Fractional Taxation: IRS Releases Technical Advice Addressing the 10% Securities Rule Applicable to Foreign Bank Branches

Similar documents
FATCA Transitional Rules Extended

Lending to Single Investor Funds: Issues in Connection with Subscription Credit Facilities

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

The IRS and Treasury Issue New Anti-Inversion Notice

Legal Update September 21, 2011

The IRS and Treasury Issue New Anti-Inversion Guidance

Sun Capital Update: US Private Equity Funds Liable for Multiemployer Plan Withdrawal Liability of Portfolio Company

Spring 2015 reforms: DC governance and charging

Treasury and IRS Re-Release Proposed Regulations on Implementation of New Centralized Partnership Audit Regime

Fund of Funds Financing: Secondary Facilities for PE Funds and Hedge Funds

Beginner s Glossary to Fund Finance

Paperwork Initiative: IRS Notice Previews of Life Settlement Reporting Rules

Capital Commitment Subscription Facilities and the Proposed Liquidity Coverage Ratio

FATCA Certifications and Notice

Preparing for the Annual Shareholders Meeting: Five Practical Matters US Public Companies Should Consider Now

Six Things Every Purchaser of US Commercial Accounts Receivable Should Know

Pension Scheme Governance for Trustees Programme

The Volcker Rule: Implication for Private Fund Activities

Bankers Bonus Cap: Where Are We Now?

Stress Relief: IRS Notice Eases the Implementation Rules for Cross-Border Dividend Equivalent Withholding

Understanding the SEC s Pay Ratio Disclosure Rule and its Implications

Spring 2015 reforms: the new DC flexibilities

The Drama Continues: Senate Finance Committee Chairman s Mark includes Proposals That Would Dramatically Impact Executive Compensation Programs

SEC Eliminates General Solicitation and General Advertising Prohibitions from Certain Private Placements

Mexico s President Unveils Historic Proposal to Open the Country s Energy Sector to Private Investment

Joint Report Signals Post-Brexit Reciprocal Protection for EU and UK Citizens

Inc. No Longer a Safe Shield Federal Circuit Greatly Expands Officer/Shareholder Liability Resulting from US Customs Violations

United States and European Union Reach a Covered Agreement on Cross-Border Insurance and Reinsurance

California Employers Provide Meal Periods by Making Them Available but Need Not Ensure that Employees Take Them

EU Regulation: Cross-border & extraterritorial issues

The Volcker Rule: Proprietary Trading and Private Fund Restrictions

The Impact of the EU Securitization Regulation on US Entities

Significant Revisions to US International Tax Rules

Supply Chain Finance Primer

New Tax Case Provides Guidance on Deductions for Fees Incurred by Family Offices

Spring 2015 reforms: other changes

US Federal Banking Agencies Recommend Changes to Permissible Banking Entity Activities and Investments

The legal form of a European Stock Corporation is an interesting alternative for mid-sized partnerships and also for large corporations.

Subscription Facilities: Analyzing Overcall Limitations Linked to Fund Concentration Limits

Subscription Credit Facility Market Review

2018 and Onward: The Impact of the House-Senate Compromise Tax Plan on the Renewable Energy Market

The Government Consults on Subsidiary Legislation for Implementation of the new Companies Ordinance Phase One

The 2017 Proposed Federal Tax Legislation: A First Look.

Hong Kong Proposes Changes to Attract Listing of Innovative Companies on the Main Board

VA Guaranty for Non-Cash-Out Refinancings Subject to New Conditions in Senate Banking Bill

New Rules Released: Senior Managers and Certification Regime Extended to All Firms

DOL Fiduciary Rule: Impact and Action Steps

The Proposed Regulations at a Glance. Legal Update April 7, 2016

Our Global Corporate Trust & Agency Group. Making a splash

Capital Markets Implications of Amendments to Simplify and Update SEC Disclosure Rules

SEC Proposes Conflict-of-Interest Rule for Asset-Backed Securities

Summary of Bidding Terms for Mexico Deepwater Areas

West Africa transaction know-how - Mauritania

SEC Adopts Final Rules Related to Representation and Warranties in Asset-Backed Securities Offerings

Complying with the Personal Data (Privacy) Ordinance (Cap. 486) in the insurance industry

BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT COMPANIES

New Ways to Use Your Offshore RMB: MOFCOM and PBoC Join Hands to Put Finishing Touches on RMB FDI Rules

Poland: The Regulations, Permits and Considerations

Pensions Legal Update

Activist Investor Settlement Agreements: Negotiating Points

Disguised Payments for Services: Proposed Regulations Review

US SEC Amends Custody Rule for Registered Investment Advisers

Takeover Code changes published - is this a new era for UK takeovers?

