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Investing with President Kamala Harris in power

7,688 Views | 82 Replies | Last: 2 mo ago by LMCane
TxAG#2011
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EliteZags said:

TxAG#2011 said:

Jabin said:

TxAG#2011 said:

EliteZags said:

TxAG#2011 said:

Raising the corporate tax rate is not going to help anything.

Perfectly fine with the wealth tax on HNW individuals
they're both crazy dumb, if you tax unrealized capital gains what happens when those assets drop in value?


....

Nothing? There would be no gains
He means what if the assets drop in value after the tax had been paid. Will the government return the paid taxes?


No that's not reasonable. Same with real estate, if your house assessment is lower next year you don't get a refund.

The issue here I imagine is how the government will possibly be able to appraise all these different assets at one time.
so its fair to have to pay taxes on your portfolio gains in 2021, even though you didn't sell anything and lost all those gains in 2022?

wtf are you smoking

with some stocks you could literally have to pay taxes on price fluctuations every year without getting any actual appreciation over several years


I'm not paying anything, I'm not worth over 100 million.
WoMD
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Jabin said:

Also, why do we need new taxes or raise taxes?

Shouldn't we first make the government more efficient, make it so that it can do more with the vast amount of money it already has?

Why do some automatically believe politicians when they say government needs more money?

Government wastes so much money, and so much goes back into the pockets of politicians, that we'd be insane to give it more.

Thats why I love living in Idaho. This past fiscal year the state went down in overall tax income, but ended up with a surplus. Less came in, but even less went out. Strange concept. So as a result they've announced another decrease in property taxes since they have enough money already. My income tax rate has also recently been lowered, and I got a refund on my property tax this year since the property value on the last appraisal went down.

The federal government should be paying attention to how to spend less than or equal to the "income" in a well run state. Instead they're paying attention to California's model.
Mostly Foggy Recollection
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WoMD said:

Jabin said:

Also, why do we need new taxes or raise taxes?

Shouldn't we first make the government more efficient, make it so that it can do more with the vast amount of money it already has?

Why do some automatically believe politicians when they say government needs more money?

Government wastes so much money, and so much goes back into the pockets of politicians, that we'd be insane to give it more.

Thats why I love living in Idaho. This past fiscal year the state went down in overall tax income, but ended up with a surplus. Less came in, but even less went out. Strange concept. So as a result they've announced another decrease in property taxes since they have enough money already. My income tax rate has also recently been lowered, and I got a refund on my property tax this year since the property value on the last appraisal went down.

The federal government should be paying attention to how to spend less than or equal to the "income" in a well run state. Instead they're paying attention to California's model.


They don't want to. The communists (D party) and Liberals (2/3 of the Republican Party) want Kabuki Theater and power stripped from the individual.

The Left today gives zero ****s about the middle class and they are actively trying to destroy it. Most Americans between 18-60 are so fiscally ignorant now…. And comfortable with commerce at their fingertips…. That they allow this country to die.

We are an emotion over logic populace hell bent on our populist tribe flavor of the week. We won't get serious until **** gets real here and I mean real painful. Then, just maybe, we will still have people with critical thinking skills who realize that the last 20 years have been a charade of idiotic fiscal policy (really the last 111 years).
BassCowboy33
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Jabin said:

BassCowboy33 said:

Serious question: the corporate tax rate has been MUCH higher than this throughout most of modern American history. So, why is raising it to 28% this time, which will still be historically low, going to bring it all crumbling down?
You're right on the history, but raising the rate will be a step backwards. Lots of good policy reasons exist to either eliminate corporate taxes or, if not that, keep them as low as possible. Raising rates will increase costs passed through to consumers and will likely have a dampening effect on the economy.

There's lots of truth to the old adage that what's good for business is good for America.

Now, breaking up the huge corporations is another story. We ought to do that and, while we're at it, break up the huge federal government agencies that make large corporations look like minnows next to whales.


