Thread: American Politics
+
Add Report
Results 2,746 to 2,760 of 20143
-
03-04-25 06:18 #17398Senior Member

Posts: 1751Not GILTI, but done for now...
Okay...it seems I need to revisit my understanding of GILTI, but one last question for you.
Originally Posted by Tiny 12
[View Original Post]
So is it your assertion, that O&G companies have no intangible assets? Because if they do (which I think they do) have intangible assets (no matter how small or seemingly inconsequential), wouldn't they need GILTI to be calculated?
And that calc use some variation of the following, when I do a search?: GILTI = Net CFC Tested Income (10% x QBAI - Interest Expense)
That's it, I'm done! It seems YOU and GILTI, have done me in....well at least for now!
PS: My apologies to all the other ISGers, for taking up the forum bandwidth these last few days! I'll try to keep things to a minimum for the next little while.
Thx for your patience and understanding!
-
03-04-25 06:07 #17397Senior Member

Posts: 1751Nobody told me, it was a gunfight...
Well that figures! Chat freakin' GPT!
Originally Posted by Tiny 12
[View Original Post]
Well...it looks like I've brought, a "Google Search knife" to an "AI ChatGPT gunfight!" Woe is me? (...kkkk!)
Well, despite the very nice long, MarquisdeSade1 (MDS1) style "Cut-n-paste" subsidies list from ChatGPT, allow me to tell ChatGPT, the same thing I'd be telling you, as I did in the last post.
At least my subsides and tax cuts, come without emitting CO2 emissions and greenhouse gases! or plumes of "clean burning methane gas" from outta space!
PS: And while your at it, ask ChatGPT, if natural gas is a "clean burning gas", I'd love to hear the answer.
-
03-04-25 05:21 #17396Senior Member

Posts: 7458Trump's mission as a longtime Russian Asset is obvious to everyone. As it always was.
Former President of Poland Lech Walesa wrote the following letter to Trump.
Your Excellency, Mr. President,
We watched the report of your conversation with the President of Ukraine, Volodymyr Zelensky, with fear and distaste. We find it insulting that you expect Ukraine to show respect and gratitude for the material assistance provided by the United States in its fight against russia. Gratitude is owed to the heroic Ukrainian soldiers who shed their blood in defense of the values of the free world. They have been dying on the front lines for more than 11 years in the name of these values and the independence of their homeland, which was attacked by Putin's russia.
We do not understand how the leader of a country that symbolizes the free world cannot recognize this.
Our alarm was also heightened by the atmosphere in the Oval Office during this conversation, which reminded us of the interrogations we endured at the hands of the Security Services and the debates in Communist courts. Prosecutors and judges, acting on behalf of the all-powerful communist political police, would explain to us that they held all the power while we held none. They demanded that we cease our activities, arguing that thousands of innocent people suffered because of us. They stripped us of our freedoms and civil rights because we refused to cooperate with the government or express gratitude for our oppression. We are shocked that President Volodymyr Zelensky was treated in the same manner.
The history of the 20th century shows that whenever the United States sought to distance itself from democratic values and its European allies, it ultimately became a threat to itself. President Woodrow Wilson understood this when he decided in 1917 that the United States must join World War I. President Franklin Delano Roosevelt understood this when, after the attack on Pearl Harbor in December 1941, he resolved that the war to defend America must be fought not only in the Pacific but also in Europe, in alliance with the nations under attack by the Third Reich.
We remember that without President Ronald Reagan and America's financial commitment, the collapse of the Soviet empire would not have been possible. President Reagan recognized that millions of enslaved people suffered in Soviet russia and the countries it had subjugated, including thousands of political prisoners who paid for their defense of democratic values with their freedom. His greatness lay, among other things, in his unwavering decision to call the USSR an "Empire of Evil" and to fight it decisively. We won, and today, the statue of President Ronald Reagan stands in Warsaw, facing the USA Embassy.
Mr. President, material aidmilitary and financialcan never be equated with the blood shed in the name of Ukraine's independence and the freedom of Europe and the entire free world. Human life is priceless; its value cannot be measured in money. Gratitude is due to those who sacrifice their blood and their freedom. This is self-evident to us, the people of Solidarity, former political prisoners of the communist regime under Soviet russia.
We call on the United States to uphold the guarantees made alongside Great Britain in the 1994 Budapest Memorandum, which established a direct obligation to defend Ukraine's territorial integrity in exchange for its relinquishment of nuclear weapons. These guarantees are unconditionalthere is no mention of treating such assistance as an economic transaction.
Signed,
Lech Wał281;sa, former political prisoner, President of Poland.
-
03-04-25 03:28 #17395Senior Member

