CUTE COUPLE AND THEIR PROGENY
Trudeau's buyback tax may spur more buybacks into 2024: CIBCJeff Lagerquist - Yesterday
Ottawa’s new buyback tax doubles the equivalent excise in the United States.
(REUTERS/Blair Gable)
Canada's new tax on share buybacks announced by the federal government on Thursday could spur an increase in big repurchases by companies before the policy kicks in, according to CIBC Capital Markets.
The new tax measure aims to encourage Canadian firms to reinvest profits in their workers and businesses by taking a two per cent cut of all types of share repurchases by domestic corporations.
Ottawa's policy doubles the one per cent excise introduced in the United States under President Joe Biden's Inflation Reduction Act in August.
CIBC analyst Ian de Verteuil calls the timing of Canada's new tax "peculiar," in a note to clients on Thursday.
"It is supposed to be implemented in January 2024. This gives companies a material window of time to make capital deployment decisions, before the two per cent tax is accrued and collected," he wrote, adding that substantial issuer bids over 10 per cent of outstanding shares, known as SIBs, "look likely in this period."
Post-2024, de Verteuil expects companies to shift their shareholder rewards strategies from buybacks to special or variable dividends.
The federal government expects the buyback tax to generate $2.1 billion in revenue over five years, according to the Fall Economic Statement released Thursday afternoon. de Verteuil calls that figure "somewhat conservative," estimating revenue could range from $400 million per year to over a billion in a given year.
"As we are likely heading into a period of weaker economic growth, we would expect the tax take to be towards the bottom of this range over the next couple years," he wrote. "[But] there is little doubt that criticizing buybacks is politically expedient."
According to his report, financial, energy and industrial companies account for the lion's share of buybacks in Canada. In the last 10 years, CIBC found Thomson Reuters (TRI.TO), Canadian National Railway (CNR.TO), and Suncor Energy (SU.TO)(SU) topped the list.
Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault recently accused Canada's oil and gas sector of rewarding shareholders before investing to mitigate climate change as profits soared on higher commodity prices. In the third quarter of 2022, the energy sector dominated total repurchases, accounting for 29 per cent, followed by financials at 23 per cent, according to CIBC.
"Given recent initiatives to limit additional fossil fuel production in Canada, it is scarcely surprising that energy companies have historically been reluctant to reinvest," de Verteuil wrote.
Jeff Lagerquist is a senior reporter at Yahoo Finance Canada. Follow him on Twitter @jefflagerquist.
Canada's new tax on share buybacks announced by the federal government on Thursday could spur an increase in big repurchases by companies before the policy kicks in, according to CIBC Capital Markets.
The new tax measure aims to encourage Canadian firms to reinvest profits in their workers and businesses by taking a two per cent cut of all types of share repurchases by domestic corporations.
Ottawa's policy doubles the one per cent excise introduced in the United States under President Joe Biden's Inflation Reduction Act in August.
CIBC analyst Ian de Verteuil calls the timing of Canada's new tax "peculiar," in a note to clients on Thursday.
"It is supposed to be implemented in January 2024. This gives companies a material window of time to make capital deployment decisions, before the two per cent tax is accrued and collected," he wrote, adding that substantial issuer bids over 10 per cent of outstanding shares, known as SIBs, "look likely in this period."
Post-2024, de Verteuil expects companies to shift their shareholder rewards strategies from buybacks to special or variable dividends.
The federal government expects the buyback tax to generate $2.1 billion in revenue over five years, according to the Fall Economic Statement released Thursday afternoon. de Verteuil calls that figure "somewhat conservative," estimating revenue could range from $400 million per year to over a billion in a given year.
"As we are likely heading into a period of weaker economic growth, we would expect the tax take to be towards the bottom of this range over the next couple years," he wrote. "[But] there is little doubt that criticizing buybacks is politically expedient."
According to his report, financial, energy and industrial companies account for the lion's share of buybacks in Canada. In the last 10 years, CIBC found Thomson Reuters (TRI.TO), Canadian National Railway (CNR.TO), and Suncor Energy (SU.TO)(SU) topped the list.
Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault recently accused Canada's oil and gas sector of rewarding shareholders before investing to mitigate climate change as profits soared on higher commodity prices. In the third quarter of 2022, the energy sector dominated total repurchases, accounting for 29 per cent, followed by financials at 23 per cent, according to CIBC.
"Given recent initiatives to limit additional fossil fuel production in Canada, it is scarcely surprising that energy companies have historically been reluctant to reinvest," de Verteuil wrote.
Jeff Lagerquist is a senior reporter at Yahoo Finance Canada. Follow him on Twitter @jefflagerquist.
