New Tax Isn’t Affecting Companies’ Stock-Buyback Decisions
Instead, most see Democrats’ 1% levy on buybacks as “part of the cost of doing business.”
A new tax created by Democrats to slow the record pace of stock buybacks has been largely shrugged off by corporations, which see the 1 percent excise levy as a minor cost of doing business.
The tax on publicly listed corporations—created in President Joe Biden’s signature tax and climate plan and set to go into effect next year—makes it slightly more costly for companies to repurchase their shares. But the desire to use free cash to buy back shares appears to be stronger than any deterrent created by the tax.
“The buyback tax is bad policy, but it’s 1 percent,” Ron Bruehlman, the CFO of healthcare technology firm IQVIA Holdings Inc., told investors at a September event. “That wouldn’t be enough to greatly affect how we approach share repurchases, frankly. Even to affect it, period.”
Democrats had hoped that increasing the cost of stock buybacks would prod companies to use their cash on hand to raise workers’ wages or invest in new endeavors, bolstering the economy.
Chances of such an outcome might have been higher if early versions of the tax had come to pass. But proposals for a 2 percent levy—and prohibiting buybacks unless companies met criteria like a minimum $15-an-hour wage—didn’t materialize.
Corporations lobbied hard against those proposals, and the result was the smaller tax with none of those strings attached. “A lot of companies have factored that in,” Dave Camp, a former chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee who now advises on tax policy issues at PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, said of the 1 percent tax. “It’s part of the cost of doing business.”
Corporations that conduct large-scale buybacks stand to pay, collectively, a hefty chunk of the $73.7 billion that congressional scorekeepers project the tax will generate over a decade.
Buybacks are on track for a record-breaking year—before the new levy, Goldman Sachs Group Inc. had predicted a $1 trillion total. And there’s little sign that the tax is proving a decisive factor in curbing appetites.
Since congressional passage of the measure on August 12th, 16 companies in the S&P 500 Index have announced buyback plans, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The list includes Johnson & Johnson, Home Depot Inc., and T-Mobile US Inc.
Instead, rising interest rates have been a constraint, with JPMorgan Chase & Co., Citigroup Inc., and Best Buy Co Inc. pausing some repurchases. “We aren’t seeing anything that is driven primarily by the tax concern,” said Elena Romanova, a partner at law firm Latham & Watkins. “Discussions are going to be driven by the business needs and the treasury needs of any particular corporation.”
Still, now that the levy exists, things could change. Companies will be watching to see whether lawmakers move to boost the 1 percent rate, viewing the tax as a tempting dial to crank when they need an easy way to increase revenue without coming up with an entirely new tax policy, one bank executive familiar with planning around the tax said.
Representative Kevin Brady, the top Republican on the House Ways and Means Committee, said members of his party will push to repeal the buyback tax when the GOP regains control of Congress. “At the end of the day, this is really a tax on savers and retirees,” he said.
Buybacks became a popular way to increase value for shareholders in part because of favorable tax treatment. When companies pay dividends, stockholders are subject to paying tax on those distributions. But with a buyback, the operation can boost the value of the shares—enhancing shareholders’ wealth—without any taxes owed until the owners decide to sell, when they would owe capital gains.
“For decades, stock buybacks were heavily favored by the tax code, despite their skewed benefits for the very top and potential for insider game-playing,” Senate Financial Services Chairman Ron Wyden, an Oregon Democrat, said in a statement. “Our goal wasn’t to end stock buybacks altogether—the stock buyback tax simply tries to reduce this preferential tax treatment in order to level the playing field and encourage more investment in workers.”
Salesforce Inc. is one example of a company doing the opposite of what Wyden had hoped. The cloud-based software maker announced its first-ever buyback of $10 billion this year, and CFO Amy Weaver told investors in September that the company plans to allocate between 30 percent and 40 percent of free cash flow to buybacks going forward.
The biggest hassle for companies may be the compliance procedures to follow the rules governing the tax, said Scott Levine, a partner at law firm Jones Day.
The Internal Revenue Service has yet to issue any regulations on the buyback tax because it takes time to write those rules, creating a period of uncertainty for corporations.
“Obviously, nobody likes a tax increase,” Levine said. “But 1 percent is not going to be enough to sufficiently move the needle.”
—With assistance from Katherine Doherty, Julia Love & Brody Ford.
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