Determining the Amount of Taxes Paid for Purposes of Section 901, 15081-15091 [E7-5862]
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Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 61 / Friday, March 30, 2007 / Proposed Rules
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[FR Doc. E7–5894 Filed 3–29–07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4160–01–S
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Internal Revenue Service
26 CFR Part 1
[REG–156779–06]
RIN 1545–BG27
Determining the Amount of Taxes Paid
for Purposes of Section 901
Internal Revenue Service (IRS),
Treasury.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking
and notice of public hearing.
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AGENCY:
SUMMARY: These proposed regulations
provide guidance relating to the
determination of the amount of taxes
paid for purposes of section 901.
The proposed regulations affect
taxpayers that claim direct and indirect
foreign tax credits. This document also
provides notice of a public hearing.
DATES: Written or electronic comments
must be received by June 28, 2007.
Outlines of topics to be discussed at the
public hearing scheduled for July 30,
2007, at 10 a.m. must be received by
July 9, 2007.
ADDRESSES: Send submissions to
CC:PA:LPD:PR (REG–156779–06), Room
5203, Internal Revenue Service, P.O.
Box 7604, Ben Franklin Station,
Washington, DC 20044. Submissions
may be hand delivered Monday through
Friday between the hours of 8 a.m. and
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4 p.m. to CC:PA:LPD:PR (REG–156779–
06), Courier’s Desk, Internal Revenue
Service, 1111 Constitution Avenue,
NW., Washington, DC, or sent
electronically via the Federal
eRulemaking Portal at https://
www.regulations.gov (IRS REG–156779–
06). The public hearing will be held in
the Auditorium of the Internal Revenue
Building, 1111 Constitution Avenue,
NW., Washington, DC.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Concerning submission of comments,
the hearing, and/or to be placed on the
building access list to attend the
hearing, Kelly Banks (202) 622–7180;
concerning the regulations, Bethany A.
Ingwalson, (202) 622–3850 (not toll-free
numbers).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
Section 901 of the Internal Revenue
Code (Code) permits taxpayers to claim
a credit for income, war profits, and
excess profits taxes paid or accrued (or
deemed paid) during the taxable year to
any foreign country or to any possession
of the United States.
Section 1.901–2(a) of the regulations
defines a tax as a compulsory payment
pursuant to the authority of a foreign
country to levy taxes, and further
provides that a tax is an income, war
profits, or excess profits tax if the
predominant character of the tax is that
of an income tax in the U.S. sense.
Section 1.901–2(e) provides rules for
determining the amount of tax paid by
a taxpayer for purposes of section 901.
Section 1.901–2(e)(5) provides that an
amount paid is not a compulsory
payment, and thus is not an amount of
tax paid, to the extent that the amount
paid exceeds the amount of liability
under foreign law for tax. For purposes
of determining whether an amount paid
exceeds the amount of liability under
foreign law for tax, § 1.901–2(e)(5)
provides the following rule:
An amount paid does not exceed the
amount of such liability if the amount paid
is determined by the taxpayer in a manner
that is consistent with a reasonable
interpretation and application of the
substantive and procedural provisions of
foreign law (including applicable tax treaties)
in such a way as to reduce, over time, the
taxpayer’s reasonably expected liability
under foreign law for tax, and if the taxpayer
exhausts all effective and practical remedies,
including invocation of competent authority
procedures available under applicable tax
treaties, to reduce, over time, the taxpayer’s
liability for foreign tax (including liability
pursuant to a foreign tax audit adjustment).
Section 1.901–2(e)(5) provides further
that if foreign tax law includes options
or elections whereby a taxpayer’s
liability may be shifted, in whole or
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part, to a different year, the taxpayer’s
use or failure to use such options or
elections does not result in a
noncompulsory payment, and that a
settlement by a taxpayer of two or more
issues will be evaluated on an overall
basis, not on an issue-by-issue basis, in
determining whether an amount is a
compulsory amount. In addition, it
provides that a taxpayer is not required
to alter its form of doing business, its
business conduct, or the form of any
transaction in order to reduce its
liability for tax under foreign law.
A. U.S.-Owned Foreign Entities
Commentators have raised questions
regarding the application of § 1.901–
2(e)(5) to a U.S. person that owns one
or more foreign entities. In particular,
commentators have raised questions
concerning the application of the
regulation when one foreign entity
directly or indirectly owned by a U.S.
person transfers, pursuant to a group
relief type regime, a net loss to another
foreign entity, which may or may not
also be owned by the U.S. person.
Certain commentators have expressed
concern that foreign taxes paid by the
transferor in a subsequent tax year
might not be compulsory payments to
the extent the transferor could have
reduced its liability for those foreign
taxes had it chosen not to transfer the
net loss in the prior year. This concern
arises because the current final
regulations apply on a taxpayer-bytaxpayer basis, obligating each taxpayer
to minimize its liability for foreign taxes
over time, even though the net effect of
the loss surrender may be to minimize
the amount of foreign taxes paid in the
aggregate by the controlled group over
time.
Similar questions and concerns arise
when one or more foreign subsidiaries
of a U.S. person reach a combined
settlement with a foreign taxing
authority that results in an increase in
the amount of one foreign subsidiary’s
foreign tax liability and a decrease in
the amount of a second foreign
subsidiary’s foreign tax liability.
B. Certain Structured Passive
Investment Arrangements
The IRS and Treasury Department
have become aware that certain U.S.
taxpayers are engaging in highly
structured transactions with foreign
counterparties in order to generate
foreign tax credits. These transactions
are intentionally structured to create a
foreign tax liability when, removed from
the elaborately engineered structure, the
basic underlying business transaction
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generally would result in significantly
less, or even no, foreign taxes. In
particular, the transactions purport to
convert what would otherwise be an
ordinary course financing arrangement
between a U.S. person and a foreign
counterparty, or a portfolio investment
of a U.S. person, into some form of
equity ownership in a foreign special
purpose vehicle (SPV). The transaction
is deliberately structured to create
income in the SPV for foreign tax
purposes, which income is purportedly
subject to foreign tax. The parties
exploit differences between U.S. and
foreign law in order to permit the U.S.
taxpayer to claim a credit for the
purported foreign tax payments while
also allowing the foreign counterparty to
claim a foreign tax benefit. The U.S.
taxpayer and the foreign counterparty
share the cost of the purported foreign
tax payments through the pricing of the
arrangement.
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Explanation of Provisions
The proposed regulations address the
application of § 1.901–2(e)(5) in cases
where a U.S. person directly or
indirectly owns one or more foreign
entities and in cases in which a U.S.
person is a party to a highly structured
passive investment arrangement
described in this preamble. The
proposed regulations would treat as a
single taxpayer for purposes of § 1.901–
2(e)(5) all foreign entities with respect to
which a U.S. person has a direct or
indirect interest of 80 percent or more.
The proposed regulations would treat
foreign payments attributable to highly
structured passive investment
arrangements as noncompulsory
payments under § 1.901–2(e)(5) and,
thus, would disallow credits for such
amounts.
A. U.S.-Owned Foreign Entities
Section 1.901–2(e)(5) requires a
taxpayer to interpret and apply foreign
law reasonably in such a way as to
reduce, over time, the taxpayer’s
reasonably expected liability under
foreign law for tax. This requirement
ensures that a taxpayer will make
reasonable efforts to minimize its
foreign tax liability even though the
taxpayer may otherwise be indifferent to
the imposition of foreign tax due to the
availability of the foreign tax credit. The
purpose of this requirement is served if
all foreign entities owned by such
person, in the aggregate, satisfy the
requirements of the regulation.
Accordingly, for purposes of
determining compliance with § 1.901–
2(e)(5), the proposed regulations would
treat as a single taxpayer all foreign
entities in which the same U.S. person
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has a direct or indirect interest of 80
percent or more. For this purpose, an
interest of 80 percent or more means
stock possessing 80 percent or more of
the vote and value (in the case of a
foreign corporation) or an interest
representing 80 percent or more of the
income (in the case of non-corporate
foreign entities).
The proposed regulations provide that
if one 80 percent-owned foreign entity
transfers or surrenders a net loss for the
taxable year to a second such entity
pursuant to a foreign law group relief or
similar regime, foreign tax paid by the
transferor in a different tax year does
not fail to be a compulsory payment
solely because such tax would not have
been due had the transferor retained the
net loss and carried it over to such other
year. Similarly, it provides that if one or
more 80 percent-owned foreign entities
enter into a combined settlement under
foreign law of two or more issues, such
settlement will be evaluated on an
overall basis, not on an issue-by-issue or
entity-by-entity basis, in determining
whether an amount is a compulsory
amount. The proposed regulations
include examples to illustrate the
proposed rule.
The IRS and Treasury Department
intend to monitor structures involving
U.S.-owned foreign groups, including
those that would be covered by the
proposed regulations, to determine
whether taxpayers are utilizing such
structures to separate foreign taxes from
the related income. The IRS and
Treasury Department may issue
additional regulations in the future in
order to address arrangements that
result in the inappropriate separation of
foreign tax and income.
B. Certain Structured Passive
Investment Arrangements
The structured arrangements
discovered and identified by the IRS
and the Treasury Department can be
grouped into three general categories:
(1) U.S. borrower transactions, (2) U.S.
lender transactions, and (3) asset
holding transactions. The transactions,
including the claimed U.S. tax results,
are described in section B.1 of this
preamble. Section B.2 of this preamble
discusses the purpose of the foreign tax
credit regime and explains why
allowing a credit in the transactions is
inconsistent with this purpose. Section
B.3 of this preamble discusses
comments the IRS and the Treasury
Department have received on the
transactions and describes the proposed
regulations. The IRS is continuing to
scrutinize the transactions under
current law and intends to utilize all
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tools available to challenge the claimed
U.S. tax results in appropriate cases.
1. Categories of Structured Passive
Investment Arrangements
(a) U.S. borrower transactions. The
first category consists of transactions in
which a U.S. person indirectly borrows
funds from an unrelated foreign
counterparty. If a U.S. person were to
borrow funds directly from a foreign
person, the U.S. person generally would
make nondeductible principal payments
and deductible interest payments. The
U.S. person would not incur foreign tax.
The foreign lender generally would owe
foreign tax on its interest income. In a
structured financing arrangement, the
U.S. borrower attempts to convert all or
a portion of its deductible interest
payments and, in certain cases, its
nondeductible principal payments into
creditable foreign tax payments. The
U.S. borrower’s foreign tax credit benefit
is shared by the parties through the
pricing of the arrangement. See Example
1 of proposed § 1.901–2(e)(5)(iv)(D).
In a typical structured financing
arrangement, the loan is made indirectly
through an SPV. The foreign lender’s
interest income (and, in many cases,
other income) is effectively isolated in
the SPV. The U.S. borrower acquires a
direct or indirect interest in the SPV and
asserts that it has a direct or indirect
equity interest in the SPV for U.S. tax
purposes. The U.S. borrower claims a
credit for foreign taxes imposed on the
income derived by the SPV. The U.S.
borrower’s purported equity interest
may be treated as debt for foreign tax
purposes or it may be treated as an
equity interest that is owned by the
foreign lender for foreign tax purposes.
In either case, the foreign lender is
treated as owning an equity interest in
the SPV for foreign tax purposes, which
entitles the foreign lender to receive taxfree distributions from the SPV.
For example, assume that a U.S.
person seeks to borrow $1.5 billion from
a foreign person. Instead of borrowing
the funds directly, the U.S. borrower
forms a corporation (SPV) in the same
country as the foreign counterparty. The
U.S. borrower contributes $1.5 billion to
SPV in exchange for 100 percent of the
stock of SPV. SPV, in turn, loans the
entire $1.5 billion to a corporation
wholly owned by the U.S. borrower.
The U.S. borrower recovers its $1.5
billion by selling its entire interest in
SPV to the foreign counterparty, subject
to an obligation to repurchase the
interest in five years for $1.5 billion.
Each year, SPV earns $120 million of
interest income from the U.S. borrower’s
subsidiary. SPV pays $36 million of
foreign tax and distributes the
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remaining $84 million to the foreign
counterparty.
The U.S. borrower takes the position
that, for U.S. tax purposes, the salerepurchase transaction is a borrowing
secured by the SPV stock. Accordingly,
the U.S. borrower asserts that it owns
the stock of SPV for U.S. tax purposes
and has an outstanding debt obligation
to the foreign counterparty. It reports
the distribution from SPV as dividend
income and claims indirect credits
under section 902 for the $36 million of
foreign taxes paid by SPV. It includes in
income the cash dividend of $84 million
paid to the foreign counterparty, plus a
section 78 gross-up amount of $36
million, for a total of $120 million. The
U.S. borrower claims a deduction of $84
million as interest on its debt obligation
to the foreign counterparty. In addition,
the U.S. borrower’s subsidiary claims an
interest deduction of $120 million. In
the aggregate, the U.S. borrower and its
subsidiary claim a foreign tax credit of
$36 million and an interest expense
deduction (net of income inclusions) of
$84 million.
For foreign tax purposes, the foreign
counterparty owns the equity of SPV
and is not subject to additional foreign
tax upon receipt of the dividend. Thus,
the net result is that the foreign
jurisdiction receives foreign tax
payments attributable to what is in
substance the lender’s interest income,
which is consistent with the foreign tax
results that would be expected from a
direct borrowing.
Both parties benefit from the
arrangement. The foreign lender obtains
an after-foreign tax interest rate that is
higher than the after-foreign tax interest
rate it would earn on a direct loan. The
U.S. borrower’s funding costs are lower
on an after-U.S. tax basis (though not on
a pre-U.S. tax basis) because it has
converted interest expense into
creditable foreign tax payments.
The benefit to the parties is solely
attributable to the reduction in the U.S.
borrower’s U.S. tax liability resulting
from the foreign tax credits claimed by
the U.S. borrower. The foreign
jurisdiction benefits from the
arrangement because the amount of
interest received by SPV exceeds the
amount of interest that would have been
received by the foreign lender if the
transaction had been structured as a
direct loan. As a result, the amount paid
by SPV to the foreign jurisdiction
exceeds the amount of foreign tax the
foreign jurisdiction would have
imposed on the foreign lender’s interest
income in connection with a direct loan.
(b) U.S. lender transactions. The
second category consists of transactions
in which a U.S person indirectly loans
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funds to an unrelated foreign
counterparty. If a U.S. person were to
loan the funds directly to the foreign
person, the U.S. person generally would
be subject to U.S. tax on its interest
income and the borrower would receive
a corresponding deduction for the
interest expense. The U.S. person
generally would not be subject to
foreign tax other than, in certain
circumstances, a gross basis
withholding tax.
In a typical structured financing
arrangement, the U.S. person advances
funds to a foreign borrower indirectly
through an SPV. The U.S. person asserts
that its interest in the SPV is equity for
U.S. tax purposes. Income of the foreign
borrower (or another foreign
counterparty) is effectively shifted into
the SPV. The U.S. person receives cash
payments from the SPV and claims a
credit for foreign taxes imposed on the
income recognized by the SPV for
foreign tax purposes. The foreign tax
credits eliminate all or substantially all
of the U.S. tax the U.S. person would
otherwise owe on its return and, in
many cases, U.S. tax the U.S. person
would otherwise owe on unrelated
foreign source income. The economic
cost of the foreign taxes is shared
through the pricing of the arrangement.
See Example 4 of proposed § 1.901–
2(e)(5)(iv)(D).
For example, assume a U.S. person
seeks to loan $1 billion to a foreign
person. In lieu of a direct loan, the U.S.
lender contributes $1 billion to a newlyformed corporation (SPV). The foreign
counterparty contributes $2 billion to
SPV, which is organized in the same
country as the foreign counterparty. SPV
contributes the total $3 billion to a
second special purpose entity (RH),
receiving a 99 percent equity interest in
RH in exchange. The foreign
counterparty owns the remaining 1
percent of RH. RH loans the funds to the
foreign counterparty in exchange for a
note that pays interest currently and a
second zero-coupon note. RH is a
corporation for U.S. tax purposes and a
flow-through entity for foreign tax
purposes.