'A cool $40 billion' revenue boost: What economists are saying about the fiscal update
Gigi Suhanic - Yesterday
Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland unveils Ottawa's Fiscal Economic Statement on Thursday in the House of Commons.© Provided by Financial Post
The Liberal government’s fiscal update , unveiled Thursday, paints a much different economic picture than the budget released in March, with Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland warning of a possible recession .
Ottawa downgraded its forecast for this year’s gross domestic product (GDP) to 3.2 per cent from 3.9 per cent. It also drastically cut its projection for 2023, and expects the economy to only grow 0.7 per cent from an earlier forecast of 3.1 per cent. Under a downside scenario, Ottawa said GDP could contract by 0.9 per cent next year.
However, economists think a 0.7 per cent growth forecast is a bit optimistic, and several expect GDP to come in at 0.2 per cent next year.
There was one upside that came out of the update: “a cool $40-billion” surprise revenue boost that will reduce the 2022-23 deficit to a projected $36.4 billion from the $52.8 billion forecast in this year’s budget, a note from National Bank of Canada Financial Markets said.
Still, economists at the Royal Bank of Canada said they would have preferred to see more of that revenue windfall “flow through to the bottomline,” adding, “program spending in the current fiscal year is the highest in nearly three decades outside of the pandemic.”
Major financial institutions also highlighted the projected decline in Ottawa’s so-called “fiscal anchor” — the debt-to-GDP ratio. For this fiscal year, debt to GDP is expected to pull back to “42.3 per cent from 45.5 per cent last year and the pandemic peak of 47.5 per cent,” BMO Capital Markets said in a note. However, the measure is well off the pre-pandemic level of 31 per cent, BMO added.
In the fiscal statement, Ottawa touted Canada as continuing to have the lowest net debt-to-GDP ratio in the G7 — “not that competition there is the toughest,” National Bank noted.
Here’s what economists had to say about the fiscal update:
Cynthia Leach and Josh Nye, RBC Economics
“As expected, (Thursday’s) Fall Economic Statement focused on new green growth initiatives with only limited affordability measures that could have complicated the Bank of Canada’s fight against inflation. The government has built some fiscal room with strong nominal GDP growth significantly reducing its key debt-to-GDP in the current fiscal year. But with nearly two-thirds of positive economic and fiscal developments being recycled into new spending, not as much of the revenue surprise flowed through to its bottom line.
Excluding an $8.5-billion provision for ‘anticipated near-term pressures’ (the new risk adjustment?) net new spending over the forecast horizon is nearly equal parts growth- and affordability-oriented, and the latter is fairly well-targeted toward lower-income households. But these measures add to an already-elevated spending track — at 15.7 per cent of GDP, program spending in the current fiscal year is the highest in nearly three decades outside of the pandemic.
Rising public debt charges limit near-term improvement in the deficit profile, which is based on economic projections that now look optimistic (0.7 per cent real GDP growth next year versus RBC’s 0.2 per cent forecast). A downside economic scenario (-0.9 per cent growth next year) shows the government’s finances could quickly go sideways — literally, in terms of debt-to-GDP — and that doesn’t account for additional discretionary spending that would likely come with such a slowdown. While the government has preserved some fiscal firepower heading into what we expect will be a moderate recession in 2023, it might not have quite as much dry powder as hoped if it aims to stick to its fiscal anchor (debt to GDP ratio).”
Warren Lovely, Taylor Schleich and Daren King, National Bank of Canada Financial Markets
“…The FES arrives at a transitional moment for the Canadian economy, with slower growth set to take hold as aggressive monetary tightening works its way through the system. For the time being, however, we continue to receive predominantly positive fiscal news from Canadian governments, owing to a stronger-than-expected glide path for nominal GDP. That trend was well in evidence here, the underlying revenue outlook boosted a cool $40 billion versus budget.
In one form or another, Ottawa has committed a portion of the ‘bonus’ revenue to new measures, the newest of which are (not surprisingly ) focused on ‘making life more affordable.’ The resulting budget deficit for 2022-23, at $36.4 billion, amounts to a relatively contained 1.3 per cent of GDP. The updated deficit tally represents a non-trivial improvement versus April’s budget, where a shortfall of $52.8 billion was forecast, and further extends the federal government’s overall fiscal recovery. Reference note: At the peak of the pandemic, economic disruptions and extraordinary government supports saw the federal deficit swell to $327.7 billion. The deficit was knocked down to $90.2 billion by 2021-22 as the recovery started to take hold.
