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IRS Revenue Ruling
1999-14 Code Secs.
162, 163
<<FULL TEXT>>
26 CFR 1.162-11: Rentals
(Also section 163; 1.163-1.)
Business expenses; interest; lease-in/lease-out
transactions. A
taxpayer may not deduct, under sections 162 and 163 of the
Code, rent and
interest paid or incurred in connection with a
lease-in/lease-out (LILO)
transaction that lacks economic substance.
REV. RUL. 99-14
ISSUE
May a taxpayer deduct, under sections 162 and 163 of the
Internal
Revenue Code, rent and interest paid or incurred in
connection with a
"lease-in/lease-out" ("LILO") transaction?
FACTS
X is a U.S. corporation. FM is a foreign municipality that
has
historically owned and used certain property having a
remaining useful
life of 50 years and a fair market value of $100 million.
BK1 and BK2 are
banks. None of the parties is related.
On January 1, 1997, X and FM entered into a LILO transaction
under
which FM leased the property to X under a "Headlease," and X
immediately
leased the property back to FM under a "Sublease." The term
of the
Headlease is 34 years. The "primary" term of the Sublease is
20 years.
Moreover, as described below, the Sublease may also have a
"put renewal"
term of 10 years.
The Headlease requires X to make two rental payments to FM
during its
34-year term: (1) an $89 million "prepayment" at the
beginning of year 1;
and (2) a "postpayment" at the end of year 34 that has a
discounted
present value of $8 million. For federal income tax
purposes, X and FM
allocate the prepayment ratably to the first 6 years of the
Headlease and
the future value of the postpayment ratably to the remaining
28 years of
the Headlease.
The Sublease requires FM to make fixed, annual rental
payments over
both the primary term and, if exercised, the put renewal
term. The fixed,
annual payments during the put renewal term are
substantially higher than
those for the primary term. Nevertheless, the fixed, annual
payments
during the put renewal term are projected (as of January 1,
1997) to equal
only 90 percent of the fair market value rental amounts for
that term.
At the end of the Sublease primary term, FM has a
"fixed-payment
option" to purchase from X the Headlease residual (the right
to use the
property beyond the Sublease primary term subject to the
obligation to
make the rent postpayment) for a fixed amount that is
projected (as of
January 1, 1997) to be equal to the fair market value of the
Headlease
residual. If FM exercises the option, the transaction is
terminated at
that point and X is not required to make any portion of the
postpayment
due under the Headlease. If FM does not exercise the option,
X may elect
to (1) use the property itself for the remaining term of the
Headlease,
(2) lease the property to another person for the remaining
term of the
Headlease, or (3) compel FM to lease the property for the
10-year put
renewal term of the Sublease. If FM does not exercise the
fixed-payment
option and X exercises its put renewal option, X can require
FM to
purchase a letter of credit guaranteeing the put renewal
rents. If FM does
not obtain the letter of credit, FM must exercise the
fixed-payment
option.
To partially fund the $89 million Headlease prepayment, X
borrows $54
million from BK1 and $6 million from BK2. Both loans are
nonrecourse, have
fixed interest rates, and provide for annual debt service
payments that
fully amortize the loans over the 20-year primary term of
the Sublease.
The amount and timing of the debt service payments mirror
the amount and
timing of the Sublease payments due during the primary term
of the
Sublease.
Upon receiving the $89 million Headlease prepayment, FM
deposits $54
million into a deposit account with an affiliate of BK1 and
$6 million
into a deposit account with an affiliate of BK2. The
deposits with the
affiliates of BK1 and BK2 earn interest at the same rates as
the loans
from BK1 and BK2. FM directs the affiliate of BK1 to pay BK1
annual
amounts equal to 90 percent of FM's annual rent obligation
under the
Sublease (that is, amounts sufficient to satisfy X's debt
service
obligation to BK1). The parties treat these amounts as
having been paid
from the affiliate to FM, then from FM to X as rental
payments, and
finally from X to BK1 as debt service payments. In addition,
FM pledges
the deposit account to X as security for FM's obligations
under the
Sublease, while X, in turn, pledges its interest in FM's
pledge to BK1 as
security for X's obligations under the loan from BK1.
Similarly, FM
directs the affiliate of BK2 to pay BK2 annual amounts equal
to 10 percent
of FM's annual rent obligation under the Sublease (that is,
amounts
sufficient to satisfy X's debt service obligation to BK2).
The parties
treat these amounts as having been paid from the affiliate
to FM, then
from FM to X as rental payments, and finally from X to BK2
as debt service
payments. Although this deposit account is not pledged, the
parties
understand that FM will use the account to pay the remaining
10 percent of
FM's annual rent obligation under the Sublease.
X requires FM to invest $15 million of the Headlease
prepayment in
highly-rated debt securities that will mature in an amount
sufficient to
fund the fixed amount due under the fixed-payment option,
and to pledge
these debt securities to X. Having economically defeased
both its rental
obligations under the Sublease and its fixed payment under
the
fixed-payment option, FM keeps the remaining portion of the
Headlease
prepayment as its return on the transaction.
