Reissuance of State or Local Bonds, 106315-106320 [2024-30267]
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 249 / Monday, December 30, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
requested or held. Five public
comments responding to the proposed
regulations were received and are
available at https://www.regulations.gov
or upon request. After careful
consideration of all the written
comments, the proposed regulations are
adopted as amended by this Treasury
decision in response to such comments
as described in the Summary of
Comments and Explanation of
Revisions.
[FR Doc. 2024–31130 Filed 12–27–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4410–09–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Internal Revenue Service
26 CFR Part 1
[TD 10020]
RIN 1545–BI22
Reissuance of State or Local Bonds
Internal Revenue Service (IRS),
Treasury.
ACTION: Final regulations.
AGENCY:
This document contains final
regulations that address when taxexempt bonds are treated as retired for
certain Federal income tax purposes.
The final regulations are necessary to
unify and to clarify existing guidance on
this subject. The final regulations affect
State and local governments that issue
tax-exempt bonds.
DATES:
Effective date: These regulations are
effective on December 30, 2024.
Applicability date: For dates of
applicability, see § 1.150–3(f).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Zoran Stojanovic, (202) 317–6980 (not a
toll-free number).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUMMARY:
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Authority
This document contains final
regulations that amend the Income Tax
Regulations (26 CFR part 1) by adding
final regulations under section 150 and
amending the regulations under section
1001 of the Internal Revenue Code
(Code) to provide rules for determining
when tax-exempt bonds are treated as
retired for purposes of sections 103 and
141 through 150 of the Code (final
regulations).
These final regulations are
promulgated under the express
delegation of authority in section
7805(a) of the Code, which authorizes
the Secretary of the Treasury or her
delegate to ‘‘prescribe all needful rules
and regulations for the enforcement of
[the Code], including all rules and
regulations as may be necessary by
reason of any alteration of law in
relation to internal revenue.’’
Background
On December 31, 2018, a notice of
proposed rulemaking (REG–141739–08)
regarding retirement of tax-exempt
bonds was published in the Federal
Register (83 FR 67701) (proposed
regulations). No public hearing was
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1. Overview
In general, under section 103, interest
received by the holders of certain bonds
issued by State and local governments is
exempt from Federal income tax. To
qualify for the tax exemption, a bond
issued by a State or local government
must satisfy various eligibility
requirements under sections 141
through 150 at the time of issuance of
the bond. If the issuer and holder agree
after issuance to modify the terms of a
tax-exempt bond significantly, the
original bond may be treated as having
been retired and exchanged for a newly
issued, modified bond. Similarly, if the
issuer or its agent acquires and resells
the bond, the bond may be treated as
having been extinguished upon
acquisition and replaced upon resale
with a newly issued bond.
The term ‘‘reissuance’’ commonly
refers to the effect of a transaction in
which a new bond is deemed to be
issued in place of an old bond as a
result of retirement of the old bond
pursuant to such an exchange or
extinguishment. In the case of a
reissuance, the reissued bond must be
retested for qualification under sections
103 and 141 through 150. The
reissuance of an issue of tax-exempt
bonds may result in various negative
consequences to the issuer, such as
changes in yield for purposes of the
arbitrage investment yield restrictions
under section 148(a), acceleration of
arbitrage rebate payment obligations
under section 148(f), and change-in-law
risk.
2. Tender Option Bonds
Tender option bonds and variable rate
demand bonds (collectively, tender
option bonds) have special features that
present reissuance questions.
Specifically, tender option bonds have
original terms that provide for a tender
option interest rate mode, as described
in this paragraph. Issuers of tax-exempt
bonds often preauthorize several
different interest rate modes in the bond
documents and retain an option to
switch interest rate modes under
parameters set forth in the bond
documents. During a tender option
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mode, tender option bonds have shortterm interest rates that are reset
periodically at various short-term
intervals (typically, every seven days)
based on the current market rate
necessary to remarket the bonds at par.
In connection with each resetting of the
interest rate, the holder of a tender
option bond has a right or requirement
to tender the bond back to the issuer or
its agent for purchase at par. Tender
option bonds generally are structured
with these short-term features supported
by put options to enable the bonds to be
eligible for purchase by tax-exempt
money market funds pursuant to 17 CFR
270.2a–7 (Rule 2a–7 under the
Investment Company Act of 1940).
Tender option bonds also may have
interest rate mode conversion options
that permit the issuer or conduit
borrower to change the interest rate
mode on the bonds from a tender option
mode to another short-term interest rate
mode or to a fixed interest rate to
maturity. At the time of a conversion to
another interest rate mode, the holder of
a tender option bond typically has the
right or requirement to tender the bond
for purchase at par.
Tender option bonds generally have
third-party liquidity facilities from
banks or other liquidity providers to
ensure that there is sufficient cash to
repurchase the bonds upon a holder’s
tender, and they also commonly have
credit enhancement from bond insurers
or other third-party guarantors. Upon a
holder’s exercise of its tender rights in
connection with either a resetting of the
interest rate during a tender option
mode or a conversion to another interest
rate mode, a remarketing agent or a
liquidity provider typically will acquire
the bonds subject to the tender and
resell the bonds either to the same
bondholders or to others willing to
purchase such bonds.
3. Existing Guidance
To address reissuance questions
related to tax-exempt bonds, on
December 27, 1988, the Department of
the Treasury (Treasury Department) and
the IRS published Notice 88–130, 1988–
2 CB 543, which provides rules for
determining when a tax-exempt bond is
retired for purposes of sections 103 and
141 through 150. Notice 88–130
provides in part that a tax-exempt bond
is retired when there is a change to the
terms of the bond that results in a
disposition of the bond for purposes of
section 1001. In addition, Notice 88–130
provides special rules for retirement of
certain tender option bonds that meet a
definition of the term ‘‘qualified tender
bond.’’
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On June 26, 1996, the Treasury
Department and the IRS published final
regulations under § 1.1001–3 of the
Income Tax Regulations (1996 final
regulations) in the Federal Register (61
FR 32926). The 1996 final regulations
provide rules for determining whether a
modification of the terms of a debt
instrument, including a tax-exempt
bond, results in an exchange for
purposes of section 1001. In recognition
of a need to coordinate the interaction
of the prior guidance in Notice 88–130
with the 1996 final regulations for
particular tax-exempt bond purposes,
the Treasury Department and the IRS
stated their intention to issue
regulations under section 150 on this
subject in the preamble of the 1996 final
regulations. See 61 FR 32930.
On April 14, 2008, the Treasury
Department and the IRS published
Notice 2008–41, 2008–1 CB 742. Like
Notice 88–130, Notice 2008–41 provides
rules for determining when a taxexempt bond is retired for purposes of
sections 103 and 141 through 150 and
includes special rules for qualified
tender bonds. While the retirement
standards provided in these two notices
are similar, Notice 2008–41 was
intended to coordinate the retirement
standards for tax-exempt bond purposes
with the 1996 final regulations on
modifications of debt instruments under
§ 1.1001–3 and to be more administrable
than Notice 88–130. In order to preserve
flexibility and to limit potential
unintended consequences during the
2008 financial crisis, Notice 2008–41
permitted issuers to apply either notice.
Generally, under Notice 2008–41, a taxexempt bond is retired when a
significant modification to the terms of
the bond occurs under § 1.1001–3, the
bond is acquired by or on behalf of its
issuer, or the bond is otherwise
redeemed or retired. The notice clarifies
that, for purposes of these retirement
standards, the purchase of a tax-exempt
bond by a third-party guarantor or thirdparty liquidity facility provider
pursuant to the terms of the guarantee
or liquidity facility is not treated as a
purchase or other acquisition by or on
behalf of a governmental issuer.
Although these general rules apply to a
qualified tender bond, Notice 2008–41
also provides that certain features of
qualified tender bonds will not result in
a retirement. In Notice 2008–41, the
Treasury Department and the IRS
reiterated their intention to provide
guidance on the retirement of taxexempt bonds in regulations under
section 150.
The proposed regulations provide
rules for determining when tax-exempt
bonds are treated as retired for purposes
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of sections 103 and 141 through 150.
The proposed regulations also amend
§ 1.1001–3(a)(2) of the 1996 final
regulations to conform that section to
the special rules in the proposed
regulations for retirement of qualified
tender bonds.
Summary of Comments and
Explanation of Revisions
After consideration of the public
comments, the Treasury Department
and the IRS adopt the proposed
regulations as amended by this Treasury
decision. This section of the preamble
discusses the public comments and the
revisions made in the final regulations
in response to those comments.
1. General Rules for Retirement of a
Tax-Exempt Bond
The proposed regulations generally
provide standards for determining when
a tax-exempt bond is retired for
purposes of sections 103 and 141
through 150, including certain special
rules for determining when qualified
tender bonds are retired.
