Reg. § 1.245A(d)-1 Disallowance of foreign tax credit or deduction.
(a) No foreign tax credit or deduction allowed under section 245A(d) -(1) Foreign income taxes paid or accrued by domestic corporations or successors. No credit under section or deduction is allowed in any taxable year for:
(i) Foreign income taxes paid or accrued by a domestic corporation that are attributable to section income of the domestic corporation;
(ii) Foreign income taxes paid or accrued by a successor to a domestic corporation that are attributable to section income of the successor; and
(iii) Foreign income taxes paid or accrued by a domestic corporation that is a United States shareholder of a foreign corporation, other than a foreign corporation that is a passive foreign investment company (as defined in section ) with respect to the domestic corporation and that is not a controlled foreign corporation, that are attributable to non-inclusion income of the foreign corporation and are not otherwise disallowed under or of this section.
(2) Foreign income taxes paid or accrued by foreign corporations No credit under section or deduction is allowed in any taxable year for foreign income taxes paid or accrued by a foreign corporation that are attributable to section income, and such taxes are not eligible to be deemed paid under section in any taxable year.
(3) Effect of disallowance on earnings and profits The disallowance of a credit or deduction for foreign income taxes under this does not affect whether the foreign income taxes reduce earnings and profits of a corporation.
(b) Attribution of foreign income taxes
(1) Section 245A(d) income Foreign income taxes are attributable to section income to the extent that the foreign income taxes are allocated and apportioned under to the section income group. For purposes of this , is applied by treating the section income group in each section category of a domestic corporation, successor, or foreign corporation as a statutory grouping and treating all other income, including the receipt of a distribution of previously taxed earnings and profits other than section PTEP, as income in the residual grouping. See through for rules regarding the allocation and apportionment of foreign income taxes to the statutory and residual groupings if the taxpayer does not realize, recognize, or take into account a corresponding U.S. item in the U.S. taxable year in which the foreign income taxes are paid or accrued. In the case of a foreign law distribution or foreign law disposition, a corresponding U.S. item is assigned to the statutory and residual groupings under and without regard to the application of section , the holding periods described in sections and , and .
(2) Non-inclusion income of a foreign corporation
(i) Scope This provides rules for attributing foreign income taxes paid or accrued by a domestic corporation that is a United States shareholder of a foreign corporation to non-inclusion income of the foreign corporation. It applies only in cases in which the foreign income taxes are allocated and apportioned under by reference to the characterization of the tax book value of stock, whether the stock is held directly or indirectly through a partnership or other passthrough entity, for purposes of allocating and apportioning the domestic corporation's interest expense, or by reference to the income of a foreign corporation that is a reverse hybrid or foreign law CFC.
(ii) Foreign income taxes on a remittance, U.S. return of capital amount, or U.S. return of partnership basis amount This applies to foreign income taxes paid or accrued by a domestic corporation that is a United States shareholder of a foreign corporation with respect to foreign taxable income that the domestic corporation includes by reason of a remittance, a distribution (including a foreign law distribution) that is a U.S. return of capital amount or U.S. return of partnership basis amount, or a disposition (including a foreign law disposition) that gives rise to a U.S. return of capital amount or a U.S. return of partnership basis amount. These foreign income taxes are attributable to non-inclusion income of the foreign corporation to the extent that they are allocated and apportioned to the domestic corporation's section subgroup of general category stock, section subgroup of passive category stock, or section subgroup of U.S. source category stock in applying for purposes of section as the operative section. For purposes of this , is applied by treating the domestic corporation's section subgroup of general category stock, section subgroup of passive category stock, and section subgroup of U.S. source category stock as the statutory groupings and treating the tax book value of the non-section subgroup of stock for each separate category as tax book value in the residual grouping.
(iii) Foreign income taxes on income of a reverse hybrid or a foreign law CFC This applies to foreign income taxes paid or accrued by a domestic corporation, other than a regulated investment company (as defined in section ), real estate investment trust (as defined in section ), or S corporation (as defined in section ), that is a United States shareholder of a foreign corporation that is a reverse hybrid or foreign law CFC with respect to the foreign law pass-through income or foreign law inclusion regime income of the reverse hybrid or foreign law CFC, respectively. These taxes are attributable to the non-inclusion income of a reverse hybrid or foreign law CFC to the extent that they are allocated and apportioned to the non-inclusion income group under . For purposes of this , is applied by treating the non-inclusion income group in each section category of the domestic corporation and the foreign corporation as a statutory grouping and treating all other income as income in the residual grouping.
