New Partnership Liability and Disguised Sale Regulations

Similar documents
Tax Benefit from Leveraged Partnerships Shut Down By New IRS Regulations

IRS issues regulations on disguised sales of property and allocations of partnership liabilities

The New Partnership Disguised Sale and Liability Allocation Regulations

26th Annual Health Sciences Tax Conference

SIGNIFICANT CHANGES TO DISGUISED SALE RULES UNDER SECTIONS 707 AND 752

Tax Alert. Funds Escape Debt-Equity Regulation Net For Now. Introduction. Key Points

IMPORTANT INFORMATION FOR THE LIVE PROGRAM

Hot Topics in Partnership Taxation

Redemptions of Partnership Interests and Divisions of Partnerships

NEW YORK STATE BAR ASSOCIATION TAX SECTION REPORT ON THE PROPOSED REGULATIONS ON THE ALLOCATION OF PARTNERSHIP LIABILITIES AND DISGUISED SALES

Partnership Workouts Hot Topics Addendum

IRS Replaces Proposed Regulations on Disguised Sale Rules and Allocation of Partnership Liabilities

Presenting a live 90-minute webinar with interactive Q&A. Today s faculty features: Rebecca Lodovico, Tax Managing Director, BDO USA, Pittsburgh

Carried Interest and Other Tax Reform Highlights for Investment Funds and Asset Managers

DISREGARDED ENTITIES AND PARTNERSHIP LIABILITY ALLOCATIONS: PROPOSED REGS CRITIQUED

BASIC PARTNERSHIP TAX II SALES, DISGUISED SALES & TERMINATIONS

Executive Compensation, Employee Benefits and ERISA Alert

Form 1065 Schedule K-1 Analysis Basis Calculations & Distributions for Partnerships & LLCs Case Suggested Solutions

Partnership Tax Planning Without Falling into the Canal (Slides)

MLP Tax Technical Seminar

Ninth Annual Domestic Tax Conference. 24 April 2014 New York City

Staff Tax Training Partnerships & LLCs (Form 1065) Case Solutions

Fundamentals of Oil and Gas Partnerships Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld LLP

Basis Issues for Partnerships and S Corporations. Edward K. Zollars, CPA

Reforming Subchapter K

ALI-ABA Course of Study Creative Tax Planning for Real Estate Transactions. October 11-13, 2007 Atlanta, Georgia

NEW YORK STATE BAR ASSOCIATION TAX SECTION

June 5, Mr. Daniel I. Werfel Acting Commissioner Internal Revenue Service 1111 Constitution Avenue, Room 3000 Washington, DC 20024

Basis Calculations for Pass-Through Entities: Challenges for Tax Preparers

Partnership Issues in International Tax Planning Tax Executives Institute February 16, 2015

Recourse and Non-Recourse Liability in Partnerships Minimizing the Tax Impact of Partner Liability and Debt Allocations Under Sections 752 and 704

Property and Liability Transfers to Partnerships: Built-In Gain or Loss, Boot, and Disguised Sales

GWU Law School / IRS 30 th Annual Institute

IRC Sect. 704(b): Partnership Allocations

Client Alert May 3, 2016

2017 Deloitte Renewable Energy Seminar Innovating for tomorrow November 13-15, 2017

Partnerships: The Fundamentals

LEGAL ALERT. April 13, 2007

DISPOSITIONS OF TANGIBLE PROPERTY

Tax Executives Institute Houston Chapter Tax School May 2, 2017

Tax Management. Real Estate Journal

Recent Developments for Sections 409A and 457: Proposed Regulations and Chief Counsel Memorandum

Partnerships and the Proposed Debt-Equity Regulations

Recourse and Nonrecourse Liability in Partnership Agreements

Executive summary. EY Global Tax Alert Library

Basis Calculations & Distributions for Pass-Thru Entities Case Suggested Solutions

S Corporation Shareholder Stock Basis & Bona Fide Shareholder Debt

AMERICAN JOBS CREATION ACT OF 2004

24 th Annual Health Sciences Tax Conference

Newly Issued 457(f) Proposed Regulations Clarify Rules for Nonqualified Deferred Compensation Provided by Non-Profit and Governmental Entities