One comment suggested expanding
the scope of the final regulations to
cover taxable tax-advantaged bonds,
such as direct pay build America bonds
and tax credit bonds, because some of
those bonds were also issued as tender
option bonds that would benefit from
the special rules for qualified tender
bonds. The authorizations for these
taxable tax-advantaged bonds, however,
have been very limited in both time and
amount, and very few of these bonds
have been issued as tender option
bonds. Furthermore, section 13404 of
Public Law 115–97, 131 Stat. 2054, 2138
(December 22, 2017), commonly
referred to as the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act,
repealed the existing authority in the
Code for taxable tax-advantaged bonds.
Because no taxable tax-advantaged
bonds currently may be issued and very
few historically have been issued as
tender option bonds, the Treasury
Department and the IRS have
determined that expanding the scope of
the final regulations to include those
bonds lacks sufficient justification.
Accordingly, the final regulations do not
adopt this comment.
The proposed regulations generally
provide that a tax-exempt bond is
retired if a significant modification to
the terms of the bond occurs under
§ 1.1001–3, the issuer or an agent acting
on its behalf acquires the bond in a
manner that liquidates or extinguishes
the bondholder’s investment in the
bond, or the bond is otherwise
redeemed (for example, redeemed at
maturity).
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The final regulations make one
technical change to the second general
rule regarding debt extinguishment to
remove the reference to the
‘‘bondholder’s investment’’ and thus to
focus more clearly on the merger of
interests and attendant extinguishment
that occurs when an issuer acquires its
own bond either directly or through an
agent.
Two comments recommended
allowing an issuer to make an election
to treat a tax-exempt bond as retired and
reissued under the final regulations.
These comments noted that it is
sometimes unclear whether a
transaction results in the retirement and
reissuance of a tax-exempt bond. The
comments described several specific
situations in which such an election
could address this uncertainty. The
Treasury Department and the IRS
recognize that such an election could
reasonably reduce the burden on issuers
in certain specific situations. However,
the Treasury Department and the IRS
have concerns that an unrestricted right
to elect retirement and reissuance of taxexempt bonds could result in
unintended consequences. In response
to this comment and to provide
flexibility to address this issue in
appropriate, tailored circumstances, the
final regulations authorize the
Commissioner to publish guidance in
the Internal Revenue Bulletin that
allows issuers to elect to treat taxexempt bonds as retired and reissued in
specific circumstances for purposes of
sections 103 and 141 through 150.
2. Exceptions to Retirement of a TaxExempt Bond
The proposed regulations provide
three exceptions to the operation of the
general rules that limit retirements of
tax-exempt bonds. Two of these
exceptions prevent the special features
of tender option bonds from resulting in
a retirement. A third exception applies
to all tax-exempt bonds.
A. Definition of Qualified Tender Bond
The first two exceptions in the
proposed regulations apply to qualified
tender bonds, which are defined to
cover tender option bonds that meet
certain requirements. Specifically, a
qualified tender bond is subject to
certain limitations on interest rate,
timing of interest payments, and
maturity. A qualified tender bond must
also include a qualified tender right.
The proposed regulations generally
define a qualified tender right as a right
or obligation of the holder of a bond to
tender the bond for purchase by the
issuer, its agent, or another party at a
purchase price equal to par plus any
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accrued interest. Under the proposed
regulations, a qualified tender right
must also require the issuer or its
remarketing agent to redeem the bond or
to use reasonable best efforts to resell
the bond within the 90 days of the
tender at a purchase price equal to par
plus any accrued interest.
Four comments urged the Treasury
Department and the IRS to amend the
definition of a qualified tender right in
the final regulations to allow a bond to
be resold at a premium or discount price
relative to the par amount of the bond
(rather than just at a price equal to par
as under the proposed regulations)
when the qualified tender right is
exercised in connection with a
conversion of the interest rate mode to
a fixed rate for the remaining term of the
bond. The comments noted that, when
a long-term fixed rate bond is originally
issued at par, a sustained upward trend
in interest rates can result in the bond
having market discount as it is resold in
the secondary market. If that market
discount exceeds the permitted de
minimis amount, the discount will be
taxed as ordinary income to the holder.
Premium included in the sale price of
a long-term fixed rate tax-exempt bond
serves as a buffer against market
discount as interest rates rise over time.
Accordingly, qualified tender bonds
resold at a premium upon conversion of
the interest rate mode on the bonds to
a fixed rate to maturity generally have
greater market demand and a lower
yield than they would have if resold at
par. The comments also noted that, even
when an issue of fixed rate tax-exempt
bonds is resold at an aggregate net
premium price, certain bonds within the
issue may be resold at a discount. The
comments further noted that Notice
2008–41 permitted qualified tender
bonds to be resold at a premium or a
discount upon conversion of the interest
rate mode to a fixed rate to maturity and
treated the premium received by the
issuer upon resale of the bonds as
additional sale proceeds for purposes of
the arbitrage investment restrictions
under section 148. The final regulations
adopt this comment.
One comment pointed out a technical
discrepancy in the proposed regulations
under which a bond may be purchased
pursuant to a qualified tender right by
the issuer, the issuer’s agent, or another
party, whereas the bond must be resold
under the terms of a qualified tender
right by the issuer or a remarketing
agent. The comment recommended that
the final regulations clarify this
technical issue in the definition of a
qualified tender right so that the parties
that may purchase the tendered bond
(that is, the issuer, the issuer’s agent, or
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another party) are also permitted to
resell the bond. The comment advised
against use of the term ‘‘remarketing
agent’’ on the grounds that the party
charged with reselling the bond may not
be an agent of the issuer and the resale
may be a private placement rather than
a remarketing. The final regulations
adopt this comment.
B. Exceptions to Retirement of a
Qualified Tender Bond
A qualified tender bond has two
features that could result in retirement
of the bond under the general rules for
retirement in the proposed regulations.
First, the existence or exercise of a
qualified tender right in connection
with an alteration under the terms of the
bond could cause the alteration to be a
modification under § 1.1001–3 and, if
significant, that modification would
result in retirement of the qualified
tender bond under § 1.150–3(b)(1) of the
proposed regulations. For example,
when accompanied by a tender right, an
exercise of the issuer’s option to change
the interest rate or the interest rate mode
under the terms of the bond could be a
modification under the rule in § 1.1001–
3(c)(2)(iii) for alterations that result from
the exercise of an option because the
holder’s resulting right to put the bond
to the issuer or its agent under the
qualified tender right upon the interest
rate conversion could cause the issuer’s
option to fail to qualify as a unilateral
option under § 1.1001–3(c)(3)(i).
Similarly, an issuer may be uncertain as
to whether the periodic change in
interest rate that occurs pursuant to the
terms of a bond operating in a tender
option mode could be a modification
under § 1.1001–3 when accompanied by
a tender right. To address these
circumstances, the proposed regulations
provide a special exception that avoids
retirement by disregarding a qualified
tender right for purposes of applying
§ 1.1001–3 to determine whether an
alteration of a qualified tender bond
constitutes a significant modification
under § 1.1001–3 that results in
retirement of the bond.
One comment requested that the final
regulations clarify whether this
exception applies to a qualified tender
right arising in connection with any
alteration of the terms of the bond or
only to a qualified tender right arising
in connection with a change in interest
rate or interest rate mode. The scope of
the analogous provisions in Notices 88–
130 and 2008–41 was limited to
circumstances covering changes in the
interest rate or interest rate mode only.
The Treasury Department and the IRS
intended for this special rule to be
similarly limited in scope. In response
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to the comment, the final regulations
clarify that the special rule for
disregarding a qualified tender right in
applying § 1.1001–3 to a qualified
tender bond applies only for the
purpose of determining whether an
alteration of the interest rate or interest
rate mode pursuant to the terms of a
qualified tender bond results in a
retirement. The determination of
whether any other alteration to the
terms of a qualified tender bond, such
as a change in maturity or collateral,
results in a retirement under § 1.150–
3(b)(1)(i) is made under the general
rules in § 1.1001–3 without the benefit
of the special exception in § 1.150–
3(c)(1), even if the alteration occurs
contemporaneously with a change in
interest rate or interest rate mode on the
bond.
One comment recommended that the
final regulations include several
additional exceptions to the general rule
under § 1.150–3(b)(1) that a bond is
retired for purposes of sections 103 and
141 through 150 when a significant
modification occurs under § 1.1001–3.
Specifically, this comment requested
that the final regulations include a rule
from Notice 2008–41 that a modification
that changes the collateral or credit
enhancement on a nonrecourse taxexempt bond is significant only if the
change results in a change in payment
expectations under § 1.1001–3(e)(4)(vi).
This special rule involved an
accommodation for circumstances in the
2008 financial crisis. This comment also
requested that the final regulations
retain the exception in Notice 88–130
for qualified corrective changes. This
exception from 1988 preceded the
significant modification standard under
§ 1.1001–3, which was finalized in the
1996 final regulations. In most
circumstances, these qualified
corrective changes would not be
significant modifications under
§ 1.1001–3. Further, a significant
purpose of the final regulations is to
improve administrability in a complex
area of law by integrating the rules for
retirement of a tax-exempt bond as
closely as possible with the existing
rules under § 1.1001–3. Accordingly, the
final regulations do not adopt these
comments.