(3) Anti-avoidance rule Foreign income taxes are treated as attributable to section income of a domestic corporation or foreign corporation, or non-inclusion income of a foreign corporation, if a transaction, series of related transactions, or arrangement is undertaken with a principal purpose of avoiding the purposes of section and this section with respect to such foreign income taxes, including, for example, by separating foreign income taxes from the income, or earnings and profits, to which such foreign income taxes relate or by making distributions (or causing inclusions) under foreign law in multiple years that give rise to foreign income taxes that are allocated and apportioned with reference to the same previously taxed earnings and profits. See of this section (Example 3).
(c) Definitions The following definitions apply for purposes of this section.
(1) Corresponding U.S. item The term corresponding U.S. item has the meaning set forth in .
(2) Foreign income tax The term foreign income tax has the meaning set forth in .
(3) Foreign law CFC The term foreign law CFC has the meaning set forth in .
(4) Foreign law disposition The term foreign law disposition has the meaning set forth in .
(5) Foreign law distribution The term foreign law distribution has the meaning set forth in .
(6) Foreign law inclusion regime The term foreign law inclusion regime has the meaning set forth in .
(7) Foreign law inclusion regime income The term foreign law inclusion regime income has the meaning set forth in .
(8) Foreign law pass-through income The term foreign law pass-through income has the meaning set forth in .
(9) Foreign taxable income The term foreign taxable income has the meaning set forth in .
(10) Gross included tested income The term gross included tested income means, with respect to a foreign corporation that is described in of this section, an item of gross tested income multiplied by the inclusion percentage of a domestic corporation that is described in of this section for the domestic corporation's U.S. taxable year with or within which the foreign corporation's taxable year described in or ends.
(11) Hybrid dividend The term hybrid dividend has the meaning set forth in .
(12) Inclusion percentage The term inclusion percentage has the meaning set forth in .
(13) Non-inclusion income The term non-inclusion income means the items of gross income of a foreign corporation other than the items that are described in (items of income assigned to the subpart F income groups) and section (without regard to section ), and other than gross included tested income.
(14) Non-inclusion income group The term non-inclusion income group means the income group within a section category that consists of non-inclusion income.
(15) Non-section 245A subgroup The term non-section subgroup means each non-section subgroup determined under , applied as if the foreign corporation whose stock is being characterized were a controlled foreign corporation.
(16) Pass-through entity The term pass-through entity has the meaning set forth in .
(17) Remittance The term remittance has the meaning set forth in .
(18) Reverse hybrid The term reverse hybrid has the meaning set forth in .
(19) Section 245A subgroup The term section subgroup means each section subgroup determined under , applied as if the foreign corporation whose stock is being characterized were a controlled foreign corporation.
(20) Section 245A(d) income With respect to a domestic corporation, the term section income means a dividend (including a section dividend and a dividend received indirectly through a pass-through entity) or an inclusion under section for which a deduction under section is allowed, a distribution of section PTEP, a hybrid dividend, or an inclusion under section and by reason of a tiered hybrid dividend. With respect to a successor of a domestic corporation, the term section income means the receipt of a distribution of section PTEP. With respect to a foreign corporation, the term section income means an item of subpart F income that gave rise to a deduction under section , a tiered hybrid dividend or a distribution of section PTEP. An item described in this that qualifies for the deduction under section is considered section income regardless of whether the domestic corporation claims the deduction on its return with respect to the item.
(21) Section 245A(d) income group The term section income group means an income group within a section category that consists of section income.
(22) Section 245A(d) PTEP The term section PTEP means previously taxed earnings and profits described in or if such previously taxed earnings and profits arose either as a result of a dividend that gave rise to a deduction under section , or as a result of a tiered hybrid dividend that, by reason of section and , gave rise to an inclusion in the gross income of a United States shareholder. For purposes of this , a dividend that qualifies for the deduction under section is considered to have given rise to a deduction under section regardless of whether the domestic corporation claims the deduction on its return with respect to the dividend.
