Trump Tax Reform
Orrin Hatch Copyright Aaron P. Bernstein, Getty Images
Senate Finance Committee Chairman Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-UT)

Carried Interest Break Targeted in Senate and House Tax Plans

The change would limit the break to gains on sales of assets held three years or more.

By John Voskuhl

(Bloomberg) --An 11th-hour amendment added to the Senate tax plan would limit the so-called “carried interest” tax break for investment managers.

The provision was contained in a list of changes that Senate Finance Chairman Orrin Hatch offered just before 10 p.m. Thursday in Washington, minutes before the panel approved a proposal for overhauling the U.S. tax code.

The change would limit the break to gains on sales of assets held three years or more, mirroring a provision that the full House approved Thursday.

Carried interest is the portion of an investment fund’s profit -- typically 20 percent -- that’s paid to investment managers. Under current law, it’s taxed as capital gains, making it eligible for rates as low as 23.8 percent for gains on assets sold after more than a year.

The House and Senate proposals would extend the holding requirement to three years.

President Donald Trump has made the favorable tax treatment of carried interest an issue. During his campaign he said hedge fund managers were “getting away with murder.”

Minutes before Hatch offered the amendment -- one of several he introduced Thursday night -- Senator Claire McCaskill, a Missouri Democrat, had complained that the Senate bill contained no provision for limiting the carried interest break.

On Thursday afternoon, the House approved its tax bill. Several hours later, the Senate finance panel approved its own tax plan. While both measures would cut taxes for corporations and individuals, they differ in significant ways. The Senate bill, for instance, would delay a reduction in the corporate tax rate to 20 percent from 35 percent until 2019, and would set many of its individual tax cuts to expire by 2026.

The full Senate is expected to vote on its plan during the week of Nov. 27. If it passes, differences with the House bill will need to be reconciled before any final legislation could be sent to Trump’s desk.
 
To contact the reporter on this story: John Voskuhl in Washington at [email protected] To contact the editors responsible for this story: John Voskuhl at [email protected] Elizabeth Wasserman

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