{"id":5089,"date":"2023-01-05T07:26:21","date_gmt":"2023-01-05T15:26:21","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/newserver.ca.andersen.com\/?p=5089"},"modified":"2025-06-11T09:40:13","modified_gmt":"2025-06-11T16:40:13","slug":"2-share-buyback-tax-what-to-expect","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/previous.ca.andersen.com\/fr\/blog\/2-share-buyback-tax-what-to-expect\/","title":{"rendered":"2% Share Buyback Tax: What to Expect?"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<p><em>Prepared by Andersen in Canada, Montreal Partner\u00a0<a href=\"https:\/\/previous.ca.andersen.com\/fr\/professionals\/danny-guerin\/\">Danny Gu\u00e9rin<\/a>\u00a0with support from\u00a0<a href=\"\/?p=2798\">St\u00e9phanie Perras<\/a><\/em>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The 2022 Federal Fall Economic Statement announced a two-percent tax that would apply<br>on the net value of all types of share buybacks made by public corporations in Canada. The<br>tax would come into effect on January 1, 2024. The statement indicates that more details<br>will be provided in the Federal Budget of 2023.<br>This announcement is similar to the one-percent tax on stock buybacks announced by US<br>President Joe Biden in August 2022. This new measure was included in the Inflation<br>Reduction Act (\u201cIRA\u201d) introduced by the Biden administration which is expected to come<br>into force in 2023 (referred to as the \u201cUS IRA\u201d). The Democrats initially proposed a 2%<br>excise tax, but Republicans lobbied to reduce the tax to 1%.<br>In this article, we will first outline what represents a buyback and its fiscal and economic<br>impacts. Second, we will shortly analyze the US IRA and speculate on what it could mean<br>from a Canadian perspective as well as alternative means of taxation that could have been<br>used to accomplish similar results.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br><em>What is a \u201cShare Buyback\u201d<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Share buybacks happen when companies &#8211; publicly traded companies in the context of the<br>new tax &#8211; buyback a portion of their own shares. There are four different methods that can<br>be used to carry out a buyback: open market buyback, fixed-price tender offer, Dutch<br>auction tender offer, and direct negotiation. In an open market buyback (most common<br>method used for share repurchases), the transaction is executed directly on the stock<br>market, and companies have the flexibility to cancel the buyback program at their<br>discretion. With a fixed-price tender offer, the company would buyback the shares at a<br>fixed price on a specific date, which is a faster option. With a Dutch auction tender offer,<br>the company would provide a range of different prices, with the minimum price being<br>above the market value. After the bids from the shareholders are received, the company<br>can determine the appropriate price for the buyback program. Finally, with a direct<br>negotiation, a company can approach directly certain shareholders and directly negotiate<br>a price with them.<br>There are various reasons for a corporation to repurchase their shares, and such an event<br>can trigger various effects, which will be discussed hereunder.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br><em>Why Issue a Buyback<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Share buybacks, along with dividends, are ways for a company to return excess cash to<br>their shareholders. Buybacks may represent an appealing option when no other<br>investment alternative seems fitting, whether there are not enough growth opportunities,<br>or that potential investments are too risky or expensive.<br>Share buybacks can also be a way to return money to shareholders without having to<br>commit to a long-term dividend policy, thereby providing more flexibility for<br>management.<br>After a buyback, the company can choose to cancel the shares, therefore reducing the<br>number of outstanding shares, or choose to hold the shares as treasury. Cancelling the<br>shares would result in higher earnings per share (\u201cEPS\u201d) ratio, thereby elevating the<br>market value of the shares outstanding.<br>Buybacks could also be used to consolidate ownership. Having fewer shareholders can<br>simplify corporate governance. Additionally, during uncertain times, share buybacks are<br>used as a tool to stabilize stock prices.<br>Moreover, when companies issue stock options as a compensation mean to retain or<br>attract key employees, it increases the number of shares outstanding, thereby diluting<br>existing shareholders investments. Buybacks can be used as a mean to prevent or mitigate<br>such effect.<br>The decision to consider whether or not to pursue share buybacks is wholly dependant on<br>an entity\u2019s financial situation. If a company\u2019s shares are undervalued while the operations<br>are doing very well and the company has extra cash, a buyback can be very beneficial to<br>investors. By increasing demand, the stock price consequently increases, which creates<br>value for all investors. However, if a company is prioritizing short-term gain and<br>neglecting investments that could create long-term growth, then it might not be so<br>beneficial to the investors in the long run.