Business
Coca-Cola battles IRS in federal appeals court with $20 billion at stake
SlateStone Wealth chief market strategist Kenny Polcari discusses whether investors are too dependent on AI, Space X’s IPO and his outlook for the markets on ‘Varney & Co.’
Coca-Cola and the IRS are heading to court with $20 billion on the line amid a years-long dispute over the beverage company’s reporting of profits made in the U.S. and overseas.
The soda giant is taking its case to a federal appeals court in Miami as it looks to resolve a tax liability stemming from how Coca-Cola and its foreign subsidiaries disclosed profits from 2007 to 2009 using an accounting practice known as transfer pricing.
The case centers on an agreement between the company and the IRS from 1996 about how the company would report foreign profits, as Coca-Cola’s U.S. corporation licenses its intellectual property – ranging from recipes, brand names and trademarks – to foreign subsidiaries that manufacture concentrates used to make its beverages for foreign markets.
Coca-Cola argues that it structured its operations to comply with the 1996 agreement using a “10-50-50” method that lets foreign suppliers keep 10% of the gross sales, with the U.S. parent company and foreign subsidiary splitting the remaining profits.
COCA-COLA SHUTTING DOWN CALIFORNIA FACILITY AFTER MORE THAN A CENTURY

Coca-Cola argues the IRS backtracked on an agreement it reached with the company in 1996. (Rachel Wolf/Fox News Digital)
“Far from seeking to evade its tax obligations, Coca-Cola carefully structured its operations to adhere to a method that the IRS had repeatedly blessed,” the company said in a court filing, per The Wall Street Journal.
The outlet reported that the IRS counters that the 1996 agreement was retroactive to 1987 but didn’t apply to future years, and that it only offered protection from penalties for the use of the 10-50-50 method as opposed to immunity.
The IRS said in its own filing that the “combination of two non-promises does not add up to a promise, as Coca-Cola wishes.”
COCA-COLA’S YELLOW CAPS ARE BACK – WHAT THEY MEAN AND WHY THEY’RE COMPARED TO MEXICAN COKE
| Ticker | Security | Last | Change | Change % |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| KO | THE COCA-COLA CO. | 79.53 | +0.14 | +0.18% |
While the company’s tax filings from 2007 to 2009 were the focus of the IRS’ initial case, Coca-Cola has continued to use the accounting method as the legal dispute has played out.
The IRS prevailed over Coca-Cola in a Tax Court ruling in 2020, which resulted in the company paying $6 billion in taxes and interest as the judge ruled the parent company’s deals with foreign subsidiaries were structured improperly to keep profits overseas in lower tax jurisdictions.
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The IRS argues Coca-Cola’s international accounting practices were flawed and not approved. (Kayla Bartkowski/Getty Images)
That money could go back to Coca-Cola with interest if the company prevails with its appeal, though it could face an even larger tax bill if it’s defeated in court due to the ongoing use of the tool.
Coca-Cola would owe an estimated $14 billion in taxes and interest for the 2010 through 2025 tax years, bringing the total to $20 billion if it loses its appeal against the IRS.
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The Journal noted that the potential $14 billion liability could cause Coca-Cola to borrow to pay the IRS, as the amount exceeds the cash it has on hand – though analysts have said the company is emphasizing it has the needed liquidity to cover the bill and maintain its dividend for investors.
Coca-Cola declined to comment. FOX Business reached out to the IRS for comment.
Business
Talkspace chief legal officer John Reilly sells $209,514 in stock

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Form 4 Talkspace Inc For: 22 June

