Friday, July 28, 2017

New Canadian banking rules called 'game changer' for real estate tax evasion



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New Canadian banking rules called 'game changer' for real estate tax evasion


By Sam Cooper
New Canadian banking rules that took effect July 1 are a “game changer” that could help governments in Victoria and Ottawa fight real estate tax scams exploited by foreign buyers, says a prominent B.C. immigration lawyer.
As of July 1, Canadian banks must confirm detailed information on non-resident clients — such as name, address, date of birth and taxpayer identification numbers — in order to report to the Canada Revenue Agency on all financial accounts held by non-residents of Canada.
The new, so-called “Common Reporting Standard” will allow dozens of countries including Canada and China to share information about bank accounts held by, or for the benefit of, non-residents, in a system designed to fight global tax evasion and improve voluntary tax compliance, the CRA says.
A number of experts, including immigration lawyer Richard Kurland, say that Canada loses significant tax revenue because B.C.’s real estate transaction system does not properly monitor whether property sellers are being honest when they say they are, or are not, residents of Canada as defined under the Income Tax Act.
It is believed many non-residents who don’t principally live in Canada, but claim they do, are evading paying tax on 25 per cent of their capital gains on home sales, Kurland says. These tax dodgers tend to be speculative Metro Vancouver investors who own or flip multiple expensive properties, according to Kurland. A common scam is claiming to live in a home that is actually vacant, he said, and claiming principle residency tax exemptions. It’s also believed that some real estate professionals help clients fake residency claims, or turn a blind eye to tax dodging tactics, Kurland and other legal experts told Postmedia.
But now the CRA will automatically have the data needed to confirm whether non-resident property sellers are being honest, Kurland says, rather than completing “whack-a-mole” real estate audits.
The CRA also will be able to share this client banking information with other countries that join the common reporting system. These international reporting changes were made partly in response to disclosures in recent years about global tax haven and offshore banking strategies of wealthy investors and politically connected elites.


‘Lifestyle audits are hard to do when the person (selling a home) and the cash are gone, and there’s nothing to seize,’ says immigration lawyer Richard Kurland. ‘But using CRA algorithms and artificial intelligence means this is fixable, if you have the data. We're looking at a game changer.’
‘Lifestyle audits are hard to do when the person (selling a home) and the cash are gone, and there’s nothing to seize,’ says immigration lawyer Richard Kurland. ‘But using CRA algorithms and artificial intelligence means this is fixable, if you have the data. We’re looking at a game changer.’ STUART DAVIS / PNG FILES

Kurland says that if the CRA were to proactively work with B.C.’s provincial government in sharing real estate data and using computer programs to search for red flags, tax compliance would rapidly improve and speculation would fade in Metro Vancouver’s overheated market.
“Lifestyle audits are hard to do when the person (selling a home) and the cash are gone, and there’s nothing to seize,” Kurland said. “But using CRA algorithms and artificial intelligence means this is fixable, if you have the data. We’re looking at a game changer.”
An even better reform, Kurland says, would be if the CRA’s new data pool could be automatically matched with a modernized B.C. title transfer system that would require a seller to register at the time of a sale, whether they are a Canadian resident, or non-resident, under the Income Tax Act.
Already sellers make these declarations on standard real estate forms by checking a box. But these forms are rarely confirmed, unless a property sale is investigated by the CRA, according to Kurland.
“The honour system just isn’t working,” he said.
As an added measure, real estate professionals would need to verify client residency with proofs such as income tax forms, Kurland said. They would then be liable for clients’ reports. This would deter some of the bad apples who are believed to be helping clients cheat Canadian taxpayers.
“The CRA is supportive of any provincial regulation that would bring increased oversight to real estate transactions completed in the province,” spokeswoman Shannon Ker said, in response to questions about reforming B.C.’s title transfer system.
The NDP’s former housing critic, MLA David Eby, who is now B.C.’s attorney-general, campaigned on ideas to combat suspected tax evasion by foreign speculators in B.C. real estate.
The new NDP government has not yet responded to Postmedia’s questions on whether the party supports the reporting reforms suggested by Kurland.
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Dropbox is preparing IPO documents with Goldman Sachs

Dropbox is preparing IPO documents with Goldman Sachs

Founder/CEO of Dropbox Drew HoustonDropbox CEO Drew Houston may soon take his company to IPO.Steve Jennings / Stringer / Getty Images
Dropbox is inching closer to an IPO and is currently working with Goldman Sachs on the paperwork for an offering, Bloomberg reports.
The file hosting service, last valued at $10 billion in 2014, is close to hiring Goldman Sachs as a "lead adviser" for an IPO that could happen as early as this year, according to the report. 
Goldman Sachs declined to comment to Business Insider. Dropbox did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
It was reported in late June that Dropbox was in the market for underwriters, and was set to start interviewing investment banks in July. 
Get the latest Goldman Sachs stock price here.