The medium-term fiscal outlook sees the positive revenue base effect carrying over, notwithstanding an expectation of slower growth ahead. With positive net adjustments more than offsetting new commitments, the FES flags progressively smaller deficits for each fiscal year, culminating with a $4.5-billion surplus in 2027-28 under the baseline scenario. Detailed year-by-year comparisons to April’s budget reveal an average budgetary upgrade of $10 billion a year. Put another way, the cumulative deficit (to 2026-27) is now $60 billion lower than that envisioned in April, which means less federal debt than previously telegraphed (in the here and now and longer term).
Combining smaller deficits with an upgraded level of nominal output could make for nifty progress on the federal debt-to-GDP ratio, which remains the government’s stated ‘fiscal anchor.’ This closely watched metric is slated to end 2022-23 at 42.3 per cent versus the 45.1 per cent level pledged at budget time. The baseline scenario implies only limited progress on debt-to-GDP in 2023-24 before regaining more meaningful downward momentum in the out years of the plan (e.g., debt-to-GDP reaching 37.3 per cent in five years from now).”
Ottawa reveals plan for new tax on stock buybacks
Stephen Brown, Capital Economics
“The $6 billion in new federal spending measures for this year, as outlined in the Fall Economic Update, amount to just 0.2 per cent of GDP and will have little impact on the economic outlook or monetary policy. By utilizing only a small part of the windfall from higher revenues this year, the government has at least succeeded in providing some fiscal support without triggering a self-defeating reaction in financial markets.
“Our GDP forecasts are more downbeat than the consensus, eyeing a 0.2 per cent drop next year and a sharper fall in the deflator, leading us to expect the deficit to widen again to two per cent of GDP next year. The government did at least acknowledge this risk in an alternative set of projections, which are closer to our own. The government’s baseline forecasts conveniently assume that the debt-to-GDP ratio will edge down by 0.1 point to 42.2 per cent of GDP next year, so it will not take much to push it up as we expect. Nevertheless, the public finances will look more favourable than those in many economies and, unless the government has a sudden change of heart when recession hits, fiscal developments should not prevent the fall in bond yields we expect as the Bank of Canada cuts interest rates.”
Andrew Grantham and Katherine Judge, CIBC Capital Markets
“(Thursday’s) fiscal update saw a notable reduction in the deficit projection for the current fiscal year and, even with some less favourable economic projections from here and modest spending increases, the updated longer-term projections now show a slim surplus being achieved by fiscal 2027/28. The debt-to-GDP ratio is expected to fall to 42.3 per cent in the current fiscal year, from 45.5 per cent last year, and reach 37.3 per cent by the end of the forecast horizon as it moves back closer to pre-pandemic levels (just above 30 per cent debt-to-GDP).
“The $36.4-billion deficit now projected for the current 2022/23 fiscal year (1.3 per cent of GDP) is well below the $52.8 billion that was expected in budget 2022, and the $90.2-billion shortfall (3.6 per cent GDP) seen in the prior fiscal year. Revenues are expected to be ahead of those prior projections, largely due to higher income tax receipts. The upward revision to revenue projections more than offset somewhat higher spending, including increased public debt charges linked to the rapid rise in interest rates seen so far this year.”
Douglas Porter, Robert Kavcic and Benjamin Reitzes, BMO Capital Markets
“Less than half of this year’s revenue windfall will make it through to an improved bottomline. Moreover, the double-whammy of slower (or no) growth and rising interest rates will limit flexibility into 2023. … The boost to government finances from higher inflation is temporary. Eventually, costs do catch up to the run-up in prices, and revenues get crimped by the economic slowdown. Accordingly, after a nice run of better-than-expected fiscal outcomes, Ottawa’s finances are expected to turn more challenging next year. Finance expects the budget deficit to narrow slightly again in the coming fiscal year (starting on April 1, 2023) to $30.6 billion, or just 1.1 per cent of GDP, and then to $25.4 billion in the following year. However, we suspect that the economic and interest rate scenario these projections are built upon are a tad optimistic, and lean closer to Finance’s so-called downside scenario.
“Ottawa’s fiscal update presents a healthier picture, thanks entirely to the tremendous strength in revenues flowing from robust income growth. Combined with strong nominal GDP growth, the debt-to-GDP ratio is now seen coming down further in the current fiscal year to 42.3 per cent and gradually fading from there — even in the downside economic scenario. Assuming the government adheres to its election platform, next year’s budget will provide a more complete measure of the medium-term fiscal landscape. At that point we will also have a much better read on how high interest rates will need to go to finally crack inflation. For now, today’s fiscal news can be characterized as moderately positive, as Ottawa largely steered clear of aggravating an already tough inflation backdrop.”
