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12-1 Contributions to Corporations in Exchange for Stock Section 351 No gain/loss recognized on transfers of property to corporation in exchange solely.

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Presentation on theme: "12-1 Contributions to Corporations in Exchange for Stock Section 351 No gain/loss recognized on transfers of property to corporation in exchange solely."— Presentation transcript:

1 12-1 Contributions to Corporations in Exchange for Stock Section 351 No gain/loss recognized on transfers of property to corporation in exchange solely for stock if immediately after transaction the transferors are in control  Property does not include services  Solely generally means only common stock is received (no ‘boot’)  Control means ownership of 80% of voting power and value of all classes of outstanding stock

2 12-2 Impact of Boot on Section 351 Exchange Boot includes cash or other property received by shareholder as part of Section 351 exchange Recipients of boot recognize gain (but not loss) equal to the lesser of the gain realized or the FMV of the boot received Tax basis of boot equals its FMV

3 12-3 Tax Basis and Section 351 Exchanges Shareholders basis in stock received equals: Adjusted tax basis of assets transferred Less FMV of boot received Plus gain recognized Corporations basis in assets received equals: Adjusted basis to contributing shareholder Plus gain recognized by contributing shareholder on exchange

4 12-4 Corporate Tax Consequences of Receipt of Contributed Property No gain or loss recognized by corporation on receipt of property in exchange for its stock No gain recognized by corporation on receipt of property contributed by nonshareholder Example: contribution of land by municipality to encourage business development Zero tax basis to corporation in such property If contribution is cash, tax basis of property purchased with the cash is reduced

5 12-5 Corporate Capital Structure – Debt versus Equity From issuing corporation’s perspective, debt is tax advantaged relative to equity Interest payments are deductible Dividend payments are not From investor’s perspective Interest and dividend receipts are taxable as ordinary income (Post-2003 Act, dividends taxed at 15%) Sales of appreciated securities produce capital gains/losses

6 12-6 Debt versus Equity – Clientele Effects Who are the natural clientele investors for corporate shares paying dividends? Other corporate investors – DRD Who are the natural clientele investors for corporate shares that do not pay dividends? Individual investors – lower capital gains rates How will the before-tax rate of return on debt (which is tax-disfavored for the investor) compare to the before-tax rate of return on stock?

7 12-7 Corporate Distributions Dividend: distribution by a corporation to its shareholders to the extent made out of earnings and profits (E&P) Taxed to shareholders as ordinary income Distributions in excess of E&P are first considered a return of capital, reducing shareholder tax basis Distributions exceeding E&P and shareholder tax basis are taxed as capital gains

8 12-8 Earnings & Profits Concept: measure of a corporation’s ability to pay its shareholders a return on their investment Ending E&P equals Beginning E&P Plus current E&P Minus current deficit E&P Minus dividend distributions out of E&P

9 12-9 E&P continued Annual calculation of current E&P: Current taxable income Less federal income tax and other expenses not deducted in calculating taxable income but that reduce dividend-paying ability Plus items of income not included in taxable income but that increase dividend-paying ability E&P is general assumed to be earned ratably throughout the year

10 12-10 Distribution Ordering Rules If current E&P is positive Distributions are treated as dividends to the extent of current E&P Distributions in excess of current E&P are dividends to the extent of beginning accumulated E&P If current E&P is negative, subtract from beginning accumulated E&P Distributions are dividends to extent above sum is positive

11 12-11 Dividends-Received Deduction DRD available only to corporate shareholders receiving qualified dividends (generally from taxable domestic corporations) Amount of DRD depends on ownership share If ownership <20%, DRD = 70% If ownership >20%, <80%, DRD = 80% If ownership > 80%, DRD = 100%

12 12-12 Corporate Distributions of Non-cash Property Shareholder recognizes dividend income equal to FMV of property received, and takes a tax basis equal to FMV Distributions of appreciated property  Corporation recognizes gain equal to excess of FMV over tax basis of property  FMV of distributed property reduces E&P Distributions of depreciated property  Corporation cannot recognize loss on excess of property’s tax basis over FMV  Adjusted basis of distributed property reduces E&P

