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United States Businesses Government The Almighty Buck Apple

Apple May Bring Back Billions In Profits To The U.S. (siliconbeat.com) 302

An anonymous Slashdot reader quotes a report from the San Jose Mercury News: Apple CEO Tim Cook says the company plans to bring back billions of dollars in profit to the U.S. next year. Cook's statement, made during an interview with RTE radio Thursday, contradicts his previous public statements on the issue: He has said for years that U.S. corporate taxes are too high, and that the Silicon Valley company wouldn't be repatriating profit until its home country changed its tax code.

"Right now I would forecast that we repatriate next year"Cook said, saying that the company has "provisioned several billion" for that purpose.

An interesting side-note: Apple accounts for 40% of Silicon Valley's profits.
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Apple May Bring Back Billions In Profits To The U.S.

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  • Empty threat (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Saturday September 03, 2016 @06:44PM (#52822693)

    Apple just wants to scare the EU, there are plenty of other countries they will hold their money that won't charge as much as the US will.

    • Yup, the EU is terrified that Apple may avoid paying taxes in America rather than evade paying taxes in Europe. All that lost money!

  • I find this a bit hard to swallow.
  • Obviously Cook is planning that taxes are lower for corporations next year, or that Apple will get a break for bringing back the taxes - either condition would meet his statement that Apple would not re-patriate because taxes are too high.

    What large-corperation loving candidate is very likely to win the election and be in office next year to make that happen, hmm...

    • Obviously Cook is planning that taxes are lower for corporations next year, or that Apple will get a break for bringing back the taxes - either condition would meet his statement that Apple would not re-patriate because taxes are too high.

      What large-corperation loving candidate is very likely to win the election and be in office next year to make that happen, hmm...

      Both of them?

    • What large-corperation loving candidate is very likely to win the election and be in office next year to make that happen, hmm...

      As both major candidates love large corporations (albeit different large corporations), could you be more specific? I say that because Apple is one of those companies that inhabits multiple spaces, some of which have been associated with the left and others which have been associated with the right.

    • by tomhath ( 637240 )
      Taxes in the US are already lower than the EU. If Apple has to pay taxes they may as well bring the cash home.
      • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

        by Anonymous Coward

        That is incorrect, the US has the third highest corporate income taxes in the world at 39%. Europe's average is 26%.

        http://taxfoundation.org/article/corporate-income-tax-rates-around-world-2015

      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        by Anonymous Coward

        And also lower than they were in most of the 20th century. If corporations paid higher taxes in the US, maybe we could have fewer mentally ill homeless pooping at the bus stop. Maybe we could have better public education. Maybe we could have a social safety net. Maybe we could have federal funding for... oh never mind, this is slashdot.

      • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

        Really it is just an indication of psychopathic greed panic. Basically the entire economic system looks to be shifting to tax payable at point of revenue and no shifting allowed. Can't prove your costs with tax records from other countries than pay full rate tax on total income with no deductions. Hence they are now looking to shift tax burdened money before it kicks in. Catch if they are to abusive about it, those countries ending up with those taxes without being the revenue source will be considered par

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by UnknowingFool ( 672806 ) on Saturday September 03, 2016 @06:58PM (#52822755)
    Apple is not bringing "back" profits. That money was never in the US. The money that is in question is profit Apple made on sales overseas in the EU. If the US chose to bring the money into the US, the tax rate would be probably 35% at the top rate. So Apple kept the money overseas and never moved it. Part of it is for operations overseas. Part of it was the tax rate the US would charge.
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      The money certainly was "in the US". iPhone sales in the US result in profits in Ireland, substantial profits.

    • by magarity ( 164372 ) on Saturday September 03, 2016 @09:43PM (#52823179)

      Apple is not bringing "back" profits. That money was never in the US

      More Apple shareholders are in the US than elsewhere. In finance terminology, profits are "brought back" to the owners. So the term is correct in this usage.

    • by dbIII ( 701233 ) on Saturday September 03, 2016 @11:59PM (#52823473)
      Actually it was in the US.
      Look up "transfer pricing".
      It's where things happen like Apple USA buy an iPhone from Apple EIRE at very close to retail price and so on paper make almost zero profit in the USA.
      The profit then happens in Ireland where the difference between say $10 per unit and $500 per unit is not taxed much at all due to personal agreements with Irish politicians and some other financial games involving Holland.


      The EU is extremely pissed off because they have been propping up Ireland financially while Ireland has been looking the other way at vast amounts of tax revenue that Irish laws say they should be collecting. It's not about 6000 jobs (the usual excuse and most likely an outright lie about the number Apple employ in Ireland), the unpaid taxes could provide that a hundred times over, it would be a money trail leading into the pockets of those Irish politicians who are loudly damning the EU this week for suggesting they tax Apple.
      • It's not about 6000 jobs (the usual excuse and most likely an outright lie about the number Apple employ in Ireland)

        You don't think a company the size of Apple employs 6000 accountants?