New York State Bar Association Tax Aspects of Real Property Transactions. Estate Planning for Investment Real Estate: Don t Forget the Income Tax Side

Executive Compensation, Employee Benefits and ERISA Alert

New York State Bar Association. Tax Section. Report on Uncertain Tax Positions in the Context of Mergers, Acquisitions and Spin-offs

Page Update Info Basis and At Risk Rules for Partnerships 1

IRS and Treasury Issue Long-Awaited Guidance on Corporate Inversions and Disqualified Stock

Section 367 limits use of the reorganization

REVISED TAX SHELTER REGULATIONS

Corporate Tax Segment 3 Corporate Formation

New IRS Notice Provides Employers with Ability to Correct Defects in Nonqualified Plan Documents

Investment Management and Hedge Funds: What s Happening Now Gregory J. Nowak Joan C. Arnold Steven D. Bortnick Jennifer A. O Leary

Structuring Funds for Investment in India: Maximizing Tax Efficiency for U.S. Investors

New Proposed Section 385 Regulations

Global Employer Rewards. Nonqualified Deferred Compensation: The Effect of Section 409A Now and in the Future

Temporary Regulations Addressing Inversions and Related Transactions and Proposed Section 385 Regulations

Anti-Inversion Guidance: Treasury Releases Temporary and Proposed Regulations

Treasury and IRS Issue Guidance under Section 409A on Correcting Document Failures

US regulations forthcoming on partnership nonrecognition of property contributions

Part I. Rulings and Decisions Under the Internal Revenue Code of 1986

NONQUALIFIED DEFERRED COMPENSATION: THE EFFECT OF THE NEW RULES NOW AND IN THE FUTURE

2018 Deloitte Renewable Energy Seminar Scaling new heights August 15-17, 2018

US proposed GILTI regulations implement international tax reform changes

Chapter Two - Formation of a Corporation

Treasury Issues Final and Temporary Regulations on Related-Party Debt Instruments

Further Guidance on the Application of Section 409A to Nonqualified Deferred Compensation Plans

PARTNERSHIP DISGUISED SALE RULES. June Mark J. Silverman Steptoe & Johnson LLP Washington, D.C. Aaron P. Nocjar. Washington, D.C.

Subchapter K Regulations. Sec Partners, not partnership, subject to tax.

Tax Executives Institute Houston chapter Indebtedness and Consolidated Returns

Current issues and transaction structures for tax-free spin-offs

ROCKY MOUNTAIN TAX SEMINAR FOR PRIVATE FOUNDATIONS CURRENT AND DEFERRED COMPENSATION FOR DIRECTORS AND OFFICERS: THE RED FLAGS. September 11, 2013

IRS proposes clarifying regulations for nonqualified deferred compensation plans

LEXIS FEDERAL TAX JOURNAL QUARTERLY

Partnership Flip Structuring Tax Perspectives. Tom Stevens Bill O Shea Deloitte Tax LLP

BUSINESS ORGANIZATIONS: Tax and Legal Aspects Compared LLCs, S Corporations and C Corporations

Controlled Foreign Corp. Restructuring For US Taxpayers By Carl Merino and Dina Kapur Sanna (August 13, 2018, 12:48 PM EDT)

US IRS issues interim guidance under new Section 1446(f) for sales of interests in non-publicly traded partnerships

New Requirements to Hong Kong Professional Investor Regime to Become Effective on 25 March 2016

21st Annual Health Sciences Tax Conference

Transfers of Certain Property by U.S. Persons to Partnerships with Related Foreign Partners

ALI-ABA Course of Study Consolidated Tax Return Regulations. Cosponsored by the ABA Section of Taxation October 1-2, 2009 Washington, D.C.

