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    Consumers in China pick their 3 favorite electric cars — and only one is Chinese

    Among the favorite EV brands in China are one from China, one from the United States and one from Germany.
    This year’s survey covered about 1,600 Chinese consumers mostly living in China’s larger cities, with an average age of 32 and monthly income of about 19,000 yuan ($2,969).
    Across cars of all categories, premium German brands ranked first, followed by Japanese brands and then Chinese brands including BYD and Geely, the report said.

    Stephan Wollenstein, CEO of Volkswagen China, presents the new ID.6 Crozz electric car during the Shanghai International Automobile Industry Exhibition on April 19, 2021.
    Hector Retamal | AFP | Getty Images

    BEIJING — When it comes to their favorite electric car brand, Chinese consumers’ top choice is Warren Buffett-backed BYD, according to a survey by Bernstein.
    Elon Musk’s Tesla ranks second, and third on the list is Germany’s Volkswagen, Bernstein said. The firm cited the latest results from a regular survey of Chinese consumers in the third quarter of the last few years. This year’s survey, released Thursday, covered about 1,600 respondents.

    Most of those surveyed lived in China’s larger cities, with an average age of 32 and monthly income of about 19,000 yuan ($2,969), the research firm.
    Nearly half the respondents said they will consider buying an electric vehicle for their next car purchase, the report said, noting consumer preferences for lower operating costs, a better driving experience and environmental friendliness.
    Intent to buy an electric car from a Chinese start-up like Nio or Xpeng doubled this year to about 9.5% of those surveyed, up from around 5% for the last few years.

    Read more about electric vehicles from CNBC Pro

    Chinese start-ups ranked first in the “upper mass & premium” segment of the electric car market, which covers cars costing at least 150,000 yuan ($23,437). The next most-favored in that segment was Tesla, followed by premium German brands like BMW and Audi, the survey found.
    But across cars of all categories, premium German brands ranked first, followed by Japanese brands Toyota, Honda, and Nissan, and Chinese brands including BYD and Geely, the report said. Electric car start-ups ranked sixth in this category.

    China is the world’s largest auto market and many European car companies are making the country the starting point in their push into electric vehicles.

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    Stock futures are flat ahead of the Fed decision

    U.S. stock futures were little changed Tuesday night as investors awaited a decision from the Federal Reserve on its tapering schedule.
    Dow Jones Industrial Average futures fell 28 points, or 0.07%. S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 futures dipped 0.08% and 0.1%, respectively.

    Lyft jumped 10.3% in after hours trading on better-than-expected third-quarter results. Zillow fell 8% after announcing it will close its home buying and flipping business. Shares of Bed Bath & Beyond rose on a partnership announcement with Kroger but the 80% surge that followed was likely fueled by a short squeeze.
    In regular trading, the Dow rose 138.79 points to 36,052.63. The S&P 500 added 0.3% and the Nasdaq Composite gained 0.3%. All three major averages closed at records for the third session in a row. The small cap Russell 2000 rose slightly and closed at an all-time high.
    Investors are focused on the Federal Reserve, which is expected to announce an end to its bond-buying program on Wednesday at the conclusion of its two-day meeting. They’ll also be listening for clues on when the central bank plans to raise interest rates.

    Still, equities rose Tuesday as companies continued to deliver strong earnings reports. Of the S&P 500 companies that have reported so far this earnings season, 83% of them have beat consensus expectations, according to FactSet. That’s despite ongoing supply chain disruptions, labor challenges, commodity inflation, central bank policy and Covid risk.
    “Stocks are like the Energizer Bunny, as they continue to soar to new highs and show no signs of tiring,” said Ryan Detrick, chief market strategist for LPL Financial. “We understand all of the worries out there, but the bottom line is earnings continue to come in way better than expected and are helping to justify stocks are current levels.”

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    Those highs are making a potential year-end rally more conceivable to investors.
    “The primary market trend appears higher,” said Keith Lerner, co-chief investment officer at Truist. “In the eight periods since 1950 where stocks were up more than 20% through October, as they are this year, the S&P 500 tacked on additional gains by year end 100% of the time with an average gain of 6.2%.”
    Weekly mortgage applications and ADP payrolls data are also scheduled to be released.
    CVS and Marriott are scheduled to report earnings before the bell Wednesday. MGM Resorts, Etsy and Electronic Arts will report after the bell.

