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Billionaires

California's 'Billionaire Tax' Could Bite Harder Than Advertised

The proposed tax is already driving people and businesses to flee the state.

J.D. Tuccille | 1.21.2026 7:00 AM

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The California State Capitol, with money flying all around it. | Illustration: Feverpitched | Dreamstime | Wikimedia Commons | Midjourney
(Illustration: Feverpitched | Dreamstime | Wikimedia Commons | Midjourney)

California's potential adoption of a one-time 5 percent "billionaire tax" on the net worth of high-value individuals is already sending wealthy residents fleeing for the exits. By one estimate, at least a trillion dollars has moved beyond the reach of state officials. But a new analysis says the tax may be even more onerous than advertised. Californians may need to get used to the sight of moving vans leaving the state.

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Give Us 5 Percent of Everything You Own

Sponsored by a chapter of the Service Employees International Union, the proposed billionaire tax is set to appear as an initiative on the California ballot in November. According to the summary approved by state Attorney General Rob Bonta, the measure "imposes one-time tax of up to 5% on taxpayers and trusts with covered assets valued over $1 billion; covered assets include businesses, securities, art, collectibles, and intellectual property, but exclude real property and some pensions and retirement accounts." If passed, the tax would apply to people resident in California as of January 1, 2026—a retroactive element bound to be challenged in court.

The ostensible purpose of the tax, per its sponsors, is to "save California's healthcare system from collapse," though money is fungible and the state has spent itself into an $18 billion deficit for the 2026–2027 budget, according to the nonpartisan Legislative Analyst's Office.

That 5-percent skim of total assets based on the estimated value of current holdings could force those affected to sell stocks and other holdings to cover the bill, diluting and potentially losing control of companies they own. After all, estimated value isn't cash in hand. That has many of those targeted by the tax looking for new homes for themselves and their businesses beyond the state border.

People and Money Flee Across the Border

According to The Washington Post's Elizabeth Dwoskin and Caroline O'Donovan, "a slew of founders and other ultra-wealthy industry leaders are reducing their ties with the state." They named David Sacks, Peter Thiel, Larry Page, and Sergey Brin among those who are severing connections to California.

While the tax is specifically targeted at billionaires, lower-worth entrepreneurs are also reportedly leaving. They're worried that the state's political environment has turned against business creation and that it will be safer to invest elsewhere.

"The total wealth that has left California is now $1T," prominent venture capitalist Chamath Palihapitiya posted on X January 10. "We had $2T of billionaire wealth just a few weeks ago. Now, 50% of that wealth has left - taking their income tax revenue, sales tax revenue, real estate tax revenue and all their staffs (and their salaries and income taxes) with them."

But while advocates of the tax alternately scoff and fume at the exodus of wealthy businesspeople, the reality of the tax could be even worse than feared. A recent analysis says the proposed tax bites harder than its proponents admit. That could push yet more wealth out of California.

Five Percent Understates the Pain

"The 2026 Billionaire Tax Act, a California ballot initiative, would ostensibly impose a one-time tax of 5 percent on the net worth of the state's billionaires," notes Jared Walczak for the Tax Foundation. "Due, however, to aggressive design choices and possible drafting errors, the actual rate on taxpayers' net worth could be dramatically higher. One particularly momentous policy choice has the potential to strip the founders of some of the world's largest companies of their controlling interests and force them to sell off a significant portion of their shares."

According to Walczak, there are many ways in which the initiative creates situations under which "tax liability would be vastly more than 5 percent of net worth." He focuses on six of them: valuations based on voting interests; assessment rules that can overvalue privately held businesses; excessive underpayment penalties that encourage overvaluing privately held businesses; anti-avoidance rules that tax more than the amount of transfers; provisions on spousal assets and debt to relatives that would tax nonresidents' assets; and deferrals that would tax wealth that no longer exists.

As an example, Walczak points to the initiative's means for valuing voting shares that aren't publicly traded. DoorDash founder Tony Xu owns 2.6 percent of the company but controls 57.6 percent of voting rights. The initiative specifies, "the percentage of the business entity owned by the taxpayer shall be presumed to be not less than the taxpayer's percentage of the overall voting or other direct control rights."

That means Xu could be taxed on his voting rights rather than his economic stake in the company. That turns a $2.41 billion ownership interest into a $4.17 billion tax liability. It could force the conversion of voting shares to common stock for sale (subject to capital gains tax), and loss of control of the company.

The other provisions examined by Walczak also impose potential tax liabilities far beyond the 5 percent claimed by the initiative's sponsors.

