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228. Clarification Of Loss Utilisation Directive.


KPMG KPMG Klynveld Peat Marwick Goerdeler (accounting firm)
KPMG Kaiser Permanente Medical Group
KPMG Keiner Prüft Mehr Genau (German)
KPMG Kommen Prüfen Meckern Gehen
 Germany Webpage

Click on the above link to visit the KPMG Germany webpage on the Mondaq website

For editorial cut-off cut-off Anesthesiology The point at which elongation of the carbon chain of the 1-alkanol family of anesthetics results in a precipitous drop in the anesthetic potential of these agents–eg, at > 12 carbons in length, there is little anesthetic activity,  date, disclaimer, and notice of copyright see end of this article.

1. Introductory

The Frankfurt Regional Tax Office has issued an administrative order An order covering traffic, supplies, maintenance, evacuation, personnel, and other administrative details.  dated 3 July 2000 (S 2745 A - 22 - St II 13 (S); DB 2000, 1541) clarifying the application of certain aspects of the 1999 Loss Utilisation Directive, on which we reported in article no. 176. The Loss Utilisation Directive (hereinafter here·in·af·ter  
adv.
In a following part of this document, statement, or book.


hereinafter
Adverb

Formal or law from this point on in this document, matter, or case

Adv. 1.
: "the 1999 directive") deals with the application of [section] 8 (4) KStG (denying loss carryforwards Loss Carryforward

An accounting technique with which a company applies net operating losses of the current year to future year's profits in order to reduce tax liability.

Notes:
 to a corporation where it is not "economically identical" to the corporation that sustained the losses) and [section] 12 (3) UmwStG (making the survival of loss carryforwards in merger situations contingent upon Adj. 1. contingent upon - determined by conditions or circumstances that follow; "arms sales contingent on the approval of congress"
contingent on, dependant on, dependant upon, dependent on, dependent upon, depending on, contingent
 the continued operation of the business that caused the loss).

The administrative order was issued on the basis of discussions between the Federal Ministry of Finance and the central tax authorities of the German states (Oberste Finanzbehorden der Lander). Hence, the Federal tax authorities and the tax authorities in the other German states are in agreement with the terms of the order.

2. Corporate Recovery Exception

Under [section] 8 (4) KStG, a corporation loses its economic identity inter alia [Latin, Among other things.] A phrase used in Pleading to designate that a particular statute set out therein is only a part of the statute that is relevant to the facts of the lawsuit and not the entire statute.  when more than half of its shares are transferred and the corporation continues or recommences its business with predominantly new assets (primary loss forfeiture The involuntary relinquishment of money or property without compensation as a consequence of a breach or nonperformance of some legal obligation or the commission of a crime. The loss of a corporate charter or franchise as a result of illegality, malfeasance, or Nonfeasance.  situation).

By way of exception, the statute provides that injection of predominantly new assets solely for the purpose of rehabilitating a failing business (restoring it to economic viability) is not damaging provided the business continues to operate on a comparable scale for a period of five years (corporate recovery exception). Marginal no. 14 of the 1999 directive limits the injection of new assets under the corporate recovery exception to what is "necessary for the continued existence of the enterprise." The injection of assets in excess of what is necessary to restore the corporation to economic viability (so-called "over-rehabilitation" - Ubersanierung) will cause the corporation to forfeit To lose to another person or to the state some privilege, right, or property due to the commission of an error, an offense, or a crime, a breach of contract, or a neglect of duty; to subject property to confiscation; or to become liable for the payment of a penalty, as the result of a  the protection of the exception and lose its economic identity.

The administrative order states that, once five years have passed since the time of the share transfer, the injection of new assets can no longer lead to a loss of economic identity by reason of "over-rehabilitation." The administrative order thus makes clear that the five year period created by marginal no. 12 of the 1999 directive applies for purposes of the corporate recovery exception as well.

Marginal no. 12 of the 1999 directive provides that an injection of predominantly new business assets is generally damaging only if it occurs within five years of the time of the relevant share transfer (five year asset injection period). The administrative order in effect provides that the five year asset injection period is also the relevant time frame for determining whether "over-rehabilitation" has occurred.

The order goes on to say that it does not matter for purposes of the "over-rehabilitation" rule if the five year period during which the business must continue to operate on a comparable scale (five year operating period) is still running when assets are injected. Since the five year operating period does not begin to run until the share transfer has occurred and predominantly new assets have been injected (1999 directive marginal no. 21), it will generally end after the five year asset injection period (and five year over-rehabilitation period) that begins when more than half of the shares change hands.

3. Relation Of Five Year Operating Periods Under KStG And UmwStG

The five year operating period required by the corporate recovery exception under corporation tax law ([section] 8 (4) KStG) is paralleled by a five year operating requirement under reorganisation Noun 1. reorganisation - the imposition of a new organization; organizing differently (often involving extensive and drastic changes); "a committee was appointed to oversee the reorganization of the curriculum"; "top officials were forced out in the cabinet  tax law ([section] 12 (3) UmwStG). In connection with the latter five year operating period, marginal no. 42 of the 1999 directive states that it is not damaging if the business is expanded during the five year period. This contrasts with the prohibition on "over-rehabilitation" for corporation tax purposes. The administrative order minimises this latent contradiction by applying the five year asset injection period, not the more restrictive five year operating period, for "over-rehabilitation" purposes.

