08 Jun 2025, 13:12 [ UTC - 5; DST ]
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Post subject: Re: Aircraft inventory levels are critically low. Posted: 25 May 2025, 19:10 |
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Joined: 05/01/12 Posts: 1151 Post Likes: +752 Location: Smith Mountain Lake VA W91
Aircraft: Ex 58P
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Can a real CPA please use the white courtesy phone and check in?
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Post subject: Re: Aircraft inventory levels are critically low. Posted: 25 May 2025, 19:55 |
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Joined: 08/20/09 Posts: 2526 Post Likes: +2078 Company: Jcrane, Inc. Location: KVES Greenville, OH
Aircraft: C441, RV7A
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Username Protected wrote: Can a real CPA please use the white courtesy phone and check in? They have. Unfortunately, it's always ambiguous. Personal situations vary so much. For me, I usually spend more in capital investment than we make in "profit" in a given year, so I like the ability to plan and spread out depreciation, however it works best in that year.
_________________ Jack N441M N107XX Bubbles Up
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Post subject: Re: Aircraft inventory levels are critically low. Posted: 25 May 2025, 20:54 |
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Joined: 05/01/14 Posts: 9392 Post Likes: +15994 Location: Операционный офис КГБ
Aircraft: TU-104
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Username Protected wrote: Well, at least Mike and I agree on something!  Too bad it is one of the few things you are wrong about! 
_________________ Be kinder than I am. It’s a low bar. Flight suits = superior knowledge
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Post subject: Re: Aircraft inventory levels are critically low. Posted: 25 May 2025, 21:53 |
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Joined: 04/06/11 Posts: 65 Post Likes: +70
Aircraft: M600
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Username Protected wrote: You guys do know the IRS allows cash based accounting for most small businesses? That turns all outgoing payments into expenses. Problem solved.
That is not the case. If I expense all my large asset purchases, that gets subtracted off and spread out on a tax schedule the CPA does for annual filings.
You are right that not all assets are able to be immediately expensed. It depends on the asset but for many small businesses, everything can be fully expensed. Planes can't though.
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Post subject: Re: Aircraft inventory levels are critically low. Posted: 25 May 2025, 22:00 |
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Joined: 04/06/11 Posts: 65 Post Likes: +70
Aircraft: M600
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Username Protected wrote: You guys do know the IRS allows cash based accounting for most small businesses? That doesn't affect depreciation. Quote: Bonus depreciation is an interest free loan from the United States tax payer. No, depreciation over multiple years is a 0% loan to the US treasury by the business.
First off, you have the cash flow backward. The business is deferring taxes by using bonus depreciation vs. 5 year. That's a loan from the treasury. Who do you think funds that loan? The US taxpayer, since that's where the treasury gets its money. Sure it can also be funded by increasing the deficit but eventually that's the taxpayer as well.
The confusion here may be that I'm just referring to actual IRS rules concerning bonus depreciation vs. straight-line. I'm not referring to a philosophical debate on whether or not all asset purchases should be immediately expensed because it's money out of the register if you are a business owner.
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Post subject: Re: Aircraft inventory levels are critically low. Posted: 26 May 2025, 00:19 |
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Joined: 11/30/24 Posts: 54 Post Likes: +24
Aircraft: Bonanza F33A
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Any thought on current inventory levels? I’m specifically interested in Baron G58. Thanks!!
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Post subject: Re: Aircraft inventory levels are critically low. Posted: 26 May 2025, 00:36 |
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Joined: 12/03/14 Posts: 20293 Post Likes: +25433 Company: Ciholas, Inc Location: KEHR
Aircraft: C560V
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Username Protected wrote: First off, you have the cash flow backward. The business is deferring taxes by using bonus depreciation vs. 5 year. That's a loan from the treasury. Sorry, the numbers don't support your claim since there is no loan to be seen anywhere. The exemplar rig operator spent $1M to get the rig and took in revenue of $500K. He is down $500K that year. He doesn't have any "loan" from the treasury. The IRS says you can't expense the rig, you can only take $100K off this year (10 year straight line, for example). So the IRS says he made $400K profit and must pay taxes on this phantom profit, so he out another $150K (say) in taxes due to that. He is effectively being taxed on the undepreciated value of the machine. In subsequent years, he can take another $100K deduction for the depreciation, but the value of each of those is reduced by inflation. In the end, he really only gets about 75% of the cost of the machine to offset his income, meaning about $250K was taxed as income he never really got in the end. How is any of this a loan from the treasury? Where is the loan money you speak of? Quote: The confusion here may be that I'm just referring to actual IRS rules concerning bonus depreciation vs. straight-line. The way I would say it is that expensing capital equipment makes it fair to businesses. They get the full value of the equipment set off from income and only get taxes on the true profit they actually made. Quote: I'm not referring to a philosophical debate on whether or not all asset purchases should be immediately expensed because it's money out of the register if you are a business owner. Expensing is fair, depreciation is not. There is a way to make depreciation more fair. Escalate the deduction every year by the rate of inflation since purchase. Then the business owner gets the true value of the equipment to offset income. It still leaves him with the initial penalty of owing taxes when he made no money, but now at least he will make that up in future years. Imagine if the rig operator goes into the rig store and the machine is priced at $1M. The rig operator says "I can't pay you $1M, but I can pay you in yearly payments of $100K for the next 10 years, that will add up to $1M." Would the store accept that deal? Of course not, but that's the raw deal of depreciation, no time value of money is considered. The tax system penalizes companies for getting capital equipment. They end up paying taxes due to some fraction of that equipment's value being considered profit. Mike C.
