Bonds

Puerto Rico’s December revenues 28% ahead of projections

Puerto Rico’s general fund net revenues were 28% above projections in December and 14% higher than those of December 2021.

Through the first six months of the fiscal year, net revenues came in 14% ahead of projections and 3% ahead of July to December 2021, according to the Puerto Rico Department of the Treasury. 

Net revenues for December were $1.411 billion and $5.422 billion for the fiscal first half. 

In December the categories with the biggest revenues were corporate income taxes with $467 million, the sales and use tax with $292 million, and individual income tax with $270 million.  

For the month, the categories that exceeded Puerto Rico Oversight Board projections the most were corporate income taxes, $179.4 million above estimates, and individual income taxes which were $77 million higher than predicted. The categories that exceeded December 2021 figures the most were corporate income taxes, $144 million better, and individual income taxes $59 million more. 

In the fiscal year’s first six months, the revenue categories with the largest collections were corporate income taxes ($1.239 billion), individual income taxes ($1.184 billion), the sales and use tax ($1.065 billion), and the foreign corporate excise tax ($575 million). 

During that period, the categories that exceeded projections the most were corporate income taxes ($322 million), individual income taxes ($207 million), and taxes on non-residents ($96 million). The only two categories that significantly exceeded collections from the first half of fiscal 2022 were corporate income ($172 million) and individual income ($160 million).

December was the last month for the foreign corporate excise, or Law 154, tax. It was replaced by the Act 52 tax. In the fiscal year’s first six months, the Law 154 tax accounted for 9.6% of gross revenues. 

Articles You May Like

Mutual fund inflows top $1.2B, half into HY
Muni buyers focus on primary, traders ignore more UST losses
Trump picks Scott Bessent as Treasury secretary
Data centers powering artificial intelligence could use more electricity than entire cities
PFM CEO Dan Hartman to transition to client-facing role