Revenue Ruling 2000-12 IRC Debt Instruments
 
Revenue Ruling 2000-12 IRC Debt Instruments
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Revenue Ruling 2000-12 IRC Debt Instruments

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Revenue Ruling 2000-12 IRC Debt Instruments


IRS Revenue Ruling
2000-12

 Code Secs. 1275, 165

<<FULL TEXT>>

26 CFR 1.1275-2: Special rules relating to debt instruments.
(Also section 165; 1.165-1.)

26 CFR 1.1275-6: Integration of qualifying debt instruments.

Treatment of certain debt acquisitions. This ruling addresses three
situations in which a taxpayer acquires two debt instruments that are
structured so that it is expected that the value of one will increase
significantly at the same time that the value of the other one decreases
significantly, and holds that in each situation the taxpayer cannot
recognize the claimed loss on the sale of the debt instrument that
decreases in value while not recognizing the gain on the other debt
instrument.


REV. RUL. 2000-12

ISSUE

Under the circumstances described below, if a taxpayer acquires two
debt instruments that are structured so that it is expected that the value
of one will increase significantly at the same time that the value of the
other one decreases significantly, can the taxpayer recognize a current
loss on the sale of the debt instrument that decreases in value while not
recognizing the gain on the other debt instrument?


FACTS

SITUATION I

X is a corporation that files returns on a calendar-year basis. On
September 1, 1993, X purchases two privately-placed debt instruments, Note
1 and Note 2, from unrelated issuers for $1,000,000 each.

Note 1 has a 10-year term and a stated principal amount of $1,000,000.
It provides for quarterly interest payments, beginning on December 1,
1993. The interest rate for the first quarter is 5.9 percent, compounded
quarterly. Note 1 provides for contingent payments based on an event that
will occur (or not occur) with a probability of 50 percent on December 1,
1993 (the reset event). The reset event does not depend on actively traded
personal property. If the reset event occurs, the interest rate doubles to
11.8 percent, compounded quarterly. If the reset event does not occur, the
interest rate is reset at zero.

Note 2 has the same terms as Note 1 except that the consequences of the
contingency are reversed. Thus, if the reset event occurs, the interest
rate is reset at zero. If the reset event does not occur, the interest
rate doubles to 11.8 percent, compounded quarterly.

At the time the notes are purchased, based upon the structure of the
notes, it can be expected that, as a result of the reset, one note will
increase significantly in value and the other note will decrease in value
by the same amount. The expected tax loss on the note that decreases in
value significantly exceeds any reasonably expected economic loss on the
two notes.

On December 1, 1993, the reset event does not occur. Thus, on that
date, the interest rate on Note 1 is reset at zero, and the interest rate
on Note 2 doubles to 11.8 percent, compounded quarterly. As a result of
the reset, the fair market value of Note 2 increases significantly because
of the doubling of its interest rate, and the fair market value of Note 1
decreases by the same amount. On December 2, 1993, X sells Note 1 for its
fair market value and claims a loss.

SITUATION 2

Y is a corporation that files returns on a calendar-year basis. On
September 1. 1998, Y purchases two privately-placed debt instruments, Note
3 and Note 4, from unrelated issuers for $1,000,000 each.

Note 3 has a 10-year term and a stated principal amount of $1,000,000.
It provides for quarterly interest payments, beginning on December 1,
1998. The interest rate for the first quarter is 5.7 percent, compounded
quarterly. Note 3 provides for contingent payments based on an event that
will occur (or not occur) with a probability of 50 percent on December 1,
1998 (the reset event). The reset event does not depend on actively traded
personal property.

If the reset event occurs, the interest rate doubles to 11.4 percent,
compounded quarterly. If the reset event does not occur, the interest rate
is reset at zero.

Note 4 has the same terms as Note 3 except that the consequences of the
contingency are reversed. Thus, if the reset event occurs, the interest
rate is reset at zero. If the reset event does not occur, the interest
rate doubles to 11.4 percent, compounded quarterly.

At the time the notes are purchased, based upon the structure of the
notes, it can be expected that, as a result of the reset, one note will
increase significantly in value and the other note will decrease in value
by the same amount. The expected tax loss on the note that decreases in
value significantly exceeds any reasonably expected economic loss on the
two notes.

