ic-disc tax law challenges: structuring and planning...
TRANSCRIPT
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IC-DISC Tax Law Challenges: Structuring and Planning Techniques to Maximize Tax Savings Post-Tax ReformNavigating Applicable IRC Sections, Formation and Qualification Issues
Today’s faculty features:
1pm Eastern | 12pm Central | 11am Mountain | 10am Pacific
THURSDAY, MAY 24, 2018
Presenting a live 90-minute webinar with interactive Q&A
Mehrdad Ghassemieh, Partner, Harlowe & Falk, Tacoma, Wash.
Michelle Rizzo, CPA, MBA, Tax Manager, WithumSmith+Brown, Princeton, N.J.
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Overview
• IC-DISC Basics
• Tax Savings – Post TCJA
• IC-DISC Requirements• Export Gross Receipts Test• Qualified Export Property Test• Export Assets Test
• IC-DISC Implementation
• IC-DISC Structuring Alternatives
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IC-DISC Basics
• IC-DISC - Interest charge domestic international sales corporation
• Domestic corporation
• Elect to be treated as an IC-DISC by filing IRS Form 4876-A
• An IC-DISC is not subject to federal income tax (IRC 991).
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Structure without IC-DISC
Individual Owners
ForeignCustomers US
MFG
Flow Through Income
(taxed to individual at
marginal rates )$ for goods
Export goods
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Structure with IC-DISC
Individual Owners
ForeignCustomers US
MFG
Flow Through Income
(taxed to individual at
marginal rates)
$ for goods
Export goods
IC-DISC
Commission
Dividend (taxed at dividend
rates)
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Tax Savings – Flow Through Entities• Section 199A
– 20% - Qualified business income deduction
– Potential Effective Rate of 29.6% for owners
• Limitation – W2 or Depreciable Property Limit
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Tax Savings – Flow Through Entities
Individual Owners
US MFG
Flow Through TI $100 * tax rate 37%Tax $37
Export Income $100
Total Tax $37
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Individual Owners
US MFG
Flow Through TI $100Sec. 199A - $20Taxable Income $80 * tax rate 37%Tax $30
Export Income $100
Total Tax $30
Total Tax $30- $37
No Sec. 199A Deduction
Full Sec. 199A Deduction
Tax Savings – Flow Through Entities
Individual Owners
US MFG
IC-DISC
Commission
Export Income $100DISC Commission $100Export TI $ 0
$100
Dividend income $100 * Dividend tax rate 23.8%Tax $23.8
Commission receipts $100* DISC tax rate 0%Tax $0
Total Tax $24
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Expected Tax Savings
6% - 13%
Tax Savings - Corporations• Foreign Derived Intangible Income
– To encourage corporations to keep their intangible property in the U.S., the FDII rules reduce the U.S. tax rate on foreign source income.
• “Foreign Derived Intangible Income (FDII)” receives a 37.5% deduction to reduce effective tax rate to 13.125%. (21% tax * 62.5% of FDII) . §250(a)(1)(A)
• FDII = Deemed Intangible Income * percentage of foreign revenue– Foreign revenue = sales of property to foreign customers for use outside the U.S., and sales of services to
foreign customers. §250(b)(4)
• Deemed Intangible Income = “Deduction Eligible Income” – “Deemed Tangible Income Return”.• Deduction Eligible Income = Gross Income excluding certain foreign net income subject to US tax under other rules
(Subpart F, GILTI, branch income, and CFC dividends), also excluding certain financial services and oil & gas income. §250(b)(3)
• Deemed Tangible Income Return = 10% * Qualified Business Asset Investment (QBAI = Tax basis in tangible business property). §250(b)(2)(B)
• Expected Tax Savings – 13.125% - 21%
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Amounts paid by an operating company to its related IC-DISC (usually commissions)are deductible to the operating company. An IC-DISC does not pay corporate incometax on its income. This yields two primary benefits:
1) Lower Tax Rate: Companies without an IC-DISC realize income at ordinary rates.Income permitted to flow through the IC-DISC reduces the income taxed at theserates, and such income is not taxed in the hands of the IC-DISC. When the IC-DISCdistributes earnings to the shareholders, they represent dividend income, whichmay be taxable at qualified rates.
