Elon Musk could have a silent partner in his $44 billion deal to buy Twitter Inc.: the U.S. tax code.
The head of Tesla Inc. and SpaceX announced Monday an agreement to
“If you look at Musk’s ‘income’ as defined by our tax code, you see that the guy is really rich, but not rich enough to buy Twitter,” Steve Wamhoff, the director of federal tax policy at the left-leaning Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy, said. “When you look at a more complete definition of his income — including the parts that are not included as taxable income under our tax rules and thus not taxed — then you start to see how the guy can buy Twitter.”
Musk is using a tried-and-true strategy favored by many American billionaires who have amassed highly appreciated stock — borrowing against those assets to get cash without having to sell and pay taxes. Musk has a margin loan against some of his Tesla holdings for $12.5 billion of the deal.
The details of how Musk plans to come up with another $21 billion aren’t yet clear in the financing agreement. He could sell Tesla or other stock, which would incur a significant tax bill. It’s possible he could fund some of that by borrowing against his stakes in SpaceX and the Boring Co. further using the IRS rules to tap tax-free cash.
Musk is worth $257.4 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index. Much of that fortune is held in Tesla and SpaceX stock, which can grow indefinitely untaxed. For any loans against his assets, Musk also gets a tax write-off for the interest on that debt. Musk faced a multibillion-dollar tax bill last year after selling a portion of his Tesla shares.
“Elon Musk has very valuable Tesla stock, which he does not want to sell and pay a tax. And so he can borrow against that stock without selling it,” Steve Rosenthal, a senior fellow at the left-leaning Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center, said. “Borrowing does not create any income in our system because the borrowing is offset by the obligation to repay.”
The ability of the mega-rich to largely choose when they pay taxes — by deferring sales to years in which they have losses to offset the liabilities, or simply holding assets until they die to avoid the levies entirely — has generated ire among many Democrats. Senators including Warren, Bernie Sanders, and Ron Wyden have for years been working on various forms of wealth taxes that go after the fortunes that are often untouched by income tax rules.
Warren, who turned the idea of a 2% wealth tax on the richest Americans into a campaign rallying cry in the 2020 Democratic primaries, said late Monday that Musk’s Twitter takeover exemplified the need for it.
This deal is dangerous for our democracy. Billionaires like Elon Musk play by a different set of rules than everyone else, accumulating power for their own gain. We need a wealth tax and strong rules to hold Big Tech accountable.
— Elizabeth Warren (@SenWarren) April 25, 2022
President Joe Biden joined the fray earlier this month with his own “Billionaires Minimum Income Tax” that would tax the annual appreciation of the financial and business assets of people worth at least $100 million. Biden’s plan would be a large blow to someone like Musk who has the potential for large gains. Under that proposal, such people would have to pay capital gains levies each year on the appreciation, said Kyle Pomerleau, a senior fellow at the right-leaning American Enterprise Institute.
A new tax on billionaires is unlikely to become law anytime soon with razor-thin margins in the U.S. Senate. Joe Manchin, a moderate Democrat from West Virginia, immediately panned Biden’s plan within hours of it being released as part of the president’s budget request.
However, the idea of taxing unrealized gains is likely to stick around. The concept has gone from a fringe idea popular only among very progressive lawmakers to a mainstream Democratic policy in only a few years.