Buybacks are back! (Or did they ever really go away?) For companies with excess cash, there is an upside to the rec… https://t.co/lULslow0rS— 3 days 12 hours ago via@theofrancis
Clues to consumer sentiment will come with reports from Dollar General, Costco, Macy's after mixed view so far:… https://t.co/BO2pcGh2ma— 3 days 13 hours ago via@theofrancis
For small-business owners, the economic future looks grim: ‘We are just trying to get through the next couple of we… https://t.co/e51sL9lCsn— 3 days 13 hours ago via@theofrancis
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The final tax bill offers much of what large companies hoped to gain from the Republican overhaul: the billboard corporate rate was knocked down, cuts were accelerated and key credits were preserved.
Two percentage points are generating a big tussle in the debate over the right corporate tax rate.
As House and Senate lawmakers continue hashing out differences between their tax-overhaul bills, the prospect lingers that they could push the new corporate tax rate to 22%.
Technology, banking and other industries mounted a new round of lobbying Monday to save a wide range of tax breaks following the last-minute switch in the federal tax overhaul by the U.S. Senate.
Multinational corporations have a lot to like in both the House and Senate tax-overhaul proposals. Depending on a company’s structure and operations, there could be a lot to worry about as well.
WASHINGTON—While lawmakers in the House and Senate craft dueling versions of tax-overhaul legislation, battling over corporate tax rates and rules for overseas income, corporate chiefs at a gathering across town are sweating some of the smaller stuff.
OMAHA, Neb.—In the parking lot outside Elliott Equipment Co.’s manufacturing plant here last month, more than a hundred employees gathered in front of a banner-bedecked truck, its raised boom flying an American flag 30 feet overhead, to hear from the company’s chief executive and the local congressman.
Cities and states have plied companies with tax breaks for decades hoping to attract jobs and commerce. A new accounting standard will force many to disclose the total annual cost.
Buried deep in American companies’ securities filings is an indicator for how aggressively they are working to shield their income from the Internal Revenue Service and other tax authorities.