US Treasury Department and Internal Revenue Service Issue Supplementary FATCA Guidance

Private Equity Portfolio Company Bulletin

IRS Releases Proposed Anti-Hybrid Regulations

Malaysia The Resurrection of Sales and Services Tax

Antitrust & Competition

US IRS Issues Preliminary FATCA Guidance Establishing Due Diligence Procedures and Information Reporting Rules for Foreign Financial Institutions

A brief overview of mining in Senegal

Energy Tax Provisions in the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009

Gain Deferral Using Qualified Opportunity Zone Investment Strategies

Vietnam Mergers & Acquisitions (M&A)

SEC Adopts Dodd-Frank Hedging Disclosure Rule

Updated EU Blocking Statute Targeting Reinstated US Iran Sanctions Enters into Force

Pensions Legal Update

Winter 2015 Subscription Credit Facility Market Review

Boricua at Heart: Guidance on Establishing a Closer Connection to Puerto Rico

Corporate & Securities update

Why a Hanjin Fleet Came to Hong Kong

EU-US Relations: Transatlantic Economic Council to Meet on November 29, 2011

Intercreditor Agreements After Momentive: When a Hindrance Is Not a Hindrance

Global Corporate Insurance and Regulatory Bulletin INSURANCE & REINSURANCE INDUSTRY GROUP

BEATen Up (Again): The IRS Issues Proposed Regulations Under the Base Erosion Anti-Abuse Tax

Understanding and Mitigating Regulatory Risk in Consumer Financial Transactions: Effective Diligence Strategies

Avoiding Post-Acquisition Disputes

Enhanced Antitrust Enforcement Expected in China as Long-awaited Anti-Monopoly Implementing Rules Finalised

Hong Kong Proposes Rules to Combat Backdoor Listing - Part 2

Abusiveness. The CFPB s New Enforcement Tool. Ori Lev Partner Mayer Brown

Summary of Government Interventions in Financial Markets European Central Bank (and the Eurosystem)

Pensions Legal Update

LESSONS LEARNED FROM OUTSOURCING DISPUTES

STRUCTURED AND MARKET-LINKED PRODUCTS

Transfer Pricing: The New Frontier Transfer Pricing Documentation in a Post-BEPS World: Evolution or Revolution? November 8, 2018

Summary of Government Interventions in Financial Markets Luxembourg

Three Key Takeaways from ICANN 59 in Johannesburg

Capital markets update

Recent Developments in the Regulation of RMB Funds

National Regulatory System Proposed for US Insurance Industry

Madden in the Supreme Court: Where It Is, and Where It Could Be Going

Transcription:

Legal Update June 27, 2013 Fractional Taxation: IRS Releases Technical Advice Addressing the 10% Securities Rule Applicable to Detailed special rules apply to determine whether, and the extent to which, income from a security is considered attributable to the conduct of a banking, financing, or similar business in the United States by a non-us bank. Unfortunately, until June 2013, the Internal Revenue Service (the IRS ) had proffered very little guidance on the application of these rules. On June 24, 2013, the IRS released Technical Advice Memorandum 201325012 addressing whether income from certain securities is eligible for the advantages of the rule for 10% securities. 1 The rule for 10% securities is beneficial to most US bank branches because it limits the amount of interest and gain on the security that is taxable in the United States to a fraction, as more fully described below. The reason why the IRS auditing agent and the taxpayer sought Technical Advice appeared to be that the taxpayer did not take advantage of the rule for 10% securities. It is reasonable to assume that the taxpayer in ruling had losses and wanted the full income from the securities to absorb such losses. While the IRS stuck to its position that the rule for 10% securities limited the taxpayer s ability to include income from the medium term notes ( MTNs ) in its US taxable income, the T.A.M. provides planning opportunities for US branches of non-us banks that are not in loss carryforward positions. All interest from loans and all gain or loss from the sale of loans is treated as effectively connected to the conduct of a trade or business in the United States if: 1) the loans are treated as securities, 2 2) the securities are capital assets, that is, they are held for investment and not as inventory, 3) the income from the securities is United States source income; 4) the income is derived in connection with a banking, financing or similar business in the United States, 5) the stocks and securities are attributable to a US office where the banking, financing or similar such business is carried on, and 6) the securities are described in one of five detailed categories. The five categories that describe securities all of the income from which is subject to US federal income tax are as follows: A) the securities were acquired as a result of, or in the course of making loans to the public; 3 B) the securities were acquired in the course of distributing such securities to the public; 4 C) the securities were acquired for the purpose of satisfying reserve requirements of a duly constituted banking authority; 5 D) the securities are payable on demand or at a fixed maturity date not exceeding one year; 6 or E) the securities are issued by the United States or any agency or instrumentality thereof. 7