Roger. Just curious.
El Chupacabra
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TxAG#2011 said:

EliteZags said:

TxAG#2011 said:

Jabin said:

TxAG#2011 said:

EliteZags said:

TxAG#2011 said:

Raising the corporate tax rate is not going to help anything.

Perfectly fine with the wealth tax on HNW individuals
they're both crazy dumb, if you tax unrealized capital gains what happens when those assets drop in value?


....

Nothing? There would be no gains
He means what if the assets drop in value after the tax had been paid. Will the government return the paid taxes?


No that's not reasonable. Same with real estate, if your house assessment is lower next year you don't get a refund.

The issue here I imagine is how the government will possibly be able to appraise all these different assets at one time.
so its fair to have to pay taxes on your portfolio gains in 2021, even though you didn't sell anything and lost all those gains in 2022?

wtf are you smoking

with some stocks you could literally have to pay taxes on price fluctuations every year without getting any actual appreciation over several years


I'm not paying anything, I'm not worth over 100 million.


I'm not black, so I don't care if there is racism against black people.

What a stupid outlook.
lobopride
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How many people paid income tax when it was first introduced?
TxAG#2011
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El Chupacabra said:

TxAG#2011 said:

EliteZags said:

TxAG#2011 said:

Jabin said:

TxAG#2011 said:

EliteZags said:

TxAG#2011 said:

Raising the corporate tax rate is not going to help anything.

Perfectly fine with the wealth tax on HNW individuals
they're both crazy dumb, if you tax unrealized capital gains what happens when those assets drop in value?


....

Nothing? There would be no gains
He means what if the assets drop in value after the tax had been paid. Will the government return the paid taxes?


No that's not reasonable. Same with real estate, if your house assessment is lower next year you don't get a refund.

The issue here I imagine is how the government will possibly be able to appraise all these different assets at one time.
so its fair to have to pay taxes on your portfolio gains in 2021, even though you didn't sell anything and lost all those gains in 2022?

wtf are you smoking

with some stocks you could literally have to pay taxes on price fluctuations every year without getting any actual appreciation over several years


I'm not paying anything, I'm not worth over 100 million.


I'm not black, so I don't care if there is racism against black people.

What a stupid outlook.


Complete useless anology. Please explain how tax brackets equate to race here?

Nobody cared for the 9 figures, so they came for the 6 figures?

Yea buddy, I think those two gaps are a lot bigger than you realize.
EliteZags
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AG
so make it pointless for those holding the most capital to invest at all and cripple entre markets/industries?
panhandlefarmer
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AG
25% tax on unrealized capital gains. They are insane.
fixer
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lobopride said:

How many people paid income tax when it was first introduced?


This is a good question.
themissinglink
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AG
Quote:

I'm not paying anything, I'm not worth over 100 million.
Congrats on outing yourself as a lolpoor. Great comment to highlight the issues of economic populism. While the direct effects of it may not directly impact you, the indirect effects certainly impact you.
LMCane
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Elon Musk can see clearer than any politician what is going to be happening.

when there is a 44% capital gains tax- what is that going to do to the S&P500 and the Nasdaq and the Dow?



CCAg95
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AG
BassCowboy33 said:

Jabin said:

You're kidding, right?

What happens when all those high-net-worth individuals move their citizenship and money to a country that doesn't tax their net worth?
Serious question: Up until a few years ago, the corporate tax rate was 35%. People weren't flocking overseas in the decades that was in place. Why would raising it to 28% make them uproot everything now?
Companies were flocking overseas and the ones that didn't were not repatriating money.
Gordo14
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panhandlefarmer said:

25% tax on unrealized capital gains. They are insane.


So are tariffs. Welcome to populism where the best candidate is the one least likely to do what they say to be elected (Harris is the one least likely to implement dumb tax policy they say on the campaign trail for what it's worth - partially because I think it's dumb political theater to get the economic illiterate vote, but also because she doesn't have a blind cult giving the executive branch extra power and influence). I would like to thank Donald Trump and Bernie Sanders for normalizing this dumb **** in their respective parties.
lobopride
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fixer said:

lobopride said:

How many people paid income tax when it was first introduced?