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<div class=\"wp-block-group is-vertical is-layout-flex wp-container-core-group-is-layout-8cf370e7 wp-block-group-is-layout-flex\">\n<pre class=\"wp-block-verse\"> <\/pre>\n<\/div>\n\n\n\n<p><em>What are the main implications of a share buyback<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>There are currently no tax consequences for a corporation that repurchases its shares in<br>cash. However, if the shares are purchased by transferring non-cash assets to a<br>shareholder, the corporation is deemed to have disposed of the assets at fair market value,<br>which can result in a gain or loss for the corporation half of which would be<br>taxable\/deductible from a Canadian tax perspective.<br>From a Canadian tax perspective, the amount received by Canadian shareholders upon<br>the buyback of their shares that exceeds the Paid-Up Capital (\u201cPUC\u201d) is taxed as a deemed<br>dividend. Subsection 84(3) of the Income Tax Act<sup>1<\/sup> (\u201cITA\u201d) applies to Canadian<br>corporations and deems as a dividend any payment to its shareholders. Such shareholders<br>would in turn be deemed, under subsection 84(9), to have disposed of their shares in<br>question to that corporation and capital gains or losses would have to be computed on<br>such disposal (the proceeds of which would have to be reduced by the deemed dividend<br>computed under 84(3) as described above). An exception to subsection 84(3) deemed<br>dividend would be if a public corporation would have proceeded by way of a purchase of<br>its own stock in \u201cthe open market\u201d (i.e., the shares must be purchased on a stock exchange<br>or over the counter through an independent middleman in accordance with the<br>procedures and requirements of the relevant securities legislation and the bylaws of the<br>relevant stock exchange. If the vendor and the purchaser have made an arrangement<br>with respect to the purchase and sale of the shares in question, the purchase will not be<br>considered to be carried out in the manner in which any member of the public would<br>normally purchase shares in the open market<sup>2<\/sup> ). Where paragraph 84(6)b) applies, the<br>recipient would tax themselves on a capital gain instead of a dividend (while the<br>corporation purchasing those shares on the market could face Part II.1 tax on such<br>purchase amount).<br>On a different note, share buybacks can also mean that a company is prioritizing short-term<br>share price gain over investing in further development or the corporation\u2019s resources<br>(e.g., human, capital). When interest rates are low, companies sometimes go into debt to<br>finance buybacks to increase stock prices temporarily, which can be seen as an imprudent<br>strategy.<br>There is actually no precise way to determine how the stock market would react to a share<br>buyback. Such corporate practice has either been seen in the past as a poor treasury<br>management strategy of a company\u2019s excess cash use, or signal that an entity has little growth opportunities or limited investment alternatives in which to invest their excess<br>capital. In particular (and limited) circumstances, buybacks have also been interpreted<br>positively on the market for companies being financially successful with undervalued stock<br>prices that would be on a stage of growth.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br><em>US IRA: New excise tax and intended purposes<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Starting January 1st, 2023, a new US non-deductible excise tax of 1% calculated on the fair<br>market value of the stock will apply on the repurchase of stock by a covered corporation.<br>The term \u201ccovered corporation\u201d refers to any domestic corporation whose stock is traded<br>on an established securities market as per Sec. 4501 of the Internal Revenue Code (\u201cIRC\u201d).<br>Furthermore, the tax will apply to all classes of stocks of a covered corporation whether<br>the class is publicly traded or not and regardless of the net earnings or loss position of the<br>firm. At this time, the Treasury Department was provided with regulatory authority by the<br>IRA to apply this tax to any other transactions that would be deemed to be economically<br>similar to share buybacks. Even if 1% is not a significant tax in comparison to the current<br>top tax rate on dividends and capital gains in the US, the joint Committee on Taxation is<br>now estimating a $74 billion gain over the next 10 years from this new 1% excise tax.<br>However, the tax base on which that 1% would be applicable will benefit from a deduction<br>equivalent to the value of the stocks issued to employees and any new stocks issued to the<br>public.<br>The 1% excise tax should also <strong>not be<\/strong> applicable to the following situations:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<ol class=\"wp-block-list\" id=\"block-b6c70e54-a514-48a5-8493-16b183cbd979\"><li>The repurchases value in the year are less than $1 million;<\/li><li>The repurchased stocks are contributed to an employer-sponsored pension plan,<br>employee stock ownership plan or any other similar plan;<\/li><li>The repurchased stock is taxed as a dividend;<\/li><li>The repurchased stocks are part of a reorganization where no gain or loss is<br>recognized; and<\/li><li>The stocks are repurchased by regulated investment companies, real estate<br>investments trust (\u201cREIT\u201d) and dealers in securities in the ordinary course of<br>business.