Obvious_Chapter2082
Obvious_Chapter2082 t1_jbhazs9 wrote
Reply to comment by Cakeking7878 in [OC] NVIDIA's FY22 income statement by giteam
Most companies incorporate in Delaware for the ease of it and the legal protection, since they have a chancery court for corps
It can help tax-wise, but only with state taxes. And enough states have combined reporting laws at this point that the benefit is pretty thin anyways
In either case, Nvidia’s state taxes here are a very negligible portion of their tax expense
Obvious_Chapter2082 t1_jbh65b4 wrote
Reply to comment by lestat01 in [OC] NVIDIA's FY22 income statement by giteam
Neither of them pay Nvidia
Obvious_Chapter2082 t1_jbh63t2 wrote
Reply to comment by rito-pIz in [OC] NVIDIA's FY22 income statement by giteam
It includes deferred taxes too. Their actual tax for the year was $2 billion
Obvious_Chapter2082 t1_jbh61qq wrote
Reply to comment by Majestic-Target8219 in [OC] NVIDIA's FY22 income statement by giteam
They didn’t get paid tax back, they paid about $2 billion of tax
Obvious_Chapter2082 t1_jbh46g2 wrote
Reply to comment by Cakeking7878 in [OC] NVIDIA's FY22 income statement by giteam
Eh, it doesn’t really have to do with Delaware either, that’s mainly for legal reasons anyways
Obvious_Chapter2082 t1_jbghyqc wrote
Reply to comment by rusself in [OC] NVIDIA's FY22 income statement by giteam
That’s not the tax they pay. They paid around $2 billion for 2022
Obvious_Chapter2082 t1_jbg3p5s wrote
Reply to comment by Fit-Plant-306 in [OC] NVIDIA's FY22 income statement by giteam
This is the danger of looking at highly technical tax information and assuming it’s a simple read. If you dig into the 10-K for this company, they actually paid about 50% of their profit in tax this year. The discrepancy comes from a new R&D capitalization policy, which gives them a deferred tax benefit on their foreign derived intangible income. This benefit is only a small portion of the actual higher tax they’ll pay from this policy, but the US portion doesn’t impact effective tax rates
It’s wrong to say that corporations barely pay any tax, because income tax expense is a misleading metric that doesn’t relate to the tax a company pays
Obvious_Chapter2082 t1_jbfvleg wrote
Reply to comment by bostonjames6 in [OC] NVIDIA's FY22 income statement by giteam
That’s their second biggest adjustment right after foreign income tax adjustments
Obvious_Chapter2082 t1_jbfvewq wrote
Reply to comment by bumblyburg in [OC] NVIDIA's FY22 income statement by giteam
It’s included in SG&A
Obvious_Chapter2082 t1_jbfaw75 wrote
Reply to comment by gusofk in [OC] NVIDIA's FY22 income statement by giteam
It’s in their 10-K. Their total tax expense is a benefit of $200M, but their current tax expense is $200B. It’s just that their deferred tax expense is a benefit of $202B
Obvious_Chapter2082 t1_jbesk70 wrote
Reply to comment by Gunra in [OC] NVIDIA's FY22 income statement by giteam
>Zero $ in taxes
They paid around $2 billion
Obvious_Chapter2082 t1_jbesgvv wrote
Reply to comment by the_fart_king_farts in [OC] NVIDIA's FY22 income statement by giteam
Nvidia’s situation has nothing to do with Ireland though
Obvious_Chapter2082 t1_jbesfa9 wrote
Reply to comment by HopefullyFunny69 in [OC] NVIDIA's FY22 income statement by giteam
Go look at their 10-K, they paid around $2 billion, or a 50% tax rate. The reason their income tax expense is negative is due to R&D getting capitalized this year, so they get a large deferred foreign benefit, but that doesn’t reduce the actual tax they owe
Obvious_Chapter2082 t1_jbesb7r wrote
Reply to comment by ExHax in [OC] NVIDIA's FY22 income statement by giteam
The tax they paid in 2022 was about 50% of their pre-tax profit
Obvious_Chapter2082 t1_jbes8mq wrote
Reply to comment by EVOOhhYeah in [OC] NVIDIA's FY22 income statement by giteam
That’s not true at all. The reason their rate is low is due to R&D getting capitalized this year, which increases the amount of FDII they pay.
If you look at the actual tax they paid this year, it’s around $2 billion, or a 50% tax rate
Obvious_Chapter2082 t1_jbernzc wrote
Reply to comment by lo_fi_ho in [OC] NVIDIA's FY22 income statement by giteam
That’s their income tax expense, which isn’t the same thing as the tax they pay. Judging from their 10-K, they did pay tax at around a 50% tax rate for 2022
Obvious_Chapter2082 t1_janep52 wrote
Reply to comment by fuhgdat1019 in [OC] Supreme court is forecast to block student debt relief by liortulip
The longer you wait, the more interest is gonna accrue though
Obvious_Chapter2082 t1_jan8lzm wrote
Reply to comment by fuhgdat1019 in [OC] Supreme court is forecast to block student debt relief by liortulip
They will. There’s really no difference in voluntarily paying the loans and letting them deduct it for you. I’m not sure why people are so opposed to paying it
Obvious_Chapter2082 t1_jan54on wrote
Reply to comment by Monster-Zero in [OC] Supreme court is forecast to block student debt relief by liortulip
Have fun with your garnished wages
Obvious_Chapter2082 t1_jae50qv wrote
Reply to comment by studmuffffffin in [OC] How Zoom makes money (visualization of the earnings they just released) by IncomeStatementGuy
There are a lot of things that can raise the effective tax rate without actually changing the amount of tax you’ll pay year to year. Anytime there’s a rate above 30% or so, that’s likely the case
Obvious_Chapter2082 t1_jadbdym wrote
Reply to comment by ErieSpirit in [OC] Capital One’s 2022 Income Statement Visualized by Square_Tea4916
Once their 10-K is released, you can probably get a good guess from their current provision. But I agree, total income tax expense won’t even be close to the actual tax they pay
Obvious_Chapter2082 t1_jadb752 wrote
Reply to comment by reddituser7542 in [OC] Capital One’s 2022 Income Statement Visualized by Square_Tea4916
The foreign impact on ETRs really isn’t large anymore, since the US taxes global corporate income. I would just assume they don’t have a lot of R&D or don’t pay a lot of stock compensation
Obvious_Chapter2082 t1_jadakhn wrote
Reply to comment by 1714alpha in [OC] Capital One’s 2022 Income Statement Visualized by Square_Tea4916
That’s just their income tax expense. The actual income tax they pay might be much larger or much smaller than this
Most large corps have low rates mainly from R&D credits and stock compensation. I’d assume Capital one doesn’t have much of those, or they could just have a large reconciling item that raises their rate
Obvious_Chapter2082 t1_jachr00 wrote
Reply to comment by originalusername__ in [OC] How Zoom makes money (visualization of the earnings they just released) by IncomeStatementGuy
To be fair, they’re probably only paying a small fraction of that amount in taxes this year
Obvious_Chapter2082 t1_jbhcn5q wrote
Reply to comment by mooseson in [OC] NVIDIA's FY22 income statement by giteam
They actually paid around $2 billion of tax, they didn’t get a benefit