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Form 1116 Foreign Tax Credits for Individuals: Mastering
Calculations, Using Carryovers and Maximizing Benefits
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 17, 2016, 1:00-2:50 pm Eastern
FOR LIVE PROGRAM ONLY
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Aug. 17, 2016
Form 1116 Foreign Tax Credits for Individuals
William R. Skinner, Partner
Fenwick & West, Mountain View, Calif.
Neel Modha
Holthouse Carlin & Van Trigt, Costa Mesa, Calif.
Kevin M. Hall
Holland & Knight, Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.
Notice
ANY TAX ADVICE IN THIS COMMUNICATION IS NOT INTENDED OR WRITTEN BY
THE SPEAKERS’ FIRMS TO BE USED, AND CANNOT BE USED, BY A CLIENT OR ANY
OTHER PERSON OR ENTITY FOR THE PURPOSE OF (i) AVOIDING PENALTIES THAT
MAY BE IMPOSED ON ANY TAXPAYER OR (ii) PROMOTING, MARKETING OR
RECOMMENDING TO ANOTHER PARTY ANY MATTERS ADDRESSED HEREIN.
You (and your employees, representatives, or agents) may disclose to any and all persons,
without limitation, the tax treatment or tax structure, or both, of any transaction
described in the associated materials we provide to you, including, but not limited to,
any tax opinions, memoranda, or other tax analyses contained in those materials.
The information contained herein is of a general nature and based on authorities that are
subject to change. Applicability of the information to specific situations should be
determined through consultation with your tax adviser.
Form 1116 Foreign Tax Credits for Individuals: Mastering Calculations, Using Carryovers and
Maximizing Benefits
Presented by: William Skinner, Fenwick & West
Kevin Hall, Holland & Knight Neel Modha, Holthouse, Carlin & Van Trigt LLP
Wednesday, August 17, 2016
The Foreign Tax Credit, Overview
» U.S. persons generally are allowed a credit for foreign taxes paid
˗ Detailed statutory and regulatory guidance regarding eligibility and limitations
˗ Must be:
(1) person entitled to claim the credit; and
(2) creditable foreign tax
» Alternatives Territorial System
Deduction Only
6
Eligible Taxpayers
» U.S. Citizens/Resident Aliens and U.S. Corporations
˗ Allowed to credit income taxes paid to a foreign country or U.S. possession
» Partnerships
˗ Transparent under foreign law – foreign tax liability of partnership is creditable by U.S. partners
˗ Corporation under foreign law – foreign partners are entitled to a foreign tax credit for proportionate share of taxes paid by the partnership
» Foreign Persons
˗ General rule – no foreign tax credit
˗ Narrow exception – section 906 allows foreign person earning ECI a credit for
1) foreign source ECI and
2) U.S. source ECI if the foreign country deems the income to be sourced within its territory (source rather than residence based foreign tax)
7
Eligible Taxpayers (cont’d)
» Technical Taxpayer Rule ˗ Credit is allowed to the person who “paid or accrued” the
tax during the taxable year
˗ Regulations provide that payor of the foreign tax is “the person on whom foreign law imposes legal liability for such tax, even if another person (e.g., a withholding agent) remits such tax” and even if the economic burden of the tax is borne by another party to the transaction
» Nissho Iwai Corp. v. Comm’r, 89 T.C. 765 (1987) ˗ “Net loan” to Brazilian borrower – borrower pays
specified rate of interest after withholding tax
Even though borrower bears burden of withholding tax, U.S. lender is the technical taxpayer
8
Creditable Foreign Taxes
» 2 Requirements
˗ 1) Tax
˗ 2) On income (or section 903 in lieu of tax)
» Other foreign taxes
˗ Deduction only
9
Creditable Foreign Taxes (cont’d)
» Tax Defined ˗ Regulations define a “tax” as “a compulsory payment pursuant
to the authority of a foreign country to levy taxes”
» U.S. Legal Principles Apply ˗ Biddle v. Commissioner, 302 U.S. 573 (1938)
Whether a foreign levy is an income tax is determined by looking to U.S. tax law
Must be an income tax “in the U.S. sense”
Bearing burden of the foreign levy is not sufficient
10
Creditable Foreign Taxes (cont’d)