On December 1, 1998, the reset event does not occur. Thus, on that
date, the interest rate on Note 3 is reset at zero, and the interest rate
on Note 4 doubles to 11.4 percent, compounded quarterly. As a result of
the reset, the fair market value of Note 4 increases significantly because
of the doubling of its interest rate, and the fair market value of Note 3
decreases by the same amount. On December 2, 1998, Y sells Note 3 for its
fair market value and claims a loss.


SITUATION 3

Z is a corporation that files returns on a calendar-year basis. On
September 1, 1998, Z purchases two privately-placed debt instruments, Note
5 and Note 6, from unrelated issuers.

Note 5 is purchased for $1,000,000. Note 5 has a 10-year term and a
stated principal amount of $1,000,000. It provides for quarterly interest
payments, beginning on December 1, 1998. The interest rate for the first
quarter is 5.7 percent, compounded quarterly. Note 5 provides for
contingent payments based on an event that will occur (or not occur) with
a probability of 50 percent on December 1, 1998 (the reset event). The
reset event does not depend on actively traded personal property. If the
reset event occurs, the interest rate doubles to 11.4 percent, compounded
quarterly. If the reset event does not occur, the interest rate is reset
at zero.

Note 6 is purchased for $615,000. Note 6 has a 20-year term and a
stated principal amount of $615,000. It provides for quarterly interest
payments beginning on December 1, 1998. The interest rate on Note 6 for
the first quarter is set at 3-month LIBOR. If the reset event occurs, the
interest rate is reset at zero. If the reset event does not occur, the
interest rate doubles to 200 percent of 3-month LIBOR, adjusted quarterly.

At the time the notes are purchased, based upon the structure of the
notes, it can be expected that, as a result of the reset, the value of one
note will increase significantly and the value of the other note will
decrease significantly. The expected tax loss on the note that decreases
in value significantly exceeds any reasonably expected economic loss on
the two notes.

On December 1, 1998, the reset event does not occur. Thus, on that
date, the interest rate on Note 5 is reset at zero, and the interest rate
on Note 6 doubles to 200 percent of 3-month LIBOR, adjusted quarterly. As
a result, the fair market value of Note 6 increases significantly because
of the doubling of its interest rate, and the fair market value of Note 5
decreases significantly. On December 2, 1998, Z sells Note 5 for its fair
market value and claims a loss.


LAW AND ANALYSIS

SITUATION 1

Section 165(a) of the Internal Revenue Code provides that there shall
be allowed as a deduction any loss sustained during the taxable year and
not compensated for by insurance or otherwise. Section 1.165-1(b) of the
Income Tax Regulations provides, in addition, that for a loss to be
allowable as a deduction under section 165(a), it must be evidenced by
closed and completed transactions, fixed by identifiable events, and
actually sustained during the taxable year. Section 1.165-1(b) also
provides that only a bona fide loss is allowable and that substance and
not mere form shall govern in determining a deductible loss.

The courts have held that a loss is allowable as a deduction for
federal income tax purposes only if it is bona fide and reflects actual
economic consequences. An artificial loss lacking economic substance is
not allowable. See ACM Partnership v. Commissioner, 157 F.3d 231, 252 (3d
Cir. 1998) ("Tax losses such as these . . . which do not correspond to any
actual economic losses, do not constitute the type of 'bona fide' losses
that are deductible under the Internal Revenue Code and regulations."),
cert. denied, 526 U.S. 1017 (1999); Scully v. United States, 840 F.2d 478,
486 (7th Cir. 1988) (to be deductible, a loss must be a "genuine economic
loss"); Shoenberg v. Commissioner, 77 F.2d 446, 448 (8th Cir. 1935) (to be
deductible, a loss must be "actual and real"), cert. denied, 296 U.S. 586
(1935).

The courts similarly have disallowed losses from option-straddle
transactions that were found to be devoid of economic substance. The
option-straddle transactions were prearranged to generate a loss for tax
purposes while deferring an offsetting gain. Even though the relevant
trades may have taken place, the loss deduction claimed was not allowed
because no true loss had occurred. Lerman v. Commissioner, 939 F.2d 44, 52
(3d Cir. 1991), cert. denied, 502 U.S. 984 (1991), and Keane v.
Commissioner, 865 F.2d 1088, 1092 (9th Cir. 1989), aff'g Glass v.
Commissioner, 87 T.C. 1087 (1986).