This is a good question.
In 1909, progressives in Congress again attached a provision for an income tax to a tariff bill. Conservatives, hoping to kill the idea for good, proposed a constitutional amendment enacting such a tax; they believed an amendment would never receive ratification by three-fourths of the states. Much to their surprise, the amendment was ratified by one state legislature after another, and on February 25, 1913, with the certification by Secretary of State Philander C. Knox, the 16th amendment took effect. Yet in 1913, due to generous exemptions and deductions, less than 1 percent of the population paid income taxes at the rate of only 1 percent of net income.

It always starts off small and then grows because government never gets "enough" of other people's money.

https://www.archives.gov/milestone-documents/16th-amendment
TxAG#2011
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themissinglink said:

Quote:

I'm not paying anything, I'm not worth over 100 million.
Congrats on outing yourself as a lolpoor. Great comment to highlight the issues of economic populism. While the direct effects of it may not directly impact you, the indirect effects certainly impact you.


What are the negative indirect effects on me?

The only guy I personally know worth 9 figures just has his money sitting in investment accounts, bank accounts etc. Dead money. No benefit to anyone.

And I'm pretty sure I paid more in taxes than him last year.
LMCane
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wonder what this will do to investing and the larger economy now.

BUY GOLD



themissinglink
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AG
TxAG#2011 said:

themissinglink said:

Quote:

I'm not paying anything, I'm not worth over 100 million.
Congrats on outing yourself as a lolpoor. Great comment to highlight the issues of economic populism. While the direct effects of it may not directly impact you, the indirect effects certainly impact you.


What are the negative indirect effects on me?

The only guy I personally know worth 9 figures just has his money sitting in investment accounts, bank accounts etc. Dead money. No benefit to anyone.

And I'm pretty sure I paid more in taxes than him last year.
We appreciate you serving as the economically illiterate punching bag.

I'm sure you'll be shocked to learn that most extremely wealthy people don't just hold millions of dollars in a bank account. Their wealth is tied up in assets (usually companies) and much of it is unrealized gains. Further, many of these assets are founder owned, not on the public market and very difficult to value/liquidate. If they need to pay a tax on unrealized gains, they need to liquidate a portion of those assets every year and slowly give up control of their companies to Wall Street.

Take Tesla for example, 6-7 years ago it was worth billions but every equity analyst said it was headed for bankruptcy. Elon had a plan, executed and now it's worth 100x. Forcing Elon to liquidate at a critical time in the company might have sunk Tesla.

A tax on unrealized gains would effectively kill new companies and the start up economy. It's easy to hate on Facebook, Google, Tesla, Amazon, etc now, but 20 years ago, they were extremely valuable founders led companies that had massive capital needs and would have need founders to liquidate a large share if their companies to pay a tax on the unrealized gains (likely losing control).

DannyDuberstein
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AG
Those high wealth people will dump stocks to pay the tax. Market crashes because those high wealth folks own a sizable part of the market. We all suffer
I bleed maroon
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AG
TxAG#2011 said:

themissinglink said:

Quote:

I'm not paying anything, I'm not worth over 100 million.
Congrats on outing yourself as a lolpoor. Great comment to highlight the issues of economic populism. While the direct effects of it may not directly impact you, the indirect effects certainly impact you.


What are the negative indirect effects on me?

The only guy I personally know worth 9 figures just has his money sitting in investment accounts, bank accounts etc. Dead money. No benefit to anyone.

And I'm pretty sure I paid more in taxes than him last year.
Perhaps you'd like to live in a command economy somewhere else, comrade? This is the foundation of a capitalist economy. We invest in companies, who use the money to hire workers at fair wages, research and develop better products for consumers, build and lease buildings, and yes, return a profit to the shareholder who risked his money. Are you saying you have a problem with this, or that it doesn't directly benefit you and all other Americans?

