XML 30 R16.htm IDEA: XBRL DOCUMENT v3.19.1
Note 8 - Income Taxes
12 Months Ended
Dec. 29, 2018
Notes to Financial Statements  
Income Tax Disclosure [Text Block]
8.
Income Taxes
 
Significant components of the provision (benefit) for income taxes for continuing operations are as follows:
 
(in thousands)
 
2018
   
2017
   
2016
 
Current:
                       
U.S. Federal
  $
-
    $
12
    $
11
 
U.S. State
   
51
     
18
     
8
 
Foreign
   
8,787
     
6,005
     
3,793
 
Total current
   
8,838
     
6,035
     
3,812
 
Deferred:
                       
U.S. Federal
   
56
     
(3,451
)    
91
 
U.S. State
   
-
     
(481
)    
47
 
Foreign
   
(8,263
)    
141
     
(1,203
)
Total deferred
   
(8,207
)    
(3,791
)    
(1,065
)
    $
631
    $
2,244
    $
2,747
 
 
Income (loss) before income taxes from continuing operations consisted of the following:
 
(in thousands)
 
2018
   
2017
   
2016
 
U.S.
  $
(42,682
)   $
1,430
    $
(13,420
)
Foreign
   
10,770
     
33,935
     
19,427
 
Total
  $
(31,912
)   $
35,365
    $
6,007
 
 
The Tax Act was enacted on
December 22, 2017,
and introduces significant changes to U.S. income tax law. Effective in
2018,
the Tax Act reduced the U.S. statutory tax rate from
35%
to
21%
and creates new taxes on certain foreign-sourced earnings and related-party payments, which are referred to as the global intangible low-taxed income ("GILTI") tax and the base erosion and anti-abuse tax, respectively. In addition, in
2017
we were subject to a
one
-time transition tax on accumulated foreign subsidiary earnings
not
previously subject to U.S. income tax. The Tax Act also repealed the alternative minimum tax (AMT) effective
January 1, 2018,
and made changes to net operating loss provisions, expensing of certain assets and capitalization of research and development expense with such changes effective for
2018
and later years.
 
Due to the timing of the enactment and the complexity involved in applying the provisions of the Tax Act, the Company made reasonable estimates of the effects and recorded provisional amounts in our financial statements as of
December 30, 2017
and for the
first
nine
months of
2018
by applying the guidance in SAB
118
because we had
not
completed our accounting for these effects. During
2018,
the Company completed the accounting for these effects. Except as described below under "One-time transition tax", due to the valuation allowance against our deferred tax assets, there was
no
net change made in
2018
to our
2017
enactment-date provisional income tax.
 
Under GAAP, we are allowed to make an accounting policy election to either (i) treat taxes due on future U.S. inclusions in taxable income related to GILTI as a current-period expense when incurred or (ii) factor such amounts into a company’s measurement of its deferred taxes. We have elected to account for GILTI as a period cost.
 
One-time transition tax
 
The Tax Act requires us to pay U.S. income taxes on accumulated foreign subsidiary earnings
not
previously subject to U.S. income tax at a rate of
15.5%
to the extent of foreign cash and certain other net current assets and
8%
on the remaining earnings. Foreign tax credits and net operating losses
may
be used to reduce this tax which is referred to as a transition or deemed repatriation tax.
 
In
2017
we recorded a provisional amount for our
one
-time transition tax liability of
$16.6
million and used foreign tax credits and net operating losses to fully offset this liability. In
2018
the IRS and U.S. Treasury issued Notice
2018
-
29
that addresses certain aspects of the calculation of the transition tax (“Notice
2018
-
29”
). Application of Notice
2018
-
29
resulted in an increase to our transition tax liability of approximately
$5.1
million that was fully offset by net operating losses resulting in
no
net increase to income tax expense.
 
Deferred tax effects
 
The Tax Act reduces the U.S. statutory tax rate from
35%
to
21%
for years after
2017.
Accordingly, we remeasured our deferred taxes as of
December 30, 2017
to reflect the reduced rate that will apply in future periods when these deferred taxes are settled or realized. We recognized a deferred tax benefit of
$4.0
million, net of a reduction in the related valuation allowance, to reflect the reduced U.S. tax rate and other effects of the Tax Act including the change in the life of NOL carryforwards from
20
years to indefinite.
 