Posts: 2386I said I could argue. The primary contributors to dirty air, and deaths therefrom, are particulate matter, sulfur dioxide, and nitrogen oxides. Particulate matter is the worst by far. See table about 40% of the way through the web page below. Hard coal and brown coal produce about 10,000 X to 30,000 X more particulate matter than gas. About 1000 X more sulfur dioxide. And two to three times more NOx compounds. Those numbers are actually variable though, depending on the chemical composition of the specific coal and gas.
Originally Posted by Spidy
[View Original Post]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fossil_fuel_power_station
Spend some time in China and Hong Kong and you'll see a huge difference in air quality between there and the USA. One of the big reasons for the difference is we burn more natural gas than coal, and they do the reverse.
-
03-04-25 03:18 #17394Senior Member

Posts: 2386Oil and gas extraction income is not subject to GILTI, no matter what the level of tangible assets is. QBAI is irrelevant for oil and gas. I don't believe oil and gas E&P is subject to Subpart F either, unless it's a royalty. It shouldn't be anyway. I don't remember why I thought the headlines were ridiculous. If I recall correctly (this is from attending a presentation by an engineer at ERCOT, which manages the electric grid in Texas, years ago), the wind generators were paying around $. 02 per kilowatt hour to sell into the grid. I'd guess the wholesale price of electricity at the time averaged around $. 05 per kilowatt hour. It's the principle of the thing. The tax laws shouldn't be set up so that people are actually paying money to produce electricity, which was wasted because there was no demand for it, solely so they could collect a tax credit. You apparently misinterpreted what I wrote, or I screwed up in what I said, as oil and gas E&P would be just about as viable without the industry specific tax advantages as it is now. You wouldn't see a significant fall off in domestic production if you axed them all tomorrow. Like I said, if I were in charge, they'd all be axed except expensing of IDC's.
Originally Posted by Spidy
[View Original Post]
And yes, if you can create cost effective battery storage, renewables look a lot better when the suns not shining and the wind's not blowing. Or, in your example, when the wind is blowing but there's no demand for electricity. The question is when will that happen, especially when Biden, Trump and others are punishing the lowest cost producers (in China) with sky high tariffs.
-
03-04-25 02:28 #17393Senior Member

Posts: 1751MLPs sorted! GILTI...To Be Determined?
Okay...Got it! I thought they'd be more O&G companies, judging from recent results, I was reading in the headlines. 2025 MLP Yields Up To 11.3%: https://www.suredividend.com/mlp-list/
Originally Posted by Tiny 12
[View Original Post]
Judging from many of the MLP investment funds, I thought the number of MLPs is probably more like, about 5-10% of O&G companies.
The articles (and I) were using FOGEI/FORI (Subpar F carveout of IRC Section 907--is what I meant instead of GILTI) for O&G extraction income.
Originally Posted by Tiny 12
[View Original Post]
But that's not the point of those articles, because the the tax loophole that's being uncovered, is really only interested in and uses the QBAI calc of the total tangible assets, in order to determine the GILTI for the intangible assets (which are vast the article's and IMH opinion).
Fair enough, that your in favor having them removed, but why then, were you calling the articles "Ridiculous"? As far as I can make out, their reporting of the O&G tax loophole is accurate.
Originally Posted by Tiny 12
[View Original Post]
You also have to ask yourself, and to your point (if it makes sense to remove them), why are O&G companies fighting so hard to hang on to GILTI?
I'm not necessarily buying that agreement and I'm not so sure that's a bad thing. O&G have had a pretty good run, some 100+ years (and this is where we probably disagree mostly), perhaps it's time to move on.
Originally Posted by Tiny 12
[View Original Post]
Well according to your last statement O&G wouldn't be viable either, without the all the "subsidies, tax advantages and loopholes". At least my subsides come without emitting CO2 emissions and greenhouse gases!
Originally Posted by Tiny 12
[View Original Post]
At the moment (and perhaps I'll circle-back), I can't speak the green energy case, you cite in Texas, but on the surface, isn't this a case for the use of batteries (BESS)? And does shutting down the windmills really give you that much more profit, over and above, the savings from reduced wear-and-tear? Maybe the difference is negligible and not enough to get worked up about?
-
03-04-25 00:26 #17392Senior Member

