FEBRUARY 2016 n NO. 1
Tax and
White Collar Defense
& Investigations
FATCA Update: Treasury Issues Long-Awaited Rules
For Foreign Asset Reporting by Domestic Entities
Action Item: Nearly six years after Congress passed the
Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA), the Treasury
Department has finally issued Final Regulations mandating
the reporting of foreign assets by domestic entities.
Starting with the 2016 tax year, certain closely-held U.S.
corporations, partnerships, and trusts must file Form 8938,
“Statement of Specified Foreign Financial Assets,” with
their federal income tax returns to report their foreign
assets. The consequences of non-compliance with this
new reporting obligation can be severe: the Internal
Revenue Service may assess significant civil penalties and,
in addition, determine that the statute of limitations for
the entire tax return remains open indefinitely until the
Form 8938 is filed.
The Treasury Department has finally issued regulations
implementing the rules requiring domestic entities to
annually disclose their foreign financial assets to the
Internal Revenue Service. In 2010, as part of the enactment
of the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA),
Congress added section 6038D to the Internal Revenue
Code requiring certain taxpayers to annually report
information about their “specified foreign financial assets,”
if the aggregate value of such assets is greater than $50,000
on the last day or the year, or $75,000 at any time during
the year.
Such reporting is to be made on Form 8938,
entitled “Statement of Specified Foreign Financial Assets.”
Section 6038D applies to individual taxpayers, as well as
any domestic entity “formed or availed of for purposes of
holding, directly or indirectly, specified foreign financial
assets as if such entity were an individual.”
In 2011, the Treasury Department published a proposed
regulation setting forth the conditions under which a
domestic entity would be required to report specified
foreign financial assets. Reporting by domestic entities
was deferred, however, due to issuance of Notice 201310, which provided that such obligation would not be
©2016 Blank Rome LLP. All rights reserved.
Please contact Blank Rome for permission to reprint. Notice: The purpose of this update is to identify select developments that may be of interest
to readers. The information contained herein is abridged and summarized from various sources, the accuracy and completeness of which cannot be assured.
This update should not be
construed as legal advice or opinion, and is not a substitute for the advice of counsel.
. Tax and White Collar Defense & Investigations n Page 2
effective until issuance of final regulations. After receiving
comments, the Treasury Department published the final
regulation for domestic entity reporting on February 23,
2016. The new rules are effective for tax years beginning
after December 31, 2015.
“Specified Domestic Entity”
Section 6038D provides that a “specified domestic entity”
that has any interest in a “specified foreign financial
asset” during the taxable year must attach Form 8938
to its tax return. The Final Regulations define “specified
domestic entity” as any domestic corporation, a domestic
partnership, or a domestic trust “formed or availed of
for purposes of holding, directly or indirectly, specified
foreign financial assets.” The determination as to whether
a domestic corporation, a domestic partnership, or a
domestic trust is a “specified domestic entity” is to be made
on an annual basis.
In the case of corporations and partnerships, such entities
are considered to have been “formed or availed of” for
purposes of holding specified foreign financial assets if (1)
the entity is “closely held” by a specified individual and
(2) at least 50 percent of the entity’s gross income for the
taxable year is passive income or at least 50 percent of the
assets held by the entity for the taxable year are assets
that produce or are held for the production of passive
income.
The Final Regulations provide that the percentage
of passive assets held by a corporation or partnership for a
taxable year is the weighted average percentage of passive
assets (weighted by total assets and measured quarterly),
and the value of assets of a corporation or partnership is
the fair market value of the assets or the book value of the
assets that is reflected on the corporation’s or partnership’s
balance sheet (as determined under either a U.S. or an
international financial accounting standard).
In the preamble to the Final Regulations, Treasury stated
that the “weighted average test” for determining whether
at least 50 percent of an entity’s income or assets are
passive “provides an administrable way to determine the
passive asset percentage.” Corporation or partnerships
may be required to substantiate their determination of the
passive asset percentage upon request by the IRS.
“Closely Held”
The Final Regulations provide that a domestic corporation
is deemed to be “closely held” by a specified individual if
at least 80 percent of the total combined voting power of
all classes of stock of the corporation entitled to vote, or
at least 80 percent of the total value of the stock of the
corporation, is owned, directly, indirectly, or constructively,
by a specified individual on the last day of the corporation’s
taxable year.
