Tax
Proposed US Tax Measure Makes Wall Street, International Investors Queasy – Report

The proposed measure calls for higher taxes for individuals and countries from countries whose tax policies are deemed by the US to be discriminatory. This could affect foreign investors, further adding to concerns at how US assets are seen abroad.
An “obscure” tax measure contained within President Donald
Trump’s tax and spending bill going through Congress is rattling
Wall Street, Bloomberg reported late last week.
The item – introduced in legislation that was passed in the House
as Section 899 and titled “Enforcement of Remedies Against Unfair
Foreign Taxes” – calls for, among other things, increasing tax
rates for individuals and companies from countries whose tax
policies the US deems “discriminatory,” the article said.
This includes raising tax rates on passive income, such as
interest and dividends, earned by investors who are potentially
sitting on trillions in the US.
The measure, if it becomes law, would further alienate foreign investors, the report said.
The report quoted Michael Brown, a strategist at Pepperstone
Group, a brokerage firm founded in Melbourne, Australia, whose
clients are all outside the US, as saying: “We’re already dealing
with a market where Treasuries, to foreign investors, probably
aren’t the most attractive investment. If you’re now talking
about massively unfavourable tax treatment, then it’s just
another reason to stay away.”
The report said that among those potentially affected are
institutional investors including sovereign wealth funds, pension
funds and even government entities, as well as retail investors
and businesses with US assets.