2) Tax Deferral- An IC-DISC is permitted to retain earnings attributable to the first$10,000,000 of gross receipts, deferring taxation to its shareholders. An interestcharge is imposed on the deferred tax amounts, and the rate is determined by the“base period T-bill rate” (currently a fraction of a percent). This amounts to a lowinterest loan from the government in the amount of the deferred tax liability, andmay be an attractive borrowing option in the current low-interest rateenvironment. Funds retained by an IC-DISC may generally be loaned back to therelated business (subject to conditions which requirecareful monitoring).
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IC-DISC Benefits
IC-DISC – No Operational Changes
• If statutory requirements of DISC met, no operationalchanges are needed
• DISC can be a “paper company”. Treasury Regulations state DISC isnot required to have employees, bear risk, or otherwise have anyeconomic substance.
• Accounting costs: • Requires separate books and records• Must file 1120-IC-DISC
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DISC Requirements • Corporation incorporated within the United States
• Single class of stock
• Stock par value > $2,500
• Elect to be treated as IC-DISC (F4876A)
• Not in same controlled group as a foreign sales corp (FSC)
• Maintain own books and records
• 95% of receipts must be “qualified export receipts”
• 95% of adjusted basis of assets must be “qualified export assets” at the end of the tax year.
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Qualified Export Property
• Produced in U.S. Test: Manufactured, produced, grown or extracted in the U.S. by a party other than a DISC
• Destination Test: Held primarily for sale, lease or rental, in the ordinary course of trade or business, by or to a DISC for direct use, consumption or disposition outside the U.S.
• FMV Test: Less than 50% of the fair market value of which is attributable to articles imported into the U.S.
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Manufactured or Produced Test
•Substantial Transformation. If property “substantiallytransformed”; Examples woodpulp to paper, steel rod toscrews, canning of fish.
•Operations Generally Constitute Manufacturing: Activity is“substantial in nature” and generally constitutesmanufacturing.
•Value Add Test: property conversion costs (direct labor andfactory burden including packaging and assembly) accountsfor 20% or more of the COGS.
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Destination Test
• Destination Test: In order to qualify as “export property,”property must be “sold or leased for direct use,consumption or disposition outside the United States”.
• Direct delivery outside of the United States; or
• if property is delivered “[w]ithin the United States to a purchaser orlessee, if such property is ultimately delivered, directly used, or directlyconsumed outside the United States (including delivery to a carrier orfreight forwarder for delivery outside the United States) by the purchaseror lessee (or a subsequent purchaser or sublessee) within 1 year aftersuch sale or lease.”
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Proof of Compliance Test
• Proof of Compliance Test: appropriate documentation must bemaintained confirming delivery. Documentation may be in form of:
• A facsimile or carbon copy of the export bill of lading issued by the carrier who deliversthe property,
• A certificate of an agent or representative of the carrier disclosing delivery of theproperty outside the United States,
• A facsimile or carbon copy of the certificate of lading for the property executed by acustoms officer of the country to which the property is delivered,
• If such country has no customs administration, a written statement by the person towhom delivery outside the United States was made,
• A facsimile or carbon copy of the shipper's export declaration, a monthly shipper'ssummary declaration filed with the Bureau of Customs, or a magnetic tape filed in lieu ofthe Shipper's Export Declaration, covering the property,
• Any other proof (including evidence as to the nature of the property or the nature of thetransaction) which establishes to the satisfaction of the Commissioner that the propertywas ultimately delivered, or directly sold, or directly consumed outside the United Stateswithin 1 year after the sale or lease.