Gigi Suhanic - Yesterday
Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland unveils Ottawa's Fiscal Economic Statement on Thursday in the House of Commons.© Provided by Financial Post
The Liberal government’s fiscal update , unveiled Thursday, paints a much different economic picture than the budget released in March, with Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland warning of a possible recession .
Ottawa downgraded its forecast for this year’s gross domestic product (GDP) to 3.2 per cent from 3.9 per cent. It also drastically cut its projection for 2023, and expects the economy to only grow 0.7 per cent from an earlier forecast of 3.1 per cent. Under a downside scenario, Ottawa said GDP could contract by 0.9 per cent next year.
However, economists think a 0.7 per cent growth forecast is a bit optimistic, and several expect GDP to come in at 0.2 per cent next year.
There was one upside that came out of the update: “a cool $40-billion” surprise revenue boost that will reduce the 2022-23 deficit to a projected $36.4 billion from the $52.8 billion forecast in this year’s budget, a note from National Bank of Canada Financial Markets said.
Still, economists at the Royal Bank of Canada said they would have preferred to see more of that revenue windfall “flow through to the bottomline,” adding, “program spending in the current fiscal year is the highest in nearly three decades outside of the pandemic.”
Major financial institutions also highlighted the projected decline in Ottawa’s so-called “fiscal anchor” — the debt-to-GDP ratio. For this fiscal year, debt to GDP is expected to pull back to “42.3 per cent from 45.5 per cent last year and the pandemic peak of 47.5 per cent,” BMO Capital Markets said in a note. However, the measure is well off the pre-pandemic level of 31 per cent, BMO added.
In the fiscal statement, Ottawa touted Canada as continuing to have the lowest net debt-to-GDP ratio in the G7 — “not that competition there is the toughest,” National Bank noted.
Here’s what economists had to say about the fiscal update:
Cynthia Leach and Josh Nye, RBC Economics
“As expected, (Thursday’s) Fall Economic Statement focused on new green growth initiatives with only limited affordability measures that could have complicated the Bank of Canada’s fight against inflation. The government has built some fiscal room with strong nominal GDP growth significantly reducing its key debt-to-GDP in the current fiscal year. But with nearly two-thirds of positive economic and fiscal developments being recycled into new spending, not as much of the revenue surprise flowed through to its bottom line.
Excluding an $8.5-billion provision for ‘anticipated near-term pressures’ (the new risk adjustment?) net new spending over the forecast horizon is nearly equal parts growth- and affordability-oriented, and the latter is fairly well-targeted toward lower-income households. But these measures add to an already-elevated spending track — at 15.7 per cent of GDP, program spending in the current fiscal year is the highest in nearly three decades outside of the pandemic.
Rising public debt charges limit near-term improvement in the deficit profile, which is based on economic projections that now look optimistic (0.7 per cent real GDP growth next year versus RBC’s 0.2 per cent forecast). A downside economic scenario (-0.9 per cent growth next year) shows the government’s finances could quickly go sideways — literally, in terms of debt-to-GDP — and that doesn’t account for additional discretionary spending that would likely come with such a slowdown. While the government has preserved some fiscal firepower heading into what we expect will be a moderate recession in 2023, it might not have quite as much dry powder as hoped if it aims to stick to its fiscal anchor (debt to GDP ratio).”
Warren Lovely, Taylor Schleich and Daren King, National Bank of Canada Financial Markets
“…The FES arrives at a transitional moment for the Canadian economy, with slower growth set to take hold as aggressive monetary tightening works its way through the system. For the time being, however, we continue to receive predominantly positive fiscal news from Canadian governments, owing to a stronger-than-expected glide path for nominal GDP. That trend was well in evidence here, the underlying revenue outlook boosted a cool $40 billion versus budget.
In one form or another, Ottawa has committed a portion of the ‘bonus’ revenue to new measures, the newest of which are (not surprisingly ) focused on ‘making life more affordable.’ The resulting budget deficit for 2022-23, at $36.4 billion, amounts to a relatively contained 1.3 per cent of GDP. The updated deficit tally represents a non-trivial improvement versus April’s budget, where a shortfall of $52.8 billion was forecast, and further extends the federal government’s overall fiscal recovery. Reference note: At the peak of the pandemic, economic disruptions and extraordinary government supports saw the federal deficit swell to $327.7 billion. The deficit was knocked down to $90.2 billion by 2021-22 as the recovery started to take hold.
