'400'에 해당되는 글 2건

  1. 2010.02.19 IRS 400 Suggests Path To Forbes 400 by CEOinIRVINE
  2. 2008.11.01 China's 400 Richest by CEOinIRVINE

IRS 400 Suggests Path To Forbes 400

William P. Barrett, 02.18.10, 04:20 PM EST

Want to join the Forbes 400? Build unrealized capital gains and cash them in when tax rates are lowest.


Here's a way the rich are really different: They know how to use capital gains to protect their wealth from Uncle Sam.

That's one conclusion from the Internal Revenue Service's latest look at the 400 Americans with the highest incomes. Crunching numbers back to 1992, the report found--not surprisingly--that the rich got a lot richer. But the way it happened is intriguing.

In 1992 realized capital gains (triggered by selling an asset, such as a business or stock) accounted for 33% of the adjusted gross income of the average magnate. Back then, gains were taxed at a 28% rate. But by 2007, the latest year examined, the capital gains slice of the 400's (by then much bigger) income pie had doubled to 66%. In 2007 the top federal tax rate on capital gains was just 15%, compared with 35% for ordinary income such as salaries.

A whopping $91 billion in capital gains reported by the "IRS 400" in 2007 accounted for 9.2% of all favorably taxed gains among the 143 million tax returns filed. That compares with the IRS 400's 1.59% share of total income of all Americans (a share that has tripled since 1992.)

The suggestion here is that the rich take advantage of a simple axiom of tax law: Taxes are not paid on unrealized gains (an increase in value), but only when an asset is sold and the gain realized. So the wealthy are able to develop businesses or make investments and watch them grow tax-free over many years before cashing out--at the most opportune time.

The 2003 tax cuts championed by President Bush dropped the top capital gains rate to 15%, its lowest level since 1933, providing a good window for taking gains. When the Bush tax cuts expire at the end of 2010, if Congress doesn't act, the rate will revert to 28%--its level at the end of the Clinton presidency. President Obama has proposed setting the top gains rate at 20% and the top rate on ordinary income at 39.6%.

The feds published their first IRS 400 study in 2003. At the time the agency acknowledged it was inspired by the Forbes 400 list of the wealthiest, compiled since 1982. The Forbes 400, of course, names names. Due to federal taxpayer privacy laws, the IRS doesn't and even says in a footnote that some data was fudged "to protect the confidentiality of tax return information."

But the biggest difference between the two lists is this: The IRS measures annual income, while Forbes calculates net wealth. Adjusted for inflation, from 1992 to 2007 the income of the IRS 400 jumped five-fold. The net worth of the Forbes 400: up about four-fold. That suggests that the rich may have recognized a larger (albeit still small) share of their wealth in gains as the gains rate fell.

According to the IRS, in 2007 the IRS 400 had average adjusted gross income of $345 million each (up 31% from 2006). The rich paid on average of $57 million apiece in income tax--the lowest effective rate in the 16 years measured. (The dropping rate has led Berkshire Hathaway ( BRK - news - people ) billionaire Warren Buffett to complain that his secretary pays a higher tax rate than he does.)



Posted by CEOinIRVINE
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China's 400 Richest

Business 2008. 11. 1. 14:52

The Year of the Rat has been a rough one for China's richest, with fortunes being dragged down amid a 60% plunge in mainland stocks and a 50% drop in Hong Kong shares in 2008. The combined net worth of the 400 richest dropped to $173 billion from $288 billion. The top 40 lost $68 billion, or 57%. The minimum net worth slipped $20 million to $180 million. We found 24 billionaires, down from a record 66 in 2007. These losses would have been greater had it not been for the renminbi's 10% appreciation against the dollar.

Net Worth: $3 billion
Age: 60

Company: East Hope Group
Industry: Agriculture, Metals
City: Shanghai


Jonathan Drake/Bloomberg News /Landov
With $120 in savings, he and 3 brothers started raising quail, chickens in 1982. Their Hope Group became one of China's largest makers of animal feed. Siblings split in 1999; Yongxing moved to Shanghai. His East Hope Group is still one of China's biggest feed producers, making 100 types; business has fared well in past year. Also owns aluminum smelters.