(23) Section 904 category The term section category has the meaning set forth in .
(24) Section 1248 dividend The term section dividend means an amount of gain that is treated as a dividend under section .
(25) Successor The term successor means a person, including an individual who is a citizen or resident of the United States, that acquires from any person any portion of the interest of a United States shareholder in a foreign corporation for purposes of section .
(26) Tested income The term tested income has the meaning set forth in .
(27) Tiered hybrid dividend The term tiered hybrid dividend has the meaning set forth in .
(28) U.S. capital gain amount The term U.S. capital gain amount has the meaning set forth in .
(29) U.S. return of capital amount The term U.S. return of capital amount has the meaning set forth in .
(30) U.S. return of partnership basis amount The term U.S. return of partnership basis amount means, with respect to a partnership in which a domestic corporation is a partner, the portion of a distribution by the partnership to the domestic corporation, or the portion of the proceeds of a disposition of the domestic corporation's interest in the partnership, that exceeds the U.S. capital gain amount.
(d) Examples The following examples illustrate the application of this section.
(1) Presumed facts Except as otherwise provided, the following facts are presumed for purposes of the examples:
(i) USP is a domestic corporation;
(ii) CFC is a controlled foreign corporation organized in Country A, and is not a reverse hybrid or a foreign law CFC;
(iii) USP owns all of the outstanding stock of CFC;
(iv) USP would be allowed a deduction under section for dividends received from CFC;
(v) All parties have a U.S. dollar functional currency and a U.S. taxable year and foreign taxable year that correspond to the calendar year; and
(vi) References to income are to gross items of income, and no party has deductions for Country A tax purposes or deductions for Federal income tax purposes (other than foreign income tax expense).
(2) Example 1: Distribution for foreign and Federal income tax purposes
(i) Facts As of December 31, Year 1, CFC has $800x of section PTEP (as defined in ) in a single annual PTEP account (as defined in ), and $500x of earnings and profits described in section . On December 31, Year 1, CFC distributes $1,000x of cash to USP. For Country A tax purposes, the entire $1,000x distribution is a dividend and is therefore a foreign dividend amount (as defined in ). Country A imposes a withholding tax on USP of $150x with respect to the $1,000x of foreign gross dividend income under Country A law. For Federal income tax purposes, USP includes in gross income $200x of the distribution as a dividend for which a deduction is allowable under section . The remaining $800x of the distribution is a distribution of PTEP that is excluded from USP's gross income and not treated as a dividend under section and (d), respectively. The entire $1,000x dividend is a U.S. dividend amount (as defined in ).
(ii) Analysis
(A) In general The rules of this section are applied by first determining the portion of the $150x Country A withholding tax that is attributable under of this section to the section income of USP, and then by determining the portion of the $150x Country A withholding tax that is described in of this section and that is attributable under either or of this section to the non-inclusion income of CFC. No credit or deduction is allowed in any taxable year under of this section for any portion of the $150x Country A withholding tax that is attributable to the section income of USP, or, under of this section, for any portion of that tax that is attributable to the non-inclusion income of CFC, to the extent the tax is not disallowed under of this section.
(B) Attribution of foreign income taxes to section 245A(d) income Under of this section, the $150x Country A withholding tax is attributable to the section income of USP to the extent that it is allocated and apportioned to the section income group (the statutory grouping) under . allocates and apportions foreign income tax to the statutory and residual groupings to which the items of foreign gross income that were included in the foreign tax base are assigned under . assigns foreign gross income that is a foreign dividend amount, to the extent of the U.S. dividend amount, to the statutory and residual groupings to which the U.S. dividend amount is assigned. The $1,000x foreign dividend amount is therefore assigned to the statutory and residual groupings to which the $1,000x U.S. dividend amount is assigned under Federal income tax law. The $1,000x U.S. dividend amount comprises a $200x dividend for which a deduction under section is allowed, which is an item of section income, and $800x of section PTEP, the receipt of which is income in the residual grouping. Accordingly, $200x of the $1,000x of foreign gross dividend income is assigned to the section income group, and $800x is assigned to the residual grouping. Under , $30x ($150x × $200x/$1,000x) of the $150x Country A withholding tax is apportioned to the section income group and is attributable to the section income of USP. The remaining $120x ($150x × $800x/$1,000x) of the tax is apportioned to the residual grouping.
