Reg. § 1.904-4 Separate application of section 904 with respect to certain categories of income.
(a) In general A taxpayer is required to compute a separate foreign tax credit limitation for income received or accrued in a taxable year that is described in section (section category income), 904(d)(1)(B) (foreign branch category income), 904(d)(1)(C) (passive category income), 904(d)(1)(D) (general category income), or of this section (specified separate categories). For purposes of this section, the definitions in apply.
(b) Passive category income
(1) In general The term passive category income means passive income and specified passive category income.
(2) Passive income
(i) In general The term passive income means any—
(A) Income received or accrued by any person that is of a kind that would be foreign personal holding company income (as defined in section , taking into account any exceptions or exclusions to section , including, for example, section , (c)(6), (h), or (i)) if the taxpayer were a controlled foreign corporation, including any amount of gain on the sale or exchange of stock in excess of the amount treated as a dividend under section ;
(B) Amount includible in gross income under section ;
(C) Distributive shares of partnership income treated as passive category income under of this section, and income from the sale of a partnership interest treated as passive category income under of this section; or
(D) Income treated as passive category income under the look-through rules in .
(ii) Exceptions Passive income does not include any export financing interest (as defined in of this section), any high-taxed income (as defined in of this section), financial services income (as defined in of this section), or any active rents and royalties (as defined in of this section). In addition, passive income does not include any income that would otherwise be passive but is excluded from passive category income under or that is assigned to a separate category other than passive category income under . See also of this section for rules relating to income resourced under a tax treaty. In determining whether any income is of a kind that would be foreign personal holding company income, the rules of section and (6) (treating related person factoring income of a controlled foreign corporation as foreign personal holding company income that is not eligible for the export financing income exception to the separate limitation for passive income) shall apply only in the case of income of a controlled foreign corporation (as defined in section ). Thus, income earned directly by a United States person that is related person factoring income may be eligible for the exception for export financing interest.
(iii) Active rents or royalties
(A) In general For rents and royalties paid or accrued after September 20, 2004, passive income does not include any rents or royalties that are derived in the active conduct of a trade or business, regardless of whether such rents or royalties are received from a related or an unrelated person. Except as provided in of this section, the principles of section and the regulations under that section shall apply in determining whether rents or royalties are derived in the active conduct of a trade or business. For this purpose, the term taxpayer shall be substituted for the term controlled foreign corporation if the recipient of the rents or royalties is not a controlled foreign corporation.
(B) Active conduct of trade or business Rents and royalties are considered derived in the active conduct of a trade or business by a United States person or by a controlled foreign corporation (or other entity to which the look-through rules apply) for purposes of section (but not for purposes of section ) if the requirements of section are satisfied by one or more corporations that are members of an affiliated group of corporations (within the meaning of section , determined without regard to section ) of which the recipient is a member. For purposes of this , an affiliated group includes only domestic corporations and foreign corporations that are controlled foreign corporations in which domestic members of the affiliated group own, directly or indirectly, at least 80 percent of the total voting power and value of the stock. For purposes of this , indirect ownership shall be determined under section and the regulations under that section.
(iv) Examples The following examples illustrate the application of this .
(A) Example 1 For Year 1, USP, a domestic corporation, has a net foreign currency gain that would not constitute foreign personal holding company income if USP were a controlled foreign corporation because the gain is directly related to the business needs of USP. See section . Under of this section, the foreign currency gain is, therefore, not passive category income to USP because it is not income of a kind that would be foreign personal holding company income.
(B) Example 2 Controlled foreign corporation, CFC, is a wholly-owned subsidiary of USP, a domestic corporation. CFC is regularly engaged in the restaurant franchise business. USP licenses trademarks, tradenames, certain know-how, related services, and certain restaurant designs for which CFC pays USP an arm's length royalty. USP is regularly engaged in the development and licensing of such property. Some of the franchisees are unrelated to CFC and USP. Other franchisees are related to CFC or USP and use the licensed property outside of CFC's country of incorporation. CFC does not satisfy, but USP does satisfy, the active trade or business requirements of section . The royalty income earned by CFC from both its related and unrelated franchisees is foreign personal holding company income because CFC does not satisfy the active trade or business requirements of section and, in addition, the royalty income from the related franchisees does not qualify for the same country exception of section or the look-through exception in section . However, all of the royalty income earned by CFC is general category income to CFC under because USP, a member of CFC's affiliated group, satisfies the active trade or business test (which is applied without regard to whether the royalties are paid by a related person). USP's inclusion under section of CFC's royalty income is general category income to USP under and of this section. The royalties received by USP are general category income to USP under and of this section.
(3) Specified passive category income means—
(i) Dividends from a DISC or former DISC (as defined in section ) to the extent such dividends are treated as income from sources without the United States;
(ii) Taxable income attributable to foreign trade income (within the meaning of section 923(b)); or
(iii) Distributions from a FSC (or a former FSC) out of earnings and profits attributable to foreign trade income (within the meaning of section 923(b)) or interest or carrying charges (as defined in section 927(d)(1)) derived from a transaction which results in foreign trade income (as defined in section 923(b)).
(c) High-taxed income
(1) In general Income received or accrued by a United States person that would otherwise be passive income is not treated as passive income if the income is determined to be high-taxed income. Income is considered to be high-taxed income if, after allocating expenses, losses, and other deductions of the United States person to that income under of this section, the sum of the foreign income taxes paid or accrued, and deemed paid under section , by the United States person with respect to such income (reduced by any portion of such taxes for which a credit is not allowed) exceeds the highest rate of tax specified in section or , whichever applies (and with reference to section if applicable), multiplied by the amount of such income (including the amount treated as a dividend under section ). If, after application of this , income that would otherwise be passive income is determined to be high-taxed income, the income is treated as general category income, foreign branch category income, section category income, or income in a specified separate category, as determined under the rules of this section, and any taxes imposed on that income are considered related to the same separate category of income under . If, after application of this , passive income is zero or less than zero, any taxes imposed on the passive income are considered related to the same separate category of income to which the passive income (if not reduced to zero or less than zero) would have been assigned had the income been treated as high-taxed income (general category, foreign branch category, section category, or a specified separate category). For additional rules regarding losses related to passive income, see of this section. Income and taxes shall be translated at the appropriate rates, as determined under sections , and and the regulations under those sections, before application of this . For purposes of allocating taxes to groups of income, United States source passive income is treated as any other passive income. In making the determination whether income is high-taxed, however, only foreign source income, as determined under United States tax principles, is relevant.
(2) Grouping of items of income in order to determine whether passive income is high-taxed income
(i) Grouping rules —Initial allocation and apportionment of deductions and taxes. For purposes of determining whether passive income is high-taxed, expenses, losses and other deductions shall be allocated and apportioned initially to each of the groups of passive income (described in , , and of this section) under the rules of through and through . Taxpayers that allocate and apportion interest expense on an asset basis may nevertheless apportion passive interest expense among the groups of passive income on a gross income basis. Foreign taxes are allocated to groups under the rules of . If a loss on a disposition of property gives rise to foreign tax (i.e., the transaction giving rise to the loss is treated under foreign law as having given rise to a gain), the foreign tax shall be allocated to the group of passive income to which gain on the sale would have been assigned under or of this section. A determination of whether passive income is high-taxed shall be made only after application of of this section (if applicable).
(ii) Reallocation of loss groups If, after allocation and apportionment of expenses, losses and other deductions under of this section, the sum of the allocable deductions exceeds the gross income in one or more groups, the excess deductions shall proportionately reduce income in the other groups (but not below zero).
(iii) Coordination with section 904(b), (f) and (g) The determination of whether foreign source passive income is high-taxed is made before taking into account any adjustments under section or any allocation or recapture of a separate limitation loss, overall foreign loss, or overall domestic loss under section and (g).
(3) Amounts received or accrued by United States persons Except as otherwise provided in of this section, all passive income received by a United States person are subject to the rules of this . of this section provides additional rules for inclusions under section or that are passive income, dividends from a controlled foreign corporation or noncontrolled 10-percent owned foreign corporation that are passive income, and income that is received or accrued by a United States person through a foreign QBU that is passive income. For purposes of this , a foreign QBU is a qualified business unit (as defined in section ), other than a controlled foreign corporation or noncontrolled 10-percent owned foreign corporation, that has its principal place of business outside the United States. The rules in this apply whether the income is received from a controlled foreign corporation of which the United States person is a United States shareholder, from a noncontrolled 10-percent owned foreign corporation of which the United States person is a United States shareholder that is a domestic corporation, or from any other person. In applying the rules in this , passive income is not treated as subject to a withholding tax or other foreign tax when a credit is disallowed in full for such foreign tax, for example, under section . For purposes of determining whether passive income is high-taxed income, the following rules apply:
(i) All passive income received during the taxable year that is subject to a withholding tax of fifteen percent or greater shall be treated as one item of income.
(ii) All passive income received during the taxable year that is subject to a withholding tax of less than fifteen percent (but greater than zero) shall be treated as one item of income.
(iii) All passive income received during the taxable year that is subject to no withholding tax or other foreign tax shall be treated as one item of income.
(iv) All passive income received during the taxable year that is subject to no withholding tax but is subject to a foreign tax other than a withholding tax shall be treated as one item of income.
(4) Dividends and inclusions from controlled foreign corporations, dividends from noncontrolled 10-percent owned foreign corporations, and income attributable to foreign QBUs Except as provided in of this section, the rules of this apply to all dividends and all amounts included in gross income of a United States shareholder under section or with respect to the foreign corporation that (after application of the look-through rules of section and ) are attributable to passive income received or accrued by a controlled foreign corporation, all dividends from a noncontrolled 10-percent owned foreign corporation that are received or accrued by a United States shareholder that (after application of the look-through rules of section and ) are treated as passive income, and all amounts of passive income received or accrued by a United States person through a foreign QBU. The grouping rules of through of this section apply separately to dividends, to inclusions under section and to inclusions under section with respect to each controlled foreign corporation of which the taxpayer is a United States shareholder, and to dividends with respect to each noncontrolled 10-percent owned foreign corporation of which the taxpayer is a United States shareholder that is a domestic corporation. The grouping rules of through of this section also apply separately to income attributable to each tested unit, as defined in , of a controlled foreign corporation, and to each foreign QBU of a noncontrolled 10-percent owned foreign corporation or any other look-through entity defined in , or of any United States person.
(5) Special rules
(i) Certain rents and royalties All items of rent or royalty income to which an item of rent or royalty expense is directly allocable shall be treated as a single item of income and shall not be grouped with other amounts.
(ii) Treatment of partnership income A partner's distributive share of income from a foreign or domestic partnership that is treated as passive income under of this section (generally providing that a less than 10 percent partner's distributive share of partnership income is passive income) is treated as a single item of income and is not grouped with other amounts. A distributive share of income from a partnership that is treated as passive income under of this section is grouped according to the rules in of this section, except that the portion, if any, of the distributive share of income attributable to income earned by a domestic partnership through a foreign QBU is separately grouped under the rules of of this section.
(iii) Currency gain or loss
(A) Section 986(c) Any currency gain or loss with respect to a distribution received by a United States shareholder (other than a foreign QBU of that shareholder) of previously taxed earnings and profits that is recognized under section and that is treated as an item of passive income shall be subject to the rules provided in of this section.
(B) Section 987 For special rules relating to the allocation and apportionment of foreign income taxes to section items, see .
(C) Example The following example illustrates the application of this .
(1) Facts USP, a domestic corporation, owns all of the stock of CFC, a controlled foreign corporation organized and operating in Country X that uses the “u” as its functional currency. In Year 1, when the highest rate of U.S. tax in section is 21%, CFC earns 100u of passive category foreign personal holding company income subject to no foreign tax. When included in USP's income under section , the applicable exchange rate is 1u=$1x. Therefore, USP's section inclusion is $100x and no foreign taxes are deemed paid by USP with respect to the inclusion. At the end of Year 1, CFC has previously taxed earnings and profits of 100u and USP's basis in those earnings is $100x. In Year 2, CFC has no earnings and profits and distributes 100u to USP. The value of the earnings when distributed is $150x. Assume that under section , USP must recognize $50x of passive category income attributable to the appreciation of the previously taxed earnings and profits. Country X does not recognize any gain or loss on the distribution, but imposes a 10u withholding tax on USP with respect to the distribution.
(2) Analysis Because the section gain is not subject to any foreign withholding tax or other foreign tax, under of this section the section gain is grouped with other items of USP's income that are subject to no withholding tax or other foreign tax. Under of this section, the 10u withholding tax is related to passive category income. See section and for rules relating to the increase in limitation in the year of distribution of previously taxed earnings and profits.
(iv) Coordination with section 954(b)(4) For rules relating to passive income of a controlled foreign corporation that is exempt from subpart F treatment because the income is subject to high foreign tax, see section , , and .
(6) Application of this paragraph to additional taxes paid or deemed paid in the year of receipt of previously taxed income
(i) Determination made in year of inclusion The determination of whether an amount included in gross income under section or is high-taxed income is made in the taxable year the income is included in the gross income of the United States shareholder under section or (for purposes of this , the year of inclusion). Any increase in foreign taxes paid or accrued, or deemed paid, when the taxpayer receives an amount that is excluded from gross income under section and that is attributable to a controlled foreign corporation's earnings and profits relating to the amount previously included in gross income will not be considered in determining whether the amount included in income in the year of inclusion is high-taxed income.
(ii) Exception of this section shall not apply to an increase in tax in a case in which the taxpayer is required to adjust its foreign taxes in the year of inclusion under section .