High Taxes Historically Fuel Migration

Few people have much affection for billionaires these days. But when has a tax targeted at the ultra-wealthy ever remained focused on them? The federal income tax was introduced in 1913 to "soak the rich" but politicians soon extended it to average earners. Now most of us file with the IRS every year. Assumptions that the billionaire tax would follow the same pattern drive many would-be entrepreneurs to seek greener pastures for what they hope will be successful business ventures.

"If the initiative passes, California must brace for an exodus of founders and investors fleeing not just extraordinarily high tax burdens, but also the potential loss of the companies they created," warns Walczak.

None of this should be a surprise. Research demonstrates that Americans tend to migrate from higher tax states to those with less burdensome regimes. In 2024, summarizing an economic paper examining state-level tax policies from 1900 to 2010, the University of California-Riverside noted, "the introduction of income tax in the post-World War II era led to out-migration by wealthy Americans" from states that imposed the tax. "Implementing higher taxes was not well accepted by many wealthy Americans—their higher income allows them to be more mobile, and therefore able to seek new residency in states with lower personal income tax or no tax."

Even before the adoption of the more-painful-than-advertised billionaire tax, California is in the process of relearning an old lesson. All things considered, people prefer to be taxed less. If they have the means to do so, they'll move from places that treat them like milking cows to friendlier environs.

The Rattler is a weekly newsletter from J.D. Tuccille. If you care about government overreach and tangible threats to everyday liberty, this is for you.

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NEXT: Brickbat: Leave the Driving to Us

J.D. Tuccille is a contributing editor at Reason.

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  1. Don't look at me! ( Is the war over yet?)   3 weeks ago

    *nelson voice* HA HA!

    Log in to Reply
  2. Mickey Rat   3 weeks ago

    State legislator offended that people think their wealth belongs to them:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bR_xm73NT_I

    "I I have of two minds of this. One is uh you made your and I said it to one this weekend. I said you made all your money in California. You ungrateful piece of, uh you could figure out a way to get pay more taxes and you and you. We deserve the taxes from you given you made your wealth here."

    Log in to Reply
    1. CE   3 weeks ago

      California already took the taxes the first time, when the wealth was earned.

      This is practically an unconstitutional bill of attainder, targeting a small number of individuals, criminalizing their success, and levying a hefty fine on them for creating businesses and jobs.

      Log in to Reply
  3. Longtobefree   3 weeks ago

    1. It won't be one time.
    2. It won't stay 5%.
    3. It will be expanded beyond "billionaires".

    Log in to Reply
    1. Longtobefree   3 weeks ago

      The more I think about it, this type of taxing non-liquid assets is why Californians voted for Prop 13 back in the day.

      Log in to Reply
    2. Thoritsu   3 weeks ago

      Expand it to the moon, and watch CA decline. Evidence of failed policy!

      Log in to Reply
      1. rswallen   3 weeks ago

        So THAT'S why Elon wants to colonise Mars. Checkmate, California!

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    3. CE   3 weeks ago

      And it will tank the economy, if billionaires are forced to sell off huge chunks of stock all at once. Everyone's 401k and IRA balances will drop, and California's expected capital gains tax revenues from millions of regular working people will be much lower than expected.

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    4. rbike   3 weeks ago

      Trillionaires next?

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      1. Rick James   3 weeks ago

        No, ten thousandaires next.

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    5. NM Dave   3 weeks ago

      This is an absolute fact. As I recall, some countries have tried this and it was a miserable failure, for many reasons, not the least of which is that it's completely unenforceable. Also, do you know how to determine the value of art? Real Estate? Sell it.

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      1. Iwanna Newname   3 weeks ago

        And what about shares of companies not publicly traded? Is the state going to go in and count inventory? Make a guesstimate of what a company is worth? Force a sell of the company to assess its value? Make up a number out of thin air?

        Log in to Reply
  4. Thoritsu   3 weeks ago

    All laws are social experiments. Unfortunately very few have a controls or are viewed as such, and the results are debated arbitrarily and unscientifically.

    I applaud the vociferous implementation of this law, and those in NYC, with a clear view of the outcomes. If the wealthy exit California and California's economy suffers, we see the consequences of trying to persecute the wealthy and successful out of envy.

    We need to see these results. The worse the better!

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    1. Rick James   3 weeks ago

      Agreed. Allow the lab techs destroy their laboratory of Democracy.

      Log in to Reply
    2. NM Dave   3 weeks ago

      I'm not sure anyone can predict the chaotic damage this will cause. Trump will be envious of Newsome's insanity.

