1/4% Tax on all stock trades pushed in NY Times today

Quote from Explorer:

Divisions emerge in German government over transaction tax

Days after the German center-right coalition government presented a unified front on a new tax on the financial sector, parliamentary and cabinet leaders have made skeptical statements over its feasibility.

http://www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,,5599620,00.html

This is great news. Hopefully these idiots finally realize that the rest of the world doesn't want a FTT. Let's hope they get laughed right out of the G20 meeting. Merkel is starting to look as embarassing as Brown with all her flip flopping on this issue.

-Guru
 
Berlin poised for €10 billion yearly cuts._
http://m.ft.com/cms/s/0/9862a1a8-6687-11df-aeb1-00144feab49a.html?catid=6

Germany is setting an example for the euro zone with budget cuts and austerity. Hopefully, Secretary Geithner will pass on this good suggestion back in the U.S. We are all PIGS now, so solidarity is good. Plus, I am no fan of deficit-stimulus spending with central planning (Keynsian and Krugman economics).

But there may be a dangerous tradeoff brewing in Germany and the euro zone. Notice the German Social Democrats (the left) want taxes on finance instead of steep social spending cuts. In the US, FTT sponsors wanted Wall Street to help Main Street. In Europe it's far worse. They want finance industries - who many view as profiting from the crisis - to pay new taxes in lieu of steep austerity regimes. Can the euro zone financial industry fight off this barrage? Especially with the Germans setting this example on austerity.

This austerity will really be painful and it will sharpen the pitchforks directed towards bankers. Will euro zone austerity really happen and will PIGS countries really vote to ratify the stringent IMF-EU bailout conditions? Doubtful, when you consider how hard it was for all EU countries to even ratify the recent EU constitution. Plus, PIGS apparently cheated on budget numbers to join. Confidence-building rhetoric is big in this bailout but country-by-country political realities are an entirely different fractured-story.

I still think the EU and G-20 will choose bank activity taxes over a FTT. The UK and US were the first to act unilaterally in the G-20 choosing bank activity taxes.

A FTT Tobin Tax was designed to put 'sands in the wheels' of markets. Other Tobin Tax adopters around the world like Brazil chose it to slow down hot money. Will the euro zone view FTT as a way to stiffle short-sellers and slow down their hot money? Many governments refuse to face their own self-induced fiscal realities (abuse) and blame short-sellers as a cause rather than a symptom of the crisis.

Suggestion. Choosing a euro zone FTT may have the reverse unintended-consequence effect - to accelerate market drops and dry up liquidity. When the UK markets imploded in meltdown 1.0 in 2008, a few large US hedge funds made huge bets in buying the UK market 'falling knife' and they made legendary billions doing so. I hope the euro zone (and US) doesn't make things worse with going over board on financial regulation and a FTT._

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Glad FTT is not part of the new sweeping Senate and House bills for financial reform or tax changes._

As expected all along, Congress and the Administration want to repeal carried interest tax breaks and the SE tax loophole for S-corps. The proposed Senate bill this week does both. The House already proposed repeal of carried interest along with the Presidents 2010 and 2011 budgets too. The House propsed repeal of the S-Corp SE tax loophole in 2008._

Atleast under the Senate version this past week, repeal of carried interest will be phased in and ultimately 25% remains as the underlying income (short or long term capital gains or 60/40 futures_treatment). So it still makes sense to keep profit allocation (carried interest) in hedge fund structures._

Money managers will be stuck with SE tax on the 75% ordinary earned carried interest income and they won't be able to navigate around it using a S-Corp election - since that loophole is closed too. Investment managers may as well stay in a LLC structure filing partnership tax returns._

Income and SE tax rates are headed higher too. Bush income tax cuts expire in 2010 and health care taxes raise the SE Medicare tax by .9% in 2013.

With all these financial regulation and tax increase changes comes more market volaltility, so hopefully traders can make back some of the extra costs in trading._

This feels like a cruel game of whack a mole. FTT is worst of all, so I guess we have something to be thankful for. But I don't trust governments in a meltdown 2.0 scenario. Will governments rather put traders out of business with a FTT than cut their own government jobs and fixed-benefits? Can the U.S. adopt an austerity regime without unions screaming for exemption and tax increases on Wall Street?_

In Greece recently, bystanders asked protesting union members why they were striking since they had good paying jobs and benefits that were bankrupting their fellow citizens. In America, unions should not have an ear in the White House or Congress to beat up on traders._

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Carried interest repeal back again

May 25, 2010

The good news is a financial-transaction tax (FTT) isn't part of the new Senate and House bills for financial reform, but there is, of course, some bad news: The carried interest repeal is on the table again.

Details of this joint effort between the House of Representatives and Senate were released last week. The "American Jobs and Closing Tax Loopholes Act of 2010" proposes repealing carried interest tax breaks and closing the self-employment (SE) tax loophole for S-corps, alongside other changes of less importance to traders. This is a new version of the bill passed by the House in December, and is now up for a vote in both the House and Senate. As of this writing, nothing has been passed yet, but passage is widely expected.

What do these changes mean?
Currently, investment managers in hedge funds using profit allocation — otherwise known as “carried interest” — instead of an incentive fee enjoy lower 60/40 tax rates on futures (a blended maximum rate of 23 percent), and lower long-term capital gains tax rates on securities. (If held over 12 months, the maximum rate for the latter group is 15 percent.)