(iii) Allocation of foreign taxes imposed on distributions of previously taxed income If an item of income is considered high-taxed income in the year of inclusion and of this section applies, then any increase in foreign income taxes imposed with respect to that item are considered to be related to the same separate category to which the income was assigned in the taxable year of inclusion. If an item of income is not considered to be high-taxed income in the year of inclusion and of this section applies, the following rules shall apply. The taxpayer shall treat an increase in taxes paid or accrued, or deemed paid, on any distribution of the earnings and profits attributable to the amount included in gross income in the year of inclusion as taxes related to passive income to the extent of the excess of the product of the highest rate of tax in section (determined with regard to section and determined as of the year of inclusion) and the amount of the inclusion (after allocation of parent expenses) over the taxes paid or accrued, or deemed paid, in the year of inclusion. The taxpayer shall treat any taxes paid or accrued, or deemed paid, on the distribution in excess of this amount as taxes related to the same category of income to which such inclusion would have been assigned had the income been treated as high-taxed income in the year of inclusion (general category income, section category income, or income in a specified separate category). If these additional taxes are not creditable in the year of distribution, the carryover rules of section apply (see section and for rules disallowing carryovers in the section category). For purposes of this , the foreign tax on an inclusion under section or is considered increased on distribution of the earnings and profits associated with that inclusion if the total of taxes paid and deemed paid on the inclusion and the distribution (taking into account any reductions in tax and any withholding taxes) exceeds the total taxes deemed paid in the year of inclusion. Any foreign currency loss associated with the earnings and profits that are distributed with respect to the inclusion is not to be considered as giving rise to an increase in tax.
(iv) Increase in taxes paid by successors If passive earnings and profits previously included in income of a United States shareholder are distributed to a person that was not a United States shareholder of the distributing corporation in the year the earnings were included, any increase in foreign taxes paid or accrued, or deemed paid, on that distribution is treated as taxes related to general category income (or income in a specified separate category, if applicable) in the case of earnings and profits previously included under section , and is treated as taxes related to section category income (or income in a specified separate category, if applicable) in the case of earnings and profits previously included under section , regardless of whether the previously-taxed income was considered high-taxed income under section in the year of inclusion.
(7) Application of this paragraph to certain reductions of tax on distributions of income
(i) In general If the effective rate of tax imposed by a foreign country on income of a foreign corporation that is included in a taxpayer's gross income is reduced under foreign law on distribution of such income, the rules of this apply at the time that the income is included in the taxpayer's gross income, without regard to the possibility of a subsequent reduction of foreign tax on the distribution. If the inclusion is considered to be high-taxed income, then the taxpayer must initially treat the inclusion as general category income, section category income, or income in a specified separate category as provided in of this section. When the foreign corporation distributes the earnings and profits to which the inclusion was attributable and the foreign tax on the inclusion is reduced, then if a redetermination of U.S. tax liability is required under , the taxpayer must redetermine whether the revised inclusion (if any) is considered to be high-taxed income. See (requiring a redetermination of the amount of the inclusion, the application of the high-tax exception under section , and the amount of foreign taxes deemed paid). If, taking into account the reduction in foreign tax, the inclusion is not considered high-taxed income, then the taxpayer, in redetermining its U.S. tax liability for the year or years affected, must treat the inclusion and the associated taxes (as reduced on the distribution) as passive category income and taxes. For purposes of this , the foreign tax on an inclusion under section or is considered reduced on distribution of the earnings and profits associated with the inclusion if the total taxes paid and deemed paid on the inclusion and the distribution (taking into account any reductions in tax and any withholding taxes) is less than the total taxes deemed paid in the year of inclusion. Therefore, any foreign currency gain associated with the earnings and profits that are distributed with respect to the inclusion is not taken into account in determining whether there is a reduction of tax requiring a redetermination of whether the inclusion is high-taxed income.
(ii) Allocation of reductions of foreign tax For purposes of of this section, reductions in foreign tax shall be allocated among the separate categories under the same principles as those of for allocating taxes among the separate categories. Thus, for purposes of determining to which year's taxes the reduction in taxes relates, foreign law shall apply. If, however, foreign law does not attribute a reduction in taxes to a particular year or years, then the reduction in taxes shall be attributable, on an annual last in-first out (LIFO) basis, to foreign taxes potentially subject to reduction that are associated with previously taxed income, then on a LIFO basis to foreign taxes associated with income that under of this section remains as passive income but that was excluded from subpart F income or tested income under section or section , and finally on a LIFO basis to foreign taxes associated with other earnings and profits. Furthermore, in applying the ordering rules of section , distributions shall be considered made on a LIFO basis first out of earnings described in section and (2), then on a LIFO basis out of earnings and profits associated with income that remains passive income under of this section but that was excluded from subpart F income or tested income under section or section , and finally on a LIFO basis out of other earnings and profits. For purposes of this , foreign law is not considered to attribute a reduction in tax to a particular year or years if foreign law attributes the tax reduction to a pool or group containing income from more than one taxable year and such pool or group is defined based on a characteristic of the income (for example, the rate of tax paid with respect to the income) rather than on the taxable year in which the income is derived.
(iii) Treatment of income excluded under section 954(b)(4) or section 951A(c)(2)(A)(i)(III) If the effective rate of tax imposed by a foreign country on income of a foreign corporation is reduced under foreign law on distribution of that income, the rules of section (including for purposes of determining tested income under section ) are applied in the year of inclusion without regard to the possibility of a subsequent reduction of foreign tax. See and . If a taxpayer excludes passive income from a controlled foreign corporation's foreign personal holding company income or tested income under section or section , then, notwithstanding the general rule of , the income is considered to be passive category income until distribution of that income. At that time, if after the redetermination of U.S. tax liability required under the taxpayer still elects to exclude the passive income under section or section , the rules of this apply to determine whether the income is high-taxed income upon distribution and, therefore, income in another separate category. For purposes of determining whether a reduction in tax is attributable to taxes on income excluded under section or section , the rules of of this section apply. The rules of of this section also apply for purposes of ordering distributions to determine whether such distributions are out of earnings and profits associated with such excluded income. For an example illustrating the operation of this , see of this section (Example 6).
(8) Examples The following examples illustrate the application of this . All of the examples assume that the highest tax rate under section is 21%, unless otherwise noted.
(i) Example 1 CFC, a controlled foreign corporation, is a wholly-owned subsidiary of domestic corporation USP. CFC is a single qualified business unit (QBU) operating in foreign Country X. In Year 1, CFC earns $130x of gross royalty income that is passive income from Country X sources, and incurs $30x of expenses that do not include any payments to USP. CFC's $100x of pre-tax passive income from the royalty is subject to $30x of foreign tax, and is included under section in USP's gross income for the taxable year. USP allocates $50x of expenses to the $100x (consisting of the $70x section inclusion and $30x section amount), resulting in net passive income of $50x. USP does not elect to exclude from subpart F under section the $70x of CFC's net passive income. After application of the high-tax kick-out rules of of this section, the $50x of USP's net passive income is treated as general category income, and the $30x of taxes deemed paid are treated as taxes imposed on general category income, because the foreign taxes paid and deemed paid on the income exceed the highest U.S. tax rate multiplied by the $50x of net passive income ($30x > $10.5x (21% × $50x)).
(ii) Example 2 CFC, a controlled foreign corporation, is a wholly-owned subsidiary of domestic corporation USP. CFC is incorporated and operating in Country Y and has a branch in Country Z. CFC has two QBUs (QBU Y and QBU Z). In Year 1, CFC earns $65x of gross royalty income that is passive income in Country Y through QBU Y and $65x of gross royalty income that is passive income in Country Z through QBU Z. CFC allocates $15x of expenses to the gross royalty income earned by each QBU, resulting in pre-tax passive income of $50x in each QBU. Country Y imposes $5x of foreign tax on the royalty income earned in Y, and Country Z imposes $10x of tax on royalty income earned in Z. All of CFC's income constitutes foreign personal holding company income that is passive income and is included under section in USP's gross income for the taxable year. USP allocates $50x of expenses pro rata to the $100x section inclusion attributable to the QBUs (consisting of the $45x section inclusion derived through QBU Y, the $5x section amount attributable to QBU Y, the $40x section inclusion derived through QBU Z, and the $10x section amount attributable to QBU Z), resulting in net passive income of $50x. Pursuant to of this section, the high-tax kickout rules must be applied separately to the subpart F inclusion attributable to the income earned by QBU Y and the income earned by QBU Z. After application of the high-tax kickout rules, the $25x of net passive income attributable to QBU Y will be treated as passive category income because the foreign taxes paid and deemed paid on the income do not exceed the highest U.S. tax rate multiplied by the $25x of net passive income ($5x < $5.25x (21% × $25x)). The $25x of net passive income attributable to QBU Z will be treated as general category income because the foreign taxes paid and deemed paid on the income exceed the highest U.S. tax rate multiplied by the $25x of net passive income ($10x > $5.25x (21% × $25x)).
(iii) Example 3 Domestic corporation USP operates in branch form in foreign countries X and Y. The branches are qualified business units (QBUs), within the meaning of section . In Year 1, QBU X earns passive royalty income, interest income, and rental income. All of the QBU X passive income is from Country Z sources. The royalty income is not subject to a withholding tax, and is not taxed by Country X, and the interest and the rental income are subject to a 4% and 10% withholding tax, respectively. QBU Y earns interest income in Country Y that is not subject to foreign tax. For purposes of determining whether USP's foreign source passive income is high-taxed income, the rental income and the interest income earned in QBU X are treated as one item of income pursuant to of this section. The interest income earned in QBU Y and the royalty income earned in QBU X are each treated as a separate item of income under and of this section. If, after allocation of expenses, QBU X's items of income composed of rental income and interest income are high-taxed income, the income may be treated as foreign branch category income.
(iv) Example 4 CFC, a controlled foreign corporation incorporated in foreign Country R, is a wholly-owned subsidiary of USP, a domestic corporation. USP and CFC have calendar year taxable years for both U.S. and Country R tax purposes. The highest tax rate under section is 34% and 21% in Year 1 and Year 2, respectively. For Year 1, USP is required under section to include in gross income $80x (not including the section amount) attributable to the earnings and profits of CFC for such year, all of which is foreign personal holding company income that is passive rent or royalty income. CFC does not make any distributions in Year 1. Foreign income taxes paid by CFC for Year 1 that are deemed paid by USP for such year under section with respect to the section inclusion equal $20x. USP properly allocates $30x of expenses to the section inclusion. The foreign income tax paid with respect to the section inclusion does not exceed the highest U.S. tax rate multiplied by the amount of income after allocation of USP's expenses ($20x < $23.80x (34% × $70x)). Thus, USP's section inclusion for Year 1 is included in USP's passive category income and the $20x of taxes attributable to that inclusion are treated as taxes related to passive category income. In Year 2, CFC distributes $70x to USP, and under section that distribution is treated as attributable to the earnings and profits with respect to the amount included in income by USP in Year 1 and is excluded from USP's gross income. Foreign Country R imposes a withholding tax of $14x on the distribution in Year 2. Under of this section, the withholding tax in Year 2 does not affect the characterization of the Year 1 inclusion as passive category income, nor does it affect the characterization of the $20x of taxes paid in Year 1 as taxes paid with respect to passive category income. No further expenses of USP are allocable to the receipt of that distribution. In Year 2, the foreign taxes paid ($14x) exceed the product of the highest U.S. tax rate and the amount of the inclusion reduced by taxes deemed paid in the year of inclusion ($14x > $3.80x ((34% × $70x) − $20x)). Thus, under of this section, $3.80x ((34% × $70x) − $20x) of the $14x withholding tax paid in Year 2 is treated as taxes related to passive category income and the remaining $10.20x ($14x − $3.80x) of the withholding tax is treated as related to general category income.
(v) Example 5 CFC, a controlled foreign corporation, is a wholly-owned subsidiary of USP, a domestic corporation. USP and CFC are calendar year taxpayers. In Year 1, CFC's only earnings consist of $200x of pre-tax passive income that is foreign personal holding company income that is earned in foreign Country X. Under Country X's tax system, the corporate tax on particular earnings is reduced on distribution of those earnings and no withholding tax is imposed. In Year 1, CFC pays $100x of foreign tax with respect to its passive income. USP does not elect to exclude this income from subpart F under section and includes $200x in gross income ($100x of net foreign personal holding company income and $100x of the amount under section (the “section dividend”)). At the time of the inclusion, the income is considered to be high-taxed income under and of this section and is general category income to USP ($100x > $42x (21% × $200x)). CFC does not distribute any of its earnings in Year 1. In Year 2, CFC has no additional earnings. On December 31, Year 2, CFC distributes the $100x of earnings from Year 1. At that time, CFC receives a $60x refund from Country X attributable to the reduction of the Country X corporate tax imposed on the Year 1 earnings. The refund is a foreign tax redetermination under that under and -1(d)(3)(iii) requires a redetermination of CFC's Year 1 subpart F income and the application of section , as well as a redetermination of USP's Year 1 inclusion under section , its deemed paid taxes under section , and its Year 1 U.S. tax liability. As recomputed taking into account the $60x refund, CFC's Year 1 passive category net foreign personal holding company income is increased by $60x to $160x, CFC's foreign income taxes attributable to that income are reduced from $100x to $40x, and the income still qualifies to be excluded from CFC's subpart F income under section ($40x > $37.80x (90% × 21% × $200x)). Assuming USP does not change its Year 1 election, USP's Year 1 inclusion under section is increased by $60x to $160x, and the associated deemed paid tax and section dividend are reduced by $60x to $40x. Under of this section, in connection with the adjustments required under section , USP must redetermine whether the adjusted Year 1 inclusion is high-taxed income of USP. Taking into account the $60x refund, the inclusion is not considered high-taxed income of USP ($40x < $42x (21% × $200x)). Therefore, USP must treat the $200x of income ($160x inclusion plus $40x section amount) and the $40x of taxes associated with the inclusion in Year 1 as passive category income and taxes. USP must also follow the appropriate procedures under .