Part III. Administrative, Procedural, and Miscellaneous

TAX MEMORANDUM. CPAs, Clients & Associates. David L. Silverman, Esq. Shirlee Aminoff, Esq. DATE: April 2, Attorney-Client Privilege

Executive Compensation and Benefits Alert

Advanced Markets Because You Asked

PARTNERSHIP TAXATION

ALI-ABA Course of Study Creative Tax Planning for Real Estate Transactions September 25-27, 2008 Chicago, Illinois

Temporary regulations issued regarding treatment of certain stock of a foreign corporation under Section 7874

Presenting a live 90-minute webinar with interactive Q&A. Today s faculty features:

Latham & Watkins Tax Department. The American Jobs Creation Act of 2004 Affects Domestic Mergers and Acquisitions Tax Issues

Executive summary. EY Global Tax Alert Library

Transcription:

Tax Alert October 11, 2016 Key Points Final, temporary and proposed regulations issued on October 5, 2016, address complex rules dealing with partnership disguised sales and debt allocation rules under Sections 707 and 752 of the Internal Revenue Code. Bottom-dollar guarantees used in certain tax-deferred leveraged partnership transactions are no longer effective and all partnership liabilities must be treated effectively as nonrecourse for disguised sale purposes. Partners and partnerships should carefully evaluate the impact these regulations may have on existing partnership arrangements and future investment structures. New Partnership Liability and Disguised Sale Regulations On October 5, 2016, the Treasury Department and the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) issued final, temporary and proposed regulations under Sections 704, 707 and 752 (the New Regulations ), 1 relating to the partnership disguised sales and debt allocation rules. These New Regulations will have a significant impact on the partnership industry because they limit the ways that certain cash distributions can be made to partners without incurring a current income tax (often in the context of leveraged partnership transactions). The new guidance also eliminates the partners ability to use certain guarantees and indemnity arrangements to enhance their tax basis in order to deduct partnership losses or to shelter gain on a contribution of property or a partnership interest where the contributing partner s share of partnership liabilities exceeds his tax basis in the partnership interest. In the case of publicly traded partnerships (known as MLPs ), a sponsor s commonly-employed strategy to monetize appreciated properties on a tax-deferred basis, either upon formation of the MLP or in subsequent dropdown transactions, will be severely restricted by these new rules. Partnerships and partners are advised to consider the impact of these changes made by the New Regulations on existing partnerships, as well as future investment structures. 1 All section references are to sections of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended. 2016 Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld LLP. This document is distributed for informational use only; it does not constitute legal advice and should not be taken as such.

Background Previously, on January 30, 2014, the Treasury Department and the IRS issued proposed regulations to address certain perceived deficiencies and technical ambiguities under the then-existing Treasury regulations under the Section 707 disguised sale rules (the 2014 Proposed 707 Regulations ) and to revise the approach of partnership debt allocations under Section 752 (the 2014 Proposed 752 Regulations ). The 2014 Proposed Regulations received significant comments from the tax community, and the New Regulations address these comments for the most part. T.D. 9787 (published as final regulations) generally retains most of the proposed changes from the 2014 Proposed 707 Regulations on disguised sales (the Final 707 Regulations ) and makes some changes to the rules for allocation of tierthree partnership nonrecourse debt under Treasury Regulation 1.752-3 (the Final 752 Regulations ). These final regulations will apply on or after October 5, 2016. The IRS withdrew a substantial part of the 2014 Proposed 752 Regulations related to allocation of partnership recourse liabilities and, instead, in T.D. 9788, issued temporary Treasury regulations under both Section 707 (the Temporary 707 Regulations ) and Section 752 (the Temporary 752 Regulations ) that will treat all partnership liabilities as, in effect, nonrecourse liabilities in applying the Section 707 disguised sale rules and will eliminate the use of most bottom-dollar guarantees 2 in leveraged partnership transactions. Finally, REG-122855-15 contains proposed Treasury Regulations under Sections 704 (the Proposed 704 Regulations ) and 752 (the Proposed 752 Regulations ) that repropose how recourse debt is determined for a partner under Section 752 and whether a deficit restoration obligation (DRO) will be respected under Treas. Reg. 1.704-1 (dealing with allocations under Section 704(b)). Disguised Sale Rules Under Section 707(a)(2)(B) Section 707(a)(2)(B) distinguishes between separate contributions of property by the partner to the partnership and the distribution of money or other consideration to the partner by the partnership, on the one hand, and so-called disguised sales of property by the partner to the partnership, on the other hand. Generally, a transfer of property by a partner to a partnership followed by a transfer of money or other consideration from the partnership to the partner will be treated as a disguised sale of property by the partner to the partnership (and, therefore, the cash or other consideration received may be taxable to the partner) if, based on all the facts and circumstances, the transfer of money or other consideration would not have been made but for the transfer of property, and, for nonsimultaneous transfers, the subsequent transfer is not dependent on the entrepreneurial risks of the partnership. The regulations under Section 707 provide a number of exceptions to disguised sale treatment and allow cash to be paid by the partnership to the partner without incurring a current income tax. Some of these exceptions are clarified by the Final 707 Regulations, while others will be modified under the Temporary 707 Regulations. 2 Bottom-dollar guarantees provide creditor protection only if the collateral securing the obligation declines in value to a certain level and is often structured to kick in only if the creditor first exhausts all other remedies available against the partnership. 2