For tax purposes, X claims deductions for interest on the
loans and for
the allocated rents on the Headlease. X includes in gross
income the rents
received on the Sublease and, if and when exercised, the
payment received
on the fixed payment option. By accounting for each element
of the
transaction separately, X purports to generate a stream of
substantial net
deductions in the early years of the transaction followed by
net income
inclusions on or after the conclusion of the Sublease
primary term. As a
result, X anticipates a substantial net after-tax return
from the
transaction. X also anticipates a positive pre-tax economic
return from
the transaction. However, this pre-tax return is
insignificant in relation
to the net after-tax return.
LAW AND ANALYSIS
In general, a transaction will be respected for tax purposes
if it has
"economic substance which is compelled or encouraged by
business or
regulatory realities, is imbued with tax-independent
considerations, and
is not shaped solely by tax-avoidance features that have
meaningless
labels attached." Frank Lyon Co. v. United States, 435 U.S.
561, 583-84
(1978); James v. Commissioner, 899 F.2d 905, 908-09 (10th
Cir. 1990). In
assessing the economic substance of a transaction, a key
factor is whether
the transaction has any practical economic effect other than
the creation
of tax losses. Courts have refused to recognize the tax
consequences of a
transaction that does not appreciably affect the taxpayer's
beneficial
interest except to reduce tax. The presence of an
insignificant pre-tax
profit is not enough to provide a transaction with
sufficient economic
substance to be respected for tax purposes. Knetsch v.
United States, 364
U.S. 361, 366 (1960); ACM Partnership v. Commissioner, 157
F.3d 231, 248
(3d Cir. 1998); Sheldon v. Commissioner, 94 T.C. 738, 768
(1990).
In determining whether a transaction has sufficient economic
substance
to be respected for tax purposes, courts have recognized
that offsetting
legal obligations, or circular cash flows, may effectively
eliminate any
real economic significance of the transaction. For example,
in Knetsch,
the taxpayer purchased an annuity bond using nonrecourse
financing.
However, the taxpayer repeatedly borrowed against increases
in the cash
value of the bond. Thus, the bond and the taxpayer's
borrowings
constituted offsetting obligations. As a result, the
taxpayer could never
derive any significant benefit from the bond. The Supreme
Court found the
transaction to be a sham, as it produced no significant
economic effect
and had been structured only to provide the taxpayer with
interest
deductions.
In Sheldon, the Tax Court denied the taxpayer the purported
tax
benefits of a series of Treasury bill sale-repurchase
transactions because
they lacked economic substance. In the transactions, the
taxpayer bought
Treasury bills that matured shortly after the end of the tax
year and
funded the purchase by borrowing against the Treasury bills.
The taxpayer
accrued the majority of its interest deduction on the
borrowings in the
first year while deferring the inclusion of its economically
offsetting
interest income from the Treasury bills until the second
year. The
transactions lacked economic substance because the economic
consequences
of holding the Treasury bills were largely offset by the
economic cost of
the borrowings. The taxpayer was denied the tax benefit of
the
transactions because the real economic impact of the
transactions was
"infinitesimally nominal and vastly insignificant when
considered in
comparison with the claimed deductions." Sheldon at 769.
In ACM Partnership, the taxpayer entered into a
near-simultaneous
purchase and sale of debt instruments. Taken together, the
purchase and
sale "had only nominal, incidental effects on [the
taxpayer's] net
economic position." ACM Partnership at 250. The taxpayer
claimed that,
despite the minimal net economic effect, the transaction had
a large tax
effect resulting from the application of the installment
sale rules to the
sale. The court held that transactions that do not
"appreciably" affect a
taxpayer's beneficial interest, except to reduce tax, are
devoid of
substance and are not respected for tax purposes. ACM
Partnership at 248.
The court denied the taxpayer the purported tax benefits of
the
transaction because the transaction lacked any significant
economic
consequences other than the creation of tax benefits.
Viewed as a whole, the objective facts of the LILO
transaction indicate
that the transaction lacks the potential for any significant
economic
consequences other than the creation of tax benefits. During
the 20-year
primary term of the Sublease, X's obligation to make the
property
available under the Sublease is completely offset by X's
right to use the
property under the Headlease. X's obligation to make debt
service payments
on the loans from BK1 and BK2 is completely offset by X's
right to receive
Sublease rentals from FM. Moreover, X's exposure to the risk
that FM will
not make the rent payments is further limited by the
arrangements with the
affiliates of BK1 and BK2. In the case of the loan from BK1,
X's economic
risk is completely eliminated through the defeasance
arrangement. In the
case of the smaller loan from BK2, X's economic risk,
although not
completely eliminated, is substantially reduced through the
deposit
arrangement. As a result, neither bank requires an
independent source of
funds to make the loans, or bears significant risk of
nonpayment. In
short, during the Sublease primary term, the offsetting and
circular
nature of the obligations eliminate any significant economic
consequences
of the transaction.
