Kind of. The deferred money will be taxed by where he lives. Which probably won't be Cali
Oh, but they can try…amercer said:
Sure some politicians in Cali will ***** about it, but nothing they can do really
Max Power said:
He's deferring 97% of his contract for an entire decade, perhaps I'm a bit of a conspiracy theorist on this one but deferring that much money for a decade to avoid CA state taxes only is ridiculous. The terms indicated there's no interest being earned on that derral so the $68MM he defers each year isn't growing, he also doesn't have the opportunity to invest that money elsewhere for an entire decade. The time value of that money being lost exceeds 10% in CA state taxes each year. I don't know what the tax situation is if he retires and goes straight back to Japan in a decade at the conclusion of the contract, perhaps that adds up. To me this feels like a way to defer compensation that will specifically become an ownership interest when his playing days are over.
The Dodgers after deferring $680 million of Ohtani’s contract til 2034
— Barstool Sports (@barstoolsports) December 12, 2023
(Via @JFrankensteiner )
pic.twitter.com/SATt58psXk
crowman2010 said:
So, just hypothetically speaking here...what happens if the Dodgers were to go bankrupt in the span of 10 years? The deferred payouts could really bite SO in the ass, right?
One of the biggest misconceptions about Shohei Ohtani's contract is that the Dodgers will have an additional ten years to pay him the money.
— Joe Pompliano (@JoePompliano) December 12, 2023
But that's not how it works.
Major League Baseball's CBA requires teams to fully fund the present-day value of deferred payments within…
There is a luxury tax advantage for the Dodgers also, that he doesn't mention in that tweet.Panama Red said:crowman2010 said:
So, just hypothetically speaking here...what happens if the Dodgers were to go bankrupt in the span of 10 years? The deferred payouts could really bite SO in the ass, right?One of the biggest misconceptions about Shohei Ohtani's contract is that the Dodgers will have an additional ten years to pay him the money.
— Joe Pompliano (@JoePompliano) December 12, 2023
But that's not how it works.
Major League Baseball's CBA requires teams to fully fund the present-day value of deferred payments within…