(vi) Example 6 The facts are the same as in of this section (the facts in Example 5), except that in Year 1, USP elects to apply section to exclude CFC's passive income from its subpart F income, both before and after the recomputation of CFC's Year 1 subpart F income and USP's Year 1 U.S. tax liability that is required by reason of the Year 2 $60x foreign tax redetermination. Although the income is not considered to be subpart F income, under of this section it remains passive category income until distribution. In Year 2, the $100x distribution is a dividend to USP, because CFC has $160x of accumulated earnings and profits described in section (the $100x of earnings in Year 1 increased by the $60x refund received in Year 2 that under is taken into account in Year 1). Under of this section, USP must determine whether the dividend income is high-taxed income to USP in Year 2. The treatment of the dividend as passive category income may be relevant in determining deductions allocable or apportioned to such dividend income or related stock that are excluded in the computation of USP's foreign tax credit limitation under section in Year 2. See section . Under of this section, the dividend income is passive category income to USP because the foreign taxes paid and deemed paid by USP ($0x) with respect to the dividend income do not exceed the highest U.S. tax rate on that income.
(vii) Example 7 The facts are the same as in of this section (the facts in Example 5), except that the distribution in Year 2 is subject to a withholding tax of $25x. Under of this section, USP must redetermine whether its Year 1 inclusion should be considered high-taxed income of USP because there is a net $35x reduction ($60x refund of foreign corporate tax—$25x withholding tax) of foreign tax. By taking into account both the reduction in foreign corporate tax and the additional withholding tax, the inclusion continues to be considered high-taxed income of USP in Year 1 ($65x > $42x (21% × $200)). USP must follow the appropriate section procedures. USP must redetermine its U.S. tax liability for Year 1, but the Year 1 inclusion and the $65x taxes ($40x of deemed paid tax in Year 1 and $25x withholding tax in Year 2) will continue to be treated as general category income and taxes.
(viii) Example 8
(A) CFC, a controlled foreign corporation operating in Country G, is a wholly-owned subsidiary of USP, a domestic corporation. USP and CFC are calendar year taxpayers. Country G imposes a tax of 50% on CFC's earnings. Under Country G's system, the foreign corporate tax on particular earnings is reduced on distribution of those earnings to 30% and no withholding tax is imposed. Under Country G's law, distributions are treated as made out of a pool of undistributed earnings subject to the 50% tax rate. For Year 1, CFC's only earnings consist of passive income that is foreign personal holding company income that is earned in foreign Country G. CFC has taxable income of $110x for Federal income tax purposes and $100x for Country G purposes. Country G, therefore, imposes a tax of $50x on the Year 1 earnings of CFC. USP does not elect to exclude this income from subpart F under section and includes $110x in gross income ($60x of net foreign personal holding company income under section and $50x of the section dividend). The highest rate of tax under section in Year 1 is 34%. Therefore, at the time of the section inclusion, the income is considered to be high-taxed income under of this section ($50x > $37.4x (34% × $110x)) and is general category income to USP. CFC does not distribute any of its earnings in Year 1.
(B) In Year 2, CFC earns general category income that is not subpart F income or tested income. CFC again has $110x in taxable income for Federal income tax purposes and $100x in taxable income for Country G purposes, and CFC pays $50x of tax to foreign Country G. In Year 3, CFC has no taxable income or earnings. On December 31, Year 3, CFC distributes $60x of its total $120x of earnings and receives a refund of foreign tax of $24x. The $24x refund is a foreign tax redetermination under that under requires a redetermination of CFC's Year 1 subpart F income and USP's deemed paid taxes and Year 1 U.S. tax liability. Country G treats the distribution of earnings as out of the 50% tax rate pool of $200x of earnings accumulated in Year 1 and Year 2, as calculated for Country G tax purposes. However, under of this section, the distribution, and, therefore, the reduction of tax is treated as first attributable to the $60x of passive category earnings attributable to income previously taxed in Year 1, and none of the distribution is treated as made out of the $60x of earnings accumulated in Year 2 (which is not previously taxed). Because 40 percent (the reduction in tax rates from 50 percent to 30 percent is a 40 percent reduction in the tax) of the $50x of foreign taxes attributable to the $60x of Year 1 passive income as calculated for Federal income tax purposes is refunded, $20x of the $24x foreign tax refund reduces foreign taxes on CFC's Year 1 passive income from $50x to $30x. The other $4x of the tax refund reduces the taxes imposed in Year 2 on CFC's general category income from $50x to $46x.
(C) Under of this section, in connection with the section adjustment USP must redetermine whether its Year 1 subpart F inclusion is considered high-taxed income. By taking into account the reduction in foreign tax, the inclusion is increased by $20x to $80x, the deemed paid taxes are reduced by $20x to $30x, and the inclusion is not considered high-taxed income ($30x < 34% × $110x). Therefore, USP must treat the revised section inclusion and the taxes associated with the section inclusion as passive category income and taxes in Year 1. USP must follow the appropriate procedures under .
(ix) Example 9 USP, a domestic corporation, earns $100x of passive royalty income from sources within the United States. Under the laws of Country X, however, that royalty is considered to be from sources within Country X, and Country X imposes a 5% withholding tax on the payment of the royalty. USP also earns $100x of foreign source passive dividend income from Country Y subject to a 10% withholding tax to which $15x of expenses are allocated. In determining whether USP's passive income is high-taxed, the $5x withholding tax on USP's royalty income is allocated to passive income, and to the group of passive income described in of this section (passive income subject to a withholding tax of less than 15% (but greater than zero)). For purposes of determining whether the income is high-taxed, however, only the $85x of foreign source dividend income (and not the $100x of U.S. source royalty income) is taken into account. The foreign source dividend income is treated as passive category income because the foreign taxes paid on the passive income in the group ($15x) do not exceed the highest U.S. tax rate multiplied by the $85x of net foreign source income in the group ($15x < $17.85x ($100x − $15x) × 21%).
(x) Example 10 In Year 1, P, a U.S. citizen with a tax home in Country X, earns the following items of gross income: $400x of foreign source, passive interest income not subject to foreign withholding tax but subject to Country X income tax of $100x, $200x of foreign source, passive royalty income subject to a 5% foreign withholding tax (foreign tax paid is $10x), $1,300x of foreign source, passive rental income subject to a 25% foreign withholding tax (foreign tax paid is $325x), $500x of foreign source, general category loss, and $2,000x of U.S. source capital gain that is not subject to any foreign tax. P has a $900x deduction allocable to its passive rental income. P's only other deduction is a $700x capital loss on the sale of stock that is allocated to foreign source passive category income under . The $700x capital loss is initially allocated to the group of passive income described in of this section (passive income subject to no withholding tax but subject to foreign tax other than withholding tax). This group comprises the $400x of interest income not subject to foreign withholding tax but subject to Country X income tax. Under of this section, the $300x amount by which the capital loss exceeds the income in the group must be reallocated to the net income in the other groups described in of this section, but the $500x general category separate limitation loss is not allocated until the high-tax kickout rules are applied to determine whether the passive income is high-taxed income. P's $200x of royalty income subject to a 5% withholding tax is described in of this section (passive income that is subject to a withholding tax of less than 15%, but greater than zero). P's $1,300x of rental income subject to a 25% withholding tax is described in of this section (passive income that is subject to a withholding tax of 15% or greater). The $1,300x of rental income is reduced by the $900x deduction allocable to such income. Therefore, the total net income in the other groups under paragraph (c)(3) is $600x, the $200x of royalty income and the $400x of rental income. The ($300x) net loss in the net basis tax group thus reduces the royalty income by $100x to $100x ($200x − ($300x × (200x/600x))) and the rental income by $200x to $200x ($400x − ($300x × (400x/600x))). The $100x of net royalty income is not high-taxed and remains passive category income because the foreign taxes of $10x do not exceed the highest U.S. rate of tax on that income, which is 37% for individuals ($10x < $37x (37% × $100x)). Under the high-tax kickout, the $200x of rental income and the $325x of associated foreign tax are assigned to the general category.
(xi) Example 11 The facts are the same as in of this section (the facts in Example 10), except the amount of the capital loss that is allocated under and of this section to the group of foreign source passive income subject to no withholding tax but subject to foreign tax other than withholding tax is $1,200x. Under of this section, the excess deductions of $800x must be reallocated to the $200x of net royalty income subject to a 5% withholding tax and the $400x of net rental income subject to a 15% or greater withholding tax. The income in each of these groups is reduced to zero, and the foreign taxes imposed on the rental and royalty income are considered related to general category income. The remaining loss of $200x constitutes a separate limitation loss with respect to passive category income.
(xii) Example 12 In Year 1, USP, a domestic corporation, earns a $100x dividend that is foreign source passive income subject to a 30% withholding tax. The dividend is not paid by a specified 10-percent owned foreign corporation (as defined in section ). A foreign tax credit for the withholding tax on the dividend is disallowed under section . A deduction for the tax is allowed, however, under sections and . In determining whether USP's passive income is high-taxed, under of this section the $100x dividend and the $30x deduction are allocated to the group of income described in of this section (passive income subject to no withholding tax or other foreign tax).
(d) General category income The term general category income means all income other than passive category income, foreign branch category income, section category income, and income in a specified separate category. Any item that is excluded from the passive category under or of this section or is included in general category income only to the extent that such item does not meet the definition of another separate category. General category income also includes income treated as general category income under the look-through rules referenced in .
(e) Financial services income
(1) In general
(i) Treatment of financial services income Passive income that is characterized as financial services income is not assigned to the passive category but is assigned in accordance with this . Financial services income that meets the definition of foreign branch category income (see of this section) is treated as income in that category. Financial services income of a controlled foreign corporation that is included in gross income of a United States shareholder under section is treated as section category income in the hands of the United States shareholder. Financial services income that is neither treated as foreign branch category income nor treated as section category income is treated as general category income. Distributions, interest, rents, or royalties received from a related person that is a financial services entity that would be assigned to the passive category under the look-through rules in , but for the fact such amounts are paid by a financial services entity (and, therefore, not attributable to passive category income of the payor), are assigned to separate categories (other than the passive category) under the rules in this section.
(ii) Definition of financial services income The term financial services income means income derived by a financial services entity, as defined in of this section, that is:
(A) Income derived in the active conduct of a banking, insurance, financing, or similar business (active financing income as defined in of this section);
(B) Passive income as defined in section and of this section as determined before the application of the exception for high-taxed income but after the application of the exception for export financing interest; or
(C) Incidental income as defined in of this section.
(2) Active financing income
(i) Income included For purposes of and of this section, income is active financing income only if it is described in any of the following subdivisions.
(A) Income that is of a kind that would be insurance income as defined in section (including related party insurance income as defined in section ) and determined without regard to those provisions of section that limit insurance income to income from countries other than the country in which the corporation was created or organized.
(B) Income from the investment by an insurance company of its unearned premiums or reserves ordinary and necessary to the proper conduct of the insurance business, income from providing services as an insurance underwriter, income from insurance brokerage or agency services, and income from loss adjuster and surveyor services.
(C) Income from investing funds in circumstances in which the taxpayer holds itself out as providing a financial service by the acceptance or the investment of such funds, including income from investing deposits of money and income earned investing funds received for the purchase of traveler's checks or face amount certificates.
(D) Income from making personal, mortgage, industrial, or other loans.
(E) Income from purchasing, selling, discounting, or negotiating on a regular basis, notes, drafts, checks, bills of exchange, acceptances, or other evidences of indebtedness.
(F) Income from issuing letters of credit and negotiating drafts drawn thereunder.
(G) Income from providing trust services.
(H) Income from arranging foreign exchange transactions, or engaging in foreign exchange transactions.
(I) Income from purchasing stock, debt obligations, or other securities from an issuer or holder with a view to the public distribution thereof or offering or selling stock, debt obligations, or other securities for an issuer or holder in connection with the public distribution thereof, or participating in any such undertaking.
(J) Income earned by broker-dealers in the ordinary course of business (such as commissions) from the purchase or sale of stock, debt obligations, commodities futures, or other securities or financial instruments and dividend and interest income earned by broker dealers on stock, debt obligations, or other financial instruments that are held for sale.
(K) Service fee income from investment and correspondent banking.
(L) Income from interest rate and currency swaps.
(M) Income from providing fiduciary services.
(N) Income from services with respect to the management of funds.
(O) Bank-to-bank participation income.
(P) Income from providing charge and credit card services or for factoring receivables obtained in the course of providing such services.
(Q) Income from financing purchases from third parties.
(R) Income from gains on the disposition of tangible or intangible personal property or real property that was used in the active financing business (as defined in of this section) but only to the extent that the property was held to generate or generated active financing income prior to its disposition.
(S) Income from hedging gain with respect to other active financing income.
(T) Income from providing traveller's check services.
(U) Income from servicing mortgages.
(V) Income from a finance lease. For this purpose, a finance lease is any lease that is a direct financing lease or a leveraged lease for accounting purposes and is also a lease for tax purposes.
(W) [Reserved]
(X) Income from providing investment advisory services, custodial services, agency paying services, collection agency services, and stock transfer agency services.
(Y) Any similar item of income that is disclosed in the manner provided in the instructions to the Form 1118 or 1116 or that is designated as a similar item of income in guidance published by the Internal Revenue Service.
(3) Financial services entities
(i) In general The term “financial services entity” means an individual or entity that is predominantly engaged in the active conduct of a banking, insurance, financing, or similar business (active financing business) for any taxable Year. Except as provided in of this section, a determination of whether an entity is a financial services entity shall be done on an entity-by-entity basis. An individual or entity is predominantly engaged in the active financing business for any year if for that year at least 80 percent of its gross income is income described in of this section. For this purpose, gross income includes all income realized by an individual or entity, whether includible or excludible from gross income under other operative provisions of the Code, but excludes gain from the disposition of stock of a corporation that prior to the disposition of its stock is related to the transferor within the meaning of section . For this purpose, income received from a related person that is a financial services entity shall be excluded if such income is characterized under the look-through rules of section and . In addition, income received from a related person that is not a financial services entity but that is characterized as financial services income under the look-through rules shall be excluded. Any income received from a related person that is characterized under the look-through rules and that is not otherwise excluded by this paragraph will retain its character either as active financing income or other income in the hands of the recipient for purposes of determining if the recipient is a financial services entity and if the income is financial services income to the recipient. For purposes of this paragraph, related person is defined in .