1. Debt-Financed Distributions Under the debt-financed distribution exception to disguised sale treatment, a distribution of cash to a partner in connection with a property contribution by such partner is not treated as a taxable sale to the extent that the cash is traceable to a partnership liability (incurred within 90 days of the distribution), and the amount of the distribution does not exceed the partner s allocable share of the liability incurred to fund the distribution. A partner s allocable share of partnership recourse liabilities equals the portion for which the partner (or a related person) bears the economic risk of loss (such as through a partner guarantee). Many leveraged partnerships took advantage of this exception by contributing built-in gain property to the partnership, having the partnership incur debt and distributing the borrowed money to the partner. To the extent that the partner is allocated the debt (e.g., the partner guarantees the partnership debt), such cash was not treated as proceeds from a sale and thus was not currently taxable. The New Regulations make numerous changes to the application of the debt-financed distribution exception. Most importantly, the Temporary 707 Regulations (effective January 3, 2017) provide that, for purposes of the disguised sale rules, all partnership liabilities (whether recourse or nonrecourse) will be treated, in effect, as nonrecourse liabilities and generally allocable to the transferor partner based on the partner s share of partnership profits. This rule applies for all of the Section 707 disguised sale Regulations and is not limited to the debt-financed distribution exception. Specifically, in the context of the debt-financed distribution exception, this means that a guarantee can no longer be used to treat an otherwise nonrecourse debt as recourse to the guarantor partner in order to increase such partner s allocable share of partnership liabilities to shelter debt-financed cash distributions. Further, if another partner guarantees the partnership debt, the partner at issue will not be able to take into account the portion guaranteed by the other partner in determining his share of the debt. The Final 752 Regulations complement this new rule of allocating all partnership liabilities, for Section 707 disguised sale purposes, based on the partner s share of partnership profits method by providing that other methods of allocating the third-tier partnership nonrecourse debt under Treasury Regulations 1.752-3(a)(3) shall not apply. 3 The Final 707 Regulations also adopt the ordering rule in the 2014 Proposed Regulations, which apply the debt-financed distribution exception before other exceptions (discussed below) under the disguised sale regulations. Additional rules are provided in the Temporary 752 Regulations that, together with the Final 707 Regulations, are designed to curtail leveraged partnerships. Temporary 752 Regulations tweak the bottom-dollar guarantee rule of the 2014 Proposed Regulations (generally not recognizing bottom-dollar guarantees as a payment obligation of a partner), but would allow vertical-slice guarantees and bottomdollar guarantee arrangements where the taxpayer retains 90 percent or more of the economic risk of loss (EROL) for the liability (that is, up to 10 percent can be indemnified). Subject to certain exceptions, the Temporary 752 Regulations generally treat as bottom-dollar payment obligations any obligations other than one in which the partner or related person is, or would be, liable up to the full amount of such 3 These other methods are referred to as the significant item method, alternative method and additional method under Treas. Reg. 1.752-3(a)(3). 3