If securities meet the five-part test described above, but do not fall into one of these five categories, the securities fall into the catch-all or residual category of Treasury Regulation 1.864-4(c)(5)(ii)(b)(3). Interest income on loans 4(c)(5)(ii)(b)(3) and held by a US branch of a non-us entity engaged in a banking, financing or similar business is not fully taxable in the United States. Instead, applicable Treasury regulations determine the amount of interest income earned on securities described in Treasury Regulation 1.864-4(c)(5)(ii)(b)(3) that is taxable in the United States by multiplying such interest income by a fraction. The numerator of such fraction is 10%. 8 The denominator of such fraction is the percentage derived by dividing the book value of such securities held by the US office by the total book value of the total assets held by the US banking office of the taxpayer. 9 The fraction is capped at 1. The fraction is also used to determine the amount of gain or loss from dispositions of securities described in Treasury Regulation 1.864-4(c)(5)(ii)(b)(3) that is considered to be attributable to the US banking, financing or similar business conducted by the taxpayer in the US Securities described in Treasury Regulation 1.864-4(c)(5)(ii)(b)(3) are sometimes referred to as 10% securities in reference to the numerator of this fraction. The use of the fraction described in the flush language of Treasury Regulation 1.864-4(c)(5)(ii)(b)(3) can result in a significant portion of the interest income and gain or loss attributable to 10% securities not being subject to US federal income tax income. For example, if the book value of 10% securities held by a taxpayer engaged in a banking, financing, or similar business constituted 50% of the total assets held by the US banking office of the taxpayer, the denominator of the applicable fraction would be 50%. Thus, the fraction would be 10%/50% or 20%. On these facts, only 20% of the interest income and gain or loss from dispositions of 10% securities would be subject to US federal income tax. Accordingly, the determination as to whether securities are 4(c)(5)(ii)(a)(1) or Treasury Regulation 1.864-4(c)(5)(b)(3) can have significant federal income tax consequences. In T.A.M. 201325012, a US bank branch of a non-us bank ( Branch ) was regularly engaged in making loans to the public and other activities 4(c)(5)(i). As part of its US banking business, Branch wrote liquidity and credit-support commitments, including the issuance of letters of credit and standby bond and asset purchase agreements. The income from these activities was treated as effectively connected to the conduct of a US trade or business and included in the US taxable income of Branch. Branch s credit-support commitments exposed the bank to significant liquidity risk. A US Federal Reserve Board regulation (Reg D) required Branch to post collateral equal to 100% of its liquidity exposure. This rule required Branch to pledge securities with the Federal Reserve Bank s Discount Window. Branch acquired outstanding MTNs on the interbank market through broker/dealers to satisfy this collateral requirement. Branch also subscribed for MTNs on and prior to their issue date. All MTNs acquired for collateral purposes were held for seven days or less prior to being pledged to the Discount Window. It appears that Branch did not have any input into the terms of the MTNs that it acquired on or before their issue date. The issue before the IRS was whether these MTNs were 10% securities. The MTNs were not payable on demand or at a fixed maturity date not exceeding one year from the date of acquisition. The MTNs were not issued by the United States or any of its agencies or instrumentalities. As a result, the MTNs would be considered to be 10% securities if they did not fall into categories (A), (B) or (C) listed above. As analyzed below, the IRS found that the 2 Mayer Brown Fractional Taxation: IRS Releases Technical Advice Addressing the 10% Securities Rule Applicable to