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Excluded Property
•Export property does not include:
• Patents, inventions, models, designs, formulas, or processes, whether or notpatented, copyrights (other than films, tapes, records, software or othersimilar reproductions for commercial or home use), goodwill, trademarks,trade brands, franchises, and other like property.
• Certain products of a character for which a deduction for depletion isallowable (e.g., unprocessed/unrefined oil, gas, coal, or uranium products).
• Property leased by a DISC for use by any member of a controlled group.
• Export property subsidized by the U.S.
• Products for which export is prohibited under Export Admin Act of 1979.
• Unprocessed timber which is a softwood.
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Services
• Related & Subsidiary. Services that are related to and subsidiary to any qualified sale, exchange, lease or disposition of export property.
• Engineering & Architectural. Engineering and architectural services for construction projects outside the United States.
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Computer Software
•Computer software qualification for disc benefits
• Classification of Computer Software - Treasury Regulations under1.861-18 (“-18 Regs”)
• Transfer of computer program classified as one of the following:• (i) A transfer of a copyright right in the computer program;
• (ii) A transfer of a copy of the computer program (a copyrightedarticle);
• (iii) The provision of services for the development or modificationof the computer program; or
• (iv) The provision of know-how relating to computer programmingtechniques.
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Computer Software
•Computer software qualification for disc benefits
• Transfers creating a copyright right – 1.861-18(c)(2):
• (i) The right to make copies of the computer program for
purposes of distribution to the public by sale or other transfer of
ownership, or by rental, lease or lending;
• (ii) The right to prepare derivative computer programs based
upon the copyrighted computer program
• (iii) The right to make a public performance of the computer
program; or
• (iv) The right to publicly display the computer program.
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Computer Software
•Computer software qualification for disc benefits
• Transfers creating a copyright right – 1.861-18(c)(2):
• (i) The right to make copies of the computer program for purposes ofdistribution to the public by sale or other transfer of ownership, or byrental, lease or lending;
• (ii) The right to prepare derivative computer programs based uponthe copyrighted computer program
• (iii) The right to make a public performance of the computer program;or
• (iv) The right to publicly display the computer program.
• Means of transfer not to be taken into account. The rules of thissection shall be applied irrespective of the physical or electronic orother medium used to effectuate a transfer of a computer program.Treas. Reg. Sec. 1.861-18(g)(2).
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Qualified Export Assets
• Export property (i.e., inventory)• Export property assets • Accounts receivable • Temporary investments of working capital • Producer’s loans • Stock or securities in a related foreign export corporation • Export-Import Bank and Foreign Credit Insurance
Association obligations • Export sales finance obligations • Temporary bank deposits in U.S.
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Corporate Setup
• Entity Type. Must be a Corporation.
• Place of Incorporation. Must be within the United States. • Consider State and Local Tax Exposure.
• Look at Washington State for incorporation. See ETA 3178.2013.
• Corporate Documents. Articles, Bylaws, Organizational Consent, etc.
• Include DISC specific language; for example: • Single class of stock• Stock par value > $2,500• Export Receipts & Export Assets Test
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Corporate Setup
• Intercompany Agreement [Commission Agreement].• Manufacture Co. should appoint DISC as Manufacture Co’s sales
agent;
• DISC is not required to perform functions or take risks in order toenjoy such income;
• Authorize Export Promotion Expenses; including markup;
• State how commission calculated; as authorized by Section994(a)(1) and (2);
• Include Payment terms – require payment within 60 daysfollowing the close of the DISC’s taxable year.
• DISC will receive a commission only with respect to sales or leasesof export property, or the furnishing of services, which result inqualified export receipts.
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Corporate Setup
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• Treas. Reg. 1.992-2
• File Form 4876A
• Timing:
• New Corp: within 90 days after thebeginning of such taxable year.
• Existing Corp: within 90 prior to yearend.
