IRS Notice
2000-60

Cumulative Bulletin Notice 2000-60, , 2000-2 CB 568, November
16, 2000.
Stock Compensation Corporate Tax Shelter
The
Internal Revenue Service and the Treasury Department
have become aware of certain types of transactions,
as described below, that are being marketed to
taxpayers for the avoidance of federal income taxes.
The
IRS
and Treasury are issuing this notice to alert
taxpayers and their representatives that the losses
generated by such transactions are not properly
allowable for federal income tax purposes and also
to alert them of certain responsibilities that may
arise from participation in such transactions.
FACTS
These
transactions generally involve three parties: a
domestic corporation (P) that is the common parent
of a consolidated group, a domestic subsidiary (S),
and a third party (X) that either is unrelated to P
or is related but is not an includible corporation
within the meaning of §1504(b) of the Internal
Revenue Code . P and X transfer cash to S in
exchange for S's stock. After this exchange, P owns
stock representing less than 80 percent of the
voting power of S's stock, thus preventing S from
being a member of P's consolidated group. X owns
preferred stock of S. P's and X's basis in their S
stock reflects the amount of cash they contributed
to S. S uses the cash to purchase stock of P from
P's shareholders. From time to time, S transfers P
shares to P employees in satisfaction of P's
stock-based employee compensation obligations (e.g.,
upon the exercise by an employee of a non-statutory
option to purchase P stock). In a few years, S will
sell any remaining P stock, and then S will
liquidate or P will sell its S stock.
Notwithstanding
that P is the majority shareholder of S, P and S
take the position that S's transfers of P stock to
P's employees must be treated, under §1.83-6(d) of
the Income Tax Regulations , as deemed capital
contributions by S to P followed by transfers by P
to the P employees. P does not reduce its basis in
its S stock as a result of S's deemed transfers to
P. S increases its basis in its remaining P stock by
the amount of the basis of the P shares S
transferred in the deemed capital contributions to
P. Under §1032 , P reports no gain or loss from the
deemed transfers of P stock to P's employees. P
takes deductions under §83(h) in the amount that
the P employees include in income under §83(a) from
their receipt of the P stock.
When
S liquidates or P sells its S stock, P claims a
capital loss under §331 or §1001 because S has
already transferred most of its P stock to the P
employees, which has substantially reduced the value
of S without a corresponding downward adjustment in
P's basis in its S stock. Because S claims to have
shifted all of its basis in the P stock to S's
shares of P stock remaining after the transfers to
the P employees, S also reports a capital loss on
the sale of its remaining P stock immediately before
S's liquidation or sale.
ANALYSIS
When
a corporation makes a payment that discharges a
liability of its shareholder, the discharge of the
liability is treated as a distribution to the
shareholder with respect to the shareholder's stock.
See, e.g., Tennessee Securities Inc. v.
Commissioner, 674 F.2d 570, 573 (6th Cir. 1982),
citing Old Colony Trust Co. v. Commissioner,
279 U.S. 716 (1929). To permit a controlled
subsidiary to avoid distribution treatment for
transfers made on behalf of a parent corporation
merely by purchasing some shares of the parent
corporation's stock would contravene the framework
governing distributions under §301 . Moreover, to
characterize such transfers as capital contributions
made by the subsidiary in its capacity as a
shareholder of the parent corporation would be
inconsistent with the substance of these
transactions. The characterization in §1.83-6(d) of
a shareholder's transfer of property to a
corporation's employees as a deemed capital
contribution only applies when the transferor is
acting in its capacity as a shareholder. That
characterization is inapposite when the transferee
is a controlling corporate shareholder of the
transferor, and the transferor subsidiary has no
plausible investment motive for making such
transfers.
The
transfers by S to the P employees are properly
characterized as distributions by S to P with
respect to P's S stock, subject to the rules of
§§301 and 311 , followed by compensatory transfers
by P to P's employees. Distributions to the extent
of earnings and profits result in dividend treatment
under §301(c)(1) . To the extent that the amount of
the distributions exceeds the earnings and profits
of S, the distributions reduce P's basis in its S
stock under §301(c)(2) , thus reducing or
eliminating P's purported loss with respect to the S
stock upon S's liquidation or sale. In addition,
because the transfers of P stock by S to P are
distributions and not capital contributions, S is
not permitted to shift basis from the transferred P
stock to S's remaining P stock and, therefore, S
does not have a capital loss on the sale of its
remaining P stock immediately before S's liquidation
or sale.
Alternatively,
the
IRS
may disregard the described steps and treat the
transaction as a redemption by P. It is a
well-established principle of tax law that when
transactions lack a legitimate business purpose and
are undertaken solely for tax avoidance purposes,
their tax consequences will be determined based on
substance and not form. Gregory v. Helvering,
293
U.S.
465 (1935). The transfer of cash from P to S, the
purchase by S of P stock from P shareholders, the
transfers by S of P stock to P's employees, and the
ultimate liquidation or sale of S, all pursuant to
the same arrangement, may be disregarded for tax
purposes and, instead, be treated as a redemption by
P of its stock followed by compensatory transfers of
treasury stock by P to its employees. No deduction
is permitted for amounts paid to redeem stock. See
§162(k) .
It
is also well-established that, to be allowable, a
loss must be bona fide and must reflect actual
economic consequences in order to be sustained. An
artificial loss lacking economic substance is not
allowable. See §165(a) ; ACM Partnership
v. Commissioner, 157 F.3d 231, 252 (3d Cir.
1998), cert. denied, 526 U.S. 1017 (1999)
("Tax losses such as these . . . which do not
correspond to any actual economic losses, do not
constitute the type of 'bona fide' losses that are
deductible under the Internal Revenue Code and
regulations."); Treas. Reg. §1.165-1(b)
("Only a bona fide loss is allowable. Substance
and not mere form shall govern in determining a
deductible loss."). This transaction is no more
than a series of contrived steps that effect an
artificial loss on P's disposition of S stock.
Consequently, the arrangement described above, or
any similar arrangement, does not produce an
allowable loss.
The
purported tax benefits from these transactions may
also be subject to challenge for other reasons,
including other provisions of the Code and the
regulations, such as §269 .
Additionally,
the Service may impose penalties on participants in
these transactions, or, as applicable, on persons
who participate in the promotion or reporting of
these transactions, including the accuracy-related
penalty under §6662 , the return preparer penalty
under §6694 , the promoter penalty under §6700 ,
and the aiding and abetting penalty under §6701 .
Transactions
that are the same as or substantially similar to
those described in this Notice 2000-60 are
identified as "listed transactions" for
the purposes of §1.6011-4T(b)(2) of the Temporary
Income Tax Regulations and §301.6111-2T(b)(2) of
the Temporary Procedure and Administration
Regulations. See also §301.6112-1T , A-4. It
should be noted that independent of their
classification as "listed transactions"
for purposes of §§1.6011-4T(b)(2) and
301.6111
-2T(b)(2) , such transactions may already be subject
to the tax shelter registration and list maintenance
requirements of §§6111 and 6112 under the
regulations issued in February 2000 (§§301.6111-2T
and
301.6112
-1T , A-4), as well as the regulations issued in
1984 and amended in 1986 (§§301.6111-1T and
301.6112
-1T , A-3). Persons required to register these tax
shelters who have failed to register the shelters
may be subject to the penalty under §6707(a) and to
the penalty under §6708(a) if the requirements of
§6112 are not satisfied.
The
principal author of this notice is Megan Fitzsimmons
of the Office of the Associate Chief Counsel
(Corporate). For further information regarding this
notice, contact Ms. Fitzsimmons at
202-622-7790
(not a toll-free call).
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