Significant recent developments.This article examines significant recent developments in C corporations and consolidated returns, including temporary regulations on attribute reduction, step transactions and loss duplication duplication /du·pli·ca·tion/ (doo-pli-ka´shun)1. the act or process of doubling, or the state of being doubled. 2. , rulings on Sec. 351 and 355 and guidance on built-in gains under Sec. 382. This article summarizes some of the more significant recent developments in the subchapter C and consolidated return areas. Specifically, it addresses temporary regulations on (1) Sec. 108 tax attribute reduction in a consolidated return setting; (2) tax attribute reduction when the debtor One who owes a debt or the performance of an obligation to another, who is called the creditor; one who may be compelled to pay a claim or demand; anyone liable on a claim, whether due or to become due. corporation is a target in a Sec. 381 transaction (such as a transfer of assets The conveyance of something of value from one person, place, or situation to another. The law recognizes that persons are generally entitled to transfer their assets to whomever they wish and for whatever reason. The most common means of transfer are wills, trusts, and gifts. in a G reorganization); (3) taxpayers' ability to "shut off" the step-transaction doctrine and make a Sec. 338(h)(10) election; and (4) the application of Sec. 382 when certain trusts distribute loss corporation stock to a beneficiary beneficiary Person or entity (e.g., a charity or estate) that receives a benefit from something (e.g., a trust, life-insurance policy, or contract). A primary beneficiary receives proceeds from a trust or insurance policy before any other. . The article also addresses the Service's new "no ruling" positions on certain aspects of Sec. 355, revenue rulings on Sec. 355 tax-flee distributions and Sec. 351 "substance over form," and a notice on Sec. 382 built-in-gains (BIGs). Temp. Regs. Sec. 108 Attribute Reduction Sec. 108(a) generally provides that a bankrupt BANKRUPT. A person who has done, or suffered some act to be done, which is by law declared an act of bankruptcy; in such case he may be declared a bankrupt. 2. It is proper to notice that there is much difference between a bankrupt and an insolvent. or insolvent INSOLVENT. This word has several meanings. It signifies a person whose estate is not sufficient to pay his debts. Civ. Code of Louisiana, art. 1980.. A person is also said to be insolvent, who is under a present inability to answer, in the ordinary course of business, the responsibility taxpayer does not include cancellation of debt (COD) income in gross income. The policy is to facilitate the debtor's "fresh start" on its emergence from bankruptcy. However, to prevent the debtor from deferring tax on a permanent, rather than a temporary basis, Sec. 108(b) requires taxpayers to reduce their tax attributes to the extent of the excluded COD income. Sec. 108(b) sets forth a prescribed pre·scribe v. pre·scribed, pre·scrib·ing, pre·scribes v.tr. 1. To set down as a rule or guide; enjoin. See Synonyms at dictate. 2. To order the use of (a medicine or other treatment). ordering rule for such attributes, beginning with the debtor's net operating losses Net operating losses Losses that a firm can take advantage of to reduce taxes. (NOLs). (1) Treasury and the Service were concerned that consolidated taxpayers might take a separate-member, rather than a single-entity, approach to Sec. 108(b) attribute reduction. For example, when the debtor member is the common parent and is also a holding company (which often is the case), it is likely that its share of the group's tax attributes--particularly the consolidated NOL NOL - Never Offline (CNOL) under Temp. Regs. Sec. 1.1502-21T(b)--might be minimal. Indeed, most of the CNOL likely would be allocated to the group's underlying operating subsidiaries An operating subsidiary is a business term frequently used within the United States railroad industry. In the case of a railroad, it refers to a company that is a subsidiary but operates with its own identity and rolling stock. . In such a case, consolidated taxpayers might take a separate-member approach to attribute reduction and reduce only the parent's portion of the CNOL, even if the total excluded COD income was well in excess of such portion. To prevent this result, Treasury issued Temp. Regs. Sec. 1.1502-28T, (2) which adopts a somewhat blended separate- and single-entity approach, but generally operates to prevent the type of taxpayer position