A couple weeks ago in StreetAuthority Daily, we talked about some of Corporate America’s latest financial engineering involving a frenzy of share buybacks. #-ad_banner-#The basic story: many companies are taking advantage of historically low interest rates to borrow money and then in turn use it to buy back shares of their own stock. But that’s not the only financial engineering that’s been going on lately… In fact, this other trick that Corporate America is employing has been a hot-debate on Capitol Hill. You may have heard it in the headlines recently. It’s called “corporate… Read More
A couple weeks ago in StreetAuthority Daily, we talked about some of Corporate America’s latest financial engineering involving a frenzy of share buybacks. #-ad_banner-#The basic story: many companies are taking advantage of historically low interest rates to borrow money and then in turn use it to buy back shares of their own stock. But that’s not the only financial engineering that’s been going on lately… In fact, this other trick that Corporate America is employing has been a hot-debate on Capitol Hill. You may have heard it in the headlines recently. It’s called “corporate inversion” or “tax inversion.” But what you haven’t heard is how it’s led to triple-digit gains for investors in the past. Our resident expert in international investing and Chief Investment Strategist of High-Yield International, Mike Vodicka, recently gave a great explanation of what an inversion is: Corporate taxes are gaining renewed attention because of a (formerly) little-known tax strategy called a tax inversion. Tax inversion occurs when a company headquartered in the United States purchases an international competitor in a country with a lower corporate tax rate. It then relocates its corporate headquarters to that… Read More