亚洲网紅露点

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carried interest

[ kar-eed in-ter-ist, in-trist ]

noun

Finance.
  1. a share of profits received by managers of private investment funds, as private equity and hedge funds, unrelated to initial money the managers may or may not have contributed:

    His piles of accumulated carried interest have fallen neatly into a tax-free loophole.



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亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins

Origin of carried interest1

First recorded in 1750鈥55
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

The ultrawealthy successfully lobbied to stop Presidents Obama and Biden from repealing the 鈥渃arried interest鈥 loophole that saves private equity executives billions by taxing their profits at lower capital gains rates, around 20 percent, instead of higher personal income tax rates, around 37 percent.

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One new proposal tackles something that federal lawmakers have failed to do: closing the carried interest loophole, which allows hedge-fund and private equity executives to pay tax rates that are lower in some cases than those paid by entry-level employees.

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The Biden administration wanted to close the carried interest loophole, but senior officials blamed fierce lobbying in Washington by the private equity industry for stymieing those plans.

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Another bonus: About $190 million of Mr. Schwarzman鈥檚 compensation is tied to carried interest, a common form of Wall Street pay that has a relatively low tax rate.

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She also ensured that a tax on the carried interest on private equity earnings was kept out of the IRA legislation.

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