discussed above. The temporary regulations first take a separate-member approach. Temp. Regs. Sec. 1.1502-28T(a)(2)(i) provides that, for a member realizing excluded COD income in a tax year, the tax attributes attributable to that member, including the basis of assets and losses and credits arising in separate return limitation years (SRLYs), must be reduced under the general rules of Secs. 108 and 1017. (3) The basis of subsidiary stock, however, is not reduced below zero. For purposes of this rule, the consolidated tax attributes attributable to a member must be determined under Temp. Regs. Sec. 1.1502-21T(b)(2)(iv). (4) Temp. Regs. Sec. 1.1502-28T(a) (3)(ii) provides an interesting "look-through rule" that blends separate- and single-entity principles. Under that rule, if the basis of a lower-tier member's stock owned by another member is reduced, the lower-tier member must be treated as realizing excluded COD income in an amount equal to such basis reduction. Accordingly, the regulations provide that the tax attributes attributable to such lower-tier member are then reduced under Secs. 108 and 1017. Finally, Temp. Regs. Sec. 1.1502-28T(a)(4) sets forth the single-member approach, as somewhat of a safety net. It provides that, to the extent excluded COD income is not applied to reduce the tax attributes attributable to the member that realizes the excluded COD income (including the application of the look-through rule above), such amount must be applied to reduce the remaining consolidated tax attributes of the group as provided in Sec. 108 and the temporary regulations. The reduction of each tax attribute is made in the order prescribed in Sec. 108 and Temp. Regs. Sec. 1.1502-21T(b)(1). Example: (5) P Corp. is the common parent of a consolidated group with subsidiaries S1 Corp. and S2 Corp. In year 1, the P group sustained a $250 CNOL. Under applicable regulations, $125 of the loss was attributable to P and $125 to S1. On day 1 of year 2, S2 joined the P group, bringing along a $50 NOL subject to the SRLY SRLY Separate Return Limitation Year SRly Southern Railway (India) rules. In year 2, the P group sustained a $200 CNOL, attributed as follows: $90 to P, $70 to S1 and $40 to S2. In year 3, S2 realized $200 of COD income excluded under Sec. 108(a). (6) That same year, the P group sustained a $50 CNOL, of which $40 was attributed to $1 and $10 was attributed to $2. At the beginning of year 4, S2 had Asset A, with a $40 basis and $10 fair market value. The temporary regulations provide that S2's separate-member tax attributes must first be reduced to take into account its $200 excluded COD income. Accordingly, the CNOL for year 3 is reduced by S's $10 share to $40. Then, the CNOL for year 2 is reduced by S2's $40 share to $160, and S2's $50 SRLY NOL is reduced to zero. Following the reduction of NOLs, S2 reduces its basis in Asset A by $40 to zero. The remaining $60 of excluded COD income then reduces consolidated tax attributes--the remaining $40 CNOL for year 3 is reduced to zero and the $250 CNOL from year 1 is reduced by $20 to $230. Attribute Reduction in G Reorganizations Sec. 108(b)(4)(A) provides that Sec. 108(b) attribute reduction has to be made after the determination of the tax for the tax year of the discharge. When timing basis reduction for debtor property with excluded COD income under Sec. 108, Sec. 1017 looks to the properties held by the taxpayer at the beginning of the tax year following the one in which the cancellation occurs. Practitioners have long pondered the proper application of the Sec. 108 attribute-reduction rules when a tax-free reorganization described in Sec. 381(a) ends in a tax year in which the transferor corporation excludes COD income from gross income. Such a scenario would arise, for example, when a corporate debtor in bankruptcy effects a G reorganization (i.e., transfers its assets to an acquiring corporation tax free). Some have argued that none of the Sec. 108(b) attributes would be reduced, because the corporation with excluded COD income is dissolved dis·solve v. dis·solved, dis·solv·ing, dis·solves v.tr. 1. To cause to pass into solution: dissolve salt in water. 