Shareholders are pressing drugstore chain Walgreen to get a Swiss address. Without a change in law, a congressional panel estimated last month, future deals will cost the US $19.5 billion in tax revenue over the next 10 years.
Medtronic has already cut its bill in recent years by accumulating $20.5 billion of untaxed earnings in offshore subsidiaries, said Robert Willens, an independent tax consultant based in New York.
An Irish address would give it access to that money without paying the 35 per cent US corporate income tax on it, he said before the announcement.
"They have one of the largest pools of unremitted earnings of any company," Willens said. He added that Medtronic might also be able to put some of the $20.5 billion to use in the purchase price for Covidien without triggering a tax bill.
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Medtronic's plan is different from most of the other reincorporations, known as "inversions," because it involves taking the Irish address of a company that isn't run from Ireland. Covidien gets most of its sales from the United States, where 19 of its 41 factories are located, according to a November securities filing.
The foreign domicile came about when corporate predecessor Tyco International carried out its own inversion to Bermuda in 1997. Covidien spun off as an independent Bermuda company a decade later, and switched to Ireland in 2009.
Medtronic Chief Executive Officer Omar Ishrak will continue to run the company from Minnesota, he said in an interview. Most of the US companies that have inverted since 1982 also have kept their top executives at home.
"This is not about lowering tax rates," Ishrak said in the interview, saying he expects little change. "What we will have is access to the cash generated outside the US. We'll use that to invest much more aggressively in the US."
Under the terms of its agreement to buy Covidien, Medtronic has the right to cancel the takeover if Congress changes the tax laws in a way that results in the combined company being considered a US taxpayer, Medtronic said in a filing today.
Companies are so keen to escape the US system because of the combination of a high tax rate - 35 per cent, the highest among developed nations - and the practice of taxing the earnings of US companies' foreign subsidiaries when the money is transferred back to the US. Many other nations, such as Great Britain, tax only domestic profits.
By establishing a parent company outside the US, firms can permanently avoid paying US tax on foreign earnings. They can also realise more benefit from "profit shifting," or transforming US profits into foreign ones. Some popular methods involve transferring valuable patents to subsidiaries in tax havens or having an offshore entity lend money to US units at exorbitant rates.
Covidien and its former parent, Tyco, are still sparring with the Internal Revenue Service over the allocation of profits following the Bermuda inversion. The IRS said last year that Tyco saddled its US units with phony debt, leading them to take improper interest deductions of $914 million between 1997 and 2000, Covidien said in a February filing.
The IRS is seeking that amount plus $154 million in penalties, Covidien said. Tyco and Covidien contend the deductions were appropriate and are fighting the case in US Tax Court.
If the IRS prevails, it probably will challenge some $6.6 billion of interest deductions taken by Tyco's US units in subsequent years, Covidien said in the filing. As a former division of Tyco, Covidien said it's partly responsible for the company's tax liabilities before 2007.
Medtronic's $20.5 billion stockpile of untaxed offshore profits has led to its own dispute with the IRS. In 2010, the tax agency filed a notice demanding $958 million in additional taxes from the 2005 and 2006 audit years, claiming Medtronic inflated profits in a Puerto Rican subsidiary to reduce its US bills. Medtronic is fighting the notice in Tax Court and last year said it had reached resolution on part of the case.
Senator Carl Levin submitted a bill that would have prevented almost all of the recent merger-based inversions from generating a tax benefit. Photo / AP
While US-based multinationals like Medtronic can't permanently avoid taxes by allocating profits to lower-tax countries, the practice allows them to defer payment indefinitely. Congress could grant another temporary tax holiday, as it did in 2005, allowing them to repatriate the money at a lower one-time rate.
Big American companies have amassed more than $1.95 trillion in retained earnings offshore, according to data compiled by Bloomberg in March. Just 22 corporations account for more than half the total, led by General Electric with $110 billion.
Ishrak, the Medtronic CEO, has been among those advocating another tax holiday. "That money can be used more effectively in the US." Ishrak told Fox Business Network last year. "Let's structure something that works for everybody."
The offshore earnings help explain how Medtronic was able to lower its taxes so far below the US's statutory 35 per cent rate, said Willens, the tax consultant. Medtronic had an average effective tax rate of about 18 per cent between 2011 and 2013.
Tyco's shift to Bermuda in 1997 helped kick off the first wave of corporate inversions that peaked during the late 1990s and early 2000s. Congressional leaders stopped the practice in 2002 by pledging to strip future deals of tax benefits through legislation. When the law was written in 2004, it contained several exceptions that made possible the current second wave.
Most importantly, companies can get an offshore address by buying a smaller foreign company, as long as the overseas firm's shareholders end up owning at least 20 per cent of the combined company. Most of the 20 inversions carried out since 2004 have involved takeovers of companies abroad that were big enough to meet the 20 per cent test. Covidien investors will own about 30 per cent of the merged company, Medtronic said yesterday.
After Pfizer announced plans to get a British domicile in April, Senator Carl Levin, a Michigan Democrat, submitted a bill that would raise the 20 per cent threshold to 50 per cent, a level that would have prevented almost all of the recent merger-based inversions from generating a tax benefit, including Medtronic's. In an attempt to discourage more companies from inverting before Congress acts, the bill would be retroactive to May 2014.
Republican leaders say that rather than targeting inversions themselves, Congress should remove the incentive to leave the US by lowering the corporate tax rate and repealing taxes on foreign earnings. They advocate dealing with inversions as part of a broader revamp of the tax code, a revision that is unlikely to take place this year.
The Medtronic deal "establishes conclusively that people aren't very concerned about the Levin bill," said Willens, the tax consultant. "Everyone is very comfortable that this proposal will never see the light of day."
- Bloomberg