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Monday, July 12, 2010

BP Oil Spill Costs Estimated To Cut Tax Bill By $10 Billion (Zero Hedge)

Zero Hedge:
Paging Alanis Morisette: BP just pulled the ironic rug from right under the feet of the US and UK - the company is now expected to pay $10 billion less in taxes as a result of oil spill costs and associated expenses. As the FT reports, "BP is forecast to pay about $10bn (£6.7bn) less tax over the next four years as it meets the costs of its huge oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, hitting the revenues of Britain and the US that receive hundreds of millions of dollars from the company each year.

The shortfall, representing a drop of more than a quarter in BP’s tax payments, is a particular concern for the British government attempting to cut the country’s budget deficit." It turns out the bulk of the tens of billions in associated costs will be tax deductible, in essence impairing primarily the government of the US and the UK at the marginal tax rate.

And yes, both governments are in dire need of tax revenues, although the UK much more so, as the US apparently can print $30 billion on a day like today at a rate of just over 1%. It appears the endgame will be a truly poetic gesture with an extended middle finger by BP's treasurer. Of course once the UK realizes it is about to see billions see in taxes, the response will be yet another series of Obama bashing headlines, just like when it was made public that Scotland's widows are among the biggest losers in the stock price collapse.

From Financial Times:
If BP manages to seal the leaking well as planned by August, analysts have estimated that its total spending in the Gulf region could be about $30bn. That would represent about $10bn of clean-up costs and $20bn compensation for losses suffered by fishing, tourist and other industries, covered by the fund agreed with the US administration last month.

With a tax rate on profits of 33 per cent in a typical year, that would cut BP’s tax bill by about $10bn.

BP paid $8.4bn in worldwide tax on profits last year, down from $12.6bn in 2008 because of the fall in oil and gas prices.

Of that 2009 payment, £930m went to the British government: about as much as is paid by the UK’s entire transport and communications industries.

The company does not give a full geographic breakdown of its taxes, but its payments to the US are likely to have been of a similar size.

Irene Himona, an analyst at Exane BNP Paribas, estimated that before the Deepwater Horizon accident, BP was set to pay about $37.5bn in tax during 2010-13, but the costs of the disaster would cut that to $27bn

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