The second feature of a qualified
tender bond that could result in
retirement of the bond under the general
rules for retirement in the proposed
regulations is the feature under which
an issuer or its agent may acquire the
bond upon the holder’s exercise of the
qualified tender right. The general rules
for retirement treat an acquisition of a
bond by an issuer or an issuer’s agent in
a manner that extinguishes the bond as
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a retirement of the bond. To address this
circumstance, the proposed regulations
provide an exception under which the
acquisition of a qualified tender bond
pursuant to the exercise of a qualified
tender right will not result in
retirement, provided that neither the
issuer nor its agent holds the bond for
longer than 90 days. One comment
recommended expanding this special
rule to cover all tax-exempt bonds rather
than just qualified tender bonds. This
exception is limited to qualified tender
bonds because the rate-setting
mechanism on those bonds may require
the issuer or its agent to purchase a
tendered bond if a buyer for the bond
cannot be found when the bond is
tendered. The Treasury Department and
the IRS have adopted this limited
exception for the narrowly defined class
of qualified tender bonds because the
acquisition of those bonds occurs
pursuant to the ordinary operation of
the rate-setting mechanism on those
bonds. In addition, qualified tender
bonds represent a significant structured
type of bonds in the tax-exempt bond
market tailored to money market fund
investors and the Treasury Department
and the IRS have supported this
structure with accommodating special
rules consistently in all of the existing
guidance in this area. Other tax-exempt
bonds do not rely on this exception for
the ordinary operation of their ratesetting mechanism. The Treasury
Department and the IRS decline to
expand this exception to allow issuers
to hold their own bonds more generally
because of concerns regarding the
implications for the debt
extinguishment principle. Accordingly,
the final regulations do not adopt this
comment.
One comment recommended
continuing a special rule from Notice
2008–41 that modified the definition of
program investment for purposes of
arbitrage investment restrictions under
§ 1.148–1(b). Ordinarily, this definition
prohibits a conduit borrower of taxexempt bond proceeds from purchasing
the bonds that financed the conduit loan
in an amount that is related to the
conduit loan. Notice 2008–41 modified
this rule so that a conduit borrower
could purchase any auction rate bonds
that financed the conduit loan, provided
the conduit borrower purchased the
bonds to facilitate liquidity under
adverse market conditions. This special
rule permitted conduit borrowers to buy
those bonds to address extraordinary
circumstances in the 2008 financial
crisis and to increase liquidity at a time
of market crisis involving the collapse of
the auction rate bond market and
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downgrades of bond insurers. The
Treasury Department and the IRS
decline to extend this special rule
beyond the conditions under which the
rule was promulgated. Accordingly, the
final regulations do not adopt this
comment.
C. Additional Exceptions for All TaxExempt Bonds
The proposed regulations also provide
an exception to the general rules of
retirement for all tax-exempt bonds.
This exception, carried forward from
Notice 2008–41, provides that
acquisition of a tax-exempt bond by a
guarantor or liquidity facility provider
acting as the issuer’s agent does not
result in retirement of the bond if the
acquisition is pursuant to the terms of
the guarantee or liquidity facility and
the guarantor or liquidity facility
provider is not a related party (as
defined in § 1.150–1(b)) to the issuer. No
public comments were received on this
provision. The final regulations adopt
this provision without change.
The proposed regulations provide that
a tax-exempt bond is retired for
purposes of sections 103 and 141
through 150 when a significant
modification occurs under § 1.1001–3.
Section 1.1001–3(e)(5)(i) generally
provides that, subject to the special rule
in § 1.1001–3(f)(7), a modification of a
debt instrument that results in an
instrument or property right that is not
debt for Federal income tax purposes is
a significant modification. Section
1.1001–3(f)(7)(ii)(A) generally provides
that, in determining whether a
modification of a debt instrument
results in an instrument or property
right that is not debt, any deterioration
in the financial condition of the obligor
between the issue date of the debt
instrument and the date of the
modification is not taken into account.
One comment recommended that, when
new bonds are issued and the proceeds
are used to currently refund outstanding
bonds, issuers be allowed to apply the
credit deterioration rule in § 1.1001–
3(f)(7) to treat the new bonds as a
continuation of the refunded bonds for
purposes of sections 103 and 141
through 150. The Treasury Department
and the IRS have concluded that there
is not sufficient justification to expand
the scope of the final regulations to
include rules for new issuances of taxexempt bonds. Accordingly, the final
regulations do not adopt this comment.
3. Effect of Retirement of a Tax-Exempt
Bond
The proposed regulations prescribe
certain consequences for a bond that is
retired pursuant to a deemed exchange
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under § 1.1001–3 or retired following
the acquisition of the bond by the issuer
or the issuer’s agent. Upon a deemed
exchange under § 1.1001–3, the bond is
treated as a new bond issued at the time
of the significant modification as
determined under § 1.1001–3. Upon an
issuer’s acquisition of its own bond,
absent any special rule, the bond is
extinguished and retired. One comment
recommended permitting an issuer that
purchases its own tax-exempt bond to
treat the resale of that bond as a
refunding of the bond extinguished by
the purchase. The comment suggested
that the issuer be permitted to allocate
the proceeds from the resale of the bond
to the expenditure incurred in the
purchase of the bond under rules
similar to the rules for using proceeds
of tax-exempt bonds to ‘‘reimburse’’
previous expenditures under the
reimbursement expenditure rules in
§ 1.150–2. Section 1.150–2(g)(1),
however, specifically prohibits using
bond proceeds to reimburse
expenditures incurred in repayment of
tax-exempt bonds. Modification of the
reimbursement rules to encompass
refundings of extinguished and retired
bonds is beyond the scope of the final
regulations. The final regulations do not
adopt this comment.
4. Applicability Dates
Under the proposed regulations, the
final rules would apply to events and
actions taken with respect to bonds that
occur on or after the date that is 90 days
after the date of publication of the final
regulations in the Federal Register. The
proposed regulations further state that
issuers may apply the proposed
regulations to events and actions taken
with respect to bonds that occur before
that date. One comment recommended
applying the final regulations only to
bonds issued after the applicability date
of the final regulations. This comment
noted that outstanding bonds are
structured to avoid retirement under the
existing guidance and potentially might
not avoid retirement under the final
regulations. The Treasury Department
and the IRS are concerned that this
approach would continue the
application of the disparate existing
guidance in this area for a substantial
period of time for the entire current
outstanding volume of tax-exempt
bonds in the municipal bond market.
The principal goals of the final
regulations are to unify, clarify, and
improve the administrability of the
existing guidance on retirement of taxexempt bonds. The Treasury
Department and the IRS have
determined that publishing the final
regulations without also obsoleting
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Notice 88–130 and Notice 2008–41
would undermine the unifying and
streamlining purposes of the final
regulations. In addition, the final
regulations and Notice 2008–41 are
similar and generally should produce
similar results in most cases outside of
special circumstances involving the
2008 financial crisis. Accordingly, the
final regulations do not adopt this
comment.
However, to provide a longer
transition period for outstanding taxexempt bonds, the final regulations
provide a period of one year from the
date the final regulations are published
in the Federal Register during which
issuers may continue to apply Notice
88–130 or Notice 2008–41. As a result,
the final regulations apply to events
occurring and actions taken with respect
to bonds on or after December 30, 2025,
though an issuer may choose to apply
the final regulations to events occurring
and actions taken with respect to bonds
on or after December 30, 2024.
Effect on Other Documents
Notice 88–130 and Notice 2008–41
are obsolete as of December 30, 2025.
Special Analyses
I. Regulatory Planning and Review
Pursuant to the Memorandum of
Agreement, Review of Treasury
Regulations under Executive Order
12866 (June 9, 2023), tax regulatory
actions issued by the IRS are not subject
to the requirements of section 6 of
Executive Order 12866, as amended.
Therefore, a regulatory impact
assessment is not required.
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
II. Regulatory Flexibility Act
Pursuant to the Regulatory Flexibility
Act (RFA), it is hereby certified that
these final regulations will not have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
The final regulations affect State and
local governments that issue tax-exempt
bonds. States are not considered small
entities for purposes of the RFA but
small governmental jurisdictions
(jurisdictions with populations less than
50,000) are considered small entities.
The Treasury Department and the IRS
do not have data on how many small
governmental jurisdictions may be
affected by these regulations, but it may
be a substantial number.
Even if a substantial number of small
entities are affected, the economic
impact of these regulations will not be
significant. These final regulations
consolidate and clarify the existing
guidance on retirement and reissuance
of tax-exempt bonds published in
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21:04 Dec 27, 2024
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Notices 88–130 and 2008–41. Therefore,
these final regulations will not create
additional obligations for, or impose an
economic impact on, a substantial
number of small entities. Accordingly, a
regulatory flexibility analysis is not
required.
