Chavez in a pants suit
ExxonMobil just reported the largest annual profit ever by a U.S. company -- a staggering $39.5 billion.There is more.
I say congratulations, although Hillary Clinton begs to differ.
At the winter meeting of the Democratic National Committee, the senator from New York said, "The oil companies reported the highest profits in the history of the world. I want to take those profits, and I want to put them in an alternative energy fund."
Take? Isn't that a confiscation of private property? Author P.J. O'Rourke framed it perfectly on a recent edition of CNBC's "Kudlow & Co.": She's "Hugo Chavez in a pants suit."And what exactly would Mrs. Clinton be taking? ExxonMobil's profits are outsized, but they come on sales of $377.5 billion, making for a profit margin of just over 10 cents on the dollar. This remains well below the profit margins of many industries, including banking and biotech, where the margins nearly double those in the energy sector. The numbers are big, but the returns are middling.
And since sales and profits in the energy sector depend on the world price of oil, it's feast or famine for these businesses. In the last decade, oil prices have fluctuated from about $10 a barrel to nearly $80. Talk about volatile pricing.
Indeed, the energy business isn't easy. Still, ExxonMobil remains one of the best-run companies in America. Many professional investors believe it's the best-run company. In his recent book, "The Future for Investors," Jeremy Siegel of the University of Pennsylvania reveals that Exxon has been one of the top three stocks in terms of return on investment over the past 50-odd years. John D. Rockefeller Sr., looking down from on high, must be pleased.
But it's also a tax-burdened company. While ExxonMobil recorded record profits last year, it also paid $100.7 billion in taxes -- two-and-half times its net profits, according to the Tax Foundation. In fact, over the past 25 years, federal and state governments took $397 billion from the largest oil companies and an additional $1.1 trillion in taxes at the pump. In today's dollars, that's $2.2 trillion.
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The truth is that corporations do not pay taxes, they merely collect taxes for the government. Just look at the direct collections of $1.1 trillion over the last 25 years. The $397 billion collected from customers and paid to the government is on top of the direct collections. The main difference between the two, is that the smaller payment is contingent on the company making a profit. If Hillary wants to confiscate profits, there will be little reason to make any. But who is she really taking the money from? The Shareholders of Exxon Mobil are a diverse group that include pension funds for workers all over this country. She is proposing confiscation of profits that benefit these funds and pay for worker retirement. Maybe this is why she opposed Social Security reform.
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