MTNs did not fit into any of these categories and, as a result, should be treated as 10% securities in Branch s hands. A) Making Loans to the Public The IRS held that the MTNs were not securities 4(c)(5)(ii)(a)(1). The IRS explicitly held that when the US banking business acquires a security on an exchange or an OTC market, the security is not considered to have been acquired as a result of, or in the course of, making loans to the public. The IRS found that the interbank market is an organized OTC market through which banks loan funds to one another. 10 Furthermore, the IRS held that acquisitions on the exchange or organized OTC markets are not acquisitions from customers and are not acquired through the origination of a customer loan or incident to the terms of such original customer loan. Accordingly, the IRS held that the acquisition of the MTNs in secondary market transactions was not undertaken in the course of making loans to the public, apparently even when the Branch was providing original funds to the borrowers. The IRS s analysis is noteworthy because there is a certain amount of overlap between the standard employed by the IRS to determine whether the MTNs were loans made to the public and the standard employed to determine whether a non-us person is engaged in a lending business in the United States. (This issue frequently comes up in connection with offshore hedge fund activities.) The federal income tax rules provide different taxation schemes for non- US persons who invest or trade in US securities and US persons who hold and acquire US securities as a result of originating loans in a lending business. In the former cases, non-us persons are subject only to certain withholding taxes that may be imposed on income from the US securities. In general, the interest from such loans would be exempt from US withholding tax pursuant to the portfolio interest exception. 11 In contrast, if income from securities is derived in connection with the conduct of a US lending business, such income is subject to the same federal income tax regime that applies to US persons, that is, the non-us person is subject to graduated tax on taxable income. 12 At the margins, it can be difficult to differentiate between non-us persons who are trading in securities and non-us persons who are engaged in a lending business. The holding of T.A.M. 201325012 clarifies that a loan acquired in the interbank market, even if acquired pursuant to a commitment prior to the origination of the loan, should not be considered to have been acquired in a lending business. T.A.M. 201325012 also explicitly recognizes that loans purchased in OTC (that is, bilateral) markets should not be considered to constitute lending transactions. The facts and conclusion of T.A.M. 201325012, however, must be considered in light of the IRS s audit guidance in AM2009-010 (PRENO- 119800-09) (September 22, 2009). In AM2009-010, the IRS considered whether a non-us corporation that acquired loans made to US persons within the United States was engaged in a banking, financing or similar business in the United States within the meaning of Treasury Regulation 1.864-4(c)(5)(i). The non-us corporation had no office or employees located in the US It retained an origination company, pursuant to a service agreement, to originate loans to US borrowers. The origination company solicited US borrowers, then negotiated the terms of the loans, performed credit analyses with respect to US borrowers, and all other activities relating to loan origination other than the final approval and signing of the loan documents. The funding of the loans and final approval were undertaken by the non-us corporation from outside of the US Although the conclusion of AM2009-010 has detractors, the view of the IRS was that the conduct of these activities in the US by the agent was attributable to the non-us corporation. As a result, the non-us corporation was considered 3 Mayer Brown Fractional Taxation: IRS Releases Technical Advice Addressing the 10% Securities Rule Applicable to

to be engaged in a banking or financing business in the United States. AM2009-010 does not address whether the loans should be considered to be 4(c)(5)(ii)(a)(1). Based upon the IRS s discussion of the issues, however, it seems clear that the IRS found that the loans originated by the origination company should be considered to have been acquired as a result of making loans to the public. Thus, the critical distinction (a thin line indeed) between the two conclusions appears to rest on the fact that in AM2009-010, the non-us person was attributed with the loan origination while in T.A.M. 201325012 the non-us person was not attributed with the origination activity. B) Distributing Securities to the Public Since the taxpayer in T.A.M. 201325012 did not act as an underwriter or market maker with respect to the MTNs, the IRS held that the Branch did not acquire the loans in connection with the distribution of securities. Accordingly, the MTNs were not treated as described in Treasury Regulation 1.864-4(c)(5)(ii)(a)(2). C) Securities Held as Reserve Assets The last issue considered by the IRS was whether the MTNs were held as reserve assets. The IRS began by noting that prior to 1980, states could impose requirements on non-us banks to hold various assets as reserve assets. (After the passage of the International Banking Act of 1978, only the Federal government could impose reserve requirements on non-us banks.) The IRS noted that the broad language of Treasury Regulation 1.864-4(c)(5)(ii)(a)(3) was intended to reach assets held in reserve pursuant to these rules. In contrast, the IRS noted that Discount Window transactions serve two functions. First, it helps stabilize demand for Federal Reserve balances. Second, it provides liquidity for depository institutions. These functions differed considerably from regulator-imposed reserve requirements. First, Discount Window borrowings are initiated by the banking institutions. In contrast, reserve requirements are imposed on the bank by a regulator and apply continuously. The Reg D requirements are transaction-specific and collateralize the full borrowing. Reg D does not function as a reserve that protects creditors and depositors based upon a percentage of the liabilities. Accordingly, the IRS held that Reg D collateral requirements should not be treated as a reserve requirement. Since the MTNs did not fit into any of the categories that would have subjected the interest earned thereon to full inclusion in the US taxable income of the Branch, the MTNs were respected as 10% securities in the hands of the Branch. T.A.M. 201325012 is an important piece of guidance for several reasons. First, it offers parameters that distinguish between lending and investment and trading activities. Second, it adopts a relatively narrow view of when an asset will be considered a reserve asset. Third, it provides a framework for evaluating when securities will generally be treated as 10% securities. For more information about this topic please contact the author listed below. Mark H. Leeds +1 212 506 2499 mleeds@mayerbrown.com Mark thanks Sarah Berman, Associate Director/Senior Vice President of Macquarie Holdings (USA), Inc. for her helpful comments and suggestions. Endnotes 1 The 10% rule is contained in Treasury Regulation 1.864-4(c)(5)(ii)(b)(3). 2 Treasury Regulation 1.864-4(c)(5)(v) defines a security as any bill, note, bond, debenture or other evidence of 4 Mayer Brown Fractional Taxation: IRS Releases Technical Advice Addressing the 10% Securities Rule Applicable to