A domestic partnership is deemed to be “closely held” by
a specified individual if at least 80 percent of the capital or
profits interest in the partnership is held, directly, indirectly,
or constructively, by a specified individual on the last day
of the partnership’s taxable year. The preamble to the Final
Regulations specifies that this 80-percent threshold should
exempt most publicly-traded partnerships from being
considered “specified domestic entities.”
The Final Regulations provide that the constructive
ownership rules of IRC § 267(c) apply in making the
determination of whether a corporation or partnership
is “closely held” by a specified individual.
The Final
Regulations further specify that the constructive ownership
rules apply as if the family of an individual includes the
spouses of the individual’s family members.
. Tax and White Collar Defense & Investigations n Page 3
“Passive Income and Assets”
The Final Regulations provide that passive income means
the portion of gross income that consists of the following
items:
„„
Dividends, including substitute dividends;
„„
Interest;
„„
I
ncome equivalent to interest, including substitute
interest;
„„ ents and royalties, other than rents and royalties
R
derived in the active conduct of a trade or business
conducted, at least in part, by employees of the
corporation or partnership;
„„
Annuities;
„„ apital gains from the sale or exchange of property
C
giving rise to passive income in the form of dividends,
interest, income equivalent to interest, and rents and
royalties.
„„ apital gains from commodities transactions (including
C
futures, forwards, and similar transactions) subject to
certain exceptions;1
„„he excess of foreign currency gains over foreign
T
currency losses attributable to any IRC § 988
transaction; and
„„
income from notional principal contracts.
Net
The preamble to the Final Regulations explain that the
definition of “passive income” is based upon a similar
definition contained with the final FATCA regulations. The
definition employed in the Final Regulations is used to
“identify entities that have a high risk of being used for
tax evasion and to reduce compliance burdens for active
entities.”
The Final Regulations eliminate the so-called “principal
purpose test” included in the proposed regulations.
That test which would have treated any corporation
or partnership as “formed or availed of” for purposes
of holding specific foreign financial assets if at least 10
percent of the entity’s gross income or assets is passive and
the entity was formed or availed of with a principal purpose
of avoiding section 6038D. In the preamble to the Final
Regulations, Treasury stated that it believed the 50-percent
passive assets or income threshold “appropriately captures
situations in which specified individuals may use a domestic
corporation or partnership to circumvent the reporting
requirements of section 6038D” and that “taxpayers should
be able to determine their reporting requirements under
section 6038D based on objective requirements rather
than a subjective principal purpose test.” In the preamble,
Treasury warns that it “will continue to monitor whether
domestic corporations and partnerships not required
to report under these final regulations are being used
inappropriately by specified individuals to avoid reporting
under section 6038D” and that Treasury “may expand the
definition of a specified domestic entity in future guidance.”
The Final Regulations provide an exception applicable to a
corporation or partnership that regularly acts as a dealer
in property that gives rise to passive income, forward
contracts, option contracts, or similar financial instruments
(including notional principal contracts and all instruments
referenced to commodities). In the case of such an entity,
the term “passive income” does not include (1) any item
of income or gain (other than any dividends or interest)
from any transaction (including hedging transactions and
transactions involving physical settlement) entered into in
the ordinary course of such dealer’s trade or business as
such a dealer; and (2) if such dealer is a dealer in securities
(within the meaning of section 475(c)(2)), any income from
any transaction entered into in the ordinary course of such
trade or business as a dealer in securities.
The Final Regulations provide a special rule for related
entities.
All domestic corporations and domestic
partnerships that are closely held by the same specified
individual and that are connected through stock or
partnership interest ownership with a common parent
corporation or partnership are treated as owning the
combined assets and receiving the combined income of all
members of that group. For purposes of this rule, assets
. Tax and White Collar Defense & Investigations n Page 4
relating to any contract, equity, or debt existing between
members of such a group, as well as any items of gross
income arising under or from such contract, equity, or
debt, are eliminated. A domestic corporation or a domestic
partnership is considered connected through stock or
partnership interest ownership with a common parent
corporation or partnership if stock representing at least 80
percent of the total combined voting power of all classes of
stock of the corporation entitled to vote or of the value of
such corporation, or partnership interests representing at
least 80 percent of the profits interests or capital interests
of such partnership, in each case other than stock of or
partnership interests in the common parent, is owned
by one or more of the other connected corporations,
connected partnerships, or the common parent.