2. immediately after the reorganization, under Sec. 381(a) (i.e., the acquiring corporation in the G reorganization would succeed to the transferor's tax attributes and property, without attribute reduction). In temporary regulations issued on July 18, 2003, (7) Treasury made it clear that, in the case of a transaction described in Sec. 381(a) that ends in a year in which the transferor corporation excludes COD income under Sec. 108(a), any tax attributes to which the acquiring corporation succeeds and the basis of any property acquired must be reduced under Sec. 108(b). (8) Temp. Regs. Sec. 1.108-7T(b) also clarified that the tax attributes (e.g., an NOL carryback) may be carried back to tax years preceding the year of the discharge before such attributes are reduced under Sec. 108(b). Shutting Off the Step-Transaction Doctrine For certain qualified stock purchases (QSPs) of a target corporation, Sec. 338(h)(10) permits the seller and acquirer to elect jointly to treat the purchase of the target's stock as an asset purchase. Typically, the seller in such a transaction is a member of a consolidated group (selling another member of the group) or a group of S corporation shareholders. If a Sec. 338(h)(10) election is made, the seller's stock sale is ignored for tax purposes; instead, the target is treated as selling all of its assets in a taxable sale and then liquidating (under Sec. 332 for a consolidated group or Sec. 331 for an S corporation). The asset sale is taxable to the consolidated group or S corporation shareholders, as the case may be. Rev. Rul. 2001-46 (9) held that a transaction will be recast re·cast tr.v. re·cast, re·cast·ing, re·casts 1. To mold again: recast a bell. 2. under the step-transaction doctrine as a single statutory merger of a target corporation into an acquiring corporation under Sec. 368(a)(1)(A) if, as part of an integrated plan, (1) an acquiring corporation acquires all of the target's stock through a reverse subsidiary merger in which the target shareholders receive consideration consisting of 70% stock and 30% cash (this transaction, considered by itself, would be a taxable transaction Taxable transaction Any transaction that is not tax-free to the parties involved, such as a taxable acquisition. ); and (2) the target then merges into the acquirer. The ruling requested comments as to whether parties, in effect, should be allowed to elect to shut off this recast and treat the transaction's first step as a Sec. 338 (h)(10) QSP QSP Relay (amateur radio Q code) QSP Quality Software Products QSP Quality Samples Program QSP Quiet Supersonic Platform QSP Quick Start Package QSP Quality System Procedure QSP Quality Selection Process QSP Quality Seafood Programme . In response, Treasury issued final and temporary regulations (10) permitting taxpayers to make such an election. Under the temporary regulations, a Sec. 338(h)(10) election may be made for the target when the stock acquisition, viewed independently, constitutes a QSP and, after the stock transaction, the target merges or liquidates into the acquirer. This treatment holds whether or not, under relevant law (including the step-transaction doctrine) the acquisition of the target's stock and the target's merger or liquidation The collection of assets belonging to a debtor to be applied to the discharge of his or her outstanding debts. A type of proceeding pursuant to federal Bankruptcy would be recast as a Sec. 368(a) reorganization. Stock Distributions from Sec. 401(a) Trusts Sec. 382 limits the amount of certain loss carryovers and recognized built-in losses that can be used to offset taxable income Under the federal tax law, gross income reduced by adjustments and allowable deductions. It is the income against which tax rates are applied to compute an individual or entity's tax liability. The essence of taxable income is the accrual of some gain, profit, or benefit to a taxpayer. following an ownership change of a loss corporation. Sec. 382(g) defines an "ownership change" as a change of more than 50% in the ownership of the loss corporation's stock owned by 5% shareholders over a three-year period. Sec. 318 constructive ownership rules apply in determining the loss corporation's ownership under Sec. 382(1)(3). In applying Sec. 382, Sec. 318 generally does not attribute stock owned by a Sec. 401(a) qualified trust to the plan participants Plan participants Employees or other beneficiaries who are eligible to receive benefits from a company's employee benefit plan. . Accordingly, there was concern that a qualified trust's stock distribution to trust participants might have Sec. 382 implications--i.e., that such a distribution might result in an owner shift under Sec. 382. To address this concern, Treasury issued temporary regulations in June 2003. (11) Under Temp. Regs. Sec. 1.382-10T(a)(1), if a qualified trust distributes an ownership interest in an entity, then for testing dates on or after the distribution date, the distributed ownership interest