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  5. HorseConch   3 weeks ago

    The truly amazing part of this is the idiots acting surprised that half of the billionaire wealth is already gone, and with it, a hell of a lot of state income tax. They pretend like Newsom is against it while being completely silent about it until it was way too late. Also, this has been a goal of many leftists for quite a while.

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    1. Thoritsu   3 weeks ago

      When they figure it out, they will want to expand the policy to the whole US so there is "nowhere" to go. They can not admit their version of envious fairness is morally, ethically wrong, AND self-defeating.

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  6. rswallen   3 weeks ago

    "A one-time 5% tax on the wealth of billionaires? Sounds like a great idea, with the best on intentions. What could possibly go wrong!"

    It's going to be funny if/when this tax ends up reducing overall tax revenue rather than increase it.

    Log in to Reply
    1. HorseConch   3 weeks ago

      It already has, and it hasn't been voted on. All of those billionaires that just relocated were paying a lot of taxes that just disappeared completely.

      Log in to Reply
    2. Eeyore   3 weeks ago

      The when was about a month ago.

      Log in to Reply
      1. Medulla Oblongata   3 weeks ago

        Because the tax proposal has a retroactive (I think not legal, but SCOTUS has allowed it) initiation date.

        Log in to Reply
        1. Iwanna Newname   3 weeks ago

          Why stop at January 1, 2026? They should go full barbaric and go back 10 years and really rape the tech billionaires.

          Log in to Reply
    3. Mickey Rat   3 weeks ago

      The evidence abounds that Left wing politicians are genuinely stupid. They may be evil as well, but their biggest trait is abject stupidity

      Log in to Reply
      1. Eeyore   3 weeks ago

        "Never attribute to just malice that which is better explained by both stupidity and malice" - Eeyore's hammer.

        Log in to Reply
      2. MWAocdoc   3 weeks ago

        I disagree. It is not a sign of stupidity to do something popular while in office that enhances your political career - at least temporarily - and for which you are extremely unlikely to be punished. The stupidity, if any, lies in the perpetual and unrelenting wishful thinking of the voters.

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      3. Longtobefree   3 weeks ago

        If they are so stupid, how come they rule California?
        Look around you grasshopper.

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    4. Medulla Oblongata   3 weeks ago

      If every affected billionaire decides to spend a few million to fight it in courts all the way up to SCOTUS, and if they refuse to join a class--"each of our tax situations is different", making California have to pay to stay in the game in the courts, it could easily run up a $100M tab.

      And it will cause at least some of those affected by the "one-time" tax to move out to ensure that the deal is not altered further. Fool me once, shame on you, fool me twice, not in this fucking lifetime.

      Log in to Reply
      1. Eeyore   3 weeks ago

        Won't California's staff lawyers get paid either way? The biggest win is just to deny California the revenue in the first place.

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        1. Medulla Oblongata   3 weeks ago

          Some have already moved (before the retroactive cutoff date). Some have said they don't think it will pass, and stayed. Some expressed that they don't care, but I think once they get a $20B tax bill they might have second thoughts. I figure among those two groups will be people who can afford to fight should this it come to pass.

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    5. I, Woodchipper   3 weeks ago

      Raising tax revenue is not the goal of the initiative. They WANT to destroy wealth. It's that simple.

      Log in to Reply
  7. Medulla Oblongata   3 weeks ago

    https://x.com/chamath/status/2010215459522548184

    Unfortunate update as of today:

    More calls from friends. The total wealth that has left California is now $1T.

    We had $2T of billionaire wealth just a few weeks ago. Now, 50% of that wealth has left - taking their income tax revenue, sales tax revenue, real estate tax revenue and all their staffs (and their salaries and income taxes) with them.

    In other words, by starting this ill conceived attempt at an asset tax, the California budget deficit will explode. And we still don’t know if the tax will even make the ballot.

    California billionaires were reliable tax payers - 13.3% every year. They were the sheep you could shear forever. Now California will lose this revenue source FOREVER.

    Unless this ballot initiative is pulled, we will not stop the billionaire exodus. With no rich people left in California, the middle class will have to foot the bill.

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    1. CE   3 weeks ago

      Plus California has lost all the new companies those billionaires would have helped fund. Venture capital is moving to Miami.

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  8. Medulla Oblongata   3 weeks ago

    Jeff Bezos supported Washington’s proposed billionaire tax. According to the Tax Foundation, he then announced a move to Miami, Florida, shortly before its passage, allowing him to forgo paying any wealth tax and upending the legislation’s potential.

