Sunday, January 24, 2016

Siemens to buy CD-adapco for close to US$1b: source

Siemens to buy CD-adapco for close to US$1b: source

[NEW YORK] Siemens AG, Europe's biggest industrial group, has agreed to buy CD-adapco, a privately held US engineering software firm, for close to US$1 billion in cash, according to a person familiar with the matter.
Siemens's deal with CD-adapco could be announced as early as on Monday, the person said, asking not to be identified because the agreement is not yet public. The two companies did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
Melville, New York-based CD-adapco makes computer programs used by engineers to simulate the inner workings of an engine. Those products will complement a business unit of Siemens focused on product lifecycle management software, the person added.
Since taking over Siemens as chief executive two years ago, former finance chief Joe Kaeser has set out to reshape the German company and make it more profitable and less cumbersome by selling off non-core units.
But Siemens has increasingly had to compete with software companies who can develop technology faster because they have a sole focus. Only 5 percent of Siemens' 350,000 employees are software engineers.
Siemens said in December it would raise its research and development budget as it seeks to maintain an edge in technology innovation over arch-rival General Electric Co.
The sale comes after CD-adapco's co-founder and CEO Steve MacDonald passed away last September. He was succeeded by his widow, Sharron MacDonald, who was named interim CEO and president.
Established in 1980 and still controlled by its founders, the company has 900 employees in 50 offices and has achieved US$200 million in annual revenue and an annual growth rate of 15 per cent for the past five years, according to its website. Its main competitor in engine simulation software is Ansys Inc .
NASA hired CD-adapco to help with simulation of structural engineering problems following the Space Challenger disaster in 1986. Car maker Renault SA's designers have also used CD-adapco software to simulate engine combustion, cooling and exhaust for Formula One race cars.
REUTERS

A Hong Kong move unlikely to slash HSBC tax bill

A Hong Kong move unlikely to slash HSBC tax bill

[LONDON] HSBC's possible relocation to Hong Kong is unlikely to save the British bank much tax - one of its reasons for maybe moving abroad - and could actually increase its bill, a Reuters analysis of the company's filings shows.
HSBC said last year that it was considering a possible shift overseas from London, citing higher taxes and tighter regulation in Britain and a desire to be closer to faster-growing Asian markets. Analysts said HSBC's former home Hong Kong, with a corporate tax rate of 16.5 per cent against a British rate set to rise to 26 per cent, was the most likely destination.
Some investors have said weakening growth in Asia and a reduction in a British levy on banks' asset bases announced last year, argues for HSBC to stay put. But some analysts say Asia's better long-term growth opportunities and Hong Kong's lower tax rate may yet hold attractions for the bank.
A Reuters examination of corporate filings shows that Hong Kong may offer HSBC fewer tax advantages than many believe.
That's because HSBC will struggle to move enough profit to Hong Kong to benefit from its lower tax rate. Indeed, it may have to report more income in Britain if it moves, since many of the overhead and borrowing costs now booked in Britain may in future be offset against more lightly taxed Hong Kong profits.
Also, Hong Kong's less generous treatment of share bonuses may cost HSBC millions of dollars in tax deductions each year.
Crawford Spence, Professor of Accounting at Warwick Business School, who has studied international groups' tax planning, said the Reuters analysis showed the "commonsense understanding" that HSBC would receive a big tax benefit was too simplistic. "They may not be saving much money at all on this particular aspect," he said.
HSBC declined to answer questions on possible changes in its structure and their tax impact. "The Board is considering at least eleven criteria for long term shareholder value, one of which includes the tax system which needs to be transparent, fair and competitive," a spokeswoman said in a statement.
HSBC moved to London from Hong Kong in 1993 after it bought Midland Bank. However the climate for banks in the city has become increasingly hostile since the 2008 crisis with regulators bringing in tougher rules on capital and bankers' pay as well as imposing heavy fines for a litany of misdeeds that has scarred the industry.
While regulators in Asia have followed suit with tighter rules on bank capital and liquidity, the region's relatively strong showing in the 2008 crisis means lenders there have faced less of the public and political backlash seen in Europe.
HSBC's ability to cut its tax bill by moving from Britain is constrained by the fact that it doesn't declare much taxable profit in Britain.
Britain is a lucrative market for HSBC, generating over US$15 billion in net interest income and fees in 2014, the most recent full year for which data is available.
However, the bank reported an accounting loss in Britain in 2014 and had a tax charge of US$69 million for the year. This is despite the fact its British retail bank, which has tens of thousands of staff, produces what Chief Executive Stuart Gulliver said last August were "excellent returns".
HSBC's investment bank, which is headquartered in London, had profits of US$8 billion in 2014, while its commercial bank, which also has a significant British presence, had profits of US$9 billion.
A key reason for the modest British taxable result is that much of the group's overhead costs are booked in Britain, such as top management salaries and central support functions.
Also, since HSBC borrows most of its debt via British-registered companies, its annual report shows, it is also entitled to British tax deductions on bond coupons and other interest costs.
HSBC's accounts show group overhead expenses of around US$9 billion a year.
Hong Kong, which does not bear the same share of group overhead costs as London, generated over US$8 billion in profit on almost US$13 billion of revenue in 2014, filings show.
The bank declined to say how much of its group costs would be booked in Hong Kong as part of any overseas move.
However, analysts said the change could be significant.
Chris Wheeler, banks analyst at Atlantic Securities, said regulatory rules mean that if HSBC moved its main holding company to Hong Kong, it would have to raise more debt there, rather than in Britain. "It would have to be in Hong Kong. It would have to be in the holding company," he said.
If these costs were no longer booked against UK income, the UK profits would rise and face UK tax.
Of course, booking costs in Hong Kong would depress taxable profits there, reducing the tax bill there. However, that's not the kind of tax arbitrage companies usually target. "You're better issuing (debt) out of a higher tax jurisdiction than a lower tax jurisdiction," said Gary Greenwood, an analyst at Shore Capital who covers HSBC.
In the area of executive pay, HSBC could find itself losing UK tax deductions without any corresponding saving in Hong Kong.
In response to pressure from investors and regulators, banks are increasingly paying senior bank executives their bonuses - often worth millions a year - in shares. Britain allows companies to take tax deductions in relation to newly issued shares paid to employees, even though this does not represent a cost to the company itself. Hong Kong does not, according to its Inland Revenue Department.
All this means that HSBC will have to shift much more UK profit than costs to Hong Kong in the coming years or face an increase in its tax bill.
That could be a hard task to manage.
That's because HSBC's average annual British tax bill of US$100 million in the past three years suggests an annual taxable profit of just US$440 million, based on prevailing tax rates.
One area where HSBC won't make any tax saving by moving to Hong Kong is on the bank levy. Following extensive lobbying, the British finance minister, George Osborne, said in July that he would halve the levy and, crucially for HSBC, no longer apply it to the overseas assets of British banks.
HSBC's levy charge was US$1.1 billion in 2014 and previously planned increases in the rate were set to lift this to around US$1.5 billion a year. Gulliver said last year that half the levy charge related to non-British assets. That meant an overseas move might have shave US$750 million a year off HSBC's levy. The fact non-British assets will in future be exempt means this part of the charge will no longer apply.
REUTERS