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    GOP Rep. Larry Bucshon is the second House lawmaker to disclose Trump SPAC stock purchase

    Republican Rep. Larry Bucshon purchased a stake in Digital World Acquisition Corp., or DWAC, the SPAC linked to former President Trump, according to a public disclosure.
    The investment from the Indiana congressman is worth at least $1,001 but no more than $15,000.
    Bucshon’s investment is the second DWAC purchase by a member of Congress. CNBC reported last week that Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene has invested up to $50,000 in the SPAC.
    In January, Bucshon said Trump had incited the deadly riot at the Capitol. Then he voted against impeaching Trump.

    Rep. Larry Bucshon, R-Ind., leaves the House Republican Conference meeting at the Capitol Hill Club on Wednesday, May 16, 2018.
    Bill Clark | CQ-Roll Call, Inc. | Getty Images

    Republican Rep. Larry Bucshon has bought up to $15,000 in the SPAC that is slated to take public former President Donald Trump’s planned social media platform.
    The Indiana congressman purchased a stake in Digital World Acquisition Corp., or DWAC, on Oct. 25, according to a public disclosure released Monday. The investment is worth at least $1,001 but no more than $15,000.

    Bucshon’s investment is the second disclosed DWAC purchase by a member of Congress. CNBC reported last week that Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene has invested up to $50,000 in the SPAC. It also appears to be the first stock transaction disclosed by Bucshon since 2013, according to Quiver Quantitative, an alternative data firm that tracks trading activities by members of Congress.

    Bucshon, who has worked as a physician and surgeon, has served in Congress since 2011. He is a member of the House Energy and Commerce Committee.
    In January, after pro-Trump rioters attacked the Capitol, Bucshon said in a statement that Trump incited the insurrection. “I cannot condone dangerous rhetoric by the president,” he said. Soon thereafter, however, Bucshon voted against impeaching Trump on charges of inciting the Capitol invasion.
    DWAC is a special purpose acquisition company that would merge with the Trump Media & Technology Group, a new social media company Trump said he has planned to “take on Big Tech censorship.”
    A spokesperson at Bucshon’s office didn’t immediately respond to CNBC’s request for comment.

    The stock has surged more than fivefold in extremely heavy trading in the past week and a half since the target company was announced. There had been signs that retail investors active on social media platforms like WallStreetBets were fueling the astronomical rally.

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    After a wild 800% two-day surge following the announcement, the SPAC pulled back nearly 70% from its all-time high of $175 to trade around $56.20 apiece.
    SPACs raise capital in an IPO and use the cash to merge with a private company and take it public, usually within two years. Early investors in these blank-check deals typically have no idea what the business combination would end up being.
    At least two hedge funds that were among early investors in DWAC — Lighthouse Investment Partners and Saba Capital Management — dumped their sizable stakes last week after learning of the SPAC’s merger target.
    Trump’s plans for a social media app come months after he was banned by Twitter and Facebook for inciting the deadly Jan. 6 Capitol riot by his supporters.

    Former US president Donald Trump announced plans on October 20 to launch his own social networking platform called “TRUTH Social,” which is expected to begin its beta launch for “invited guests” next month.
    Chris Delmas | AFP | Getty Images

    The former president said he’s rolling out a social media app called Truth Social. He said the new company also will launch an on-demand video streaming service “that competes with the increasingly ‘woke’ and politicized ‘entertainment’ programming created by Big Tech and Big Media players,” and sees “opportunities to create ‘cancel-proof’ alternatives in other key areas ranging from web services to payment processing.”

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    The Fed is about to set its post-crisis policy course — with a high level of uncertainty ahead

    The Federal Reserve, upon the conclusion of its two-day meeting Wednesday, will almost certainly announce it is reducing the amount of bonds it buys each month.
    That means the central bank is stepping away from a historic level of support for the economy and into a new regime in which it will still be putting its tools to use but to a lesser degree.
    Though the move to cut the $120 billion a month in bond purchases has been well telegraphed, there is still risk for the Fed.

    Chair of the Federal Reserve Jerome Powell appears before a Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee hearing on the CARES Act, at the Hart Senate Office Building on September 28, 2021 in Washington, DC. – The hearing will examine the effects and results of the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act, also known as the CARES ACT.
    Matt McClain | AFP | Getty Images

    When the Federal Reserve adjourns its meeting Wednesday, it will be doing more than scaling down its economic aid. The central bank will be charting a course for its post-pandemic future.
    Virtually everyone who cares about such things anticipates the policymaking Federal Open Market Committee, upon the conclusion of its two-day meeting, will announce that it is reducing the amount of bonds it buys each month.