partner or related person s payment obligation if, and to the extent that, any amount of the partnership liability is not otherwise satisfied. If a payment obligation is subject to indemnification, reimbursement or contribution, such payment obligation may still be recognized as an obligation if the partner or a related person is liable for, as noted above, at least 90 percent of the partner s or related person s obligation. Another exception, as mentioned earlier, is made for vertical slice guarantees where a partner s payment obligation is stated as a fixed percentage of every dollar of the partnership liability to which such obligation relates. The Temporary 752 Regulations will require partnerships to disclose bottom-dollar payment obligations on IRS Form 8275 in the taxable year in which the bottom-dollar payment obligation is undertaken or modified. These rules regarding bottom-dollar payment obligations in the Temporary 752 Regulations would generally apply on or after October 5, 2016 (subject to a binding contract exception), but allows a sevenyear transition period to transitional partners whose allocable shares of recourse liabilities exceed their tax basis on October 5, 2016. Such transitional partners may continue to apply the existing Section 752 regulations for seven years, or until their basis is reduced to zero. These changes relating to the manner in which allocable shares of partnership debt are measured for disguised sale purposes mean that, if a taxpayer engages in a partnership rollup where either partnership assets or interests are transferred to a new partnership, the partners allocable share of the partnership recourse or nonrecourse liabilities will now be determined using their respective shares of partnership profits without regard to any partner guarantees and thus could potentially trigger a disguised sale. As a result of these changes, partners are very likely to incur taxable gain on a rollup that did not previously exist under the pre-october 5, 2016, regime. 2. Capital Expenditure Reimbursement Under existing law, when a partner contributes property to the partnership and the partnership reimburses the contributing partner for certain capital expenditures and costs incurred by the partner, cash received by the partner as reimbursement of capital expenditures is not taxable. This exception generally applies only to the extent that the reimbursed capital expenditures do not exceed 20 percent of the fair market value of the transferred property (the 20 percent limitation). The 20 percent limitation, however, does not apply if the fair market value of the transferred property does not exceed 120 percent of the partner s adjusted basis in the property at the time of the transfer (the 120 percent test). The Final 707 Regulations (effective October 5, 2016) clarify a few ambiguities in the existing Regulations. First, the Final 707 Regulations generally provide that the 20 percent limitation and the 120 percent test are to be applied on a property-by-property basis. In addition, the taxpayers are prohibited from double-dipping in connection with a capital expenditure reimbursement and also shifting the economics of the borrowing used to fund the capital expenditures to another partner. 3. Tiered Partnerships The Final 707 Regulations adopt the 2014 Proposed 707 Regulations approach on tiered partnerships. Under such approach, the debt-financed distribution exception applies in a tiered-partnership setting, and 4

the liabilities attributable to contributed partnership interests are treated as qualified liabilities in the hands of the upper-tier partnership to the extent that the liabilities would have been qualified liabilities had the liabilities been assumed or taken subject to by the upper-tier partnership in connection with a transfer of all of the lower-tier partnership s property to the upper-tier partnership by the lower-tier partnership. The Final 707 Regulations also clarify that the contributing partner s intent (rather than the lower-tier partnership s intent) is taken into account in determining qualified liabilities status. Lastly, the Final 707 Regulations set forth that a partner steps in the shoes of a person (to the extent that the person was not previously reimbursed) with respect to preformation capital expenditures and for determining whether a liability is a qualified liability under Treasury Regulation 1.707-5(a)(6) when a partner acquires the property, assumes a liability or takes property subject to a liability from another person in connection with a nonrecognition transaction described in Sections 351, 381(a), 721 or 731. These rules are effective on October 5, 2016. Changes to the Debt Allocation Rules Under the Section 752 Regulations Section 752 generally provides that increases and decreases in a partner s allocable share of the liabilities of a partnership are treated as money contributed (or money distributed) to (or from) the partnership. These liability allocations directly increase or decrease the partner s tax basis in its partnership interest, which, in turn, affects the amount of losses or money that can be allocated or distributed to the partner, thereby directly affecting its tax liability. In the disguised sales area, when a partner transfers encumbered properties to the partnership or if the partnership assumes the partner s liabilities in connection with the transfer of properties, the shifting of so-called nonqualified liabilities may be treated as a deemed distribution of cash taxable to the transferor partner even if no other consideration was paid by the partnership to such partner. For this purpose, nonqualified liabilities are generally liabilities that are less than two years old and do not secure the contributed property, have not funded capital expenditures with respect to the contributed property, or are not related to the trade or business of the partnership. As discussed above, a partner s share of a partnership recourse liability equals the portion of the liability for which the partner or related person bears the EROL. A partner or a related person bears the EROL to the extent that the partner or the related person would be obligated to make a payment if the partnership s assets became worthless and the liability became due and payable. Whether a partner has an obligation to make a payment is determined based on the facts and circumstances at the time of the determination. Under the existing Section 752 regulations, all statutory and contractual obligations relating to the partnership liability (including DROs, guarantees, indemnifications and reimbursement arrangements) are taken into account in determining whether a partner has a payment obligation for a partnership liability, and it is assumed that all partners and related persons will actually satisfy their payment obligations regardless of net worth, unless there exists a plan to circumvent or avoid the obligation. In determining whether a partner or a related person bears the EROL with respect to a partnership liability, the 2014 Proposed 752 Regulations adopted an all-or-nothing, multifactor test in determining a partner s or a related person s payment obligation (other than bottom-dollar payment obligations) with 5