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  9. Medulla Oblongata   3 weeks ago

    https://www.forbes.com/sites/nathangoldman/2026/01/19/california-billionaire-tax-why-some-billionaires-are-planning-exits/

    The Tax Foundation highlights that, as a function of design issues and potential drafting errors, the 5% wealth tax is actually much larger than that. In particular, a billionaire’s valuation is based on voting interests. The article uses Tony Xu, the founder of DoorDash, as an example. Xu owns 2.6% of the company but controls 57.6% of the vote. In this example, Xu has a $2.41 billion net worth based on his ownership in the company. However, as a consequence of the bill as currently written, Xu’s wealth tax consequence would be $4.17 billion, or 173% of his company ownership.

    The Tax Foundation highlights five other California billionaires whose tax liability would be well over the 5% being advertised, including David Baszucki (Roblox), Sergey Brin (Alphabet), Larry Page (Alphabet), Mark Zuckerberg (Meta), and Jensen Huang (Nvidia). This raises questions about whether affected taxpayers would remain in California due to the unusually high wealth tax rate they would be facing.

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  10. MWAocdoc   3 weeks ago

    "save California's healthcare system from collapse"

    I laughed so hard I blew coffee out through my nose! A one-time tax to correct a long-term and growing mismanagement problem? OMFG! I suppose it's understandable that the public employee unions expect the clueless masses to buy into this fantasy. But are Californians in general really that stupid? "I guess we'll find out!"

    And by the way, I remember when the Washington State Legislature implemented the State Lottery and promised that all of the proceeds would go to fund public education in the state. Would you care to guess how long THAT "promise" lasted? Washingonians pay some of the highest petrol taxes in the nation, which the legislature promised would go to repair and maintenance of the state's highways. Would you care to guess how far behind the state highway maintenance projects are now?

    Log in to Reply
    1. I, Woodchipper   3 weeks ago

      They spent $12B on medicaid for illegal immigrants just in one year.

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      1. damikesc   3 weeks ago

        It is odd how they can at least go a long way to fix the budget issue and they absolutely will not.

        Have Republicans destroy the filibuster and pass a law saying that only citizens can be used in terms of apportionment for Congressional seats.

        That ALONE would end all sanctuary policies the next day

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  11. DRM   3 weeks ago

    There are four possibilities:

    1. The tax is enacted. Anyone halfway sane and at the 90th percentile of wealth or higher flees California, because the voters, having proved willing to do it once, must be presumed willing to do it again.

    2. The tax is defeated by 3:2 or closer. Anyone fully sane and at the 95th percentile of wealth or higher flees California, because the voters have shown too much willingness, and it will be attempted again.

    3. The tax is defeated by more than 3:2. California residency might be worth risking even for the 1%, if there's a particular financial advantage.

    4. The tax fails to make the ballot. California turns out to be much saner than anyone could have reasonably expected. Maybe the idiots in the state legislature learn something and start displaying more sanity themselves.

    Log in to Reply
    1. Medulla Oblongata   3 weeks ago

      The tax proposal says that the tax is retroactive to 1 Jan 2026. If you didn't flee already, you're stuck with the bill.

      Log in to Reply
      1. Rossami   3 weeks ago

        That retroactivity will certainly be challenged in court. I give it no better than a 50/50 of surviving.

        Log in to Reply
    2. CE   3 weeks ago

      But the people voting on the initiative are the same people who think a bond measure is funded by the people buying the bonds and not the taxpayers when the money loaned to the state by the bond buyers is paid back.

      Log in to Reply
  12. I, Woodchipper   3 weeks ago

    This is one of the dumbest ideas californians have ever come up with and it's going to pass with flying colors.

    Log in to Reply
  13. CE   3 weeks ago

    Well that didn't go as planned.... half the targeted wealth just walked out the door.

    Californians like to point out that California has the world's fifth largest economy. But most of that wealth is due to the billionaire technology entrepreneurs in Silicon Valley and the venture capital industry that has grown up around them to fund new ventures. California isn't just chasing off the people who have already succeeded, it is ensuring that the future economic growth they would have created will occur in Florida or Texas instead.

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    1. Longtobefree   3 weeks ago

      Also, a great deal of that "economy" is based on the federal government's activity.
      Take away the military itself, the military contracts, the tourism based on federal parks, all the federal employees, etc. and see what the true "California" economy is.

      Log in to Reply
      1. Medulla Oblongata   3 weeks ago

        And don't forget that the "GDP" includes the state government, too.

        Log in to Reply
  14. Use the Schwartz   3 weeks ago

    Well, the means of production isn't just going to seize itself!

    Log in to Reply
  15. BadLib   3 weeks ago

    I encourage Californians to sign the petition to put this on the ballot -- but only after verifying that the person gathering petitions is being paid "by the signature".