Pursuant to section 7805(f) of the
Code, the notice of proposed rulemaking
preceding this regulation was submitted
to the Chief Counsel for the Office of
Advocacy of the Small Business
Administration for comment on its
impact on small governmental
jurisdictions and no comments were
received.
III. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
Section 202 of the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA)
requires that agencies assess anticipated
costs and benefits and take certain other
actions before issuing a final rule that
includes any Federal mandate that may
result in expenditures in any one year
by a State, local, or Tribal government,
in the aggregate, or by the private sector,
of $100 million in 1995 dollars, updated
annually for inflation. These regulations
do not include any Federal mandate that
may result in expenditures by State,
local, or Tribal governments, or by the
private sector in excess of that
threshold.
IV. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
Executive Order 13132 (Federalism)
prohibits an agency from publishing any
rule that has federalism implications if
the rule either imposes substantial,
direct compliance costs on State and
local governments, and is not required
by statute, or preempts State law, unless
the agency meets the consultation and
funding requirements of section 6 of the
Executive order. The final regulations
do not have federalism implications and
do not impose substantial direct
compliance costs on State and local
governments or preempt State law
within the meaning of the Executive
order.
V. Congressional Review Act
Pursuant to the Congressional Review
Act (5 U.S.C. 801 et seq.), the Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs
designated this rule as not a major rule,
as defined by 5 U.S.C. 804(2).
Statement of Availability of IRS
Documents
Any IRS Revenue Procedure, Revenue
Ruling, Notice, or other guidance cited
in this document is published in the
Internal Revenue Bulletin (or
Cumulative Bulletin) and are available
from the Superintendent of Documents,
U.S. Government Publishing Office,
PO 00000
Frm 00089
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
106319
Washington, DC 20402, or by visiting
the IRS website at https://www.irs.gov.
Drafting Information
The principal author of these
regulations is Zoran Stojanovic of the
Office of Associate Chief Counsel
(Financial Institutions and Products).
However, other personnel from the
Treasury Department and the IRS
participated in their development.
List of Subjects in 26 CFR Part 1
Income taxes, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
Adoption of Amendments to the
Regulations
Accordingly, 26 CFR part 1 is
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 1.150–3 is added to
read as follows:
■
§ 1.150–3 Retirement standards for state
and local bonds.
(a) General purpose and scope. This
section provides rules to determine
when a tax-exempt bond is retired
solely for purposes of sections 103 and
141 through 150 of the Internal Revenue
Code (Code).
(b) Retirement of a tax-exempt bond—
(1) General rules. Except as otherwise
provided in paragraph (c) of this
section, a tax-exempt bond is retired
when:
(i) A significant modification of the
bond occurs under § 1.1001–3;
(ii) The issuer or its agent acquires the
bond in a manner that extinguishes the
bond; or
(iii) The bond is otherwise redeemed
(for example, redeemed at maturity).
(2) Elective retirement. In guidance
published in the Internal Revenue
Bulletin (see § 601.601(d)(2)(ii)(a) of this
chapter), the Commissioner may set
forth specific circumstances under
which an issuer may elect to treat a taxexempt bond as retired for purposes of
sections 103 and 141 through 150 of the
Code.
(c) Exceptions to general rules for
retirement of a tax-exempt bond—(1)
Qualified tender right disregarded for
certain purposes. In applying § 1.1001–
3 to a qualified tender bond for
purposes of paragraph (b)(1)(i) of this
section, both the existence and exercise
of a qualified tender right are
disregarded for purposes of determining
whether an alteration of the interest rate
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 249 / Monday, December 30, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
or interest rate mode that occurs
pursuant to the terms of the bond is a
modification. Thus, an issuer’s exercise
of an option to alter the interest rate or
interest rate mode on a qualified tender
bond generally is not a modification
under § 1.1001–3 because the alteration
occurs by operation of the terms of the
bond and the holder’s resulting right to
put the bond to the issuer or the issuer’s
agent pursuant to the disregarded
qualified tender right does not prevent
the issuer’s option from qualifying as a
unilateral option under § 1.1001–3(c)(3)
that would not give rise to a
modification.
(2) Acquisition pursuant to a qualified
tender right. An acquisition of a
qualified tender bond by the issuer or its
agent does not result in the retirement
of the bond under paragraph (b)(1)(ii) of
this section if the acquisition is
pursuant to the operation of a qualified
tender right and neither the issuer nor
its agent continues to hold the bond
after the close of the 90-day period
beginning on the date of the tender.
(3) Acquisition of a tax-exempt bond
by a guarantor or liquidity facility
provider. An acquisition of a tax-exempt
bond by a guarantor or liquidity facility
provider acting on the issuer’s behalf
does not result in the retirement of the
bond under paragraph (b)(1)(ii) of this
section if the acquisition is pursuant to
the terms of the guarantee or liquidity
facility and the guarantor or liquidity
facility provider is not a related party
(as defined in § 1.150–1(b)) to the issuer.
(d) Effect of retirement. If a bond is
retired pursuant to paragraph (b)(1)(i) of
this section (that is, in a transaction
treated as an exchange of the bond for
a bond with modified terms), the bond
is treated as a new bond issued at the
time of the modification as determined
under § 1.1001–3. If the issuer or its
agent resells a bond retired pursuant to
paragraph (b)(1)(ii) of this section, the
bond is treated as a new bond issued on
the date of resale. The rules of § 1.150–
1(d) apply to determine if the new bond
is part of a refunding issue.
(e) Definitions. For purposes of this
section, the following definitions apply:
(1) Issuer means the State or local
governmental unit (as defined in
§ 1.103–1) that actually issues the taxexempt bond and any related party (as
defined in § 1.150–1(b)) to the actual
issuer (as distinguished, for example,
from a conduit borrower that is not a
related party to the actual issuer).
(2) Qualified tender bond means a taxexempt bond that, pursuant to the terms
of the bond, has all of the following
features:
(i) During each authorized interest
rate mode, the bond bears interest at a
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21:04 Dec 27, 2024
Jkt 265001
fixed interest rate, a qualified floating
rate under § 1.1275–5(b), or an objective
rate for a tax-exempt bond under
§ 1.1275–5(c)(5);
(ii) Interest on the bond is
unconditionally payable (as defined in
§ 1.1273–1(c)(1)(ii)) at periodic intervals
of no more than one year;
(iii) The bond has a stated maturity
date that is not later than 40 years after
the issue date of the bond; and
(iv) The bond includes a qualified
tender right.
(3) Qualified tender right means a
right or obligation of a holder of a taxexempt bond pursuant to the terms of
the bond to tender the bond for
purchase as described in this paragraph
(e)(3). The purchaser under the tender
may be the issuer, its agent, or another
party. The tender right is available on at
least one date before the stated maturity
date. For each such tender, the purchase
price of the bond is equal to par (plus
any accrued interest). Following each
such tender, the issuer, its agent, or
another party either redeems the bond
or uses reasonable best efforts to resell
the bond within the 90-day period
beginning on the date of the tender.
Upon any such resale, the resale price
of the bond is equal to the par amount
of the bond (plus any accrued interest),
except that, if the tender right is
exercised in connection with a
conversion of the interest rate mode on
the bond to a fixed rate for the
remaining term of the bond, the bond
may be resold at any price, including a
premium price above the par amount of
the bond or a discount price below the
par amount of the bond (plus any
accrued interest). Any premium
received by the issuer pursuant to such
a resale is treated solely for purposes of
the arbitrage investment restrictions
under section 148 of the Code as
additional sale proceeds of the bonds.
(f) Applicability date—(1) General
applicability. This section applies to
events occurring and actions taken with
respect to bonds on or after December
30, 2025.
(2) Permissive applicability. An issuer
may choose to apply this section to
events occurring and actions taken with
respect to bonds on or after December
30, 2024.
■ Par. 3. Section 1.1001–3 is amended
by revising paragraph (a)(2) to read as
follows:
§ 1.10011.1001–3
instruments.
Modifications of debt
(a) * * *
(2) Tax-exempt bonds. For special
rules governing whether tax-exempt
bonds are retired for purposes of
PO 00000
Frm 00090
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
sections 103 and 141 through 150 of the
Internal Revenue Code, see § 1.150–3.
*
*
*
*
*
Douglas W. O’Donnell,
Deputy Commissioner.
Approved: December 8, 2024.
Aviva R. Aron-Dine,
Deputy Assistant Secretary of the Treasury
(Tax Policy).
[FR Doc. 2024–30267 Filed 12–27–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4830–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND
SECURITY
Coast Guard
33 CFR Part 165
[Docket Number USCG–2024–0205]
RIN 1625–AA11
Regulated Navigation Area; Port of
Miami, Miami, FL
Coast Guard, DHS.