• Consent – Shareholders must consent
• In Community property states, bothspouses must consent
IC-DISC – Typical DISC Structure
• U.S. Manufacturer (Partnership or S Corp) directly exports product
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Individual Owners
ForeignCustomers
US MFG
$ for goods
Export goods
IC-DISC
Commission Dividend
IC-DISC – Typical DISC Structure
• U.S. Manufacturer (C Corp) directly exports product
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Individual Owners
ForeignCustomers
$ for goods
Export goods
IC-DISCCommissionUS MFG
Dividend
IC-DISC – Ultimate Export Structure
• U.S. Manufacturer that indirectly exports goods
ForeignCustomers US
MFG
$ for goods
Export goods
Buy/SellDistributor
$ for goods
Export goods
• Goods must be exported within 1 year of sale; • Need compliance of Distributor to meet the “proof of
compliance test”.
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IC-DISC
Commission
IC-DISC – Operating DISC Structure
• Buy/Sell distributor involved in exports
ForeignCustomers US
MFG
$ for goods
Export goods
Buy/SellDistributor
$ for goods
Export goods
• Distributor enters into buy/sell agreements with unrelated third parties;
• Use of 482 method; • Distributor company can be DISC company, all export
profits DISC eligible
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DISC Company
Buy/Sell Distributor w/Domestic Sales• Buy/Sell distributor involved in exports
ForeignCustomers
US MFG
$ for goods
Export
goods
Buy/SellDistributor
$
Export
goods
• Opco Distributor sets up new DISC company.
• DISC contracts with US MFG & foreign clients
• Existing Opco contracts with US MFG & domestic clients
• DISC pays Opco a service fee for services performed by Opco on behalf of DISC
DISC
Company
Buy/Sell Distributor
DomesticCustomers
$ for goods
Domestic
goods
$
Domestic
goods
Service Fee $
IC-DISC – Operating DISC Structure
• Broker for export sales
ForeignCustomers US
MFG
$ for goods
Broker
$ Commission
Export goods
• Broker earns commission for export sales; • Use of 482 method; • Broker company can be DISC company, all export commissions
DISC eligible; • Need compliance of US MFG to meet proof of compliance test.
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DISC Company
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Executive Compensation
Shareholder
IC-DISC
Executive
• DISC shares not required to be in proportion to OpCo Ownership
• Key Executive can be made owner of DISC
• Executive receives payment at dividend rates
• Shareholder not required to relinquish ownership of OpCo
DividendDividend
Commission
OpCo
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Estate Planning
Shareholder
OpCoIC-DISC
Next Generation
• Commission payments not included in estate for estate tax purposes
• Risk: See Rev. Rul. 81-54 (deemed gift)
• See Hellweg v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2011-58
Dividend
Commission
Owners
ForeignCustomers OpCo
Flow
Through
Income
(taxed to
individual at
marginal
rates)
$ for goods
Export
goods
IC-DISCCommission
Dividend
Roth IRA
Holding Company
Dividend
IRA Planning
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• Summa Holdings v. Commissioner, 848 F.3d 779 (6th Cir.)
• Benenson v. Comm. (1st Cir.)
• Benenson v. Comm. (2nd Cir.)
• Mazzei v. Commissioner, 150 T.C. No. 7
Contact Information
Mehrdad Ghassemieh• Harlowe & Falk LLP
• Phone: (253) 284-4424
• Email: [email protected]
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WithumSmith+Brown, PC | BE IN A POSITION OF STRENGTH
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IC-DISCMichelle Rizzo CPA, MBA
Tax Manager
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HOW AN IC-DISC CAN BENEFIT YOUR BUSINESS
What does the IC-DISC do?
How are the tax savings calculated?
Establishing and maintaining the IC-DISC.
Who is eligible?
What property qualifies? vs What is excluded?
Tax compliance requirements.
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IC-DISC – WHAT IS IT? AND WHAT DOES IT DO?
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1) Converts ordinary incomeinto qualified dividend income
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2) Defers income.