» Specific Economic Benefit ˗ Not a tax if payor receives “an economic benefit that is not
made available on substantially the same terms to substantially all persons”
» Dual Capacity Taxpayer ˗ Part Tax / Part Subsidy
˗ Levy imposed on the dual capacity taxpayer differs from the levy imposed on other taxpayers
˗ Result Credit allowed for tax portion
Deduction generally allowed for the subsidy portion
11
Creditable Foreign Taxes (cont’d)
» Compulsory
˗ To qualify as a tax, payment must be compulsory under foreign law
˗ Taxpayer must:
• 1) reasonably interpret and apply foreign tax law (including tax treaties); and
• 2) exhaust all “effective and practical” procedural remedies
» Soak-Up Taxes
˗ Defined as a foreign tax that would not be imposed but for the availability of a credit to another country
˗ Partial credit is available
12
Creditable Foreign Taxes (cont’d)
» On Income ˗ Must be designed to reach net gain.
˗ 3 Requirements:
• 1) Realization;
• 2) gross receipts;
• 3) net income
» In Lieu of Taxes ˗ 3 Requirements:
• 1) country must have general income tax law;
• 2) absent a specific provision, taxpayer would have been subject to the general income tax;
• 3) general income tax is not imposed on the taxpayer
13
Tax Treaties
» Tax Treaties
˗ Typically incorporate otherwise allowable foreign tax
credits
˗ Generally do not provide for credits not otherwise
available under the Code
» But may:
˗ Specifically provide that a tax is creditable; or
˗ Treat income (e.g., gain from sale of stock) as
foreign source
14
Indirect Credits, Overview
» Who is eligible for the credit?
» How is the amount of the credit computed?
» How do the indirect credit rules apply to
individuals?
15
Indirect Credits, Eligibility
» Indirect Credits ˗ Section 902 provides that a domestic corporation is
deemed to have paid its share of foreign taxes paid by a foreign corporation when:
1) it receives a dividend from the foreign corporation;
2) it includes income of the foreign corporation under section 951; and
3) it recognizes gain on the sale of the stock of a CFC
» Domestic Corporations Only ˗ Ownership Requirement:
1) at least 10% of voting stock of first-tier subsidiary; or
2) at least 5% of the indirect voting interest in a lower-tier subsidiary
16
Indirect Credits, Example
» USP wholly owns newly formed FS
˗ FS has:
Current Earnings: $1,000
Foreign Income Taxes: $300
Current Year E&P: $700
» FS Pays a $350 Dividend
˗ USP’s Section 902 Credit = $150
$350 X (300 FT Pool / 700 E&P Pool) = $150
˗ Section 78 gross-up = $150
˗ USP’s Dividend Income = $500
17
Indirect Credits, Individuals
» Section 962 Election
˗ A U.S. individual, trust, or estate may elect to be taxed as a domestic corporation with respect to income included under section 951
» Consequences
˗ U.S. shareholder is taxed at corporate income tax rates and is eligible for indirect credits under the section 960 rules; and
˗ Subsequent distribution of the earnings is taxable to the shareholder at ordinary income tax rates
» Planning
˗ Reduces tax liability in year of section 951 inclusion
˗ Adds second level of tax upon distribution
˗ May be beneficial if second tax is deferred for significant period of time
18
Credit vs Deduction - Documentation 1. How to elect to take credit versus deduction
a. Itemize deduction (Form 1040, Schedule A) b. Foreign Tax Credit (Form 1116 – Attach to Form 1040) c. Annual choice
2. Claiming FTC Without Filing Form 1116 - Requirements a. All foreign source income is passive income; b. Reported on a qualified payee statement (e.g., Form 1099, Sch K-1); c. Total of qualified foreign taxes does not exceed a limit;
i. Limit for tax year 2015 = $300 (or $600 if MFJ) d. Asset giving rise to interest and dividends held for at least 16 days; e. Not filing Form 4563 or excluding income from sources within Puerto Rico;
and f. All foreign taxes were (i) legally owed and (ii) paid to countries recognized
by the US and do not support terrorism
3. If you claim the credit directly on Form 1040 without filing Form 1116, you cannot carry back or carry forward any unused foreign tax to or from this year.