(ii) Special rule for affiliated groups In the case of any corporation that is not a financial services entity under of this section, but is a member of an affiliated group, such corporation will be deemed to be a financial services entity if the affiliated group as a whole meets the requirements of of this section. For purposes of this , affiliated group means an affiliated group as defined in section , determined without regard to section . In counting the income of the group for purposes of determining whether the group meets the requirements of of this section, the following rules apply. Only the income of group members that are United States corporations or foreign corporations that are controlled foreign corporations in which United States members of the affiliated group own, directly or indirectly, at least 80 percent of the total voting power and value of the stock shall be included. For purposes of this , indirect ownership shall be determined under section and the regulations under that section. The income of the group will not include any income from transactions with other members of the group. Passive income will not be considered to be active financing income merely because that income is earned by a member of the group that is a financial services entity without regard to the rule of this .
(iii) Treatment of partnerships and other pass-through entities For purposes of determining whether a partner (including a partnership that is a partner in a second partnership) is a financial services entity, all of the partner's income shall be taken into account, except that income that is excluded under of this section shall not be taken into account. Thus, if a partnership is determined to be a financial services entity none of the income of the partner received from the partnership that is characterized under the look-through rules shall be included for purpose of determining if the partner is a financial services entity. If a partnership is determined not to be a financial services entity, then income of the partner from the partnership that is characterized under the look-through rules will be taken into account (unless such income is financial services income) and such income will retain its character either as active financing income or as other income in the hands of the partner for purposes of determining if the partner is a financial service entity and if the income is financial services income to the partner. If a partnership is a financial services entity and the partner's income from the partnership is characterized as financial services income under the look-through rules, then, for purposes of determining a partner's foreign tax credit limitation, the income from the partnership shall be considered to be financial services income to the partner regardless of whether the partner is itself a financial services entity. The rules of this will apply for purposes of determining whether an owner of an interest in any other pass-through entity the character of the income of which is preserved when such income is included in the income of the owner of the interest is a financial services entity.
(iv) [Reserved]
(4) Definition of incidental income
(i) In general
(A) Rule Incidental income is income that is integrally related to active financing income of a financial services entity. Such income includes, for example, income from precious metals trading and commodity trading that is integrally related to futures income. If securities, shares of stock, or other types of property are acquired by a financial services entity as an ordinary and necessary incident to the conduct of an active financing business, the income from such property will be considered to be financial services income but only so long as the retention of such property remains an ordinary or necessary incident to the conduct of such business. Thus property, including stock, acquired as the result of, or in order to prevent, a loss in an active financing business upon a loan held by the taxpayer in the ordinary course of such business will be considered ordinary and necessary to the conduct of such business, but income from such property will be considered financial services income only so long as the holding of such property remains an ordinary and necessary incident to the conduct of such business. If an entity holds such property for five years or less then the property is considered held incident to the financial services business. If an entity holds such property for more than five years, a presumption will be established that the entity is not holding such property incident to its financial services business. An entity will be able to rebut the presumption by demonstrating that under the facts and circumstances it is not holding the property as an investment. However, the fact that an entity holds the property for more than five years and is not able to rebut the presumption that it is not holding the property incident to its financial services business will not affect the characterization of any income received from the property during the first five years as financial services income.
(B) [Reserved]
(ii) Income that is not incidental income Income that is attributable to non-financial activity is not incidental income within the meaning of and of this section solely because such income represents a relatively small proportion of the taxpayer's total income or that the taxpayer engages in non-financial activity on a sporadic basis. Thus, for example, income from data processing services provided to related or unrelated parties or income from the sale of goods or non-financial services (for example travel services) is not financial services income, even if the recipient is a financial services entity.
(f) Foreign branch category income
(1) Foreign branch category income
(i) In general Except as provided in , , or of this section, the term foreign branch category income means income of a United States person, other than a pass-through entity, that is—
(A) Income attributable to foreign branches of the United States person held directly or indirectly through disregarded entities;
(B) A distributive share of partnership income that is attributable to foreign branches held by the partnership directly or indirectly through disregarded entities, or held indirectly by the partnership through another partnership or other pass-through entity that holds the foreign branch directly or indirectly through disregarded entities; and
(C) Income from other pass-through entities determined under principles similar to those described in of this section.
(ii) Passive category income excluded from foreign branch category income Income assigned to the passive category under of this section is not foreign branch category income, regardless of whether the income is described in of this section. Income that is treated as passive category income under the look-through rules in is also excluded from foreign branch category income, regardless of whether the income is attributable to a foreign branch. However, income that would be passive category income but for the application of section (export financing interest and high-taxed income) or 904(d)(2)(C) (financial services income) and also meets the definition of foreign branch category income is foreign branch category income.
(iii) Income arising from U.S. activities excluded from foreign branch category income Gross income that is attributable to a foreign branch and that arises from activities carried out in the United States by any foreign branch, including income that is reflected on a foreign branch's separate books and records, is not assigned to the foreign branch category. Instead, such income is assigned to the general category or a specified separate category under the rules of this section. However, under of this section, gross income (including U.S. source gross income) attributable to activities carried on outside the United States by the foreign branch may be assigned to the foreign branch category by reason of a disregarded payment to a foreign branch from a foreign branch owner or another foreign branch that is allocable to income recorded on the books and records of the payor foreign branch or foreign branch owner.
(iv) Income arising from stock excluded from foreign branch category income
(A) In general Except as provided in of this section, gross income that is attributable to a foreign branch and that comprises items of income arising from stock of a corporation (whether foreign or domestic), including gain from the disposition of such stock or any inclusion under section , , , or , is not assigned to the foreign branch category. Instead, such income is assigned to the general category or a specified separate category under the rules of this section.
(B) Exception for dealer property of this section does not apply to gain recognized from dispositions of stock of a corporation, if the stock would be dealer property (as defined in ) if the foreign branch were a controlled foreign corporation.
(2) Gross income attributable to a foreign branch
(i) In general Except as provided in this , gross income is attributable to a foreign branch to the extent the gross income (as adjusted to conform to Federal income tax principles) is reflected on the separate set of books and records (as defined in and ) of the foreign branch. Gross income that is not attributable to the foreign branch and is therefore attributable to the foreign branch owner is income in a separate category (other than the foreign branch category) under the other rules of this section.
(ii)-(iii) [Reserved]
(iv) Disposition of interests in certain entities
(A) In general Except as provided in of this section, gross income attributable to a foreign branch does not include gain from the disposition of an interest in a partnership or other pass-through entity or an interest in a disregarded entity. See also of this section for general rules relating to the sale of a partnership interest.
(B) Exception for sales by a foreign branch in the ordinary course of business The rule in of this section does not apply to gain from the sale or exchange of an interest in a partnership or other pass-through entity or an interest in a disregarded entity if the gain is reflected on the books and records of a foreign branch and the interest is held by the foreign branch in the ordinary course of its active trade or business. An interest is considered to be held in the ordinary course of the foreign branch's active trade or business only if the foreign branch—
(1) Directly engages in the same, or a related, trade or business as that partnership, other pass-through entity, or disregarded entity; and
(2) In the case of a partnership or other pass-through entity, the foreign branch owns 10 percent or more of the capital or profits interests in the partnership or other pass-through entity.
(v) Adjustments to items of gross income reflected on the books and records If a principal purpose of recording or failing to record an item of gross income on the books and records of a foreign branch, or of making or not making a disregarded payment described in of this section, is the avoidance of Federal income tax, the purposes of section , or the purposes of section (in connection with section ), the item must be attributed to one or more foreign branches or the foreign branch owner in a manner that reflects the substance of the transaction. For purposes of this , interest received by a foreign branch from a related person is presumed to be attributable to the foreign branch owner (and not to the foreign branch) unless the interest income meets the definition of financial services income under of this section. For purposes of this , a related person is any person that bears a relationship to the foreign branch owner described in section or .
(vi) Attribution of gross income to which disregarded payments are allocable
(A) In general If a foreign branch makes a disregarded payment to its foreign branch owner or a second foreign branch, and the disregarded payment is allocable to gross income that would be attributable to the foreign branch under the rules in through of this section, the gross income attributable to the foreign branch is adjusted downward (but not below zero) to reflect the allocable amount of the disregarded payment, and the gross income attributable to the foreign branch owner or the second foreign branch is adjusted upward by the same amount as the downward adjustment, translated (if necessary) from the foreign branch's functional currency to U.S. dollars (or the second foreign branch's functional currency, as applicable) at the spot rate (as defined in ) on the date of the disregarded payment. For rules addressing multiple disregarded payments in a taxable year, see of this section. Similarly, if a foreign branch owner makes a disregarded payment to its foreign branch and the disregarded payment is allocable to gross income attributable to the foreign branch owner, the gross income attributable to the foreign branch owner is adjusted downward (but not below zero) to reflect the allocable amount of the disregarded payment, and the gross income attributable to the foreign branch is adjusted upward by the same amount as the downward adjustment, translated (if necessary) from U.S. dollars to the foreign branch's functional currency at the spot rate on the date of the disregarded payment. An adjustment to the amount of attributable gross income under this does not change the total amount, character, or source of the United States person's gross income; does not change the amount of a United States person's income in any separate category other than the foreign branch and general categories (or a specified separate category associated with the foreign branch and general categories); and has no bearing on the analysis of whether an item of gross income is eligible to be resourced under an income tax treaty.
(B) Allocation of disregarded payments
(1) In general Except as provided in of this section, whether a disregarded payment is allocable to gross income attributable to a foreign branch or gross income attributable to its foreign branch owner, and the source and separate category of the gross income to which the disregarded payment is allocable, is determined under the following rules:
(i) Disregarded payments from a foreign branch owner to its foreign branch are allocable to gross income attributable to the foreign branch owner to the extent a deduction for that payment or any disregarded cost recovery deduction relating to that payment, if regarded, would be allocated and apportioned to gross income attributable to the foreign branch owner under the principles of through and (without regard to exclusive apportionment) by treating foreign source gross income and U.S. source gross income in each separate category (determined prior to the application of this to the disregarded payment at issue) each as a statutory grouping; and
(ii) Disregarded payments from a foreign branch to its foreign branch owner or to another foreign branch are allocable to gross income attributable to the payor foreign branch to the extent a deduction for that payment or any disregarded cost recovery deduction relating to that payment, if regarded, would be allocated and apportioned to gross income attributable to the payor foreign branch under the principles of through and (without regard to exclusive apportionment) by treating foreign source gross income and U.S. source gross income in each separate category (determined before the application of this to the disregarded payment at issue) each as a statutory grouping.
(2) Special rule for certain disregarded payments Whether a disregarded payment made in connection with a sale or exchange of property is allocable to gross income attributable to a foreign branch or its foreign branch owner, and the source and separate category of the gross income to which the disregarded payment is allocable, is determined under the following rules:
(i) Except as provided in of this section, disregarded payments from a foreign branch owner to its foreign branch in respect of non-inventory property are allocable to the gross income attributable to the foreign branch owner, if any, that is recognized with respect to a regarded sale or exchange of that property (including gross income arising in a later taxable year) to the extent of the adjusted disregarded gain with respect to the transferred property, and in the same proportions as the source and separate category of the gain recognized on the regarded sale or exchange of the transferred property;
(ii) Except as provided in of this section, disregarded payments from a foreign branch to its foreign branch owner or to another foreign branch in respect of non-inventory property are allocable to the gross income attributable to the foreign branch, if any, that is recognized with respect to a regarded sale or exchange of that property (including gross income arising in a later taxable year) to the extent of the adjusted disregarded gain with respect to the transferred property, and in the same proportions as the source and separate category of the gain recognized on the regarded sale or exchange of the transferred property; and
(iii) The principles of and of this section apply in the case of disregarded payments in respect of inventory property between a foreign branch and its foreign branch owner or between foreign branches to the extent the disregarded payment, if regarded, would, for purposes of determining gross income, be subtracted from gross receipts that are regarded for Federal income tax purposes.
(3) Timing of reattribution
(i) In general The gross income attributable to the foreign branch is adjusted under of this section only in the taxable year that a disregarded payment, if regarded, would be allowed as a deduction (including by giving rise to disregarded cost recovery deductions), or otherwise would be taken into account as an increase to cost of goods sold.
(ii) Disregarded sales of property The gross income attributable to a foreign branch is adjusted under of this section only in the taxable year or years in which gain is recognized by reason of the disposition of property with an adjusted disregarded basis in a transaction that is regarded for Federal income tax purposes.
(C) Exclusion of certain disregarded payments of this section does not apply to the following payments, accruals, or other transfers between a foreign branch and its foreign branch owner, or between foreign branches, that are disregarded for Federal income tax purposes:
(1) Interest, and interest equivalents that, if regarded, would be described in and -9T(b);
(2) Remittances from the foreign branch to its foreign branch owner, except as provided in of this section;
(3) Contributions of money, securities, and other property from the foreign branch owner to its foreign branch, except as provided in of this section; or
(4) Any disregarded payment that, if made to a foreign branch and regarded for Federal income tax purposes, could not result in the attribution of gross income to a foreign branch (for example, the sale of an interest in a partnership by a foreign branch to its foreign branch owner, unless the sale or exchange occurred in the ordinary course of business within the meaning of of this section).
(D) Certain transfers of intangible property
(1) In general For purposes of applying this , the amount of gross income attributable to a foreign branch (and the amount of gross income attributable to its foreign branch owner) must be adjusted under the principles of of this section to reflect all transactions that are disregarded for Federal income tax purposes in which property described in section is transferred to or from a foreign branch or between foreign branches, whether or not a disregarded payment is made in connection with the transfer. In determining the amount of gross income that is attributable to a foreign branch that must be adjusted by reason of this , the principles of sections and apply. For example, if a foreign branch owner transfers property described in section to a foreign branch, the principles of section are applied by treating the foreign branch as a separate foreign corporation to which the property is transferred in exchange for stock of the corporation in a transaction described in section . Similarly, if a foreign branch remits property described in section to its foreign branch owner, the foreign branch is treated as having sold the transferred property to the foreign branch owner in exchange for annual payments contingent on the productivity or use of the property, the amounts of which are determined under the principles of section .
(2) Transactions occurring before December 7, 2018 of this section does not apply to a disregarded transfer of property that occurred before December 7, 2018.