Each year, the foreign counterparty
pays $92 million of interest to RH, and
RH accrues $113 million of interest on
the zero-coupon note. RH distributes the
$92 million of cash it receives to SPV.
Because RH is a partnership for foreign
tax purposes, SPV is required to report
for foreign tax purposes 99 percent
($203 million) of the income recognized
by RH. Because RH is a corporation for
U.S. tax purposes, SPV recognizes only
the cash distributions of $92 million for
U.S. tax purposes. SPV pays foreign tax
of $48 million on its net income (30
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percent of $159 million, or $203 interest
income less $44 million interest
deduction) and distributes its remaining
cash of $44 million to the U.S. lender.
The U.S. lender takes the position that
it has an equity interest in SPV for U.S.
tax purposes. It claims an indirect credit
for the $48 million of foreign taxes paid
by SPV. It includes in income the cash
dividend of $44 million, plus a section
78 gross-up amount of $48 million. For
foreign tax purposes, the U.S. lender’s
interest in SPV is debt, and the foreign
borrower owns 100 percent of the equity
of SPV. The foreign counterparty and
SPV, in the aggregate, have a net
deduction of $44 million for foreign tax
purposes.
Both parties benefit from the
transaction. The foreign borrower
obtains ‘‘cheap financing’’ because the
$44 million of cash distributed to the
U.S. lender is less than the amount of
interest it would have to pay on a direct
loan with respect to which the U.S.
lender would owe U.S. tax. The U.S.
lender is better off on an after-U.S. tax
basis because of the foreign tax credits,
which eliminate the U.S. lender’s U.S.
tax on the ‘‘dividend’’ income.
The benefit to the parties is solely
attributable to the reduction in the U.S.
lender’s U.S. tax liability resulting from
the foreign tax credits claimed by the
U.S. lender. The foreign jurisdiction
benefits because the aggregate foreign
tax result is a deduction for the foreign
borrower that is less than the amount of
the interest deduction the foreign
borrower would have had upon a direct
loan.
(c) Asset holding transactions. The
third category of transactions (‘‘asset
holding transactions’’) consists of
transactions in which a U.S. person that
owns an income-producing asset moves
the asset into a foreign taxing
jurisdiction. For example, assume a U.S.
person owns passive-type assets (such
as debt obligations) generating an
income stream that is subject to U.S. tax.
In an asset holding transaction, the U.S.
person transfers the assets to an SPV
that is subject to tax in a foreign
jurisdiction on the income stream.
Ordinarily, such a transfer would not
affect the U.S. person’s after-tax position
since the U.S. person could claim a
credit for the foreign tax paid and,
thereby, obtain a corresponding
reduction in the amount of U.S. tax it
would otherwise owe. In the structured
transactions, however, the cost of the
foreign tax is shared by a foreign person
who obtains a foreign tax benefit by
participating in the arrangement. Thus,
the U.S. person is better off paying the
foreign tax instead of U.S. tax because
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it does not bear the full economic
burden of the foreign tax.
In a typical structured transaction, a
foreign counterparty participates in the
arrangement with the SPV. For example,
the foreign counterparty may be
considered to own a direct or indirect
interest in the SPV for foreign tax
purposes. The foreign counterparty’s
participation in the arrangement allows
it to obtain a foreign tax benefit that it
would not otherwise enjoy. The foreign
counterparty compensates the U.S.
person for this benefit in some manner.
This compensation, which can be
viewed as a reimbursement for a portion
of the foreign tax liability resulting from
the transfer of the assets, puts the U.S.
person in a better after-U.S. tax position.
See Example 7 of proposed § 1.901–
2(e)(5)(iv)(D).
The benefit to the parties is solely
attributable to the reduction in the U.S.
taxpayer’s U.S. tax liability resulting
from the foreign tax credits claimed by
the U.S. taxpayer. The foreign
jurisdiction benefits because the foreign
taxes purportedly paid by the SPV
exceed the amount by which the foreign
counterparty’s taxes are reduced.
2. Purpose of the Foreign Tax Credit
The purpose of the foreign tax credit
is to mitigate double taxation of foreign
source income. Because the foreign tax
credit provides a dollar-for-dollar
reduction in U.S. tax that a U.S. person
would otherwise owe, the U.S. person
generally is indifferent, subject to
various foreign tax credit limitations, as
to whether it pays foreign tax on its
foreign source income (if fully offset by
the foreign tax credit) or whether it pays
U.S. (and no foreign) tax on that income.
The structured arrangements
described in section B.1 of this
preamble violate this purpose. A
common feature of all these
arrangements is that the U.S. person and
a foreign counterparty share the
economic cost of the foreign taxes
claimed as credits by the U.S. person.
This creates an incentive for the U.S.
person to subject itself voluntarily to the
foreign tax because there is a U.S. tax
motivation to do so. The result is an
erosion of the U.S. tax base in a manner
that is not consistent with the purpose
of the foreign tax credit provisions.
Although the foreign counterparty
derives a foreign tax benefit in these
arrangements, the foreign jurisdiction
generally is made whole because of the
payments to the foreign jurisdiction
made by the special purpose vehicle. In
fact, the aggregate amount of payments
to the foreign jurisdictions in
connection with these transactions
generally exceeds the amount of foreign
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tax that would have been imposed in
the ordinary course. Only the U.S. fisc
experiences a reduction in tax payments
as a result of the structured
arrangements.
The IRS and Treasury Department
recognize that often there is a business
purpose for the financing or portfolio
investment underlying the otherwise
elaborately engineered transactions.
However, it is inconsistent with the
purpose of the foreign tax credit to
permit a credit for foreign taxes that
result from intentionally structuring a
transaction to generate foreign taxes in
a manner that allows the parties to
obtain duplicate tax benefits and share
the cost of the tax payments. The result
in these structured arrangements is that
both parties as well as the foreign
jurisdiction benefit at the expense of the
U.S. fisc.
3. Comments and Proposed Regulations
The IRS and Treasury Department
have determined that it is not
appropriate to allow a credit in
connection with these highly
engineered transactions where the U.S.
taxpayer benefits by intentionally
subjecting itself to foreign tax. The
proposed regulations would revise
§ 1.901–2(e)(5) to provide that an
amount paid to a foreign country in
connection with such an arrangement is
not an amount of tax paid. Accordingly,
under the proposed regulations, a
taxpayer would not be eligible to claim
a foreign tax credit for such a payment.
For periods prior to the effective date of
final regulations, the IRS will continue
to utilize all available tools under
current law to challenge the U.S. tax
results claimed in connection with such
arrangements, including the substance
over form doctrine, the economic
substance doctrine, debt-equity
principles, tax ownership principles,
existing § 1.901–2(e), section 269, and
the partnership anti-abuse rules of
§ 1.701–2.
Certain commentators recommended
that the IRS and Treasury Department
adopt a broad anti-abuse rule that would
deny a foreign tax credit in any case
where allowance of the credit would be
inconsistent with the purpose of the
foreign tax credit regime. Other
commentators recommended a narrower
approach that would only deny foreign
tax credits attributable to transactions
that include particular features. The IRS
and Treasury Department are concerned
that a broad anti-abuse rule would
create uncertainty for both taxpayers
and the IRS. The IRS and Treasury
Department have concluded that, at this
time, a targeted rule denying foreign tax
credits in arrangements similar to the
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arrangements described in section B.1 of
this preamble is more appropriate.
For periods after the effective date of
final regulations, the IRS and Treasury
Department will continue to scrutinize
other arrangements that are not covered
by the regulations but are inconsistent
with the purpose of the foreign tax
credit. Such arrangements may include
arrangements that are similar to
arrangements described in the proposed
regulations, but that do not meet all of
the conditions included in the proposed
regulations. The IRS will utilize all
available tools, including those
described above, to challenge the
claimed U.S. tax results in appropriate
cases. In addition, the IRS and Treasury
Department may issue additional
regulations in the future in order to
address such other arrangements.
The proposed regulations would
retain the general rule in the existing
regulations that a taxpayer need not
alter its form of doing business or the
form of any transaction in order to
reduce its foreign tax liability. However,
the proposed regulations would provide
that, notwithstanding the general rule,
an amount paid to a foreign country (a
‘‘foreign payment’’) is not a compulsory
payment, and thus is not an amount of
tax paid, if the foreign payment is
attributable to a structured passive
investment arrangement. For this
purpose, the proposed regulations
would define a structured passive
investment arrangement as an
arrangement that satisfies six
conditions. The six conditions consist of
features that are common to the three
types of arrangements identified in
section B.1 of this preamble. The IRS
and Treasury Department believe it is
appropriate to treat foreign payments
attributable to these arrangements as
voluntary payments because such
arrangements are intentionally
structured to generate the foreign
payment.
The first condition is that the
arrangement utilizes an entity that
meets two requirements (an ‘‘SPV’’).
The first requirement is that
substantially all of the gross income (for
United States tax purposes) of the entity
is attributable to passive investment
income and substantially all of the
assets of the entity are assets held to
produce such passive investment
income. The second requirement is that
there is a purported foreign tax payment
attributable to income of the entity. The
purported foreign tax may be paid by
the entity itself, by the owner(s) of the
entity (if the entity is treated as a passthrough entity under foreign law) or by
a lower-tier entity (if the lower-tier
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entity is treated as a pass-through entity
under U.S. law).
For purposes of this first requirement,
passive investment income is defined as
income described in section 954(c), with
two modifications. The first
modification is that if the entity is a
holding company that owns a direct
equity interest (other than a preferred
interest) of 10 percent or more in
another entity (a lower-tier entity) that
is predominantly engaged in the active
conduct of a trade or business (or
substantially all the assets of which
consist of qualifying equity interests in
other entities that are predominantly
engaged in the active conduct of a trade
or business), passive investment income
does not include income attributable to
the interest in such lower-tier entity.
This exception does not apply if there
are arrangements under which
substantially all of the opportunity for
gain and risk of loss with respect to
such interest in the lower-tier entity are
borne by either the U.S. party or the
counterparty (but not both).
Accordingly, a direct equity interest in
any such lower-tier entity is not held to
produce passive investment income
provided there are no arrangements
under which substantially all of the
entity’s opportunity for gain and risk of
loss with respect to the lower-tier entity
are borne by either the U.S. party or the
counterparty (but not both). This
modification is based on the notion that
an entity is not a passive investment
vehicle of the type targeted by these
regulations if the entity is a holding
company for one or more operating
companies. This modification ensures
that a joint venture arrangement
between a U.S. person and a foreign
person is not treated as a passive
investment arrangement solely because
the joint venture is conducted through
a holding company structure.
The second modification is that
passive investment income is
determined by disregarding sections
954(c)(3) and (c)(6) and by treating
income attributable to transactions with
the counterparties (described in this
preamble) as ineligible for the
exclusions under sections 954(h) and (i).
Sections 954(c)(3) and (c)(6) provide
exclusions for certain related party
payments of dividends, interest, rents,
and royalties. Those exclusions are not
appropriate for these transactions
because these transactions can be
structured utilizing related party
payments. The modifications to the
application of sections 954(h) and (i) are
intended to ensure that income derived
from the counterparty cannot qualify for
the exclusion from passive investment
income, but will not prevent other
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income from qualifying for those
exclusions. The IRS and Treasury
Department intend that the structured
financing arrangements described in
this preamble do not qualify for the
active banking, financing or insurance
business exceptions to the definition of
passive investment income. Comments
are requested on whether further
modifications or clarifications to the
proposed regulations’ definition of
passive investment income are
appropriate to ensure this result.
The requirement that substantially all
of the assets of the entity produce
passive investment income is intended
to ensure that an entity engaged in an
active trade or business is not treated as
an SPV solely because, in a particular
year, it derives only passive investment
income.
The second overall condition is that a
person (a ‘‘U.S. party’’) would be
eligible to claim a credit under section
901(a) (including a credit for foreign
taxes deemed paid under section 902 or
960) for all or a portion of the foreign
payment if such payment were an
amount of tax paid. Such eligibility to
claim the credit could arise because the
U.S. party would be treated as having
paid or accrued the foreign payment for
purposes of section 901 if it were an
amount of tax paid. Alternatively, the
U.S. party’s eligibility to claim the
credit could arise because the U.S. party
owns an equity interest in the SPV or
another entity that would be treated as
having paid or accrued the foreign
payment for purposes of section 901 if
it were an amount of tax paid.
The third overall condition is that the
foreign payment or payments are (or are
expected to be) substantially greater
than the amount of credits, if any, that
the U.S. party would reasonably expect
to be eligible to claim under section
901(a) if such U.S. party directly owned
its proportionate share of the assets
owned by the SPV other than through a
branch, a permanent establishment or
any other arrangement (such as an
agency arrangement) that would subject
the income generated by its share of the
assets to a net basis foreign tax. For
example, if the SPV owns a note that
generates interest income with respect
to which a foreign payment is made, but
foreign law (including an applicable
treaty) provides for a zero rate of
withholding tax on interest paid to nonresidents, the U.S. party would not
reasonably expect to pay foreign tax for
which it could claim foreign tax credits
if it directly owned the note and directly
earned the interest income.
The fourth condition is that the
arrangement is structured in such a
manner that it results in a foreign tax
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benefit (such as a credit, deduction,
loss, exemption or a disregarded
payment) for a counterparty or for a
person that is related to the
counterparty, but not related to the U.S.
party.
The fifth condition is that the
counterparty is a person (other than the
SPV) that is unrelated to the U.S. party
and that (i) directly or indirectly owns
10 percent or more of the equity of the
SPV under the tax laws of a foreign
country in which such person is subject
to tax on the basis of place of
management, place of incorporation or
similar criterion or otherwise subject to
a net basis foreign tax or (ii) acquires 20
percent or more of the assets of the SPV
under the tax laws of a foreign country
in which such person is subject to tax
on the basis of place of management,
place of incorporation or similar
criterion or otherwise subject to a net
basis foreign tax.
The sixth condition is that the U.S.
and an applicable foreign country treat
the arrangement differently under their
respective tax systems. For this purpose,
an applicable foreign country is any
foreign country in which either the
counterparty, a person related to the
counterparty (but not related to the U.S.
party) or the SPV is subject to net basis
tax. To provide clarity and limit the
scope of this factor, the proposed
regulations provide that the
arrangement must be subject to one of
four specified types of inconsistent
treatment. Specifically, the U.S. and the
foreign country (or countries) must treat
one or more of the following aspects of
the arrangement differently, and the
U.S. treatment of the inconsistent aspect
must materially affect the amount of
foreign tax credits claimed, or the
amount of income recognized, by the
U.S. party to the arrangement: (i) The
classification of an entity as a
corporation or other entity subject to an
entity-level tax, a partnership or other
flow-through entity or an entity that is
disregarded for tax purposes; (ii) the
characterization as debt, equity or an
instrument that is disregarded for tax
purposes of an instrument issued in the
transaction, (iii) the proportion of the
equity of the SPV (or an entity that
directly or indirectly owns the SPV) that
is considered to be owned directly or
indirectly by the U.S. party and the
counterparty; or (iv) the amount of
taxable income of the SPV for one or
more tax years during which the
arrangement is in effect.
Under the proposed regulations, a
foreign payment would not be a
compulsory payment if it is attributable
to an arrangement that meets the six
conditions. The proposed regulations
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would treat a foreign payment as
attributable to such an arrangement if
the foreign payment is attributable to
income of the SPV. Such foreign
payments include a payment by the
SPV, a payment by the owner of the SPV
(if the SPV is a pass-through entity
under foreign law) and a payment by a
lower-tier entity that is treated as a passthrough entity under U.S. law. For this
purpose, a foreign payment is not
treated as attributable to the income of
the SPV if the foreign payment is a gross
basis withholding tax imposed on a
distribution or payment from the SPV to
the U.S. party. Such taxes could be
considered to be noncompulsory
payments because the U.S. party
intentionally subjects itself to the taxes
as part of the arrangement. However, the
IRS and Treasury Department have
determined that such taxes should not
be treated as attributable to the
arrangement because, among other
reasons, the foreign counterparty
generally does not derive a duplicative
foreign tax benefit and, therefore,
generally does not share the economic
cost of such taxes.
