pwshub.com

S&P 500 could see 5% earnings hit from Harris' proposed tax reforms, says Goldman Sachs

(Reuters) - U.S. Vice President and Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris' proposed corporate tax hike ahead of the November Presidential elections could lower earnings for companies on the benchmark S&P 500 index by about 5%, analysts at Goldman Sachs said.

Last month, Harris proposed raising the corporate tax rate to 28% from 21% and ensure "big corporations pay their fair share," if she wins the election against Republican rival Donald Trump.

Goldman estimated that at a 28% taxation rate earnings of S&P 500 companies would take a 5% hit.

Adding taxation of foreign income and an increase in the alternative minimum tax rate to 21% from 15% could reduce earnings by as much as 8%, the analysts said.

On the other hand, Trump's proposed relief on the federal statutory domestic corporate tax rate to 15% from the current 21% would "arithmetically" boost S&P 500 earnings by about 4%.

"The current U.S. statutory corporate tax rate on domestic income is 26%, but the total effective tax rate paid by the typical S&P 500 company is 19%," the brokerage added.

Goldman projected with each 1 percentage point change in the U.S. statutory domestic tax rate the shift in S&P 500 earnings per share (EPS) would be slightly less than 1% or about $2 of S&P 500 EPS.

Harris' rise to the top of the Democratic ticket has re-energized a Democratic campaign that had harbored doubts about Joe Biden's chances.

Polls showed that Trump had built a lead over Biden but Harris has since edged ahead of the Republican candidate in some national opinion polls.

(Reporting by Roshan Abraham in Bengaluru; Editing by Nivedita Bhattacharjee)

Source: finance.yahoo.com

Related stories
1 month ago - Shares in Donald Trump’s social media company hit their lowest level since it went public in March on the Nasdaq exchange.
1 month ago - Volkswagen is considering closing factories in Germany for the first time in its 87-year history as the carmaker battles to cut costs and survive the transition to electric cars.
1 month ago - Jobs growth and GDP would be higher with one presidential candidate, according to Goldman Sachs.
2 days ago - John Paulson, the founder and President of the hedge fund turned family office Paulson & Co., has been one of the most vocal supporters of former President and Republican nominee Donald Trump. He was also reportedly under consideration as...
3 days ago - A November victory for Democratic Party presidential nominee Kamala Harris could light a fire under three game-changing businesses.
Other stories
10 minutes ago - SINGAPORE (Reuters) -Oil prices fell on Monday, after posting their steepest weekly rise in more than a year last week, as oversupply concerns amid softer demand countered the worries over a wider Middle East conflict disrupting exports...
58 minutes ago - Qualcomm Inc. today debuted the Networking Pro A7 Elite, a new chip for powering routers and other network devices that provide Wi-Fi connectivity. The chip is based on a new version of the Wi-Fi standard that rolled out earlier this...
1 hour ago - (Bloomberg) -- Top Chinese chipmaker Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp. led a $13 billion sector rally, after investors bet that Beijing will declare more policy or financial support for an industry central to its...
1 hour ago - (Bloomberg) -- Hedge funds turned bullish on the yen just before dovish comments by Japan’s new prime minister and a robust US jobs report helped spark the worst week for Japan’s currency since late 2009. Most Read from BloombergSingapore...
2 hours ago - The reverberations from a blowout U.S. employment number could threaten an assortment of trades predicated on falling interest rates, if stronger-than-expected growth spurs investors to radically shift views on how much the Federal...