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Divided holding periods for partnership interests.


New Regs. Sec. 1.1223-3 provides for divided holding periods for partnership interests. These rules, effective for transfers of partnership interests and partnership distributions occurring after Sept. 20, 2000, affect the character of capital gain recognized on the sale of partnership interests and Sec. 731 distributions exceeding basis. When applicable, the regulations divide the recognized gain Recognized Gain

The amount of gain reported for income tax purposes.

Notes:
You can defer recognizing some gains until the following year(s).
See also: Capital Gain, Capital Loss, Deferred Income Tax, Drought Sale, Exempt Income, Exemption, Gain, Recognized Loss
 into long-term and short-term capital gain Short-term capital gain

A profit on the sale of a security or mutual fund share that has been held for one year or less. A short-term capital gain is taxed as ordinary income.
.

Long-term gain Long-term gain

A profit on the sale of a capital assets held longer than 12 months, and eligible for long-term capital gains tax treatment.
 is determined by multiplying the percentage of a partnership interest that has been held for more than one year by the total gain. Likewise, short-term gain Short-term gain (or loss)

A profit or loss realized from the sale of securities held for less than a year that is taxed at normal income tax rates if the net total is positive.
 is determined by multiplying the percentage held for one year or less by the total gain. This bifurcation Bifurcation

A term used in finance that refers to a splitting of something into two separate pieces.

Notes:
Generally, this term is used to refer to the splitting of a security into two separate pieces for the purpose of complex taxation advantages.
 can easily occur when a partner of an existing partnership contributes a substantial amount of property to a partnership and then disposes of his partnership interest shortly thereafter.

Background

Under Sec. 1223(1) and Regs. Sec. 1.1223-1(a), a partner's holding period for his partnership interest includes the holding period of noncash capital assets capital assets n. equipment, property, and funds owned by a business. (See: capital, capital account)  or Sec. 1231 property that the partner contributed to the partnership in exchange for such interest.

In view of the long-established principle that a partner has a single basis in a partnership interest (see Rev. Rul. 84-53), there was some confusion as to how the statutory and regulatory rule applied to the sale of all or part of a partnership interest.

Holding Periods under the New Regulations

Under Regs. Sec. 1.1223-3(a), a partner has a divided holding period for his partnership interest if:

* Portions of the interest were acquired at different times; or

* Portions of the interest were acquired for property transferred at the same time, but resulted in different holding periods under Sec. 1223.

Under Regs. Sec. 1.1223-3(b)(1), the portion of a partnership interest to which a holding period relates is expressed as a fraction. The numerator numerator

the upper part of a fraction.


numerator relationship
see additive genetic relationship.


numerator Epidemiology The upper part of a fraction
 is the fair market value (FMV FMV - full-motion video ) of the portion of the partnership interest received in the transaction to which the holding period relates. The denominator is the entire interest's FMV (immediately after the transaction).

Example: Taxpayer B contributes $10,000 cash for a portion of his partnership interest. He also contributes a building that he has held for three years. The building's adjusted basis is $15,000 and its FMV is $30,000. The interest's total FMV is $40,000 immediately after the transaction. B's holding period for one-quarter ($10,000/$40,000) of the partnership interest begins on the day after the cash is contributed. The holding period for three quarters ($30,000/$40,000) of the interest is three years.

Special Rules for Certain Contributions and Distributions

If a partner, in the year preceding the sale of a partnership interest or the recognition of gain or loss under Sec. 731, makes one or more cash contributions to (and receives one or more cash distributions from) the partnership, he may reduce the cash contributions made during the year by cash distributions received on a last-in, first-out last-in, first-out
n.
A method of inventory accounting in which the most recently acquired items are assumed to have been the first sold. In a period of rising prices, this method yields a lower ending inventory, a higher cost of goods sold, a lower
 basis, treating all cash distributions as if they were received immediately before the transaction generating the gain or loss. This special rule normally causes more long-term capital gain Long-term capital gain

A profit on the sale of a security or mutual fund share that has been held for more than one year.
 recognition, because the fraction of the partnership interest related to the cash contribution is reduced. This rule applies generally only to actual cash distributions; Regs. Sec. 1.1223-3(b)(3) disregards Sec. 752 deemed cash contributions and distributions (to the same extent that they are disregarded under Regs. Sec. 1.704-1(b)(2)(iv)(c)).

Other Rules

Under Regs. Sec. 1.1223-3(d)(1), a partner's holding period for a partnership interest is not affected by partnership distributions, except for the treatment of distributions under the special rules discussed. However, if a partner has to recognize capital gain or loss on a partnership distribution, Regs. Sec. 1.1223-3(d)(2) requires such gain or loss to be divided between long- and short-term capital gain or loss. This division; is in the same proportions as the long- and short-term capital gain or loss that the distributee partner would have realized if his entire partnership interest were transferred in a fully taxable transaction Taxable transaction

Any transaction that is not tax-free to the parties involved, such as a taxable acquisition.
 immediately before the distribution.

For Regs. Sec. 1.1223-3 purposes, properties and potential gain treated as Sec. 751(c) unrealized receivables are considered separate assets, not capital assets or Sec. 1231 property; see Regs. Sec. 1.1223(e). Caution: The proposed regulations' preamble concludes:

These proposed regulations do not contain a specific anti-abuse rule regarding holding periods. However, there may be situations where taxpayers will attempt to undertake abusive transactions using the rules in these regulations. For instance, taxpayers may attempt to shift gain from property with a short-term holding period to property with a long-term holding period by contributing the short-term property to a partnership and selling the partnership interest. Because the basis of a partnership interest cannot be segregated to a portion of an interest, basis in the portion of a partnership interest with a long-term holding period could reduce gain attributable to the portion of a partnership interest with a short-term holding period in situations where such interest was recently received in exchange for contributed short-term capital gain property. In appropriate situations, the IRS An abbreviation for the Internal Revenue Service, a federal agency charged with the responsibility of administering and enforcing internal revenue laws.  may attack such abusive transactions under a variety of judicial doctrines, including substance over form or step transaction, or under [sections] 1.701-2 of the regulations.

Because the final regulations are substantially the same as the proposed, this warning continues to be relevant.

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Article Details
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Author:Packard, Pamela
Publication:The Tax Adviser
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:May 1, 2001
Words:909
Previous Article:When not to use an LLC to own real estate.(limited liability companies)
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