4. Role Of Intangible Assets Intangible Asset

An asset that is not physical in nature.

Notes:
Examples are things like copyrights, patents, intellectual property, and goodwill. These are the opposite of tangible assets.
 In Before/After Comparison

A before-and-after comparison is necessary in order to determine whether predominantly new assets have been injected into a loss corporation. Marginal no. 9 of the 1999 directive provides that intangible assets - i.e. intangible assets belonging to the loss corporation - are to be counted for purposes of this comparison, even if such assets do not appear on the loss corporation's balance sheet. Counting such intangibles favours taxpayers who acquire loss corporations with uncapitalised intangibles because it permits more new assets to be added without crossing the critical threshold Critical threshold, a notion derived from the percolation theory, refers to a threshold, that summons up to a critical mass. Under the threshold the phenomenon tends to abort, above the threshold, it tends to grow exponentially. .

The administrative order states that marginal no. 9 of the 1999 directive is to be applied only to self-created intangibles, capitalisation of which is prohibited by [section] 5 (2) EStG. Intangibles whose capitalisation is barred by the rule against capitalising assets under contracts in the course of performance (contracts executory That which is yet to be fully executed or performed; that which remains to be carried into operation or effect; incomplete; depending upon a future performance or event. The opposite of executed.


executory adj. something not yet performed or done.
 on both sides) are not to be counted for purposes of comparing the relative weights of newly injected assets to assets pre-existing in the loss corporation.

For instance, patents licensed by a loss corporation from another entity cannot be capitalised by the loss entity as long as its license rights are counterbalanced coun·ter·bal·ance  
n.
1. A force or influence equally counteracting another.

2. A weight that acts to balance another; a counterpoise or counterweight.

tr.v.
 by an obligation to pay royalties. Under the terms of the administrative order, such licenses are also not counted when determining whether newly injected assets predominate.

Editorial cut-off date: 05 June 2001

Disclaimer And Notice Of Copyright

This article treats the subjects covered in condensed con·dense  
v. con·densed, con·dens·ing, con·dens·es

v.tr.
1. To reduce the volume or compass of.

2. To make more concise; abridge or shorten.

3. Physics
a.
 form. It is intended to provide a general guide to the subject matter and should not be relied on as a basis for business decisions. Specialist advice must be sought with respect to your individual circumstances. KPMG Germany in particular insists that the tax law and other sources on which the article is based be consulted in the original, whether or not such sources are named in the article. Please note that the article is current only through its editorial cut-off date shown immediately above (not to be confused with the later date as of which the article was placed online - the date appearing at the article's outset). Related developments subsequent to the editorial cut-off are not necessarily reported on in later articles. Please note as well that later versions of this article or other articles on related topics may have since appeared on this database or elsewhere and should also be searched for and consulted. While KPMG Germany's articles are carefully reviewed, it can accept no responsibility in the event of any inaccuracy in·ac·cu·ra·cy  
n. pl. in·ac·cu·ra·cies
1. The quality or condition of being inaccurate.

2. An instance of being inaccurate; an error.
 or omission. Any claims nevertheless raised against KPMG Germany on the basis of this article are subject to German substantive law The part of the law that creates, defines, and regulates rights, including, for example, the law of contracts, torts, wills, and real property; the essential substance of rights under law.  and, to the extent permissible thereunder, to the exclusive jurisdiction of the courts in Frankfurt am Main, Germany. This article is the intellectual property of KPMG Germany (KPMG Deutsche Treuhand-Gesellschaft AG). No use of or quotation from the article is permitted without full attribution at·tri·bu·tion  
n.
1. The act of attributing, especially the act of establishing a particular person as the creator of a work of art.

2.
 to KPMG Germany and the article's stated author(s), if any. Distribution to third persons is prohibited without the express written consent of KPMG Germany in advance.

KPMG Germany

Marie-Curie-Stra[beta]e 30

Frankfurt

D - 60439

GERMANY

Tel: 6995870

Fax: 6995871050

E-mail: wbader@kpmg.com

URL URL
 in full Uniform Resource Locator

Address of a resource on the Internet. The resource can be any type of file stored on a server, such as a Web page, a text file, a graphics file, or an application program.
: www.kpmg.de

(c) Mondaq Ltd, 2002 - Tel. +44 (0)20 7820 7733 - http://www.mondaq.com
COPYRIGHT 2001 Mondaq Ltd.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2001 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.

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Publication:Mondaq Business Briefing
Geographic Code:4EUGE
Date:Jul 20, 2001
Words:1241
Previous Article:227. Old [section] 8b (1) KStG Requires Direct Shareholding.
Next Article:229. Waiver Of Shareholder Debt: Application To Pre-Shareholder Loan.
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