    The process, know as “tapering,” probably will commence before November ends.
    In doing so, the Fed will be stepping away from a historic level of support for the economy and into a new regime in which it will still be using its tools to a lesser degree.

    Though the move to cut the $120 billion a month in bond purchases has been well telegraphed, there is still risk for the Fed in how it communicates where it goes from here.
    Talk up the tapering too much, and investors will get nervous that interest rate hikes are coming. Soft-pedal the move too much, and the market could think the Fed is ignoring the inflation threat. There’s risk to both too much optimism and too much pessimism that the FOMC and Chairman Jerome Powell will have to avoid.
    “There’s just a very wide range of possible outcomes. They need to be nimble and responsive,” said Bill English, a former senior Fed advisor and now a professor at the Yale School of Management. “I worry that the markets will think that they’re on a steady track to run purchases down and then begin raising rates when they may just not be. They may have to act more quickly, they may have to raise them more slowly.”

    As things stand, the market is betting the first rate increase will come in June 2022, followed by at least one — and perhaps two — more before the year is out. In their most recent projections, FOMC members indicated a small likelihood of pulling the first hike into next year.
    For Powell, his post-meeting news conference should be an opportunity to stress the Fed is not on a preset course in either direction.
    “He needs to note that there are risks on both sides. Of course, there are risks that the inflation we’ve seen proves more persistent than they hoped,” English said. “I’d like to hear him say there are downside risks. Fiscal policy is tightening a lot.”

    Indeed, at a time when the Fed is starting to pull back on its monetary policy help, Congress is providing less help from its side after pouring more than $5 trillion into the economy during the Covid crisis.
    Whereas fiscal spending added nearly 7.9% to the economy to start 2021, that has morphed into a drag that will see it subtract close to 3.8% by the middle of 2022, according to a gauge developed by the Brookings Institution’s Hutchins Center on Fiscal and Monetary Policy.
    That makes circumstances even more challenging for the Fed.

    ‘A big change in tune’

    The committee uses its post-meeting statement to describe how it feels about economic conditions — GDP, employment, housing, trade and the pandemic’s influence – and how they could feed into policy.
    Through the pandemic, the Fed has developed boiler-plate language stressing economic growth but continued risks from the pandemic that necessitate easy policy. This meeting, though, will likely see substantial changes to that statement to lay out a new course.
    “It’s a big change in tune,” John Hancock Investment Management co-chief investment strategist Matt Miskin said. “You go back six months, and the Fed was completely dovish. They were confident in the transitory component [of inflation], they were confident in the economy doing well, and they still had the time needed for healing, and it’s really changed. So, we do see a lot of change in language.”

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    In recent days, Powell and his colleagues have been walking back the “transitory” call on inflation. Instead, they have been saying that price increases have been stronger and longer lasting than they had thought, and stress that the Fed has the appropriate tools — rate hikes — to address the situation.
    “The Fed has wanted inflation for much of the last 10 years, and they were unable to generate it with [quantitative easing] and low interest rates,” Miskin said. “But now it’s here, and it just goes to show you have to be careful what you wish for.”
    The post-meeting statement, then, likely will reflect the inflation realities as well as the changing shape of the economy as it heads into a post-crisis future.
    Bank of America economists and market strategists expect several changes: a note explaining the tapering process and its flexible nature; a change in the characterization of inflation, from “reflecting transitory factors” to adding a qualifier like “largely” or “partly;” and perhaps some guidance either from the Powell news conference or the statement that will emphasize the Fed is tapering without tightening.
    After all, the Fed will still be purchasing more bonds than it ever had pre-crisis for the next several months, and its $8.6 trillion balance sheet will continue to grow past $9 trillion in the early part of next year. There are no discussions yet on when the Fed will actually reduce its bond holdings, and that likely won’t come until rate hikes are underway.
    “We think Powell will likely use the press conference as an opportunity to underscore that the end of tapering does not automatically mean the beginning of hikes. He will likely emphasize that the two policy actions are distinct,” Bank of America Global Research said in a note.
    Markets are prepared for the Fed taper, but such occasions can be source of market volatility. So Powell will have to choose his words carefully.
    “The market’s already priced in a relatively swift taper and rate hikes in the second half of next year. So in that sense, I think it’s not obvious that there will be a problem,” English, the former Fed official, said. “It would be helpful if he just added that the world is an uncertain place and we’re not locked into anything, we’ll adjust as we need to changes in the outlook.”