(C) Attribution of foreign income taxes to non-inclusion income Under of this section, the $150x Country A withholding tax may be attributed to non-inclusion income of CFC if the tax is allocated and apportioned under by reference to either the characterization of the tax book value of stock under or the income of a foreign corporation that is a reverse hybrid or foreign law CFC. CFC is neither a reverse hybrid nor a foreign law CFC. In addition, no portion of the $150x Country A withholding tax is allocated and apportioned under by reference to the characterization of the tax book value of CFC's stock. See . Therefore, none of the tax is attributable to non-inclusion income of CFC.
(D) Disallowance Under of this section, no credit under section or deduction is allowed in any taxable year to USP for the $30x portion of the Country A withholding tax that is attributable to section income of USP.
(3) Example 2: Distribution for foreign law purposes
(i) Facts As of December 31, Year 1, CFC has $800x of section PTEP (as defined in ) in a single annual PTEP account (as defined in ), and $500x of earnings and profits described in section . On December 31, Year 1, CFC distributes $1,000x of its stock to USP. For Country A tax purposes, the entire $1,000x stock distribution is treated as a dividend to USP and is therefore a foreign dividend amount (as defined in ). Country A imposes a withholding tax on USP of $150x with respect to the $1,000x of foreign gross dividend income that USP includes under Country A law. For Federal income tax purposes, USP does not recognize gross income as a result of the stock distribution under section . The $1,000x stock distribution is therefore a foreign law distribution.
(ii) Analysis
(A) In general The rules of this section are applied by first determining the portion of the $150x Country A withholding tax that is attributable under of this section to the section income of USP, and then by determining the portion of the $150x Country A withholding tax that is described in of this section and that is attributable under either or of this section to the non-inclusion income of CFC. No credit or deduction is allowed in any taxable year under of this section for any portion of the $150x Country A withholding tax that is attributable to the section income of USP or, under of this section, for any portion of that tax that is attributable to the non-inclusion income of CFC, to the extent the tax is not disallowed under of this section.
(B) Attribution of foreign income taxes to section 245A(d) income Under of this section, the $150x Country A withholding tax is attributable to the section income of USP to the extent that it is allocated and apportioned to the section income group (the statutory grouping) under . allocates and apportions foreign income tax to the statutory and residual groupings to which the items of foreign gross income that were included in the foreign tax base are assigned under . In general, assigns foreign gross income to the statutory and residual groupings to which the corresponding U.S. item is assigned. If a taxpayer does not recognize a corresponding U.S. item in the year in which it pays or accrues foreign income tax with respect to foreign gross income that it includes by reason of a foreign law dividend, assigns the foreign dividend amount to the same statutory or residual groupings to which the foreign dividend amount would be assigned if a distribution were made for Federal income tax purposes in the amount of, and on the date of, the foreign law distribution. Further, computes the U.S. dividend amount (as defined in ) as if the distribution occurred on the date the distribution occurs for foreign law purposes. Therefore, the foreign dividend amount is assigned to the same statutory and residual groupings to which it would be assigned if a $1,000x distribution occurred on December 31, Year 1 for Federal income tax purposes. If such a distribution occurred, it would result in a $200x dividend to USP for which a deduction would be allowed under section . The remaining $800x of the distribution would be excluded from USP's gross income and not treated as a dividend under section and (d), respectively. Under and of this section, the $1,000x U.S. dividend amount comprises a $200x dividend for which a deduction under section would be allowed, which is an item of section income, and $800x of section PTEP, which is income in the residual grouping. Accordingly, $200x of the $1,000x foreign gross dividend income is assigned to the section income group, and $800x is assigned to the residual grouping. Under , $30x ($150x × $200x/$1,000x) of the Country A foreign income tax is apportioned to the section income group and is attributable to the section income of USP. The remaining $120x ($150x × $800x/$1,000x) of the tax is apportioned to the residual grouping.
