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The OBBBA Makes Look-Through Guidance Relevant Again

📝 usncan Note: The OBBBA Makes Look-Through Guidance Relevant Again

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The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (P.L. 119-21) has made permanent a long-standing rule that provides an exception from subpart F status for income allocable to a related corporation’s nonsubpart F income or income not effectively connected to a U.S. business. After several extensions over two decades, the rule in section 954(c)(6) was set to expire at the end of 2025. Now it will not expire at all. Most of the general guidance on section 954(c)(6) is in a 2007 notice, but a regulation cross-references six provisions in which the exception’s availability is limited.

Section 952(a)(2) defines subpart F income to include foreign base company income, which is defined in section 954. Under section 954(a)(1), foreign base company income includes foreign personal holding company income (FPHCI) determined under section 954(c) (and reduced by allocable deductions under section 954(b)(5)).

Section 954(c)(1)(A) defines FPHCI to include dividends, interest, royalties, rents, and annuities.

Section 954(c)(6) provides a look-through rule for related controlled foreign corporations. Under the general rule in subparagraph (c)(6)(A), for purposes of section 954(c), dividends, interest, rents, and royalties received or accrued from a CFC that is a related person are not treated as FPHCI to the extent attributable or properly allocable to income of the related person that is neither subpart F income nor treated as effectively connected income with the conduct of a trade or business in the United States.

Whether income is attributable or allocable to other income is determined under rules similar to those in section 904(d)(3)(C) and (D). Under those provisions, interest, rents, or royalties received from a CFC in which the taxpayer is a U.S. shareholder are treated as passive category income to the extent allocable (under regs) to passive category income of the CFC. Also, dividends paid out of the earnings and profits of a CFC in which the taxpayer is a U.S. shareholder are treated as passive category income in proportion to the ratio of E&P attributable to passive category income to total E&P.

Subparagraph (c)(6)(A) further provides that interest includes factoring income that is treated as income equivalent to interest under subparagraph (c)(1)(E). It also instructs the Treasury secretary to prescribe regs necessary to carry out paragraph (c)(6), including regs necessary to prevent the abuse of its purposes.

An exception in subparagraph (c)(6)(B) provides that subparagraph (A) does not apply to interest, rents, or royalties to the extent they create or increase a deficit that may reduce the subpart F income of the payer or another CFC under section 952(c).

Under subparagraph (c)(6)(C), subparagraph (A) applies to tax years of foreign corporations beginning after December 31, 2005, and before January 1, 2026, and to tax years of U.S. shareholders in or with which the tax years of foreign corporations end.

OBBBA

Section 70351 of the OBBBA, titled “Permanent Extension of Look-Thru Rule for Related Controlled Foreign Corporations” amends section 954(c)(6)(C) by removing the reference to tax years before January 1, 2026. As a result, the look-through rule applies to tax years of foreign corporations beginning after December 31, 2005, and to tax years of U.S. shareholders in or with which the tax years of foreign corporations end. The effective date of this amendment is tax years of foreign corporations beginning after December 31, 2025.

Section 954(c)(6)(C) was added to the code in 2006 by the Tax Increase Prevention and Reconciliation Act of 2005 (P.L. 109-222). It originally applied to tax years of foreign corporations beginning after December 31, 2005, and before January 1, 2009. In the 14 years between 2006 and 2020, the expiration date was extended seven times, most recently to January 1, 2026, by Division EE of the Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2021 enacted on December 27, 2020 (P.L. 116-220). The OBBBA eliminates the expiration date altogether. Because this rule will no longer expire at the end of 2025, guidance on the rule deserves another look.

Published August 27, 2020, T.D. 9909 provides regs mainly under section 245A but did contain one provision under section 954(c)(6). These final regs were preceded by temporary (T.D. 9865) and proposed (REG-106282-18) regs published on June 18, 2019. The regulation under section 954(c)(6) only consists of cross-references to other code and reg sections. Reg. section 1.954(c)(6)-1(a)(1)(6) is titled, “Cross-references to other rules.” It directs taxpayers to a nonexclusive list of rules that in certain cases limit the applicability of the exception to FPHCI under section 954(c)(6). These are:

An applicability date in reg. section 1.954(c)(6)-1(b) provides that this section applies as of February 23, 2020.

Section 245A. Reg. section 1.245A-5 is titled, “Limitation of section 245A deduction and section 954(c)(6) exception.” Reg. section 1.245A-5(a) provides an overview that partly describes it as providing rules that limit the applicability of section 954(c)(6) when a portion of a dividend is paid out of an extraordinary disposition account or when an extraordinary reduction occurs. Paragraph (d) provides rules that limit the application of section 954(c)(6) when one or more section 245A shareholders of a lower-tier CFC have an extraordinary disposition account. Paragraph (f) provides rules that limit the application of section 954(c)(6) when a lower-tier CFC has an extraordinary reduction amount.