  • If this move turns out to be contrary to the fiduciary interests of shareholders, expect a class action lawsuit. A CEO can't simply throw money away.

  • Isn't that profit rightly produced in Ireland? Or was that in the Bermuda Triangle? At least Ireland will get their cut of the imaginary Irish profits (when forced by EU to assess legal tax rate on Apple's Irish subsidiary.) Longer term, countries where profits are made will want to see their rightful tax, e.g. as Austria'a position. Curious though, what these tax scams, offshore domiciling etc, imply when assessing trade treaties etc. I mean, by the "supposed" numbers, Ireland has a certain benefit of
    • I had a discussion about this just this evening with a friend. He states the EU shouldn't charge that amount to Apple, but to Ireland itself since it's Ireland that struck a bargain with Apple.
      I agree on part of it, but Ireland could never pay that amount, certainly not on the backs of the Irish. They'd take the first boat to leave the country if the government did that so it's a bit more obvious to make Apple pay who should have known a low tax rate as they had could never have been correct.

      I think Tim
      • Actually it doesn't really matter _that_ much if it's Apple Ireland or the Country Ireland that gets charged with 13 billion in taxes... either case will fuck up both Apple and the government. (for the better)

      • by dbIII ( 701233 )

        I had a discussion about this just this evening with a friend. He states the EU shouldn't charge that amount to Apple, but to Ireland itself

        Huge flaw in that - since the EU is financially propping up Ireland they would be charging themselves!

    • According to current CNN article, the profits were from Europe, Middle East, Africa, India.
  • Tactical Move (Score:3, Interesting)

    by ytene ( 4376651 ) on Saturday September 03, 2016 @07:15PM (#52822803)
    This announcement makes perfect sense if you think of it as a move in the game of chess between Apple and the EU.

    Despite his public proclamations and rhetoric, Tim Cook knows that the EU investigation into the tax deal between Ireland and Apple is absolutely not, "political crap" and he's had now enough time for his lawyers to tell him so. That event is an issue between the EU and Ireland and, in a sense, has nothing to do with Apple. The problem for Cook, then, is what to do? He can't put Apple in the middle of the dispute with the EU. He has no options.

    Except one.

    He can go to the US government to ask for help. "Hey Barak, that sweet deal we had with Ireland, the one that is letting us be profitable and employ lots of Americans? It's going south. Can you help?"

    Obama isn't stupid either. He knows that now that the wheels are in motion, Apple is going to have to pay some taxes to someone - and Obama would rather the someone was the US Federal Government and not the Irish government. So what we're seeing now is Apple asking Washington for help. Washington have said, "Sure, we can help. But of course you're going to have to pay some tax somewhere..."

    So Tim Cook has made this announcement about repatriation to show Barak that he's serious. Washington will now attempt to apply pressure to Brussels in order to get the EU to back down and allow Apple to continue to operate across the EU, all whilst paying less than 1% Corporation Tax. Meanwhile, Apple will repatriate some of their profits, which the US will tax, as part of the arrangements.

    At least, that's their plan. However, bear in mind that the EU are just in the process of throwing out TTIP, which is going to make any attempt by the US to negotiate forcefully absolutely fraught with danger. The worst possible thing would be for the US to try and apply pressure right now: all they will do is make the entire EU mad at them. The only potential ally they would have had, the UK, is in the process of leaving the EU [with the planned start of Article 50 to commence in the New Year].

    But the thing that all us little people need to remember here is that every pound, euro or dollar in tax that Apple "avoids", well that's a pound, euro or dollar that we have to find. When companies don't pull their weight, tax-wise, the private individuals are the ones who get stung. You only need to look at the international tax arrangements of the big multinationals to realise what a joke this process has become. What we need is a clear, internationally-agreed law that says that for tax purposes, a transaction occurs at the location that the buyer initiates the transaction. [ Turning that around, and saying that it is where the seller processes the transaction achieves nothing: Apple and others would just put their transaction processing system in a tax haven ].

    The interesting thing is that these practices cost "local" tax payers HUGE amounts of extra taxes. So it's entirely possible that what we're seeing here could set a precedent that benefits 500 million people across the EU... Let's hope so...
    • Re: (Score:2, Troll)

      by PPH ( 736903 )

      Right. It's a three-way game. Apple will bring back 'a few billion'. Which, if taxed at 10 or 20% (nobody with a competent accountant pays the full marginal US rate of 35%), that will cost them a few hundred million. Small potatoes to have the US Treasury arm-twist the EU to BTFO. The USA would like to have Apple repatriate their offshore cash. Not just for the taxes, but to improve the odds that if Apple chooses to make investments, they will make them here. The EU might have shot themselves in the foot, b

      • No, the current issue is evasion. Apple evaded taxes by declaring them in an imaginary company that was not based in any country on earth. They did this solely for the purpose of tax evasion.