(3) Transitory ownership
(i) In general of this section does not apply to disregarded transfers of property by a foreign branch or a foreign branch owner (such foreign branch or foreign branch owner, the limited transferor), if the conditions in and of this section are met.
(ii) Transitory ownership period The limited transferor's ownership of the property is transitory.
(iii) Use of property The limited transferor does not develop, exploit, or otherwise employ the property in a trade or business, other than in the ordinary course of the limited transferor's business during the period of transitory ownership.
(iv) Predecessors For purposes of and of this section, a reference to a limited transferor that is a foreign branch owner includes any predecessor to the foreign branch owner. No person is a predecessor with respect to a foreign branch under this .
(4) Multiple transfers of intangible property If the same intangible property is transferred in a series of transfers described in of this section, each successive transfer is separately subject to the provisions of paragraph (f)(2)(vi)(D)(1) and will not terminate or otherwise affect the application of paragraph (f)(2)(vi)(D)(1) to a prior transfer described in paragraph (f)(2)(vi)(D)(1).
(E) Amount of disregarded payments The amount of each disregarded payment used to make an adjustment under this (or the absence of any adjustment) must be determined in a manner that results in the attribution of the proper amount of gross income to each of a foreign branch and its foreign branch owner under the principles of section , applied as if the foreign branch were a corporation.
(F) Multiple disregarded payments In the case of multiple disregarded payments, this is applied with respect to each disregarded payment, and under the ordering rules specified in and of this section. For purposes of this , of this section applies before of this section.
(1) Income initially attributable to a foreign branch In applying this to gross income that would, but for this , be attributable to a foreign branch, adjustments related to disregarded payments from a foreign branch to another foreign branch are computed first, followed by adjustments related to disregarded payments from a foreign branch to its foreign branch owner, followed by adjustments related to disregarded payments from a foreign branch owner to its foreign branch.
(2) Income initially attributable to a foreign branch owner In applying this to gross income that would, but for this , be attributable to a foreign branch owner, adjustments related to disregarded payments from a foreign branch owner to a foreign branch are computed first, followed by adjustments related to disregarded payments from a foreign branch to another foreign branch, followed by adjustments related to disregarded payments from a foreign branch to its foreign branch owner.
(G) Effect of disregarded payments made and received by non-branch taxable units
(1) In general For purposes of determining the amount, source, and character of gross income attributable to a foreign branch and its foreign branch owner under of this section, the rules of of this section apply to a non-branch taxable unit as though the non-branch taxable unit were a foreign branch or a foreign branch owner, as appropriate, to attribute gross income to the non-branch taxable unit and to further attribute, under this , the income of a non-branch taxable unit to one or more foreign branches or to a foreign branch owner. See of this section (Example 16).
(2) Foreign branch group income The income of a foreign branch group is attributed to the foreign branch that owns the group. The income of a foreign branch group is the aggregate of the U.S. gross income that is attributed, under the rules of this , to each member of the foreign branch group, determined after accounting for all disregarded payments made and received by each member of the foreign branch group.
(3) Foreign branch owner group income The income of a foreign branch owner group is attributed to the foreign branch owner that owns the group. The income of a foreign branch owner group income is the aggregate of the U.S. gross income that is attributed, under the rules of this , to each member of the foreign branch owner group, determined after accounting for all disregarded payments made and received by each member of the foreign branch owner group.
(3) Definitions The following definitions apply for purposes of this .
(i) Adjusted disregarded basis The term adjusted disregarded basis means, with respect to property transferred in a transaction that is disregarded for Federal income tax purposes, the tentative disregarded basis of the property—
(A) Reduced by any disregarded cost recovery deductions with respect to the property; and
(B) Increased by any disregarded section expenditures with respect to the property.
(ii) Adjusted disregarded gain
(A) In general The term adjusted disregarded gain means, with respect to property transferred in a transaction that is disregarded for Federal income tax purposes, the lesser of—
(1) The adjusted disregarded basis of the property, reduced by the adjusted basis of the property at the time the property was transferred in a transaction that is disregarded for Federal income tax purposes; and
(2) The gain (if any) attributable to a regarded sale or exchange of the transferred property.
(B) Limitation Adjusted disregarded gain may not be less than zero.
(iii) Disregarded cost recovery deduction For a taxable year, the term disregarded cost recovery deduction means, with respect to property transferred in a transaction that is disregarded for Federal income tax purposes—
(A) The amounts that would be allowed as a deduction, and that would give rise to an adjustment described in section , with respect to the transferred property if the transfer (and the foreign branch) were regarded for Federal income tax purposes, to the extent that, under of this section, the deduction would be allocable to—
(1) Gross income attributable to a foreign branch owner, in the case of property transferred to a foreign branch owner; or
(2) Gross income attributable to a foreign branch, in the case of property transferred to a foreign branch; reduced by
(B) The amounts that are allowed as a deduction, and that give rise to an adjustment described in section , with respect to the transferred property to the extent that, under the principles of of this section, the deduction would be allocable to—
(1) Gross income attributable to a foreign branch owner, in the case of property transferred to a foreign branch owner; or
(2) Gross income attributable to a foreign branch, in the case of property transferred to a foreign branch.
(iv) Disregarded entity The term disregarded entity means an entity described in that is disregarded as an entity separate from its owner for Federal income tax purposes.
(v) Disregarded payment A disregarded payment includes an amount of property (within the meaning of section ) that is transferred to or from a non-branch taxable unit, foreign branch, or foreign branch owner, including a payment in exchange for property or in satisfaction of an account payable, or a remittance or contribution, in connection with a transaction that is disregarded for Federal income tax purposes and that is reflected on the separate set of books and records of a non-branch taxable unit (other than an individual or domestic corporation) or a foreign branch. A disregarded payment also includes any other amount that is reflected on the separate set of books and records of a non-branch taxable unit (other than an individual or a domestic corporation) or a foreign branch in connection with a transaction that is disregarded for Federal income tax purposes and that would constitute an item of accrued income, gain, deduction, or loss of the non-branch taxable unit (other than an individual or a domestic corporation) or the foreign branch if the transaction to which the amount is attributable were regarded for Federal income tax purposes.
(vi) Disregarded section 1016(a)(1) expenditure The term disregarded section expenditure means a disregarded payment that, if regarded for Federal income tax purposes, would be described in section and that, under the principles of of this section, would be allocable to—
(A) General category gross income, in the case of property held by a foreign branch owner; or
(B) Foreign branch category income, in the case of property held by a foreign branch.
(vii) Foreign branch
(A) In general The term foreign branch means a qualified business unit (QBU), as defined in and , that conducts a trade or business outside the United States. For an illustration of the principles of this , see of this section (Example 1).
(B) Trade or business outside the United States Activities carried out in the United States, whether or not such activities are described in , do not constitute the conduct of a trade or business outside the United States. Activities carried out outside the United States that constitute a permanent establishment under the terms of an income tax treaty between the United States and the country in which the activities are carried out constitute a trade or business conducted outside the United States for purposes of this . In determining whether activities constitute a trade or business under , disregarded payments are taken into account and may give rise to a trade or business, provided that the activities (together with any other activities of the QBU) would otherwise satisfy the rule in .
(C) Activities of a partnership, estate, trust, or corporation
(1) Treatment as a foreign branch For purposes of this , the activities of a partnership, estate, trust, or corporation that conducts a trade or business that satisfies the requirements of (as modified by of this section) are—
(i) Deemed to satisfy the requirements of ; and
(ii) Comprise a foreign branch.
(2) Separate set of books and records A foreign branch described in this is treated as maintaining a separate set of books and records with respect to the activities described in of this section, and must determine, as the context requires, the items of gross income, disregarded payments, and any other items that would be reflected on those books and records in applying this with respect to the foreign branch. The principles of apply for purposes of determining which items would be reflected on such books and records.
(viii) Foreign branch group The term foreign branch group means a foreign branch and any non-branch taxable units (other than an individual or a domestic corporation), to the extent that the foreign branch owns the non-branch taxable unit (if any) directly or indirectly through one or more other non-branch taxable units.
(ix) Foreign branch owner The term foreign branch owner means, with respect to a foreign branch, the person (including a foreign or domestic partnership or other pass-through entity) that owns the foreign branch, either directly or indirectly through one or more disregarded entities. For purposes of this , the foreign branch owner does not include the foreign branch or another foreign branch of the person that owns the foreign branch.
(x) Foreign branch owner group The term foreign branch owner group means a foreign branch owner and any non-branch taxable units (other than an individual or a domestic corporation), to the extent that the foreign branch owner owns the non-branch taxable unit (if any) directly or indirectly through one or more other non-branch taxable units.
(xi) Non-branch taxable unit The term non-branch taxable unit has the meaning provided in .
(xii) Remittance The term remittance means a transfer of property (within the meaning of section ) by a foreign branch that would be treated as a distribution if the foreign branch were treated as a separate corporation.
(xiii) Tentative disregarded basis The term tentative disregarded basis means, in connection with the transfer of property in a transaction that is disregarded for Federal income tax purposes, the basis that property would have if the disregarded payment made in exchange for the transferred property were treated as the cost of such property under section .
(4) Examples The following examples illustrate the application of this .
(i) Example 1: Determination of foreign branches and foreign branch owner
(A) Facts
(1) P, a domestic corporation, is a partner in PRS, a domestic partnership. All other partners in PRS are unrelated to P. PRS conducts activities solely in Country A (the Country A Business), and those activities constitute a trade or business outside the United States within the meaning of of this section. PRS reflects items of income, gain, loss, and expense of the Country A Business on the books and records of PRS's home office. PRS is in the business of manufacturing bicycles.
(2) PRS owns FDE1, a disregarded entity organized in Country B. FDE1 conducts activities in Country B (the Country B Business), and those activities constitute a trade or business outside the United States within the meaning of of this section. FDE1 maintains a set of books and records that are separate from those of PRS, and the separate set of books and records reflects items of income, gain, loss, and expense with respect to the Country B Business. FDE1 is in the business of selling bicycles manufactured by PRS.
(3) FDE1 owns FDE2, a disregarded entity organized in Country C. FDE2 conducts activities in Country C (the Country C Business), and those activities constitute a trade or business outside the United States within the meaning of of this section. FDE2 maintains a set of books and records that are separate from those of PRS and FDE1, and the separate set of books and records reflects items of income, gain, loss, and expense with respect to the Country C Business. FDE2's paper business is not related to FDE1's bicycle sales business, and FDE1 does not hold its interest in FDE2 in the ordinary course of its trade or business.
(B) Analysis
(1) Country A Business's activities comprise a trade or business conducted outside the United States within the meaning of and (in each case, as modified by of this section). PRS does not maintain a separate set of books and records with respect to the Country A Business. However, under of this section, the Country A Business's activities are deemed to satisfy the requirement of that a QBU maintain a separate set of books and records with respect to the relevant activities. Thus, for purposes of this , the activities of the Country A Business constitute a QBU as defined in and , as modified by of this section, that conducts a trade or business outside the United States. Accordingly, the activities of the Country A Business constitute a foreign branch within the meaning of of this section. PRS, the person that owns the Country A Business, is the foreign branch owner, within the meaning of of this section, with respect to the Country A Business.
(2) Country B Business's activities comprise a trade or business outside the United States within the meaning of and (in each case, as modified by of this section). PRS maintains a separate set of books and records with respect to the Country B Business, as described in . Thus, for purposes of this section, the activities of the Country B Business constitute a QBU as defined in and , as modified by of this section, that conducts a trade or business outside the United States. Accordingly, the activities of the Country B Business constitute a foreign branch within the meaning of of this section. Under of this section, PRS, the person that owns the Country B Business indirectly through FDE1 (a disregarded entity), is the foreign branch owner with respect to the Country B Business.
(3) The same analysis that applies to the Country B Business applies to the Country C Business. Accordingly, the activities of the Country C Business constitute a foreign branch within the meaning of of this section. PRS, the person that owns the Country C Business indirectly through FDE1 and FDE2 (disregarded entities), is the foreign branch owner with respect to the Country C Business.
(ii) Example 2: Sale of foreign branch
(A) Facts The facts are the same as in of this section (the facts in Example 1), except that in Year 1, FDE1 sells FDE2 to an unrelated person, recording gain from the sale on its books and records. In Year 2, PRS sells FDE1 to another unrelated person, recording gain from the sale on its books and records. In each year, PRS allocates a portion of the gain to P.
(B) Analysis
(1) Sale of FDE2 Under of this section, P's distributive share of gain recognized by PRS in connection with the sales of FDE1 and FDE2 constitutes foreign branch category income if it is attributable to a foreign branch held by PRS directly or indirectly through one or more disregarded entities. PRS's gross income from the Year 1 sale of FDE2 is reflected on the separate set of books and records maintained with respect to the Country B Business (a foreign branch) operated by FDE1. Therefore, absent an exception, under of this section PRS's gross income from the sale of FDE2 would be attributable to the Country B Business, and would constitute foreign branch category income. However, under of this section, gross income attributable to the Country B Business does not include gain from the sale or exchange of an interest in FDE2, a disregarded entity, unless the interest in FDE2 is held by the Country B Business in the ordinary course of its active trade or business (within the meaning of of this section). In this case, the Country B Business does not hold FDE2 in the ordinary course of its active trade or business within the meaning of of this section. As a result, P's distributive share of gain from the sale of FDE2 is not attributable to a foreign branch, and is not foreign branch category income.
(2) Sale of FDE1 The analysis of PRS's sale of FDE1 in Year 2 is the same as the analysis for the sale of FDE2, except that PRS, through its Country A Business, holds FDE1 in the ordinary course of its active trade or business within the meaning of of this section because the Country A Business engages in a trade or business that is related to the trade or business of FDE1. Therefore, P's distributive share of gain from the sale of FDE1 is attributable to a foreign branch, and is foreign branch category income.