Final rule.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
The Coast Guard is
establishing a regulated navigation area
for certain waters surrounding the Port
of Miami. This action is necessary to
enhance the protection of high-risk
vessel and port operations while
reducing navigational hazards to
waterway users and mariners by
controlling vessel speeds. This rule will
establish a slow speed zone throughout
Fisherman’s Channel and the Main Ship
Channel for vessels less than 50 meters
in length.
DATES: This rule is effective January 29,
2025.
ADDRESSES: To view documents
mentioned in this preamble as being
available in the docket, go to https://
www.regulations.gov, type USCG–2024–
0205 in the search box and click
‘‘Search.’’ Next, in the Document Type
column, select ‘‘Supporting & Related
Material.’’
SUMMARY:
If
you have questions about this rule, call
or email Mr. David Lieberman, District
7 Dpw, U.S. Coast Guard; telephone
(206) 827–3637, email
David.L.Lieberman2@uscg.mil.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
I. Table of Abbreviations
CFR Code of Federal Regulations
COTP Captain of the Port
DHS Department of Homeland Security
FR Federal Register
LNG Liquified Natural Gas
NAVCEN Coast Guard Navigation Center
NOI Notice of Intent
E:\FR\FM\30DER1.SGM
30DER1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 89, Number 249 (Monday, December 30, 2024)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 106315-106320]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2024-30267]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Internal Revenue Service
26 CFR Part 1
[TD 10020]
RIN 1545-BI22
Reissuance of State or Local Bonds
AGENCY: Internal Revenue Service (IRS), Treasury.
ACTION: Final regulations.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This document contains final regulations that address when
tax-exempt bonds are treated as retired for certain Federal income tax
purposes. The final regulations are necessary to unify and to clarify
existing guidance on this subject. The final regulations affect State
and local governments that issue tax-exempt bonds.
DATES:
Effective date: These regulations are effective on December 30,
2024.
Applicability date: For dates of applicability, see Sec. 1.150-
3(f).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Zoran Stojanovic, (202) 317-6980 (not
a toll-free number).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Authority
This document contains final regulations that amend the Income Tax
Regulations (26 CFR part 1) by adding final regulations under section
150 and amending the regulations under section 1001 of the Internal
Revenue Code (Code) to provide rules for determining when tax-exempt
bonds are treated as retired for purposes of sections 103 and 141
through 150 of the Code (final regulations).
These final regulations are promulgated under the express
delegation of authority in section 7805(a) of the Code, which
authorizes the Secretary of the Treasury or her delegate to ``prescribe
all needful rules and regulations for the enforcement of [the Code],
including all rules and regulations as may be necessary by reason of
any alteration of law in relation to internal revenue.''
Background
On December 31, 2018, a notice of proposed rulemaking (REG-141739-
08) regarding retirement of tax-exempt bonds was published in the
Federal Register (83 FR 67701) (proposed regulations). No public
hearing was requested or held. Five public comments responding to the
proposed regulations were received and are available at https://www.regulations.gov or upon request. After careful consideration of all
the written comments, the proposed regulations are adopted as amended
by this Treasury decision in response to such comments as described in
the Summary of Comments and Explanation of Revisions.
1. Overview
In general, under section 103, interest received by the holders of
certain bonds issued by State and local governments is exempt from
Federal income tax. To qualify for the tax exemption, a bond issued by
a State or local government must satisfy various eligibility
requirements under sections 141 through 150 at the time of issuance of
the bond. If the issuer and holder agree after issuance to modify the
terms of a tax-exempt bond significantly, the original bond may be
treated as having been retired and exchanged for a newly issued,
modified bond. Similarly, if the issuer or its agent acquires and
resells the bond, the bond may be treated as having been extinguished
upon acquisition and replaced upon resale with a newly issued bond.
The term ``reissuance'' commonly refers to the effect of a
transaction in which a new bond is deemed to be issued in place of an
old bond as a result of retirement of the old bond pursuant to such an
exchange or extinguishment. In the case of a reissuance, the reissued
bond must be retested for qualification under sections 103 and 141
through 150. The reissuance of an issue of tax-exempt bonds may result
in various negative consequences to the issuer, such as changes in
yield for purposes of the arbitrage investment yield restrictions under
section 148(a), acceleration of arbitrage rebate payment obligations
under section 148(f), and change-in-law risk.
2. Tender Option Bonds
Tender option bonds and variable rate demand bonds (collectively,
tender option bonds) have special features that present reissuance
questions. Specifically, tender option bonds have original terms that
provide for a tender option interest rate mode, as described in this
paragraph. Issuers of tax-exempt bonds often preauthorize several
different interest rate modes in the bond documents and retain an
option to switch interest rate modes under parameters set forth in the
bond documents. During a tender option mode, tender option bonds have
short-term interest rates that are reset periodically at various short-
term intervals (typically, every seven days) based on the current
market rate necessary to remarket the bonds at par. In connection with
each resetting of the interest rate, the holder of a tender option bond
has a right or requirement to tender the bond back to the issuer or its
agent for purchase at par. Tender option bonds generally are structured
with these short-term features supported by put options to enable the
bonds to be eligible for purchase by tax-exempt money market funds
pursuant to 17 CFR 270.2a-7 (Rule 2a-7 under the Investment Company Act
of 1940).
Tender option bonds also may have interest rate mode conversion
options that permit the issuer or conduit borrower to change the
interest rate mode on the bonds from a tender option mode to another
short-term interest rate mode or to a fixed interest rate to maturity.
At the time of a conversion to another interest rate mode, the holder
of a tender option bond typically has the right or requirement to
tender the bond for purchase at par.
Tender option bonds generally have third-party liquidity facilities
from banks or other liquidity providers to ensure that there is
sufficient cash to repurchase the bonds upon a holder's tender, and
they also commonly have credit enhancement from bond insurers or other
third-party guarantors. Upon a holder's exercise of its tender rights
in connection with either a resetting of the interest rate during a
tender option mode or a conversion to another interest rate mode, a
remarketing agent or a liquidity provider typically will acquire the
bonds subject to the tender and resell the bonds either to the same
bondholders or to others willing to purchase such bonds.
3. Existing Guidance
To address reissuance questions related to tax-exempt bonds, on
December 27, 1988, the Department of the Treasury (Treasury Department)
and the IRS published Notice 88-130, 1988-2 CB 543, which provides
rules for determining when a tax-exempt bond is retired for purposes of
sections 103 and 141 through 150. Notice 88-130 provides in part that a
tax-exempt bond is retired when there is a change to the terms of the
bond that results in a disposition of the bond for purposes of section
1001. In addition, Notice 88-130 provides special rules for retirement
of certain tender option bonds that meet a definition of the term
``qualified tender bond.''
[[Page 106316]]
On June 26, 1996, the Treasury Department and the IRS published
final regulations under Sec. 1.1001-3 of the Income Tax Regulations
(1996 final regulations) in the Federal Register (61 FR 32926). The
1996 final regulations provide rules for determining whether a
modification of the terms of a debt instrument, including a tax-exempt
bond, results in an exchange for purposes of section 1001. In
recognition of a need to coordinate the interaction of the prior
guidance in Notice 88-130 with the 1996 final regulations for
particular tax-exempt bond purposes, the Treasury Department and the
IRS stated their intention to issue regulations under section 150 on
this subject in the preamble of the 1996 final regulations. See 61 FR
32930.
On April 14, 2008, the Treasury Department and the IRS published
Notice 2008-41, 2008-1 CB 742. Like Notice 88-130, Notice 2008-41
provides rules for determining when a tax-exempt bond is retired for
purposes of sections 103 and 141 through 150 and includes special rules
for qualified tender bonds. While the retirement standards provided in
these two notices are similar, Notice 2008-41 was intended to
coordinate the retirement standards for tax-exempt bond purposes with
the 1996 final regulations on modifications of debt instruments under
Sec. 1.1001-3 and to be more administrable than Notice 88-130. In
order to preserve flexibility and to limit potential unintended
consequences during the 2008 financial crisis, Notice 2008-41 permitted
issuers to apply either notice. Generally, under Notice 2008-41, a tax-
exempt bond is retired when a significant modification to the terms of
the bond occurs under Sec. 1.1001-3, the bond is acquired by or on
behalf of its issuer, or the bond is otherwise redeemed or retired. The
notice clarifies that, for purposes of these retirement standards, the
purchase of a tax-exempt bond by a third-party guarantor or third-party
liquidity facility provider pursuant to the terms of the guarantee or
liquidity facility is not treated as a purchase or other acquisition by
or on behalf of a governmental issuer. Although these general rules
apply to a qualified tender bond, Notice 2008-41 also provides that
certain features of qualified tender bonds will not result in a
retirement. In Notice 2008-41, the Treasury Department and the IRS
reiterated their intention to provide guidance on the retirement of
tax-exempt bonds in regulations under section 150.
