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US Treasury deal with G7 kills 'revenge tax' that spooked Wall Street
By Daniel Flatley and Lauren Vella (BTAX)
The Treasury Department announced a deal with G-7 allies that will exclude US companies from some taxes imposed by other countries in exchange for removing the Section 899 'revenge tax' proposal from President Donald Trump 's tax bill.
'OECD Pillar 2 taxes will not apply to US companies, and we will work cooperatively to implement this agreement across the OECD-G20 Inclusive Framework in coming weeks and months,' Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said on social media Thursday.
'Based on this progress and understanding, I have asked the Senate and House to remove the Section 899 protective measure from consideration in the One, Big, Beautiful Bill,' he added.
The tax has sparked fears on Wall Street that the proposal would make it much harder for foreign individuals and companies to invest in the US. The levy targets allies that have digital services taxes on US tech companies, as well as countries imposing a global minimum tax on corporations.
The market reaction was largely muted. The Bloomberg Dollar Index declined for a fourth day, Treasuries rallied and the S&P 500 approached an all-time high, all largely before the deal was announced late Thursday afternoon.
'Removing Section 899 from the budget negotiations would potentially allow investors to breathe a sigh of relief,' said Gennadiy Goldberg, head of US rates strategy at TD Securities. 'That said, it's difficult to know if the market seriously expected this statute to make it into the final law.'
The measure included in Trump's bill came to be known as the revenge tax because it would increase tax rates only for countries whose tax policies the US deems 'discriminatory.'
The Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development has been hosting global talks over corporate taxes, with some of the proposals drawing opposition from the US.
The revenge tax targeted a part of the OECD's 15 per cent global minimum tax that former Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen helped negotiate while former President Joe Biden was in office. Republicans and Trump administration officials have criticized the deal for ceding US taxing authority to other countries.
The global minimum tax is part of a larger deal agreed to by more 140 countries at the OECD that seeks to impose a 15 per cent minimum tax rate on multinational companies in every country where they operate.
Trump's Treasury in recent weeks has pushed for the US tax system to be considered completely separate from the OECD's global tax framework, arguing that the US already robustly taxes income that American companies earn overseas.
'It's definitely a positive development for non-US investors who invest frequently in the US,' said Scott Semer, partner with Torys LLP in New York. 'It'll definitely be helpful to provide certainty to investments.'
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