NEW YORK: Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris’ proposed corporate tax hike could reduce S&P 500 company earnings by about 5 percent, with additional taxes potentially hitting profits harder, Goldman Sachs analysts said. Last month, Vice President Harris outlined plans to raise the corporate tax rate to 28 percent from 21 percent, in order to ensure “big corporations pay their fair share.”

Goldman analysts said in a note late on Wednesday that at a 28 percent taxation rate, they estimate earnings of S&P 500 companies would take a 5 percent hit. However, the brokerage has said earlier that the broader economy would get the biggest boost in the next two years if Democrats win the White House and Congress. Economic output would take a hit next year under a Republican administration, mostly from increased import tariffs and tighter immigration policies, it has previously said. On Wednesday, Harris said Trump’s plans would cut off federal programs that offer loans to small businesses, cut the corporate tax rate and push the US deficit higher.

“The current US statutory corporate tax rate on domestic income is 26 percent, but the total effective tax rate paid by the typical S&P 500 company is 19 percent,” the brokerage said. “While each presidential candidate has proposed changes to the corporate tax code, changes are not a given,” analysts led by Ben Snider wrote in a note. Polls showed that Trump had built a lead over Biden but Harris has since edged ahead of the Republican candidate in some national opinion polls.

Adding taxation on foreign income and an increase in the alternative minimum tax rate to 21 percent from 15 percent could reduce earnings by as much as 8 percent if Harris won, they said. Trump’s proposed relief on the federal domestic corporate tax rate to 15 percent from the current 21 percent would “arithmetically” boost S&P 500 earnings by about 4 percent, they added. — Reuters

For every projected 1 percentage point change in the US statutory domestic tax rate, S&P 500 earnings per share would shift by about $2, according to the brokerage. — Reuters