(C) Attribution of foreign income taxes to non-inclusion income Under of this section, the $150x Country A withholding tax may be attributed to non-inclusion income of CFC if the tax is allocated and apportioned under by reference to either the characterization of the tax book value of stock under or the income of a foreign corporation that is a reverse hybrid or foreign law CFC. CFC is neither a reverse hybrid nor a foreign law CFC. In addition, no portion of the $150x Country A withholding tax is allocated and apportioned under by reference to the characterization of the tax book value of CFC's stock. See . Therefore, none of the tax is attributable to non-inclusion income of CFC.
(D) Disallowance Under of this section, no credit under section or deduction is allowed in any taxable year to USP for the $30x portion of the Country A withholding tax that is attributable to section income of USP.
(4) Example 3: Successive foreign law distributions subject to anti-avoidance rule
(i) Facts For Year 1, CFC earns $500x of subpart F income that gives rise to a $500x gross income inclusion to USP under section , and income that creates $500x of earnings and profits described in section . CFC earns no income in Years 2 through 4. As of January 1, Year 2, and through December 31, Year 4, CFC has $500x of earnings and profits described in section and $500x of section PTEP (as defined in ) in a single annual PTEP account (as defined in ). In each of Years 2 and 3, USP makes a consent dividend election under Country A law that, for Country A tax purposes, deems CFC to distribute to USP, and USP immediately to contribute to CFC, $500x on December 31 of each year. For Country A tax purposes, each deemed distribution is a dividend of $500x to USP, and each deemed contribution is a non-taxable contribution of $500x to the capital of CFC. Each $500x deemed distribution is therefore a foreign dividend amount (as defined in ). Country A imposes $150x of withholding tax on USP in each of Years 2 and 3 with respect to the $500x of foreign gross dividend income that USP includes in income under Country A law. For Federal income tax purposes, the Country A deemed distributions in Years 2 and 3 are disregarded such that USP recognizes no income, and the deemed distributions are therefore foreign law distributions. On December 31, Year 4, CFC distributes $1,000x to USP, which for Country A tax purposes is treated as a return of contributed capital on which no withholding tax is imposed. For Federal income tax purposes, $500x of the $1,000x distribution is a dividend to USP for which a deduction under section is allowed; the remaining $500x of the distribution is a distribution of section PTEP that is excluded from USP's gross income and not treated as a dividend under section and (d), respectively. The entire $1,000x dividend is a U.S. dividend amount (as defined in ). The Country A consent dividend elections in Years 2 and 3 are made with a principal purpose of avoiding the purposes of section and this section to disallow a credit or deduction for Country A withholding tax incurred with respect to USP's section income.
(ii) Analysis
(A) In general The rules of this section are applied by first determining the portion of the $150x Country A withholding tax paid by USP in each of Years 2 and 3 that is attributable under of this section to the section income of USP, and then by determining the portion of the $150x Country A withholding tax paid by USP in each of Years 2 and 3 that is described in of this section and that is attributable under either or of this section to the non-inclusion income of CFC. Finally, the anti-avoidance rule under of this section applies to treat any portion of the $150x Country A withholding tax paid by USP in each of Years 2 and 3 as attributable to section income of USP or non-inclusion income of CFC, if a transaction, series of related transactions, or arrangement is undertaken with a principal purpose of avoiding the purposes of section and this section. No credit or deduction is allowed in any taxable year under of this section for any portion of the $150x Country A withholding tax paid by USP in each of Years 2 and 3 that is attributable to the section income of USP or, under of this section, for any portion of that tax that is attributable to the non-inclusion income of CFC, to the extent the tax is not disallowed under of this section.
(B) Attribution of foreign income taxes to section 245A(d) income Under of this section, the $150x Country A withholding tax paid by USP in each of Years 2 and 3 is attributable to the section income of USP to the extent that it is allocated and apportioned to the section income group (the statutory grouping) under . allocates and apportions foreign income tax to the statutory and residual groupings to which the items of foreign gross income that were included in the foreign tax base are assigned under . In general, assigns foreign gross income to the statutory and residual groupings to which the corresponding U.S. item is assigned. If a taxpayer does not recognize a corresponding U.S. item in the year in which it pays or accrues foreign income tax with respect to foreign gross income that it includes by reason of a foreign law dividend, assigns the foreign dividend amount to the same statutory or residual groupings to which the foreign dividend amount would be assigned if a distribution were made for Federal income tax purposes in the amount of, and on the date of, the foreign law distribution. Therefore, the $500x foreign dividend amount in each of Years 2 and 3 is assigned to the same statutory and residual groupings to which it would be assigned if a $500x distribution occurred on December 31 of each of those years for Federal income tax purposes.