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    Fed is in denial about 'persistent' inflation, Wall Street forecaster Jim Bianco warns

    Market forecaster Jim Bianco expects inflation’s intensity to catch up with central bank policymakers worldwide, including the Federal Reserve.
    The fallout could make stocks less attractive, and knock them off record highs.

    “Inflation is persistent and you’ve got to start thinking about moving your policies more aggressively towards tightening,” the Bianco Research President told CNBC’s “Trading Nation” on Tuesday. “None of these central banks want to do that. They’re in denial that the markets are telling them that.”
    Bianco points to trading activity in bonds.
    “What’s happened in the markets in the last couple of weeks is short-term interest rates have moved up and moved up a lot especially in countries like Australia and New Zealand,” he said. “They’re saying that you’re behind the curve.”
    According to Bianco, it’s evidence inflation is widening its grip across the globe. He contends it’s tough to just pin it on temporary supply chain issues.
    Bianco lists wide-ranging issues from surging food and commodity inflation to wage growth as tell-tale signs the backdrop isn’t changing anytime soon.

    ‘Everywhere you turn prices are up’

    “Everywhere you turn prices are up, and they’re going higher,” he said. “The Fed likes to use the word transitory. But every day it looks less transitory, and to use the opposite word more persistent.”
    He doubts Fed Chair Jerome Powell will open a Pandora’s Box during Wednesday’s decision on interest rates by sounding hawkish. However, Bianco believes the Fed warns hikes will likely come sooner than economists and investors anticipate.
    “If the market stay at these high interest rate levels on the short-end of the yield curve signaling that they should be moving faster, they’ll [the Fed] eventually come around to accepting that,” said Bianco. “You’re going to start to see more aggressive rate hikes in 2022 than most are giving credit for right now.”
    At the moment, Bianco suggests the stock market is in a sweet spot. He sees retail investors vigorously putting money in stocks through year-end.
    “You’ve got huge amounts of cash in accounts after 18 months of stimulus and people not spending money,” he said. “So, they’re figuring out ways to invest their money. Well, welcome to 2021. There’s really only one investment, and that is to buy an index ETF probably based on the S&P 500 like SPY [SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust].”
    But it appears the bullish activity would have a shelf life.
    “If interest rates continue to head higher, and continue to put pressure on central banks and they kind of buckle and say ‘Maybe we ought to start thinking about persistent inflation in raising rates.’ Then, the market can be vulnerable,” Bianco said. “That’s probably not a story until next year. Maybe the first quarter.”
    On Tuesday, the S&P 500, Dow and tech-heavy Nasdaq closed at all-time highs.
    Disclosure: Jim Bianco is long SPY.
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    Stocks making the biggest moves after hours: Bed Bath & Beyond, Caesars Entertainment, Lyft and more

    The Lyft logo is seen on electric bicycles in Oakland, California.
    David Paul Morris | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Check out the companies making headlines after the bell Tuesday: 
    Bed Bath & Beyond — Bed Bath & Beyond shares soared 74% after the company announced various strategic changes to speed up growth, including a partnership with Kroger, the largest grocery chain in the U.S. Kroger’s online customers will have access to Bed Bath’s products.

    T-Mobile US — Shares of T-Mobile rose more than 2% in extended trading after the telecom company posted a stronger-than-expected profit for the previous quarter. T-Mobile earned 55 cents a share, topping a Refinitiv forecast of 53 cents per share. However, the company’s revenue came in at $19.62 billion. Analysts expected sales of $20.19 billion, according to Refinitiv.
    Lyft — Lyft jumped 10.3% after reporting better-than-expected third-quarter results. The ridesharing company posted a profit of 5 cents per share, while analysts polled by Refinitiv had forecast a loss of 3 cents per share. The company’s revenue of $864.4 million was just above expectations. Revenue per active rider — a key metric for the company — also beat a StreetAccount estimate. To be sure, Lyft’s 18.94 million active riders was below a consensus forecast of 19.7 million.
    Activision Blizzard — The video game company reported better-than-expected quarterly earnings.. Activision earned 72 cents per share, while analysts polled by Refinitiv expected a profit of 70 cents. It also reported revenue of $1.88 billion, right in line with analysts’ expectations. Activision shares, however, were down nearly 10% after the bell.
    Caesars Entertainment — The casino and entertainment giant saw its shares fall nearly 6% after reporting EBITDA of $882 million, falling short of a $937 million StreetAccount estimate. Caesars said its results were pressured by a loss in its digital business. The company has said it plans to invest more in digital sports betting and iGaming.
    Zillow — Zillow shares fell 8% after the real estate company announced it’s closing its home buying and flipping business. The company also said it’s eliminating a quarter of its workforce.