indebtedness, or any evidence of an interest in... any of the foregoing items. 3 Treas. Reg. 1.864-4(c)(5)(ii)(a)(1). 4 Treas. Reg. 1.864-4(c)(5)(ii)(a)(2). 5 Treas. Reg. 1.864-4(c)(5)(ii)(a)(3). 6 Treas. Reg. 1.864-4(c)(5)(ii)(b)(1). 7 Treas. Reg. 1.865-4(c)(5)(ii)(b)(2). 8 Treas. Reg. 1.864-4(c)(5)(ii)(flush lang.). 9 In fact, the fraction is determined monthly, the monthly fractions are then aggregated and divided by 12. 10 See Treas. Reg. 1.864-4(c)(5)(iv)(c). 11 See Code 864(b)(2), Code 871(a)(1)(A) and Code 881(a)(1). 12 See Code 871(b) and Code 882(a). Mayer Brown is a global legal services organization advising many of the world s largest companies, including a significant portion of the Fortune 100, FTSE 100, DAX and Hang Seng Index companies and more than half of the world s largest banks. Our legal services include banking and finance; corporate and securities; litigation and dispute resolution; antitrust and competition; US Supreme Court and appellate matters; employment and benefits; environmental; financial services regulatory & enforcement; government and global trade; intellectual property; real estate; tax; restructuring, bankruptcy and insolvency; and wealth management. Please visit our web site for comprehensive contact information for all Mayer Brown offices. www.mayerbrown.com IRS CIRCULAR 230 NOTICE. Any advice expressed herein as to tax matters was neither written nor intended by Mayer Brown LLP to be used and cannot be used by any taxpayer for the purpose of avoiding tax penalties that may be imposed under US tax law. If any person uses or refers to any such tax advice in promoting, marketing or recommending a partnership or other entity, investment plan or arrangement to any taxpayer, then (i) the advice was written to support the promotion or marketing (by a person other than Mayer Brown LLP) of that transaction or matter, and (ii) such taxpayer should seek advice based on the taxpayer s particular circumstances from an independent tax advisor. Mayer Brown is a global legal services provider comprising legal practices that are separate entities (the Mayer Brown Practices ). The Mayer Brown Practices are: Mayer Brown LLP and Mayer Brown Europe Brussels LLP, both limited liability partnerships established in Illinois USA; Mayer Brown International LLP, a limited liability partnership incorporated in England and Wales (authorized and regulated by the Solicitors Regulation Authority and registered in England and Wales number OC 303359); Mayer Brown, a SELAS established in France; Mayer Brown JSM, a Hong Kong partnership and its associated entities in Asia; and Tauil & Chequer Advogados, a Brazilian law partnership with which Mayer Brown is associated. Mayer Brown and the Mayer Brown logo are the trademarks of the Mayer Brown Practices in their respective jurisdictions. This Mayer Brown publication provides information and comments on legal issues and developments of interest to our clients and friends. The foregoing is not a comprehensive treatment of the subject matter covered and is not intended to provide legal advice. Readers should seek specific legal advice before taking any action with respect to the matters discussed herein. 2013 The Mayer Brown Practices. All rights reserved. 5 Mayer Brown Fractional Taxation: IRS Releases Technical Advice Addressing the 10% Securities Rule Applicable to