<\/li><\/ol>\n\n\n\n<p>As mentioned earlier, dividends and stock buybacks are two ways of distributing income<br>to shareholders that have different tax treatments. From a US tax perspective, the tax rate<br>is similar in both cases, but stocks buybacks are only taxed on the capital gain portion,<br>making shares repurchasing more appealing to stockholders. In the US, the short-term<br>capital gains on stocks owned for less than a year are taxed at their ordinary income<br>bracket. However, when owned for a longer period, the long-term capital gains are taxed<br>at a rate of 0%, 15% or 20% depending on the taxable income, thus making share buybacks<br>significantly more attractive to taxpayers which have hold on to their shares for a longer<br>period.<br>Stock repurchases in the US have significantly increased in the last decade as compared to<br>dividends payments, to the point where they now greatly exceed them as a form of earnings<br>distribution to shareholders. In 2021, these buybacks have reached more than $900<br>billion, primarily driven by Apple, Facebook, Google, Microsoft and Bank of America. As<br>a result, concerns over these higher levels of share buybacks and their impact on firms and<br>markets were raised by legislators, individuals in the financial services industry and some<br>academics. Firstly, it was argued that firms were now using share buybacks as a way to<br>meet short-term share price targets and boost earnings per share instead of investing in<br>capital expenditures and research and development, which are both essential to the longterm<br>sustainability of any corporations. Stock buybacks were therefore mainly benefiting<br>short-term shareholders selling their stocks after prices went up at the expense of longterm<br>shareholders. They also believed that the long-term rise of the price of the share<br>should not be dependent on the artificial price manipulation caused by the firm\u2019s<br>repurchase of its own shares.<br>Secondly, in the cases of both dividend payments and share buybacks, the value of the firm<br>is generally reduced following the distribution. The Securities and Exchange<br>Commission\u2019s \u201csafe harbor\u201d rule, which prohibits market manipulations, recommends<br>that companies limit their buybacks programs within considerations of their volume and<br>timing conditions. However, the share buybacks seem to have the opposite effect on the<br>stock price, driving it to rise as the outstanding number of shares in the market decrease.<br>Some critics have claimed that stock buybacks might cause the redistribution of earnings<br>from public shareholders to corporate insiders who usually own a significant amount of<br>the firm\u2019s equity and whose financial compensations are directly linked to the earnings per<br>shares of the company. They have dubbed this practice as \u201cindirect insider trading\u201d, as the<br>corporate insiders would initiate the stock buybacks based on information obtained<br>internally that leads them to believe the stock is undervalued. Furthermore, it was also<br>argued that the increased levels of stock buybacks have caused the shareholders to benefit<br>from these programs for their own financial gain, thus widening economic inequality at<br>the expense of the workers and corporate stakeholders.<br>Thirdly, concerns were raised over the fact that share buybacks were often debt-financed,<br>which could jeopardize the firm\u2019s financial stability. When incentivized by low interest<br>rates, compagnies would use debt to finance their buyback programs, also known as<br>\u201cleveraged buybacks\u201d.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<div class=\"wp-block-columns is-layout-flex wp-container-core-columns-is-layout-9d6595d7 wp-block-columns-is-layout-flex\">\n<div class=\"wp-block-column is-layout-flow wp-block-column-is-layout-flow\" style=\"flex-basis:100%\"><\/div>\n<\/div>\n\n\n\n<p><em>What It Means for Canadian taxpayers<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Whether the extent to which the impacts on the Canadian market of such proposed tax<br>should be similar to the effects of the tax implemented in the US is still uncertain. This<br>new tax is certainly in response to Biden\u2019s administration IRA adopted earlier this year.<br>However, the great disparity between these two economies is leading some to believe that<br>the tax was proposed (by Justin Trudeau\u2019s Liberal government) without a better<br>understanding of Canada\u2019s corporate finances.<br>The new share buyback tax is evidently expected to raise money for Canada, but the larger<br>goal of the Liberal government seems to be about incentivizing public corporations to<br>make more investments with their profits and pay their \u201cfair share\u201d through this \u201csmart<br>tax\u201d. The government wants to make sure that large corporations reinvest their profits in<br>what they consider to be the right incentives, such as workers, operations and the energy<br>transition, amongst other things. Although the government wants to incentivize all public<br>companies, public oil and gas corporations, who have been the most active in the past year<br>in the buyback programs, have been especially criticized for making record profits and<br>issuing share buybacks instead of reinvesting their excess capital in clean energy.<br>Energy producers have been vocal about how they believe that this tax will hurt<br>investments in the energy sector, despite them contributing massively to the country\u2019s<br>economy during this inflationary period. Petroleum associations have also raised<br>concerns over the fact that the increased rate of 2% in Canada would put them at a<br>competitive disadvantage with other US energy companies, thus discouraging investment<br>into Canadian businesses.