The sale of Note 1 in Situation 1 does not produce an allowable loss
under section 165. When X sells Note 1 before its maturity date but
retains Note 2, X does not realize an actual economic loss because the
purported loss on the sale of Note 1 is substantially offset by the
unrealized gain in Note 2. Such an artificial loss is not allowable for
federal income tax purposes.


SITUATION 2

Sections 1271 through 1275, and the regulations thereunder, provide
rules for the taxation of holders of debt instruments, including debt
instruments that provide for one or more contingent payments. These rules
generally require holders of debt instruments to accrue original issue
discount (OID) using the constant-yield method. Note 3 and Note 4 are
subject to the OID rules because the notes provide for contingent
payments.

Section 1.1275-6 generally provides for the integration of a
"qualifying debt instrument" with a "section 1.1275-6 hedge" if the
combined cash flows of the components are substantially equivalent to the
cash flows on a fixed rate debt instrument or a variable rate debt
instrument that pays interest at a qualified floating rate. When section
1.1275-6 applies, the combined cash flows of the qualifying debt
instrument and the section 1.1275-6 hedge generally are treated as a
synthetic debt instrument for all federal income tax purposes. The purpose
of section 1.1275-6 is to permit a more appropriate determination of the
character and timing of income, deductions, gains, or losses than would be
achieved by separate treatment of the components. Section 1.1275-6
generally applies to qualifying debt instruments issued on or after August
13, 1996.

Under section 1.1275-6(b)(1), a contingent payment debt instrument
(CPDI) that is issued for cash is a qualifying debt instrument. Under
section 1.1275-6(b)(2)(i), a section 1.1275-6 hedge is any financial
instrument (including a debt instrument) if the combined cash flows of the
financial instrument and the qualifying debt instrument permit the
calculation of a yield to maturity (under the principles of section 1272)
or the right to the combined cash flows would qualify under section
1.1275-5 as a variable rate debt instrument that pays interest at a
qualified floating rate or rates (except for the requirement that the
interest payments be stated as interest) (fixed-or-floating requirement).

Section 1.1275-6(b)(2)(ii)(B) provides that a debt instrument can be a
section 1.1275-6 hedge only if it is issued substantially
contemporaneously with, and has the same maturity (including rights to
accelerate or delay payments) as, the qualifying debt instrument.

Section 1.1275-6(c)(2) grants the Commissioner authority to integrate a
qualifying debt instrument that is a CPDI with a section 1.1275-6 hedge if
the combined cash flows are substantially the same as either of the cash
flows necessary to satisfy the fixed-or-floating requirement of section
1.1275-6(b)(2)(i). This rule allows the Commissioner to prevent the
potential timing and character mismatches that arise if the CPDI and its
hedge are treated separately.

Section 1.1275-6(d)(2) provides rules for legging out of an integrated
transaction. Section 1.1275-6(d)(2)(i)(B) sets out the rules for
determining when a legging out occurs if the Commissioner has integrated a
qualifying debt instrument and a financial instrument under section
1.1275-6(c)(2). Under those rules, the taxpayer legs out of the integrated
transaction if, prior to the maturity of the synthetic debt instrument,
the requirements for Commissioner integration under section 1.1275-6(c)(2)
are no longer met. Section 1.1275-6(d)(2)(ii) provides that if the
taxpayer legs out of an integrated transaction, then the taxpayer is
treated as selling or otherwise terminating the synthetic debt instrument,
immediately before legging out, for its fair market value and realizing
and recognizing at that time any resulting income, deduction, gain, or
loss.

In Situation 2, unlike Situation 1, the notes are issued after the
effective date of the integration rules of section 1.1275-6 and qualify
for integration by the Commissioner under section 1.1275-6(c)(2). In this
case, the Commissioner integrates the notes under section 1.1275-6(c)(2)
as of the issue date. Upon the sale of Note 3, the requirements for
Commissioner integration under section 1.1275-6(c)(2) are no longer met.
Therefore, Y is treated as legging out of the integrated transaction under
section 1.1275-6(d)(2)(ii).

Under the legging out rules of section 1.1275-6(d)(2)(ii), immediately
before Note 3 is sold, Y is treated as disposing of the synthetic debt
instrument for its fair market value, and Y must realize and recognize at
that time any gain or loss on the deemed disposition. As a result, Y
cannot recognize the claimed loss on the sale of Note 3 while not
recognizing the gain on Note 4.


