Pineapple used to be one of those loner fruits – you didn’t really eat it with anything else. Maybe you ate it with other fruits. In Jell-o.
But it never crossed the dessert/entrée barrier. But pizza changed that. Now you can find pineapple on topping lists or on grills heating up as a side dish across the country.
Technology is becoming the pineapple for the entire food and beverage (F&B) manufacturing industry. Once upon a time, tech was a stand-alone sector. You had the software and gadgets and then you had everything else.
But technology is now the ingredients, toppings, and side dishes of nearly every industry on earth, including food and beverage.
Of course, many people may think GMO when they associate tech with food, but that’s not where this is going. Tech investors are beginning to stuff their capital into food startups. Businesses like “virtual kitchens” (delivery-only restaurants) and meal kit services are whetting investor appetites.
Food has always attracted investors, of course. Humans must eat. No declining economy or evaporating trends stop people from consuming food - the only variables may be what people eat and drink and how they acquire it.
R&D Credits – They’re Not Just for Breakfast Anymore |
So now with a booming economy, U.S. citizens are spending more on food annually than many other essentials, such as health care. The Department of Agriculture confirms this with a revelation that consumers – including businesses and government entities – doled out approximately $1.62 trillion for food and beverages in 2017.1
The public-at-large is willing to spend more for conveniences and innovations when it comes to food. And venture capitalists are piling on their funding in response.
They’ve layered investments into food-based tech companies from $60 million to $1 billion in just seven years.2 They see the potential and they want a taste.
Though restaurant-to-customer remains the leader in food delivery, platform-to-customer (app delivery services, such as Grubhub) looks sweet with a $3.5 billion investment in the first ten months of 2018. 2 Meat alternatives market growth also looks appetizing with an estimated worth of $4.6 billion in 2018 - and a projected rise to $6.43 billion by 2023. 2
Tech investors aren’t the only way food and beverage startups can stuff their pockets. Research and development (R&D) tax credits can add some meat too.
This federal corporate income tax credit can help F&B startups secure a dollar-for-dollar reduction in federal tax liability for qualifying research and development activities, such as:
And to top off your glass, recently in 2016, new tax provisions granted startup companies an opportunity to offset their corporate payroll taxes through qualifying R&D credits.
Startups can qualify for up to $250,000 in credits against payroll tax each year if they’ve produced less than $5 million in gross receipts for the year in which they are claiming the credit. This affords new, struggling or emerging businesses the ability to maximize their tax saving potential.
With what may have seemed an unlikely pairing, the tech and F&B sectors now find themselves together on the same investor menu, and the R&D tax credit lends a real helping hand to new food and beverage companies that have - or haven’t yet - caught an investor’s eye.
Of course, to ensure all potential credits are delivered to their door, organizations should consult a tax professional.