Example 2. Application of aggregation rule and reporting
threshold.
EXAMPLES
(i) Facts. L is a specified individual.
In Year X, L wholly
owns DC1, a domestic corporation, and also owns a
90% capital interest in DP, a domestic partnership. DC1
owns 80% of the sole class of stock of DC2, a domestic
corporation. DC1 has no assets other than its interest
in DC2.
DC2’s only assets are assets that produce
passive income, with a maximum value in Year X of
$40,000 on October 12. DC2’s assets are comprised
in relevant part of specified foreign financial assets
with a maximum value in Year X of $15,000 on
October 12. DP’s only assets are assets that produce
passive income and that are specified foreign financial
assets with a maximum value of $90,000 in Year X on
October 12.
The Final Regulations provide a series of examples to
illustrate these rules.
(ii) Specified domestic entity status.
Example 1.
Closely held and constructive ownership.
(i) acts. DC1 is a domestic corporation the total value
F
of the stock of which is owned 60% by A, a specified
individual, 30% by B, a member of A’s family for
purposes of section 267(c)(2) who is not a specified
individual, and 10% by FC1, a foreign corporation. DC1
owns 90% of the total value of the stock of DC2, a
domestic corporation.
FC2, a foreign corporation, owns
10% of DC2. Neither A nor B owns, directly, indirectly,
or constructively, any stock in FC1 or FC2.
(ii) Closely held ownership determination. A is
considered to own 90% and 81% of the total value of
DC1 and DC2, respectively, by application of the rules
of section 267(c) and this section.
DC1 and DC2 are
closely held by A within the meaning of paragraph (b)
(2) of this section because A, a specified individual, is
considered to own more than 80% of their total value.
(A) C1 and DC2. DC1 and DC2 are closely held by a
D
specified individual for purposes of paragraph (b)
(2) of this section. DC1 and DC2 are considered
related entities that are connected through stock
ownership with a common parent corporation
under paragraph (b)(3)(iii) of this section, because
DC1 and DC2 are closely held by L, and DC2 is
connected with DC1 through DC1’s ownership
of stock of DC2 representing at least 80% of the
voting power or value of DC2.
As a result, for
purposes of applying paragraph (b)(1)(ii) of this
section, each of DC1 and DC2 is considered as
owning the combined assets, and receiving the
combined income, of both DC1 and DC2; however,
DC1’s equity interest in DC2 is disregarded for this
purpose under paragraph (b)(3)(iii) of this section.
Therefore, DC1 and DC2 each satisfies the passive
asset threshold of paragraph (b)(1)(ii) of this
section, because 100 percent of each company’s
assets is passive. DC1 and DC2 are specified
domestic entities for Year X.
. Tax and White Collar Defense & Investigations n Page 5
(B) P. DP is closely held by a specified individual for
D
purposes of paragraph (b)(2) of this section. DP is
not considered a related entity with DC1 and DC2
under paragraph (b)(3)(iii) of this section, because
DC1 and DP are not owned by a common parent
corporation or partnership. As a result, whether
the passive income or passive asset threshold
of paragraph (b)(1)(ii) of this section is met with
respect to DP is determined solely by reference
to DP’s separately earned passive income and
separately held passive assets.
DP holds only
passive assets during Year X and therefore
satisfies paragraph (b)(1)(ii) of this section. DP is a
specified domestic entity for Year X.
(iii) Reporting requirements.
(A) DC1. Under §1.6038D-2(a)(6)(ii), DC1 is
not treated as owning the specified foreign
financial assets held by DC2 and DP for
purposes of applying the reporting threshold of
§1.6038D-2(a)(1), because DC1 does not have an
interest in any specified foreign financial assets.
DC1 is not required to file Form 8938 because
DC1 does not satisfy the reporting threshold of
§1.6038D-2(a)(1).
(B) DC2 and DP.
Under §1.6038D-3, DC2 and DP
each has an interest in specified foreign financial
assets. For purposes of applying the reporting
threshold of §1.6038D-2(a)(1), §1.6038D-2(a)
(6)(ii) provides that DC2 is treated as owning in
addition to its own assets the assets of DP, and DP
is treated as owning in addition to its own assets
the assets of DC2. As a result, DC2 and DP each
satisfies the reporting threshold of §1.6038D-2(a)
(1), because the value of the specified foreign
financial assets each is considered as owning
for purposes of § 1.6038D-2(a)(1) is $105,000
on October 12, Year X, which exceeds DC2’s and
DP’s $75,000 reporting threshold.