The IRS and Treasury Department
considered excluding all foreign
payments with respect to which the
economic cost is not shared from the
definition of foreign payments
attributable to the arrangement, but
determined that such a rule would be
difficult to administer. The IRS and
Treasury Department request comments
on whether it would be appropriate to
exclude certain foreign payments from
the definition of foreign taxes
attributable to the structured passive
investment arrangement. Comments
should address the rationale and
administrable criteria for identifying
any such exclusions.
Certain commentators recommended
that the proposed regulations include a
requirement that the foreign tax credits
attributable to the arrangement be
disproportionate to the amount of
taxable income attributable to the
arrangement. This recommendation has
not been adopted for three reasons.
First, the IRS and Treasury Department
were concerned that such a requirement
would create too much uncertainty and
would be unduly burdensome for
taxpayers and the IRS. Second, the
extent to which interest and other
expenses, as well as returns on
borrowed funds and capital, should be
considered attributable to a particular
arrangement is not entirely clear. A
narrow view could present
opportunities for manipulation,
especially for financial institutions
having numerous alternative placements
of leverage for use within the group,
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while an expansive view could
undercut the utility of such a test.
Third, the fundamental concern in these
transactions is that they create an
incentive for taxpayers voluntarily to
subject themselves to foreign tax. This
concern exists irrespective of whether
the particular arrangement generates a
disproportionate amount of foreign tax
credits.
The IRS and Treasury Department
considered whether it would be
appropriate to permit a taxpayer to treat
a foreign payment attributable to an
arrangement that meets the definition of
a structured passive investment
arrangement as an amount of tax paid,
if the taxpayer can show that tax
considerations were not a principal
purpose for the structure of the
arrangement. Alternatively, the IRS and
Treasury Department considered
whether it would be appropriate to treat
a foreign payment as an amount of tax
paid if a taxpayer shows that there is a
substantial business purpose for
utilizing a hybrid instrument or entity,
which would not include reducing the
taxpayer’s after-tax costs or enhancing
the taxpayer’s after-tax return through
duplicative foreign tax benefits. The IRS
and Treasury Department determined
not to include such a rule in these
proposed regulations due to
administrability concerns. Comments
are requested, however, on whether the
final regulations should include such a
rule as well as how such a rule could
be made to be administrable in practice,
including what reasonably ascertainable
evidence would be sufficient to
establish such a substantial non-tax
business purpose, or the lack of a taxrelated principal purpose. Comments
should also address whether it would be
appropriate to adopt a broader antiabuse rule and permit a taxpayer to
demonstrate that it should not apply.
C. Effective Date
The regulations are proposed to be
effective for foreign taxes paid or
accrued during taxable years of the
taxpayer ending on or after the date on
which the final regulations are
published in the Federal Register. No
inference is intended regarding the U.S.
tax consequences of structured passive
investment arrangements prior to the
effective date of the regulations.
Special Analyses
It has been determined that this notice
of proposed rulemaking is not a
significant regulatory action as defined
in Executive Order 12866. Therefore, a
regulatory assessment is not required. It
also has been determined that section
553(b) of the Administrative Procedure
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Act (5 U.S.C. chapter 5) does not apply
to these regulations, and because the
regulations do not impose a collection
of information on small entities, the
Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C.
chapter 6), does not apply. Pursuant to
section 7805(f) of the Internal Revenue
Code, this regulation has been
submitted to the Chief Counsel for
Advocacy of the Small Business
Administration for comment on its
impact on small businesses.
Comments and Public Hearing
Before these proposed regulations are
adopted as final regulations,
consideration will be given to any
written (a signed original and eight (8)
copies) or electronic comments that are
submitted timely to the IRS. The IRS
and Treasury Department request
comments on the clarity of the proposed
regulations and how they can be made
easier to understand. All comments will
be available for public inspection and
copying.
A public hearing has been scheduled
for July 30, 2007, at 10 a.m. in the
Internal Revenue Building, 1111
Constitution Avenue, NW., Washington,
DC. All visitors must present photo
identification to enter the building.
Because of access restrictions, visitors
will not be admitted beyond the
immediate entrance area more than 30
minutes before the hearing starts. For
information about having your name
placed on the building access list to
attend the hearing, see the FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT section of this
preamble.
The rules of 26 CFR 601.601(a)(3)
apply to the hearing. Persons who wish
to present oral comments must submit
electronic or written comments and an
outline of the topics to be discussed and
time to be devoted to each topic (a
signed original and eight (8) copies) by
July 9, 2007. A period of 10 minutes
will be allotted to each person for
making comments. An agenda showing
the scheduling of the speakers will be
prepared after the deadline for receiving
outlines has passed. Copies of the
agenda will be available free of charge
at the hearing.
Drafting Information
The principal author of these
regulations is Bethany A. Ingwalson,
Office of Associate Chief Counsel
(International). However, other
personnel from the IRS and the Treasury
Department participated in their
development.
List of Subjects in 26 CFR Part 1
Income taxes, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
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Proposed Amendments to the
Regulations
Accordingly, 26 CFR part 1 is
proposed to be amended as follows:
PART 1—INCOME TAXES
Paragraph 1. The authority citation
for part 1 continues to read in part as
follows:
Authority: 26 U.S.C. 7805 * * *
Par. 2. Section 1.901–2 is amended by
adding paragraphs (e)(5)(iii) and (iv),
and revising paragraph (h) to read as
follows:
§ 1.901–2 Income, war profits, or excess
profits tax paid or accrued.
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*
*
*
*
*
(e)(5) * * *
(iii) U.S.-owned foreign entities—(A)
In general. If a U.S. person described in
section 901(b) directly or indirectly
owns stock possessing 80 percent or
more of the total voting power and total
value of one or more foreign
corporations (or, in the case of a noncorporate foreign entity, directly or
indirectly owns an interest in 80 percent
or more of the income of one or more
such foreign entities), the group
comprising such foreign corporations
and entities (the ‘‘U.S.-owned group’’)
shall be treated as a single taxpayer for
purposes of paragraph (e)(5) of this
section. Therefore, if one member of
such a U.S.-owned group transfers or
surrenders a net loss for the taxable year
to a second member of the U.S.-owned
group and the loss reduces the foreign
tax due from the second member
pursuant to a foreign law group relief or
similar regime, foreign tax paid by the
first member in a different year does not
fail to be a compulsory payment solely
because such tax would not have been
due had the member that transferred or
surrendered the net loss instead carried
over the loss to reduce its own income
and foreign tax liability in that year.
Similarly, if one or more members of the
U.S.-owned group enter into a combined
settlement under foreign law of two or
more issues involving different
members of the group, such settlement
will be evaluated on an overall basis,
not on an issue-by-issue or entity-byentity basis, in determining whether an
amount is a compulsory amount. The
provisions of this paragraph (e)(5)(iii)
apply solely for purposes of determining
whether amounts paid are compulsory
payments of foreign tax and do not, for
example, modify the provisions of
section 902 requiring separate pools of
post-1986 undistributed earnings and
post-1986 foreign income taxes for each
member of a qualified group.
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(B) Special rules. All domestic
corporations that are members of a
consolidated group (as that term is
defined in § 1.1502–1(h)) shall be
treated as one domestic corporation for
purposes of this paragraph (e)(5)(iii). For
purposes of this paragraph (e)(5)(iii),
indirect ownership of stock or another
equity interest (such as an interest in a
partnership) shall be determined in
accordance with the principles of
section 958(a)(2), whether the interest is
owned by a U.S. or foreign person.
(C) Examples. The following
examples illustrate the rules of this
paragraph (e)(5)(iii):
Example 1. (i) Facts. A, a domestic
corporation, wholly owns B, a country X
corporation. B, in turn, wholly owns several
country X corporations, including C and D.
B, C, and D participate in group relief in
country X. Under the country X group relief
rules, a member with a net loss may choose
to surrender the loss to another member of
the group. In year 1, C has a net loss of
(1,000x) and D has net income of 5,000x for
country X tax purposes. Pursuant to the
group relief rules in country X, C agrees to
surrender its year 1 net loss to D and D agrees
to claim the net loss. D uses the net loss to
reduce its year 1 net income to 4,000x for
country X tax purposes, which reduces the
amount of country X tax D owes in year 1
by 300x. In year 2, C earns 3,000x with
respect to which it pays 900x of country X
tax. Country X permits a taxpayer to carry
forward net losses for up to ten years.
(ii) Result. Paragraph (e)(5)(i) of this
section provides, in part, that an amount paid
to a foreign country does not exceed the
amount of liability under foreign law for tax
if the taxpayer determines such amount in a
manner that is consistent with a reasonable
interpretation and application of the
substantive and procedural provisions of
foreign law (including applicable tax treaties)
in such a way as to reduce, over time, the
taxpayer’s reasonably expected liability
under foreign law for tax. Under paragraph
(e)(5)(iii)(A) of this section, B, C, and D are
treated as a single taxpayer for purposes of
testing whether the reasonably expected
foreign tax liability has been minimized over
time, because A directly and indirectly owns
100 percent of each of B, C, and D.
Accordingly, none of the 900x paid by C in
year 2 fails to be a compulsory payment
solely because C could have reduced its year
2 country X tax liability by 300x by choosing
to carry forward its year 1 net loss to year 2
instead of surrendering it to D to reduce D’s
country X liability in year 1.
Example 2. (i) Facts. L, M, and N are
country Y corporations. L owns 100 percent
of the common stock of M, which owns 100
percent of the stock of N. O, a domestic
corporation, owns a security issued by M that
is treated as debt for country Y tax purposes
and as stock for U.S. tax purposes. As a
result, L owns 100 percent of the stock of M
for country Y purposes while O owns 99
percent of the stock of M for U.S. tax
purposes. L, M, and N participate in group
relief in country Y. Pursuant to the group
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relief rules in country Y, M may surrender its
loss to any member of the group. In year 1,
M has a net loss of $10 million, N has net
income of $25 million, and L has net income
of $15 million. M chooses to surrender its
year 1 net loss to L. Country Y imposes tax
of 30 percent on the net income of country
Y corporations. Accordingly, in year 1, the
loss surrender has the effect of reducing L’s
country Y tax by $3 million. In year 1, N
makes a payment of $7.5 million to country
Y with respect to its net income of $25
million. If M had surrendered its net loss to
N instead of L, N would have had net income
of $15 million, with respect to which it
would have owed only $4.5 million of
country Y tax.
(ii) Result. M and N, but not L, are treated
as a single taxpayer for purposes of paragraph
(e)(5) of this section because O directly and
indirectly owns 99 percent of each of M and
N, but owns no direct or indirect interest in
L. Accordingly, in testing whether M and N’s
reasonably expected foreign tax liability has
been minimized over time, L is not
considered the same taxpayer as M and N,
collectively, and the $3 million reduction in
L’s year 1 country Y tax liability through the
surrender to L of M’s $10 million country Y
net loss in year 1 is not considered to reduce
M and N’s collective country Y tax liability.
(iv) Certain structured passive
investment arrangements—(A) In
general. Notwithstanding paragraph
(e)(5)(i) of this section, an amount paid
to a foreign country (a ‘‘foreign
payment’’) is not a compulsory
payment, and thus is not an amount of
tax paid, if the foreign payment is
attributable to an arrangement described
in paragraph (e)(5)(iv)(B) of this section.
For purposes of this paragraph (e)(5)(iv),
a foreign payment is attributable to an
arrangement described in paragraph
(e)(5)(iv)(B) of this section if the foreign
payment is described in paragraph
(e)(5)(iv)(B)(1)(ii) of this section.
(B) Conditions. An arrangement is
described in this paragraph (e)(5)(iv)(B)
if all of the following conditions are
satisfied:
(1) Special purpose vehicle (SPV). An
entity that is part of the arrangement
meets the following requirements:
(i) Substantially all of the gross
income (for United States tax purposes)
of the entity is passive investment
income as defined in paragraph
(e)(5)(iv)(C)(4) of this section, and
substantially all of the assets of the
entity are assets held to produce such
passive investment income. As provided
in paragraph (e)(5)(iv)(C)(4)(ii) of this
section, passive investment income
generally does not include income of a
holding company from qualified equity
interests in lower-tier entities that are
predominantly engaged in the active
conduct of a trade or business. Thus,
except as provided in paragraph
(e)(5)(iv)(C)(4)(ii) of this section,
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qualified equity interests of a holding
company in such lower-tier entities are
not held to produce passive investment
income and the ownership of such
interests will not cause the holding
company to satisfy this paragraph
(e)(5)(iv)(B)(1)(i).
(ii) There is a foreign payment
attributable to income of the entity (as
determined under the laws of the
foreign country to which such foreign
payment is made), including the entity’s
share of income of a lower-tier entity
that is a branch or pass-through entity
under the laws of such foreign country.
A foreign payment attributable to
income of an entity includes a foreign
payment attributable to income that is
required to be taken into account by an
owner of the entity, if the entity is a
branch or pass-through entity under the
laws of such foreign country. A foreign
payment attributable to income of an
entity also includes a foreign payment
attributable to income of a lower-tier
entity that is a branch or pass-through
entity for U.S. tax purposes. A foreign
payment attributable to income of the
entity does not include a withholding
tax (within the meaning of section
901(k)(1)(B)) imposed on a distribution
or payment from the entity to a U.S.
party (as defined in paragraph
(e)(5)(iv)(B)(2) of this section).
(2) U.S. party. A person (a ‘‘U.S.
party’’) would be eligible to claim a
credit under section 901(a) (including a
credit for foreign taxes deemed paid
under section 902 or 960) for all or a
portion of the foreign payment
described in paragraph (e)(5)(iv)(B)(1)(ii)
of this section if the foreign payment
were an amount of tax paid.
(3) Direct investment. The foreign
payment or payments described in
paragraph (e)(5)(iv)(B)(1)(ii) of this
section are (or are expected to be)
substantially greater than the amount of
credits, if any, the U.S. party would
reasonably expect to be eligible to claim
under section 901(a) for foreign taxes
attributable to income generated by the
U.S. party’s proportionate share of the
assets owned by the SPV if the U.S.
party directly owned such assets. For
this purpose, direct ownership shall not
include ownership through a branch, a
permanent establishment or any other
arrangement (such as an agency
arrangement) that would result in the
income generated by the U.S. party’s
proportionate share of the assets being
subject to tax on a net basis in the
foreign country to which the payment is
made. A U.S. party’s proportionate
share of the assets of the SPV shall be
determined by reference to such U.S.
party’s proportionate share of the total
value of all of the outstanding interests
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in the SPV that are held by its equity
owners and creditors.
(4) Foreign tax benefit. The
arrangement is structured in such a
manner that it results in a foreign tax
benefit (such as a credit, deduction,
loss, exemption or a disregarded
payment) for a counterparty described
in paragraph (e)(5)(iv)(B)(5) of this
section or for a person that is related to
the counterparty (determined under the
principles of paragraph (e)(5)(iv)(C)(6) of
this section by applying the tax laws of
a foreign country in which the
counterparty is subject to tax on a net
basis) but is not related to the U.S. party
(within the meaning of paragraph
(e)(5)(iv)(C)(6) of this section).
(5) Unrelated counterparty. The
arrangement involves a counterparty. A
counterparty is a person (other than the
SPV) that is not related to the U.S. party
(within the meaning of paragraph
(e)(5)(iv)(C)(6) of this section) and that
meets one of the following conditions:
(i) The person is considered to own
directly or indirectly 10 percent or more
of the equity of the SPV under the tax
laws of a foreign country in which the
person is subject to tax on the basis of
place of management, place of
incorporation or similar criterion or
otherwise subject to a net basis tax.