(iii) Example 3: Disregarded payment for services
(A) Facts P, a domestic corporation, owns FDE, a disregarded entity that is a foreign branch within the meaning of of this section. FDE's functional currency is the U.S. dollar. In Year 1, P accrues and records on its books and records (and not FDE's books and records) $1,000x of gross income from the performance of services to unrelated parties that is not passive category income, $400x of which is foreign source income in respect of services performed outside the United States by employees of FDE and $600x of which is U.S. source income in respect of services performed in the United States. Absent the application of of this section, the $1,000x of gross income earned by P would be general category income that would not be attributable to FDE. FDE provides services in support of P's gross income from services. P compensates FDE for its services with an arm's length payment of $400x, which is disregarded for Federal income tax purposes. The deduction for the payment of $400x from P to FDE would be allocated to P's $1,000x of general category gross services income and apportioned entirely to the $400x of foreign source services income under and principles (treating foreign source general category gross income and U.S. source general category gross income each as a statutory grouping) if the payment were regarded for Federal income tax purposes.
(B) Analysis The disregarded payment from P, a United States person, to FDE, its foreign branch, is not recorded on FDE's separate books and records (as adjusted to conform to Federal income tax principles) within the meaning of of this section because it is disregarded for Federal income tax purposes. However, the disregarded payment is allocable to gross income attributable to P because a deduction for the payment, if it were regarded, would be allocated and apportioned to the $400x of P's foreign source services income. Accordingly, under and of this section, the amount of gross income attributable to the FDE foreign branch (and the gross income attributable to P) is adjusted in Year 1 to take the disregarded payment into account. As such, $400x of P's foreign source gross income from the performance of services is attributable to the FDE foreign branch for purposes of this section. Therefore, $400x of the foreign source gross income that P earned with respect to its services in Year 1 constitutes gross income that is assigned to the foreign branch category.
(iv) Example 4: Disregarded payment for non-inventory property
(A) Facts P, a domestic corporation, owns FDE, a disregarded entity that is a foreign branch within the meaning of of this section. FDE's functional currency is the U.S. dollar. P holds Asset A, a non-depreciable asset, with an adjusted basis of $200x. In Year 1, P sells Asset A, which will be used in FDE's manufacturing business, to FDE for $500x. FDE makes no other disregarded payments with respect to Asset A. No adjustments described in section apply with respect to Asset A while FDE holds Asset A. In Year 3, FDE sells Asset A to a third party for $600x and reflects $400x of gross income on its separate set of books and records (that is, $600x amount realized less Asset A's $200x adjusted basis). Under sections and , the income arising from the sale of Asset A is foreign source income that is not treated as passive category income. Asset A is not inventory property. Absent the application of of this section, the entire $400x of gross income earned by P by reason of FDE's sale of Asset A would be attributable to FDE and be treated as foreign branch category income.
(B) Analysis
(1) Disregarded basis determinations If regarded, the $500x payment from FDE to P would result in FDE holding Asset A with a basis of $500x under section . Accordingly, the tentative disregarded basis (within the meaning of of this section) with respect to Asset A is $500x. Because there are no adjustments described in section with respect to Asset A (including any adjustments resulting from any disregarded payments made with respect to the transferred property), the adjusted disregarded basis (within the meaning of of this section) with respect to Asset A is $500x.
(2) Adjusted disregarded gain Under of this section, the adjusted disregarded gain with respect to Asset A is $300x, which is equal to the lesser of $300x (FDE's adjusted disregarded basis in Asset A ($500x) less the adjusted basis of Asset A at the time that Asset A was transferred to FDE ($200x)) and $400x (the gain (if any) attributable to the regarded sale or exchange of Asset A).
(3) Attribution of gross income Under of this section, the gross income attributable to FDE ($400x) is adjusted downward to the extent that the $500x disregarded payment from FDE to P is allocable to gross income of FDE that is reflected on FDE's separate set of books and records. Under of this section, the $500x payment from FDE to P is allocable to gross income attributable to FDE to the extent of FDE's adjusted disregarded gain ($300x) with respect to Asset A. The source and separate category of the gross income of FDE to which the payment is allocable is proportionate to the source and separate category of the gain recognized by FDE with respect to Asset A. Accordingly, $300x of the payment is allocable to foreign source income that would be foreign branch category income. Thus, under and of this section, foreign source gross income attributable to P is adjusted upward by $300x (increasing foreign source general category income by $300x) and foreign source gross income attributable to FDE is adjusted downward by $300x (decreasing foreign source foreign branch category income by $300x) in Year 3.
(v) Example 5: Disregarded payment for depreciable non-inventory property
(A) Facts The facts are the same as in of this section (the facts in Example 4), except as set forth in this . Asset A is depreciable property. In Year 2, P is entitled to a $20x depreciation deduction with respect to Asset A, $18x of which is allocated and apportioned to non-passive category gross income attributable to FDE under through and $2x of which is allocated and apportioned to passive category gross income under through . If the transfer of Asset A were regarded for Federal income tax purposes, FDE would be entitled to a $50x depreciation deduction, 90% of which would be allocated and apportioned to non-passive category gross income attributable to FDE under through and % of which would be allocated and apportioned to passive category gross income under through . In Year 2, FDE earns $315x of gross income that it reflects on its books and records that, in the absence of of this section, would be foreign branch category income. FDE also earns $35x of passive category income in Year 2 from the non-active rental of a portion of Asset A. In Year 3, FDE reflects $420x of gross income on its separate set of books and records by reason of the sale of Asset A (that is, $600x amount realized less Asset A's $180x adjusted basis), $42x of which is passive category income under of this section.
(B) Analysis
(1) Attribution of gross income in Year 2 The disregarded payment from FDE to P in Year 1 is disregarded for Federal income tax purposes, and does not generate gross income. However, under of this section, the disregarded payment is allocable to gross income attributable to FDE to the extent of any disregarded cost recovery deduction relating to that payment in Year 2. Under of this section, the disregarded cost recovery deduction with respect to Asset A is $30x, which is $50x (the amount that would be allowed as a deduction, and that would give rise to an adjustment described in section , with respect to Asset A if the transfer of Asset A to FDE were regarded for Federal income tax purposes, to the extent that the deduction would be allocable to income attributable to a foreign branch), reduced by $20x (the amount allowed as a deduction, and that gives rise to an adjustment described in section , with respect to Asset A, to the extent allocable to income attributable to a foreign branch). If regarded, $27x (90% of $30x) of the disregarded cost recovery deduction would be allocated and apportioned to non-passive category gross income attributable to FDE under through and $3x (10% of $30x) would be allocated and apportioned to passive category gross income under through . Accordingly, under and of this section, the $315x of non-passive category gross income that would otherwise be attributed to FDE is reduced to $288x ($315x less $27x), and the non-passive category gross income attributable to P is increased by $27x in Year 2. As a result, in Year 2, P's foreign branch category gross income is $288x, and its general category gross income is increased by $27x. P's passive category gross income is $35x. See and of this section.
(2) Attribution of gross income in Year 3
(i) Adjusted disregarded basis If regarded, the $500x payment from FDE to P would result in FDE holding Asset A with a basis of $500x under section . Accordingly, the tentative disregarded basis (within the meaning of of this section) with respect to Asset A is $500x. To determine FDE's adjusted disregarded basis with respect to Asset A under of this section, FDE's tentative disregarded basis is reduced by $30x (the disregarded cost recovery deduction with respect to Asset A), resulting in an adjusted disregarded basis of $470x.
(ii) Adjusted disregarded gain Under of this section, the adjusted disregarded gain with respect to Asset A is $270x, which is equal to the lesser of $270x (FDE's adjusted disregarded basis in Asset A ($470x) less the adjusted basis of Asset A at the time that Asset A was transferred to FDE ($200x)), and $420x (the gain attributable to the regarded sale or exchange of Asset A).
(iii) Sale of Asset A Under of this section, the gross income attributable to FDE ($420x) by reason of the sale of Asset A is adjusted downward to the extent that the $500x disregarded payment from FDE to P is allocable to gross income that would be attributable to FDE under through of this section. Under of this section, the $500x payment from FDE to P is allocable to gross income attributable to FDE to the extent of the adjusted disregarded gain with respect to Asset A, which is $270x. The source and separate category of the gross income of FDE to which that amount is allocable is proportionate to the source and separate category of the $420x of gain recognized on the regarded sale of Asset A ($378x of foreign source non-passive category income and $42x of foreign source passive category income). Consequently, under and of this section, in Year 3, gross income attributable to P is adjusted upward by $270x (increasing P's foreign source general category gross income by $243x, which bears the same proportion to $270x as the foreign source non-passive gain ($378x) bears to P's overall gain with respect to Asset A ($420x)), and the foreign source gross income attributable to FDE is adjusted downward by $270x (with foreign source foreign branch category gross income reduced by $243x). P also has $42x of foreign source passive category income from the sale of Asset A. See and of this section.
(vi) Example 6: Disregarded payment for non-depreciable non-inventory property—regarded gain limitation
(A) Facts The facts are the same as in of this section (the facts in Example 4), except that in Year 3, FDE sells Asset A to a third party for $340x and reflects $140x of gross income on its separate set of books and records (that is, $340x amount realized less Asset A's $200x adjusted basis), none of which is passive category income.
(B) Analysis The analysis is the same as the analysis in of this section (the analysis in Example 4), except that in Year 3, the adjusted disregarded gain with respect to Asset A is $140x, which is equal to the lesser of $300x (FDE's adjusted disregarded basis in Asset A ($500x) less the adjusted basis of Asset A at the time that Asset A was transferred to FDE ($200x)), and $140x (the gain attributable to the regarded sale or exchange of Asset A). Accordingly, under and of this section, gross income attributable to P is adjusted upward by $140x (increasing P's foreign source general category gross income by $140x) and gross income attributable to FDE is adjusted downward by $140x (decreasing P's foreign source foreign branch category gross income by $140x) in Year 3.
(vii) Example 7: Disregarded payment for non-depreciable non-inventory property—loss
(A) Facts The facts are the same as in of this section (the facts in Example 4), except that in Year 3, FDE sells Asset A to a third party for $175x and reflects a $25x loss on its separate set of books and records (that is, $175x amount realized less Asset A's $200x adjusted basis).
(B) Analysis The analysis is the same as the analysis in of this section (the analysis in Example 4), except that in Year 3, the adjusted disregarded gain with respect to Asset A is $0x, which is equal to the lesser of $300x (FDE's adjusted disregarded basis in Asset A ($500x) less the adjusted basis of Asset A at the time that Asset A was transferred to FDE ($200x)), and $0x (the gain attributable to the regarded sale or exchange of Asset A). Accordingly, gross income amounts attributable to P and FDE are not adjusted under of this section by reason of the transfer of Asset A from P to FDE.
(viii) Example 8: Disregarded payment for non-depreciable non-inventory property—disregarded gain limitation
(A) Facts The facts are the same as in of this section (the facts in Example 4), except that in Year 1, P sells Asset A to FDE for $65x.
(B) Analysis The analysis is the same as the analysis in of this section (the analysis in Example 4), except that in Year 3, the tentative disregarded basis and the adjusted disregarded basis with respect to Asset A are $65x. Under of this section, the adjusted disregarded gain with respect to Asset A is $0x. Accordingly, under of this section, gross income amounts attributable to P and FDE are not adjusted under of this section by reason of the transfer of Asset A from P to FDE.
(ix) Example 9: Application of the rules to the sale of inventory from a foreign branch owner to a foreign branch for distribution
(A) Facts P, a domestic corporation, owns FDE, a disregarded entity that is a foreign branch within the meaning of of this section. FDE's functional currency is the U.S. dollar. P manufactures portable electronic devices, which it sells to FDE for $1,500x during a taxable year in a transaction that is disregarded for Federal income tax purposes. In the same taxable year, FDE sells the portable electronic devices to its customers for $1,750x. P uses an overall accrual method of accounting and has $1,300x of cost of goods sold for the taxable year, $1,200x of which were incurred prior to the disregarded sale to FDE and recorded on P's separate set of books and records and $100x of which were incurred after the disregarded sale and recorded on the books and records of FDE. P reports $450x of gross income for the taxable year: $1,750x of gross receipts less cost of goods sold of $1,300x. The $450x of gross income from the sale of portable electronic devices is U.S. source income under section .
(B) Analysis
(1) In general The gross receipts from the sale of portable electronic devices ($1,750x), which results in U.S. source gross income of $450x, is recorded on FDE's separate books and records (as adjusted to conform to Federal income tax principles). Therefore, the gross income ($450x) generally would be foreign branch category income under of this section. However, under of this section, the amount of gross income attributable to FDE (and the gross income attributable to P) is adjusted to take the disregarded payment for the portable electronic devices from FDE to P into account. If both FDE and the disregarded payment from FDE to P were recognized for Federal income tax purposes, the amount of the payment ($1,500x) would reduce FDE's gross income. Therefore, under of this section, the principles of of this section apply for purposes of determining whether, and to what extent, the disregarded payment is allocable to non-passive category income attributable to FDE for purposes of determining the extent of any adjustment.
(2) Applying the principles of the tangible property rules to sales of inventory The principles of of this section are applied by treating the cost of goods sold with respect to expenses recorded on P's separate set of books and records ($1,200x) similarly to the adjusted basis at the time of the disregarded sale; the gross income ($450x) similarly to gain from the disposition of non-inventory property; and the lesser of the recognized gross income ($450x) and the disregarded payment less the cost of goods sold attributable to expenses reflected on P's separate set of books and records ($1,500x less $1,200x) similarly to disregarded gain ($300x). Accordingly, under of this section, general category U.S. source gross income attributable to P is adjusted upward by $300x and the non-passive category U.S. source gross income attributable to FDE is adjusted downward by $300x.
(x) Example 10: Gross income initially attributable to a foreign branch
(A) Facts
(1) Overview P, a domestic corporation, owns FDE, which is a disregarded entity that is a foreign branch within the meaning of of this section that has the U.S. dollar as its functional currency. P, which is a foreign branch owner with respect to FDE, also conducts a trade or business in the United States. During a single taxable year, P and FDE engage in the transactions described in and of this section.