    If the measure fails to make it to the ballot, the union just wasted a bunch of money gathering signatures (a good thing).

    If the measure makes to the ballot, we get to see how stupid California voters are (a good thing to know) and the union(s) have to spend a whole lot of money trying to convince voters to vote for it (another good thing).

    If the proposition fails at the ballot box, we have some (tiny) hope that there is some (tiny) hope for California (perhaps a good thing to know).

    If the proposition succeeds at the ballot box, we know that it's likely time to give up on California and let it fall into the abyss (as a lifelong Californian this would be sad but there is already much to be sad about in California). Also, California can then serve as an object lesson to the other Blue states as the voters get what they demanded and deserve.

    Log in to Reply
    1. Rick James   3 weeks ago

      If the measure makes to the ballot, we get to see how stupid California voters are (a good thing to know) and the union(s) have to spend a whole lot of money trying to convince voters to vote for it (another good thing).

      We already know how stupid California voters are. How many beers do Californians have to tell us to hold before we know what's about to happen is retarded?

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  16. TJJ2000   3 weeks ago

    What do you mean. Didn't the 'Guns' (Gov-Guns) make ?free? healthcare & sh*t?
    STOP running people. Your labor and belongings is the ?free? politicians were advertising.

    It truly is amazing the amount of cognitive dissonance and ignorance the human population entertains.
    If 'Guns' don't make sh*t where do people think the ?free? comes from?

    Log in to Reply
  17. creech   3 weeks ago

    No need to piss off the billionaires to raise revenue. Just raise fares on the extremely successful bullet train.

    Log in to Reply
  18. aronofskyd   3 weeks ago

    The proposed tax is dumb. Relocation to Texas or Florida, where there are no state income, estate or inheritance taxes, takes less than 24 hours as many wealthy former California's have easily learned. The wealthy live quite well in both once they get used to the weather.

    Log in to Reply
    1. Longtobefree   3 weeks ago

      This may be a surprise to you, but with a few million for central heat and (especially) air, you can live very comfortably in Florida.

      Log in to Reply
  19. ruffsoft   3 weeks ago

    There is no evidence to back up this propagand claim, intended to frighten Californians into oppose the one time wealth tax, which the article misleadng implies is paid all at once. It can be paid 20% a year for 5 yrs.
    Who has left the state? Why does this dual citizen billionaires claims have the wealth has left the state but provides not one single actual person, including himself who has several mansions in California. And anyway, it's two late, if passed, the bill would levy this tax on any billionaire (it applies to no one else) was a resdent on Jan1 of this year. We also hear this about taxing the uberrich: they will leave. And then they don't because California is the world hub of high technology on which most of these fortunes are built. It's horsepucky meant to scare people. Imagine you have 20 billion; next year you will only have 19 billion 800 million at the end of the first year..and in 5 yrs, you would only have 19 billion 500 million. Ouch!
    Last year, billioinaires in the US saw a rise of 18% in their wealth, so that 1% would hurt like hell, leaving only a 17% gain. This is why they will pack up and leave...well, threaten to.

    When top tier taxes in the Golden Age were 90%, hardly anyone left (so would they leave for an increase of 1% for 5 yrs..then done?): "Historical evidence shows that the very rich largely stayed in the U.S., continued investing, running businesses, and generating new wealth.

    Some individuals moved temporarily or shifted legal residence for tax planning, but the numbers were tiny relative to the total wealthy population." It's just BS by greedy men and their servants in the media.....to try to head off a tax that will make no impact on their well-being, while being used to provide healthcare to the needy.

    Log in to Reply
    1. TJJ2000   3 weeks ago

      Yeah. My 'armed-theft' plans shouldn't scare anyone! /s
      At least you got one point right. The Billionaires aren't going to pay the bill.
      They just shovel the costs off onto their already 'poor' consumers.
      And you dumb*sses have to wonder why your living expenses are off the charts.
      Stupid is; is stupid does.

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  20. Longtobefree   3 weeks ago

    Ever actually read a Reason article?

    You: claims have the wealth has left the state but provides not one single actual person . . .
    JD: "David Sacks, Peter Thiel, Larry Page, and Sergey Brin among those who are severing connections to California"

    You: if passed, the bill would levy this tax on any billionaire (it applies to no one else) was a resident on Jan1 of this year
    JD: " . . . set to appear as an initiative on the California ballot in November" (That is November 2026, making January 1st 2026 the January involved)

    You: " . . . which the article misleading implies is paid all at once. It can be paid 20% a year for 5 yrs."
    The text of the bill: If not paid when due, the later payments carry 7.5% interest.

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