GOP HEALTHCARE DISASTER: 'SKINNY REPEAL' DIES AS MCCAIN VOTES NO

GOP HEALTHCARE DISASTER: 'SKINNY REPEAL' DIES AS MCCAIN VOTES NO

mithc mcconnellSenate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell. J. Scott Applewhite/AP Images
Senate Republicans came out of 20 hours of debate with a stunning failure in their efforts to overhaul the US healthcare system — and Sen. John McCain of Arizona cast a decisive vote.
Early Friday morning, the Senate voted against a "skinny" plan to repeal the Affordable Care Act. Republican senators formed the last-ditch effort, called the Health Care Freedom Act, after earlier votes on the Senate's healthcare plans failed.
The vote failed, with 49 voting in favor and 51 voting against. Three Republican senators — McCain as well as Sens. Lisa Murkowski of Alaska and Susan Collins of Maine — voted no. All 48 Democrats joined them.
This vote was to replace the House bill, the American Health Care Act.
The skinny bill included a series of amendments that aimed to repeal certain unpopular parts of the Affordable Care Act.
The failure left Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell with no clear options moving forward. The Senate has been grappling for weeks with healthcare overhaul, running through different versions of legislation before settling on the more modest attempt with the aim of moving to a conference with the House of Representatives.
In a surreal scene on the Senate floor, McConnell and Vice President Mike Pence were seen before the vote speaking with McCain. A previous vote was left open for more than 40 minutes as it appeared Republican leaders attempted to persuade McCain, who made a dramatic return to the Senate this week after receiving a diagnosis of brain cancer, to change his vote.
In announcing his vote, McCain came to the Senate floor and put his right thumb down before walking off.
"It's time for our friends on the other side to tell us what they have in mind, and we'll see how the American people feel about their ideas," McConnell said after the vote, suggesting it was time to "move on" from healthcare.
Minority Leader Chuck Schumer said after the vote that he wanted to "turn the page" and move on to improve the ACA.
"We are not celebrating," he said. "We are relieved."
The failed vote marks the end of the road for the healthcare debate in the Senate, which had been going on since Tuesday.

Amazon misses Wall Street expectations by a mile

Amazon misses Wall Street expectations by a mile

Jeff Bezos AmazonWall Street will likely want an explanation from Jeff Bezos about Amazon's big miss.David Ryder / Stringer / Getty Images
AMZN Amazon.Com
 1,025.30 10.48 (+1.00 %)
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Amazon's second-quarter report fell well short of Wall Street's expectations.
The company's earnings missed analysts' forecasts by more than a dollar a share. It also offered a disappointing outlook for the third quarter.
Investors sold the stock on the news. In recent trading after the bell, Amazon's stock was down $29 a share, or nearly 3%, to $1,017.00.
The company reported on Thursday:
  • EPS (GAAP) of 40 cents a share. Wall Street was expecting $1.42 a share, according to Bloomberg. In the year-ago period, Amazon earned $1.78 a share.
  • Revenues of $38 billion. Analysts were expecting $37.2 billion. Amazon posted sales of $30.4 billion in the second quarter last year.
  • Guidance: For the third quarter, Amazon expects to post revenue of between $39.25 billion and $41.75 billion. It expects its operating results to range from an operating loss of $400 million to an operating profit of $300 million. Assuming the company's nonoperating income and expenses stay about the same — and depending on its allocation for taxes — that guidance implies that Amazon expects its bottom line for the period to come in at between a nearly $1-per-share loss to a profit that's well shy of a $1 a share. Before Amazon's report, Wall Street was forecasting that Amazon would earn $1.13 a share on $39.97 billion in sales in the period.
The company's sales were boosted by results from its services business, most notably its AWS cloud-computing business. Compared with the year-ago period, AWS' revenue was up 42% to $4.1 billion. Amazon's overall service revenues also rose 42% to $13.2 billion. The company's total revenue grew 25%.
But rapidly rising expenses weighed heavily on Amazon's bottom line. Marketing costs jumped 44% from the second quarter last year to $2.2 billion. Amazon's spending on technology and content jumped 43% to $5.5 billion over the same period. Its fulfillment costs swelled 33% to $5.2 billion. Overall, the company's operating income was down 51% from the second quarter of 2016, to $628 million.
Amazon has been hiring software engineers and sales representatives for its AWS business, Brian Olsavsky, Amazon's chief financial officer, said on a conference call with analysts. It's also been investing in new warehouses, digital video for its streaming video service, and in developing and promoting its Echo smart speaker products, he said. 
Besides increased operating costs, taxes took a toll on the company's results too. Even though Amazon's operating income was down from the same period last year, the amount it set aside for income taxes rose by more than 50%, to $467 million. That provision would give it a tax rate of about 70% for the quarter. It was unclear from the company's report why it set aside so much for taxes.
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Starbucks tempers expectations, says it's closing all of its Teavana stores