FTC – Documentation
20
Amending Tax Return to Claim the Foreign Tax Credit 1. File Form 1040X (and Form 1116) within 10 years from the original due
date of your return. The 10-year period also applies to calculation corrections of your previously claimed foreign tax credit.
2. If the foreign income taxes you claimed as a credit are refunded or otherwise reduced, you must file an amended return on Form 1040X reporting the reduced foreign tax credit. There is no time limit on this requirement.
Example: Alice, a U.S. citizen, filed her Form 1040 for calendar year 2008 on August 28, 2009. On the return, she chose to deduct certain foreign taxes that she paid to the government of Spain for a business that she operates in Spain as a sole proprietor. Alice files an amended return on Sept. 22, 2012 to claim additional mortgage interest deduction as an itemized deduction on Schedule A. When will Alice’s ability to file an amended return to claim a foreign tax credit in lieu of a deduction originally taken?
FTC – Documentation
21
Steps to Calculate FTC
1. Source the income
2. Basket the income (passive and general)
3. Allocation and apportionment of expenses
4. Foreign Tax Credit Limitation
5. Carryovers carryback 1 year, carryforward 10 years
FTC – Calculation
22
Income Source Rules
FTC – Calculation
23
Type of income Source rule (in general)
Dividend Residence of payor Exception for foreign corp with >=25% US ECI
Interest Residence of payor Exception for US corp with 80% active business income from foreign sources over prior 3 years
Rent Location property used
Royalties Location IP is used
Gain from sale of personal property
Residence of seller US citizen with foreign tax home is foreign source
Gain from sale of inventory Location of sale Special rules if inventory is manufactured
Services Location where services are performed Commercial traveler exception
Income Source Rules – Examples Example #1 Adam receives $2,000 of interest income from domestic corporation ABC Co, and $10,000 of interest income from US corporation DEF Co. All of ABC Co’s income from inception has been US source income. For the past three years, 90% of DEF Co’s gross income has been active foreign business income. What is the source of the interest income that Adam receives for the current tax year from ABC Co and DEF Co?
FTC – Calculation
24
Income Source Rules – Examples Example #2 Barbara receives dividends from the following corporations for the current tax year. Calculate the amount of US source income:
FTC – Calculation
25
Amount Corporation % ECI for past 3 years US source income
$1,000 GHI Co (domestic) ?
$2,000 JKL Co (foreign) 20% ?
$3,000 MNO Co (foreign) 90% ?
Basketing – Sec 904(d) • Prevents cross crediting between baskets • Passive
• Interest, dividends, rent, royalties, gains • Defined under subpart F rules section 954(c)
• General • Income not in another basket • Usually active types of income
• Other • Treaty Resourcing
• Look through rules – Section 904(d)(3) • Apply to related party CFC transactions • Subpart F inclusions – generally passive basket • Dividends – look thru to underlying E&P (10% owned) • Interest – generally passive basket to extent of passive category income
of CFC
FTC – Calculation
26
Three Types of Apportionment Rules 1. “Factual Relationship” Method Used for deductions definitely related to a class of
gross income, including all gross income. Temp. Reg. § 1.861-8T(c)(1).
2. Gross Income Method Required for deductions not definitely related to any
gross income. Treas. Reg. § 1.861-8(c)(3). 3. Specifically Prescribed Methods. Treas. Reg. § 1.861-
8(e) and Temp. Reg. § 1.861-8T(e).