#2 Wong Kwong Yu (Huang Guangyu)

10.29.08, 10:00 PM ET

Net Worth: $2.7 billion
Age: 39

Company: Gome Electrical Appliances
Industry: Retailing
City: Beijing


AP Images
Heads electronics-appliance retailer Gome, forbes asia's Fab 50 member. Shares have lost three-quarters of their value since January high on fears of consumer slowdown. Wong cashed out $300 million of shares in 2008. Majority owner of 360 privately held Gome stores

#3 Yang Huiyan

10.29.08, 10:00 PM ET

Net Worth: $2.22 billion
Age: 27

Company: Country Garden
Industry: Real Estate
City: Foshan


REUTERS/China Daily
Real estate heiress whose father, Country Garden's chief, Yeung Kwok Keung, transferred holdings to her ahead of 2007 initial offering. Net worth plunged $14 billion in part due to company's ill-timed acquisitions during market peak.

#4 Liu Yonghao

10.29.08, 10:00 PM ET

Net Worth: $2.2 billion
Age: 57

Company: New Hope Group
Industry: Agriculture, Finance
City: Chengdu


AP Images
Brother of Liu Yongxing (No. 1) has run New Hope Group since 1995. Fortune hurt by declining value of stake in Minsheng Banking. Acquired stake in chemical maker Hebei Baoshuo. Donated $1.5 million to earthquake victims.

#5 Zhou Chengjian & family

10.29.08, 10:00 PM ET

Net Worth: $2 billion
Age: 43

Company: Metersbonwe
Industry: Retailing
City: Wenzhou


ImagineChina
Has created a fashion brand and retailer, Metersbonwe, for China's masses, thanks in part to savvy marketing that includes hiring pop stars as spokespeople, fashion consultants. Constantly refreshing products, launching 3,000 designs in a year. Opened first store in 1995, now has 2,200. Took company public in late August, raising $200 million, one of China's most successful public offerings of the year. Fortune includes shares held by his daughter.

#6 Zhang Jindong

10.29.08, 10:00 PM ET

Net Worth: $1.8 billion
Age: 45

Company: Suning Appliances
Industry: Retailing
City: Nanjing


AP Images
Got start in air-conditioning wholesale market in 1990 but soon shifted to retail. His Suning Appliance, rival of Wong's Gome, now has $5.5 billion in sales and is member of Fab 50. Opened 175 stores last year. Sales, profits up, but stock fell 80% owing to worries about outlook.

#7 Robin Li

10.29.08, 10:00 PM ET

Net Worth: $1.7 billion
Age: 40

Company: Baidu.com
Industry: IT
City: Beijing


AP Images
Entrepreneur behind Baidu.com, leading Chinese-language Internet search provider. Stock is down, despite strong performance including 91% gain in net profits in most recent quarter. Hired new chief technology officer, chief financial officer in 2008.

#8 Du Shuanghua

10.29.08, 10:00 PM ET

Net Worth: $1.6 billion
Age: 43

Company: Rizhao Steel
Industry: Manufacturing
City: Hengshui


ImagineChina
Heads Rizhao Steel Holding, one of China's largest private steel manufacturers. Group donated $15 million for Sichuan earthquake victims.

#9 Ma Huateng

10.29.08, 10:00 PM ET

Net Worth: $1.58 billion
Age: 37

Company: Tencent
Industry: IT
City: Shenzhen


AP Images
Runs Tencent, China's most popular provider of online chat services. Revenues up 85% in first half 2008 thanks to boost in Internet advertising ahead of Olympics and popularity of such online games as Dungeon, qq Dancer and Cross Fire.


10 Zhou Furen & family 10.29.08, 10:00 PM ET

Net Worth: $1.55 billion
Age: 57

Company: Xiyang Group
Industry: Manufacturing
City: Haicheng


ImagineChina
Former leader of a collective, he and family own $2.9 billion (sales) Xiyang Group, one of China's largest suppliers of magnetite products. Also makes steel, fertilizer.

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