This has to be a troll, or is just the most simplistic form of envy I've ever seen on these boards.
TxAG#2011
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I bleed maroon said:

TxAG#2011 said:

themissinglink said:

Quote:

I'm not paying anything, I'm not worth over 100 million.
Congrats on outing yourself as a lolpoor. Great comment to highlight the issues of economic populism. While the direct effects of it may not directly impact you, the indirect effects certainly impact you.


What are the negative indirect effects on me?

The only guy I personally know worth 9 figures just has his money sitting in investment accounts, bank accounts etc. Dead money. No benefit to anyone.

And I'm pretty sure I paid more in taxes than him last year.
Perhaps you'd like to live in a command economy somewhere else, comrade? This is the foundation of a capitalist economy. We invest in companies, who use the money to hire workers at fair wages, research and develop better products for consumers, build and lease buildings, and yes, return a profit to the shareholder who risked his money. Are you saying you have a problem with this, or that it doesn't directly benefit you and all other Americans?

This has to be a troll, or is just the most simplistic form of envy I've ever seen on these boards.
I'm sorry, what? Your post has nothing to do with the bolded.

This very guy thinks the current tax system is a joke and ultra HNW individuals should be paying way more because as it currently stands there are all sorts of ways for him to escape paying taxes.
TxAG#2011
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Appreciate you but I doubt you have ever had exposure to the ultra wealthy in any capacity.

"Most" of the ultra wealthy are just trust fund kids that got handed jobs and inheritance. Any of them will tell you the exact same.

For every Mark Zuckerberg there's a 100 alice waltons.
I bleed maroon
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AG
TxAG#2011 said:

I bleed maroon said:

TxAG#2011 said:

themissinglink said:

Quote:

I'm not paying anything, I'm not worth over 100 million.
Congrats on outing yourself as a lolpoor. Great comment to highlight the issues of economic populism. While the direct effects of it may not directly impact you, the indirect effects certainly impact you.


What are the negative indirect effects on me?

The only guy I personally know worth 9 figures just has his money sitting in investment accounts, bank accounts etc. Dead money. No benefit to anyone.

And I'm pretty sure I paid more in taxes than him last year.
Perhaps you'd like to live in a command economy somewhere else, comrade? This is the foundation of a capitalist economy. We invest in companies, who use the money to hire workers at fair wages, research and develop better products for consumers, build and lease buildings, and yes, return a profit to the shareholder who risked his money. Are you saying you have a problem with this, or that it doesn't directly benefit you and all other Americans?

This has to be a troll, or is just the most simplistic form of envy I've ever seen on these boards.
I'm sorry, what? Your post has nothing to do with the bolded.

This very guy thinks the current tax system is a joke and ultra HNW individuals should be paying way more because as it currently stands there are all sorts of ways for him to escape paying taxes.
Pardon me? You stated that investing money has no benefit to anyone, and is somehow "dead money"?

That's ludicrous. Please defend, if you choose.
WoMD
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themissinglink said:

Quote:

I'm not paying anything, I'm not worth over 100 million.
Congrats on outing yourself as a lolpoor. Great comment to highlight the issues of economic populism. While the direct effects of it may not directly impact you, the indirect effects certainly impact you.

LIVs are easy to manipulate using envy and manufactured victimhood. All they need is a boogeyman as a target.

Smart (and often evil) people can manipulate others. Willfully ignorant people get manipulated, allowing bad people to get ahead and stay in power.
themissinglink
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AG
TxAG#2011 said:

Appreciate you but I doubt you have ever had exposure to the ultra wealthy in any capacity.

"Most" of the ultra wealthy are just trust fund kids that got handed jobs and inheritance. Any of them will tell you the exact same.

For every Mark Zuckerberg there's a 100 alice waltons.
Had plenty of experience in my day job.

A simple google search would have told you otherwise...

In 1984, less than half the people on The Forbes 400 were self-made; in 2023, 70% have created their own riches.

