Ensuring Better Interest Treatment and Deductibility Act (EBITDA)
Summary
The EBITDA Act (HR8101) repeals the 2022 tightening of Section 163(j) interest deductibility, restoring the more favorable EBITDA-based cap for tax years beginning after 2025. This directly reduces tax liabilities for capital-intensive, highly leveraged companies across telecoms, autos, and infrastructure, freeing hundreds of millions in after-tax cash flow. Banks benefit from improved corporate credit quality. The bill is in early legislative stages (referred to Ways & Means) with a Senate companion.
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Key Takeaways
- 1.EBITDA Act reverses 2022's 163(j) tightening, restoring EBITDA-based interest deductibility for tax years starting after 2025.
- 2.Telecoms $T and $VZ are the largest beneficiaries; estimated $400M+ annual tax savings each from broader deduction capacity.
- 3.Automakers $GM and $F gain $150M-$500M each in annual tax savings, improving FCF for EV transition investments.
- 4.Banks $BAC, $JPM, $WFC see secondary benefit from reduced credit risk across leveraged corporate loan portfolios.
- 5.Bill is early stage (Ways & Means referral) but coordinated with Senate companion — plausible in 2026 tax legislation.
- 6.Current stock trends show financials rising (BAC +2.6% 7-day) while autos falling (F -4.2% 7-day), decoupled from tax bill prospects.
Market Implications
Current market data shows financial stocks consolidating near recent highs — BAC at $53.40 (52-week range $39.58-$57.55), JPM at $312.54 ($242.17-$337.25), and WFC at $81.94 ($70.43-$97.76) — all well above their 52-week lows and showing positive 7-day momentum. This reflects a strong banking sector independent of tax legislation. Telecom stocks show mixed signals: VZ at $47.74 (up 2.93% 7-day) and T at $26.21 (flat 7-day), with both near the lower half of their 52-week ranges. The EBITDA Act would provide a structural catalyst for both telecoms, improving leverage and dividend sustainability. Immediate price action will track committee movement and tax reform speculation rather than bill text. Investors should watch Ways & Means markup scheduling for the first signal of momentum.
Full Analysis
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What the bill does
Repeal of EBITDA-based ATI cap modification (Section 163(j)(8)(A)(vi) of the Internal Revenue Code), restoring pre-2022 interest deductibility limit of 30% of EBITDA instead of 30% of EBIT for tax years beginning after December 31, 2025.
Who must act
C-corporations with net business interest expense, particularly highly leveraged firms with significant depreciation/amortization.
What happens
Restored EBITDA-based cap allows corporations to deduct more interest expense (EBITDA is larger than EBIT for capital-intensive firms), reducing taxable income and increasing after-tax cash flow available for debt service and operations.
Stock impact
Bank of America's commercial and corporate loan portfolio (Q1 2026 net interest income ~$14.5B) faces reduced credit risk as leveraged borrowers' tax liabilities decrease and debt service coverage ratios improve via higher after-tax cash flows. Lower default probability on C&I loans supports net interest margin stability and reduces loan loss provisions.
What the bill does
Repeal of EBITDA-based ATI cap modification (Section 163(j)(8)(A)(vi)), restoring pre-2022 interest deductibility limit of 30% of EBITDA for tax years beginning after December 31, 2025.
Who must act
C-corporations with net business interest expense, particularly highly leveraged firms with significant depreciation/amortization.
What happens
Restored EBITDA-based cap allows corporations to deduct more interest expense, reducing taxable income and increasing after-tax cash flow available for debt service and operations.
Stock impact
Wells Fargo's commercial banking franchise, with heavy exposure to middle-market and energy sector borrowers (energy loans ~$40B), benefits significantly as these capital-intensive borrowers gain the most from EBITDA-based deductibility. Improved debt service coverage ratios reduce non-performing loan risk.
Market Impact Score
Connected Signals
Matched on shared policy language across AI analyses, with ticker & timing weight
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Executive orders & memoranda affecting the same sectors or companies
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