13 12-13 Stock Dividends Non-taxable stock dividends Proportionate distribution with no potential for differential impact on any owner’s share of outstanding stock No dividend income recognized, no impact on corporate E&P Taxable stock dividends Disproportionate distribution of stock Dividend income recognized equal to FMV of stock received, corporate E&P reduced by FMV

14 12-14 Stock Redemptions Some possible motivations for redeeming stock: Stock needed for ESOP contributions Stock needed for option plans Belief that stock is under-valued, management attempting to signal this belief to the market Possibly more favorable tax treatment to redeeming shareholders than achieved if corporation simply pays a dividend

15 12-15 Example: After-Tax Cash Flow from Dividends Tony owns 10% of the stock of X Corporation and receives a dividend of $10,000 If Tony’s marginal tax rate on dividend income is 15%, calculate the tax due on his dividend income, and his after-tax cash flow How would your answer change if the shareholder were Tony Inc. a corporation with a 35% marginal tax rate?

16 12-16 Example: Sale of Stock Tony sells stock for $10,000. The stock was purchased two years ago for $2,000. Calculate Tony’s tax liability and after-tax cash flow from the stock sale. How would your answer change if the shareholder were Tony Inc.? On an after-tax cash flow basis, would Tony (Tony Inc.) prefer a dividend or stock sale?  What important economic difference between these transactions affects this comparison?

17 12-17 Example: Dividend versus Sale Extended Suppose that Tony owns 100% of the stock of X Corporation. If Tony sells 10% of his stock to an unrelated third party, has his economic interest in the corporation changed substantively? If X Corporation redeems 10% of Tony’s stock, has his economic interest in the corporation changed substantively?  Is this transaction economically different from a dividend?

18 12-18 Stock Redemptions: Dividend versus Sale Treatment Qualifying redemptions are treated as a sale of stock. Otherwise, amounts received in redemption are taxed as dividends. Qualifying stock redemptions:  Distributions not essentially equivalent to a dividend  Substantially disproportionate distributions  Distributions in complete termination of a shareholder’s interest

19 12-19 Types of Stock Redemptions Distributions ‘not essentially equivalent’ to a dividend Subjective determination, requires a ‘meaningful reduction’ in shareholder’s interest  Decrease in voting control important factor to courts Substantially disproportionate distributions after redemption, shareholder must own less than 80% of interest owned prior to redemption after redemption shareholder must own < 50% of combined voting power of the corporation Redemptions in complete liquidation of shareholder’s interest

20 12-20 Shareholder Tax Consequences of Redemptions If redemption qualifies in one of the above categories: Treated as sale of stock for tax purposes  Loss realized on redemption not deductible if shareholder owns, directly or indirectly, 50% or more of the stock of the corporation prior to the redemption

21 12-21 Tax Consequences to Redeeming Corporation If redemption funded with cash, no gain or loss recognized by redeeming corporation If redemption funded with property other than cash Gain recognized if property’s FMV > adjusted tax basis Loss not recognized if FMV < adjusted tax basis Redemption also reduces E&P

22 12-22 Example: Redemption versus Dividend At the beginning of the year, Lance owned 1,000 shares Camelot Corporation with a total tax basis of $20,000. The corporation had 2,500 shares outstanding. If the corporation redeems 500 of Lance’s shares for $100,000, is the redemption treated as a sale or as a dividend, and what are the resulting tax consequences? What if the corporation had 1,500 shares outstanding prior to the redemption?

23 12-23 Corporate Liquidations Tax consequences depend on ownership: Liquidation of controlled subsidiary into parent corporation Liquidation of corporation not considered a controlled subsidiary General rule: tax treatment of liquidations maintains the double taxation inherent in the corporate tax system

24 12-24 Liquidations continued Liquidation of corporation not a controlled sub Tax consequences to corporation: Treated as if all assets sold on date of liquidation  General rule: resulting gains and losses included in taxable income for final tax return Tax consequences to shareholders:  Treated as sale of stock, with FMV of liquidating distribution as amount realized  Tax basis of assets received = FMV

25 12-25 Liquidation of Controlled Sub Parent recognizes no gain or loss on receipt of property in liquidation of controlled sub Carryover basis in property received Subsidiary recognizes no gain or loss on distributions of property to controlling parent If sub < 100% owned, distributions to minority owners treated like non-liquidating redemptions Sub recognizes gain (not loss) on property distributed Shareholders taxed on sale of shares


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