Home > Ireland > US multinationals accumulate $28bn in worldwide profits in Ireland

US multinationals accumulate $28bn in worldwide profits in Ireland

Written by Business World, on 17th Aug 2018. Posted in Ireland

article headline

Dollars are going home. In low-tax jurisdictions from Ireland to the Bahamas, the stock of Treasury bond holdings is down $22 billion this year in a sign U.S. companies are repatriating cash held offshore after changes to how foreign earnings are taxed.

Over the years, U.S. multinationals have accumulated an estimated $3 trillion in worldwide profits offshore, held in cash as well as securities including U.S. Treasuries. This is the result of a rule under the previous tax regime allowing them to defer paying tax on offshore profits as long as the money was not repatriated to the United States.

But a powerful incentive to repatriate these earnings has come from changes which eliminated the "deferral" rule but reduced the rates at which company profits accumulated abroad are taxed -- to 15.5% for cash holdings and 8% for more illiquid investments.

Both rates are far below the 35% rate that would have been charged on repatriated foreign profits before the law was passed, and below a new 21% corporate income tax rate.

As a result, $300 billion was repatriated in the first quarter of 2018, U.S. balance of payments data indicates.

Analysis of data from U.S. Treasury International Capital, or TIC, shows Treasury bond holdings are dwindling in 10 locations that are well known either as low-tax jurisdictions, overseas bases of U.S. firms, or simply home to significant fund management or custody business.

Ireland, which hosts the European hubs of U.S. technology and pharmaceutical companies, saw a $28 billion drop between January and June, latest TIC data released Aug. 15 shows. Irish Treasuries holdings, which once almost matched the country's annual economic output, have fallen by a tenth this year to $299.6 billion.

But Switzerland, Bermuda, the Bahamas and the Netherlands also witnessed sharp falls in Treasuries holdings, which are down between $300 million and $14.6 billion since January. An exception among these types of jurisdictions is the Cayman Islands, which saw a $26 billion increase in holdings of Treasuries over the same period.

"Obviously this is being driven by the tax situation. Repatriation is happening in lumps and the major drivers are the tech companies," said Salman Ahmed, chief investment strategist at Lombard Odier.

"It's a fixed income-to-equity play, the money is coming out of Treasuries and going into buybacks."

There is no evidence in the data to show which companies might be returning cash or indeed whether the drop is down to repatriation. But filings with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission show Treasuries holdings at Apple, Google and Microsoft are now $202 billion, versus almost $220 billion at the end of 2017.

Apple alone bought back $23.5 billion of its stock in the March quarter and added $100 billion to its target for future purchases.

If repatriation is indeed the driver, the drops in offshore holdings should continue.

"We are sure these are all private (Treasuries) holdings as Ireland as a country doesn't have much in FX reserves," Bank of America Merrill Lynch analyst Carol Zhang said.

"(U.S. tech firms) did mention in (analyst conference) calls they have plans to repatriate. But it may not happen all at once." (Reuters)

Source: www.businessworld.ie

More articles from Ireland

image Description

State Street Opens New Kilkenny Office

Read more
image Description

Vodafone Ireland announces 120 jobs and €35m investment

Read more
image Description

Infineon Technologies to create 100 Irish jobs

Read more
image Description

Buymedia to create 100 jobs in Galway

Read more
image Description

Accenture Opens New Generative AI Studio in Dublin

Read more