(2) Unrelated party transactions P, through its U.S. office, accrues and records on its books and records $5,000x of gross income from the performance of accounting services for Customer A, an unrelated party (the Customer A services). The gross income from the Customer A services performed by P is non-passive category income and, under section , is U.S. source income. Absent the application of of this section, the gross income earned by P through its U.S. office would be general category income. FDE accrues and records on its books and records $3,400x of gross income from the performance of web design services for Customer B, an unrelated party (the Customer B services). The gross income from the Customer B services performed by FDE is non-passive category income and, under section , is foreign source income. Absent the application of of this section, the $3,400x of gross income earned by FDE would be foreign branch category income.
(3) Disregarded payments FDE provides web design services to P. As compensation for those services, P pays $300x to FDE. The deduction for P's payment to FDE (if regarded) would be allocable to the $5,000x of general category U.S. source gross income earned from P's performance of the Customer A services. P provides accounting services to FDE from P's U.S. office. As compensation for those services, FDE pays $300x to P. The deduction for FDE's payment to P (if regarded) would be allocable to the $3,400x of non-passive category foreign source gross income earned from FDE's performance of the Customer B services.
(B) Analysis
(1) Application of multiple disregarded payments rule Under of this section, of this section applies to determine the effects of the disregarded payments described in of this section on gross income initially attributable to FDE before of this section is applied to gross income initially attributable to P.
(2) Disregarded payment from FDE to P The disregarded payment from FDE to P is disregarded for Federal income tax purposes, and does not generate gross income. However, the disregarded payment is allocable to non-passive category gross income attributable to FDE because a deduction for the payment, if it were regarded, would be allocated to FDE's $3,400x of non-passive category foreign source gross services income under . Under of this section, the amount of non-passive category foreign source gross income attributable to FDE is adjusted downward, and the amount of general category foreign source gross income attributable to P (in its capacity as a foreign branch owner) is adjusted upward, to take the disregarded payment into account. Thus, $300x of FDE's foreign source gross income relating to the Customer B services is attributable to P for purposes of this section, and $3,100x of that income is attributable to FDE.
(3) Disregarded payment from P to FDE The disregarded payment from P to FDE is not recorded on FDE's separate books and records (as adjusted to conform to Federal income tax principles) within the meaning of of this section because it is disregarded for Federal income tax purposes. However, the disregarded payment is allocable to general category U.S. source gross income attributable to P because a deduction for the payment, if it were regarded, would be allocated to P's $5,000x of general category U.S. source gross services income under . Accordingly, under of this section, the amount of general category U.S. source gross income attributable to P is adjusted downward, and the amount of non-passive category U.S. source gross income attributable to FDE is adjusted upward, to take the disregarded payment into account. Thus, $300x of P's U.S. source gross income from the performance of Customer A services is attributable to FDE for purposes of this section, and $4,700x of that income is attributable to P.
(xi) Example 11: Ordering rule
(A) Facts
(1) Overview P, a domestic corporation, owns FDE1 and FDE2, each of which is a disregarded entity that is a foreign branch within the meaning of of this section that has the U.S. dollar as its functional currency. P, which is a foreign branch owner with respect to FDE1 and FDE2, also conducts a trade or business in the United States. During a single taxable year, P, FDE1, and FDE2 engage in the transactions described in and of this section.
(2) Unrelated party transactions FDE1 accrues and records on its books and records $1,000x of gross income from the performance of services for Customer A, an unrelated party (the Customer A services). The gross income from the Customer A services performed by FDE is non-passive category income and, under section , is foreign source income. Absent the application of of this section, the $1,000x of non-passive foreign source gross income earned by FDE1 would be foreign branch category income. FDE2 accrues and records on its books and records $1,100x of gross income from royalties received from Customer B, an unrelated party (the Customer B royalties) on licensed intangible property developed by FDE2 and used by Customer B in the United States. The gross income from the Customer B royalties is non-passive category income and under section is U.S. source income. Absent the application of of this section, the $1,100x of non-passive category U.S. source gross income earned by FDE2 would be foreign branch category income.
(3) Disregarded payments FDE2 provides services to FDE1. As compensation for those services, FDE1 pays $200x to FDE2. The deduction for FDE1's payment to FDE2 (if regarded) would be allocable to the $1,000x of non-passive category foreign source gross income earned from the Customer A services. P provides services to FDE2 from P's U.S. office. As compensation for those services, FDE2 pays $50x to P. The deduction for FDE2's payment to P (if regarded) would be allocable to the non-passive category foreign source gross income attributable to FDE2 (see of this section) relating to gross income from the Customer A services.
(B) Analysis
(1) Disregarded payment from FDE1 to FDE2 The $1,000x of gross income earned by FDE1 from the Customer A services would, but for of this section, be attributable to FDE1 (a foreign branch). Accordingly, under of this section, adjustments related to disregarded payments from FDE1 to FDE2 are computed before adjustments related to disregarded payments from FDE2 to P (in its capacity as a foreign branch owner). The disregarded payment from FDE1 to FDE2 is not recorded on FDE2's separate books and records (as adjusted to conform to Federal income tax principles) within the meaning of of this section because it is disregarded for Federal income tax purposes. However, the disregarded payment is allocable to gross income attributable to FDE1 because a deduction for the payment, if it were regarded, would be allocated to FDE1's $1,000x of non-passive category foreign source gross services income under . Accordingly, under of this section, the amount of non-passive category foreign source gross income attributable to FDE1 is adjusted downward, and the amount of non-passive category foreign source gross income attributable to FDE2 is adjusted upward, to take the disregarded payment into account. Thus, $200x of FDE1's non-passive category foreign source gross income from the performance of Customer A services is attributable to FDE2 for purposes of this section, and $800x of that income is attributable to FDE1.
(2) Disregarded payment from FDE2 to P The disregarded payment from FDE2 to P is disregarded for Federal income tax purposes, and does not generate gross income. However, the disregarded payment is allocable to gross income attributable to FDE2 because a deduction for the payment, if it were regarded, would be allocated to FDE2's $200x of non-passive category foreign source gross services income under . Under of this section, the amount of non-passive category foreign source gross income attributable to FDE2 is adjusted downward, and the amount of general category foreign source gross income attributable to P is adjusted upward, to take the $50x disregarded payment into account. Thus, $50x of non-passive category foreign source gross income relating to the Customer A services is attributable to P for purposes of this section, $150x of that income is attributable to FDE2, and $800x of that income remains attributable to FDE1. FDE2's $1,100x of U.S. source royalty income is not adjusted under of this section and remains foreign branch category income.
(xii) Example 12: Application of intangible property rules
(A) Facts P, a domestic corporation that has a calendar taxable year, owns FDE, a disregarded entity that is a foreign branch within the meaning of of this section. FDE's functional currency is the U.S. dollar. Asset A, a patent with a useful life ending on December 31, Year 2, was obtained with respect to a discovery that was made by FDE in the course of its trade or business and was used in that trade or business until December 31, Year 1. On December 31, Year 1, FDE remits Asset A to P and receives no consideration. Asset A has an adjusted basis of $0. In Year 2, P uses Asset A to generate general category gross income. P earns $1,000x of general category U.S. source gross income in Year 2, including the income generated by its use of Asset A. If FDE were a domestic corporation, P were a foreign corporation, and Asset A had been transferred in exchange for stock in a transaction described in section , such that section applied by its terms (but all other facts remained the same), the payment determined under section for Year 2 would be $300x. A disregarded payment for the use of Asset A, if it were regarded, would be allocated to FDE's $1,000x of general category U.S. source gross income under .
(B) Analysis The remittance of Asset A by FDE to P is a transfer of intangible property described in section from a foreign branch to its foreign branch owner. The facts in of this section do not implicate an exception in or of this section. Therefore, this is a transaction to which of this section applies. The foreign branch is treated as having sold the transferred property to the foreign branch owner in exchange for annual payments contingent on the productivity or use of the property, the amount of which for Year 2 is determined under the principles of section to be $300x. Thus, in Year 2, P is treated as making a $300x disregarded payment to FDE. The payment would be allocable to general category U.S. source income under of this section. Therefore, $300x of P's non-passive category U.S. source gross income is attributable to FDE under and of this section. P has $700x of general category U.S. source gross income and $300x of foreign branch category U.S. source gross income in Year 2.
(xiii) Example 13: Disregarded payment from domestic corporation to foreign branch
(A) Facts P, a domestic corporation, owns FDE, a disregarded entity that is a foreign branch. FDE's functional currency is the U.S. dollar. In Year 1, P accrues and records on its books and records for Federal income tax purposes $400x of gross income from the license of intellectual property to unrelated parties that is not passive category income, all of which is U.S. source income. P also accrues $600x of foreign source passive category interest income. P compensates FDE for services that FDE performs in a foreign country with an arm's length payment of $350x, which FDE records on its books and records; the transaction is disregarded for Federal income tax purposes. Absent the application of of this section, the $400x of gross income earned by P from the license would be general category income that would not be attributable to FDE. If the $350x disregarded payment from P to FDE were regarded for Federal income tax purposes, the deduction for the payment would be allocated and apportioned entirely to P's $400x of general category gross licensing income under the principles of and (treating U.S. source general category gross income and foreign source passive category gross income each as a statutory grouping). P and FDE incur no other expenses.
(B) Analysis The $350x disregarded payment from P, a United States person, to FDE, its foreign branch, is not recorded on FDE's separate books and records (as adjusted to conform to Federal income tax principles) under of this section because it is disregarded for Federal income tax purposes. The disregarded payment is allocable to gross income attributable to P because a deduction for the payment, if it were regarded, would be allocated and apportioned to the $400x of P's U.S. source licensing income. Accordingly, under and of this section, the amount of gross income attributable to the FDE foreign branch (and the gross income attributable to P) is adjusted in Year 1 to take the disregarded payment into account. Accordingly, $350x of P's $400x U.S. source general category gross income from the license is attributable to the FDE foreign branch for purposes of this section. Therefore, $350x of the U.S. source gross income that P earned with respect to its license in Year 1 constitutes U.S. source gross income that is assigned to the foreign branch category and $50x remains U.S. source general category income. P's $600x of foreign source passive category interest income is unchanged.
(xiv) Example 14: Regarded payment from non-consolidated domestic corporation to a foreign branch
(A) Facts The facts are the same as those in of this section (the facts in Example 13), except P wholly owns USS, and USS (rather than P) owns FDE. P and USS do not file a consolidated return. USS has no gross income other than the $350x foreign source services income from the $350x payment it receives from P, through FDE.
(B) Analysis The $350x services payment from P, a United States person, to FDE, a foreign branch of USS, is not a disregarded payment because the transaction is regarded for Federal income tax purposes. Under and , P's $350x deduction for the services payment is allocated and apportioned to its U.S. source general category gross income. The payment of $350x from P to USS is services income attributable to FDE, and foreign branch category income of USS under of this section. Accordingly, USS has $350x of foreign source foreign branch category gross income. P has $600x of foreign source passive category income and $400x of U.S. source general category gross income and a $350x deduction for the services payment, resulting in $50x of U.S. source general category taxable income to P.
(xv) Example 15: Regarded payment from a member of a consolidated group to a foreign branch of another member of the consolidated group
(A) Facts The facts are the same as those in of this section (the facts in Example 14), except that P and USS are members of an affiliated group that files a consolidated return pursuant to section (P group).
(B) Analysis
(1) Definitions under § 1.1502-13 Under , the $350x services payment from P to FDE, a foreign branch of USS, is an intercompany transaction between P and USS; USS is the selling member, P is the buying member, P has a deduction of $350x for the services payment that is a corresponding item, and USS has $350x of income that is an intercompany item. The payment is not a disregarded payment because the transaction is regarded for Federal income tax purposes.
(2) Timing and attributes under § 1.1502-13
(i) Separate entity versus single entity analysis Under a separate entity analysis, the result is the same as in of this section (the analysis in Example 14), whereby P has $600x of foreign source passive category income and $50x of U.S. source general category income, and USS has $350x of foreign source foreign branch category income. In contrast, under a single entity analysis, the result is the same as in of this section (the analysis in Example 13), whereby P has $600x of foreign source passive category income, $50x of U.S. source general category income, and $350x of U.S. source foreign branch category income.
(ii) Application of the matching rule Under the matching rule in , the timing, character, source, and other attributes of USS's $350x intercompany item and P's $350x corresponding item are redetermined to produce the effect of transactions between divisions of a single corporation, as if the services payment had been made to a foreign branch of that corporation. Accordingly, all of USS's foreign source income of $350x is redetermined to be U.S. source, rather than foreign source, income. Therefore, for purposes of , the P group has $600x of foreign passive category income, $50x of U.S. source general category income, and $350x of U.S. source foreign branch category income.
(xvi) Example 16: Disregarded payment made from non-branch taxable unit
(A) Facts The facts are the same as those in of this section (the facts in Example 13), except that P also wholly owns FDE1, a disregarded entity that is a non-branch taxable unit. In addition, FDE1 (rather than P) is the entity that properly accrues and records on its books and records the $400x of U.S. source general category income from the license of intellectual property and the $600x of foreign source passive category interest income, and FDE1 (rather than P) is the entity that makes the $350x payment, which is disregarded for Federal income tax purposes, to FDE in compensation for services.
(B) Analysis Under of this section, the rules of of this section apply to attribute gross income to FDE1, a non-branch taxable unit, as though FDE1 were a foreign branch. Under these rules, the $400x of licensing income and the $600 of interest income are initially attributable to FDE1. This income is adjusted in Year 1 to account for the $350x disregarded payment, which is allocable to the $400x of licensing income of FDE1. Accordingly, $50x of the $400x of U.S. source general category licensing income is attributable to FDE1 and $350x of this income is attributable to the FDE foreign branch. To determine the income that is attributable to P, the foreign branch owner, and FDE, the foreign branch, the income that is attributed to FDE1, after taking into account all of the disregarded payments that it makes and receives, must be further attributed to one or more foreign branches or a foreign branch owner under of this section. Under of this section, the income of FDE1 is attributed to the foreign branch group or foreign branch owner group of which it is a member. Because FDE1 is wholly owned by P, FDE is a member solely of the foreign branch owner group that is owned by P. See definition of “foreign branch owner group” in . All the income that is attributed to FDE1 under of this section, namely, the $50x of U.S. source general category licensing income and the $600x of foreign source passive category interest income, is further attributed to P. See . Therefore, the result is the same as in of this section (the analysis in Example 13).