Posts: 3951Click listen
Allahu Akbar.
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/03/03/o...-business.html
-
03-03-25 23:52 #17391Senior Member

Posts: 1751MAGA "clean burning gas" greenwashing attempts at zero 0% emissions...
(...kkkk!) No but your American Fuhrer did, and MAGA (and MAGA adjacent alike) ate that shit-up! MAGA greenwashing at it's best!
Originally Posted by Tiny 12
[View Original Post]
But don't try to backpedal, outta your equally idiotic statement of "Thanks to clean clean burning natural gas..." , you said it, you thanked it...now own it!
Originally Posted by Tiny 12
[View Original Post]
Maybe, not toxic in the traditional sense, but methane is way more potent (80x??), due to its dangerous asphyxiation and explosion risks and an even worse greenhouse gas.
Originally Posted by Tiny 12
[View Original Post]
Let me be clear! You can dibble, dabble and haggle in futility, over a few meaningless flare capturing percentage points here and there, all you want....have at it! Your haggling matters not in the larger scheme of things, when S+W+B emit zero 0% CO2 emissions.
Originally Posted by Tiny 12
[View Original Post]
But, your main take-away from this debate, should be that the fossil fuel industry, has been polluting for over 100+ years, and could have another 100+ years and still wouldn't get to zero 0% flaring or zero 0% CO2 emissions from using fossil fuels. Meaning, the very definition of insanity, is...
Yeah, I often hear that nonsensical statement (IMHO), from those that would love to keep the status quo. Especially when the status quo, benefits them!
Originally Posted by Tiny 12
[View Original Post]
Hey, I won't stop you, beating yourself up and defending natural gas vs. coal, if that's what you wish to do, over and over again, while convincing yourself with the fossil fuel propaganda that natural gas is "clean burning."
Originally Posted by Tiny 12
[View Original Post]
Again, I refer you to my 100+ years response above. But just keep in mind, other alternatives for producing electricity, like S+W+B, that don't emit CO2 and greenhouse gases and didn't take 100+ years to get to 0.5% flaring capture.
But if you are going to argue, that natural gas is 10X or 100X cleaner, I would love to see your facts, data and sources w/r to such false and dubious claims.
And is the very reason I said, that way I think China is doing much better with their CO2 emission than you realize, given their population size and its only since 2007, they surpass the U.S. as the worse polluter on the plant. The U.S. had been the worst, decades before.
Originally Posted by Tiny 12
[View Original Post]
And YET, developing countries, like China, somehow manage to develop world class AI, EVs and batteries tech at a fraction of the cost. Hmmm...pretty good for a developing country.
Originally Posted by Tiny 12
[View Original Post]
Recall, that I said the U.S./Europe has been burning/emitting CO2 emission for a whole lot longer, well I'm betting that if go back perhaps 75 years ago and add up all the U.S. emissions, that would really say something about all the U.S. GDP crap and waster, over 3/4 of a century.
Originally Posted by Tiny 12
[View Original Post]
No, not sensitive, just angry about you, adding inappropriate words, I NEVER wrote. Taking what I wrote out of context. But by all means highlight and underline the words in my post all you want just don't change them!
Originally Posted by Tiny 12
[View Original Post]
As for the IRA being lucrative, well that was probably more the doing of those backstabbing turncoats and DINOs, Joe Manchin and Kyrsten Sinema. Other wise lucrative tax acts and subsides for the rich billionaires and robber barons is something your American Fuhrer's transactional administration is world famous for doing. I'm sure their cup will runneth over, this term.
-
03-03-25 23:45 #17390Senior Member