FTC – Calculation
27
Apportionment – Gross Income Method
• Gross Income Method under Treas. Reg. § 1.861-8(c)(3) must be used
if a deduction is not definitely related to any gross income.
FTC – Calculation
28
Gross Income in Statutory
Grouping
Apportioned
Amount
=
Deduction
Total Amount of Gross Income
Expense Allocation for Individuals • Some deductions do not definitely relate to either your foreign source income or
your US source income. These expenses (except for interest expense) are allocated pro rata using the gross income method.
• Charitable contribution are definitely related and allocable to all of taxpayer’s gross income. The deduction is ratably apportioned between statutory grouping of gross income and the residual grouping on the basis of the relative amounts of U.S. source gross income in each grouping. It cannot offset foreign source income. Effectively, it cannot impair the foreign tax credit limitation.
• Mortgage interest is allocated using the gross income method unless the taxpayer’s FSI (including income excluded on Form 2555) does not exceed $5,000. Then the taxpayer can allocate all mortgage expense to US source income.
• Other interest (investment interest, passive activity interest, interest incurred in a trade or business) is allocated using the “asset method” unless the taxpayer’s FSI (including income excluded on Form 2555) does not exceed $5,000. Then the taxpayer can allocate all other interest expense to US source income.
FTC – Calculation
29
Foreign Tax Credit - IRC Section 904(d)
• Purpose = to prevent taxpayers from crediting foreign taxes against U.S.
taxes levied on U.S. source income
• Rule: FTC cannot exceed the lesser of two amounts: 1. Actual foreign taxes paid or accrued; or 2. U.S. tax on foreign source income
FTC – Calculation
30
Foreign-source taxable income
FTC
Limitation =
U.S. tax
before FTC Total taxable
income
Example #1 – FTC vs Deduction
FTC – Calculation
31
Indv (US)
Germany
$100 income 40% Germany tax $60 E&P
No Foreign Tax Credit
$60 Div income $12 US tax 20%
ETR = 52% (40+12)
$60 Dividend
Foreign Tax Credit
Indv (US)
Germany
$100 income 40% Germany tax
$100 Income $39.6 US tax 39.6% ( 39.6) FTC $0 Addtl paid to US
ETR = 40% (40+0)
Deduction
Indv (US)
Germany
$100 income 40% Germany tax
$100 Income (40) Foreign tax ded $60 $23.76 US tax 39.6%
ETR = 63.76% (40+23.76)
Example #2a Brian Jones is a US citizen living in Texas and has the following types of income and expenses for tax year 2015: 1. What is the source of Brian’s income items? 2. Calculate his foreign tax credit for 2015 and calculate any
excess foreign tax credits
FTC – Calculation
32
Income Tax Withheld
Wage income from US employer (services performed in the US) $ 150,000.00 $ 35,000.00
Partnership K-1
Nonqualified Dividend income from US-based corporation $ 7,500.00
Interest income from US government bond $ 10,000.00
Nonqualified Dividend from Dutch corporation (less than 10% owned) $ 11,000.00 $ 1,650.00
Interest income from Dutch government bond $ 16,000.00 $ 4,800.00
Consulting services performed in the Netherlands $ 30,000.00 $ 9,000.00
Total $ 224,500.00 $ 50,450.00
Mortgage Interest $ (24,000.00)
Charitable contributions $ (750.00)
Property taxes $ (7,000.00)
Total itemized deductions $ (31,750.00)
Example #2b Same as Example #2a except the dividend income is derived from a Japanese corporation: 1. What is the source of Brian’s income items? 2. Calculate his foreign tax credit for 2015 and calculate any
excess foreign tax credits
FTC – Calculation
41
Income Tax Withheld
Wage income from US employer (services performed in the US) $ 150,000.00 $ 35,000.00
Partnership K-1
Nonqualified Dividend income from US-based corporation $ 7,500.00
Interest income from US government bond $ 10,000.00
Nonqualified Dividend from Japanese corporation (less than 10% owned) $ 11,000.00 $ 1,650.00
Interest income from Dutch government bond $ 16,000.00 $ 4,800.00
Consulting services performed in the Netherlands $ 30,000.00 $ 9,000.00
Total $ 224,500.00 $ 50,450.00
Mortgage Interest $ (24,000.00)
Charitable contributions $ (750.00)
Property taxes $ (7,000.00)
Total itemized deductions $ (31,750.00)
Foreign Tax Credit (“FTC”) for Individuals –
The FTC Limitation &
Other Important FTC Rules and Pitfalls
50
51
William R. Skinner, Esq. is a tax partner
with Fenwick & West LLP, in Mountain
View, CA. He graduated from Stanford
Law School and was recognized as a
Rising Star in Tax by California Super
Lawyers. He focuses his practice on U.S.