<br>On the other hand, certain academics, economic experts and financial market gurus<br>believe that this new tax would impose limits on how companies allocate their capital, in<br>turn creating economic uncertainty. As investors use the money from share buybacks from<br>mature companies to reinvest in smaller firms with better growth prospects, a tax on<br>buybacks could lead to a less efficient use of available capital. Indeed, the new tax will be<br>hindering buybacks, which is often a tool used to lower volatility. There are also<br>circumstances in which it would be sounder to return money to the shareholders rather<br>than making risky investments. Therefore, the new tax would not have the desired effect<br>to drive investments and innovations.<br>The higher rate announced by the Liberal government might be in correlation to the rate<br>of 2% initially proposed by the Democrats in the earlier attempted legislation. Even if this<br>tax is proposed to take effect as of January 1st, 2024, it is not believed, amongst the<br>financial community, that it will drive companies to spend more on stock repurchase in<br>the upcoming year (i.e., 2023) as most firms have capital allocation policies that prevent<br>them from arbitrarily spending on buyback programs.<br>Furthermore, the latest Q4 2022 reports from Canada\u2019s largest banks are signaling a<br>potential recession in 2023. In a context where interest rates keep on increasing and the<br>economy is slowing down, it might not be wise for companies to borrow funds to finance<br>their buyback programs before the implementation of this new tax.<br>On a different perspective, many individuals in the financial sector believe that the new<br>tax is not significant enough to alter or influence the capital allocation strategy of<br>companies in which the public and investment funds are currently invested in. The<br>sentiment in Canada is that companies are already allocating their capital efficiently<br>through a combination of capital expenditure investments, dividend payments and share<br>buyback programs. Judging by the billions of dollars that have been injected into the<br>domestic energy sector, one might think that it would be a false belief to state that the<br>money is mainly redistributed to investors (through buybacks) at the expense of capital<br>investments, workers, innovation, while detrimental to the future growth of Canadian<br>public companies.<br>Alternative taxing measures could also be explored by governments to try to mitigate the<br>so-called capital allocation malfunctions as it pertains to public corporations. Indeed, a<br>transaction tax that would be applicable on all market transactions at a fixed price (let\u2019s<br>assume 0,01$ per transaction) would bring every financial actor on the same level playing<br>field while generating substantial income for the government that could be redistributed<br>to workers (through tax cuts or credits). Such additional revenue could also be used to<br>enhance governmental programs which would entice Canadian public company\u2019s<br>innovation, capital expenditures, etc. and help on fostering the future growth of such<br>entities.<br>To conclude, Canadian businesses will now have to weigh the pros and cons of this<br>proposed excise tax and determine when time comes to raise funds if it is still worthwhile<br>for them to issue shares during difficult times if buying them back when times are better<br>now comes at a cost.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"has-small-font-size\">_______________________________________________________________________________________<br><sup>1<\/sup> Income Tax Act (R.S.C., 1985, c. 1 (5th Supp.));<br><sup>2<\/sup> &#8220;Revenue Canada Round Table,&#8221; in Report of Proceedings of the Forty-Second Tax Conference,<br>1990 Conference Report (Toronto: Canadian Tax Foundation, 1991) 50:1-68, question 50, at 50:26.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Prepared by Andersen in Canada, Montreal Partner\u00a0Danny Gu\u00e9rin\u00a0with support from\u00a0St\u00e9phanie Perras. The 2022 Federal Fall Economic Statement announced a two-percent tax that would applyon the net value of all types of share buybacks made by public corporations in Canada. Thetax would come into effect on January 1, 2024. The statement indicates that more detailswill be [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":42,"featured_media":3533,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[146,1],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-5089","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-canadian-business-taxation","category-uncategorized"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.6 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>2% Share Buyback Tax: What to Expect? &#8211; Andersen<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/previous.ca.andersen.com\/fr\/blog\/2-share-buyback-tax-what-to-expect\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"fr_FR\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"2% Share Buyback Tax: What to Expect? &#8211; Andersen\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Prepared by Andersen in Canada, Montreal Partner\u00a0Danny Gu\u00e9rin\u00a0with support from\u00a0St\u00e9phanie Perras. The 2022 Federal Fall Economic Statement announced a two-percent tax that would applyon the net value of all types of share buybacks made by public corporations in Canada. Thetax would come into effect on January 1, 2024. 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