Posts: 1751Fair enough!
Originally Posted by SubCmdr
[View Original Post]
Me neither!
Originally Posted by SubCmdr
[View Original Post]
As you may recall, I don't really care, if the consumer buys EVs or ICE! But FWIW, global EV sales, are trending up positively!
BTW, where exactly are people being mandated to buy EVs? The only mandates I know of, are those given to the auto vehicle industry, required to meet emissions standards.
-
03-03-25 20:27 #17389Senior Member

Posts: 2386Subsidies and Tax Breaks for Green Energy, Demystified!
If the playing field were leveled among all industries, the total tax burden on oil and gas relative to other businesses would be less than it is now. On the other hand, a lot of green energy projects wouldn't be viable. The combination of tax benefits and outright government subsidies exceeds their profit. Here's a list of some, kindly provided by ChatGPT.
As of March 2025, the United States offers a variety of federal subsidies and tax incentives to support manufacturers of green energy and renewable products, as well as their customers. These incentives aim to promote the adoption of clean energy technologies and reduce greenhouse gas emissions. Below is an overview of the key programs:8203;.
1. Investment Tax Credit (ITC):
Overview: The ITC provides a dollar-for-dollar reduction in federal income taxes for investments in renewable energy properties, most commonly solar developments. .
Current Rates: The Inflation Reduction Act extended the ITC at a 30% credit for qualified expenditures through 2032. The credit decreases to 26% for systems installed in 2033 and 22% for those installed in 2034. .
2. Production Tax Credit (PTC):
Overview: The PTC offers a per kilowatt-hour (kWh) federal tax credit for electricity generated by qualified renewable energy resources, such as wind and geothermal energy. .
Eligibility: Facilities must produce and sell electricity from qualified resources to an unrelated person during the taxable year to qualify. .
3. Clean Vehicle Tax Credits:
New Clean Vehicles:
Credit Amount: Up to $7,500 for the purchase of a new, qualified plug-in electric vehicle (EV) or fuel cell electric vehicle (FCV).
Eligibility Criteria: The vehicle must undergo final assembly in North America and meet specific battery component and critical mineral sourcing requirements.
Used Clean Vehicles:
Credit Amount: Lesser of $4,000 or 30% of the sales price for eligible used EVs.
Eligibility Criteria: The vehicle must be at least two years old, have a sale price under $25,000, and be purchased from a licensed dealer.
4. Alternative Fuel Refueling Property Credit:
Overview: This credit covers 30% of the cost, up to $1,000 for residential installations and up to $30,000 for commercial installations, for purchasing and installing qualified alternative fuel vehicle refueling property, including EV charging stations. .
Duration: Available for property placed in service before December 31,2032. .
5. Residential Clean Energy Credit:
Overview: Homeowners can receive a tax credit equal to 30% of the costs for installing qualified clean energy property, such as solar panels, wind turbines, and geothermal heat pumps. .
Duration: Applicable for installations from 2022 through 2032, with a phased reduction thereafter. .
6. Energy Efficient Home Improvement Credit:
Overview: Homeowners can claim credits for specific energy-efficient improvements, including insulation, windows, and doors. .
Energystar. Gov.
Annual Limit: Up to $3,200 annually through 2032. .
7. Biofuel Incentives:
Overview: Producers of biodiesel and renewable diesel are eligible for a $1. 00 per gallon tax credit. An additional $0. 10 per gallon credit is available for small agri-biodiesel producers. .
8. Accelerated Depreciation:
Overview: The Modified Accelerated Cost-Recovery System (MACRS) allows businesses to recover investments in certain property through depreciation deductions. Renewable energy technologies, including solar, wind, and geothermal, qualify for accelerated depreciation over a five-year period. .
9. State and Local Incentives:
Overview: Many states and local governments offer additional incentives, such as rebates, tax credits, and grants, to promote renewable energy and energy efficiency. These incentives vary by location and can significantly enhance the benefits provided by federal programs. .
Recent Developments: The political landscape can influence the availability and structure of these incentives. For instance, discussions around the future of the Inflation Reduction Act and associated subsidies have created some uncertainty within the clean energy sector. Companies like Engie have expressed concerns that tariff and tax uncertainties could threaten investments in the USA Additionally, the potential rollback of EV subsidies under the current administration has raised questions about the future of such incentives. .
And here are some more, provided by Biden's Inflation Reduction Act, which according to Goldman Sachs will cost the Treasury over $1 trillion:
Residential Clean Energy Credit.
Extends the 30% tax credit for installing solar panels, battery storage, and small wind or geothermal systems (available through 2032, then phases out).
High-Efficiency Electric Home Rebate Program.
Provides up to $14,000 in rebates for low- and moderate-income households to switch to efficient electric appliances (e. G. , heat pumps, stoves, insulation).
Home Energy Audits.
Covers 30% of the cost (up to $150) for professional home energy audits.
Clean Electricity Production and Investment Tax Credits.
Extends Production Tax Credit (PTC) and Investment Tax Credit (ITC) for renewable energy projects (solar, wind, geothermal, hydropower, etc.).
Base credit: 30% of project costs, with potential bonuses for projects in low-income or energy communities.
Advanced Manufacturing Production Credit.
Incentives for USA Production of solar panels, wind turbines, batteries, and critical minerals.
Carbon Capture, Utilization, and Storage (CCUS) Tax Credit.
Increased to $85 per ton for carbon capture used in industrial and power facilities.
$180 per ton for direct air capture.
Clean Hydrogen Production Tax Credit.
Up to $3 per kg for clean hydrogen production, depending on emission levels.
Energy-Efficient Commercial Buildings Deduction (179 D).
Up to $5 per square foot for businesses improving energy efficiency in buildings.
Commercial Clean Vehicle Credit.
Up to $40,000 per vehicle for businesses purchasing electric or fuel-cell commercial vehicles.
Rural Energy for America Program (REAP).
Grants and loans for rural businesses and farmers to install renewable energy systems.
-
03-03-25 20:12 #17388Senior Member

