IRS Publishes Final Regulations Under Sections 954 and 956
Focus of the recent Section 956 regulations
1. The definition of funding with respect to Section 956 Anti Avoidance provisions: |
These rules address what happens when a CFC with Earnings and Profits funds a new CFC and then new CFC extends a loan to the US shareholder. In this way the CFC that actually extends the loan has no E&P and a Section 956 inclusion is avoided. The new regulations address this type of transaction when it is structured with the intent to avoid an inclusion.
2.Also under the Anti-avoidance provisions the treatment of acquisitions of U.S. property by a Partnership controlled by a CFC; |
With these provisions the IRS addresses another common structure used to potentially avoid Section 956. This approach has the CFC as a controlling partner in a partnership that has what is considered an “investment in U.S. property” under Section 956 as opposed to the CFC directly owning the “investment in U.S. property”.
3.Application of Section 956 to related party factoring transactions; |
These rules provide guidance on when a CFC acquiring the trade receivables of its U.S. shareholder would be deemed a Section 956 inclusion.
4. The IRS and Treasury reserves on and will continue to study the issue how a Section 956 inclusion is computed when multiple CFCs serve as pledgers or guarantors of a single obligation. |
Who these rules may affect
- U.S. shareholder of multiple CFCs with back to back funding (loan, equity or other) and an Investment in U.S. property;
- U.S. shareholders of CFCs that are controlling partners in partnerships; and
- U.S. shareholders of a CFCs that engage in related party factoring of trade receivables.
For more information or questions, please reach out to our International Tax Services Team at [email protected].
Chaya Siegfried, CPA, MST T (742) 842 3113 [email protected] |
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