Reg. § 1.367(b)-3T Repatriation of foreign corporate assets in certain nonrecognition transactions (temporary).
(a)-(b) (3) [Reserved]. For further guidance, see through .
(4) Election of taxable exchange treatment
(i) Rules
(A) In general In lieu of the treatment prescribed by , an exchanging shareholder described in may instead elect to recognize the gain (but not loss) that it realizes in the exchange (taxable exchange election). To make a taxable exchange election, the following requirements must be satisfied—
(1) The exchanging shareholder (and its direct or indirect owners that would be affected by the election, in the case of an exchanging shareholder that is a foreign corporation) reports the exchange in a manner consistent therewith (see, e.g., sections , and );
(2) The notification requirements of of this section are satisfied; and
(3) The adjustments described in of this section are made when the following circumstances are present—
(i) The transaction is described in section or is an asset acquisition described in section , with regard to which one U.S. person owns (directly or indirectly) 100 percent of the foreign acquired corporation; and
(ii) The all earnings and profits amount described in with respect to the exchange exceeds the gain recognized by the exchanging shareholder.
(B) Attribute reduction
(1) Reduction of NOL carryovers The amount by which the all earnings and profits amount exceeds the gain recognized by the exchanging shareholder (the excess earnings and profits amount) shall be applied to reduce the net operating loss carryovers (if any) of the foreign acquired corporation to which the domestic acquiring corporation would otherwise succeed under section and (c)(1). See also Rev. Rul. 72-421 (1972-2 C.B. 166) (see ).
(2) Reduction of capital loss carryovers After the application of of this section, any remaining excess earnings and profits amount shall be applied to reduce the capital loss carryovers (if any) of the foreign acquired corporation to which the domestic acquiring corporation would otherwise succeed under section and (c)(3).
(3) Reduction of basis After the application of of this section, any remaining excess earnings and profits amount shall be applied to reduce (but not below zero) the basis of the assets (other than dollar-denominated money) of the foreign acquired corporation that are acquired by the domestic acquiring corporation. Such remaining excess earnings and profits amount shall be applied to reduce the basis of such assets in the following order: first, tangible depreciable or depletable assets, according to their class lives (beginning with those assets with the shortest class life); second, other non-inventory tangible assets; third, intangible assets that are amortizable; and finally, the remaining assets of the foreign acquired corporation that are acquired by the domestic acquiring corporation. Within each of these categories, if the total basis of all assets in the category is greater than the excess earnings and profits amount to be applied against such basis, the taxpayer may choose to which specific assets in the category the basis reduction first applies.
(C) Notification The exchanging shareholder shall elect to apply the rules of this by attaching a statement of its election to its section notice. See For the rules concerning filing a section notice.
(D) Example The following example illustrates the rules of this :
Example.
(i) Facts. DC, a domestic corporation, owns all of the outstanding stock of FC, a foreign corporation. The stock of FC has a value of $100, and DC has a basis of $80 in such stock. The assets of FC are one parcel of land with a value of $60 and a basis of $30, and tangible depreciable assets with a value of $40 and a basis of $80. FC has no net operating loss carryovers or capital loss carryovers. The all earnings and profits amount with respect to the FC stock owned by DC is $30, of which $19 is described in section and the remaining $11 is not (for example, because it was earned prior to 1963). In a liquidation described in section , FC distributes all of its property to DC, and the FC stock held by DC is canceled. Rather than including in income as a deemed dividend the all earnings and profits amount of $30 as provided in , DC instead elects taxable exchange treatment under of this section.
(ii) Result. DC recognizes the $20 of gain it realizes on its stock in FC. Of this $20 amount, $19 is included in income by DC as a dividend pursuant to section . (For the source of the remaining $1 of gain recognized by DC, see section . For the treatment of the $1 for purposes of the foreign tax credit limitation, see generally section .) Because the transaction is described in section and because the all earnings and profits amount with respect to the FC stock held by DC ($30) exceeds by $10 the income recognized by DC ($20), the attribute reduction rules of of this section apply. Accordingly, the $10 excess earnings and profits amount is applied to reduce the basis of the tangible depreciable assets of FC, beginning with those assets with the shortest class lives. Under section FC does not recognize gain or loss in the assets that it distributes to DC, and under section (which is applied taking into account the basis reduction prescribed by of this section) DC takes a basis of $30 in the land and $70 in the tangible depreciable assets that it receives from FC.
(ii) Effective date This applies for section exchanges that occur between February 23, 2000, and February 23, 2001.
(c)-(d) [Reserved]. For further guidance, see through .
[T.D. 8863, 65 FR 3588, Jan. 24, 2000, as amended by T.D. 9243, 71 FR 4288, Jan. 26, 2006]