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  2. Understanding Deferred Tax Assets: Calculations, Applications ...

    www.aol.com/finance/understanding-deferred-tax...

    Common causes of deferred tax assets are items such as net operating losses, eligible business expenses, certain revenue, bad debt, warranty liabilities, and more. These will be explained further ...

  3. 6 Common Mistakes To Avoid If You Are Harvesting Year-End Tax ...

    www.aol.com/6-common-mistakes-avoid-harvesting...

    It may make sense to harvest a loss when it is large, perhaps in a less-robust month, rather than selling it after its losses have diminished, according to the experts at Frontier Asset Management ...

  4. Deferred Tax Assets vs. Deferred Tax Liabilities: What's the ...

    www.aol.com/deferred-tax-assets-vs-deferred...

    Say it has $3,000 in deferred tax assets and a tax liability of $10,000. For the sake of example, imagine that the company is being taxed at a rate of 30%, meaning it owes $3,000 in taxes.

  5. Deferred tax - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deferred_tax

    For example, a tax asset may appear on the company's accounts due to losses in previous years (if carry-forward of tax losses is allowed). In this case a deferred tax asset should be recognised if and only if the management considered that there will be sufficient future taxable profit to use the tax loss. [2]

  6. Tax loss harvesting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tax_loss_harvesting

    If marginal rates are different, then there can be additional tax savings (e.g., deducting excess losses against a higher ordinary income rate in one year in exchange for additional long term capital gains tax at a lower rate in a later year) or even a tax penalty (e.g., deducting at a lower capital gains tax rate in several years in exchange ...

  7. Earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earnings_before_interest...

    A company's earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization (commonly abbreviated EBITDA, [1] pronounced / ˈ iː b ɪ t d ɑː,-b ə-, ˈ ɛ-/ [2]) is a measure of a company's profitability of the operating business only, thus before any effects of indebtedness, state-mandated payments, and costs required to maintain its asset base.

  8. What You Need to Know About Tax-Loss Harvesting and ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/finance/know-tax-loss-harvesting...

    The IRS doesn’t look at individual investments for tax-loss harvesting purposes. Instead, assets are treated as a collective or aggregate and grouped together as capital gains or losses.

  9. Depreciation recapture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Depreciation_recapture

    The original basis of an asset is usually the value of a taxpayer's investment in the asset. (See IRC § 1012). When a taxpayer purchases an asset, the original basis is the purchase price, or cost, of the asset. Different factors, including tax deductions for depreciation, can lead to an adjusted or recomputed basis for the asset.