Form 4 Talkspace Inc For: 22 June
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Global Market Today: Asian stocks dip at open as oil edges higher
MSCI Inc.’s gauge of regional shares fell as much as 0.2% in early trading. S&P 500 futures also edged lower after a slide in megacap tech stocks and rising bond yields dragged the benchmark down 0.4% Monday. SpaceX shares slipped for a third straight day, shedding hundreds of billions of dollars in value. Brent crude prices rose slightly to trade above $78 a barrel.
The US issued a 60-day license allowing Iran to sell oil on the international market, giving Tehran an economic lifeline as the two adversaries are poised to continue discussions to reach a permanent peace deal.
Meanwhile, Vice President JD Vance described the first round of negotiations with Iran as “very, very good” and said Tehran had agreed to allow nuclear inspectors back into the country. But officials from the Islamic Republic, who also cited progress, challenged that claim, saying Vance’s assertion was “false and does not reflect reality.”
While geopolitical developments are likely to remain a key source of volatility in the near term, shifts in investor confidence regarding the durability of the AI rally may also lead to bouts of market swings, according to Ulrike Hoffmann-Burchardi at UBS Chief Investment Office.
Expectations that an agreement will be reached, as well as the revival of the AI trade and solid corporate earnings, have fueled a 14% advance in the S&P 500 Index this quarter. However, that trails the 26% surge in the MSCI Asia Pacific Index.
Treasuries fell on Monday as trading resumed following a US public holiday, even as oil prices turned lower Iran said there had been “major progress” in all-night discussions with the US. Strategists cited Federal Reserve Chairman Kevin Warsh’s hawkish messaging last week as one of the reasons for the selling pressure.In currency markets, the Japanese yen lingered near its lowest level since 1986 as investors weighed the prospects for a lasting US-Iran peace deal and the risk of intervention by Japanese authorities. The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index was little changed after rising 0.2% on Monday.
SpaceX plunged 16% after saying it’s selling investment-grade bonds in what’s expected to be a massive borrowing spree. Its bond sale is the latest in a wave of deals from companies driving the AI boom. Alphabet, Amazon.com Inc. and others have raised more than $300 billion of debt tied to AI since November across multiple credit markets. The rocket firm is seeking to raise at least $20 billion, Bloomberg reported.
“The issue that stands out the most is the idea that the hyperscalers continue to receive an extremely low return on investment on their colossal level of spending on AI,” said Matt Maley at Miller Tabak. “Another big concern surrounds the issue of ‘circular investments,’ where companies invest in each other, while also committing to buying each other’s products.”
Elsewhere, Andy Burnham appears set to become the UK’s seventh prime minister in a decade after Keir Starmer laid out a timeline for his own departure and potential rivals backed a quick transition to the popular Manchester politician. While markets showed little reaction to the resignation, they were buoyed by reduced odds of a leadership contest that could have prolonged uncertainty.
Business
BJ’s Restaurants director Ottinger sells $149,372 of common stock

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Oklo: Almost Everything Has Changed Since My Sell Call – Almost
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SpaceX falls for third day, erases $600 billion in market value
The stock fell 16% Monday to close at $154.60, the lowest level since the company’s first day of trading, pushing its three-day loss to 23% and erasing over $600 billion in value over that period. The company’s market capitalization now sits just above $2 trillion.
“Sellers are back in control. Anyone in the world who wanted to buy this has bought it already,” said Michael O’Rourke, chief market strategist at JonesTrading.
SpaceX’s first days of trading following its record $75 billion initial public offering were met with the type of volatility generally associated with new IPOs that have a low float — 4.2% of total shares outstanding were available to trade on day one — and high interest from retail investors. Still, even with Monday’s losses, SpaceX is the sixth-largest company in the world with shares about 15% higher than their $135 IPO price.
BloombergThe rocket, satellite and AI conglomerate is seeking to raise at least $20 billion from the first bond offering, Bloomberg reported last week. SpaceX also inked a multibillion-dollar agreement to provide computing resources to Reflection AI, an AI startup, the company said Monday.
SpaceX’s embrace of artificial intelligence with the acquisition of Musk’s xAI in February meant investors closely watched the listing ahead of IPO prospects of competitors Anthropic PBC and OpenAI, both of which plan to go public as soon as this year with valuations expected to be around $1 trillion.
Retail trading in SpaceX, officially named Space Exploration Technologies Corp., was the strongest of any IPO in recent history, with the cohort buying net $405 million in the first five sessions according to Vanda Research. Retail investors bought more SpaceX last week than buying across all Magnificent Seven stocks combined, the data showed. On Monday, retail traders were still net buyers of SpaceX, but inflows were below last week’s levels, Vanda data showed. The stock was initiated with a recommendation of sector weight at KeyBanc Capital Markets, the first hold-equivalent rating according to data tracked by Bloomberg. Analysts led by Michael Leshock wrote that SpaceX is set to remain the leader in space-launch and adjacent verticals, but much of the long-term value is already captured in the stock price.
SpaceX “possesses significant disruptive growth avenues, though we believe this is reflected in current valuation and risk/reward appears balanced, in our view,” he wrote.
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Form 4 CrowdStrike Holdings Inc For: 22 June

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Should you be tracking your water level?
His company is one of several that makes sweat-analysing devices. In Epicore Biosystems’ case, that includes single-use sticky patches and sleeve-like wearables, which track the flow rate of sweat as it emerges from your skin, the sweat’s sodium (salt) content, and skin temperature, among other metrics.
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AST SpaceMobile: My Bet On The New Telecommunications Order
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Wall Street ends mixed as investors focus on Iran talks
The S&P 500 and the Nasdaq have closed down, dragged by declines in the megacap technology stocks including Alphabet.
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