will be treated as having been acquired by the distributed on the date and in the manner acquired by the qualified trust. In addition, and importantly, the distribution itself does not cause the distribution date to be a Sec. 382 testing date. Loss Disallowance/Loss Duplication In March 2003, Treasury issued loss-duplication temporary regulations. (12) As expected, these temporary regulations are much narrower than the loss-duplication regulations invalidated in·val·i·date tr.v. in·val·i·dat·ed, in·val·i·dat·ing, in·val·i·dates To make invalid; nullify. in·val in Rite Aid Rite Aid (NYSE: RAD) is a United States retailer and pharmacy chain, operating over 5,000 stores in 31 states and the District of Columbia. Rite Aid Corporation is one of the nation's leading drugstore chains. Corp. (13) The temporary regulations generally address two types of transactions that might allow a consolidated group to claim more than one tax benefit from a single economic loss: (1) the group absorbs a subsidiary's "inside loss" (such as an NOL), while another group member recognizes a loss on the subsidiary's stock; and (2) a group member recognizes a loss on the disposition of subsidiary stock that reflects the subsidiary's inside loss, the subsidiary remains within the group, and the group subsequently recognizes the subsidiary's inside loss. (14) Sec. 355 No-Ruling Areas In Rev. Proc. 2003-48, (15) the Service announced that it would no longer issue letter rulings on three essential requirements for Sec. 355 tax-free treatment. Specifically, the IRS An abbreviation for the Internal Revenue Service, a federal agency charged with the responsibility of administering and enforcing internal revenue laws. National Office will no longer rule on whether a purported pur·port·ed adj. Assumed to be such; supposed: the purported author of the story. pur·port ed·ly adv. Sec. 355 distribution (1) has one or more corporate business purposes, (2) is being used as a device or (3) is part of a plan under Sec. 355(e). Instead, these determinations now may be made on an examination of the taxpayer's return. The revenue procedure stated essentially that this no-rule position is part of a one-year pilot program. Recognizing the significant uncertainty embedded Inserted into. See embedded system. in the tax-free treatment of Sec. 355 spin-off The situation that arises when a parent corporation organizes a subsidiary corporation, to which it transfers a portion of its assets in exchange for all of the subsidiary's capital stock, which is subsequently transferred to the parent corporation's shareholders. transactions, the Service further stated that it would dedicate ded·i·cate tr.v. ded·i·cat·ed, ded·i·cat·ing, ded·i·cates 1. To set apart for a deity or for religious purposes; consecrate. 2. its resources to increasing published guidance on Sec. 355, including the business-purpose requirement and other legal questions. Indeed, simultaneously with the release of Rev. Proc. 2003-48, the Service issued Rev. Ruls. 2003-74 (16) and 2003-75, (17) providing further guidance on corporate business purpose, and has requested comments on Sec. 355 issues that should be addressed in published guidance. These and other Sec. 355 revenue rulings are discussed below. Rev. Rul. 2003-74 The Service held that a parent corporation's distribution of a wholly owned subsidiary's stock to the parent's shareholders met the business-purpose requirement and was not taxable, because it enabled each corporation's management to concentrate on its own business. In the ruling, the parent was a public corporation in the software business, while the subsidiary conducted a paper products business. The parent's management wanted to concentrate solely on the software business, but was prevented from doing so because of the need to service the paper business. The subsidiary objected to the lack of attention from the parent's management. Following the separation, two directors of the parent temporarily joined the subsidiary's board, to assist management and provide continuity. The ruling concluded that there was no other nontaxable way for each business to achieve separate management and that the temporary transfer of the two directors was reasonable. It further noted that separating the two companies to provide independent management was a real and substantial nontax purpose germane ger·mane adj. Being both pertinent and fitting. See Synonyms at relevant. [Middle English germain, having the same parents, closely connected; see german2. to each company's business under Sec. 355. Competition for Capital/Shared