_________________ Email mikec (at) ciholas.com
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Post subject: Re: Aircraft inventory levels are critically low. Posted: 26 May 2025, 07:35 |
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Joined: 11/07/11 Posts: 815 Post Likes: +463 Location: KBED, KCRE
Aircraft: Phenom 100
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An oil rig isn't a business expense, it's a business asset just to be clear.
And a buyer can absolutely go into a Rig's R Us and say they'd like to buy this over the next 10 years and not up front all at once. In fact, there's an entire industry that supports this as well as leases all the really tall buildings in major cities.
Heck, Rig's R Us may even let you rent the rig with monthly payments for 5 years and then give it back!
Chip-
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Post subject: Re: Aircraft inventory levels are critically low. Posted: 26 May 2025, 07:40 |
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Joined: 05/01/14 Posts: 9392 Post Likes: +15994 Location: Операционный офис КГБ
Aircraft: TU-104
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Username Protected wrote: An oil rig isn't a business expense, it's a business asset just to be clear.
And a buyer can absolutely go into a Rig's R Us and say they'd like to buy this over the next 10 years and not up front all at once. In fact, there's an entire industry that supports this as well as leases all the really tall buildings in major cities.
Heck, Rig's R Us may even let you rent the rig with monthly payments for 5 years and then give it back!
Chip- Don’t confuse Mike with reality.
_________________ Be kinder than I am. It’s a low bar. Flight suits = superior knowledge
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Post subject: Re: Aircraft inventory levels are critically low. Posted: 26 May 2025, 08:39 |
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Joined: 05/23/13 Posts: 8009 Post Likes: +10324 Company: Jet Acquisitions Location: Franklin, TN 615-739-9091 chip@jetacq.com
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Username Protected wrote: Any thought on current inventory levels? I’m specifically interested in Baron G58. Thanks!! You mean you want to talk about airplanes, not oil rigs? You’re not enamored by this debate about taxation? Well… ok! We don’t track the piston markets, but I believe our system does provide data on Barons. Let me take a look and I’ll let you know if I can any insight. I do have a prospective client that has one, they plan to sell it once we complete the acquisition of a jet to replace it.
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Post subject: Re: Aircraft inventory levels are critically low. Posted: 26 May 2025, 09:15 |
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Joined: 12/03/14 Posts: 20293 Post Likes: +25433 Company: Ciholas, Inc Location: KEHR
Aircraft: C560V
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Username Protected wrote: An oil rig isn't a business expense, it's a business asset just to be clear. It doesn't matter what you call it, it costs money and it is necessary for the business. Quote: And a buyer can absolutely go into a Rig's R Us and say they'd like to buy this over the next 10 years and not up front all at once. Yes, but they will pay interest. They won't let you just straight line the payments to the same total number like depreciation does. Depreciation doesn't account for the time value of money. Mike C.
_________________ Email mikec (at) ciholas.com
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Post subject: Re: Aircraft inventory levels are critically low. Posted: 26 May 2025, 09:17 |
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Joined: 12/03/14 Posts: 20293 Post Likes: +25433 Company: Ciholas, Inc Location: KEHR
Aircraft: C560V
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Username Protected wrote: Don’t confuse Mike with reality. Mike understands reality just fine, it is just that reality is depreciation penalizes businesses for buying capital equipment. Bonus depreciation for airplanes is the way all equipment should be done, basically expensing capital purchases. It is not a gift from the treasury, it is the true offset of cost versus profit. Mike C.
_________________ Email mikec (at) ciholas.com
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Post subject: Re: Aircraft inventory levels are critically low. Posted: 26 May 2025, 09:55 |
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Joined: 05/23/13 Posts: 8009 Post Likes: +10324 Company: Jet Acquisitions Location: Franklin, TN 615-739-9091 chip@jetacq.com
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Username Protected wrote: Don’t confuse Mike with reality. Mike understands reality just fine, it is just that reality is depreciation penalizes businesses for buying capital equipment. Bonus depreciation for airplanes is the way all equipment should be done, basically expensing capital purchases. It is not a gift from the treasury, it is the true offset of cost versus profit. Mike C.
The tax revenue created by what you suggest seems to be overlooked.
It took a lot of employees to build that drilling rig, they all pay taxes on their labor and everything they purchase.
Our government wants to tax the goose and the eggs she lays.
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Post subject: Re: Aircraft inventory levels are critically low. Posted: 26 May 2025, 15:04 |
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Joined: 05/01/14 Posts: 9392 Post Likes: +15994 Location: Операционный офис КГБ
Aircraft: TU-104
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Username Protected wrote: Based on what I see here, it appears that market has really swung towards the buyer’s favor. I would expect the same thing for most piston singles and twins, boats, RV's, certain kinds of cars, and many other categories. Except for drills. Drills are going to be in high demand.
_________________ Be kinder than I am. It’s a low bar. Flight suits = superior knowledge
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