        Ireland is not free to choose its own tax laws (which would have made it a "sweetheart deal" rather than an illegal subsidy). Apple broke the law of the EU (which is the highest sovereign power in Ireland). The money is legally owed - to the EU, and one provision in the deal is that if Ireland does not take it the other

    • This announcement makes perfect sense if you think of it as a move in the game of chess between Apple and the EU.

      It does, or you can just see it as a simple strategic decision. The EU wants them to start paying taxes; if they're going to have to pay them somewhere, they might as well pay them in the USA. Then they can employ more people here (and less in the EU) which is a benefit since their primary engineering is all here in the USA. They were one of the pioneers of the double irish accounting system, it's "made" them a lot of money, and now that it's over it's only a drawback to employ people in Ireland. It's much

    • This is actually a big part of Trump's plan for his presidency. Tax holiday, bring back the billions Apple and Microsoft have stashed overseas, and put the money to work inside of America as well.

      It's well known that they're just waiting for a tax holiday to do this, so Obama could theoretically steal some of Trump's fire in the unlikely event it looks like he's going to win and do it early.

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        Is no candidate proposing to simply start taxing profits held overseas? Less whatever tax they paid overseas of course.

    • by pla ( 258480 )
      It makes even more sense when you consider that the US credits companies for taxes paid to other countries.

      Effectively, the EU's decision lets Apple repatriate roughly $50B, tax free.
    • This announcement makes perfect sense if you think of it as a move in the game of chess between Apple and the EU.

      Despite his public proclamations and rhetoric, Tim Cook knows that the EU investigation into the tax deal between Ireland and Apple is absolutely not, "political crap" and he's had now enough time for his lawyers to tell him so. That event is an issue between the EU and Ireland and, in a sense, has nothing to do with Apple. The problem for Cook, then, is what to do? He can't put Apple in the middle of the dispute with the EU. He has no options.

      Except one.

      He can go to the US government to ask for help. "Hey Barak, that sweet deal we had with Ireland, the one that is letting us be profitable and employ lots of Americans? It's going south. Can you help?"

      Obama isn't stupid either. He knows that now that the wheels are in motion, Apple is going to have to pay some taxes to someone - and Obama would rather the someone was the US Federal Government and not the Irish government. So what we're seeing now is Apple asking Washington for help. Washington have said, "Sure, we can help. But of course you're going to have to pay some tax somewhere..."

      So Tim Cook has made this announcement about repatriation to show Barak that he's serious. Washington will now attempt to apply pressure to Brussels in order to get the EU to back down and allow Apple to continue to operate across the EU, all whilst paying less than 1% Corporation Tax. Meanwhile, Apple will repatriate some of their profits, which the US will tax, as part of the arrangements.

      At least, that's their plan. However, bear in mind that the EU are just in the process of throwing out TTIP, which is going to make any attempt by the US to negotiate forcefully absolutely fraught with danger. The worst possible thing would be for the US to try and apply pressure right now: all they will do is make the entire EU mad at them. The only potential ally they would have had, the UK, is in the process of leaving the EU [with the planned start of Article 50 to commence in the New Year].

      But the thing that all us little people need to remember here is that every pound, euro or dollar in tax that Apple "avoids", well that's a pound, euro or dollar that we have to find. When companies don't pull their weight, tax-wise, the private individuals are the ones who get stung. You only need to look at the international tax arrangements of the big multinationals to realise what a joke this process has become. What we need is a clear, internationally-agreed law that says that for tax purposes, a transaction occurs at the location that the buyer initiates the transaction. [ Turning that around, and saying that it is where the seller processes the transaction achieves nothing: Apple and others would just put their transaction processing system in a tax haven ].

      The interesting thing is that these practices cost "local" tax payers HUGE amounts of extra taxes. So it's entirely possible that what we're seeing here could set a precedent that benefits 500 million people across the EU... Let's hope so...

      You seem to be trying to make the case that all Apple thinks all it has to do is move all it's billions to the US, play the US off against the Europeans and their piles of cash will be safe from the EU. Even if that assessment is true I'm having trouble believing that the US leadership can possibly be that short sighted since it would sour their relationship with a whole string of their oldest and most important allies (although I have no trouble believing President Trump would be that stupid). Apple (along

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by bjwest ( 14070 ) on Saturday September 03, 2016 @07:39PM (#52822899)
    Regardless of where the income is generated, U.S. corporations need to pay U.S. taxes the same as any U.S. citizen. Calculate the tax after all (foreign) wages, expenses and taxes are subtracted. No more of this slight of hand bullshit, pay your fucking taxes or move your corporation. Hell, most have already moved the majority of their workforce, the rest of the U.S. based employees are executives and their staff.
    • by Rakshasa Taisab ( 244699 ) on Saturday September 03, 2016 @08:01PM (#52822945) Homepage

      One of the most fucked up parts of being an U.S. citizen is that even if you work, live, breath on foreign soil you still need to report everything to the US tax office.