(ii) In a single transaction or series of
transactions, the person directly or
indirectly acquires 20 percent or more
of the value of the assets of the SPV
under the tax laws of a foreign country
in which the person is subject to tax on
the basis of place of management, place
of incorporation or similar criterion or
otherwise subject to a net basis tax. For
purposes of determining the percentage
of assets of the SPV acquired by the
person, an asset of the SPV shall be
disregarded if a principal purpose for
transferring such asset to the SPV was
to avoid this paragraph
(e)(5)(iv)(B)(5)(ii).
(6) Inconsistent treatment. The U.S.
and an applicable foreign country (as
defined in paragraph (e)(5)(iv)(C)(1) of
this section) treat one or more of the
following aspects of the arrangement
differently under their respective tax
systems, and the U.S. treatment of the
inconsistent aspect would materially
affect the amount of income recognized
by the U.S. party or the amount of
credits claimed by the U.S. party if the
foreign payment described in paragraph
(e)(5)(iv)(B)(1)(ii) of this section were an
amount of tax paid:
(i) The classification of the SPV (or an
entity that has a direct or indirect
ownership interest in the SPV) as a
corporation or other entity subject to an
entity-level tax, a partnership or other
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flow-through entity or an entity that is
disregarded for tax purposes.
(ii) The characterization as debt,
equity or an instrument that is
disregarded for tax purposes of an
instrument issued by the SPV (or an
entity that has a direct or indirect
ownership interest in the SPV) to the
U.S. party, the counterparty or a person
related to the U.S. party or the
counterparty.
(iii) The proportion of the equity of
the SPV (or an entity that directly or
indirectly owns the SPV) that is
considered to be owned directly or
indirectly by the U.S. party and the
counterparty.
(iv) The amount of taxable income of
the SPV for one or more tax years during
which the arrangement is in effect.
(C) Definitions—(1) Applicable foreign
country. An applicable foreign country
means each foreign country to which a
foreign payment described in paragraph
(e)(5)(iv)(B)(1)(ii) of this section is made
or which confers a foreign tax benefit
described in paragraph (e)(5)(iv)(B)(4) of
this section.
(2) Entity. For purposes of paragraph
(e)(5)(iv)(B)(1) and (e)(5)(iv)(C)(4) of this
section, the term entity includes a
corporation, trust, partnership or
disregarded entity described in
§ 301.7701–2(c)(2)(i) of this chapter.
(3) Indirect ownership. For purposes
of paragraph (e)(5)(iv) of this section,
indirect ownership of stock or another
equity interest (such as an interest in a
partnership) shall be determined in
accordance with the principles of
section 958(a)(2), whether the interest is
owned by a U.S. or foreign entity.
(4) Passive investment income—(i) In
general. For purposes of paragraph
(e)(5)(iv) of this section, the term
passive investment income means
income described in section 954(c), as
modified by this paragraph
(e)(5)(iv)(C)(4)(i) and paragraph
(e)(5)(iv)(C)(4)(ii) of this section. In
determining whether income is
described in section 954(c), sections
954(c)(3) and 954(c)(6) shall be
disregarded, and sections 954(h) and (i)
shall be taken into account by applying
those provisions at the entity level as if
the entity were a controlled foreign
corporation (as defined in section
957(a)). In addition, for purposes of the
preceding sentence, any income of an
entity attributable to transactions with a
person that would be a counterparty (as
defined in paragraph (e)(5)(iv)(B)(5) of
this section) if the entity were an SPV,
or with other persons that are described
in paragraph (e)(5)(iv)(B)(4) of this
section and that are eligible for a foreign
tax benefit described in such paragraph
(e)(5)(iv)(B)(4), shall not be treated as
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qualified banking or financing income
or as qualified insurance income, and
shall not be taken into account in
applying sections 954(h) and (i) for
purposes of determining whether other
income of the entity is excluded from
section 954(c)(1) under section 954(h) or
(i).
(ii) Income attributable to lower-tier
entities. Except as provided in this
paragraph (e)(5)(iv)(C)(4)(ii), income of
an entity that is attributable to an equity
interest in a lower-tier entity is passive
investment income. If the entity is a
holding company and directly owns a
qualified equity interest in another
entity (a ‘‘lower-tier entity’’) that is
engaged in the active conduct of a trade
or business and that derives more than
50 percent of its gross income from such
trade or business, then none of the
entity’s income attributable to such
interest is passive investment income,
provided that there are no arrangements
whereby substantially all of the entity’s
opportunity for gain and risk of loss
with respect to such interest is borne by
the U.S. party (or a related person) or
the counterparty (or a related person),
but not both parties. For purposes of the
preceding sentence, an entity is a
holding company, and is considered to
be engaged in the active conduct of a
trade or business and to derive more
than 50 percent of its gross income from
such trade or business, if substantially
all of its assets consist of qualified
equity interests in one or more entities,
each of which is engaged in the active
conduct of a trade or business and
derives more than 50 percent of its gross
income from such trade or business and
with respect to which there are no
arrangements whereby substantially all
of the entity’s opportunity for gain and
risk of loss with respect to such interest
is borne by the U.S. party (or a related
person) or the counterparty (or a related
person), but not both parties. For
purposes of this paragraph
(e)(5)(iv)(C)(4)(ii), a lower-tier entity that
is engaged in a banking, financing, or
similar business shall not be considered
to be engaged in the active conduct of
a trade or business unless the income
derived by such entity would be
excluded from section 954(c)(1) under
section 954(h) or (i), determined by
applying those provisions at the lowertier entity level as if the entity were a
controlled foreign corporation (as
defined in section 957(a)). In addition,
for purposes of the preceding sentence,
any income of an entity attributable to
transactions with a person that would
be a counterparty (as defined in
paragraph (e)(5)(iv)(B)(5) of this section)
if the entity were an SPV, or with other
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persons that are described in paragraph
(e)(5)(iv)(B)(4) of this section and that
are eligible for a foreign tax benefit
described in such paragraph
(e)(5)(iv)(B)(4), shall not be treated as
qualified banking or financing income
or as qualified insurance income, and
shall not be taken into account in
applying sections 954(h) and (i) for
purposes of determining whether other
income of the entity is excluded from
section 954(c)(1) under section 954(h) or
(i).
(5) Qualified equity interest. With
respect to an interest in a corporation,
the term qualified equity interest means
stock representing 10 percent or more of
the total combined voting power of all
classes of stock entitled to vote and 10
percent or more of the total value of the
stock of the corporation or disregarded
entity, but does not include any
preferred stock (as defined in section
351(g)(3)). Similar rules shall apply to
determine whether an interest in an
entity other than a corporation is a
qualified equity interest.
(6) Related person. Two persons are
related for purposes of paragraph
(e)(5)(iv) of this section if—
(i) One person directly or indirectly
owns stock (or an equity interest)
possessing more than 50 percent of the
total value of the other person; or
(ii) The same person directly or
indirectly owns stock (or an equity
interest) possessing more than 50
percent of the total value of both
persons.
(7) Special purpose vehicle (SPV). For
purposes of this paragraph (e)(5)(iv), the
term SPV means the entity described in
paragraph (e)(5)(iv)(B)(1) of this section.
(D) Examples. The following
examples illustrate the rules of
paragraph (e)(5)(iv) of this section. No
inference is intended as to whether a
taxpayer would be eligible to claim a
credit under section 901(a) if a foreign
payment were an amount of tax paid.
Example 1. U.S. borrower transaction. (i)
Facts. A domestic corporation (USP) forms a
country M corporation (Newco), contributing
$1.5 billion in exchange for 100 percent of
the stock of Newco. Newco, in turn, loans the
$1.5 billion to a second country M
corporation (FSub) wholly owned by USP.
FSub is engaged in the active conduct of
manufacturing and selling widgets and
derives more than 50 percent of its gross
income from such business. USP then sells
its entire interest in Newco to a country M
corporation (FP) for the original purchase
price of $1.5 billion, subject to an obligation
to repurchase the interest in five years for
$1.5 billion. The sale has the effect of
transferring ownership of the Newco stock to
FP for country M tax purposes. The salerepurchase transaction is structured in a way
that qualifies as a collateralized loan for U.S.
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15089
tax purposes. Therefore, USP remains the
owner of the Newco stock for U.S. tax
purposes. In year 1, FSub pays Newco $120
million of interest. Newco pays $36 million
to country M with respect to such interest
income and distributes the remaining $84
million to FP. Under country M law, the $84
million distribution is excluded from FP’s
income. FP is not related to USP within the
meaning of paragraph (e)(5)(iv)(C)(6) of this
section. Under an income tax treaty between
country M and the U.S., country M does not
impose country M tax on interest received by
U.S. residents from sources in country M.
(ii) Result. The payment by Newco to
country M is not a compulsory payment, and
thus is not an amount of tax paid. First,
Newco is an SPV because all of Newco’s
income is passive investment income
described in paragraph (e)(5)(iv)(C)(4) of this
section, Newco’s only asset, a note, is held
to produce such income, and the payment to
country M is attributable to such income.
Second, if the foreign payment were treated
as an amount of tax paid, USP would be
deemed to pay the foreign payment under
section 902(a) and, therefore, would be
eligible to claim a credit for such payment
under section 901(a). Third, USP would not
pay any country M tax if it directly owned
Newco’s loan receivable. Fourth,
distributions from Newco to FP are exempt
from tax under country M law. Fifth, FP is
a counterparty because FP and USP are
unrelated and FP owns more than 10 percent
of the stock of Newco under country M law.
Sixth, FP is the owner of 100 percent of
Newco’s stock for country M tax purposes,
while USP is the owner of 100 percent of
Newco’s stock for U.S. tax purposes, and
USP’s ownership of the stock would
materially affect the amount of credits
claimed by USP if the payment to country M
were an amount of tax paid. If the foreign
payment were treated as an amount of tax
paid, USP’s ownership of the stock for U.S.
tax purposes would make USP eligible to
claim a credit for such amount under
sections 901(a) and 902(a). Because the
payment to country M is not an amount of
tax paid, USP has dividend income of $84
million and is not deemed to pay any country
M tax under section 902(a). USP also has
interest expense of $84 million. FSub’s post1986 undistributed earnings are reduced by
$120 million of interest expense.
Example 2. U.S. borrower transaction. (i)
Facts. The facts are the same as in Example
1, except that FSub is a wholly-owned
subsidiary of Newco. In addition, FSub
agrees not to pay, and Newco and FP agree
not to cause FSub to pay, dividends during
the five-year period in which FP holds the
Newco stock subject to the obligation of USP
to repurchase the stock.
(ii) Result. The results are the same as in
Example 1. Although Newco wholly owns
FSub, which is engaged in the active conduct
of manufacturing and selling widgets and
derives more than 50 percent of its income
from such business, income attributable to
Newco’s stock in FSub is passive investment
income because there are arrangements
whereby substantially all of Newco’s
opportunity for gain and risk of loss with
respect to its stock in FSub is borne by USP.
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See paragraph (e)(iv)(C)(4)(ii) of this section.
Accordingly, Newco’s stock in FSub is held
to produce passive investment income. Thus,
Newco is an SPV because all of Newco’s
income is passive investment income
described in paragraph (e)(5)(iv)(C)(4) of this
section, Newco’s assets are held to produce
such income, and the payment to country M
is attributable to such income.
Example 3. Active business; no SPV. (i)
Facts. A, a domestic corporation, wholly
owns B, a country X corporation engaged in
the manufacture and sale of widgets. On
January 1, 2008, C, also a country X
corporation, loans $400 million to B in
exchange for an instrument that is debt for
U.S. tax purposes and equity for country X
tax purposes. As a result, C is considered to
own 20 percent of the stock of B for country
X tax purposes. B loans $55 million to D, a
country Y corporation wholly owned by A.
For its 2008 tax year, B has $166 million of
net income attributable to its sales of widgets
and $3.3 million of interest income
attributable to the loan to D. Country Y does
not impose tax on interest paid to
nonresidents. B makes a payment of $50.8
million to country X with respect to B’s net
income. Country X does not impose tax on
dividend payments between country X
corporations. A and C are not related within
the meaning of paragraph (e)(5)(iv)(C)(6) of
this section.
(ii) Result. B is not an SPV within the
meaning of paragraph (e)(5)(iv)(B)(1) of this
section because the amount of interest
income received from D does not constitute
substantially all of B’s income and the $55
million loan to D does not constitute
substantially all of B’s assets. Accordingly,
the $50.8 million payment to country X is not
attributable to an arrangement described in
paragraph (e)(5)(iv) of this section.
Example 4. U.S. lender transaction. (i)
Facts. (A) A country X corporation (foreign
bank) contributes $2 billion to a newlyformed country X corporation (Newco) in
exchange for 100 percent of Newco’s
common stock. A U.S. bank (USB)
contributes $1 billion to Newco in exchange
for securities that are treated as stock of
Newco for U.S. tax purposes and debt of
Newco for country X tax purposes. The
securities represent 10 percent of the total
voting power of Newco. Newco contributes
the entire $3 billion to a newly-formed
country X entity (RH) in exchange for 99
percent of RH’s equity. Foreign bank owns
the remaining 1 percent of RH. RH is treated
as a corporation for U.S. tax purposes and a
partnership for country X tax purposes. RH
loans the entire $3 billion it receives from
Newco to foreign bank in exchange for a note
that pays interest currently and a zerocoupon note. Under an income tax treaty
between country X and the U.S., country X
does not impose country X tax on interest
received by U.S. residents from sources in
country X. Country X does not impose tax on
dividend payments between country X
corporations. USB and the foreign bank are
not related within the meaning of paragraph
(e)(5)(iv)(C)(6) of this section.
(B) In year 1, foreign bank pays RH $92
million of interest and accrues $113 million
of interest on the zero-coupon note. RH
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distributes the $92 million of cash it receives
to Newco. Newco distributes $44 million to
USB. Because RH is a partnership for country
X purposes, Newco is required to report for
country X purposes 99 percent ($203 million)
of the income recognized by RH. Newco is
entitled to interest deductions of $44 million
for distributions to USB on the securities for
country X tax purposes and, thus, has $159
million of net income for country X tax
purposes. Newco makes a payment to
country X of $48 million with respect to its
net income. For U.S. tax purposes, Newco’s
post-1986 undistributed earnings pool for
year 1 is $44 million ($92 million–$48
million). For country X tax purposes, foreign
bank is entitled to interest expense
deductions of $205 million.
(ii) Result. (A) The payment to country X
is not a compulsory payment, and thus is not
an amount of tax paid. First, Newco is an
SPV because all of Newco’s income is passive
investment income described in paragraph
(e)(5)(iv)(C)(4) of this section, Newco’s sole
asset, stock of RH, is held to produce such
income, and the payment to country X is
attributable to such income. Second, if the
foreign payment were treated as an amount
of tax paid, USB would be deemed to pay the
$48 million under section 902(a) and,
therefore, would be eligible to claim a credit
under section 901(a). Third, USB would not
pay any country X tax if it directly owned its
proportionate share of Newco’s asset, the 99
percent interest in RH, because under the
U.S.-country X tax treaty country X would
not impose tax on USB’s distributive share of
RH’s interest income. Fourth, foreign bank is
entitled to interest deductions under country
X law for interest it pays and accrues to RH,
and will receive tax-free dividends from
Newco upon payment of the accrued interest.
Fifth, foreign bank and USB are unrelated
and foreign bank is considered to own more
than 10 percent of Newco under country X
law. Sixth, the U.S. and country X view
several aspects of the transaction differently,
and the U.S. treatment would materially
affect the amount of credits claimed by USB
if the country X payment were an amount of
tax paid. If the country X payment were
treated as an amount of tax paid, the equity
treatment of the securities for U.S. tax
purposes would make USB eligible to claim
a credit for the payment under sections
901(a) and 902(a). Moreover, the fact that
Newco recognizes a smaller amount of
income for U.S. tax purposes than it does for
country X tax purposes would increase the
amount of credits USB would be eligible to
claim upon receipt of the $44 million
distribution. Because the $48 million
payment to country X is not an amount of tax
paid, USB has dividend income of $44
million. It is not deemed to pay tax under
section 902(a).
