss in Years

(New York)

Goldman Sachs just reported its first quarterly loss since 2011. The good news is that the loss does not mean the sky is falling in on investment banking or the markets. The loss was because of a huge $4.4 bn tax charge the company took in advance of the new tax regime for this year. Aside form the tax charge, Goldman’s business looked solid, with higher overall revenue and pre-tax margins in 2017. The one sore spot was bond trading, which produced only $1 bn of revenue.


FINSUM: The fall in bond trading revenue at GS has been prolific. In 2009 the firm created $23 bn of revenue in FICC trading. In 2017 revenues were just $5.3bn.

Published in Eq: Large Cap
Friday, 05 January 2018 10:08

How to Protect Clients from Tax Hikes

(Washington)

Advisors need to pay very close attention to what states are doing on taxes. As might have been expected, states with high taxes are working hard to come up with solutions that protect their residents from the higher payouts trying to be imposed by the federal government. The new tax package limits state and local deductions (“SALT”) to just $10,000, which means much higher tax bills for residents of higher tax states. While New York is preparing to sue the federal government over the changes, California has already come up with what looks like a good solution. Residents of the state can simply donate to the “California Excellence Fund” instead pf paying taxes, as such a charitable gift is deductible in the new federal package.


FINSUM: New York may also use the same plan as California is using. All the states seem likely to do this. What a big waste of time and energy because of a silly rule.

Published in Wealth Management
Page 26 of 27

Contact Us

Newsletter

Subscribe

Subscribe to our daily newsletter

Top
We use cookies to improve our website. By continuing to use this website, you are giving consent to cookies being used. More details…