Khaleej Times

Pace of repatriati­on by US firms slows

- Sujata Rao and Ritvik Carvalho

new york — US companies have sent home over half a trillion dollars of cash they held overseas in 2018 to take advantage of tax changes, but data suggest the pace is slowing, potentiall­y removing a key source of support for Wall Street.

Dollar repatriati­on in the JulySeptem­ber period fell to $93 billion, around half of second-quarter volumes and less than a third of the $300 billion or so sent home from January to March, US current account data shows.

The repatriati­on bonanza followed new regulation­s that allowed the US government to tax profits accumulate­d overseas, regardless of where the money was held. Prior rules allowed companies to “defer” US tax on worldwide profits unless they repatriate­d the money.

The change offered a powerful incentive to bring home some of the $3 trillion US firms were believed to hold in jurisdicti­ons ranging from Ireland to Switzerlan­d, either in cash or in securities such as US Treasuries.

But investment bank JPMorgan said the flows were on “a rapidly decelerati­ng trajectory”.

The current account data shows repatriati­on in all sectors. Looking at just non-financial companies, JPMorgan calculates $60 billion was repatriate­d in the third quarter, versus $225 billion in the first quarter and $115 billion in the second quarter.

Because companies had probably already pre-booked a one-off tax hit for the year, repatriati­on will have dwindled further in the last quarter, it predicted.

Repatriati­on flows are also evident from data released by the US Treasury Internatio­nal Capital, or TIC. That shows Treasury bond holdings falling in locations that are well known as low-tax jurisdicti­ons or overseas bases of US companies or that host significan­t fund management or custody business.

Ireland, which hosts the European hubs of US technology and pharmaceut­ical companies such as Apple and Pfizer, saw Treasury holdings drop by $40 billion between end-2017 and end-October 2018, TIC data released on December 17 shows. The holdings fell by over a tenth in January-October to $287.6 billion.

Shrinking repatriati­on is likely to affect markets, because the flows helped fund this year’s record $1 trillion in US share buybacks. A Jefferies analysis of a Federal Reserve paper looking at the use of repatriate­d cash concluded it had significan­tly enhanced buybacks, effectivel­y placing a floor under stock markets.

But US equities have endured a dismal few months as worries have grown for economic growth. The last quarter of 2018 has been the worst for the S&P500 index since the end of 2008 when the Lehman Brothers crisis erupted.

Should flows dwindle further, “the extra boost that US repatriati­on provided to US equity and bond markets via share buybacks and corporate bond redemption­s would likely dissipate next year,” JPMorgan told clients.

Bond markets meanwhile saw reduced issuance, as companies drew instead on repatriati­on proceeds.

The 10 biggest US multinatio­nals, including six tech companies, sold zero bonds in 2018, after raising $80 billion annually on average in the previous three years, Goldman Sachs said.

The dollar may be affected less — a significan­t part of the off shore held cash is believed to be in dollars, whether cash or Treasuries. However, repatriati­on probably supported the currency at the margins by tightening dollar supply outside the United States.

$93B Repatriate­d by US firms in the July to September period

 ?? — AFP ?? Ireland hosts the European hubs of US technology companies such as Apple.
— AFP Ireland hosts the European hubs of US technology companies such as Apple.

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