The medium-term fiscal outlook sees the positive revenue base effect carrying over, notwithstanding an expectation of slower growth ahead. With positive net adjustments more than offsetting new commitments, the FES flags progressively smaller deficits for each fiscal year, culminating with a $4.5-billion surplus in 2027-28 under the baseline scenario. Detailed year-by-year comparisons to April’s budget reveal an average budgetary upgrade of $10 billion a year. Put another way, the cumulative deficit (to 2026-27) is now $60 billion lower than that envisioned in April, which means less federal debt than previously telegraphed (in the here and now and longer term).
Combining smaller deficits with an upgraded level of nominal output could make for nifty progress on the federal debt-to-GDP ratio, which remains the government’s stated ‘fiscal anchor.’ This closely watched metric is slated to end 2022-23 at 42.3 per cent versus the 45.1 per cent level pledged at budget time. The baseline scenario implies only limited progress on debt-to-GDP in 2023-24 before regaining more meaningful downward momentum in the out years of the plan (e.g., debt-to-GDP reaching 37.3 per cent in five years from now).”
Ottawa reveals plan for new tax on stock buybacks
Stephen Brown, Capital Economics
“The $6 billion in new federal spending measures for this year, as outlined in the Fall Economic Update, amount to just 0.2 per cent of GDP and will have little impact on the economic outlook or monetary policy. By utilizing only a small part of the windfall from higher revenues this year, the government has at least succeeded in providing some fiscal support without triggering a self-defeating reaction in financial markets.
“Our GDP forecasts are more downbeat than the consensus, eyeing a 0.2 per cent drop next year and a sharper fall in the deflator, leading us to expect the deficit to widen again to two per cent of GDP next year. The government did at least acknowledge this risk in an alternative set of projections, which are closer to our own. The government’s baseline forecasts conveniently assume that the debt-to-GDP ratio will edge down by 0.1 point to 42.2 per cent of GDP next year, so it will not take much to push it up as we expect. Nevertheless, the public finances will look more favourable than those in many economies and, unless the government has a sudden change of heart when recession hits, fiscal developments should not prevent the fall in bond yields we expect as the Bank of Canada cuts interest rates.”
Andrew Grantham and Katherine Judge, CIBC Capital Markets
“(Thursday’s) fiscal update saw a notable reduction in the deficit projection for the current fiscal year and, even with some less favourable economic projections from here and modest spending increases, the updated longer-term projections now show a slim surplus being achieved by fiscal 2027/28. The debt-to-GDP ratio is expected to fall to 42.3 per cent in the current fiscal year, from 45.5 per cent last year, and reach 37.3 per cent by the end of the forecast horizon as it moves back closer to pre-pandemic levels (just above 30 per cent debt-to-GDP).
“The $36.4-billion deficit now projected for the current 2022/23 fiscal year (1.3 per cent of GDP) is well below the $52.8 billion that was expected in budget 2022, and the $90.2-billion shortfall (3.6 per cent GDP) seen in the prior fiscal year. Revenues are expected to be ahead of those prior projections, largely due to higher income tax receipts. The upward revision to revenue projections more than offset somewhat higher spending, including increased public debt charges linked to the rapid rise in interest rates seen so far this year.”
Douglas Porter, Robert Kavcic and Benjamin Reitzes, BMO Capital Markets
“Less than half of this year’s revenue windfall will make it through to an improved bottomline. Moreover, the double-whammy of slower (or no) growth and rising interest rates will limit flexibility into 2023. … The boost to government finances from higher inflation is temporary. Eventually, costs do catch up to the run-up in prices, and revenues get crimped by the economic slowdown. Accordingly, after a nice run of better-than-expected fiscal outcomes, Ottawa’s finances are expected to turn more challenging next year. Finance expects the budget deficit to narrow slightly again in the coming fiscal year (starting on April 1, 2023) to $30.6 billion, or just 1.1 per cent of GDP, and then to $25.4 billion in the following year. However, we suspect that the economic and interest rate scenario these projections are built upon are a tad optimistic, and lean closer to Finance’s so-called downside scenario.
“Ottawa’s fiscal update presents a healthier picture, thanks entirely to the tremendous strength in revenues flowing from robust income growth. Combined with strong nominal GDP growth, the debt-to-GDP ratio is now seen coming down further in the current fiscal year to 42.3 per cent and gradually fading from there — even in the downside economic scenario. Assuming the government adheres to its election platform, next year’s budget will provide a more complete measure of the medium-term fiscal landscape. At that point we will also have a much better read on how high interest rates will need to go to finally crack inflation. For now, today’s fiscal news can be characterized as moderately positive, as Ottawa largely steered clear of aggravating an already tough inflation backdrop.”
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