There aren’t at lot of events that make someone like me want
to make the “L” sign on our foreheads and start yelling “Loser!” at someone who
has managed to create his or her own Epic Fail in a business context. Part of
it, of course, is simply due to the fact that I am a mature adult with two
Master’s degrees in Business and a better-than-average experience with things
that can go wrong through no fault of one’s own. Some of it is because I am a
student of business failures, and I’m aware of how fine a line there is between
a “moderate success,” a “fail” and an “EPIC FAIL.” And some of it is just
because I’m the type to view another person’s misfortunes and think “There but
for the grace of God go I,” rather than “Neener Neener Neener!” None of which
keeps me from wanting to call the guy who renounced his U.S. Citizenship to
avoid paying taxes on the money he made on the Facebook IPO a loser – and a
complete idiot with no grasp of strategy – however…
In case you missed it during the original events, you can
pick up the story on the Forbes web page. A man named Eduardo Saverin bought a
large amount of stock in Facebook during the initial public offering, and then
moved out of the country and renounced his U.S. Citizenship in order to avoid
paying the capital gains tax he was sure would arise as the stock price
continued to soar. He had to pay taxes on the $2.4 billion his shares were
worth on that day, but he’d be immune to any additional gains. Unfortunately,
he failed to take into account what would happen if the stock didn’t continue
to rise – as, in fact, it didn’t. As of this writing, Saverin’s shares of
Facebook are now worth about $1.2 billion, or about half what they were on the
day he renounced his citizenship. But, since he’s no longer a citizen, he can’t
take advantage of the tax implications of the loss…
Yes, that’s right: his stock is now worth $1.2 billion, but
he is going to have to pay taxes on $2.4 billion. Best guess, according to
Forbes, is that this will cost him around $180 million – in addition to the
loss of half of his stock value in the first place, of course…
Now, I don’t pretend to know much about finance or tax law,
let alone karma, but it seems relatively straightforward to me that if you’re
going to play games with the tax laws in order to screw the United States
government out of money you owe them, you should probably at least consider
what will happen to your clever stunt – and your personal fortune – if the
market doesn’t do what you expected it to do. Especially in a case like this
one, where nearly all of the company’s assets are intangibles – not even
defined things, like patents and copyrights, but nebulous things like market
position and goodwill. Because if the market does not rise, you’ve renounced
your citizenship and accepted all of the issues that will come with that
decision for nothing – and if it drops, you’re losing money fast…
Previously in this space I’ve noted that right or wrong, a
stock price is based on what people will pay for it, not on what the security
is actually worth, or even on what they think it is worth. And in the case of a
company that owns no property, has no tangible or intellectual assets, and is
counting on driving its stock price up based almost entirely on hype it doesn’t
take much to change people’s opinions. I’m not saying that attempting these
sorts of shenanigans with tax laws and citizenship will automatically make you
a loser; I’m saying that just as in any other human activity, you need to plan
for the possibility that you’re not quite as clever as you think you are…