If you want to tax inheritance, you should tax inheritance and not unrealized gains or wealth.
Jabin
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What do you do with a guy who's built a machine shop business from scratch? The business is now worth millions. If you tax the value of that business at 25%, he'll have to sell the business to pay the tax and/or lay off perhaps hundreds of workers.

What about a farm that has appreciated by 50% or more over the last 20 years? Do you think that farmer should have to sell his farm to pay the tax?

And there is no such thing as "dead" money. It's invested in something and being used. Even if it's just sitting in a bank account, that bank is lending out 10x the amount deposited to business people. If you force the depositor to pay a tax on 25% of the amount deposited, that means that the bank will have to reduce its loans backed by those deposits by 250%.

The problem with leftist ideas is that no one ever takes the time to think through the first layer of unintended consequences, let alone the second and third layers.
Definitely Not A Cop
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AG
Invested money has already been taxed. It will be taxed again once the profit is realized. There is no realistic way to tax the large majority of wealth without constant government seizure of assets.

Anyone advocating for taxing unrealized gains is a short-sighted moron that you are wasting your time arguing with.
Diggity
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AG
I'm not saying I agree with it, but ad valorem taxes have all the traits you're talking about.


Mostly Foggy Recollection
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The modern Lefts view on fiscal and economic policy is why, for the first time ever, I will be voting straight ticket R.

Didn't vote for a major party from 2002 to 2018 on a federal level.

I'm not voting for the R shade of populism. I'm voting against the radical Communist swine of the D tribe.
TxAG#2011
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Yes, ad valorem tax is already taxation on unrealized gains and the result isn't the downfall of capitalism as people are implying.

People are blowing up over this yet it would only affect ~10k individuals who can almost certainly afford to pay this tax and it will certainly not pass as congress will unite to protect their donors so this is just theoretical.
MAS444
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AG
If I read correctly, the tax is also offset by the person's other regular tax obligations, right?

Heineken-Ashi
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TxAG#2011 said:

Yes, ad valorem tax is already taxation on unrealized gains and the result isn't the downfall of capitalism as people are implying.

People are blowing up over this yet it would only affect ~10k individuals who can almost certainly afford to pay this tax and it will certainly not pass as congress will unite to protect their donors so this is just theoretical.
Nonsense. The people this would be subject to this (which I can promise you, if this stupidity somehow got enacted it would be far more than 10k and the arbritrary "high net worth" figure would comes lower and lower with each passing year) are already paying like 30-40% of their unrealized gains on their primary house each year in taxes. Now you want to take away 25% of their gains on EVERYTHING THEY OWN.

Let me just clue you in on an example since its obvious you have never spent a minute around the investment class.

$100M net worth guy owns a commercial real estate firm and buys an apartment complex worth $50M that generates $2.5M in NOI. He funds it with 70% debt and raises 35% in equity to cover the rest, closing costs, and capex. Equity in the deal is $17.5M. He puts in $2M of his own money and raises the rest from family offices and accredited investors.

After year 1, the property has appreciated 5% in value primarily through cap rate compression. NOI is relatively flat from acquisition and no cash flows have been paid to investors yet as the plan was to start distributions in Year 2 and sell by Year 5 for an IRR of 20%, and since NOI hasn't grown much, there's not enough funds to distribute anyway, likely accruing toward the terminal sale year. At the end of year 1, uncle same now gets $625,000, equal to 4 months of NOI. Except that money doesn't exist. Operations are flat. Value was grown from falling cap rates while any incremental increases in rents were already offset with increases in property tax, insurance, and controllable expenses that have grown 3% with inflation.

And the same can be expected in each year of the deal. There was no cash flow generated to pay the first year's Kamala tax, requiring an capital call from investors or a new credit line to be opened. Now year 2 comes and Kamala is expected to get roughly the same tax while cash flow, though likely decent at this point, still hasn't generated enough to pay off the first year Kamala tax, much less the second. We likely go into year 3 and possibly Year 4 with no distributions to investors.