Starbucks tempers expectations, says it's closing all of its Teavana stores

StarbucksFacebook/Publix
SBUX Starbucks
 54.06 -3.87 (-6.70 %)
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(Reuters) - Starbucks Corp on Thursday reported quarterly profit that matched analysts' estimates, but tempered expectations for the current quarter amid softness in the U.S. retail and restaurant industries, and said it would close all 379 of its Teavana stores.
The company's shares rose slightly in late trade to $59.60.
The results landed just hours after Starbucks announced plans to buy the remaining 50 percent share of its East China business from its joint venture partners for about $1.3 billion, in its biggest ever acquisition.
Net income fell to $691.6 million, or 47 cents per share, for the third quarter ended July 2. That was down from $754.1 million, or 51 cents per share, a year ago.
Starbucks had a profit of 55 cents per share, excluding items, which matched analysts' average estimate as complied by Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.
U.S. restaurants are locked in a bitter fight for market share, battling new competition from non-traditional rivals such as meal kit sellers and convenience stores.
Sales at its mainstay U.S. cafes open at least 13 months rose 5 percent in the latest quarter. Traffic turned slightly positive, reversing three straight quarters of declines that the company attributed in part to changing its loyalty program to focus on dollars spent rather than the number of purchases they make.
Same-store sales from China were up a robust 7 percent in the latest quarter.
(Reporting by Lisa Baertlein in Los Angeles; Editing by Bernard Orr)
Read the original article on Reuters. Copyright 2017. Follow Reuters on Twitter.

Amazon's big profit miss spooks investors, but analysts' stay bullish

Amazon's big profit miss spooks investors, but analysts' stay bullish

People pass a signage at Amazon's Prime Now fulfillment centre in Singapore July 27, 2017. REUTERS/Edgar SuPeople pass a signage at Amazon's Prime Now fulfillment centre in Singapore Thomson Reuters
By Sweta Singh and Ankur Banerjee
(Reuters) - A steeper-than-expected drop in quarterly profit rattled some Amazon.cominvestors, but Wall Street analysts remained largely bullish about the company's aggressive spending plans.
Shares of the e-commerce juggernaut, which have risen 40 percent this year, were down 4.3 percent at $1,001 in early trading on Friday, wiping out $21 billion from its market value.
The stock touched a record high on Thursday, helping CEO Jeff Bezos briefly unseat Microsoft Inc co-founder Bill Gates as the world's richest person.
"The overall story coming out of Amazon's second quarter print feels a lot like it did three months ago — accelerating growth, stepped-up investments, lower near-term profitability," J.P. Morgan analyst Doug Anmuth said.
"But will anyone care about profit when Amazon is taking bigger chunks of market share?"
The world's largest online retailer reported a better-than-expected rise in revenue, but operating profit came in well short of analysts' estimate as the company continued to pump in money to expand in international markets such as India.
The company also guided to a possible operating loss for the current quarter.
Amazon, which started as an online bookseller, has forayed into areas that historically had barriers to e-commerce. The company's recent $13.7 billion acquisition of Whole Foods Markets Inc is testimony to Bezos' far-reaching ambition.
At least four brokerages, including J.P. Morgan, raised their price targets on the stock.
Morgan Stanley, however, trimmed its price target by $50 to $1,150 based on valuation. The median price target is $1,150, indicating a 9.9 percent upside to Thursday's close.
Amazon currently trades 115.8 times its 12-months forward earnings. This compares with Microsoft's 22.43 and Alphabet Inc's 26.45. The two compete with Amazon's market leading cloud computing business, Amazon Web Services (AWS).
PE is widely used on Wall Street to gauge the relative value of stocks although it is not the only such metric.
AWS continued to be the company's cash cow, bringing in $4.1 billion in sales, a 42 percent jump.
Chief Financial Officer Brian Olsavsky said on a post-earnings call that the AWS unit would expand in France, Sweden and China in the near future.
"We believe the company's ongoing heavy investments in fulfillment capacity, video content, and AWS are to match with its substantial growth rates, and should not be viewed negatively," Needham & Co analyst Kerry Rice said, who views the pullback in the stock as a "buying opportunity."
(Reporting by Sweta Singh and Ankur Banerjee in Bengaluru; Editing by Sriraj Kalluvila)
Read the original article on Reuters. Copyright 2017. Follow Reuters on Twitter.

Thursday, July 27, 2017

Facebook totally dominates the list of most popular social media apps

Facebook totally dominates the list of most popular social media apps

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The good times keep on rolling for Facebook, as the tech giant on Wednesday reported another stellar quarter.
Thirteen years into its existence, the company is as dominant as ever. As this chart from Statista shows, Facebook runs four of the five most used social network and messaging services in the world. And it’s not really that close.
That Facebook rules over these specific types of apps is significant, because social media platforms are particularly powerful for advertisers that want to target people’s interests as precisely as possible. Not surprisingly, putting ads in front of those billions of eyes is how Facebook makes nearly all of its money.
The company has been warning that its revenue is set to slow down later this year, largely because it’s run out of room to put ads in the main Facebook app’s News Feed. The company is now looking to bulk up its advertising power in those other platforms, with Messenger the particular apple of Mark Zuckerberg’s eye.
Since those platforms are so huge, Facebook is already positioned to do well. And for advertisers looking to reach the broadest audience, the alternatives are look underwhelming.
COTD_7.27_02Mike Nudelman/Business Insider

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