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Is a tax refund spending surge really coming on April 15th next year? Will Americans pay down debt, or buy new stuff?



Photo above - If you're getting a big tax refund after April 15th, you're doing it wrong (the W-4 withholding worksheet). But that's the way the IRS wants it - free use of our money the previous 12 months.

According to Wall Street's JPMorgan (link below) the average federal income tax refund will go up $600 next year. Because Trump’s BBB (big beautiful bill) makes the new tax rates retroactive to January 1st, 2025, but the IRS never did anything to adjust worker and employer withholding.

The average tax refund is $3,000 even before the rate cuts anyway, so an extra $600 may not be the mind-blowing windfall JPMorgan imagines. Why are refunds so high? Some experts believe this is a deliberate strategy by workers who enjoy getting a big check each spring. Other experts believe those huge refunds are evidence that most people are flummoxed by America's complicated tax rules, and cannot select the proper withholding rate (see sample withholding worksheet above). I’m leaning toward the latter – there are 2,000 pages of IRS tax regulations for individual filers alone. I dare you to try and update your withholding worksheet. I dare you.

JPMorgan may also have done the math wrong on the second part of their prediction. They claim the average tariff rate will increase from 8% (today) to 14% in 2026. Which doesn’t relate to anything the White House is tweeting 24/7. But that’s not the problem. If tariffs are increasing 6%, how does JPMorgan figure that the average household will pay $2,400 MORE in tariffs next year? For that to be true, people would have to be spending more than $40,000 annually on imported stuff. Which might be true if you’re buying BMWs and 75 inch flat screen TVs every year, but that’s not how I personally live.

If you’re an investor, how should you "play" the extra $600 refund (other than investing your own pittance)? What stocks could surge because consumers go on a possible spending spree?

Auto stocks come to ,mind. That money - the whole $3,600 refund – could be the cash down payment on a new car lease. More likely however, the extra $600 is going to disappear in the blink of an eye on stuff like Doordash and DraftKings mobile betting. Because we are a nation of spenders, not savers. If you need any proof, just look at our $38 trillion national debt, which will surely get larger as tax rates are cut. Deficits are driven by spending and never cured by higher taxes.

I’m just sayin’ . . .



A tax-refund surge is coming, JPMorgan strategist says — and it’ll shift US economy like a new round of stimulus checks
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Avectoijesuismoi · 36-40
@jackjjackson you do the same thing you get the same result each and everytime.
If you input rubbish data into a computer it gives you rubbish incorrect results.
It is best not to give them money in the first place they will just squander it.
I am an unemployed and economically inactive individual (don't have a job and no intention of looking for one and depriving a person who genuinely needs the job of having it) I am also a very good Socialist (I love a good party).
FoxyGoddess · 51-55, F
I don't know. My federal returns have been so miniscule, despite what I've been paying into it. Ever since trump's first term, my tax returns are awful. I actually bring in more from the state, which is absurd.
SusanInFlorida · 31-35, F
@FoxyGoddess this is my situation as well. i usually owe federal taxes, but that's because i have 3 unrelated income sources. so far i'm dodging penalties for being under withheld. apparently as long as your withholding in the current year is more than the prior year, they don't penalize for a shortfall.
exchrist · 36-40
Based on the current situation I’m expecting most people will buy food assuming most people get anything back at all. Bankrupt America’s federal government is getting extra money? That is hasn’t already spent! From where?
SusanInFlorida · 31-35, F
@exchrist the number of people who no longer buy groceries and cook in their own apartments seems to be growing.

there are epic numbers of doordash, uber eats, and domino's deliveries every day of the week where i live.
exchrist · 36-40
@SusanInFlorida but those same people ordering out are complaining about not having money bc of increasing prices. If one wants to balance their budget ordering out isn’t the way to do that
SusanInFlorida · 31-35, F
@exchrist we are in agreement. if you lack the confidence, equipment, or skill to cook from stuff in the supermarket, you will forever be paying higher prices for delivery, or "read to go takeout meals" from fast food and supermarkets
exchrist · 36-40
Probably buy new stuff putting only a down payments on it. They should pay their debts but due to ongoing needs which are being unmet debt will only grow
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exchrist · 36-40
@Avectoijesuismoi the only debt I can justify is to buy food clothing and shelter. Extra of those three basics are excess. No excuse pay debt until I’m out of debilitating mafia (cartel) based interest rates and payments.
SusanInFlorida · 31-35, F
@exchrist agreed. i don't see anybody making an extra payment or 2 on their past due student loan balance. everyone is assuming that the whole thing will be canceled at some point by a future president.
You’re not wrong.
SusanInFlorida · 31-35, F
@jackjjackson thanks. i'm reassured. i've been wrong for 6 years in predicting a stock market correction.
What is the definition of repeating the same thing over and over and expecting a different result? @SusanInFlorida

 
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