The property value continues to rise 5% each year until year 4, and by Year 5, cap rates rise significantly and are 100 basis points above where they were at purchase with NOI up 25%. The property is worth $52M. The partnership has paid $2.5M in Kamala taxes to date and likely hasn't been able to distribute a dime to investors, including high net worth principal. If they sell, after closing costs and loan payoff, there's likely $15M AT MOST to distribute. Not only have none of the investors made any money, they likely don't even get their original equity back in full.

You know what happens if a law like this goes into affect? This quick behind the napkin scenario gets put into every acquisition model, business startup model, and every single investment model for ANYTHING in the country. And the investor decides.. "not worth it".

If your goal is to completely iradicate investment capital from America, then ya, back Kamala. Guess how much property taxes will be going up when jurisdictions and state and local governments have nobody willing to own investments and less taxes are coming in from commercial real estate, stock market, private and public businesses, etc. And let's see if capitalism breaks or not.
"H-A: In return for the flattery, can you reduce the size of your signature? It's the only part of your posts that don't add value. In its' place, just put "I'm an investing savant, and make no apologies for it", as oldarmy1 would do."
- I Bleed Maroon (distracted easily by signatures)
Mostly Foggy Recollection
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Heineken-Ashi said:

TxAG#2011 said:

Yes, ad valorem tax is already taxation on unrealized gains and the result isn't the downfall of capitalism as people are implying.

People are blowing up over this yet it would only affect ~10k individuals who can almost certainly afford to pay this tax and it will certainly not pass as congress will unite to protect their donors so this is just theoretical.
Nonsense. The people this would be subject to this (which I can promise you, if this stupidity somehow got enacted it would be far more than 10k and the arbritrary "high net worth" figure would comes lower and lower with each passing year) are already paying like 30-40% of their unrealized gains on their primary house each year in taxes. Now you want to take away 25% of their gains on EVERYTHING THEY OWN.

Let me just clue you in on an example since its obvious you have never spent a minute around the investment class.

$100M net worth guy owns a commercial real estate firm and buys an apartment complex worth $50M that generates $2.5M in NOI. He funds it with 70% debt and raises 35% in equity to cover the rest, closing costs, and capex. Equity in the deal is $17.5M. He puts in $2M of his own money and raises the rest from family offices and accredited investors.

After year 1, the property has appreciated 5% in value primarily through cap rate compression. NOI is relatively flat from acquisition and no cash flows have been paid to investors yet as the plan was to start distributions in Year 2 and sell by Year 5 for an IRR of 20%, and since NOI hasn't grown much, there's not enough funds to distribute anyway, likely accruing toward the terminal sale year. At the end of year 1, uncle same now gets $625,000, equal to 4 months of NOI. Except that money doesn't exist. Operations are flat. Value was grown from falling cap rates while any incremental increases in rents were already offset with increases in property tax, insurance, and controllable expenses that have grown 3% with inflation.

And the same can be expected in each year of the deal. There was no cash flow generated to pay the first year's Kamala tax, requiring an capital call from investors or a new credit line to be opened. Now year 2 comes and Kamala is expected to get roughly the same tax while cash flow, though likely decent at this point, still hasn't generated enough to pay off the first year Kamala tax, much less the second. We likely go into year 3 and possibly Year 4 with no distributions to investors.

The property value continues to rise 5% each year until year 4, and by Year 5, cap rates rise significantly and are 100 basis points above where they were at purchase with NOI up 25%. The property is worth $52M. The partnership has paid $2.5M in Kamala taxes to date and likely hasn't been able to distribute a dime to investors, including high net worth principal. If they sell, after closing costs and loan payoff, there's likely $15M AT MOST to distribute. Not only have none of the investors made any money, they likely don't even get their original equity back in full.

You know what happens if a law like this goes into affect? This quick behind the napkin scenario gets put into every acquisition model, business startup model, and every single investment model for ANYTHING in the country. And the investor decides.. "not worth it".