Posts: 2386As Elvis and I have already told you, oil and gas producers in general aren't MLP's. A number of the pipeline and other midstream companies are. I can think of a few exceptions, like royalty trusts that don't actually produce hydrocarbons, and at least one producer, Vanguard. But my wild guess is that less than 1% of USA oil and gas is produced by MLP's. If you were dictator and decided there would be no new MLP's, I wouldn't have a problem with that. As long as you treated all companies equally. Meaning no new green energy MLP's like Brookfield Renewable Partners either. I'm all for leveling the playing field.
Originally Posted by Spidy
[View Original Post]
You've gone off on a tangent on GILTI. Income from oil and gas extraction isn't subject to the GILTI tax. My comments earlier about tangible and intangible assets were just to indicate that the GILTI tax, if imposed on foreign income realized by oil and gas companies, wouldn't raise that much revenue. If you're going to have the GILTI tax on foreign income, oil companies should be subject to it. However, at the same time, you should remove the provisions of IRC Section 907, targeted towards oil companies, that limit their ability to take advantage of foreign tax credits. You level the playing field on GILTI and Section 907 and I bet the oil and gas producers would end up paying more tax.
In fact, if you've been paying attention, I've favored removing all oil and gas "subsidies, tax advantages and loopholes" mentioned by you and in your links, except expensing of Intangible Drilling Costs. And if you want to eliminate Section 179 Depreciation and other accelerated depreciation, for all companies, along with IDC expensing, that would make sense.
The fact is, again, because of severance tax, gasoline taxes, and Section 907, oil and gas is taxed at higher rates than the average for USA. If you removed all the "subsidies, tax advantages and loopholes" available exclusively to oil and gas producers, USA oil and gas output wouldn't fall significantly and revenues to the USA Treasury wouldn't increase significantly.
Contrast with green energy, which in many instances wouldn't be viable without government support. When it's windy in Texas and so there's a surplus of electricity, companies that generate electricity from wind have to pay $.01 or $.02 per kilowatt hour "sell" energy into the grid. And instead of shutting down the windmills to reduce wear and tear, they do it! Why? Because the tax credits are worth $.02+ per kilowatt hour. In the words of Elvis, how fucked up is that?
-
03-03-25 12:25 #17387Senior Member