(B) In addition, RH is an SPV because all
of RH’s income is passive investment income
described in paragraph (e)(5)(iv)(C)(4) of this
section, RH’s sole assets, notes of foreign
bank, are held to produce such income, and
Newco’s payment to country X is attributable
to such income. Second, if the foreign
payment were treated as an amount of tax
paid, USB would be deemed to pay the $48
million under section 902(a) and, therefore,
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would be eligible to claim a credit under
section 901(a). Third, USB would not pay
any country X tax if it directly owned its
proportionate share of RH’s assets, notes of
foreign bank, because under the U.S.-country
X tax treaty country X would not impose tax
on interest paid by foreign bank to USB.
Fourth, foreign bank is entitled to interest
deductions under country X law for interest
it pays and accrues to RH, and will receive
tax-free dividends from Newco upon
payment of the accrued interest. Fifth,
foreign bank and USB are unrelated and
foreign bank is considered to own directly or
indirectly more than 10 percent of RH under
country X law. Sixth, the U.S. and country
X view several aspects of the transaction
differently, and the U.S. treatment would
materially affect the amount of credits
claimed by USB if the country X payment
were an amount of tax paid. If the country
X payment were treated as an amount of tax
paid, the equity treatment of the Newco
securities for U.S. tax purposes would make
USB eligible to claim a credit for the payment
under sections 901(a) and 902(a). Moreover,
the entity classification of RH for U.S. tax
purposes results in Newco recognizing a
smaller amount of income for U.S. tax
purposes than it does for country X tax
purposes, which would increase the amount
of credits USB would be eligible to claim
upon receipt of the $44 million distribution.
Because the $48 million payment to country
X is not an amount of tax paid, USB has
dividend income of $44 million. It is not
deemed to pay tax under section 902(a).
Example 5. Active business; no SPV. (i)
Facts. A, a country X corporation, and B, a
domestic corporation, each contribute $1
billion to a newly-formed country X entity
(C) in exchange for stock of C. C is treated
as a corporation for country X purposes and
a partnership for U.S. tax purposes. C
contributes $1.95 billion to a newly-formed
country X corporation (D) in exchange for
100 percent of D’s stock. It loans its
remaining $50 million to D. Accordingly, C’s
sole assets are stock and debt of D. D uses
the entire $2 billion to engage in the business
of manufacturing and selling widgets. For the
2015 tax year, D derives $300 million of
income from its widget business and derives
$2 million of interest income. For the 2015
tax year, C has dividend income of $200
million and interest income of $3.2 million
with respect to its investment in D. Country
X does not impose tax on dividends received
by one country X corporation from a second
country X corporation. C makes a payment of
$960,000 to country X with respect to C’s net
income.
(ii) Result. C’s dividend income is not
passive investment income, and C’s stock in
D is not held to produce such income,
because C owns at least 10 percent of D and
D derives more than 50 percent of its income
from the active conduct of its widget
business. See paragraph (e)(5)(iv)(C)(4)(ii) of
this section. As a result, less than
substantially all of C’s income is passive
investment income and less than
substantially all of C’s assets are held to
produce passive investment income.
Accordingly, C is not an SPV within the
meaning of paragraph (e)(5)(iv)(B)(1) of this
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section, and the $960,000 payment to country
X is not attributable to an arrangement
described in paragraph (e)(5)(iv) of this
section.
Example 6. Active business; no SPV. (i)
Facts. The facts are the same as in Example
5, except that instead of loaning $50 million
to D, C contributes the $50 million to E in
exchange for 10 percent of the stock of E. E
is a country Y entity that in not engaged in
the active conduct of a trade or business.
Also, for the 2015 tax year, D pays no
dividends to C, E pays $3.2 million in
dividends to C, and C makes a payment of
$960,000 to country X with respect to C’s net
income.
(ii) Result. C’s dividend income
attributable to its stock in E is passive
investment income, and C’s stock in E is held
to produce such income. C’s stock in D is not
held to produce passive investment income
because C owns at least 10 percent of D and
D derives more than 50 percent of its income
from the active conduct of its widget
business. See paragraph (e)(5)(iv)(C)(4)(ii) of
this section. As a result, less than
substantially all of C’s assets are held to
produce passive investment income.
Accordingly, C does not meet the
requirements of paragraph (e)(5)(iv)(B)(1) of
this section, and the $960,000 payment to
country X is not attributable to an
arrangement described in paragraph (e)(5)(iv)
of this section.
Example 7. Asset holding transaction. (i)
Facts. (A) A domestic corporation (USP)
contributes $6 billion of country Z debt
obligations to a country Z entity (DE) in
exchange for all of the class A and class B
stock of DE. A corporation unrelated to USP
and organized in country Z (Fcorp)
contributes $1.5 billion to DE in exchange for
all of the class C stock of DE. DE uses the
$1.5 billion contributed by Fcorp to redeem
USP’s class B stock. The class C stock is
entitled to ‘‘all’’ income from DE. However,
Fcorp is obligated immediately to contribute
back to DE all distributions on the class C
stock. USP and Fcorp enter into—
(1) A forward contract under which USP
agrees to buy after five years the class C stock
for $1.5 billion; and
(2) An agreement under which USP agrees
to pay Fcorp interest at a below-market rate
on $1.5 billion.
(B) For U.S. tax purposes, these steps
create a secured loan of $1.5 billion from
Fcorp to USP. Therefore, for U.S. tax
purposes, USP is the owner of both the class
A and class C stock. DE is a disregarded
entity for U.S. tax purposes and a corporation
for country Z tax purposes. In year 1, DE
earns $400 million of interest income on the
country Z debt obligations. DE makes a
payment to country Z of $100 million with
respect to such income and distributes the
remaining $300 million to Fcorp. Fcorp
contributes the $300 million back to DE. USP
and Fcorp are not related within the meaning
of paragraph (e)(5)(iv)(C)(6) of this section.
Country Z does not impose tax on interest
income derived by U.S. residents.
(C) Country Z treats Fcorp as the owner of
the class C stock. Pursuant to country Z tax
law, Fcorp is required to report the $400
million of income with respect to the $300
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million distribution from DE, but is allowed
to claim credits for DE’s $100 million
payment to country Z. For country Z tax
purposes, Fcorp’s contribution increases its
basis in the class C stock. When the class C
stock is later ‘‘sold’’ to USP for $1.5 billion,
the increase in tax basis will result in a
country Z tax loss for Fcorp. Each year, the
amount of the basis increase (and, thus, the
amount of the loss generated) will be
approximately $300 million.
(ii) Result. The payment to country Z is not
a compulsory payment, and thus is not an
amount of tax paid. First, DE is an SPV
because all of DE’s income is passive
investment income described in paragraph
(e)(5)(iv)(C)(4) of this section, all of DE’s
assets are held to produce such income, and
the payment to country Z is attributable to
such income. Second, if the payment were
treated as an amount of tax paid, USP would
be eligible to claim a credit for such amount
under section 901(a). Third, USP would not
pay any country Z tax if it directly owned
DE’s assets. Fourth, Fcorp is entitled to claim
a credit under country Z tax law for the
payment and will recognize a loss under
country Z law upon the ‘‘sale’’ of the class
C stock. Fifth, Fcorp and USP are not related
within the meaning of paragraph
(e)(5)(iv)(C)(6) of this section and Fcorp is
considered to own more than 10 percent of
DE under country Z law. Sixth, the United
States and country X view certain aspects of
the transaction differently and the U.S.
treatment would materially affect the amount
of credits claimed by USP if the country Z
payment were an amount of tax paid. USP’s
ownership of the class C stock for U.S. tax
purposes would make USP eligible to claim
a credit for the country Z payment if the
payment were treated as an amount of tax
paid.
*
*
*
*
*
(h) Effective date. Paragraphs (a)
through (e)(5)(ii) and paragraph (g) of
this section, § 1.901–2A, and § 1.903–1
apply to taxable years beginning after
November 14, 1983. Paragraphs
(e)(5)(iii) and (iv) of this section are
effective for foreign taxes paid or
accrued during taxable years of the
taxpayer ending on or after the date on
which these regulations are published
as final regulations in the Federal
Register.
Kevin M. Brown,
Deputy Commissioner for Services and
Enforcement.
[FR Doc. E7–5862 Filed 3–29–07; 8:45 am]
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DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Occupational Safety and Health
Administration
29 CFR Part 1910
[Docket No. OSHA–2007–0021]
RIN 1218–AC11
Announcement of Additional
Stakeholder Meetings on Occupational
Exposure to Ionizing Radiation
Occupational Safety and Health
Administration, Labor.
ACTION: Announcement of additional
stakeholder meetings.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: The Occupational Safety and
Health Administration (OSHA) invites
interested parties to participate in or
observe informal stakeholder meetings
on Occupational Exposure to Ionizing
Radiation. These meetings are a
continuation of OSHA’s information
collection efforts on ionizing radiation.
DATES: Stakeholder meetings: The
stakeholder meeting dates are:
1. 8:30 a.m.–1 p.m., April 19, 2007,
Chicago, IL.
2. 8:30 a.m.–4:30 p.m., April 26, 2007,
Washington, DC.
Notice of intention to attend a
stakeholder meeting: You must submit a
notice of intention to attend (i.e., to
participate or observe) the Chicago, IL or
Washington, DC, stakeholder meeting by
April 11, 2007.
ADDRESSES: Stakeholder meetings: The
stakeholder meeting locations are:
1. Crown Plaza Chicago O’Hare, 5440
North River Road, Rosemont, IL 60018.
2. Frances Perkins Building, U.S.
Department of Labor, 200 Constitution
Avenue, NW., Washington, DC 20210.
Notices of intention to attend a
stakeholder meeting: You may submit
your notice of intention to attend (i.e.,
to participate or observe) a stakeholder
meeting by any of the following
methods:
Electronic: OSHA encourages you to
submit your notice of intention to attend
to navas.liset@dol.gov.
Facsimile: You may fax your notice of
intention to attend to (202) 693–1678.
Regular mail, express delivery, hand
delivery, messenger and courier service:
Submit your notice of intention to
attend to Liset Navas, OSHA,
Directorate of Standards and Guidance,
Room N–3718, U.S. Department of
Labor, 200 Constitution Avenue, NW.,
Washington, DC 20210; telephone (202)
693–1950. The Department of Labor’s
and OSHA’s normal hours of operation
are 8:15 a.m. to 4:45 p.m., e.t.
Instructions: For further information
on the stakeholder meetings and
E:\FR\FM\30MRP1.SGM
30MRP1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 72, Number 61 (Friday, March 30, 2007)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 15081-15091]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E7-5862]
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DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Internal Revenue Service
26 CFR Part 1
[REG-156779-06]
RIN 1545-BG27
Determining the Amount of Taxes Paid for Purposes of Section 901
AGENCY: Internal Revenue Service (IRS), Treasury.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking and notice of public hearing.
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SUMMARY: These proposed regulations provide guidance relating to the
determination of the amount of taxes paid for purposes of section 901.
The proposed regulations affect taxpayers that claim direct and
indirect foreign tax credits. This document also provides notice of a
public hearing.
DATES: Written or electronic comments must be received by June 28,
2007. Outlines of topics to be discussed at the public hearing
scheduled for July 30, 2007, at 10 a.m. must be received by July 9,
2007.
ADDRESSES: Send submissions to CC:PA:LPD:PR (REG-156779-06), Room 5203,
Internal Revenue Service, P.O. Box 7604, Ben Franklin Station,
Washington, DC 20044. Submissions may be hand delivered Monday through
Friday between the hours of 8 a.m. and 4 p.m. to CC:PA:LPD:PR (REG-
156779-06), Courier's Desk, Internal Revenue Service, 1111 Constitution
Avenue, NW., Washington, DC, or sent electronically via the Federal
eRulemaking Portal at https://www.regulations.gov (IRS REG-156779-06).
The public hearing will be held in the Auditorium of the Internal
Revenue Building, 1111 Constitution Avenue, NW., Washington, DC.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Concerning submission of comments, the
hearing, and/or to be placed on the building access list to attend the
hearing, Kelly Banks (202) 622-7180; concerning the regulations,
Bethany A. Ingwalson, (202) 622-3850 (not toll-free numbers).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
Section 901 of the Internal Revenue Code (Code) permits taxpayers
to claim a credit for income, war profits, and excess profits taxes
paid or accrued (or deemed paid) during the taxable year to any foreign
country or to any possession of the United States.
Section 1.901-2(a) of the regulations defines a tax as a compulsory
payment pursuant to the authority of a foreign country to levy taxes,
and further provides that a tax is an income, war profits, or excess
profits tax if the predominant character of the tax is that of an
income tax in the U.S. sense. Section 1.901-2(e) provides rules for
determining the amount of tax paid by a taxpayer for purposes of
section 901. Section 1.901-2(e)(5) provides that an amount paid is not
a compulsory payment, and thus is not an amount of tax paid, to the
extent that the amount paid exceeds the amount of liability under
foreign law for tax. For purposes of determining whether an amount paid
exceeds the amount of liability under foreign law for tax, Sec. 1.901-
2(e)(5) provides the following rule:
An amount paid does not exceed the amount of such liability if
the amount paid is determined by the taxpayer in a manner that is
consistent with a reasonable interpretation and application of the
substantive and procedural provisions of foreign law (including
applicable tax treaties) in such a way as to reduce, over time, the
taxpayer's reasonably expected liability under foreign law for tax,
and if the taxpayer exhausts all effective and practical remedies,
including invocation of competent authority procedures available
under applicable tax treaties, to reduce, over time, the taxpayer's
liability for foreign tax (including liability pursuant to a foreign
tax audit adjustment).
Section 1.901-2(e)(5) provides further that if foreign tax law
includes options or elections whereby a taxpayer's liability may be
shifted, in whole or part, to a different year, the taxpayer's use or
failure to use such options or elections does not result in a
noncompulsory payment, and that a settlement by a taxpayer of two or
more issues will be evaluated on an overall basis, not on an issue-by-
issue basis, in determining whether an amount is a compulsory amount.
In addition, it provides that a taxpayer is not required to alter its
form of doing business, its business conduct, or the form of any
transaction in order to reduce its liability for tax under foreign law.
A. U.S.-Owned Foreign Entities
Commentators have raised questions regarding the application of
Sec. 1.901-2(e)(5) to a U.S. person that owns one or more foreign
entities. In particular, commentators have raised questions concerning
the application of the regulation when one foreign entity directly or
indirectly owned by a U.S. person transfers, pursuant to a group relief
type regime, a net loss to another foreign entity, which may or may not
also be owned by the U.S. person. Certain commentators have expressed
concern that foreign taxes paid by the transferor in a subsequent tax
year might not be compulsory payments to the extent the transferor
could have reduced its liability for those foreign taxes had it chosen
not to transfer the net loss in the prior year. This concern arises
because the current final regulations apply on a taxpayer-by-taxpayer
basis, obligating each taxpayer to minimize its liability for foreign
taxes over time, even though the net effect of the loss surrender may
be to minimize the amount of foreign taxes paid in the aggregate by the
controlled group over time.
Similar questions and concerns arise when one or more foreign
subsidiaries of a U.S. person reach a combined settlement with a
foreign taxing authority that results in an increase in the amount of
one foreign subsidiary's foreign tax liability and a decrease in the
amount of a second foreign subsidiary's foreign tax liability.