If the repeal passes, carried interest income will be re-characterized for the investment manager as ordinary income. Carried interest is different from incentive fees. The former is considered investment unearned income and the latter is classified as earned income subject to the SE tax. Currently, the SE tax rate is 12.4 percent on the social security base amount ($106,800) and 2.9 percent unlimited thereafter. The unlimited Medicare portion is a great concern of managers with large carried interest income. The new health reform law will raise that Medicare tax to 3.8 percent starting in 2013.

Previous versions of this tax change asked to classify 100 percent of carried interest as ordinary income, but this rendition calls for a 75-percent re-characterization; the remaining 25 percent would retain the underlying income tax treatment for short- or long-term capital gains, 60/40 futures or interest income.

If this 25 percent "break" survives, it will still make sense to keep carried interest structured into hedge fund vehicles. Managed accounts have management and incentive fees taxed at ordinary rates and subject to SE tax. They don’t fall in the category of carried interest. Hedge funds require more compliance costs than managed accounts. Traditionally, tax benefits have been one of the pros of hedge funds and that edge should remain if this bill is passed as stated.

Also, unlike previous versions, this bill offers a phase-in period of two years. In 2011 and 2012, half of carried interest would be taxed at the ordinary income rate, with the remaining 50 percent eligible for capital gains treatment. Finally, in 2013 and thereafter, 75 percent of the carried interest would be taxed under the new rules.

Tax increases all around
This tax increase for investment managers is made even more painful when other scheduled tax increases are factored in. All income tax rates are scheduled to rise in 2011 when the Bush Administration tax cuts expire. Congress and the President want to extend those tax cuts for the middle class only, which excludes the upper income making more than $250,000 per year (filing jointly). The long-term capital gains rate is scheduled to rise from 15 to 20 percent and the ordinary rate shoots up to 39.6 percent from 35 percent — returning to the Clinton Administration tax rates. The blended 60/40 futures tax rate will rise from 23 to 28 percent. The alternative minimum tax (AMT) rate will stay at 28 percent. The qualifying dividends tax rate will rise from 15 to 39.6 percent — back to the ordinary tax rate. The President wants to fix the dividend rate only, using the 20 percent revised capital gains rate.

An unfair repeal
Personally, I think this repeal is a mistake and unfair. Managers risk their time, effort, reputation, brand and sweat equity in their funds, which I believe is tantamount to money. All of this risk capital should be subject to capital gains taxes and not ordinary rates. Funds also pay investment managers management fees, which are reported as earned ordinary income. The carried interest portion is managers’ pro-rata share of return on risk capital, putting them in the same boat as their investors. Proponents of this tax are using convenient (and faulty) logic as a means to their end: to raise taxes where the money is — in hedge funds and on Wall Street.

Is there a workaround?
The only legal way an investment manager can avoid the carried interest re-characterization is to personally invest his own money in his hedge fund. The bill contains “abuse provisions” to protect the Treasury from inappropriate behavior, and specifically says loans can’t be used to make cash investments. The new health care tax law beefed up tax avoidance scheme rules that make this type of behavior very dangerous for a taxpayer.

Closing the S-corp loophole
In the past, investment managers for funds and managed accounts have reduced the SE tax on advisory fee income with an S-corp tax vehicle. The IRS knows S-corps are used in this manner and it insists on reasonable compensation to the owner/manager to pay some SE or payroll taxes. Guidelines suggest that the 30 percent is “reasonable,” which means the owner saves the SE tax on the remaining 70 percent of fee income.

Before you get too excited at the prospect of using an S-corp to reduce SE tax on the repeal of carried interest, here’s the bad news. The new bill has proposed to repeal the S-corp SE tax loophole. According to Thomson Reuters, “… the bill would address the situation where service professionals have been avoiding Medicare and Social Security taxes by routing their self-employment income through a corporation where (1) an S corporation is engaged in a professional service business that principally based on the reputation and skill of 3 or fewer individuals or (2) an S corporation is a partner in a professional service business.”

It appears Congress wants to close the SE tax loophole for smaller companies — one-person professionals who use the S-corp to avoid payroll. Many small investment managers have less than three people, but larger ones might not be affected here. Unless, Congress hangs their hat on "principally based on the reputation and skill of 3 or fewer individuals." Even some of the larger investment managers have their reputation based on a few key managers.

Investment managers affected by this change may as well remain in an LLC structure filing partnership tax returns, which is usually preferred by their attorneys for governance reasons. Partnership returns are also better than S-corp tax returns. The owner/manager can use administration fees rather than payroll which have added compliance costs. Partnerships can use special tax allocations to owners, whereas S-corps may not.

Better than a FTT
These tax changes will collectively raise the income tax bills of profitable investment managers. It’s unfortunate, but better than a nasty, industry-killing financial-transaction tax. A FTT is the worst-case scenario for traders, so its absence from this legislation is something to be thankful for. But I don't trust governments in today's "meltdown" environment. Bank taxes and/or a potential FTT is being coordinated on a G-20 level and it may be absent from this legislation for that reason too. The Administration wants a bank “fee” (i.e., tax) and they have said no to a global FTT.

Looking on the bright side, these financial regulations and tax changes should bring more market volatility, so hopefully traders can make back some of the extra costs in trading.
 
No, carried interest only effects investment advisers not retail or prop traders with or without MTM. SE S-Corp loophole changes don't effect retail or prop traders either.

The new 2013 health care tax for the first time treats investment income - for upper income only- like earned income subject to SE tax - just the revised 3.8% Medicare portion. This is dangerous new precedent for investment income.

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