Services In Rev. Rul. 2003-75, the Service held that a parent's distribution of a controlled subsidiary's stock to the parent's shareholders met the business-purpose requirement, because it resolved a competition for capital between the parent and the subsidiary. The parent was a publicly traded corporation in the pharmaceutical business, while the subsidiary was in the cosmetics business. Both needed large amounts of capital for investment, research and development. The parent borrowed all funds for both corporations and allocated capital spending capital spending Spending for long-term assets such as factories, equipment, machinery, and buildings that permits the production of more goods and services in future years. among the two. The ruling stated that the controlled subsidiary's direct access to the capital markets after the distribution would result in a business benefit to the subsidiary. In addition, as part of the stock distribution, the parent and the subsidiary entered into temporary agreements to share information technology, benefits administration and accounting. The subsidiary also borrowed funds from the parent under an arm's-length, two-year loan. The Service held that such agreements facilitated the corporate separation and were permissible per·mis·si·ble adj. Permitted; allowable: permissible tax deductions; permissible behavior in school. per·mis under Sec. 355. Split-Off with Estate Planning Estate Planning The overall planning of a person's wealth, including the preparation of a will and the planning of taxes after the individual's death. Notes: Contrary to popular belief, estate planning involves much more than preparing a will, and it is not only for the Benefits In Rev. Rul. 2003-52, (18) a father, mother, son and daughter jointly owned a farming business. The son and daughter were active in the corporation's daily operations, but disagreed as to the business's future direction. As a result, a Sec. 355 transaction was effected to divide the company's business into two corporations; the son and the daughter each received 50% of one separate company, with the remaining stock of each company held by their parents. Despite the fact that the transaction was carried out in part to facilitate estate planning and to promote family harmony (a shareholder purpose that generally preludes Sec. 355 tax-free treatment), the ruling held that the transaction was tax free, because it also eliminated sibling sibling /sib·ling/ (sib´ling) any of two or more offspring of the same parents; a brother or sister. sib·ling n. disagreement over the future course of the business and allowed the son and daughter to focus on business aspects in which they are most interested. Accordingly, the Sec. 355 business purpose-requirement was deemed met. Business Expansion Rev. Ruls. 2003-18 (19) and 200338 (20) addressed the business-expansion doctrine. The key issue in these types of rulings is whether the new activity constitutes an expansion of a preexisting pre·ex·ist or pre-ex·ist v. pre·ex·ist·ed, pre·ex·ist·ing, pre·ex·ists v.tr. To exist before (something); precede: Dinosaurs preexisted humans. v.intr. active trade or business under Sec. 355(b) (which is permissible), or amounts to an acquisition of a new or different business. (21) Rev. Rul. 2003-18 concluded that the acquisition by a dealer engaged in the sale and service of one brand of automobiles of a franchise to sell and service a different brand (and the assets to operate the franchise) was an expansion of the underlying business, rather than the acquisition of a new or different business. Similarly, the Service held in Rev. Rul. 2003-38 that a retail shoe store that created a website to sell shoes at retail was expanding its existing business, rather than acquiring a new or different one. Change in Circumstance In Rev. Rul. 2003-55, (22) a publicly traded corporation was advised by investment bankers Investment Banker A person representing a financial institution that is in the business of raising capital for corporations and municipalities. Notes: An investment banker may not accept deposits or make commercial loans. that a Sec. 355 distribution of all of the subsidiary's stock would better position the subsidiary to effect a public offering of its stock. The distribution was made, but the equity market later turned downward. As a result, the stock offering was abandoned and the subsidiary raised capital through a debt offering. The ruling held that the distribution was still tax free, on the theory that the market deterioration de·te·ri·o·ra·tion n. The process