ATLANTA, Dec. 17, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- PowerPlan, a leading provider of financial software solutions for energy companies, today announced the general availability of Provision NXT, its ...
The One Big Beautiful Bill Act is a massive bill that overhauls much of the U.S. tax system. Our Federal & International Tax and State & Local Tax teams cover the Act’s key tax provisions for ...
Taxpayers are taking a second look at the Taxpayer Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017. Some—but not all—of those provisions are set to expire in 2025. And while some changes are welcome, some—like limits on ...
The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (the OBBBA), Pub. L. No. 119-21, was enacted July 4, 2025. The OBBBA makes numerous changes to the United States Internal Revenue Code of 1986 (the Code). Fulfilling a ...
WASHINGTON, DC - JULY 04: President Donald Trump, joined by Republican lawmakers, signs the One, Big Beautiful Bill Act into law. (Photo by Samuel Corum/Getty Images) Now that the ink has dried on the ...
With 30 tax provisions set to expire at the end of 2025, the tax liabilities for family farms could increase at a time America’s farm families can ill afford any additional hits to the budget.
With the blustery cold we have seen across most parts of the country in recent days, it’s hard to believe that spring is right around the corner. Springtime brings planting, fresh blossoms, and, of ...
WASHINGTON (AP) — Congressional Republicans agreed to remove the so-called revenge tax provision from President Donald Trump’s big bill on Thursday after a request by Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent.
Fund managers and Wall Street executives say a small provision inside the Big, Beautiful Bill could crush foreign investment into the United States. The sweeping budget and tax bill that passed the ...
Republicans are set to drop one of the most controversial elements in their plan to steeply hike annual taxes on private colleges’ and universities’ annual investment income: the exclusion of ...
WASHINGTON − What happens in Vegas will be staying more with the IRS from now on. That’s because of an obscure provision to reduce the tax deduction for gambling losses, which Congress recently ...
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