Beginning in
2018,
the Tax Act provides a
100%
deduction for dividends received from
10
-percent owned foreign corporations by U.S. corporate shareholders, subject to a
one
-year holding period. Although dividend income is now exempt from U.S. federal tax in the hands of U.S. corporate shareholders, companies must still apply the guidance of ASC
740
-
30
-
25
-
18
to account for the tax consequences of outside basis differences and other tax impacts of their investments in non-U.S. subsidiaries.
 
Except for working capital requirements in certain foreign jurisdictions, we provide for all taxes, including withholding and other residual taxes, related to unremitted earnings of our foreign subsidiaries.
 
Deferred income taxes reflect the net tax effects of temporary differences between the carrying amounts of assets and liabilities for financial reporting and tax purposes. Significant components of our deferred tax assets and liabilities were as follows:
 
(in thousands)
 
2018
   
2017
 
Deferred tax assets:
               
Inventory, receivable and warranty reserves
  $
12,560
    $
3,417
 
Net operating loss carryforwards
   
65,587
     
7,467
 
Tax credit carryforwards
   
34,251
     
14,724
 
Accrued employee benefits
   
5,134
     
4,796
 
Deferred profit and gain on facility sale
   
3,032
     
3,617
 
Stock-based compensation
   
2,108
     
1,897
 
Acquisition basis differences
   
1,158
     
1,606
 
Other
   
3,637
     
208
 
Gross deferred tax assets
   
127,467
     
37,732
 
Less valuation allowance
   
(84,718
)    
(31,491
)
Total deferred tax assets
   
42,749
     
6,241
 
Deferred tax liabilities:
               
Depreciation and fixed asset related
   
3,156
     
120
 
Intangible assets and other acquisition basis differences
   
70,415
     
5,518
 
Unremitted earnings of foreign subsidiaries
   
5,257
     
2,002
 
Other
   
-
     
437
 
Total deferred tax liabilities
   
78,828
     
8,077
 
Net deferred tax liabilities
  $
(36,079
)   $
(1,836
)
 
Companies are required to assess whether a valuation allowance should be recorded against their deferred tax assets (“DTAs”) based on the consideration of all available evidence, using a “more likely than
not”
realization standard. The
four
sources of taxable income that must be considered in determining whether DTAs will be realized are, (
1
) future reversals of existing taxable temporary differences (i.e. offset of gross deferred tax assets against gross deferred tax liabilities); (
2
) taxable income in prior carryback years, if carryback is permitted under the tax law; (
3
) tax planning strategies and (
4
) future taxable income exclusive of reversing temporary differences and carryforwards.
 
In assessing whether a valuation allowance is required, significant weight is to be given to evidence that can be objectively verified. We have evaluated our DTAs each reporting period, including an assessment of our cumulative income or loss over the prior
three
-year period and future periods, to determine if a valuation allowance was required. A significant negative factor in our assessment was Cohu's
three
-year cumulative U.S. loss history at the end of various fiscal periods including
2018.
 
As a result of our cumulative,
three
-year U.S. GAAP pretax loss from continuing operations at the end of
2018
we were unable to conclude at
December 29, 2018,
that it was “more likely than
not”
that our U.S. DTAs would be realized. We will evaluate the realizability of our DTAs at the end of each quarterly reporting period in
2019
and should circumstances change it is possible the remaining valuation allowance, or a portion thereof, will be reversed in a future period.
 
Our valuation allowance on our DTAs at
December 29, 2018,
and
December 30, 2017,
was approximately
$84.7
million and
$31.5
 million, respectively. The remaining gross DTAs for which a valuation allowance was
not
recorded are realizable primarily through future reversals of existing taxable temporary differences. As the realization of DTAs is determined by tax jurisdiction, the deferred tax liabilities recorded by our non U.S. subsidiaries were
not
a source of taxable income in assessing the realization of our DTAs in the U.S.
 
The reconciliation of income tax computed at the U.S. federal statutory tax rate to the provision for income taxes for continuing operations is as follows:
 
(in thousands)
 
2018
   
2017
   
2016
 
Tax provision at U.S. 21% statutory rate (35% in 2017 & 2016)
  $
(6,702
)   $
12,378
    $
2,102
 
Impact of Tax Act, before reduction in valuation allowance
   
5,095
     
12,397
     
-
 
State income taxes, net of federal tax benefit
   
(663
)    
56
     
168
 
Settlements, adjustments and releases from statute expirations
   
(783
)    
(1,731
)    
(312
)
Federal tax credits
   
(864
)    
(371
)    
(183
)
Stock-based compensation
   
(838
)    
(2,801
)    
168
 
Executive compensation limited by Section 162(m)
   