The proposed regulations provide rules for determining when tax-
exempt bonds are treated as retired for purposes of sections 103 and
141 through 150. The proposed regulations also amend Sec. 1.1001-
3(a)(2) of the 1996 final regulations to conform that section to the
special rules in the proposed regulations for retirement of qualified
tender bonds.
Summary of Comments and Explanation of Revisions
After consideration of the public comments, the Treasury Department
and the IRS adopt the proposed regulations as amended by this Treasury
decision. This section of the preamble discusses the public comments
and the revisions made in the final regulations in response to those
comments.
1. General Rules for Retirement of a Tax-Exempt Bond
The proposed regulations generally provide standards for
determining when a tax-exempt bond is retired for purposes of sections
103 and 141 through 150, including certain special rules for
determining when qualified tender bonds are retired.
One comment suggested expanding the scope of the final regulations
to cover taxable tax-advantaged bonds, such as direct pay build America
bonds and tax credit bonds, because some of those bonds were also
issued as tender option bonds that would benefit from the special rules
for qualified tender bonds. The authorizations for these taxable tax-
advantaged bonds, however, have been very limited in both time and
amount, and very few of these bonds have been issued as tender option
bonds. Furthermore, section 13404 of Public Law 115-97, 131 Stat. 2054,
2138 (December 22, 2017), commonly referred to as the Tax Cuts and Jobs
Act, repealed the existing authority in the Code for taxable tax-
advantaged bonds. Because no taxable tax-advantaged bonds currently may
be issued and very few historically have been issued as tender option
bonds, the Treasury Department and the IRS have determined that
expanding the scope of the final regulations to include those bonds
lacks sufficient justification. Accordingly, the final regulations do
not adopt this comment.
The proposed regulations generally provide that a tax-exempt bond
is retired if a significant modification to the terms of the bond
occurs under Sec. 1.1001-3, the issuer or an agent acting on its
behalf acquires the bond in a manner that liquidates or extinguishes
the bondholder's investment in the bond, or the bond is otherwise
redeemed (for example, redeemed at maturity).
The final regulations make one technical change to the second
general rule regarding debt extinguishment to remove the reference to
the ``bondholder's investment'' and thus to focus more clearly on the
merger of interests and attendant extinguishment that occurs when an
issuer acquires its own bond either directly or through an agent.
Two comments recommended allowing an issuer to make an election to
treat a tax-exempt bond as retired and reissued under the final
regulations. These comments noted that it is sometimes unclear whether
a transaction results in the retirement and reissuance of a tax-exempt
bond. The comments described several specific situations in which such
an election could address this uncertainty. The Treasury Department and
the IRS recognize that such an election could reasonably reduce the
burden on issuers in certain specific situations. However, the Treasury
Department and the IRS have concerns that an unrestricted right to
elect retirement and reissuance of tax-exempt bonds could result in
unintended consequences. In response to this comment and to provide
flexibility to address this issue in appropriate, tailored
circumstances, the final regulations authorize the Commissioner to
publish guidance in the Internal Revenue Bulletin that allows issuers
to elect to treat tax-exempt bonds as retired and reissued in specific
circumstances for purposes of sections 103 and 141 through 150.
2. Exceptions to Retirement of a Tax-Exempt Bond
The proposed regulations provide three exceptions to the operation
of the general rules that limit retirements of tax-exempt bonds. Two of
these exceptions prevent the special features of tender option bonds
from resulting in a retirement. A third exception applies to all tax-
exempt bonds.
A. Definition of Qualified Tender Bond
The first two exceptions in the proposed regulations apply to
qualified tender bonds, which are defined to cover tender option bonds
that meet certain requirements. Specifically, a qualified tender bond
is subject to certain limitations on interest rate, timing of interest
payments, and maturity. A qualified tender bond must also include a
qualified tender right. The proposed regulations generally define a
qualified tender right as a right or obligation of the holder of a bond
to tender the bond for purchase by the issuer, its agent, or another
party at a purchase price equal to par plus any
[[Page 106317]]
accrued interest. Under the proposed regulations, a qualified tender
right must also require the issuer or its remarketing agent to redeem
the bond or to use reasonable best efforts to resell the bond within
the 90 days of the tender at a purchase price equal to par plus any
accrued interest.
Four comments urged the Treasury Department and the IRS to amend
the definition of a qualified tender right in the final regulations to
allow a bond to be resold at a premium or discount price relative to
the par amount of the bond (rather than just at a price equal to par as
under the proposed regulations) when the qualified tender right is
exercised in connection with a conversion of the interest rate mode to
a fixed rate for the remaining term of the bond. The comments noted
that, when a long-term fixed rate bond is originally issued at par, a
sustained upward trend in interest rates can result in the bond having
market discount as it is resold in the secondary market. If that market
discount exceeds the permitted de minimis amount, the discount will be
taxed as ordinary income to the holder. Premium included in the sale
price of a long-term fixed rate tax-exempt bond serves as a buffer
against market discount as interest rates rise over time. Accordingly,
qualified tender bonds resold at a premium upon conversion of the
interest rate mode on the bonds to a fixed rate to maturity generally
have greater market demand and a lower yield than they would have if
resold at par. The comments also noted that, even when an issue of
fixed rate tax-exempt bonds is resold at an aggregate net premium
price, certain bonds within the issue may be resold at a discount. The
comments further noted that Notice 2008-41 permitted qualified tender
bonds to be resold at a premium or a discount upon conversion of the
interest rate mode to a fixed rate to maturity and treated the premium
received by the issuer upon resale of the bonds as additional sale
proceeds for purposes of the arbitrage investment restrictions under
section 148. The final regulations adopt this comment.
One comment pointed out a technical discrepancy in the proposed
regulations under which a bond may be purchased pursuant to a qualified
tender right by the issuer, the issuer's agent, or another party,
whereas the bond must be resold under the terms of a qualified tender
right by the issuer or a remarketing agent. The comment recommended
that the final regulations clarify this technical issue in the
definition of a qualified tender right so that the parties that may
purchase the tendered bond (that is, the issuer, the issuer's agent, or
another party) are also permitted to resell the bond. The comment
advised against use of the term ``remarketing agent'' on the grounds
that the party charged with reselling the bond may not be an agent of
the issuer and the resale may be a private placement rather than a
remarketing. The final regulations adopt this comment.
B. Exceptions to Retirement of a Qualified Tender Bond
A qualified tender bond has two features that could result in
retirement of the bond under the general rules for retirement in the
proposed regulations. First, the existence or exercise of a qualified
tender right in connection with an alteration under the terms of the
bond could cause the alteration to be a modification under Sec.
1.1001-3 and, if significant, that modification would result in
retirement of the qualified tender bond under Sec. 1.150-3(b)(1) of
the proposed regulations. For example, when accompanied by a tender
right, an exercise of the issuer's option to change the interest rate
or the interest rate mode under the terms of the bond could be a
modification under the rule in Sec. 1.1001-3(c)(2)(iii) for
alterations that result from the exercise of an option because the
holder's resulting right to put the bond to the issuer or its agent
under the qualified tender right upon the interest rate conversion
could cause the issuer's option to fail to qualify as a unilateral
option under Sec. 1.1001-3(c)(3)(i). Similarly, an issuer may be
uncertain as to whether the periodic change in interest rate that
occurs pursuant to the terms of a bond operating in a tender option
mode could be a modification under Sec. 1.1001-3 when accompanied by a
tender right. To address these circumstances, the proposed regulations
provide a special exception that avoids retirement by disregarding a
qualified tender right for purposes of applying Sec. 1.1001-3 to
determine whether an alteration of a qualified tender bond constitutes
a significant modification under Sec. 1.1001-3 that results in
retirement of the bond.
One comment requested that the final regulations clarify whether
this exception applies to a qualified tender right arising in
connection with any alteration of the terms of the bond or only to a
qualified tender right arising in connection with a change in interest
rate or interest rate mode. The scope of the analogous provisions in
Notices 88-130 and 2008-41 was limited to circumstances covering
changes in the interest rate or interest rate mode only. The Treasury
Department and the IRS intended for this special rule to be similarly
limited in scope. In response to the comment, the final regulations
clarify that the special rule for disregarding a qualified tender right
in applying Sec. 1.1001-3 to a qualified tender bond applies only for
the purpose of determining whether an alteration of the interest rate
or interest rate mode pursuant to the terms of a qualified tender bond
results in a retirement. The determination of whether any other
alteration to the terms of a qualified tender bond, such as a change in
maturity or collateral, results in a retirement under Sec. 1.150-
3(b)(1)(i) is made under the general rules in Sec. 1.1001-3 without
the benefit of the special exception in Sec. 1.150-3(c)(1), even if
the alteration occurs contemporaneously with a change in interest rate
or interest rate mode on the bond.
One comment recommended that the final regulations include several
additional exceptions to the general rule under Sec. 1.150-3(b)(1)
that a bond is retired for purposes of sections 103 and 141 through 150
when a significant modification occurs under Sec. 1.1001-3.