or condition of becoming worse. was unforeseen at the time of the distribution. See. 351 Transactions Under Sec. 351, the transfer to a corporation of property may be tax free, provided the transferor is in control of the transferor corporation within the meaning of Sec. 368(a)(1)(C) (generally, 80%). Previous court decisions have held that the Sec. 351 control requirement is not satisfied when, pursuant to a binding agreement entered into by the transferor before the transfer, the transferor loses control of the corporation by a taxable sale of all or part of that stock to a third party. (23) In Rev. Rul. 2003-51, (24) the Service seemingly seem·ing adj. Apparent; ostensible. n. Outward appearance; semblance. seem ing·ly adv. applied a substance-over-form analysis to allow Sec. 351 tax-free treatment, even though the transaction involved a prearranged pre·ar·range tr.v. pre·ar·ranged, pre·ar·rang·ing, pre·ar·rang·es To arrange in advance. pre break in the first transferor's control over the transferee. In the ruling, W and X were unrelated corporations engaged in the same business. X engages in business indirectly through its wholly owned subsidiary Wholly Owned Subsidiary A subsidiary whose parent company owns 100% of its common stock. Notes: In other words, the parent company owns the company outright and there are no minority owners. , Y. W and X wanted to consolidate their business operations Business operations are those activities involved in the running of a business for the purpose of producing value for the stakeholders. Compare business processes. The outcome of business operations is the harvesting of value from assets within a new corporation in a holding company structure. Under a prearranged binding agreement with X, W formed a new corporation, Z, by transferring its business assets to Z for all of Z's stock (the "first transfer"), Immediately thereafter, W contributed all of its Z stock to Y for Y stock (the "second transfer"). Simultaneous with the second transfer, X contributed sufficient cash to Y to meet the business's capital needs, in exchange for additional Y stock (the "third transfer"). After the second and third transfers, Y transferred the cash and its business assets to Z (the "fourth transfer"). After the second and third transfers, Wand X owned 40 and 60%, respectively, of Y's outstanding stock. Viewed separately, all of the above transfers qualify for tax-free treatment under Sec. 351. However, the overall transaction raises an issue as to the Sec. 351 control requirement. Specifically, W lost control of newly formed Z under a binding obligation. Nonetheless, the Service held that the four separate transfers were each tax free under Sec. 351. Seemingly central to the Service's conclusion was that the parties could have arranged the transaction as successive Sec. 351 transfers--i.e., W could have transferred its assets directly to Y for Y stock, with Y then forming Z and transferring such assets to Z. The Service has long held that successive Sec. 351 transfers are respected. (25) BIGs and BILs Sec. 382 limits the amount of pre-change NOLs that may be used to offset post-change income of a corporation that undergoes an ownership change. An ownership change generally occurs when 5% shareholders of a loss corporation have increased their ownership in the corporation by more than 50% during the testing period (generally, three years). The Sec. 382 limit generally equals the value of the loss corporation, multiplied mul·ti·ply 1 v. mul·ti·plied, mul·ti·ply·ing, mul·ti·plies v.tr. 1. To increase the amount, number, or degree of. 2. Mathematics To perform multiplication on. by the long-term tax-exempt rate. Importantly, the Sec. 382 limit may be increased if the corporation recognizes BIG during the five-year period following the ownership change. Conversely con·verse 1 intr.v. con·versed, con·vers·ing, con·vers·es 1. To engage in a spoken exchange of thoughts, ideas, or feelings; talk. See Synonyms at speak. 2. , if a corporation recognizes a built-in loss (BIL BIL Brother-In-Law BIL Billion BIL Bilateral BIL Band Interleaved by Line BIL Basic Impulse Level (electrical power switches) BIL Basic Insulation Level (IEC) ) during such period, its loss will be subject to the Sec. 382 limit. In this regard, a recognized BIG or BIL will implicate im·pli·cate tr.v. im·pli·cat·ed, im·pli·cat·ing, im·pli·cates 1. To involve or connect intimately or incriminatingly: evidence that implicates others in the plot. 2. the Sec. 382 limit only if the corporation has a net unrealized BIG or net unrealized BIL, respectively, in excess of a threshold determined under See. 382(h). Notice 2003-65 (26) sets forth two alternative safe harbors Safe Harbor 1. A legal provision to reduce or eliminate liability as long as good faith is demonstrated. 