Burger King Is Going Bananas

burger king
burger king

REUTERS

Presenter and showmaster of the German TV program "Wetten Dass" (take a bet) Thomas Gottschalk holds up a cap of U.S. fast-food company Burger King during the show in Berlin in 1999.

Burger King shares were up as much as 22% Monday on news the fast-food chain was in talks to buy Canadian donut giant Tim Hortons in a deal that would see Burger King headquarters move to Canada to avoid U.S. taxes.

The Wall Street Journal reported late Sunday that the home of the Whopper was hoping to execute a "tax inversion" deal that would allow for savings on foreign earnings and cash and in some cases a lower overall corporate tax rate.

Tax inversion deals have surged this year as cash-flush companies prioritize acquisition targets beyond the reach of U.S. levies. The Obama administration is well aware of the strategy and has urged Congress to pass legislation that would disincentivize businesses from trying to pull it off. Here's the chart:

tax inversions chart
tax inversions chart

Goldman Sachs

If consummated, the deal would create the world's third-largest fast-food chain.

Tim Hortons was up 18%.



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