3,456
     
246
     
-
 
Change in valuation allowance
   
(2,015
)    
(13,484
)    
2,430
 
Non-deductible transaction related costs
   
1,106
     
331
     
463
 
GILTI
   
3,531
     
-
     
-
 
Foreign rate differential
   
(435
)    
(4,866
)    
(2,378
)
Other, net
   
(257
)    
89
     
289
 
    $
631
    $
2,244
    $
2,747
 
 
At
December 29, 2018,
including carryforwards from the Xcerra acquisition as described below, we had federal, state and foreign net operating loss carryforwards of approximately
$244.2
 million,
$147.6
million and
$12.7
million, respectively, that expire in various tax years beginning in
2019
through
2038
or have
no
expiration date. We also have federal and state tax credit carryforwards at
December 29, 2018
of approximately
$13.5
 million and
$53.5
million, respectively, certain of which expire in various tax years beginning in
2019
through
2038
or have
no
expiration date. The federal and state loss and credit carryforwards are subject to annual limitations under Sections
382
and
383
of the Internal Revenue Code and applicable state tax law. We believe the state tax credit is
not
likely to be realized in the foreseeable future.
 
The Company has completed a Section 
382
and
383
analysis of the Internal Revenue Code and applicable state law, regarding the limitation of its net operating loss and business tax credit carryforwards as of
December 
29,
2018.
As a result of the analysis, the Company concluded that the acquisition of Xcerra on
October 1, 2018,
triggered a limitation in the utilization of Xcerra’s net operating loss and research credit carryforwards. The Company has reduced its deferred tax assets related to the Xcerra U.S. net operating loss and credit carryforwards that are anticipated to expire unused as a result of ownership changes. These tax attributes have been excluded from deferred tax assets with a corresponding reduction of the valuation allowance with
no
net effect on the income tax provision or effective tax rate. The Company will continue to assess the realizability of these carryforwards in subsequent periods. Future changes in the ownership of Cohu could further limit the utilization of these carryforwards.
 
We have certain tax holidays with respect to our operations in Malaysia and the Philippines. These holidays require compliance with certain conditions and expire at various dates through
2027.
The impact of these holidays was an increase in net income of approximately
$2.4
million or
$0.08
per share in
2018,
$2.8
 million, or
$0.10
per share, in
2017
and
$1.0
million, or
$0.04
per share, in fiscal
2016.
 
A reconciliation of our gross unrecognized tax benefits, excluding accrued interest and penalties, is as follows:
 
(in thousands)
 
2018
   
2017
   
2016
 
Balance at beginning of year
  $
10,321
    $
10,075
    $
10,444
 
Gross additions for tax positions of current year
   
524
     
200
     
125
 
Gross additions for tax positions of prior years
   
191
     
58
     
58
 
Reductions due to lapse of the statute of limitations
   
(645
)    
(1,148
)    
(446
)
Gross additions related to Xcerra and Kita acquisitions
   
24,352
     
900
     
-
 
Foreign exchange rate impact
   
(42
)    
236
     
(106
)
Balance at end of year
  $
34,701
    $
10,321
    $
10,075
 
 
If the unrecognized tax benefits at
December 29, 2018
are ultimately recognized, excluding the impact of U.S. tax benefits netted against deferred taxes that are subject to a valuation allowance, approximately
$8.2
 million (
$4.3
 million at
December 30, 2017)
would result in a reduction in our income tax expense and effective tax rate. It is reasonably possible that our gross unrecognized tax benefits as of
December 29, 2018,
could decrease in
2019
by approximately
$2.7
 million as a result of the expiration of certain statutes of limitations.
 
We recognize interest and penalties related to unrecognized tax benefits in income tax expense. Cohu had approximately
$1.5
 million and
$1.1
 million accrued for the payment of interest and penalties at
December 
29,
 
2018,
and
December 30, 2017,
respectively. Interest expense, net of accrued interest reversed, was
$0.6
 million in
2018,
$(
0.3
) million in
2017
and
not
significant in
2016.
 
Our U.S. federal and state income tax returns for years after
2014
and
2013,
respectively, remain open to examination, subject to the statute of limitations. Net operating loss and credit carryforwards arising prior to these years are also open to examination if and when utilized. The statute of limitations for the assessment and collection of income taxes related to our foreign tax returns varies by country. In the foreign countries where we have significant operations these time periods generally range from
four
to
ten
years after the year for which the tax return is due or the tax is assessed. Our German subsidiaries income tax returns for
2012
to
2016
 are currently under routine examination by tax authorities in Germany.