Just as naturally as the wind blows through the trees, financiers will find their least-tax financial option.
In the world of finance, there are lots of ways to finance projects and move money around. You might want to fund a new venture...but with what funds? Equity? Or taking on debt? And from where? Or maybe you’re just setting up an investment, but want to do so with the smallest possible fees and taxes attached.
Financial transactions are said to be tax-efficient if they have the lowest amount of taxes relative to other financial transactions used to achieve the same goal. Taxes, like everything else (labor, materials, equipment, etc.), are just another cost of doing business. As with all costs, they’re most efficient if they’re minimized...getting the biggest bang for your buck, so to speak.
The U.S. government knows people try to be tax-efficient with its investments, which is why they created retirement vehicles like 401(k)s and Roth IRAs/OG IRAs. These retirement funds are set up with tax benefits, encouraging working people to save up for retirement. Likewise, you’ll get penalized in most cases for tapping your 401(k) or IRA early. For your average American Joe, maxing these accounts out first is your most tax-efficient bet in terms of saving money.
While mutual funds have dominated the responsible, long-term investing market for a while now, ETFs have largely disrupted this scene, in part because many ETFs are more tax-efficient than their mutual fund counterparts. For the most part, not only are ETFs not passively managed, but their structure of fewer long-term capital gains redistributions makes ETF-holders subject to less tax compared to an equivalent mutual fund. That is, ETFs don't realize gains; they just buy and hold "forever."
Setting up trusts, buying tax-free bonds, and strategically timing the cashing out of investments are all aimed at maximizing tax efficiency. Why not? The alternative is just handing over yet more of your hard-earned money to Uncle Sam.
Related or Semi-related Video
Finance: What is Double Declining Balanc...10 Views
Finance a la shmoop what is double-declining balance sheet
depreciation kind of sounds like that strange-looking British double-decker [Buses in London]
bus right but it's not instead it's a structure or formula under which [Definition of a double declining balance sheet]
companies assess the depreciating value of an asset that you know loses value
it's basically the way they lose or track the loss of value in it that's [Guy talking on a London street]
different from normal depreciation like a tractor smelting Factory or the break [A bucket of molten metal being poured]
room vending machine which used to deposit KitKat bars but has been hanging [KitKat bar gets stuck in the machine]
on to that one bar since 1992 we got to depreciate those well if Shmaterpiller
has a smelting Factory they paid a hundred million bucks to build which [100 million bucks price tag appears]
will be sold for salvage value or scrap for ten million bucks in 20 years then
the decline in total value over that time will be ninety million bucks yep [Decline in value calculation]
over twenty years or four and a half million dollars each year if the company
used straight-line depreciation to account for the loss in value of that [Straight line on a value/time graph]
smelting Factory but under double declining balance depreciation systems
the deduction rate is essentially double the straight-line amounts it's still the
same total amount of deduction it's not like the value of the tractor factory
changed either at purchase time or scrap time but the speed and timing of the [Timeline of depreciation]
depreciation changed to favor high depreciation in the early years giving
the company lower profits but also lower taxes [The first 5 years on the timeline are highlighted]
well the accounting rationale follows suit the utility or value of the asset
is in fact not declining in true market value in a steady state straight-line [Stop sign appears over the value graph]
over twenty years try to convince a buyer that your car
has depreciated only five percent in value a year after you bought it new [Car for sale on eBay]
yeah not happening depreciate way more than that so in double declining balance
depreciation instead of deducting four-and-a-half million bucks a year the
company would deduct nine million a year each year with some adjustments along
the way and yes we're way over generalizing on that statement until [Overgeneralizing flashing red]
that smelting Factory was fully deducted away to whatever terminal salvage value
or scrap value they predicted it would then sell [Factory value declining]
for that is if a normal depreciation was taking four-and-a-half million bucks a
year for 20 years or four-and-a-half percent of the total initial cost then [Straight line depreciation per year]
double declining balance depreciation would take double that number or nine
percent of the hundred million dollars in year one
so they deduct nine million right upfront and your one right goes from 100
to ninety one on the sheets and in reality that's probably a lot closer to [Price tag decreasing]
what the actual loss and market value of the smelting machine and would look like
all right well then in year two double declining balance depreciation would
again take double the flat rate of that four inhabitant they double it to nine
percent of the remaining book value of the smelter or nine percent of the
remaining 91 million that it's worth or about 8.2 million in incremental [Double declining balance depreciation per year]
depreciation for that year leaving the value ninety one - 8.2 or eighty two
point eight million dollars in year three the value of the shelter would
drop another nine percent to about seventy five point four million say we
did all the math therefore there no extra charge and in year four down nine [Post it note showing the calculation]
percent again to around sixty eight point six million dollars so up to this
point the set of deductions would look like this there we go all that stuff you [Amount depreciated in the first 4 years is shown]
notice that as we've gone along here we've taken the beginning of the year
book value of the smelter as the starting point against which to take our
nine percent deduction if we take nine percent always well we'll never get to
zero or rather to the scrap value target there of ten million bucks right nine [The value in the 20th year is shown]
percent and keep just being a tiny tiny amount on those out years so in practice
at some point when companies have depreciated the crap out of their
capital assets well then they switch to straight-line depreciation in this case
after say year five our smelter would be valued at sixty two point four million
dollars ish with fifty two point four million left to depreciate to hit that
ten million dollar scrap value for about three point five million a year for the [Calculation of loss per year is shown]
remaining fifteen years until finally yes Bessie is a put out to pasture the [The factory is thrown into the trash]
gist of double declining balance sheets appreciation is to let companies pay
less in taxes early in their history having more cash to
build their businesses and grow faster at the price of showing lower accounting
earnings and that's just okay with Wall Street so yeah here's to hoping they [Someone doing an okay sign next the Wall St. sign]
deploy that cash into after know something a little more fun [Money going down a water slide]
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