At the end of the 20-year Sublease primary term, X will have
either the
proceeds of the fixed-payment option or a Headlease residual
that has a
fair market value approximately equal to the proceeds of the
fixed payment
option. If, at the end of the 20-year Sublease primary term,
the Headlease
residual is worth more than the payment required on the
fixed-payment
option, FM will capture this excess value by exercising the
fixed payment
option, leaving X with only the proceeds of the option.
Conversely, if, at
the end of the 20-year Sublease primary term, the Headlease
residual is
worth significantly less than the payment required on the
fixed-payment
option, X will put the property back to FM under the put
renewal option at
rents, that while initially projected to be at only 90
percent of
estimated fair market value, are (because of the decline in
the value of
the property) greater than fair market value. Thus, the
fixed payment
option and put renewal option operate to "collar" the value
of the
Headlease residual during the primary term, limiting much of
the economic
consequence of the Headlease residual.
In addition, facts indicate that there is little economic
consequence
from X's nominal exposure to FM's credit under the
fixed-payment option
and, if exercised, the put renewal term. At the inception of
the
transaction, FM was required to use a portion of the
Headlease prepayment
to purchase highly-rated debt securities that were pledged
to X ensuring
FM's ability to make the payment under the fixed-payment
option. If FM
does not exercise the fixed-payment option and X exercises
the put renewal
option, X can require FM to purchase a letter of credit
guaranteeing FM's
obligation to make the put renewal rent payments. If FM does
not obtain
the letter of credit, FM must exercise the fixed-payment
option. Thus, as
a practical matter, the transaction is structured so that X
is never
subject to FM's credit.
The conclusion that X is insulated from any significant
economic
consequence of the Headlease residual is further supported
by several
factors indicating that the parties expect FM to exercise
the
fixed-payment option. First, FM has historically used the
property.
Second, because the fixed payment obligation is fully
defeased, FM need
not draw on other sources of capital to exercise the option.
However, if
FM does not exercise the fixed payment option and X
exercises the put
renewal option, FM would be required to draw on other
sources of capital
to satisfy its put renewal rental obligations.
In sum, the LILO transaction lacks the potential for
significant
economic consequences other than the creation of tax
benefits. During the
primary term of the Sublease, X's obligations to provide
property are
completely offset by its right to use property. X's
obligations to make
debt service payments on the loans are completely offset by
X's right to
receive rent on the Sublease. These cash flows are further
assured by the
deposit arrangements with the affiliates of BK1 and BK2.
Finally, X's
economic exposure to the Headlease residual is rendered
insignificant by
the option structure and the pledge of the securities that
defeases FM's
option payment. Thus, the only real economic consequence of
the LILO
transaction during the 20-year primary term of the Sublease
is X's pre-tax
return. This pre-tax return is too insignificant, when
compared to X's
after-tax yield, to support a finding that the transaction
has significant
economic consequences other than the creation of tax
benefits.
Some of the features of the LILO transaction discussed above
are
present in transactions that the Service will respect for
federal income
tax purposes. For example, an arrangement for "in-substance
defeasance" of
an outstanding debt was respected in Rev. Rul. 85-42, 1985-1
C.B. 36. By
contrast, in the LILO transaction, the deposit arrangement
exists from the
inception of the transaction, eliminating any need by BK1
and BK2 for an
independent source of funds. Similarly, other features of
the LILO
transaction, such as nonrecourse financing and fixed-payment
options, are
respected in other contexts. However, when these and other
features are
viewed as a whole in the context of the LILO transaction,
these features
indicate the transaction should not be respected for tax
purposes.
As a result of the transaction lacking economic substance, X
may not
deduct interest or rent paid or incurred in connection with
the
transaction.
The Service will scrutinize LILO transactions for lack of
economic
substance and/or, in appropriate cases, recharacterize
transactions for
federal income tax purposes based on their substance. See,
e.g., Gregory
v. Helvering 293 U.S. 495 (1935), Bussing v. Commissioner,
88 T.C. 449
(1987), Supplemental Opinion, 89 T.C. 1050 (1987). Use of
terms such as
"loan," "lease," "Headlease," and "Sublease" in this revenue
ruling should
not be interpreted to indicate the Service's acceptance of
X's
characterization of the LILO transaction described above.
HOLDING
A taxpayer may not deduct, under sections 162 and 163, rent
and
interest paid or incurred in connection with a LILO
transaction that lacks
economic substance.
EFFECT ON OTHER DOCUMENTS
Rev. Rul. 85-42 is distinguished.
DRAFTING INFORMATION
The principal author of this revenue ruling is John Aramburu
of the
Office of Assistant Chief Counsel (Income Tax and
Accounting). For further
information regarding this revenue ruling contact Mr.
Aramburu on (202)
622-4960 (not a toll-free call).
<<END RULING>>
TO
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