"Score one for the barbarians" -- so reads the New York Post today. The reference, of course, is to Barbarians at the Gate, the sordid tale of the leveraged buyout of RJR Nabisco in the 1980s. Today, the private equity barbarians have won another battle: there will be no new tax on carried interest, at least not this year.
Charles Rangel, the House Ways and Means Committee Chairman has dropped a proposed change in the tax laws that would raise taxes on hedge fund managers. The change was relatively simple, raising the tax rate on fund profits and management fees from the current 15% to the 35% that corporations (are supposed to) pay. Needless to say, the private equity industry fiercely opposed the change, which would have raised $54 billion in new taxes.
The change in the tax code was part of a bill aimed at alleviating the effects of the Alternative Minimum Tax, which now affects 23 million households. The idea was to "fix" the AMT to keep it from being applied too broadly; the resulting loss in revenue could then be made up by increasing taxes on fund managers. But it looks like the managers are too powerful to allow that to happen, at least this time around. Hey, do you think this could have anything to do with campaign contributions and the growing political power of the newly gilded elite? Nah, couldn't be . . .
Last updated: February 09, 2010: 04:52 PM
Hot Stocks
DailyFinance Headlines
- The Dow's Jump Doesn't Mean All's Well in Europe
- Hermes Opens Store Just for Men
- PepsiCo Earnings Preview: Company Is a Mirror of the Economy
- Toyota Adds Some 2010 Camry Models to Recall; Feds Looking into Corolla Steering
- The Wages of Recession: Average 2010 Raises Will Barely Cover Inflation
TheFlyOnTheWall.com Headlines
- Options Update; FEB 9, 2010
- TheStreet.com regains compliance with NASDAQ listing rule
- Vion Pharma reports positive results from Phase 1 Triapine study
- Companies reporting Before the Market Open on Wednesday, February 10
- Companies reporting After the Market Close on Tuesday, February 9
BioHealth Investor Headlines
- Cell Therapeutics Facing Tougher FDA (CTIC)
- New Restless Leg Syndrome Review for XenoPort (XNPT, GSK)
- AMAG Fights Back (AMAG)
- Human Genome Sciences… When Insiders Sell Stock (HGSI)
- 10-Bagger Hunt Heads Back to Repros (RPRX)
WalletPop Headlines
- Deaths spark crib recall: CSPC says to stop using Generation 2 and ChildESIGNS cribs
- Survey says? Homeowners think real estate collapse is over
- Dave Ramsey's recession-themed pick-up lines
- Valentine's Day is the best time to buy a sports car
- Credit checks don't tell potential employers enough to allow them
My Portfolios
Track your stocks here!
Find out why more people track their portfolios on AOL Money & Finance then anywhere else.
BloggingStocks Partners
More from AOL Money & Finance
- Money
- Stock Screener
- Stock Quotes
- Stock Charts
- Banking
- Identity Theft
- DJIA
- Debt Management
- Loans
- Auto Loan
- Mortgages
- Taxes
- Retirement
- Insurance
- Small Business
- Earnings
- Dow Jones Industrial Average
- Tech News
- Tax Forms
- Tax Deductions
- Tax Credit
- Tax Audit
- Tax Advice
- Stock Ticker
- Stock Brokers
- Resume Builder
- Pig Flu
- Online Tax Filing
- Madoff
- Investing For Retirement
- Income Tax
- Historical Stock Prices
- GOOG
- ETF Investing
- Deals
- DailyFinance
- Crude Oil Prices
- Credit Score Calculator
- Common Tax Filing Mistakes
- AMT
- Zhu Zhu Pets
- Small Business Checking Account
- Crib Recall
WalletPop Headlines
- Deaths spark crib recall: CSPC says to stop using Generation 2 and ChildESIGNS cribs
- Survey says? Homeowners think real estate collapse is over
- Dave Ramsey's recession-themed pick-up lines
- Valentine's Day is the best time to buy a sports car
- Credit checks don't tell potential employers enough to allow them



Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
12-07-2007 @ 6:14PM
William Newman said...
Greed is king - long live the king. When will the $35000 per year Republicans wake up to the fact that they are being screwed - I don't know which is more reprehensible the hedge fund thieves or the teleevangelical thieves.