respect to such partnership liability and imposed a net value requirement on the partner throughout the term of the payment obligation. Such approach received wide criticism from tax practitioners, and the Proposed 752 Regulations drop the net-value requirement and repropose a modified, multifactor test, but incorporate those factors into the general antiabuse section of the regulations as part of the facts-andcircumstances analysis of the payment obligation. Such nonexclusive factors include: whether there will be commercially reasonable contractual restrictions that protect the likelihood of repayment of the debt whether there is commercially reasonable documentation regarding the partner s financial condition whether the payment obligation ends prior to the term of the loan (with some commercial exceptions) whether there is an amount of cash or other liquid assets beyond the reasonable needs of the business whether the payment obligation does not permit the creditor to promptly pursue payment whether the loan terms would have changed absent the guarantee whether the creditor benefiting from the obligation did not receive executed loan documents (meaning that the creditor never saw the signed guarantee agreement). Commentators to the 2014 Proposed 752 Regulations pointed out that the factors listed above may not be satisfied by a DRO (which is also a payment obligation), and they also suggested that, if a DRO is disregarded as an payment obligation of a partner for Section 752 purposes, it should not be given effect for capital account purposes under Section 704. In response to these comments, the Proposed 704 Regulations adopt a separate nonexclusive list of factors in testing for the validity of a DRO and provide that a DRO that is disregarded under the Proposed 704 Regulations will also be disregarded for purposes of the Proposed 752 Regulations. The list of factors in the Proposed 704 Regulations consider: whether the partner is subject to commercially reasonable provisions for the enforcement and collection of the obligation whether the partner is required to provide (either at the time the obligation is made or periodically) commercially reasonable documentation regarding the partner s financial condition to the partnership whether the obligation ends or could, by its terms, be terminated before the liquidation of the partner s interest in the partnership or when the partner s capital account is negative whether the terms of the obligation are provided to all the partners in the partnership in a timely manner. The new proposed regulations provide these nonexclusive lists of factors as evidence of the recourse nature of the debt or the bona fides of a DRO. The failure to include a factor will not be determinative of the status of the debt as recourse to a partner or as a good DRO for the partner, nor is the inclusion of a listed factor determinative of whether the recourse nature of the debt or the DRO will be respected. Thus, the absence of any of the listed factors will not make the debt nonrecourse or cause the DRO to be 6

disregarded as it would have been under the Proposed 2014 Regulations. However, solely for purposes of Section 752, evidence of a plan to circumvent or avoid an obligation is deemed to exist if the facts and circumstances indicate that there is not a reasonable expectation that the payment obligor will have the ability to make the required payments if the payment obligation becomes due and payable. These proposed regulations generally do not apply until on or after the date that such regulations are published as final regulations. However, taxpayers can generally rely on them in the interim period before these regulations become final. These New Regulations have significant impact to existing partnership and partners, as well as future investment transactions involving a partnership. 7

Contact Information If you have any questions regarding this alert, please contact: Alison L. Chen alchen@akingump.com +1 713.250.2165 Houston Monte A. Jackel mjackel@akingump.com +1 202.887.4178 Washington, D.C. Stuart E. Leblang sleblang@akingump.com +1 212.872.1017 New York Patrick B. Fenn pfenn@akingump.com +1 212.872.1040 New York 8