2. A form of shark repellent implemented by a target company acquiring a business that is so poorly regulated that the target itself is less attractive. to identify whether a corporation has BIGs or BILs: the Sec. 1374 approach and the Sec. 338 approach. The notice states that taxpayers may rely on these approaches in applying Sec. 382(h) to an ownership change that occurred before the notice's issuance or on or after such issuance and before the effective date of temporary or final Sec. 382 (h) regulations. The details of these ap-proaches are beyond the scope of this article. However, tax advisers should carefully review the notice, because it will apply to taxpayers' open years. Editor's note Editor's Note (foaled in 1993 in Kentucky) is an American thoroughbred Stallion racehorse. He was sired by 1992 U.S. Champion 2 YO Colt Forty Niner, who in turn was a son of Champion sire Mr. Prospector and out of the mare, Beware Of The Cat. Trained by D. : Mr. Schneider is a former chair and current member of the AICPA AICPA See American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA). Tax Division's Corporations & Shareholders Taxation Technical Resource Panel. (1) Alternatively, taxpayers can elect under Sec. 108(b)(5) to first reduce the adjusted bases of depreciable depreciable Of, relating to, or being a long-term tangible asset that is subject to depreciation. property held at the beginning of the tax year following the tax year of cancellation. (2) TD 9089 (8/29/03). (3) The temporary regulations also contain special rules on the application of Sec. 108(b)(5), which are beyond the scope of this article. (4) See Temp. Regs. Sec. 1.1502-28T(a)(2)(ii). (5) See Temp. Regs. Sec. 1.1502-28T(c), Example 1. (6) Notwithstanding the apparent concerns when the common parent is the debtor, the examples focus on situations involving a debtor subsidiary. (7) TD 9080 (7/18/03). (8) See Temp. Regs. Sec. 1.108-7T(c). (9) Rev. Rul. 2001-46, 2001-2 CB 321. (10) TD 9071 (7/8/03). (11) TD 9063 (6/26/03). (12) TD 9048 (3/11/03). (13) Rite Aid Corp, 255 F3d 1357 (Fed. Cir. 200l). reh'g den. (14) For additional discussion on the loss-disallowance rules, see Schneider and Chui, "Loss Disallowance dis·al·low tr.v. dis·al·lowed, dis·al·low·ing, dis·al·lows 1. To refuse to allow: "[The government] Rules, The Story Continues...," Tax Mngmt Memo. 13 (6/30/03); Thompson and Stewart, "Temp. Regs. Limit Duplicative du·pli·cate adj. 1. Identically copied from an original. 2. Existing or growing in two corresponding parts; double. 3. Stock Losses," 34 The Tax Adviser 36 (January 2004). (15) Rev. Proc. 2003-48, IRB IRB See: Industrial Revenue Bond 2003-29, 86. (16) Rev. Rul. 2003-74, IRB 2003-29, 77. (17) Rev. Rul. 2003-75, IRB 2003-29, 79. (18) Rev. Rul. 2003-52, IRB 2003-22, 960. (20) Rev. Rul. 2003-38, IRB 2003-17, 811. (21) See Regs. Sec. 1.355-3(b)(3)(ii). (22) Rev. Rul. 2003-55, IRB 2003-22, 961. (23) See, e.g., Hazeltine Corp., 89 F2d 513 (3d Cir. 1937). (24) Rev. Rul. 2003-51, IRB 2003-21, 938. (25) The ruling cites Rev. Rul.77-449, 1977-2 C B 110, which permits successive Sec. 351 tranfers. (26) Notice 2003-65, IRB 2003-40, 747; see Yecies, Tax Clinic, "Safe Harbors for Identifying Sec. 382 RBIG or RBIL," p. 16, this issue. EXECUTIVE SUMMARY * Temporary regulations address Sec. 108(b) attribute reduction. * In Rev. Proc. 2003-48, the Service announced it would no longer issue letter rulings on three essential Sec. 355 requirements. * Notice 2003-65 sets forth two ways to identify BIGs and BILs: the Sec. 1374 approach and the Sec. 338 approach. Mark A. Schneider, J.D., LL.M LL.M Legum Magister (Master of Laws) . Partner National Tax Office BDO Seidman BDO Seidman, LLP is the United States arm of BDO International, one of the largest accounting firms outside of the Big Four. History BDO Seidman, LLP was founded as Seidman and Seidman in New York City in 1910 by Maximillian L. Seidman. , LLP LLP - Lower Layer Protocol Greater Washington, DC Yidan Chui, CPA (Computer Press Association, Landing, NJ) An earlier membership organization founded in 1983 that promoted excellence in computer journalism. Its annual awards honored outstanding examples in print, broadcast and electronic media. The CPA disbanded in 2000. , M.Sc. Manager BDO Seidman, LLP Greater Washington, DC |
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