international and corporate taxation,
including the full range of international
tax issues such as subpart F and deferral
structures, foreign tax credits, transfer
pricing, IP migration and structuring IP
ownership within a corporate group,
internal restructurings and cross-border
M&A, and tax treaties and inbound tax
planning. More information about his
practice is available at
www.fenwick.com.
William R. Skinner
Partner, Tax Group
Phone: 650.335.7669
Fax: 650.938.5200
E-mail:
Emphasis:
International Tax
Tax Planning
Tax Controversy
Foreign Tax Credit Limitation
The FTC limitation is designed to ensure that foreign
taxes may be credited only against U.S. taxes that are
imposed on the same foreign income.
The § 904(a) overall FTC limitation is calculated using
the following formula:
Applied on a basket by basket basis
Foreign Source Taxable Income
Worldwide Taxable Income
Tentative
U.S. Tax
Liability
x = FTC Limit
52
Foreign Tax Credit Limitation
Example:
U.S. taxpayer has $500 of taxable income for its 2015 taxable
year ($250 derived from U.S. activities and $250 derived from
foreign sources).
• Foreign countries levy taxes totaling $97.
• The U.S. income tax liability prior to the foreign tax credit is $175
(35% average rate).
$250 Foreign Source Income
$500 Worldwide Income
$175
Tentative
U.S. Tax
Liability
x = $87
FTC Limit
The taxpayer’s FTC is limited to $87, leaving the taxpayer with $10 of
unused FTC. The taxpayer’s total U.S. tax liability is $88 following the
application of § 904 ($175 - $87).
53
Foreign Tax Credit Limitation for Individuals
Several components of an individual’s tax base are not
offset by foreign tax credits:
SECA / FICA
3.8% Medicare contribution tax
State income taxes (varies by jurisdiction)
FTC limitation effectively is calculated by applying the
the average federal rate to the taxpayer’s foreign source
income.
Special adjustments are made to the FTC limitation for:
Capital gains and qualified dividend income
Individuals electing the foreign earned income exclusion under
section 911
54
Foreign Tax Credit Limitation – § 904(b) Example
Individual has the following items of income:
US Source Foreign Source
20% Rate $0 $200 Cap Gain
Ordinary Income $500 Income $0
(39.6% Rate)
Individual must adjust the $200 capital gain entering the
Section 904 limitation to reflect the rate differential
amount (20% / 39.6%).
Individual’s percentage of Foreign Source income is $200
(20% / 39.6%) / (($500 + $200 (20%/ 39.6%)) = 16.8%.
55
Foreign Tax Credit Limitation & Section 911
Section 911 allows electing persons who are bona fide
residents of a foreign country and meet certain other
requirements to exclude foreign earned income up to an
annual maximum (roughly $100K).
FTCs properly allocable to the excluded income are
disallowed. See § 911(d)(6).
The disallowed FTC equals the fraction of total foreign
income taxes imposed on the foreign earned income equal
to excluded foreign earned income / total foreign earned
income. See Reg. § 1.911-6(d), Example 6.