(g) Section 951A category income
(1) In general Except as provided in of this section, the term section category income means amounts included (directly or indirectly through a pass-through entity) in gross income of a United States person under section .
(2) Exceptions for passive category income Section category income does not include any amounts included under section that are allocable to passive category income under .
(h) Export financing interest
(1) Definitions
(i) Export financing interest The term “export financing interest” means any interest derived from financing the sale (or other disposition) for use or consumption outside the United States of any property that is manufactured, produced, grown, or extracted in the United States by the taxpayer or a related person, and not more than 50 percent of the fair market value of which is attributable to products imported into the United States. For purposes of this paragraph, the term “United States” includes the fifty States, the District of Columbia, and the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico.
(ii) Fair market value For purposes of this paragraph, the fair market value of any property imported into the United States shall be its appraised value, as determined by the Secretary under section 402 of the Tariff Act of 1930 (19 U.S.C. 1401a) in connection with its importation. For purposes of determining the foreign content of an item of property imported into the United States, see section 927 and the regulations thereunder.
(iii) Related person For purposes of this paragraph, the term “related person” has the meaning given it by section except that such section shall be applied by substituting “the person with respect to whom the determination is being made” for “controlled foreign corporation” each place it applies.
(2) Treatment of export financing interest Except as provided in of this section, if a taxpayer (including a financial services entity) receives or accrues export financing interest from an unrelated person, then that interest is not treated as passive category income. Instead, the interest income is treated as foreign branch category income, section category income, general category income, or income in a specified separate category under the rules of this section.
(3) Exception Unless it is received or accrued by a financial services entity, export financing interest shall be treated as passive category income if that income is also related person factoring income. For this purpose, related person factoring income is—
(i) Income received or accrued by a controlled foreign corporation that is income described in section (income of a controlled foreign corporation from a loan for the purpose of financing the purchase of inventory property of a related person); or
(ii) Income received or accrued by any person that is income described in section (income from a trade receivable acquired from a related person).
(4) Examples The following examples illustrate the application of of this section.
(i) Example 1 Controlled foreign corporation CFC is a wholly-owned subsidiary of domestic corporation USP. CFC is not a financial services entity and has accumulated cash reserves. USP has uncollected trade and service receivables of foreign obligors. USP sells the receivables at a discount (“factors”) to CFC. The income derived by CFC on the receivables is related person factoring income. The income is also export financing interest. Because the income is related person factoring income, the income is passive category income to CFC.
(ii) Example 2 Domestic corporation USS is a wholly-owned subsidiary of domestic corporation USP. USS is not a financial services entity, does not have any foreign qualified business entities, and has accumulated cash reserves. USP has uncollected trade and service receivables of foreign obligors. USP factors the receivables to USS. The income derived by USS on the receivables is related person factoring income. The income is also export financing interest. The income will be passive category income to USS.
(iii) Example 3 The facts are the same as in of this section (the facts in Example 2), except that instead of factoring USP's receivables, USS finances the sales of USP's goods by making loans to the purchasers of USP's goods. The interest derived by USS on these loans is export financing interest and is not related person factoring income. The income will be general category income to USS.
(5) Income eligible for section 864(d)(7) exception (same country exception) from related person factoring treatment
(i) Income other than interest If any foreign person receives or accrues income that is described in section (income on a trade or service receivable acquired from a related person in the same foreign country as the recipient) and such income would also meet the definition of export financing interest if section applied to such income (income on a trade or service receivable acquired from a related person treated as interest), then the income is considered to be export financing interest and is not treated as passive category income. The income is treated as foreign branch category income, section category income, general category income, or income in a specified separate category under the rules of this section.
(ii) Interest income If export financing interest is received or accrued by any foreign person and that income would otherwise be treated as related person factoring income of a controlled foreign corporation under section if section did not apply, section applies and the interest is not treated as passive category income. The income is treated as general category income in the hands of the controlled foreign corporation.
(iii) Examples The following examples illustrate the application of this :
(A) Example 1 CFC1, a controlled foreign corporation, is a wholly-owned subsidiary of domestic corporation USP. CFC2, a controlled foreign corporation, is a wholly-owned subsidiary of CFC1. CFC1 and CFC2 are incorporated in Country M. In Year 1, USP sells tractors to CFC2, which CFC2 sells to X, an unrelated foreign corporation organized in Country M. The tractors are to be used in Country M. CFC2 uses a substantial part of its assets in its trade or business located in Country M. CFC2 has uncollected trade receivables from X that it factors to CFC1. The income is not related person factoring income because it is described in section (income eligible for the same country exception) and is tested income. If section applied, the income CFC1 derived from the receivables would meet the definition of export financing interest. The income, therefore, is considered to be export financing interest and is general category income to CFC1 and may be section category income to USP.
(B) Example 2 CFC1, a controlled foreign corporation, is a wholly-owned subsidiary of domestic corporation, USP. CFC2, a controlled foreign corporation, is a wholly-owned subsidiary of CFC1. CFC1 and CFC2 are incorporated in Country M. In Year 1, USP sells tractors to CFC2, which CFC2 sells to X, a foreign partnership that is organized in Country M and is related to CFC1 and CFC2. CFC1 makes a loan to X to finance the tractor sales. The interest earned by CFC1 from financing the sales is described in section and is export financing interest and is tested income. Therefore, the income is general category income to CFC1 and may be section category income to USP.
(i) Interaction of section 907(c) and income described in this section If a person receives or accrues income that is income described in section (relating to oil and gas income), the rules of section and the regulations thereunder, as well as the rules of this section, shall apply to the income. The reduction in amount allowed as foreign tax provided by section shall therefore be calculated separately for income in each separate category.
(j) Special rule for DASTM gain or loss Any DASTM gain or loss computed under must be allocated among the categories of income under the rules of or . The rules of apply before the rules of section (the exception from passive income for high-taxed income).
(k) Separate category under section 904(d)(6) or 865(h) for items resourced under treaties
(1) Section 904(d)(6)
(i) In general Except as provided in of this section, sections , (b), (c), (d), (f), and (g) and sections and are applied separately to any item of income that, without regard to a treaty obligation of the United States, would be treated as derived from sources within the United States, but under a treaty obligation of the United States such item of income would be treated as arising from sources outside the United States, and the taxpayer chooses the benefits of such treaty obligation.
(ii) Aggregation of items of income in each other separate category For purposes of applying the general rule of of this section, items of income in each other separate category of income that are resourced under each applicable treaty are aggregated in a single separate category for income in that separate category that is resourced under that treaty. For example, all items of passive category income that would otherwise be treated as derived from sources within the United States but which the taxpayer chooses to treat as arising from sources outside the United States pursuant to a provision of a bilateral U.S. income tax treaty are treated as income in a separate category for passive category income resourced under the particular treaty, and the high-tax kickout grouping rules of of this section are applied separately to the groups of passive income included in that separate category. Any items of resourced high-taxed passive income are assigned to a separate category for general (or other) category income resourced under a tax treaty. Items of income described in of this section are not combined with other income that is foreign source income under the Code, even if the other income arises from sources within the jurisdiction with which the United States has a bilateral income tax treaty (“treaty jurisdiction”) and is included in the same separate category to which the resourced income would be assigned without regard to section . Items of income described in of this section are also not combined with other items of resourced income that are subject to a separate limitation by reason of a Code provision other than section .
(iii) Related taxes Foreign taxes, including foreign taxes paid to a foreign jurisdiction other than the treaty jurisdiction on an item of resourced income, are allocated to each separate category described in of this section in accordance with .
(iv) Coordination with certain income tax treaty provisions
(A) Exception for special relief from double taxation for individual residents of treaty jurisdictions Section and of this section do not apply to any item of income deemed to be from foreign sources by reason of the relief from double taxation rules in any U.S. income tax treaty that is solely applicable to U.S. citizens who are residents of the other Contracting State.
(B) U.S. competent authority assistance For purposes of applying of this section, if, under the mutual agreement procedure provisions of an applicable income tax treaty, the U.S. competent authority agrees to allow a taxpayer to treat an item of income as foreign source income, where such item of income would otherwise be treated as derived from sources within the United States, then the taxpayer is considered to have chosen the benefits of such treaty obligation to treat the item as foreign source income.
(v) Coordination with other Code provisions Section and of this section do not apply to any item of income to which any of section , , or applies. See also of this section.
(2) Section 865(h) If any gain, as defined in section , would be treated as derived from sources within the United States under section , but pursuant to a treaty obligation of the United States such gain would be treated as arising from sources outside the United States, and the taxpayer chooses the benefits of such treaty obligation, then that gain will be treated as foreign source income. However, sections , (b), (c), (d), (f), and (g) and sections and are applied separately to amounts described in the preceding sentence with respect to each treaty under which the taxpayer has claimed benefits and, within each treaty, to each separate category of income. The principles of the rules in through of this section apply to gains, and foreign taxes on gains, that are subject to a separate limitation under section .
(l) Priority rule Income that meets the definitions of a specified separate category and another category of income described in section is subject to the separate limitation described in of this section and is not treated as general category income, foreign branch category income, passive category income, or section category income.
(m) Income treated as allocable to a specified separate category If section , (b), and (c) are applied separately to any category of income under the Internal Revenue Code (for example, under section , , , , or ), that category of income is treated for all purposes of the Internal Revenue Code as if it were a separate category listed in section . For purposes of this section, a separate category that is treated as if it were listed in section by reason of the first sentence in this is referred to as a specified separate category.
(n) Income from partnerships and other pass-through entities
(1) Distributive shares of partnership income
(i) In general Except as provided in of this section, a partner's distributive share of partnership income is characterized as passive category income to the extent that the distributive share is a share of income earned or accrued by the partnership in the passive category. A partner's distributive share of partnership income that is not described in the first sentence of this is treated as foreign branch category income, general category income, or income in a specified separate category under the rules of this section. The principles of the rules in this also apply to characterize a person's share of income from any other pass-through entity.
(ii) Less than 10 percent partners partnership interests
(A) In general Except as provided in of this section, if any limited partner owns less than 10 percent of the value in a partnership, the partner's distributive share of partnership income from the partnership is passive income to the partner (subject to the exception for high-taxed income under section and of this section), and the partner's distributive share of partnership deductions from the partnership is allocated and apportioned under the principles of only to the partner's passive income from that partnership. See also for rules for apportioning partnership interest expense.
(B) Exception for partnership interest held in the ordinary course of business If a partnership interest described in of this section is held in the ordinary course of a partner's active trade or business, the rules of of this section apply for purposes of characterizing the partner's distributive share of the partnership income. A partnership interest is considered to be held in the ordinary course of a partner's active trade or business if the partner (or a member of the partner's affiliated group of corporations (within the meaning of section and without regard to section )) engages (other than through a less than 10 percent interest in a partnership) in the same or a related trade or business as the partnership.
(2) Income from the sale of a partnership interest
(i) In general To the extent a partner recognizes gain on the sale of a partnership interest, that income shall be treated as passive income to the partner, subject to the exception for high-taxed income under section and of this section.
(ii) Exception for sale by 25-percent owner Except as provided in of this section, in the case of a sale of an interest in a partnership by a partner that is a 25-percent owner of the partnership, determined by applying section and substituting “partner” for “controlled foreign corporation” every place it appears, for purposes of determining the separate category to which the income recognized on the sale of the partnership interest is assigned such partner is treated as selling the proportionate share of the assets of the partnership attributable to such interest.
(3) Value of a partnership interest For purposes of and of this section, a partner will be considered as owning 10 percent of the value of a partnership for a particular year if the partner, together with any person that bears a relationship to the partner described in section or , owns 10 percent of the capital and profits interest of the partnership. For purposes of this , value will be determined at the end of the partnership's taxable year.
(4) Example The following example illustrates the application of this .
(i) Facts PRS is a domestic partnership. PRS has two general partners, A and B. A and B each have a greater than 10% interest in PRS. PRS also has two limited partners, C and D. C has a 50% interest in the partnership and D has a 9% interest. D's partnership interest is not held in the ordinary course of business. A, B, C and D are all United States persons. In Year 1, PRS has $100x of general category non-subpart F income on which it pays no foreign tax.
(ii) Analysis Under of this section, A's, B's, and C's distributive shares of PRS's income are not passive category income. Under of this section, because D is a limited partner with a less than 10% interest in PRS, D's distributive share of PRS's income is passive category income.
(o) Separate category of section 78 gross up The amount included in income under section by reason of taxes deemed paid under section is assigned to the separate category to which the taxes are allocated under 1.904-6(e).
(p) Separate category of foreign currency gain or loss Foreign currency gain or loss recognized under section with respect to a distribution of previously taxed earnings and profits (as described in section or ) is assigned to the separate category or categories of the previously taxed earnings and profits from which the distribution is made. See for rules on assigning section gain or loss on a remittance from a section QBU to a separate category or categories.
(q) Applicability date
(1) Except as provided in and of this section, this section applies for taxable years that both begin after December 31, 2017, and end on or after December 4, 2018.
(2) Paragraphs (c)(7)(i) and (iii) and (c)(8)(v) through (viii) apply to taxable years ending on or after December 16, 2019. For taxable years that both begin after December 31, 2017, and end on or after December 4, 2018, and also end before December 16, 2019, see and as in effect on December 17, 2019.
(3) Except as provided in the following sentence, of this section applies to taxable years that begin after December 31, 2019, and end on or after November 2, 2020. of this section applies to taxable years that begin on or after October 10, 2024.
Editorial Note
Editorial Note:
For Federal Register citations affecting , see the List of CFR Sections Affected, which appears in the Finding Aids section of the printed volume and at www.govinfo.gov.
[T.D. 8214, 53 FR 27011, July 18, 1988]