B. Certain Structured Passive Investment Arrangements
The IRS and Treasury Department have become aware that certain U.S.
taxpayers are engaging in highly structured transactions with foreign
counterparties in order to generate foreign tax credits. These
transactions are intentionally structured to create a foreign tax
liability when, removed from the elaborately engineered structure, the
basic underlying business transaction
[[Page 15082]]
generally would result in significantly less, or even no, foreign
taxes. In particular, the transactions purport to convert what would
otherwise be an ordinary course financing arrangement between a U.S.
person and a foreign counterparty, or a portfolio investment of a U.S.
person, into some form of equity ownership in a foreign special purpose
vehicle (SPV). The transaction is deliberately structured to create
income in the SPV for foreign tax purposes, which income is purportedly
subject to foreign tax. The parties exploit differences between U.S.
and foreign law in order to permit the U.S. taxpayer to claim a credit
for the purported foreign tax payments while also allowing the foreign
counterparty to claim a foreign tax benefit. The U.S. taxpayer and the
foreign counterparty share the cost of the purported foreign tax
payments through the pricing of the arrangement.
Explanation of Provisions
The proposed regulations address the application of Sec. 1.901-
2(e)(5) in cases where a U.S. person directly or indirectly owns one or
more foreign entities and in cases in which a U.S. person is a party to
a highly structured passive investment arrangement described in this
preamble. The proposed regulations would treat as a single taxpayer for
purposes of Sec. 1.901-2(e)(5) all foreign entities with respect to
which a U.S. person has a direct or indirect interest of 80 percent or
more. The proposed regulations would treat foreign payments
attributable to highly structured passive investment arrangements as
noncompulsory payments under Sec. 1.901-2(e)(5) and, thus, would
disallow credits for such amounts.
A. U.S.-Owned Foreign Entities
Section 1.901-2(e)(5) requires a taxpayer to interpret and apply
foreign law reasonably in such a way as to reduce, over time, the
taxpayer's reasonably expected liability under foreign law for tax.
This requirement ensures that a taxpayer will make reasonable efforts
to minimize its foreign tax liability even though the taxpayer may
otherwise be indifferent to the imposition of foreign tax due to the
availability of the foreign tax credit. The purpose of this requirement
is served if all foreign entities owned by such person, in the
aggregate, satisfy the requirements of the regulation. Accordingly, for
purposes of determining compliance with Sec. 1.901-2(e)(5), the
proposed regulations would treat as a single taxpayer all foreign
entities in which the same U.S. person has a direct or indirect
interest of 80 percent or more. For this purpose, an interest of 80
percent or more means stock possessing 80 percent or more of the vote
and value (in the case of a foreign corporation) or an interest
representing 80 percent or more of the income (in the case of non-
corporate foreign entities).
The proposed regulations provide that if one 80 percent-owned
foreign entity transfers or surrenders a net loss for the taxable year
to a second such entity pursuant to a foreign law group relief or
similar regime, foreign tax paid by the transferor in a different tax
year does not fail to be a compulsory payment solely because such tax
would not have been due had the transferor retained the net loss and
carried it over to such other year. Similarly, it provides that if one
or more 80 percent-owned foreign entities enter into a combined
settlement under foreign law of two or more issues, such settlement
will be evaluated on an overall basis, not on an issue-by-issue or
entity-by-entity basis, in determining whether an amount is a
compulsory amount. The proposed regulations include examples to
illustrate the proposed rule.
The IRS and Treasury Department intend to monitor structures
involving U.S.-owned foreign groups, including those that would be
covered by the proposed regulations, to determine whether taxpayers are
utilizing such structures to separate foreign taxes from the related
income. The IRS and Treasury Department may issue additional
regulations in the future in order to address arrangements that result
in the inappropriate separation of foreign tax and income.
B. Certain Structured Passive Investment Arrangements
The structured arrangements discovered and identified by the IRS
and the Treasury Department can be grouped into three general
categories: (1) U.S. borrower transactions, (2) U.S. lender
transactions, and (3) asset holding transactions. The transactions,
including the claimed U.S. tax results, are described in section B.1 of
this preamble. Section B.2 of this preamble discusses the purpose of
the foreign tax credit regime and explains why allowing a credit in the
transactions is inconsistent with this purpose. Section B.3 of this
preamble discusses comments the IRS and the Treasury Department have
received on the transactions and describes the proposed regulations.
The IRS is continuing to scrutinize the transactions under current law
and intends to utilize all tools available to challenge the claimed
U.S. tax results in appropriate cases.
1. Categories of Structured Passive Investment Arrangements
(a) U.S. borrower transactions. The first category consists of
transactions in which a U.S. person indirectly borrows funds from an
unrelated foreign counterparty. If a U.S. person were to borrow funds
directly from a foreign person, the U.S. person generally would make
nondeductible principal payments and deductible interest payments. The
U.S. person would not incur foreign tax. The foreign lender generally
would owe foreign tax on its interest income. In a structured financing
arrangement, the U.S. borrower attempts to convert all or a portion of
its deductible interest payments and, in certain cases, its
nondeductible principal payments into creditable foreign tax payments.
The U.S. borrower's foreign tax credit benefit is shared by the parties
through the pricing of the arrangement. See Example 1 of proposed Sec.
1.901-2(e)(5)(iv)(D).
In a typical structured financing arrangement, the loan is made
indirectly through an SPV. The foreign lender's interest income (and,
in many cases, other income) is effectively isolated in the SPV. The
U.S. borrower acquires a direct or indirect interest in the SPV and
asserts that it has a direct or indirect equity interest in the SPV for
U.S. tax purposes. The U.S. borrower claims a credit for foreign taxes
imposed on the income derived by the SPV. The U.S. borrower's purported
equity interest may be treated as debt for foreign tax purposes or it
may be treated as an equity interest that is owned by the foreign
lender for foreign tax purposes. In either case, the foreign lender is
treated as owning an equity interest in the SPV for foreign tax
purposes, which entitles the foreign lender to receive tax-free
distributions from the SPV.
For example, assume that a U.S. person seeks to borrow $1.5 billion
from a foreign person. Instead of borrowing the funds directly, the
U.S. borrower forms a corporation (SPV) in the same country as the
foreign counterparty. The U.S. borrower contributes $1.5 billion to SPV
in exchange for 100 percent of the stock of SPV. SPV, in turn, loans
the entire $1.5 billion to a corporation wholly owned by the U.S.
borrower. The U.S. borrower recovers its $1.5 billion by selling its
entire interest in SPV to the foreign counterparty, subject to an
obligation to repurchase the interest in five years for $1.5 billion.
Each year, SPV earns $120 million of interest income from the U.S.
borrower's subsidiary. SPV pays $36 million of foreign tax and
distributes the
[[Page 15083]]
remaining $84 million to the foreign counterparty.
The U.S. borrower takes the position that, for U.S. tax purposes,
the sale-repurchase transaction is a borrowing secured by the SPV
stock. Accordingly, the U.S. borrower asserts that it owns the stock of
SPV for U.S. tax purposes and has an outstanding debt obligation to the
foreign counterparty. It reports the distribution from SPV as dividend
income and claims indirect credits under section 902 for the $36
million of foreign taxes paid by SPV. It includes in income the cash
dividend of $84 million paid to the foreign counterparty, plus a
section 78 gross-up amount of $36 million, for a total of $120 million.
The U.S. borrower claims a deduction of $84 million as interest on its
debt obligation to the foreign counterparty. In addition, the U.S.
borrower's subsidiary claims an interest deduction of $120 million. In
the aggregate, the U.S. borrower and its subsidiary claim a foreign tax
credit of $36 million and an interest expense deduction (net of income
inclusions) of $84 million.
For foreign tax purposes, the foreign counterparty owns the equity
of SPV and is not subject to additional foreign tax upon receipt of the
dividend. Thus, the net result is that the foreign jurisdiction
receives foreign tax payments attributable to what is in substance the
lender's interest income, which is consistent with the foreign tax
results that would be expected from a direct borrowing.
Both parties benefit from the arrangement. The foreign lender
obtains an after-foreign tax interest rate that is higher than the
after-foreign tax interest rate it would earn on a direct loan. The
U.S. borrower's funding costs are lower on an after-U.S. tax basis
(though not on a pre-U.S. tax basis) because it has converted interest
expense into creditable foreign tax payments.
The benefit to the parties is solely attributable to the reduction
in the U.S. borrower's U.S. tax liability resulting from the foreign
tax credits claimed by the U.S. borrower. The foreign jurisdiction
benefits from the arrangement because the amount of interest received
by SPV exceeds the amount of interest that would have been received by
the foreign lender if the transaction had been structured as a direct
loan. As a result, the amount paid by SPV to the foreign jurisdiction
exceeds the amount of foreign tax the foreign jurisdiction would have
imposed on the foreign lender's interest income in connection with a
direct loan.
(b) U.S. lender transactions. The second category consists of
transactions in which a U.S person indirectly loans funds to an
unrelated foreign counterparty. If a U.S. person were to loan the funds
directly to the foreign person, the U.S. person generally would be
subject to U.S. tax on its interest income and the borrower would
receive a corresponding deduction for the interest expense. The U.S.
person generally would not be subject to foreign tax other than, in
certain circumstances, a gross basis withholding tax.
In a typical structured financing arrangement, the U.S. person
advances funds to a foreign borrower indirectly through an SPV. The
U.S. person asserts that its interest in the SPV is equity for U.S. tax
purposes. Income of the foreign borrower (or another foreign
counterparty) is effectively shifted into the SPV. The U.S. person
receives cash payments from the SPV and claims a credit for foreign
taxes imposed on the income recognized by the SPV for foreign tax
purposes. The foreign tax credits eliminate all or substantially all of
the U.S. tax the U.S. person would otherwise owe on its return and, in
many cases, U.S. tax the U.S. person would otherwise owe on unrelated
foreign source income. The economic cost of the foreign taxes is shared
through the pricing of the arrangement. See Example 4 of proposed Sec.
1.901-2(e)(5)(iv)(D).
For example, assume a U.S. person seeks to loan $1 billion to a
foreign person. In lieu of a direct loan, the U.S. lender contributes
$1 billion to a newly-formed corporation (SPV). The foreign
counterparty contributes $2 billion to SPV, which is organized in the
same country as the foreign counterparty. SPV contributes the total $3
billion to a second special purpose entity (RH), receiving a 99 percent
equity interest in RH in exchange. The foreign counterparty owns the
remaining 1 percent of RH. RH loans the funds to the foreign
counterparty in exchange for a note that pays interest currently and a
second zero-coupon note. RH is a corporation for U.S. tax purposes and
a flow-through entity for foreign tax purposes.
Each year, the foreign counterparty pays $92 million of interest to
RH, and RH accrues $113 million of interest on the zero-coupon note. RH
distributes the $92 million of cash it receives to SPV. Because RH is a
partnership for foreign tax purposes, SPV is required to report for
foreign tax purposes 99 percent ($203 million) of the income recognized
by RH. Because RH is a corporation for U.S. tax purposes, SPV
recognizes only the cash distributions of $92 million for U.S. tax
purposes. SPV pays foreign tax of $48 million on its net income (30
percent of $159 million, or $203 interest income less $44 million
interest deduction) and distributes its remaining cash of $44 million
to the U.S. lender.
The U.S. lender takes the position that it has an equity interest
in SPV for U.S. tax purposes. It claims an indirect credit for the $48
million of foreign taxes paid by SPV. It includes in income the cash
dividend of $44 million, plus a section 78 gross-up amount of $48
million. For foreign tax purposes, the U.S. lender's interest in SPV is
debt, and the foreign borrower owns 100 percent of the equity of SPV.
The foreign counterparty and SPV, in the aggregate, have a net
deduction of $44 million for foreign tax purposes.
Both parties benefit from the transaction. The foreign borrower
obtains ``cheap financing'' because the $44 million of cash distributed
to the U.S. lender is less than the amount of interest it would have to
pay on a direct loan with respect to which the U.S. lender would owe
U.S. tax. The U.S. lender is better off on an after-U.S. tax basis
because of the foreign tax credits, which eliminate the U.S. lender's
U.S. tax on the ``dividend'' income.
The benefit to the parties is solely attributable to the reduction
in the U.S. lender's U.S. tax liability resulting from the foreign tax
credits claimed by the U.S. lender. The foreign jurisdiction benefits
because the aggregate foreign tax result is a deduction for the foreign
borrower that is less than the amount of the interest deduction the
foreign borrower would have had upon a direct loan.
(c) Asset holding transactions. The third category of transactions
(``asset holding transactions'') consists of transactions in which a
U.S. person that owns an income-producing asset moves the asset into a
foreign taxing jurisdiction. For example, assume a U.S. person owns
passive-type assets (such as debt obligations) generating an income
stream that is subject to U.S. tax. In an asset holding transaction,
the U.S. person transfers the assets to an SPV that is subject to tax
in a foreign jurisdiction on the income stream. Ordinarily, such a
transfer would not affect the U.S. person's after-tax position since
the U.S. person could claim a credit for the foreign tax paid and,
thereby, obtain a corresponding reduction in the amount of U.S. tax it
would otherwise owe. In the structured transactions, however, the cost
of the foreign tax is shared by a foreign person who obtains a foreign
tax benefit by participating in the arrangement. Thus, the U.S. person
is better off paying the foreign tax instead of U.S. tax because
[[Page 15084]]
it does not bear the full economic burden of the foreign tax.
In a typical structured transaction, a foreign counterparty
participates in the arrangement with the SPV. For example, the foreign
counterparty may be considered to own a direct or indirect interest in
the SPV for foreign tax purposes. The foreign counterparty's
participation in the arrangement allows it to obtain a foreign tax
benefit that it would not otherwise enjoy. The foreign counterparty
compensates the U.S. person for this benefit in some manner. This
compensation, which can be viewed as a reimbursement for a portion of
the foreign tax liability resulting from the transfer of the assets,
puts the U.S. person in a better after-U.S. tax position. See Example 7
of proposed Sec. 1.901-2(e)(5)(iv)(D).
The benefit to the parties is solely attributable to the reduction
in the U.S. taxpayer's U.S. tax liability resulting from the foreign
tax credits claimed by the U.S. taxpayer. The foreign jurisdiction
benefits because the foreign taxes purportedly paid by the SPV exceed
the amount by which the foreign counterparty's taxes are reduced.
2. Purpose of the Foreign Tax Credit
The purpose of the foreign tax credit is to mitigate double
taxation of foreign source income. Because the foreign tax credit
provides a dollar-for-dollar reduction in U.S. tax that a U.S. person
would otherwise owe, the U.S. person generally is indifferent, subject
to various foreign tax credit limitations, as to whether it pays
foreign tax on its foreign source income (if fully offset by the
foreign tax credit) or whether it pays U.S. (and no foreign) tax on
that income.
The structured arrangements described in section B.1 of this
preamble violate this purpose. A common feature of all these
arrangements is that the U.S. person and a foreign counterparty share
the economic cost of the foreign taxes claimed as credits by the U.S.
person. This creates an incentive for the U.S. person to subject itself
voluntarily to the foreign tax because there is a U.S. tax motivation
to do so. The result is an erosion of the U.S. tax base in a manner
that is not consistent with the purpose of the foreign tax credit
provisions.
Although the foreign counterparty derives a foreign tax benefit in
these arrangements, the foreign jurisdiction generally is made whole
because of the payments to the foreign jurisdiction made by the special
purpose vehicle. In fact, the aggregate amount of payments to the
foreign jurisdictions in connection with these transactions generally
exceeds the amount of foreign tax that would have been imposed in the
ordinary course. Only the U.S. fisc experiences a reduction in tax
payments as a result of the structured arrangements.
The IRS and Treasury Department recognize that often there is a
business purpose for the financing or portfolio investment underlying
the otherwise elaborately engineered transactions. However, it is
inconsistent with the purpose of the foreign tax credit to permit a
credit for foreign taxes that result from intentionally structuring a
transaction to generate foreign taxes in a manner that allows the
parties to obtain duplicate tax benefits and share the cost of the tax
payments. The result in these structured arrangements is that both
parties as well as the foreign jurisdiction benefit at the expense of
the U.S. fisc.