56
Foreign Tax Credit Limitation & Section 911
Example: X, a single individual earns $200,000 of
foreign salary on which $50,000 of foreign income tax is
imposed. X has no other income and assume, for
simplicity, that X has no deductions. X elects to exclude
$100,000 from gross income under Section 911(a).
X’s allowable foreign tax credit is reduced to $25,000
($50,000 * $100,000 / $200,000).
X’s Section 904 limitation is $27,955 (Total Fed tax *
$100,000 of FSI / $100,000 of total WWTI)). X fully
utilizes the $25,000 of FTCs.
*$27,995 = incremental tax on an individual from $100,000
to $200,000 under the Section 911(f)“Stacking Rule”. 57
Section 904(d) Separate Baskets
Section 904(d) requires that taxpayers apply the
§904 limitation separately to different categories of
foreign source income (“baskets”):
Passive Basket Income
General Basket income
Determine taxable income and tax in each separate
basket, then apply the § 904 formula.
Each “item of income” treated as foreign source
income under a Treaty is also a separate basket. See
§ 904(d)(6). 58
Y, a married US individual, earns $500,000 of foreign source income
and pays $140,000 of foreign tax. Y has $1,000,000 of worldwide
income and has a U.S. tax liability (pre-credit) of $350,000. Y’s
foreign source income and tax is allocated to the FTC baskets as
follows:
Passive income: $200,000 income $ 20,000 foreign tax
General income: $300,000 income $120,000 foreign tax
$500,000 $140,000
Example – Separate Baskets
Y’s FTC limitation must be computed separately with respect to the
baskets of income:
Passive basket: ($200/1,000) x $350 = $70,000
General basket: ($300/1,000) x $350 = $105,000
59
Section 904(c) Carryover / Carryback
Section 904(c) allows foreign income taxes in excess of
the Section 904 limitation for the year to be carried back
to the one (1) preceding taxable year, and then carried
forward to the following ten (10) taxable years.
Carryforward / carryback occurs on a basket-by-basket
basis.
Taxes paid or accrued in a year may be carried forward or
back from that year even if the taxpayer has no foreign
income in the year when the taxes were paid or accrued.
See Chief Counsel Advice 201438027.
60
Sourcing Rules – Compensation for Services
Place of performance sourcing rule also applies to multi-
year compensation arrangements (e.g., stock options,
RSUs).
Reg. § 1.861-4(b)(2)(ii)(F) - Attribution of compensation
to services during a multi-year period depends on the facts
and circumstances of the case. In some cases, time-based
analysis throughout the vesting period may be the best
measure.
US and foreign countries may not have same rules for
source and timing of such income, complicating FTC.
61
Sourcing Rules – Capital Gains
General rule is “residence of the seller.” § 865(a).
Several Code-based exceptions may provide foreign
source treatment to a US citizen / resident alien, including
the following:
Sale of real estate with a foreign situs. § 862(a)(5).
Deemed dividend on sale of CFC stock. § 1248.
Certain foreign IP sales with a royalty component. § 865(d)(1)(B).
Certain foreign-connected sales subject to at least 10% foreign tax
in the relevant country.
• US citizen or resident alien with “tax home” in a foreign country.
§865(g).
• US person with a foreign office to which the sale is attributable.
§865(e).
62
Sourcing Rules – Treaty Relief
Depending on applicable treaty terms, foreign source
treatment may be available under a tax treaty to avoid
double taxation.
2006 US Model Treaty Article 23(3). Where income of a
US resident is taxable in foreign country under treaty, the
income shall be sourced to that country.
2006 US Model Treaty Article 23(4) – alternative
resourcing under so-called “Three Bites rule” for an US
expatriate subject to tax as a Treaty country resident on
US source income.