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    Stocks making the biggest moves midday: Tesla, Chegg, Avis and more

    The logo marks the showroom and service center for the US automotive and energy company Tesla in Amsterdam on October 23, 2019.
    John Thys | AFP | Getty Images

    Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading.
    Avis Budget — Shares of the rental car company jumped 108% after Avis Budget reported a huge earnings beat for the third quarter. The stock had abnormally short interest before the earnings report, which appears to have caused a squeeze as hedge funds try to cover their bets against the stock.

    Chegg — Shares of the education technology company plunged 48.8% after the company delivered disappointing sales guidance, citing a slowdown in enrollment from the pandemic. Several Wall Street shops downgraded Chegg on Tuesday, including Morgan Stanley.
    Tesla, Hertz — Tesla CEO Elon Musk tweeted on Monday night that the electric vehicle maker had not signed a contract with rental car company Hertz, after Hertz announced last week it would offer 100,000 Tesla cars by the end of 2022. Hertz said Tesla has already started delivering cars into its rental fleet. Tesla shares retreated 3% while Hertz shares gained 2.7%
    Under Armour — Shares of the athletic retail soared more than 16.3% after raising its annual outlook.  Under Armour’s fiscal third-quarter earnings and sales topped analysts’ estimates, revealing the company is seeing progress in improving its brand image under CEO Patrik Frisk.
    Pfizer — Shares of the pharmaceutical giant rose 4.2% in midday trading after beating on the top and bottom lines of its quarterly results. Pfizer also raised its 2021 revenue and EPS outlook.
    Generac — Shares of the generator manufacturer fell 4.4% after it reported third-quarter adjusted per-share earnings and revenue that fell short of estimates, according to StreetAccount. Generac also said it plans to buy the smart thermostat maker Ecobee, if it hits certain performance targets. The cash-and-stock deal would be worth as much as $770 million.

    McKesson — Drug distributor McKesson saw shares rise 5.2% after reporting quarterly results that beat consensus estimates. The company recorded earnings of $6.15 per share, trumping estimates of $4.66. It also topped revenue estimates, thanks to strong delivery numbers for specialty drugs and a government contract to distribute Covid-19 vaccines.
    DuPont — Shares of DuPont gained 8.8% after the chemicals company beat expectations. The company posted earnings of $1.15 per share on revenue of $4.27 billion. Analysts expected a profit of $1.12 per share on revenue of $4.14 billion, according to Refinitiv.
    Simon Property Group — Shares of Simon Property added 6.5% after the mall owner beat earnings expectations soundly. The company posted net income of $2.07 per diluted share versus the $1.09 per share consensus estimate via Refinitiv. The company’s revenue also came in higher than expected.
    Clorox — Shares of the consumer products company rose 1.2% after posting stronger-than-expected results for the first quarter. The company reported $1.21 in adjusted earnings per share on $1.81 billion in revenue. Analysts surveyed by Refinitiv had penciled in $1.03 per share and $1.70 billion. Clorox also maintained its full-year guidance despite commentary around cost pressures.
    Nutrien — Shares of the fertilizer company pulled back 5.3% despite a quarterly earnings beat. Nutrien posted adjusted earnings of $1.38 per share versus the StreetAccount consensus of $1.23 per share. The company also announced a quarterly dividend of 46 cents per share.
    Marathon Petroleum — Shares of Marathon Petroleum retreated 3.9% despite the company beating Wall Street expectations on its top and bottom lines. Marathon said it is considering a sale of its Alaska refinery.
    Global Payments — Shares of Global Payments fell 9.2% despite the financial technology firm topping earnings expectations. The company reported adjusted earnings of $2.18 per share on revenue of $2 billion. Analysts surveyed by StreetAccount expected a profit of $2.14 per share on revenue of $1.99 billion.
    Estee Lauder — The cosmetics maker’s stock gained 4.1% after the company’s quarterly results beat Wall Street forecasts. Estee Lauder reported adjusted diluted per-share earnings of $1.89 for the quarter, compared to a $1.70 per share consensus estimate.
    — CNBC’s Jesse Pound, Maggie Fitzgerald and Tanaya Macheel contributed reporting