If your goal is to completely iradicate investment capital from America, then ya, back Kamala. Guess how much property taxes will be going up when jurisdictions and state and local governments have nobody willing to own investments and less taxes are coming in from commercial real estate, stock market, private and public businesses, etc. And let's see if capitalism breaks or not.



Great example.

Also the reason we identify the Left as emotion over logic voters.
TxAG#2011
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Heineken-Ashi said:

TxAG#2011 said:

Yes, ad valorem tax is already taxation on unrealized gains and the result isn't the downfall of capitalism as people are implying.

People are blowing up over this yet it would only affect ~10k individuals who can almost certainly afford to pay this tax and it will certainly not pass as congress will unite to protect their donors so this is just theoretical.
Nonsense. The people this would be subject to this (which I can promise you, if this stupidity somehow got enacted it would be far more than 10k and the arbritrary "high net worth" figure would comes lower and lower with each passing year) are already paying like 30-40% of their unrealized gains on their primary house each year in taxes. Now you want to take away 25% of their gains on EVERYTHING THEY OWN.

Let me just clue you in on an example since its obvious you have never spent a minute around the investment class.

$100M net worth guy owns a commercial real estate firm and buys an apartment complex worth $50M that generates $2.5M in NOI. He funds it with 70% debt and raises 35% in equity to cover the rest, closing costs, and capex. Equity in the deal is $17.5M. He puts in $2M of his own money and raises the rest from family offices and accredited investors.

After year 1, the property has appreciated 5% in value primarily through cap rate compression. NOI is relatively flat from acquisition and no cash flows have been paid to investors yet as the plan was to start distributions in Year 2 and sell by Year 5 for an IRR of 20%, and since NOI hasn't grown much, there's not enough funds to distribute anyway, likely accruing toward the terminal sale year. At the end of year 1, uncle same now gets $625,000, equal to 4 months of NOI. Except that money doesn't exist. Operations are flat. Value was grown from falling cap rates while any incremental increases in rents were already offset with increases in property tax, insurance, and controllable expenses that have grown 3% with inflation.

And the same can be expected in each year of the deal. There was no cash flow generated to pay the first year's Kamala tax, requiring an capital call from investors or a new credit line to be opened. Now year 2 comes and Kamala is expected to get roughly the same tax while cash flow, though likely decent at this point, still hasn't generated enough to pay off the first year Kamala tax, much less the second. We likely go into year 3 and possibly Year 4 with no distributions to investors.

The property value continues to rise 5% each year until year 4, and by Year 5, cap rates rise significantly and are 100 basis points above where they were at purchase with NOI up 25%. The property is worth $52M. The partnership has paid $2.5M in Kamala taxes to date and likely hasn't been able to distribute a dime to investors, including high net worth principal. If they sell, after closing costs and loan payoff, there's likely $15M AT MOST to distribute. Not only have none of the investors made any money, they likely don't even get their original equity back in full.

You know what happens if a law like this goes into affect? This quick behind the napkin scenario gets put into every acquisition model, business startup model, and every single investment model for ANYTHING in the country. And the investor decides.. "not worth it".

If your goal is to completely iradicate investment capital from America, then ya, back Kamala. Guess how much property taxes will be going up when jurisdictions and state and local governments have nobody willing to own investments and less taxes are coming in from commercial real estate, stock market, private and public businesses, etc. And let's see if capitalism breaks or not.
There's not a lot of details on this bill, but this scenario would not appear to be applicable at all. The commercial real estate firm running this deal would not have any change to their tax structure and this "partnership" would not be liable for this tax.

It is simply the $100 million net worth guys overall stake in the company. I'm skeptical any business startup owner would even take note of this given to even meet the threshold of $100 million net worth is light years away.

Definitely Not A Cop
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AG
Diggity said:

I'm not saying I agree with it, but ad valorem taxes have all the traits you're talking about.





Agreed. And there are not many more asinine organizations in our government to deal with than the appraisal districts.

Now imagine giving them the power to appraise everything you own, and get back to me on whether that sounds like a good expenditure of government resources.
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