Specifically, this comment requested that the final regulations include
a rule from Notice 2008-41 that a modification that changes the
collateral or credit enhancement on a nonrecourse tax-exempt bond is
significant only if the change results in a change in payment
expectations under Sec. 1.1001-3(e)(4)(vi). This special rule involved
an accommodation for circumstances in the 2008 financial crisis. This
comment also requested that the final regulations retain the exception
in Notice 88-130 for qualified corrective changes. This exception from
1988 preceded the significant modification standard under Sec. 1.1001-
3, which was finalized in the 1996 final regulations. In most
circumstances, these qualified corrective changes would not be
significant modifications under Sec. 1.1001-3. Further, a significant
purpose of the final regulations is to improve administrability in a
complex area of law by integrating the rules for retirement of a tax-
exempt bond as closely as possible with the existing rules under Sec.
1.1001-3. Accordingly, the final regulations do not adopt these
comments.
The second feature of a qualified tender bond that could result in
retirement of the bond under the general rules for retirement in the
proposed regulations is the feature under which an issuer or its agent
may acquire the bond upon the holder's exercise of the qualified tender
right. The general rules for retirement treat an acquisition of a bond
by an issuer or an issuer's agent in a manner that extinguishes the
bond as
[[Page 106318]]
a retirement of the bond. To address this circumstance, the proposed
regulations provide an exception under which the acquisition of a
qualified tender bond pursuant to the exercise of a qualified tender
right will not result in retirement, provided that neither the issuer
nor its agent holds the bond for longer than 90 days. One comment
recommended expanding this special rule to cover all tax-exempt bonds
rather than just qualified tender bonds. This exception is limited to
qualified tender bonds because the rate-setting mechanism on those
bonds may require the issuer or its agent to purchase a tendered bond
if a buyer for the bond cannot be found when the bond is tendered. The
Treasury Department and the IRS have adopted this limited exception for
the narrowly defined class of qualified tender bonds because the
acquisition of those bonds occurs pursuant to the ordinary operation of
the rate-setting mechanism on those bonds. In addition, qualified
tender bonds represent a significant structured type of bonds in the
tax-exempt bond market tailored to money market fund investors and the
Treasury Department and the IRS have supported this structure with
accommodating special rules consistently in all of the existing
guidance in this area. Other tax-exempt bonds do not rely on this
exception for the ordinary operation of their rate-setting mechanism.
The Treasury Department and the IRS decline to expand this exception to
allow issuers to hold their own bonds more generally because of
concerns regarding the implications for the debt extinguishment
principle. Accordingly, the final regulations do not adopt this
comment.
One comment recommended continuing a special rule from Notice 2008-
41 that modified the definition of program investment for purposes of
arbitrage investment restrictions under Sec. 1.148-1(b). Ordinarily,
this definition prohibits a conduit borrower of tax-exempt bond
proceeds from purchasing the bonds that financed the conduit loan in an
amount that is related to the conduit loan. Notice 2008-41 modified
this rule so that a conduit borrower could purchase any auction rate
bonds that financed the conduit loan, provided the conduit borrower
purchased the bonds to facilitate liquidity under adverse market
conditions. This special rule permitted conduit borrowers to buy those
bonds to address extraordinary circumstances in the 2008 financial
crisis and to increase liquidity at a time of market crisis involving
the collapse of the auction rate bond market and downgrades of bond
insurers. The Treasury Department and the IRS decline to extend this
special rule beyond the conditions under which the rule was
promulgated. Accordingly, the final regulations do not adopt this
comment.
C. Additional Exceptions for All Tax-Exempt Bonds
The proposed regulations also provide an exception to the general
rules of retirement for all tax-exempt bonds. This exception, carried
forward from Notice 2008-41, provides that acquisition of a tax-exempt
bond by a guarantor or liquidity facility provider acting as the
issuer's agent does not result in retirement of the bond if the
acquisition is pursuant to the terms of the guarantee or liquidity
facility and the guarantor or liquidity facility provider is not a
related party (as defined in Sec. 1.150-1(b)) to the issuer. No public
comments were received on this provision. The final regulations adopt
this provision without change.
The proposed regulations provide that a tax-exempt bond is retired
for purposes of sections 103 and 141 through 150 when a significant
modification occurs under Sec. 1.1001-3. Section 1.1001-3(e)(5)(i)
generally provides that, subject to the special rule in Sec. 1.1001-
3(f)(7), a modification of a debt instrument that results in an
instrument or property right that is not debt for Federal income tax
purposes is a significant modification. Section 1.1001-3(f)(7)(ii)(A)
generally provides that, in determining whether a modification of a
debt instrument results in an instrument or property right that is not
debt, any deterioration in the financial condition of the obligor
between the issue date of the debt instrument and the date of the
modification is not taken into account. One comment recommended that,
when new bonds are issued and the proceeds are used to currently refund
outstanding bonds, issuers be allowed to apply the credit deterioration
rule in Sec. 1.1001-3(f)(7) to treat the new bonds as a continuation
of the refunded bonds for purposes of sections 103 and 141 through 150.
The Treasury Department and the IRS have concluded that there is not
sufficient justification to expand the scope of the final regulations
to include rules for new issuances of tax-exempt bonds. Accordingly,
the final regulations do not adopt this comment.
3. Effect of Retirement of a Tax-Exempt Bond
The proposed regulations prescribe certain consequences for a bond
that is retired pursuant to a deemed exchange under Sec. 1.1001-3 or
retired following the acquisition of the bond by the issuer or the
issuer's agent. Upon a deemed exchange under Sec. 1.1001-3, the bond
is treated as a new bond issued at the time of the significant
modification as determined under Sec. 1.1001-3. Upon an issuer's
acquisition of its own bond, absent any special rule, the bond is
extinguished and retired. One comment recommended permitting an issuer
that purchases its own tax-exempt bond to treat the resale of that bond
as a refunding of the bond extinguished by the purchase. The comment
suggested that the issuer be permitted to allocate the proceeds from
the resale of the bond to the expenditure incurred in the purchase of
the bond under rules similar to the rules for using proceeds of tax-
exempt bonds to ``reimburse'' previous expenditures under the
reimbursement expenditure rules in Sec. 1.150-2. Section 1.150-
2(g)(1), however, specifically prohibits using bond proceeds to
reimburse expenditures incurred in repayment of tax-exempt bonds.
Modification of the reimbursement rules to encompass refundings of
extinguished and retired bonds is beyond the scope of the final
regulations. The final regulations do not adopt this comment.
4. Applicability Dates
Under the proposed regulations, the final rules would apply to
events and actions taken with respect to bonds that occur on or after
the date that is 90 days after the date of publication of the final
regulations in the Federal Register. The proposed regulations further
state that issuers may apply the proposed regulations to events and
actions taken with respect to bonds that occur before that date. One
comment recommended applying the final regulations only to bonds issued
after the applicability date of the final regulations. This comment
noted that outstanding bonds are structured to avoid retirement under
the existing guidance and potentially might not avoid retirement under
the final regulations. The Treasury Department and the IRS are
concerned that this approach would continue the application of the
disparate existing guidance in this area for a substantial period of
time for the entire current outstanding volume of tax-exempt bonds in
the municipal bond market. The principal goals of the final regulations
are to unify, clarify, and improve the administrability of the existing
guidance on retirement of tax-exempt bonds. The Treasury Department and
the IRS have determined that publishing the final regulations without
also obsoleting
[[Page 106319]]
Notice 88-130 and Notice 2008-41 would undermine the unifying and
streamlining purposes of the final regulations. In addition, the final
regulations and Notice 2008-41 are similar and generally should produce
similar results in most cases outside of special circumstances
involving the 2008 financial crisis. Accordingly, the final regulations
do not adopt this comment.
However, to provide a longer transition period for outstanding tax-
exempt bonds, the final regulations provide a period of one year from
the date the final regulations are published in the Federal Register
during which issuers may continue to apply Notice 88-130 or Notice
2008-41. As a result, the final regulations apply to events occurring
and actions taken with respect to bonds on or after December 30, 2025,
though an issuer may choose to apply the final regulations to events
occurring and actions taken with respect to bonds on or after December
30, 2024.
Effect on Other Documents
Notice 88-130 and Notice 2008-41 are obsolete as of December 30,
2025.
Special Analyses
I. Regulatory Planning and Review
Pursuant to the Memorandum of Agreement, Review of Treasury
Regulations under Executive Order 12866 (June 9, 2023), tax regulatory
actions issued by the IRS are not subject to the requirements of
section 6 of Executive Order 12866, as amended. Therefore, a regulatory
impact assessment is not required.
II. Regulatory Flexibility Act
Pursuant to the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA), it is hereby
certified that these final regulations will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial number of small entities. The final
regulations affect State and local governments that issue tax-exempt
bonds. States are not considered small entities for purposes of the RFA
but small governmental jurisdictions (jurisdictions with populations
less than 50,000) are considered small entities. The Treasury
Department and the IRS do not have data on how many small governmental
jurisdictions may be affected by these regulations, but it may be a
substantial number.
