Re: No such thing as a Treasury bond bubble
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?p...d=aeD4ZWA0j8M4
Originally posted by santafe2
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Feb. 5 (Bloomberg) -- Japan’s plan to waive taxes on profits companies bring home from overseas may limit fund inflows before the financial year ends next month, damping any gains in the yen, Daiwa Institute of Research says.
Many Japanese companies repatriate overseas earnings before the accounting period ends on March 31, helping strengthen the yen. Japanese corporations had accumulated about 17 trillion yen ($190 billion) of overseas earnings, which they had not yet brought home at the end of the fiscal year 2006, according to the Trade Ministry. The firms were reluctant to do so because of Japan’s relatively high national tax rates.
Expectations for the proposed legislation “may create downward pressure on the yen” as companies delay repatriating funds on speculation the new policy will be passed, said Yuji Kameoka, a senior economist in Tokyo at Daiwa Institute of Research, a unit of Japan’s second-largest brokerage.
Japan’s corporate tax rate is among the highest of developed countries, being around 40.7 percent when both national and local taxes are taken into account, according to government calculations.
The planned legislation aims at giving companies greater scope to make new investments in Japan with the goal of helping shore up the faltering local economy.
Many Japanese companies repatriate overseas earnings before the accounting period ends on March 31, helping strengthen the yen. Japanese corporations had accumulated about 17 trillion yen ($190 billion) of overseas earnings, which they had not yet brought home at the end of the fiscal year 2006, according to the Trade Ministry. The firms were reluctant to do so because of Japan’s relatively high national tax rates.
Expectations for the proposed legislation “may create downward pressure on the yen” as companies delay repatriating funds on speculation the new policy will be passed, said Yuji Kameoka, a senior economist in Tokyo at Daiwa Institute of Research, a unit of Japan’s second-largest brokerage.
Japan’s corporate tax rate is among the highest of developed countries, being around 40.7 percent when both national and local taxes are taken into account, according to government calculations.
The planned legislation aims at giving companies greater scope to make new investments in Japan with the goal of helping shore up the faltering local economy.
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