Some of the expense is also due to the revaluation of its tax
liabilities, the drugmaker said in a filing with the Securities
and Exchange Commission.
Amgen did not say how much of its $38.9 billion in cash and
other holdings it plans to move back to the United States. To
encourage U.S. companies to bring home the more than $2.6
trillion now held overseas, the law sets a one-time tax
repatriation rate of 15.5 percent for cash and cash-equivalents
and 8 percent for illiquid assets.
Amgen said its future U.S. income generally will be taxed at the
21 percent U.S. corporate income tax rate, while its income
elsewhere will generally be taxed in the United States at 10.5
percent, reduced by foreign tax credits.
It said the tax expenses from moving its cash back to the United
States will affect its current generally accepted accounting
principles (GAAP) earnings forecast, but will not affect its
non-GAAP forecast.
(Reporting by Michael Erman; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)
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