Reg. section 1.245A(e)-1(c) applies to hybrid dividends of tiered corporations. It applies if a CFC (the receiving CFC) receives a tiered hybrid dividend from another CFC and a domestic corporation is a U.S. shareholder of both CFCs. In that case:

  • the tiered hybrid dividend is treated under section 951(a)(1)(A) as subpart F income of the receiving CFC for the tax year of the CFC in which the tiered hybrid dividend is received;
  • the U.S. shareholder includes in gross income its pro rata share of the subpart F income; and
  • the rules of section 245A(d) and reg. section 1.245A(d)-1 (disallowance of foreign tax credit and deductions) apply to the amount included in the U.S. shareholder’s gross income.

A tiered hybrid dividend is an amount received by a receiving CFC from another CFC to the extent that the amount would be a hybrid dividend under subparagraph (b)(2) if the receiving CFC were a domestic corporation. A tiered hybrid dividend does not include an amount described in section 959(b). No other amount received by a receiving CFC from another CFC is a tiered hybrid dividend.

Subparagraph (c)(3) applies if a CFC directly or indirectly sells or exchanges stock of a foreign corporation and, under section 964(e)(1), the gain recognized on the sale or exchange is included in gross income as a dividend. In that case, the rules of subparagraph (b)(3) apply by treating the CFC as the domestic corporation and include a reference to sections 964(e)(1) and 1248(c)(2) (instead of only section 1248(c)(2)).

Subparagraph (c)(4) applies to the extent that a dividend described in section 964(e)(1) (gain on certain stock sales by CFCs treated as dividends) is a tiered hybrid dividend. In that case, the rules of section 964(e)(4) do not apply to a domestic corporation that is a U.S. shareholder of both CFCs described in subparagraph (c)(1). Therefore, the U.S. shareholder is not allowed a deduction under section 245A(a) for the amount included in gross income under clause (c)(1)(ii).

Section 367. Reg. section 1.367(b)-4(e)(1) requires income inclusion and gain recognition in certain exchanges following an inversion transaction. It applies if a foreign corporation (the transferee foreign corporation) acquires stock of a foreign corporation in an exchange described in section 351 or stock or assets of a foreign corporation in a reorganization described in section 368(a)(1) (in either case, the foreign acquired corporation). In that case, an exchanging shareholder must, if its exchange is a specified exchange and the de minimis exception in subparagraph (e)(3) does not apply:

  • include in income as a deemed dividend the section 1248 amount attributable to the stock that it exchanges; and
  • after taking into account any increase in basis provided in reg. section 1.367(b)-2(e)(3)(ii) caused by the deemed dividend, recognize all realized gain that would not otherwise be recognized.

Subparagraph (e)(4) provides that an income inclusion of a foreign corporation under subparagraph (e)(1) does not qualify for the exceptions from FPHCI provided by sections 954(c)(3)(A)(i) and 954(c)(6).

Section 964. Section 964(e)(1) applies if a CFC sells or exchanges stock in any other foreign corporation. In that case, gain recognized on the sale or exchange is included in the gross income of the CFC as a dividend to the same extent that it would have been so included under section 1248(a) if the CFC were a U.S. person. Section 964(e)(4)(A) applies if, for any tax year of a CFC beginning after December 31, 2017, any amount is treated as a dividend under paragraph (e)(1) by reason of a sale or exchange by the CFC of stock in another foreign corporation held for one year or more. In that case:

  • the foreign-source portion of the dividend is treated as subpart F income of the selling CFC for the tax year;
  • a U.S. shareholder of the selling CFC must include in gross income for the tax year of the shareholder in or with which the year of the CFC ends an amount equal to the shareholder’s pro rata share of the amount treated as subpart F income; and
  • the deduction under section 245A(a) is allowable to the U.S. shareholder for the subpart F income included in gross income in the same manner as if the subpart F income were a dividend received by the shareholder from the selling CFC.

Section 7701. Reg. section 1.7701(l)-4(e) provides that an amount included in the gross income of a CFC as a dividend related to stock transferred in a specified transaction does not qualify for the exception from FPHCI provided by section 954(c)(6). A specified transaction is defined in reg. section 1.7701(l)-4(b).

Notice 2007-9

Notice 2007-9, 2007-1 C.B. 401, provides more general guidance on the application of section 954(c)(6). It also describes additional guidance that Treasury and the IRS intend to issue, including antiabuse rules.

According to the notice, for purposes of section 954(c)(6), a related person has the meaning provided in section 954(d)(3) and reg. section 1.954-1(f), which is ownership of more than 50 percent of vote or value. The CFCs must be related persons only at the time the dividend, interest, rent, or royalty is received or accrued. The section 954(c)(6) exception is not elective and so applies to all covered transactions.

Dividends

For purposes of section 954(c)(6), dividend has the meaning provided in section 316(a), including any amount treated as a section 301(c)(1) distribution because of a redemption described in either section 302 or 304. Dividends also include gains treated as dividends under sections 964(e) and 356(a)(2).

If a CFC is an exchanging shareholder and includes in income as a deemed dividend the full earnings and profit amount under reg. section 1.367(b)-3(b)(3)(i), that inclusion is not eligible for the section 954(c)(6) exception.

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