3. Comments and Proposed Regulations
The IRS and Treasury Department have determined that it is not
appropriate to allow a credit in connection with these highly
engineered transactions where the U.S. taxpayer benefits by
intentionally subjecting itself to foreign tax. The proposed
regulations would revise Sec. 1.901-2(e)(5) to provide that an amount
paid to a foreign country in connection with such an arrangement is not
an amount of tax paid. Accordingly, under the proposed regulations, a
taxpayer would not be eligible to claim a foreign tax credit for such a
payment. For periods prior to the effective date of final regulations,
the IRS will continue to utilize all available tools under current law
to challenge the U.S. tax results claimed in connection with such
arrangements, including the substance over form doctrine, the economic
substance doctrine, debt-equity principles, tax ownership principles,
existing Sec. 1.901-2(e), section 269, and the partnership anti-abuse
rules of Sec. 1.701-2.
Certain commentators recommended that the IRS and Treasury
Department adopt a broad anti-abuse rule that would deny a foreign tax
credit in any case where allowance of the credit would be inconsistent
with the purpose of the foreign tax credit regime. Other commentators
recommended a narrower approach that would only deny foreign tax
credits attributable to transactions that include particular features.
The IRS and Treasury Department are concerned that a broad anti-abuse
rule would create uncertainty for both taxpayers and the IRS. The IRS
and Treasury Department have concluded that, at this time, a targeted
rule denying foreign tax credits in arrangements similar to the
arrangements described in section B.1 of this preamble is more
appropriate.
For periods after the effective date of final regulations, the IRS
and Treasury Department will continue to scrutinize other arrangements
that are not covered by the regulations but are inconsistent with the
purpose of the foreign tax credit. Such arrangements may include
arrangements that are similar to arrangements described in the proposed
regulations, but that do not meet all of the conditions included in the
proposed regulations. The IRS will utilize all available tools,
including those described above, to challenge the claimed U.S. tax
results in appropriate cases. In addition, the IRS and Treasury
Department may issue additional regulations in the future in order to
address such other arrangements.
The proposed regulations would retain the general rule in the
existing regulations that a taxpayer need not alter its form of doing
business or the form of any transaction in order to reduce its foreign
tax liability. However, the proposed regulations would provide that,
notwithstanding the general rule, an amount paid to a foreign country
(a ``foreign payment'') is not a compulsory payment, and thus is not an
amount of tax paid, if the foreign payment is attributable to a
structured passive investment arrangement. For this purpose, the
proposed regulations would define a structured passive investment
arrangement as an arrangement that satisfies six conditions. The six
conditions consist of features that are common to the three types of
arrangements identified in section B.1 of this preamble. The IRS and
Treasury Department believe it is appropriate to treat foreign payments
attributable to these arrangements as voluntary payments because such
arrangements are intentionally structured to generate the foreign
payment.
The first condition is that the arrangement utilizes an entity that
meets two requirements (an ``SPV''). The first requirement is that
substantially all of the gross income (for United States tax purposes)
of the entity is attributable to passive investment income and
substantially all of the assets of the entity are assets held to
produce such passive investment income. The second requirement is that
there is a purported foreign tax payment attributable to income of the
entity. The purported foreign tax may be paid by the entity itself, by
the owner(s) of the entity (if the entity is treated as a pass-through
entity under foreign law) or by a lower-tier entity (if the lower-tier
[[Page 15085]]
entity is treated as a pass-through entity under U.S. law).
For purposes of this first requirement, passive investment income
is defined as income described in section 954(c), with two
modifications. The first modification is that if the entity is a
holding company that owns a direct equity interest (other than a
preferred interest) of 10 percent or more in another entity (a lower-
tier entity) that is predominantly engaged in the active conduct of a
trade or business (or substantially all the assets of which consist of
qualifying equity interests in other entities that are predominantly
engaged in the active conduct of a trade or business), passive
investment income does not include income attributable to the interest
in such lower-tier entity. This exception does not apply if there are
arrangements under which substantially all of the opportunity for gain
and risk of loss with respect to such interest in the lower-tier entity
are borne by either the U.S. party or the counterparty (but not both).
Accordingly, a direct equity interest in any such lower-tier entity is
not held to produce passive investment income provided there are no
arrangements under which substantially all of the entity's opportunity
for gain and risk of loss with respect to the lower-tier entity are
borne by either the U.S. party or the counterparty (but not both). This
modification is based on the notion that an entity is not a passive
investment vehicle of the type targeted by these regulations if the
entity is a holding company for one or more operating companies. This
modification ensures that a joint venture arrangement between a U.S.
person and a foreign person is not treated as a passive investment
arrangement solely because the joint venture is conducted through a
holding company structure.
The second modification is that passive investment income is
determined by disregarding sections 954(c)(3) and (c)(6) and by
treating income attributable to transactions with the counterparties
(described in this preamble) as ineligible for the exclusions under
sections 954(h) and (i). Sections 954(c)(3) and (c)(6) provide
exclusions for certain related party payments of dividends, interest,
rents, and royalties. Those exclusions are not appropriate for these
transactions because these transactions can be structured utilizing
related party payments. The modifications to the application of
sections 954(h) and (i) are intended to ensure that income derived from
the counterparty cannot qualify for the exclusion from passive
investment income, but will not prevent other income from qualifying
for those exclusions. The IRS and Treasury Department intend that the
structured financing arrangements described in this preamble do not
qualify for the active banking, financing or insurance business
exceptions to the definition of passive investment income. Comments are
requested on whether further modifications or clarifications to the
proposed regulations' definition of passive investment income are
appropriate to ensure this result.
The requirement that substantially all of the assets of the entity
produce passive investment income is intended to ensure that an entity
engaged in an active trade or business is not treated as an SPV solely
because, in a particular year, it derives only passive investment
income.
The second overall condition is that a person (a ``U.S. party'')
would be eligible to claim a credit under section 901(a) (including a
credit for foreign taxes deemed paid under section 902 or 960) for all
or a portion of the foreign payment if such payment were an amount of
tax paid. Such eligibility to claim the credit could arise because the
U.S. party would be treated as having paid or accrued the foreign
payment for purposes of section 901 if it were an amount of tax paid.
Alternatively, the U.S. party's eligibility to claim the credit could
arise because the U.S. party owns an equity interest in the SPV or
another entity that would be treated as having paid or accrued the
foreign payment for purposes of section 901 if it were an amount of tax
paid.
The third overall condition is that the foreign payment or payments
are (or are expected to be) substantially greater than the amount of
credits, if any, that the U.S. party would reasonably expect to be
eligible to claim under section 901(a) if such U.S. party directly
owned its proportionate share of the assets owned by the SPV other than
through a branch, a permanent establishment or any other arrangement
(such as an agency arrangement) that would subject the income generated
by its share of the assets to a net basis foreign tax. For example, if
the SPV owns a note that generates interest income with respect to
which a foreign payment is made, but foreign law (including an
applicable treaty) provides for a zero rate of withholding tax on
interest paid to non-residents, the U.S. party would not reasonably
expect to pay foreign tax for which it could claim foreign tax credits
if it directly owned the note and directly earned the interest income.
The fourth condition is that the arrangement is structured in such
a manner that it results in a foreign tax benefit (such as a credit,
deduction, loss, exemption or a disregarded payment) for a counterparty
or for a person that is related to the counterparty, but not related to
the U.S. party.
The fifth condition is that the counterparty is a person (other
than the SPV) that is unrelated to the U.S. party and that (i) directly
or indirectly owns 10 percent or more of the equity of the SPV under
the tax laws of a foreign country in which such person is subject to
tax on the basis of place of management, place of incorporation or
similar criterion or otherwise subject to a net basis foreign tax or
(ii) acquires 20 percent or more of the assets of the SPV under the tax
laws of a foreign country in which such person is subject to tax on the
basis of place of management, place of incorporation or similar
criterion or otherwise subject to a net basis foreign tax.
The sixth condition is that the U.S. and an applicable foreign
country treat the arrangement differently under their respective tax
systems. For this purpose, an applicable foreign country is any foreign
country in which either the counterparty, a person related to the
counterparty (but not related to the U.S. party) or the SPV is subject
to net basis tax. To provide clarity and limit the scope of this
factor, the proposed regulations provide that the arrangement must be
subject to one of four specified types of inconsistent treatment.
Specifically, the U.S. and the foreign country (or countries) must
treat one or more of the following aspects of the arrangement
differently, and the U.S. treatment of the inconsistent aspect must
materially affect the amount of foreign tax credits claimed, or the
amount of income recognized, by the U.S. party to the arrangement: (i)
The classification of an entity as a corporation or other entity
subject to an entity-level tax, a partnership or other flow-through
entity or an entity that is disregarded for tax purposes; (ii) the
characterization as debt, equity or an instrument that is disregarded
for tax purposes of an instrument issued in the transaction, (iii) the
proportion of the equity of the SPV (or an entity that directly or
indirectly owns the SPV) that is considered to be owned directly or
indirectly by the U.S. party and the counterparty; or (iv) the amount
of taxable income of the SPV for one or more tax years during which the
arrangement is in effect.
Under the proposed regulations, a foreign payment would not be a
compulsory payment if it is attributable to an arrangement that meets
the six conditions. The proposed regulations
[[Page 15086]]
would treat a foreign payment as attributable to such an arrangement if
the foreign payment is attributable to income of the SPV. Such foreign
payments include a payment by the SPV, a payment by the owner of the
SPV (if the SPV is a pass-through entity under foreign law) and a
payment by a lower-tier entity that is treated as a pass-through entity
under U.S. law. For this purpose, a foreign payment is not treated as
attributable to the income of the SPV if the foreign payment is a gross
basis withholding tax imposed on a distribution or payment from the SPV
to the U.S. party. Such taxes could be considered to be noncompulsory
payments because the U.S. party intentionally subjects itself to the
taxes as part of the arrangement. However, the IRS and Treasury
Department have determined that such taxes should not be treated as
attributable to the arrangement because, among other reasons, the
foreign counterparty generally does not derive a duplicative foreign
tax benefit and, therefore, generally does not share the economic cost
of such taxes.
The IRS and Treasury Department considered excluding all foreign
payments with respect to which the economic cost is not shared from the
definition of foreign payments attributable to the arrangement, but
determined that such a rule would be difficult to administer. The IRS
and Treasury Department request comments on whether it would be
appropriate to exclude certain foreign payments from the definition of
foreign taxes attributable to the structured passive investment
arrangement. Comments should address the rationale and administrable
criteria for identifying any such exclusions.
Certain commentators recommended that the proposed regulations
include a requirement that the foreign tax credits attributable to the
arrangement be disproportionate to the amount of taxable income
attributable to the arrangement. This recommendation has not been
adopted for three reasons. First, the IRS and Treasury Department were
concerned that such a requirement would create too much uncertainty and
would be unduly burdensome for taxpayers and the IRS. Second, the
extent to which interest and other expenses, as well as returns on
borrowed funds and capital, should be considered attributable to a
particular arrangement is not entirely clear. A narrow view could
present opportunities for manipulation, especially for financial
institutions having numerous alternative placements of leverage for use
within the group, while an expansive view could undercut the utility of
such a test. Third, the fundamental concern in these transactions is
that they create an incentive for taxpayers voluntarily to subject
themselves to foreign tax. This concern exists irrespective of whether
the particular arrangement generates a disproportionate amount of
foreign tax credits.
The IRS and Treasury Department considered whether it would be
appropriate to permit a taxpayer to treat a foreign payment
attributable to an arrangement that meets the definition of a
structured passive investment arrangement as an amount of tax paid, if
the taxpayer can show that tax considerations were not a principal
purpose for the structure of the arrangement. Alternatively, the IRS
and Treasury Department considered whether it would be appropriate to
treat a foreign payment as an amount of tax paid if a taxpayer shows
that there is a substantial business purpose for utilizing a hybrid
instrument or entity, which would not include reducing the taxpayer's
after-tax costs or enhancing the taxpayer's after-tax return through
duplicative foreign tax benefits. The IRS and Treasury Department
determined not to include such a rule in these proposed regulations due
to administrability concerns. Comments are requested, however, on
whether the final regulations should include such a rule as well as how
such a rule could be made to be administrable in practice, including
what reasonably ascertainable evidence would be sufficient to establish
such a substantial non-tax business purpose, or the lack of a tax-
related principal purpose. Comments should also address whether it
would be appropriate to adopt a broader anti-abuse rule and permit a
taxpayer to demonstrate that it should not apply.
C. Effective Date
The regulations are proposed to be effective for foreign taxes paid
or accrued during taxable years of the taxpayer ending on or after the
date on which the final regulations are published in the Federal
Register. No inference is intended regarding the U.S. tax consequences
of structured passive investment arrangements prior to the effective
date of the regulations.
Special Analyses
It has been determined that this notice of proposed rulemaking is
not a significant regulatory action as defined in Executive Order
12866. Therefore, a regulatory assessment is not required. It also has
been determined that section 553(b) of the Administrative Procedure Act
(5 U.S.C. chapter 5) does not apply to these regulations, and because
the regulations do not impose a collection of information on small
entities, the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. chapter 6), does not
apply. Pursuant to section 7805(f) of the Internal Revenue Code, this
regulation has been submitted to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the
Small Business Administration for comment on its impact on small
businesses.
Comments and Public Hearing
Before these proposed regulations are adopted as final regulations,
consideration will be given to any written (a signed original and eight
(8) copies) or electronic comments that are submitted timely to the
IRS. The IRS and Treasury Department request comments on the clarity of
the proposed regulations and how they can be made easier to understand.
All comments will be available for public inspection and copying.
A public hearing has been scheduled for July 30, 2007, at 10 a.m.
in the Internal Revenue Building, 1111 Constitution Avenue, NW.,
Washington, DC. All visitors must present photo identification to enter
the building. Because of access restrictions, visitors will not be
admitted beyond the immediate entrance area more than 30 minutes before
the hearing starts. For information about having your name placed on
the building access list to attend the hearing, see the FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT section of this preamble.
The rules of 26 CFR 601.601(a)(3) apply to the hearing. Persons who
wish to present oral comments must submit electronic or written
comments and an outline of the topics to be discussed and time to be
devoted to each topic (a signed original and eight (8) copies) by July
9, 2007. A period of 10 minutes will be allotted to each person for
making comments. An agenda showing the scheduling of the speakers will
be prepared after the deadline for receiving outlines has passed.
Copies of the agenda will be available free of charge at the hearing.
Drafting Information
The principal author of these regulations is Bethany A. Ingwalson,
Office of Associate Chief Counsel (International). However, other
personnel from the IRS and the Treasury Department participated in
their development.
List of Subjects in 26 CFR Part 1
Income taxes, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
[[Page 15087]]
Proposed Amendments to the Regulations
Accordingly, 26 CFR part 1 is proposed to be amended as follows:
PART 1--INCOME TAXES
Paragraph 1. The authority citation for part 1 continues to read in
part as follows:
Authority: 26 U.S.C. 7805 * * *
Par. 2. Section 1.901-2 is amended by adding paragraphs (e)(5)(iii)
and (iv), and revising paragraph (h) to read as follows:
Sec. 1.901-2 Income, war profits, or excess profits tax paid or
accrued.
* * * * *
(e)(5) * * *
(iii) U.S.-owned foreign entities--(A) In general. If a U.S. person
described in section 901(b) directly or indirectly owns stock
possessing 80 percent or more of the total voting power and total value
of one or more foreign corporations (or, in the case of a non-corporate
foreign entity, directly or indirectly owns an interest in 80 percent
or more of the income of one or more such foreign entities), the group
comprising such foreign corporations and entities (the ``U.S.-owned
group'') shall be treated as a single taxpayer for purposes of
paragraph (e)(5) of this section. Therefore, if one member of such a
U.S.-owned group transfers or surrenders a net loss for the taxable
year to a second member of the U.S.-owned group and the loss reduces
the foreign tax due from the second member pursuant to a foreign law
group relief or similar regime, foreign tax paid by the first member in
a different year does not fail to be a compulsory payment solely
because such tax would not have been due had the member that
transferred or surrendered the net loss instead carried over the loss
to reduce its own income and foreign tax liability in that year.