SITUATION 3

Under section 1.1275-2(g), if a principal purpose in structuring a debt
instrument or engaging in a transaction is to achieve a result that is
unreasonable in light of the purposes of sections 163(e), 1271 through
1275, or any related section of the Code, the Commissioner can apply or
depart from the regulations under the applicable sections as necessary or
appropriate to achieve a reasonable result. Section 1.1275-2(g) applies to
debt instruments issued on or after August 13, 1996.

Section 1.1275-2(g)(2) provides that whether a result is unreasonable
is determined based on all the facts and circumstances. A significant fact
is whether the treatment of the debt instrument is expected to have a
substantial effect on the issuer's or a holder's U.S. tax liability. A
result is unreasonable only if there is an expected substantial effect on
the present value of a taxpayer's tax liability.

A principal purpose of sections 1271 through 1275 and related sections
of the Code is to tax holders of debt instruments according to economic
income as determined by the constant-yield method. These provisions ensure
that the holder of a debt instrument cannot artificially avoid, defer, or
offset timely recognition of the economic income from the debt instrument.

In Situation 3, the notes are issued after the effective dates of the
integration rules of section 1.1275-6 and the anti-abuse rule of section
1.1275-2(g). But for the anti-abuse rule, there are two reasons why the
integration rules would not apply. First, it cannot be determined at the
time of issuance whether the combined cash flows will be substantially the
same as either of the cash flows necessary to satisfy the
fixed-or-floating requirement of section 1.1275-6(b)(2)(i). Second, the
notes have different maturities and, thus, they do not meet the
same-maturity limitation of section 1.1275-6(b)(2)(ii)(B).

If the structure of the transaction were respected for federal income
tax purposes, Z would be able to recognize the claimed loss upon the sale
of Note 5 even though it could be expected, when Z purchased the two
notes, that, as a result of the reset, one note would increase
significantly in value and the other note would decrease significantly in
value. The expected tax loss on the note that decreases in value
significantly exceeds any reasonably expected economic loss on the two
notes. Essentially, Z purchased a series of cash flows that, absent the
application of the anti-abuse rule of section 1.1275-2(g) (or section 165
principles), would produce an artificial loss immediately after the reset.

This result is unreasonable in light of the purposes of the OID rules.
The OID rules were intended, in part, to ensure that the holder of a debt
instrument cannot artificially avoid, defer, or offset timely recognition
of the economic income from the debt instrument. In this case, the
transaction is structured to defeat this purpose by creating an artificial
loss immediately after the reset. Section 1.1275-2(g) authorizes the
Commissioner to apply or depart from the OID regulations as necessary or
appropriate to prevent this unreasonable result.

In this case, the Commissioner departs from the literal requirements of
the integration rules by integrating the two notes before Note 5 is sold.
Upon the sale of Note 5, Z is treated as legging out of an integrated
transaction under section 1.1275-6(d)(2)(ii). Under the legging out rules
of section 1.1275-6(d)(2)(ii), immediately before Note 5 is sold, Z is
treated as disposing of the synthetic debt instrument for its fair market
value, and Z must realize and recognize at that time any gain or loss on
the deemed disposition. As a result, Z cannot recognize the claimed loss
on the sale of Note 5 while not recognizing the gain on Note 6.


HOLDING

In each situation the taxpayer cannot recognize the claimed loss on the
sale of the debt instrument that decreases in value while not recognizing
the gain on the other debt instrument.

In Situation 1, the loss on the sale of Note 1 is not allowed under
section 165.

In Situation 2, the integration rule of section 1.1275-6(c)(2) applies.
The Commissioner integrates the notes as of the issue date. Upon the sale
of Note 3, Y is treated as legging out of the integrated transaction.
Accordingly, Y is treated as disposing of the synthetic debt instrument at
its fair market value immediately before the sale.

In Situation 3, the anti-abuse rule of section 1.1275-2(g) applies. The
Commissioner integrates the notes before Note 5 is sold. Upon the sale of
Note 5, Z is treated as legging out of the integrated transaction.
Accordingly, Z is treated as disposing of the synthetic debt instrument at
its fair market value immediately before the sale.


DRAFTING INFORMATION

The principal authors of this revenue ruling are Charles W. Culmer and
Christina A. Morrison of the Office of Assistant Chief Counsel (Financial
Institutions and Products). For further information regarding this revenue
ruling contact Mr. Culmer on (202) 622-3950 or Ms. Morrison on (202)
622-3960 (not a toll-free call).

<<END RULING>>

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