DC2 and DP
must each file Form 8938 for Year X to report
their respective specified foreign financial assets
in which they have an interest and disclose their
maximum values as provided in § 1.6038D-4
($15,000 in the case of DC2 and $90,000 in the
case of DP).
Example 3. Application of aggregation rule and entity
with an active trade or business.
(i) Facts. The facts are the same as in Example 2, except
that DC2 also owns an active business.
The assets
attributable to the business are not passive assets and
constitute at least 60% of the value of DC2’s assets at
all times during Year X. The income from the business
is not passive income and constitutes at least 60% of
the gross income generated by DC2 in Year X.
(ii) Specified domestic entity status.
(A) DC1 and DC2. DC1 and DC2 are considered
related entities that are connected through stock
ownership with a common parent corporation
under paragraph (b)(3)(iii) of this section
because DC1 and DC2 are closely held by L,
and DC2 is connected with DC1 though DC1’s
ownership of stock of DC2 representing at least
80% of the voting power or value of DC2.
As a
result, for purposes of applying paragraph (b)
. Tax and White Collar Defense & Investigations n Page 6
(1)(ii) of this section, each of DC1 and DC2 is
treated as owning the combined assets, and
receiving the combined income, of both DC1 and
DC2; however, DC1’s equity interest in DC2 is
disregarded for this purpose under paragraph (b)
(3)(iii) of this section. As a result, no more than
40 percent of the value of DC1’s and DC2’s assets
at all times during Year X are passive and no more
than 40 percent of DC1’s and DC2’s gross income
for Year X is passive. DC1 and DC2 do not satisfy
the passive income or passive asset threshold in
paragraph (b)(1)(ii) of this section for Year X. DC1
and DC2 are not specified domestic entities for
Year X.
(B) DP.
For the reasons described in paragraph (ii)(B)
of Example 2, DP is a specified domestic entity for
Year X.
(iii) Reporting requirements.
(A) DC1 and DC2. DC1 and DC2 are not specified
domestic entities for Year X, and are not required
to file Form 8938.
(B) DP. Under §1.6038D-3, DP has an interest
in specified foreign financial assets.
Under
§1.6038D-2(a)(6)(ii), DP is treated as owning
in addition to its own assets the assets of DC2.
As a result, DP satisfies the reporting threshold
of §1.6038D-2(a)(1) because the value of the
specified foreign financial assets it is considered
to own for purposes of §1.6038D-2(a)(1) is
$105,000 on October 12, Year X, which exceeds
DP’s $75,000 reporting threshold. DP must file
Form 8938 for Year X to report the specified
foreign financial assets in which it has an interest
and disclose their maximum values as provided in
§1.6038D-4, which is $90,000.
Domestic Trusts
A domestic trust is considered to “formed or availed of”
for purposes of holding specified foreign financial assets
only if it has one or more specified persons as a current
beneficiary. The term “current beneficiary” means, with
respect to the taxable year, any person who at any time
during such taxable year is entitled to, or at the discretion
of any person may receive, a distribution from the principal
or income of the trust (determined without regard to
any power of appointment to the extent that such power
remains unexercised at the end of the taxable year).
A
“current beneficiary” also includes any holder of a general
power of appointment, whether or not exercised, that was
exercisable at any time during the taxable year, but does
not include any holder of a general power of appointment
that is exercisable only on the death of the holder.
Excepted Domestic Entities
The Final Regulations provide that certain domestic entities
are excluded from the definition of “specified domestic
entity,” including all of the following:
„„ ny corporation the stock of which is regularly traded
a
on an established securities market,
„„ ny corporation which is a member of the same
a
“expanded affiliated group” as a corporation the stock
of which is regularly traded on an established securities
market,
„„ ny organization exempt from taxation under IRC §
a
501(a) or an individual retirement plan,
„„he United States government or any wholly owned
t
agency or instrumentality thereof,
„„ ny State, the District of Columbia, any possession
a
of the United States, any political subdivision of any
of the foregoing, or any wholly owned agency or
instrumentality of any one or more of the foregoing,
„„
bank (as defined in section 581),
any
„„ ny real estate investment trust (as defined in
a
section 856),
„„ ny regulated investment company (as defined in
a
section 851),
. Tax and White Collar Defense & Investigations n Page 7
„„ny common trust fund (as defined in section 584(a)),
a
and
„„ ny
a
trust which is exempt from tax under section
664(c), or is described in section 4947(a)(1).
