Analysis: Biden tax increase might not be so bad for big banks
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[October 22, 2020] By
David Henry
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Democratic
presidential candidate Joe Biden's plan to raise corporate taxes would
have a modest impact on profits of big U.S. banks and probably not
before 2022, analysts said.
Other aspects of Biden's plan, including tax credits for low and
moderate income households and government spending on infrastructure,
could lead to fewer loan losses and more lending revenue, they said.
Banks were big beneficiaries of tax cuts under President Donald Trump,
making a reversal seem ominous. But a second look at what might happen
if Biden were to win the election and Democrats were to win control of
the U.S. Senate suggests the pain might not be so bad.
Biden's plan would raise the current 21% corporate rate to 28%, putting
back only seven of the 14-point reduction enacted during the Trump
administration.
That seven-point hike would reduce big banks' earnings per share by a
median of 7.4% based on 2021 estimates, according to Morgan Stanley
analyst Betsy Graseck.
For Wells Fargo & Co <WFC.N>, the estimated hit would be 10.2% because
the vast majority of its operations are in the United States. For
Citigroup Inc <C.N>, which gets a lot of revenue abroad, it would only
be 6.5%.
Analysts do not think corporate tax rates will go as high as what Biden
has proposed, even if Democrats gain control of Congress in a so-called
"Blue Wave." The economy will be too fragile because of the coronavirus
pandemic to enact much higher rates, they said.
"There could be reticence, especially with moderate Democrats, to hike
taxes out of fear that any fiscal tightening would slow economic
activity," said Issac Boltansky, director of policy research at Compass
Point Research & Trading.
Biden's proposed 28% rate would also face arguments that the total
corporate tax bill from federal, state and local levies would put U.S.
companies at a disadvantage to global competitors that have lower rates,
said Rohit Kumar, co-leader of PwC's national tax office in Washington.
A Democratic sweep might benefit banks in another way, by launching
proposed infrastructure projects. That government money would flow
through to businesses and their employees, making it easier for them to
repay their loans, analysts said.
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U.S. Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden delivers remarks at
a Voter Mobilization Event campaign stop at the Cincinnati Museum
Center at Union Terminal in Cincinnati, Ohio, U.S., October 12,
2020. REUTERS/Tom Brenner/File Photo
Big U.S. banks have put set aside more than $60 billion for potential loan
losses since the pandemic started. If those losses do not materialize, the banks
will be able to bring the money back into reported earnings.
More government infrastructure spending could also support demand for loans and
increase inflation. Higher interest rates would lift bank revenue from loans and
securities.
Combined, those factors could offset two-thirds of the 7.4% drag on bank
earnings from a 28% corporate tax rate, Morgan Stanley's Graseck estimated.
There are many hypotheticals at play - if Biden wins, if Democrats take control
of Congress, if various proposals pass as written - but bank shareholders have
been concerned that lenders would lose the huge earnings benefit they gained
from the 2017 tax cuts, analysts said.
Biden was leading Trump by 10 points, according to a Reuters/Ipsos poll earlier
this month.
Higher rates probably would not take effect until 2022, analysts said.
Democrats would first try to shore up the economy and pursue legislation on
healthcare, racial injustice, wealth disparities and the environment before they
would turn to reversing gains banks made under Trump, Washington policy experts
said.
The history of tax bills back to 1986 shows they take time to move through the
legislative process and that hikes almost always take effect in the future,
Kumar said.
"It seems more likely it would be January 2022 than January 2021," he said.
(Reporting by David Henry in New York; Editing by Lauren Tara LaCapra, Michelle
Price and Steve Orlofsky)
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