TheBigShort
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A tax deferred asset is a valuable asset in the hands of the tax payer - not the tax collector.
You seem to be suggesting that the State should have retained its shareholding in AIB until the value of the tax deferred asset was reduced to zero.
Hang on! Won't that just cause a corresponding reduction in the value that could be realised on the sale of those shares?
Whoo!hoo! Now you are getting it. With a 100% shareholding, the State has 100% of a valuable asset in its hands for the next 20yrs.
They made an actual economic loss and the rules allow companies to carry forward such losses and offset them against economic gains.
Any restriction on the above impacts on the bank's capital position as it loses the deferred tax asset that those losses represent. The State is then compelled to step in and shore up the capital position (circa €3bn).
Moaning about AIB not paying corporation tax for the forseable future is lowest common denominator stuff to be frank.
A tax deferred asset is of no value in the hands of the State (the tax collector).
Can't you see that?
The rest of your post suggests that you are missing this very obvious point.
A tax deferred asset is a valuable asset in the hands of the tax payer -
The above is not the first time that you've asked me a question, I've answered it, and you've ignored the response because it blew your argument out of the
Now you seem to be pushing this idea that the market didn't know about the deferred tax asset and that it wasn't built into the price that the State sold some of its shareholding at.
There is no preferential treatment here; i
That is that the State is sitting on both sides of this equation, as the tax collector and the taxpayer (by virtue of its 100% holding of AIB).
Put another way, imagine if the State sold 100% of AIB for €12bn or so and today it was revealed that no CT would be paid for 20yrs to liabilities valued to €3bn?
In which case AIB, and the State with its 99.9% stake, effectively realises the €1 bn as profit - no need to bother the guys down at Revenue.
A €1bn return to the State with or without the deferred tax asset. Yes? No?
on the one hand it does not recover tax that it would otherwise but on the other hand it does not suffer that same tax. Surely you can see that?
People are blue in the face
Well get lost then, or better still answer the questions I asked you in the homeless threads. Or have you run away from them?
Btw, your last post is off track.
No, I just try to live by the "don't feed the trolls" motto.
Tough though, especially in the face of utter claptrap.
I can't wait for your "is the Moon made of cheese" thread...
I have never posted anything about the dole or a nine month time horizon.
I think you are mixing me up with someone else.
But that wasn't the case!
The extent of the losses that AIB was carrying forward was publicly available information at the time of the public offering.
The implications of the losses being carried forward would however, I gather, not be known to the general public at large. That is, in the view of the CEO, 20yrs without any tax liability.
Are you seriously suggesting that somebody buying €10k worth of stock in a public company wouldn't understand the implications of the losses that were being carried forward? Really?!
Even though the CEO of that company spelt it out for them?
Tough though, especially in the face of utter claptrap.
I can't wait for your "is the Moon made of cheese" thread...
BigShort, stop hurling personal insults at other posters.
Listen to the substance of what Sarenco and I are saying.
You seem to have a blindspot in relation to this issue.
The proof is never in the pudding, the proof of the pudding is in the eating.The proof will be in the pudding.
I've never heard anyone blame the poor for the bailout.The consequences of the bailout are people whinging about how much tax they have to pay, they blame the poor.
Nice soundbite but it doesn't mean anything.Oblivious to the fact that 90% of stock sold was sold to corporate investors who can now drink the gravy on a cheap stock that is highly profitable and those profits are tax free.
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