(1) Year 2 $500x deemed distribution CFC made no distributions in Year 1 and earned no income and made no distributions in Year 2 for Federal income tax purposes. As of December 31, Year 2, CFC has $500x of earnings and profits described in section and $500x of section PTEP. If CFC distributed $500x on that date, the distribution would be a distribution of section PTEP. A distribution of previously taxed earnings and profits is a U.S. dividend amount. assigns the foreign dividend amount, to the extent of the U.S. dividend amount, to the statutory and residual groupings to which the U.S. dividend amount is assigned. The receipt of a distribution of previously taxed earnings and profits is assigned to the residual grouping under of this section. Therefore, all $500x foreign dividend amount would be assigned to the residual grouping, and none of the $150x withholding tax paid or accrued by USP in Year 2 would be treated as attributable to section income of USP.
(2) Year 3 $500x deemed distribution CFC made no distributions in Year 1 and earned no income and made no distributions in Year 2 or Year 3 for Federal income tax purposes. Consequently, as of December 31, Year 3, CFC has $500x of earnings and profits described in section and $500x of section PTEP. If CFC distributed $500x on that date, the distribution would be a distribution of section PTEP. For the reasons described in of this section, all $500x of the foreign dividend amount would be assigned to the residual grouping, and none of the $150x withholding tax paid or accrued by USP in Year 3 would be treated as attributable to section income of USP.
(3) Year 4 $1,000x distribution The Year 4 $1,000x distribution is, for Country A purposes, a return of capital distribution that is not subject to withholding tax. For Federal income tax purposes, it comprises a $500x dividend for which a deduction under section is allowed, which is an item of section income of USP, and a $500x distribution of section PTEP, the receipt of which is income in the residual grouping.
(C) Attribution of foreign income taxes to non-inclusion income Under of this section, the $150x Country A withholding tax paid by USP in each of Years 2 and 3 may be attributed to non-inclusion income of CFC if the tax is allocated and apportioned under by reference to either the characterization of the tax book value of stock under or the income of a foreign corporation that is a reverse hybrid or foreign law CFC. CFC is neither a reverse hybrid nor a foreign law CFC. In addition, no portion of the Country A withholding tax is allocated and apportioned under by reference to the characterization of the tax book value of CFC's stock. See . Therefore, none of the tax is attributable to non-inclusion income of CFC.
(D) Attribution of foreign income taxes pursuant to anti-avoidance rule USP made two successive foreign law distributions in Years 2 and 3 that were subject to Country A withholding tax and that did not individually exceed, but together exceeded, the section PTEP of CFC. The Country A withholding tax on each consent dividend is allocated to the residual grouping rather than to the statutory grouping of section income under and -20(d)(3)(i). USP paid no Country A withholding tax on the Year 4 distribution as a result of the Country A consent dividends in Years 2 and 3. If CFC had distributed its earnings and profits in Year 4 without the prior consent dividends, the distribution would have been subject to withholding tax, a portion of which would have been attributable to the section income arising from the distribution. But for the application of the anti-avoidance rule in of this section, USP would avoid the disallowance under section with respect to this portion of the withholding tax. Because USP made foreign law distributions that caused withholding tax from multiple foreign law distributions to be associated with the same previously taxed earnings and profits with a principal purpose of avoiding the purposes of section and this section, the $150x Country A withholding tax paid by USP in each of Years 2 and 3 is treated as being attributable to section income of USP.
(E) Disallowance Under of this section, no credit under section or deduction is allowed in any taxable year to USP for the $150x Country A withholding tax paid by USP in each of Years 2 and 3 that is attributable to section income of USP.