Note: Form 8833 compliance obligations generally apply to reliance on
resourcing provisions of a tax treaty. 63
Sourcing Rules – “Three Bites” Example
US citizen resident in Foreign Country receives a $1 million dividend from a
US corporation. As a dual resident, US citizen is subject to $200,000 of pre-
credit US tax and $250,000 of foreign income tax. For simplicity, US citizen
has no other items.
First bite (Article 23(4)(a)) is “notional” US withholding tax at source under
Article 10 – e.g., $100,000 (10% rate). Foreign country allows credit for this
amount and reduces foreign tax to $150,000.
Second bite (Article 23(4)(b)). US collects “notional” withholding tax of
$100,000.
Third bite (Article 23(4)(c)). Remaining $100,000 of US pre-credit tax may
be offset by credits for $150,000 of foreign country taxes by resourcing up to
$500,000 of the dividend as foreign source income (i.e., $100,000 / 20%).
End result: taxpayer pays $100,000 of US tax after FTC and $150,000 of
foreign tax.
64
Sourcing Rules – Characterization Questions
Source of income depends on how income is characterized
for U.S. federal income tax purposes. In some areas,
substance of transaction may be different from its form:
Service fee vs. royalty income
Sale of entire asset vs. license or lease of limited rights
Sale of products with embedded IP vs. license of IP rights
and separate sale of products
Joint venture / profit sharing payment vs. service fee,
product sales or other guaranteed payment.
65
Timing Issues – Section 905
Foreign taxes generally are taken into account when paid
or accrued under the taxpayer’s normal method of
accounting. However, regardless of the taxpayer’s normal
method of accounting, a taxpayer may elect to take into
account foreign income taxes when accrued. See §905(a).
The election is binding for all future years.
Under the accrual method, foreign income taxes are taken
into account in the US year with which or in which the
foreign taxable year ends. See AM 2008-005, Situation
No. 2 (discussing Rev. Rul. 61-93)).
66
Timing Issues – Section 905
When foreign taxes claimed as a credit are re-determined,
the taxpayer must adjust the foreign tax credit
accordingly. See § 905(c).
For example, refunds of foreign taxes that were paid and
claimed as a credit require reversal of the previously
claimed FTC. See, e.g., Sotiropoulos v. Commissioner,
142 TC 269 (2014).
Whether an individual uses the cash or accrual method
may affect whether additional assessment taxes relate
back to prior years or are “bunched” in the current year.
See CCA 201534013 (and authorities discussed therein).
67
Special FTC Limitation Rules for CFCs
What is the basket and Section 904 limitation with respect
to the withholding taxes imposed in year 2?
68
AU.S.
CFC
Year 2–
$500,000 Distribution
Subject to $50,000 of
Withholding Tax
Year 1–
$500,000 Subpart F
Income (Passive Basket)
Special FTC Limitation Rules for CFCs
Section 960(b)(1) provides for an increase in the Section
904 limitation on taxes imposed on a distribution of a
CFC’s previously taxed income (“PTI”), where the
shareholder elected to credit foreign income taxes for both
the year of the inclusion and the year of the distribution.
The shareholder creates and draws down “excess
limitation accounts” with respect to the prior year subpart
F inclusions to allow use of credits on the distribution of
PTI. See § 960(b)(2).
69
Special FTC Limitation Rules for CFCs - Example
In facts of previous slide, in year 1, if shareholder elects to
credit foreign income taxes, it would create an excess
limitation account equal to the excess Section 904
limitation created by the Subpart F inclusion (e.g.,
$150,000, if average rate were 35% and no Section 962
credits were claimed).
In year 2, distribution of PTI would utilize $50,000 of
excess limitation to absorb withholding taxes.
Remaining excess limitation in the passive basket of
$100,000 would carry forward to future years.
With respect to the Section 904(d) basket of the taxes
imposed on the distribution, see Reg. 1.904-4(c)(6)(iii). 70
Any Questions?
William R. Skinner
Partner, Tax Group
Phone: 650.335.7669
E-mail: [email protected]
71