Posts: 6685What I expected
I expect for the government of the United States of America to work as designed in the constitution. I did not expect for the Legislative Branch of Government to lay down and just take it like a *****. Straight fucking no kissin!! Without giving anyone a civics lesson it's up to the courts now. But will will still have to see if the Administration will obey the courts.
I expected for him to keep his promises. The legislation that crypto industry needs will originate in congress. The current administration has other priorities.
There is a new SEC chair. There will be NO CBDC. But now POTUS needs to ask congress to draft specific regulation to cover the crypto industry. Governing by executive order does not cut it. Next president could be a Democrat. Hostile too crypto as it seems the Democratic party was last election.
I don't like what POTUS is doing to the government workers. But, I don't live in the United States of America and I have no plans too. But as long as I hold a passport that they issue, crypto issues affect me way more than all the other stuff that is happening with the current administration.
I do not like that a child of apartheid has been given permission to run roughshod over the traditional processes that have occurred in the government.
apartheid
The above policy does not work for me. So I am making plans for a new homeland.policy*that governed relations between*South Africas white minority and nonwhite majority for much of the latter half of the 20th century, sanctioning*racial segregation*and political and economic*discrimination*against nonwhites.
Originally Posted by TheCane
[View Original Post]
-
03-03-25 11:36 #17386Senior Member

Posts: 7458Everybody understood you and got it except hopeless Wingers
Absolutely. A single reading of your previous post made it clear as day what you meant.
Originally Posted by Xpartan
[View Original Post]
President Chainsaw Musk isn't taking "an axe" to ANY meaningful budget cuts. When has Trump or anyone standing close enough to Trump to smell him ever SAVED anyone else money? Lolol. He SCAMS people out of more and ever more money. He already drove up the deficit more than any president ever the first time around after being handed a near perfect set of economic trajectories, far better than any outgoing Repub ever handed an incoming Dem in history.
What Musk and Trump are doing will COST Americans more money and ADD to the deficit.
And along the way he will, not might, he will hand over all available USA military intel and control of it to whichever enemy or enemies make the highest bid for it. And it will go directly into his and his oligarch friends' pockets, not the USA Treasury.
-
03-03-25 09:34 #17385Senior Member