(5) Example 4: Distribution that is in part a dividend and in part a return of capital
(i) Facts CFC uses the modified gross income method to allocate and apportion its interest expense, and its stock has a tax book value of $10,000x. For Year 1, CFC earns $500x of income that is specified foreign source general category gross income as that term is defined in and is therefore neither tested income nor subpart F income of CFC. As of December 31, Year 1, CFC has $500x of earnings and profits described in section . On that date, CFC distributes $1,000x of cash to USP. For Country A tax purposes, the entire $1,000x distribution is a dividend to USP and is therefore a foreign dividend amount (as defined in ). Country A imposes a withholding tax on USP of $150x with respect to the $1,000x of foreign gross dividend income that USP includes under the law of Country A. For Federal income tax purposes, USP includes $500x of the distribution in its gross income as a dividend for which a $500x deduction is allowed to USP under section ; the remaining $500x of the distribution is applied against and reduces USP's basis in its CFC stock under section . The portion of the distribution that is a $500x dividend is a U.S. dividend amount (as defined in ). The remaining $500x of the distribution is a U.S. return of capital amount.
(ii) Analysis
(A) In general The rules of this section are applied by first determining the portion of the $150x Country A withholding tax that is attributable under of this section to the section income of USP, and then by determining the portion of the $150x Country A withholding tax that is described in of this section and that is attributable under either or of this section to the non-inclusion income of CFC. No credit or deduction is allowed under of this section for any portion of the $150x Country A withholding tax that is attributable to the section income of USP or, under of this section, for any portion of that tax that is attributable to the non-inclusion income of CFC, to the extent the tax is not disallowed under of this section.
(B) Attribution of foreign income taxes to section 245A(d) income Under of this section, the $150x Country A withholding tax is attributable to the section income of USP to the extent that it is allocated and apportioned to the section income group (the statutory grouping) under . allocates and apportions foreign income tax to the statutory and residual groupings to which the items of foreign gross income that were included in the foreign tax base are assigned under . assigns foreign gross income that is a foreign dividend amount, to the extent of the U.S. dividend amount, to the statutory and residual groupings to which the U.S. dividend amount is assigned. Of the $1,000x foreign dividend amount, $500x is therefore assigned to the statutory and residual groupings to which the $500x U.S. dividend amount is assigned under Federal income tax law. The entire $500x U.S. dividend amount is a dividend for which a section deduction is allowed and is therefore section income that is assigned to the section income group. Accordingly, $500x of the foreign dividend amount is assigned to the section income group. Under , $75x ($150x × $500x/$1,000x) of the Country A withholding tax is allocated to the section income group and so under of this section is attributable to the section income of USP.
(C) Attribution of foreign income taxes to non-inclusion income The remaining $75x of the Country A withholding tax is described in of this section because the $500x of foreign dividend amount that corresponds to the $500x U.S. return of capital amount is assigned, and the remaining withholding tax imposed on that foreign dividend amount is allocated and apportioned, by reference to the characterization of the tax book value of the stock of CFC. Under of this section, the remaining $75x Country A withholding tax is attributable to non-inclusion income of CFC to the extent that the tax is allocated and apportioned under to USP's section subgroup of general category stock, section subgroup of passive category stock, and section subgroup of U.S. source category stock (the statutory groupings) for purposes of section as the operative section. Under , the $500x portion of the foreign dividend amount that corresponds to the $500x U.S. return of capital amount is assigned to the statutory and residual groupings to which $500x of earnings of CFC would be assigned if CFC recognized them in Year 1. Those earnings are deemed to arise in the statutory and residual groupings in the same proportions as the proportions of the tax book value of CFC's stock in the groupings for Year 1 for purposes of applying the asset method of expense allocation and apportionment under . Under , , and , for purposes of section as the operative section, all of the tax book value of the stock of CFC is assigned to USP's section subgroup of general category stock because CFC uses the modified gross income method to allocate and apportion its interest expense and earns only specified foreign source general category gross income for Year 1. Under , if CFC recognized $500x of earnings in Year 1 these earnings would be deemed to arise in the section subgroup of general category stock. Accordingly, the remaining $500x of foreign dividend amount is assigned to USP's section subgroup of general category stock. Under , the remaining $75x of withholding tax is allocated to the section subgroup and, under of this section, is attributable to the non-inclusion income of CFC.
(D) Disallowance Under of this section, no credit under section or deduction is allowed in any taxable year to USP for the $75x portion of the Country A withholding tax that is attributable to section income of USP. Under of this section, no credit under section or deduction is allowed in any taxable year to USP for the $75x portion of the Country A withholding tax that is attributable to non-inclusion income of CFC.