      Basically the only country in the world that will keep fucking you over even after you try to leave it behind for ever. Glad I'm not a 'citizen'.

      • by bjwest ( 14070 )
        If you want to leave it behind forever all you have to do is give up your citizenship. Same with corporations. If you don't want to pay U.S. taxes, give up your U.S. corporation status.
      • Basically the only country in the world that will keep fucking you over even after you try to leave it behind for ever. Glad I'm not a 'citizen'.

        Except for Australia, India, and the many members of the EU, which incidentally if any have double taxation agreements with any of the former countries you're also screwed.

        I.e. Australia as an agreement for double taxation with the Netherlands. So if you're Dutch and live in Australia you need to report your income in the Netherlands. If you live in Canada you do not. Things are much more complicated than just the USA, though looking through the rules I believe the USA has the most onerous requirements for

  • by nehumanuscrede ( 624750 ) on Saturday September 03, 2016 @07:58PM (#52822943)

    I would be all for lowering their taxes, on one condition.

    American workers only within the US.

    You want the tax breaks ? You quit going the H1B route cheating the US workforce out of a job.

    You hire foreign labor ? Your tax rate will increase to compensate. Pretty simple. Do the math, set the rates to make hiring US workers a financial win for the company. Price of doing business in the US I'm afraid.

    Don't like it ? Move your company to India or Ireland or wherever you want. See how well you do when you're denied access to the US market.

    Those that are gaming the system can just gtfo or deal with the tax man.

  • Timmy has no intention of suddenly paying a much higher corporate tax rate by repatriating funds. He's only looking for leverage against his European bureaucrat opponents by recruiting eager EU members like Ireland to fight for him to preserve what little he contributes to their economies.
  • Proit (Score:5, Interesting)

    by ledow ( 319597 ) on Saturday September 03, 2016 @09:17PM (#52823117) Homepage

    It's easy to make more profit than your competitors when you're aren't paying any tax, in any country that you operate in.

    Strangely bad for PR when it gets on the news, though. And strangely ends up changing from a hush-hush golf-and-a-posh-meal secret deal with the local ministers to laws being changed to prevent it happening when it does make the news.

    Starbucks found that out in the UK.

    So, technically, Apple don't make 40% of the profits in the Silicon Valley. Because those profits aren't properly taxed. And they aren't registered as profit in Silicon Valley at all. They are registered as profit only in Ireland. Which was charging them basically 0% tax. They are the LEAST profitable company in Silicon Valley, or else the US taxman would have had their share a long time ago.

    But they are in fact the most profitable in Ireland, while also being the least taxed. Strange that.

    I could earn twice what I do if I didn't have to pay tax.

    And I could make any company outstrip all its competitors if it didn't have to pay tax (get company, make no changes, stop paying tax, bang, you just doubled your profit most likely, and can lower prices or buy suppliers to put your competitors out of the market).

    I'm much more interested in an article entitled "Who pays the most tax in Silicon Valley?"

    • I could earn twice what I do if I didn't have to pay tax.

      If you're paying 50% tax, you're a complete moron who has some REALLY bad tax advice...

  • It looks like Apple is assuming Trump will be in office by next year. I doubt that they have any intention of importing their money just to get it confiscated.

    • you people who think the Clinton's aren't mega-corporate bitches too are amusing

    • Yeah, 'cause Hillary is the big evil socialist-marxist-tax-them-fuckers-out-the-wazoo bitch.

      She's a bitch all right. But the only marxist in this race is Trump. And he's more of the Groucho kind.

  • Cook is saying that Apple will repatriate profits...next year. As in after Obama is out of office. Clearly, Apple has not been able to negotiate an agreement with the Obama administration that they can live with. By saying next year Cook is basically saying that he has given up on this administration. Trump has already come out publicly against the EU decision.

    Interestingly the Obama administration is also against the EU decision. Why? I can think of two possible reasons:

    1) They would rather get their own g

    • The US government may possibly looking for the $44bn of US tax money that Apple funneled through Apple Operations International (Incorporated in Ireland, operated from the US, paying tax nowhere), according to a US senate inquiry in 2013.
  • We noticed that foreign tax havens aren't so reliable, so we'll try some domestic tax havens for a change. We'll bite the bullet and probably have to pay twice the tax we had to pay in Ireland (which would probably be a whooping 0.01% [cnn.com] instead of the 0.005% so far).

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