In addition, the Final Regulations also exempt a domestic
trust provided that the trustee:
„„ as supervisory authority over or fiduciary obligations
h
with regard to the specified foreign financial assets
held by the trust;
„„ mely files (including any applicable extensions) annual
ti
returns and information returns on behalf of the trust;
and
„„ (1) a bank that is examined by the Office of the
i
s
Comptroller of the Currency, the Board of Governors
of the Federal Reserve System, the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation, or the National Credit Union
Administration; (2) a financial institution that is
registered with and regulated or examined by the
Securities and Exchange Commission; or (3) a domestic
corporation whose stock is regularly traded on an
established securities market or is a member of the
same expanded affiliated group as a corporation whose
stock is regularly traded on an established securities
market.
Finally, the Final Regulations exempt domestic grantor
trusts owned by one or more specified persons.
Valuation Determination
The Final Regulations provide a special rule for purposes
of determining the aggregate value of specified foreign
financial assets held by a specific domestic entity. Under
the existing regulations, a taxpayer is not required to report
a particular asset on Form 8938 if such asset is reported
on any of the following international information returns:
Forms 3520, 5471, 8621, 8865, and 8891. The Final
Regulations provide that the value of any specified foreign
financial asset which is reported on one of the enumerated
information returns is excluded for purposes of determining
the domestic entity’s aggregate value of specified foreign
financial assets.
The Final Regulations further provide that purposes of
determining the aggregate value of specified foreign
financial assets, a specified domestic entity that is a
corporation or partnership and that has an interest in any
specified foreign financial asset is treated as owning all
the specified foreign financial assets held by all domestic
corporations and domestic partnerships that are closely
held by the same specified individual.
Effective Date
The Final Regulations apply to taxable years beginning after
December 31, 2015.
Penalties for Non-Compliance
Any domestic entity that is required to file Form 8938 and
fails to do so will be subject to an initial civil penalty of
$10,000. A continuation penalty of $10,000 per month
may be applied if the non-compliance continues after the
IRS mails a notice regarding the failure to file Form 8938, up
to a maximum of $50,000.
In addition to civil penalties, the
failure to file Form 8938 may also subject the taxpayer to
criminal penalties.
If the taxpayer demonstrates that the failure to file
Form 8938 was due to reasonable cause and not due to
willful neglect, the penalty may be abated. In order to
demonstrate reasonable cause, the taxpayer must make an
affirmative showing of all the facts alleged as reasonable
cause for the failure to disclose. The IRS will make the
determination of whether a failure to disclose a specified
foreign financial asset on Form 8938 was due to reasonable
cause and not due to willful neglect on a case-by-case basis,
taking into account all pertinent facts and circumstances.
.
Tax and White Collar Defense & Investigations n Page 8
The Final Regulations provide that the fact that a foreign
jurisdiction would impose a civil or criminal penalty on the
taxpayer (or any other person) for disclosing the required
information is not reasonable cause.
Even more significant than the potential civil penalty
exposure, a taxpayer’s failure to comply with the Form
8938 filing obligations may cause the statute of limitations
to remain open. In particular, for any taxpayer who fails
to file Form 8938, or fails to report a specified foreign
financial asset that is required to be reported, the statute of
limitations for the tax year may remain open for all or a part
of the income tax return until three years after the date on
which the Form 8938 is filed.— ©2016, BLANK ROME LLP
1. he Final Regulations exclude (1) any commodity hedging transaction
T
described in IRC § 954(c)(5)(A), determined by treating the corporation
or partnership as a controlled foreign corporation; or (2) active business
gains or losses from the sale of commodities, but only if substantially all the
corporation or partnership’s commodities are property described in IRC §
1221(a)(1), (2), or (8).
Matthew D. Lee is the author of
The Foreign Account Tax Compliance
Act Answer Book 2015 (published
by the Practising Law Institute),
a definitive treatment of the due
diligence, withholding, reporting, and
compliance obligations imposed by
FATCA on foreign financial institutions,
non-financial foreign entities, and withholding agents.
For
more information on this publication, please click here.
For additional information, please contact:
Matthew D. Lee
215.569.5352 | Lee-M@BlankRome.com
www.taxcontroversywatch.com
.