(6) Example 5: Income of a reverse hybrid
(i) Facts CFC is a reverse hybrid. In Year 1, CFC earns a $500x item of gain described in section that is non-inclusion income. CFC also earns for Federal income tax purposes and Country A tax purposes a $1,000x item of royalty income, of which $500x is gross included tested income and $500x is non-inclusion income. USP includes the $500x item of foreign gain and the $1,000x item of foreign gross royalty income in its Country A taxable income, and the items are foreign law pass-through income. If CFC included these items under Country A tax law, its $1,000x of royalty income for Federal income tax purposes would be the corresponding U.S. item for the foreign gross royalty income, and its $500x of gain for Federal income tax purposes would be the corresponding U.S. item for the foreign gain. Country A imposes a $150x foreign income tax on USP with respect to $1,500x of foreign gross income.
(ii) Analysis
(A) In general The rules of this section are applied by first determining the portion of the $150x Country A tax that is attributable under of this section to the section income of USP, and then by determining the portion of the $150x Country A tax that is described in of this section and that is attributable under either or of this section to the non-inclusion income of CFC. No credit or deduction is allowed under of this section for any portion of the $150x Country A tax that is attributable to the section income of USP or, under of this section, for any portion of that tax that is attributable to the non-inclusion income of CFC, to the extent the tax is not disallowed under of this section.
(B) Attribution of foreign income taxes to section 245A(d) income Under of this section, the $150x Country A tax is attributable to section income to the extent the tax is allocated and apportioned to the section income group (the statutory grouping) under . allocates and apportions foreign income tax to the statutory and residual groupings to which the items of foreign gross income that were included in the foreign tax base are assigned under . In general, assigns foreign gross income to the statutory and residual groupings to which the corresponding U.S. item is assigned. assigns the foreign law pass-through income that USP includes by reason of its ownership of CFC to the statutory and residual groupings by treating USP's foreign law pass-through income as foreign gross income of CFC, and by treating CFC as paying the $150x of Country A tax in CFC's U.S. taxable year within which its foreign taxable year ends (Year 1). CFC is therefore treated as including a $1,000x foreign gross royalty item and a $500x foreign gross income item of gain and paying $150x of Country A tax in Year 1. These foreign gross income items are assigned to the statutory and residual groupings to which the corresponding U.S. items are assigned under Federal income tax law. No foreign gross income is assigned to the section income group because neither the corresponding U.S. item of royalty income nor the corresponding U.S. item of gain is assigned to the section income group. Therefore, none of USP's Country A tax is allocated to the section income group.
(C) Attribution of foreign income taxes to non-inclusion income The $150x Country A tax is described in of this section because USP is a United States shareholder of CFC, CFC is a reverse hybrid, and allocates and apportions the tax by reference to the income of CFC. Under of this section, the $150x Country A tax is attributable to the non-inclusion income of CFC to the extent that the foreign income taxes are allocated and apportioned to the non-inclusion income group under . For the reasons described in of this section, under CFC is treated as including a $1,000x foreign gross royalty item and a $500x foreign gross income item of gain and paying $150x of Country A tax in Year 1. These foreign gross income items are assigned to the statutory and residual groupings to which the corresponding U.S. items are assigned under Federal income tax law. For Federal income tax purposes, the $500x item of gain and $500x of the $1,000x item of royalty income are items of non-inclusion income that are therefore assigned to the non-inclusion income group. The remaining $500x of the foreign gross royalty income item is assigned to the residual grouping. Under , $100x ($150x × $1,000x/$1,500x) of the Country A tax is apportioned to the non-inclusion income group, and $50x ($150x × $500x/$1,500x) is apportioned to the residual grouping. Under of this section, the $100x of Country A tax that is apportioned to the non-inclusion income group under is attributable to non-inclusion income of CFC.
(D) Disallowance Under of this section, no credit under section or deduction is allowed in any taxable year to USP for the $100x of Country A foreign income tax that is attributable to non-inclusion income of CFC.
(e) Applicability date This section applies to taxable years of a foreign corporation that begin after December 31, 2019, and end on or after November 2, 2020, and with respect to a United States person, taxable years in which or with which such taxable years of the foreign corporation end.
[T.D. 9959, 87 FR 317, Jan. 4, 2022, as amended by 87 FR 45018, July 27, 2022]