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Income Taxes
9 Months Ended
Nov. 02, 2019
Income Tax Disclosure [Abstract]  
INCOME TAXES INCOME TAXES

The quarterly tax provision for income taxes is based on the current estimate of the annual effective income tax rate and is adjusted as necessary for discrete quarterly events. The Company’s quarterly tax provision and the estimate of the annual effective tax rate are subject to significant variation due to several factors. These include variability in the pre-tax jurisdictional mix of earnings, changes in how the Company does business including entering into new businesses or geographies, changes in foreign currency exchange rates, changes in law, regulations, interpretations and administrative practices, relative changes in expenses or losses for which tax benefits are not recognized and the impact of discrete items. The impact of these items on the effective tax rate will be greater at lower levels of pre-tax earnings.

Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017

In December 2017, the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 (the “Act”) was signed into law. The Act made broad and significantly complex changes to the U.S. corporate income tax system by, among other things: reducing the U.S. federal corporate income tax rate from 35% to 21%; transitioning U.S. international taxation to a modified territorial tax system; and imposing a mandatory one-time deemed repatriation tax, payable over eight years, on accumulated undistributed foreign subsidiary earnings and profits as of December 31, 2017. Given the significant changes resulting from and complexities associated with the Act, the estimated financial impacts related to the enactment of the Act were provisional as of November 3, 2018. Provisional amounts were finalized after the Company’s Fiscal 2017 U.S. corporate income tax return was filed in the fourth quarter of Fiscal 2018, no later than one year from the enactment of the Act.

Primarily due to regulatory guidance issued by the Internal Revenue Service in Fiscal 2018, the Company recognized measurement period charges of $0.4 million and $2.4 million during the thirteen and thirty-nine weeks ended November 3, 2018.

Swiss Tax Reform

In May 2019, Switzerland voted to approve the Federal Act on Tax Reform and AHV Financing (“Swiss Tax Reform”), effective at the federal level beginning January 2020, which will result in the abolishment of preferential tax regimes by the cantons. In addition to the abolishment of the preferential tax regimes, the cantons will need to implement new, mandatory tax provisions in their cantonal tax law which are subject to a referendum process as a result of Swiss Tax Reform. As a result of changes in Swiss tax law and actions taken by the Company, both of which occurred during the third quarter of Fiscal 2019, the Company increased its deferred income tax assets and liabilities, which are recorded on the Condensed Balance Sheet within other assets and other liabilities, respectively, by $38.0 million during the third quarter of Fiscal 2019. Swiss Tax Reform did not have an impact to the Condensed Consolidated Statements of Operations and Comprehensive Income (Loss) or the Company’s cash flows during the period.

Share-based compensation

Refer to Note 10, “SHARE-BASED COMPENSATION,” for details on discrete income tax benefits and charges related to share-based compensation awards during the thirteen and thirty-nine weeks ended November 2, 2019 and November 3, 2018.