Final regulations on dual consolidated losses: originally enacted in 1986, the dual consolidated loss (DCL) rules are designed to prevent a corporation from using a net operating loss to offset income both in the United States and in a foreign country. Part II discusses triggering events and their consequences, plus applicable transition rules.

AuthorJacobs, Karen
PositionA Practical Guide, part 2

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

* In general, if there is a triggering event for a DCL of a DRC or a separate unit during the certification period, the elector must recapture and report as ordinary income the amount of the DCL and pay interest.

* A triggering event will not occur if the elector demonstrates that the transfer of assets did not result in a carryover under foreign law of the DRC's losses, expenses, or deductions to the transferee of the assets.

* In general, the reasonable-cause relief standard applies for all untimely filings for DCLs, including those incurred in tax years beginning before the application date of the 2007 DCL regulations.

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This two-part article is organized to assist taxpayers in determining the applicability of the 2007 dual-consolidated loss (DCL) regulations and to help practitioners comply with the regulations. Part I, in the September 2007 issue, discussed the entities to which the DCL rules are applicable, the computation of a DCL, the limitation on using a DCL to offset U.S. taxable income, and the exceptions to the limitation on utilization of a DCL. Part II, below, discusses triggering events and their consequences, as well as the transition rules from the 1992 to the 2007 regulations.

Triggering Events and Their Consequences

Triggering Events

In general, if there is a triggering event for a DCL of a dual-resident corporation (DRC) or a separate unit during the certification period, the elector must recapture and report as ordinary income the amount of the DCL and pay interest. Under Regs. Sec. 1.1503(d)-6(e)(1), the following constitute triggering events:

  1. A foreign use of the DCL.

  2. An affiliated DRC or affiliated domestic owner of a separate unit ceases to be a member of the consolidated group that made the domestic-use election. (27)

  3. An unaffiliated DRC or unaffiliated domestic owner becomes a member of a consolidated group.

  4. 50% or more of the DRC's or separate unit's gross assets(measured by the fair market value (FMV) of the assets at the time of such transaction or, for multiple transactions, at the time of the first transaction) are disposed of in a single transaction or a series of transactions within a 12-month period. Dispositions are disregarded if they occur in the ordinary course of the DRC's or separate unit's trade or business. Also, an interest in another separate unit and the shares of a DRC are not treated as assets of a separate unit or a DRC. A triggering event will not occur if the elector demonstrates, to the IRS's satisfaction, that the transfer of assets did not result in a carryover under foreign law of the DRC's, or separate unit's, losses, expenses, or deductions to the transferee of the assets. Following rebuttal, described below, the domestic-use agreement is still effective. (28)

  5. 50% or more of the interest in a separate unit (measured by voting power or value at the time of transaction, or for multiple transactions, at the time of the first transaction) of the domestic owner, as compared with the domestic owner's percentage interest on the last day of the tax year in which the DCL was incurred, is disposed of in a single transaction or a series of transactions within a 12-month period. (29)

  6. An unaffiliated DRC, unaffiliated domestic owner, or hybrid-entity separate unit incurs a DCL and then becomes a foreign corporation (for instance, due to a reorganization or an election under Regs. Sec. 301.7701-3(c)).

  7. An unaffiliated DRC or unaffiliated domestic owner makes an election to become an RIC, REIT, or S corporation. 8. The elector fails to file the annual certification for a DCL.

  8. A taxpayer no longer satisfies the conditions required for the stand-alone exception.

    Triggering Event Exceptions

  9. Continuing ownership in interests and assets: Under Regs. Sec. 1.1503(d)-6(f), the following transactions do not constitute triggering events and do not require a new domestic-use agreement (because the ownership remains in the same affiliated group or with the same unaffiliated DRC or domestic owner):

  10. An affiliated DRC or affiliated domestic owner is no longer a member of a consolidated group solely because of a transaction in which a member of the same consolidated group succeeds to the tax attributes of the DRC or domestic owner under Sec. 381.

  11. Assets of an affiliated DRC, or assets of (or interests in) a separate unit of an affiliated domestic owner, are disposed of, and the assets or interests are acquired by one or more members of the consolidated group that includes the affiliated DRC or affiliated domestic owner, or by a partnership or a grantor trust, but only if, immediately after the acquisition, more than 90% of the partnership's or grantor trust's interests is owned, directly or indirectly, by members of such consolidated group.

  12. Assets of an unaffiliated DRC, or assets of (or interests in) a separate unit of an unaffiliated domestic owner, are disposed of, and the assets or interests are acquired by the unaffiliated DRC, or unaffiliated domestic owner, as applicable, or by a partnership or grantor trust, but only if immediately after the acquisition more than 90% of the partnership's or grantor trust's interests is owned, directly or indirectly, by the unaffiliated DRC or unaffiliated domestic owner.

  13. New domestic-use agreement: A triggering event will not occur for multiple-party events and events resulting in a single consolidated group, provided the elector files a new domestic-use agreement (Regs. Sec. 1.1503(d)-6(f)(2)(i)).

    A multiple-party event includes one of the following:

  14. An affiliated DRC or affiliated domestic owner becomes an unaffiliated domestic corporation or a member of a new consolidated group (other than in a transaction described in (2) below for events resulting in a single consolidated group).

  15. Assets of a DRC or assets of, or interests in, a separate unit are disposed of in a transaction in which such assets or interests are acquired by an unaffiliated domestic corporation, one or more members of a new consolidated group, or a partnership or grantor trust, but only if immediately after the disposition, more than 90% of the partnership's or grantor trust's interests is owned, directly or indirectly, by the unaffiliated domestic owner or by members of a new consolidated group.

    Events resulting in a single consolidated group under Regs. Sec. 1.1503 (d)-6(f)(2)(ii) include:

  16. An unaffiliated DRC or unaffiliated domestic owner becomes a member of a consolidated group.

  17. A consolidated group ceases existence due to a transaction described in Regs. Sec. 1.1502-13(j)(5)(i) (relating to acquisitions of the consolidated group's common parent), other than a transaction in which any member of the terminating group, or the successor-in-interest of such member, is not a member of the surviving group immediately after the...

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