Singapore No 4 worldwide for supporting global innovation through domestic policies

Singapore No 4 worldwide for supporting global innovation through domestic policies

By
nishar@sph.com.sg@Nisha_BT
SINGAPORE was ranked fourth worldwide for domestic policies which support global innovation, according to think tank Information Technology and Innovation Foundation (ITIF).
The report studied 56 countries, looking at 27 factors with positive and negative spillovers such as supportive tax systems, investment in research & development and human capital, forced localisation and weak intellectual property protection.
"Robust innovation is essential for economic growth and progress," said co-author Stephen Ezell, ITIF's vice-president for global innovation. "As countries increasingly vie for leadership in the innovation economy, they can implement policies that try to benefit only themselves but harm the production of innovation in the rest of the world. Or they can implement 'win-win' policies that bolster their own innovation capacity while also generating positive spillovers for the entire global economy. For innovation to flourish around the world, we need a system that is doing much more of the latter."
Singapore's fourth place indicated policies that the report found to be best in their positive contribution to the global innovation ecosystem and 22nd in terms of being least harmful.
The report also showed a robust correlation between countries' contributions to global innovation and their levels of domestic innovation success, suggesting that performing well when it comes to innovation policy at home bodes well for the world too.
The report also highlighted that countries should adopt policies to enhance their impact on global innovation. To start, it urged policymakers and economists to treat innovation as an important tool for optimising global growth.
Secondly, the report called on the global development and trade community to set up a framework that better differentiates between policies that are beneficial for the world's innovation ecosystem and those that are harmful.
Finally, ITIF said that established countries should set up a Global Science and Innovation Foundation to fund research on major global challenges, especially through joint research.
Robert D Atkinson, ITIF's president and a co-author of the report, added: "Policymakers need to better understand and more aggressively push back when countries try to advance their own interests at the expense of global innovation. The world's leaders need to articulate a more robust vision of commonly shared prosperity based on substantial increases in worldwide productivity and more innovative products and services."

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