Posts: 1751MLPs and GILTI tax loopholes (aka. Subisides) for Oil and Gas...demystified!
When it comes to MLP's tax structure and tax advantages, its all too apparent that it was mostly created specially, for energy oil and gas (O&G) companies.
Originally Posted by Tiny 12
[View Original Post]
MLPs Tax Advantages:
Only a small fraction of companies (ie. niche industries like, minerals, forestry and timber) use MLP for real estate, as REITs are simpler, more efficient, and a more popular tax structures for mainstream real estate.
If you take a look at MLP investment sector with MLP indexes, ETFs and mutual/hedge funds (like Alerian MLP Index and others), will have 90-95% weighted O&G energy stocks, in their portfolios. Meaning MLPs are most definitely primarily created as tax shelters, with preferential tax treatment, to benefit O&G energy companies.
O&G companies, are making billions, you'd think their time at the gov't trough should have ended long ago.
Originally Posted by Tiny 12
[View Original Post]
The GILTI Tax O&G Loophole:
Originally Posted by Tiny 12
[View Original Post]
Allow me to explain, why I think your assessment of GILTI, and that it applies more to tech and software companies, and not so much to oil and gas (O&G), is not entirely correct.
Although, Ken Moy (lobbyist/lawyer for American Petroleum Institute from my NPR article: https://www.npr.org/2021/12/14/10640...-first-thought), is correct, that O&G companies have to go where the reserves are found, and can't necessarily choose to solely operate, just in low-income tax jurisdiction/countries, like tech and software companies can, he left out one key important fact ...intangible assets.
To calculate the foreign taxes on oil and gas (O&G) tangible assets, under GILTI, the tax guidelines says to use FOGEI/FORI, in the Subpar F carveout of GILTI, found in IRC section 907. All other non-energy O&G companies use the standard GILTI calculation, unless specified.
The O&G foreign tax calcs, using FOGEI/FORI must use the standard U.S. corporate tax rate (currently 21%), so no real tax benefits there on O&G tangible assets.
However...where the tax loophole comes into play, is from having a large base of oversees tangible assets (or QBAI: ie. rigs, platforms, well, refineries, storage facilities, buildings, offices...etc), that allows O&G companies to reduce their foreign income tax/GILTI tax, on their holdings of intangible assets.
The strategy of allocating or increasing their oversees tangible asset base, to reduce the GILTI tax, on their intangible assets, is widely practiced and seen as very beneficial, many O&G companies, w/r to paying lower taxes.
After doing some digging on the GILTI tax, it appears that the O&G companies (to my surprise, anyways), have more in common with the tech and software industries, than you'd think.
Yes indeed, they do have a vast, expanding and growing portfolio of intangible assets, commonly know as patents, licensing, copyrights, technical know-how, proprietary technologies...etc, that are strangely enough, as we all know, are often more commonly associated with, the tech and software industry. Ergo the why O&G companies want to keep the GILTI loophole!
- QBAI Calculation and Its Impact on Tax Planning Strategies:"QBAI plays a critical role in the Global Intangible Low-Taxed Income (GILTI) calculation by influencing the deemed tangible income return. This return, equal to 10% of the QBAI of each controlled foreign corporation, reduces the amount of GILTI subject to U.S. tax.
Businesses can manage effective tax rates by increasing investment in tangible assets, raising the deemed tangible income return, and potentially decreasing GILTI inclusion. This strategy is particularly relevant for industries with substantial capital expenditures, like manufacturing and technology." https://accountinginsights.org/qbai-...ng-strategies/
- Intangibles and performance in oil and gas industry --"Findings: Results show that intangibles had a significant impact on firm performance in multiple financial measures. Firms intangibles also influence their market capitalization, indicating that the financial markets discount such information in their pricing." --Brief Synopsis by Emerald Insight. (Bedtime Reading) https://www.researchgate.net/publica...d_gas_industry OR https://www.emerald.com/insight/cont...1139/full/html
The headlines in those articles, told the TRUTH and were indeed correct, calling for the oil and gas subsides, tax advantages and loopholes to end!
- QBAI Calculation and Its Impact on Tax Planning Strategies:"QBAI plays a critical role in the Global Intangible Low-Taxed Income (GILTI) calculation by influencing the deemed tangible income return. This return, equal to 10% of the QBAI of each controlled foreign corporation, reduces the amount of GILTI subject to U.S. tax.
-
03-03-25 02:40 #17384Senior Member

Posts: 6685If you put money into a toilet, what exactly do you think will happen when you flush?
ADA
Huge move after POTUS announced that it will be included in a strategic crypto reserve.
https://www.cnbc.com/2025/03/02/trum...-and-more.html
I comment about what I know. I don't know jack about $LIBRA. Why? Because I don't participate in the meme coin casino. ADA has been around since 2017 when it was released to the public. I don't see anyone complaining about Casino profits in Las Vegas. They are produced because the people in the casinos lose money.
Originally Posted by Spidy
[View Original Post]
I do not believe anyone should be mandated to buy an EV. I was won over by a ride in a EV. I was never impressed by Tesla due to its prices. It was liberal luxury they could feel good about. I own a Private Jet but I drive a Tesla. GET THE FUCK UP OUTTA HERE!!








Reply With Quote