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    Democrats might not touch these taxes on the wealthy, but they're going up anyway

    A law passed by Republicans in 2017 cut the top income-tax rate to 37%, offered a 20% tax break to certain business owners and reduced the number of wealthy estates subject to federal tax.
    House Democrats proposed undoing these measures in September as part of a social and climate spending package. But a new White House framework left them unchanged.
    The tax cuts for individuals are temporary. They would end starting in 2026 even if Democrats don’t touch them.

    Tasos Katopodis | Getty Images News | Getty Images

    Democrats jettisoned a number of proposals to raise taxes on the wealthy in their $1.75 trillion social and climate spending measure. But those taxes are set to increase even if lawmakers don’t touch them.
    Starting in 2026, the marginal income-tax rate paid by the highest earners would increase (to 39.6% from 37%), more multimillion-dollar estates would be subject to federal tax and many entrepreneurs would lose a 20% tax deduction on their business income.

    That’s due to language in the 2017 tax law, passed by a Republican-controlled Congress and White House, which made these tax cuts temporary.

    “Most of the individual provisions of the [law] do expire at the end of 2025,” said Garrett Watson, a senior policy analyst at the Tax Foundation. “Just like [many households] saw a tax cut in 2018, they might see a tax increase relative to current policy in 2026.”
    In September, House Democrats proposed repealing changes to the top income-tax rate, estate tax and tax deduction for wealthy owners of pass-through businesses.
    The measures, part of a social and climate package then envisioned to cost up to $3.5 trillion, aimed to raise money from households earning more than $400,000 a year and make the tax code more equitable.
    More from Personal Finance:Third stimulus checks still available and scammers are on the prowlThis risk-free bond pays 7.12% annual interest for the next six monthsOpen enrollment is underway. Here are some tips to maximize your benefits

    However, an updated and slimmed-down framework issued Thursday by the White House didn’t call for those tax measures. The framework was the result of months of negotiations between President Joe Biden and progressive and moderate Democrats.
    Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, D-Ariz., had rejected many of the rate hikes the House Ways and Means Committee passed last month, leading party officials to scramble for other ways to pay for the plan. Republicans have also been loath to unwind provisions in their 2017 tax law.
    The tax measures may still change in ongoing negotiations. Lawmakers may also opt to extend the existing tax provisions before their expiration, or make them permanent.

    Income tax rates

    Prior to the 2017 tax law, the highest earners paid a 39.6% marginal income-tax rate. (Individuals paid the rate on income exceeding $426,700 and married couples on income over $480,050, according to the Tax Policy Center.)
    The law reduced the top rate to 37%. (In 2021, it applies to single taxpayers with income of more than $523,600 and to married couples with income over $628,300.)

    The top rate is scheduled to revert to 39.6% in 2026. (The income threshold would be higher than under prior law, however, to account for inflation over the decade.)

    Estate tax

    The 2017 tax law reduced the number of estates subject to the estate tax, which is a levy on wealth transfer at death.
    Estates owe a 40% federal tax once values exceed a certain amount. The tax law roughly doubled the threshold, which was $5.49 million per person in 2017.
    (The amount, which changes each year to account for inflation, is $11.7 million a person and $23.4 million for married couples in 2021.)

    The share of estates that pay the tax (about 0.2% a year) is at its lowest percentage on record, dating back to 1934.
    The threshold would fall to roughly $6 million in 2026 after accounting for inflation, Watson said.

    Pass-through deduction

    The 2017 tax law allowed entrepreneurs who structure their business as a pass-through (such as a partnership or sole proprietorship) to deduct up to 20% of their business income from taxes. (Such entrepreneurs pay taxes on business income at their individual tax rates.)
    The measure was meant to offer rough parity with a tax cut for corporations; the law reduced their tax rate to 21% from 35%.
    The rules are complex and don’t apply to all types of pass-throughs. Business owners would lose the tax break in 2026.
    The House Ways and Means Committee had proposed limiting the tax break to business owners with income less than $400,000 (or $500,000 for married couples).

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