A growing cohort of corporate executives is structuring nonqualified deferred compensation arrangements to push up to $300,000 in income past December 31st, a move driven by the arithmetic of marginal tax rates rather than any single regulatory trigger. By electing deferral before year-end, high earners avoid immediate federal income tax at the 37% top bracket, allowing pre-tax dollars to compound inside the plan until distribution. The mechanics are straightforward: the executive forgoes current receipt of wages or bonus, the employer retains the obligation as an unsecured liability, and the funds grow without annual tax drag. The calculus favors deferral when the executive expects a lower effective rate at distribution, whether through retirement, a lower-income year, or a change in tax law. What to watch: any post-election legislative movement on individual income tax rates would directly reprice the value of existing deferral elections, potentially accelerating or discouraging new commitments heading into 2025 planning cycles.
US inflation hit 4.1% in May 2026, its highest level in three years, driven by rising energy prices, keeping a Federal Reserve rate hike in September firmly on the table. Consumer spending rose on tax refunds and a stock market rally, while business investment in AI equipment also rebounded.
RBI data through May 2026 shows that its 85 basis point repo rate cuts since February 2025 are only partially reaching borrowers, with lending rate transmission described as moderated. Slower pass-through limits relief for loan holders and may pressure the RBI to cut rates further to achieve its growth goals.
U.S. consumer prices rose at a 4.2% annual rate in May, the fastest pace in three years, driven by a spike in energy costs. The reading puts pressure on the Federal Reserve to respond, with potential knock-on effects for interest rates, borrowing costs, and household purchasing power.
US inflation rose to a three-year high in May, driven by surging gas and energy prices tied to the Middle East conflict. The reading complicates the Federal Reserve's path toward cutting interest rates and keeps pressure on household budgets.