Even if a substantial number of small entities are affected, the
economic impact of these regulations will not be significant. These
final regulations consolidate and clarify the existing guidance on
retirement and reissuance of tax-exempt bonds published in Notices 88-
130 and 2008-41. Therefore, these final regulations will not create
additional obligations for, or impose an economic impact on, a
substantial number of small entities. Accordingly, a regulatory
flexibility analysis is not required.
Pursuant to section 7805(f) of the Code, the notice of proposed
rulemaking preceding this regulation was submitted to the Chief Counsel
for the Office of Advocacy of the Small Business Administration for
comment on its impact on small governmental jurisdictions and no
comments were received.
III. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
Section 202 of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA)
requires that agencies assess anticipated costs and benefits and take
certain other actions before issuing a final rule that includes any
Federal mandate that may result in expenditures in any one year by a
State, local, or Tribal government, in the aggregate, or by the private
sector, of $100 million in 1995 dollars, updated annually for
inflation. These regulations do not include any Federal mandate that
may result in expenditures by State, local, or Tribal governments, or
by the private sector in excess of that threshold.
IV. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
Executive Order 13132 (Federalism) prohibits an agency from
publishing any rule that has federalism implications if the rule either
imposes substantial, direct compliance costs on State and local
governments, and is not required by statute, or preempts State law,
unless the agency meets the consultation and funding requirements of
section 6 of the Executive order. The final regulations do not have
federalism implications and do not impose substantial direct compliance
costs on State and local governments or preempt State law within the
meaning of the Executive order.
V. Congressional Review Act
Pursuant to the Congressional Review Act (5 U.S.C. 801 et seq.),
the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs designated this rule
as not a major rule, as defined by 5 U.S.C. 804(2).
Statement of Availability of IRS Documents
Any IRS Revenue Procedure, Revenue Ruling, Notice, or other
guidance cited in this document is published in the Internal Revenue
Bulletin (or Cumulative Bulletin) and are available from the
Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Publishing Office,
Washington, DC 20402, or by visiting the IRS website at https://www.irs.gov.
Drafting Information
The principal author of these regulations is Zoran Stojanovic of
the Office of Associate Chief Counsel (Financial Institutions and
Products). However, other personnel from the Treasury Department and
the IRS participated in their development.
List of Subjects in 26 CFR Part 1
Income taxes, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
Adoption of Amendments to the Regulations
Accordingly, 26 CFR part 1 is amended as follows:
PART 1--INCOME TAXES
0
Paragraph 1. The authority citation for part 1 continues to read in
part as follows:
Authority: 26 U.S.C. 7805 * * *
0
Par. 2. Section 1.150-3 is added to read as follows:
Sec. 1.150-3 Retirement standards for state and local bonds.
(a) General purpose and scope. This section provides rules to
determine when a tax-exempt bond is retired solely for purposes of
sections 103 and 141 through 150 of the Internal Revenue Code (Code).
(b) Retirement of a tax-exempt bond--(1) General rules. Except as
otherwise provided in paragraph (c) of this section, a tax-exempt bond
is retired when:
(i) A significant modification of the bond occurs under Sec.
1.1001-3;
(ii) The issuer or its agent acquires the bond in a manner that
extinguishes the bond; or
(iii) The bond is otherwise redeemed (for example, redeemed at
maturity).
(2) Elective retirement. In guidance published in the Internal
Revenue Bulletin (see Sec. 601.601(d)(2)(ii)(a) of this chapter), the
Commissioner may set forth specific circumstances under which an issuer
may elect to treat a tax-exempt bond as retired for purposes of
sections 103 and 141 through 150 of the Code.
(c) Exceptions to general rules for retirement of a tax-exempt
bond--(1) Qualified tender right disregarded for certain purposes. In
applying Sec. 1.1001-3 to a qualified tender bond for purposes of
paragraph (b)(1)(i) of this section, both the existence and exercise of
a qualified tender right are disregarded for purposes of determining
whether an alteration of the interest rate
[[Page 106320]]
or interest rate mode that occurs pursuant to the terms of the bond is
a modification. Thus, an issuer's exercise of an option to alter the
interest rate or interest rate mode on a qualified tender bond
generally is not a modification under Sec. 1.1001-3 because the
alteration occurs by operation of the terms of the bond and the
holder's resulting right to put the bond to the issuer or the issuer's
agent pursuant to the disregarded qualified tender right does not
prevent the issuer's option from qualifying as a unilateral option
under Sec. 1.1001-3(c)(3) that would not give rise to a modification.
(2) Acquisition pursuant to a qualified tender right. An
acquisition of a qualified tender bond by the issuer or its agent does
not result in the retirement of the bond under paragraph (b)(1)(ii) of
this section if the acquisition is pursuant to the operation of a
qualified tender right and neither the issuer nor its agent continues
to hold the bond after the close of the 90-day period beginning on the
date of the tender.
(3) Acquisition of a tax-exempt bond by a guarantor or liquidity
facility provider. An acquisition of a tax-exempt bond by a guarantor
or liquidity facility provider acting on the issuer's behalf does not
result in the retirement of the bond under paragraph (b)(1)(ii) of this
section if the acquisition is pursuant to the terms of the guarantee or
liquidity facility and the guarantor or liquidity facility provider is
not a related party (as defined in Sec. 1.150-1(b)) to the issuer.
(d) Effect of retirement. If a bond is retired pursuant to
paragraph (b)(1)(i) of this section (that is, in a transaction treated
as an exchange of the bond for a bond with modified terms), the bond is
treated as a new bond issued at the time of the modification as
determined under Sec. 1.1001-3. If the issuer or its agent resells a
bond retired pursuant to paragraph (b)(1)(ii) of this section, the bond
is treated as a new bond issued on the date of resale. The rules of
Sec. 1.150-1(d) apply to determine if the new bond is part of a
refunding issue.
(e) Definitions. For purposes of this section, the following
definitions apply:
(1) Issuer means the State or local governmental unit (as defined
in Sec. 1.103-1) that actually issues the tax-exempt bond and any
related party (as defined in Sec. 1.150-1(b)) to the actual issuer (as
distinguished, for example, from a conduit borrower that is not a
related party to the actual issuer).
(2) Qualified tender bond means a tax-exempt bond that, pursuant to
the terms of the bond, has all of the following features:
(i) During each authorized interest rate mode, the bond bears
interest at a fixed interest rate, a qualified floating rate under
Sec. 1.1275-5(b), or an objective rate for a tax-exempt bond under
Sec. 1.1275-5(c)(5);
(ii) Interest on the bond is unconditionally payable (as defined in
Sec. 1.1273-1(c)(1)(ii)) at periodic intervals of no more than one
year;
(iii) The bond has a stated maturity date that is not later than 40
years after the issue date of the bond; and
(iv) The bond includes a qualified tender right.
(3) Qualified tender right means a right or obligation of a holder
of a tax-exempt bond pursuant to the terms of the bond to tender the
bond for purchase as described in this paragraph (e)(3). The purchaser
under the tender may be the issuer, its agent, or another party. The
tender right is available on at least one date before the stated
maturity date. For each such tender, the purchase price of the bond is
equal to par (plus any accrued interest). Following each such tender,
the issuer, its agent, or another party either redeems the bond or uses
reasonable best efforts to resell the bond within the 90-day period
beginning on the date of the tender. Upon any such resale, the resale
price of the bond is equal to the par amount of the bond (plus any
accrued interest), except that, if the tender right is exercised in
connection with a conversion of the interest rate mode on the bond to a
fixed rate for the remaining term of the bond, the bond may be resold
at any price, including a premium price above the par amount of the
bond or a discount price below the par amount of the bond (plus any
accrued interest). Any premium received by the issuer pursuant to such
a resale is treated solely for purposes of the arbitrage investment
restrictions under section 148 of the Code as additional sale proceeds
of the bonds.
(f) Applicability date--(1) General applicability. This section
applies to events occurring and actions taken with respect to bonds on
or after December 30, 2025.
(2) Permissive applicability. An issuer may choose to apply this
section to events occurring and actions taken with respect to bonds on
or after December 30, 2024.
0
Par. 3. Section 1.1001-3 is amended by revising paragraph (a)(2) to
read as follows:
Sec. 1.10011.1001-3 Modifications of debt instruments.
(a) * * *
(2) Tax-exempt bonds. For special rules governing whether tax-
exempt bonds are retired for purposes of sections 103 and 141 through
150 of the Internal Revenue Code, see Sec. 1.150-3.
* * * * *
Douglas W. O'Donnell,
Deputy Commissioner.
Approved: December 8, 2024.
Aviva R. Aron-Dine,
Deputy Assistant Secretary of the Treasury (Tax Policy).
[FR Doc. 2024-30267 Filed 12-27-24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4830-01-P