Similarly, if one or more members of the U.S.-owned group enter into a
combined settlement under foreign law of two or more issues involving
different members of the group, such settlement will be evaluated on an
overall basis, not on an issue-by-issue or entity-by-entity basis, in
determining whether an amount is a compulsory amount. The provisions of
this paragraph (e)(5)(iii) apply solely for purposes of determining
whether amounts paid are compulsory payments of foreign tax and do not,
for example, modify the provisions of section 902 requiring separate
pools of post-1986 undistributed earnings and post-1986 foreign income
taxes for each member of a qualified group.
(B) Special rules. All domestic corporations that are members of a
consolidated group (as that term is defined in Sec. 1.1502-1(h)) shall
be treated as one domestic corporation for purposes of this paragraph
(e)(5)(iii). For purposes of this paragraph (e)(5)(iii), indirect
ownership of stock or another equity interest (such as an interest in a
partnership) shall be determined in accordance with the principles of
section 958(a)(2), whether the interest is owned by a U.S. or foreign
person.
(C) Examples. The following examples illustrate the rules of this
paragraph (e)(5)(iii):
Example 1. (i) Facts. A, a domestic corporation, wholly owns B,
a country X corporation. B, in turn, wholly owns several country X
corporations, including C and D. B, C, and D participate in group
relief in country X. Under the country X group relief rules, a
member with a net loss may choose to surrender the loss to another
member of the group. In year 1, C has a net loss of (1,000x) and D
has net income of 5,000x for country X tax purposes. Pursuant to the
group relief rules in country X, C agrees to surrender its year 1
net loss to D and D agrees to claim the net loss. D uses the net
loss to reduce its year 1 net income to 4,000x for country X tax
purposes, which reduces the amount of country X tax D owes in year 1
by 300x. In year 2, C earns 3,000x with respect to which it pays
900x of country X tax. Country X permits a taxpayer to carry forward
net losses for up to ten years.
(ii) Result. Paragraph (e)(5)(i) of this section provides, in
part, that an amount paid to a foreign country does not exceed the
amount of liability under foreign law for tax if the taxpayer
determines such amount in a manner that is consistent with a
reasonable interpretation and application of the substantive and
procedural provisions of foreign law (including applicable tax
treaties) in such a way as to reduce, over time, the taxpayer's
reasonably expected liability under foreign law for tax. Under
paragraph (e)(5)(iii)(A) of this section, B, C, and D are treated as
a single taxpayer for purposes of testing whether the reasonably
expected foreign tax liability has been minimized over time, because
A directly and indirectly owns 100 percent of each of B, C, and D.
Accordingly, none of the 900x paid by C in year 2 fails to be a
compulsory payment solely because C could have reduced its year 2
country X tax liability by 300x by choosing to carry forward its
year 1 net loss to year 2 instead of surrendering it to D to reduce
D's country X liability in year 1.
Example 2. (i) Facts. L, M, and N are country Y corporations. L
owns 100 percent of the common stock of M, which owns 100 percent of
the stock of N. O, a domestic corporation, owns a security issued by
M that is treated as debt for country Y tax purposes and as stock
for U.S. tax purposes. As a result, L owns 100 percent of the stock
of M for country Y purposes while O owns 99 percent of the stock of
M for U.S. tax purposes. L, M, and N participate in group relief in
country Y. Pursuant to the group relief rules in country Y, M may
surrender its loss to any member of the group. In year 1, M has a
net loss of $10 million, N has net income of $25 million, and L has
net income of $15 million. M chooses to surrender its year 1 net
loss to L. Country Y imposes tax of 30 percent on the net income of
country Y corporations. Accordingly, in year 1, the loss surrender
has the effect of reducing L's country Y tax by $3 million. In year
1, N makes a payment of $7.5 million to country Y with respect to
its net income of $25 million. If M had surrendered its net loss to
N instead of L, N would have had net income of $15 million, with
respect to which it would have owed only $4.5 million of country Y
tax.
(ii) Result. M and N, but not L, are treated as a single
taxpayer for purposes of paragraph (e)(5) of this section because O
directly and indirectly owns 99 percent of each of M and N, but owns
no direct or indirect interest in L. Accordingly, in testing whether
M and N's reasonably expected foreign tax liability has been
minimized over time, L is not considered the same taxpayer as M and
N, collectively, and the $3 million reduction in L's year 1 country
Y tax liability through the surrender to L of M's $10 million
country Y net loss in year 1 is not considered to reduce M and N's
collective country Y tax liability.
(iv) Certain structured passive investment arrangements--(A) In
general. Notwithstanding paragraph (e)(5)(i) of this section, an amount
paid to a foreign country (a ``foreign payment'') is not a compulsory
payment, and thus is not an amount of tax paid, if the foreign payment
is attributable to an arrangement described in paragraph (e)(5)(iv)(B)
of this section. For purposes of this paragraph (e)(5)(iv), a foreign
payment is attributable to an arrangement described in paragraph
(e)(5)(iv)(B) of this section if the foreign payment is described in
paragraph (e)(5)(iv)(B)(1)(ii) of this section.
(B) Conditions. An arrangement is described in this paragraph
(e)(5)(iv)(B) if all of the following conditions are satisfied:
(1) Special purpose vehicle (SPV). An entity that is part of the
arrangement meets the following requirements:
(i) Substantially all of the gross income (for United States tax
purposes) of the entity is passive investment income as defined in
paragraph (e)(5)(iv)(C)(4) of this section, and substantially all of
the assets of the entity are assets held to produce such passive
investment income. As provided in paragraph (e)(5)(iv)(C)(4)(ii) of
this section, passive investment income generally does not include
income of a holding company from qualified equity interests in lower-
tier entities that are predominantly engaged in the active conduct of a
trade or business. Thus, except as provided in paragraph
(e)(5)(iv)(C)(4)(ii) of this section,
[[Page 15088]]
qualified equity interests of a holding company in such lower-tier
entities are not held to produce passive investment income and the
ownership of such interests will not cause the holding company to
satisfy this paragraph (e)(5)(iv)(B)(1)(i).
(ii) There is a foreign payment attributable to income of the
entity (as determined under the laws of the foreign country to which
such foreign payment is made), including the entity's share of income
of a lower-tier entity that is a branch or pass-through entity under
the laws of such foreign country. A foreign payment attributable to
income of an entity includes a foreign payment attributable to income
that is required to be taken into account by an owner of the entity, if
the entity is a branch or pass-through entity under the laws of such
foreign country. A foreign payment attributable to income of an entity
also includes a foreign payment attributable to income of a lower-tier
entity that is a branch or pass-through entity for U.S. tax purposes. A
foreign payment attributable to income of the entity does not include a
withholding tax (within the meaning of section 901(k)(1)(B)) imposed on
a distribution or payment from the entity to a U.S. party (as defined
in paragraph (e)(5)(iv)(B)(2) of this section).
(2) U.S. party. A person (a ``U.S. party'') would be eligible to
claim a credit under section 901(a) (including a credit for foreign
taxes deemed paid under section 902 or 960) for all or a portion of the
foreign payment described in paragraph (e)(5)(iv)(B)(1)(ii) of this
section if the foreign payment were an amount of tax paid.
(3) Direct investment. The foreign payment or payments described in
paragraph (e)(5)(iv)(B)(1)(ii) of this section are (or are expected to
be) substantially greater than the amount of credits, if any, the U.S.
party would reasonably expect to be eligible to claim under section
901(a) for foreign taxes attributable to income generated by the U.S.
party's proportionate share of the assets owned by the SPV if the U.S.
party directly owned such assets. For this purpose, direct ownership
shall not include ownership through a branch, a permanent establishment
or any other arrangement (such as an agency arrangement) that would
result in the income generated by the U.S. party's proportionate share
of the assets being subject to tax on a net basis in the foreign
country to which the payment is made. A U.S. party's proportionate
share of the assets of the SPV shall be determined by reference to such
U.S. party's proportionate share of the total value of all of the
outstanding interests in the SPV that are held by its equity owners and
creditors.
(4) Foreign tax benefit. The arrangement is structured in such a
manner that it results in a foreign tax benefit (such as a credit,
deduction, loss, exemption or a disregarded payment) for a counterparty
described in paragraph (e)(5)(iv)(B)(5) of this section or for a person
that is related to the counterparty (determined under the principles of
paragraph (e)(5)(iv)(C)(6) of this section by applying the tax laws of
a foreign country in which the counterparty is subject to tax on a net
basis) but is not related to the U.S. party (within the meaning of
paragraph (e)(5)(iv)(C)(6) of this section).
(5) Unrelated counterparty. The arrangement involves a
counterparty. A counterparty is a person (other than the SPV) that is
not related to the U.S. party (within the meaning of paragraph
(e)(5)(iv)(C)(6) of this section) and that meets one of the following
conditions:
(i) The person is considered to own directly or indirectly 10
percent or more of the equity of the SPV under the tax laws of a
foreign country in which the person is subject to tax on the basis of
place of management, place of incorporation or similar criterion or
otherwise subject to a net basis tax.
(ii) In a single transaction or series of transactions, the person
directly or indirectly acquires 20 percent or more of the value of the
assets of the SPV under the tax laws of a foreign country in which the
person is subject to tax on the basis of place of management, place of
incorporation or similar criterion or otherwise subject to a net basis
tax. For purposes of determining the percentage of assets of the SPV
acquired by the person, an asset of the SPV shall be disregarded if a
principal purpose for transferring such asset to the SPV was to avoid
this paragraph (e)(5)(iv)(B)(5)(ii).
(6) Inconsistent treatment. The U.S. and an applicable foreign
country (as defined in paragraph (e)(5)(iv)(C)(1) of this section)
treat one or more of the following aspects of the arrangement
differently under their respective tax systems, and the U.S. treatment
of the inconsistent aspect would materially affect the amount of income
recognized by the U.S. party or the amount of credits claimed by the
U.S. party if the foreign payment described in paragraph
(e)(5)(iv)(B)(1)(ii) of this section were an amount of tax paid:
(i) The classification of the SPV (or an entity that has a direct
or indirect ownership interest in the SPV) as a corporation or other
entity subject to an entity-level tax, a partnership or other flow-
through entity or an entity that is disregarded for tax purposes.
(ii) The characterization as debt, equity or an instrument that is
disregarded for tax purposes of an instrument issued by the SPV (or an
entity that has a direct or indirect ownership interest in the SPV) to
the U.S. party, the counterparty or a person related to the U.S. party
or the counterparty.
(iii) The proportion of the equity of the SPV (or an entity that
directly or indirectly owns the SPV) that is considered to be owned
directly or indirectly by the U.S. party and the counterparty.
(iv) The amount of taxable income of the SPV for one or more tax
years during which the arrangement is in effect.
(C) Definitions--(1) Applicable foreign country. An applicable
foreign country means each foreign country to which a foreign payment
described in paragraph (e)(5)(iv)(B)(1)(ii) of this section is made or
which confers a foreign tax benefit described in paragraph
(e)(5)(iv)(B)(4) of this section.
(2) Entity. For purposes of paragraph (e)(5)(iv)(B)(1) and
(e)(5)(iv)(C)(4) of this section, the term entity includes a
corporation, trust, partnership or disregarded entity described in
Sec. 301.7701-2(c)(2)(i) of this chapter.
(3) Indirect ownership. For purposes of paragraph (e)(5)(iv) of
this section, indirect ownership of stock or another equity interest
(such as an interest in a partnership) shall be determined in
accordance with the principles of section 958(a)(2), whether the
interest is owned by a U.S. or foreign entity.
(4) Passive investment income--(i) In general. For purposes of
paragraph (e)(5)(iv) of this section, the term passive investment
income means income described in section 954(c), as modified by this
paragraph (e)(5)(iv)(C)(4)(i) and paragraph (e)(5)(iv)(C)(4)(ii) of
this section. In determining whether income is described in section
954(c), sections 954(c)(3) and 954(c)(6) shall be disregarded, and
sections 954(h) and (i) shall be taken into account by applying those
provisions at the entity level as if the entity were a controlled
foreign corporation (as defined in section 957(a)). In addition, for
purposes of the preceding sentence, any income of an entity
attributable to transactions with a person that would be a counterparty
(as defined in paragraph (e)(5)(iv)(B)(5) of this section) if the
entity were an SPV, or with other persons that are described in
paragraph (e)(5)(iv)(B)(4) of this section and that are eligible for a
foreign tax benefit described in such paragraph (e)(5)(iv)(B)(4), shall
not be treated as
[[Page 15089]]
qualified banking or financing income or as qualified insurance income,
and shall not be taken into account in applying sections 954(h) and (i)
for purposes of determining whether other income of the entity is
excluded from section 954(c)(1) under section 954(h) or (i).
(ii) Income attributable to lower-tier entities. Except as provided
in this paragraph (e)(5)(iv)(C)(4)(ii), income of an entity that is
attributable to an equity interest in a lower-tier entity is passive
investment income. If the entity is a holding company and directly owns
a qualified equity interest in another entity (a ``lower-tier entity'')
that is engaged in the active conduct of a trade or business and that
derives more than 50 percent of its gross income from such trade or
business, then none of the entity's income attributable to such
interest is passive investment income, provided that there are no
arrangements whereby substantially all of the entity's opportunity for
gain and risk of loss with respect to such interest is borne by the
U.S. party (or a related person) or the counterparty (or a related
person), but not both parties. For purposes of the preceding sentence,
an entity is a holding company, and is considered to be engaged in the
active conduct of a trade or business and to derive more than 50
percent of its gross income from such trade or business, if
substantially all of its assets consist of qualified equity interests
in one or more entities, each of which is engaged in the active conduct
of a trade or business and derives more than 50 percent of its gross
income from such trade or business and with respect to which there are
no arrangements whereby substantially all of the entity's opportunity
for gain and risk of loss with respect to such interest is borne by the
U.S. party (or a related person) or the counterparty (or a related
person), but not both parties. For purposes of this paragraph
(e)(5)(iv)(C)(4)(ii), a lower-tier entity that is engaged in a banking,
financing, or similar business shall not be considered to be engaged in
the active conduct of a trade or business unless the income derived by
such entity would be excluded from section 954(c)(1) under section
954(h) or (i), determined by applying those provisions at the lower-
tier entity level as if the entity were a controlled foreign
corporation (as defined in section 957(a)). In addition, for purposes
of the preceding sentence, any income of an entity attributable to
transactions with a person that would be a counterparty (as defined in
paragraph (e)(5)(iv)(B)(5) of this section) if the entity were an SPV,
or with other persons that are described in paragraph (e)(5)(iv)(B)(4)
of this section and that are eligible for a foreign tax benefit
described in such paragraph (e)(5)(iv)(B)(4), shall not be treated as
qualified banking or financing income or as qualified insurance income,
and shall not be taken into account in applying sections 954(h) and (i)
for purposes of determining whether other income of the entity is
excluded from section 954(c)(1) under section 954(h) or (i).
(5) Qualified equity interest. With respect to an interest in a
corporation, the term qualified equity interest means stock
representing 10 percent or more of the total combined voting power of
all classes of stock entitled to vote and 10 percent or more of the
total value of the stock of the corporation or disregarded entity, but
does not include any preferred stock (as defined in section 351(g)(3)).
Similar rules shall apply to determine whether an interest in an entity
other than a corporation is a qualified equity interest.
(6) Related person. Two persons are related for purposes of
paragraph (e)(5)(iv) of this section if--
(i) One person directly or indirectly owns stock (or an equity
interest) possessing more than 50 percent of the total value of the
other person; or
(ii) The same person directly or indirectly owns stock (or an
equity interest) possessing more than 50 percent of the total value of
both persons.
(7) Special purpose vehicle (SPV). For purposes