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STRUCTURING THE IC-DISC FOR C-CORPS WITHOUT AN IC-DISC
Individuals
Operating Company (C-Corp)
$1,000,000 earnings$210,000, 21% corporate income tax
$790,000 cash after taxes
$790,000 dividend$158,000, 20% capital gain tax, $632,000 left
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STRUCTURING THE IC-DISC FOR C-CORPS WITH AN IC-DISC
Individual owners
Operating Company (C-Corp)
IC-DISC
$1,000,000 commission0% tax
$1,000,000 dividend$200,000, 20% capital gain tax,
$800,000 left
$800,000-$632,000
$168,000 Savings
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STRUCTURING THE IC-DISC FOR PASSTHROUGHS WITHOUT AN IC-DISC
Individuals
Operating Company (LLC, S-Corp, Partnership)
$1,000,000 earnings$370,000, 37% ordinary income tax $630,000 net
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STRUCTURING THE IC-DISC FOR PASSTHROUGHS WITH AN IC-DISC
Individuals
Operating Company (LLC, S-Corp, Partnership)
IC-DISC
$1,000,000 commission
0% tax
$1,000,000 dividend
$1,000,000 dividend20% capital gain rate
$800,000 net
$800,000$630,000
$170,000 Savings
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CALCULATING THE COMMISSION
The "4 percent"
gross receipts method;
The "50-50" combined
taxable income
method; and
IRC §482 method.
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EXAMPLE
▪ A corporation manufactures children’s toys and exports 100% of its inventory overseas. In 2017, it has $10 million of qualified gross receipts from these sales. It’s net income is $2 million.
▪ Using the 4% of sales method gives us a commission of $400,000 (4 percent of $10 million).
▪ Using the 50% of net income method gives us a commission of $1 million (50 % of $2 million)
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Impact of the Medicare and Net Investment Income Tax to Corporations
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Impact of the Medicare and Net Investment Income Tax to Flow Throughs
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IC-DISC – DEFERRAL OF TAX / INTEREST CHARGES
▪ An IC-DISC may choose not to pay a dividend to its shareholders. In this case, an interest charge would apply to the deferred tax (hence the entity’s name). The interest charges are based on Treasury bill rates, so at this time the potential interest charges are small. The interest charge is imposed on the shareholder and not the DISC.
▪ The shareholder reports the interest charge on Form 8404, Interest Charge on DISC-Related Deferred Tax Liability.
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TYPES OF IC-DISC
A commission DISC is the most common type of DISC. It does not take title to the export property. Instead, the related supplier sells the export property directly to the customer for use abroad. The DISC earns a commission on the sale.
Commission DISC
A buy-sell DISC buys the export property from the
related supplier, takes title to it, and then resells the
property to a customer for use abroad.
Buy-Sell DISC
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THE TAX BENEFIT DOES NOT APPLY TO LOSS COMPANIES
Under Treas. Reg. §1.994-1(e)(1), IC-DISCs cannot cause a taxable loss for
the related supplier in any year subject to certain
exceptions.
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QUALIFYING AND MAINTAINING IC-DISC STATUS
In addition to the formation requirements,
to qualify as an IC-DISC,
the entity must maintain
the following requirements
annually:
• At least 95% of the IC-DISC’s gross receipts must be qualified export receipts (QER);
• At least 95% of the total adjusted basis of all the IC-DISC’s assets must be qualified export assets (QEA);
• An IC-DISC tax return, Form 1120-IC-DISC, must be filed annually by the 15th day of the ninth month following the close of the IC-DISC’s taxable year.
• The IC-DISC’s taxable year must be the same as that of its principal shareholder.
• Extensions are not permitted; and
• International boycott operations must be disclosed.
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EXPORT PROPERTY
Property that is manufactured, produced, grown, or extracted in the U.S. with an ultimate destination outside the U.S.;
Property that is held primarily for sale, lease, or rental, in the ordinary course of trade or business for direct use, consumption, or disposition outside the U.S.; and
• Goods must be exported within a year from sale;
• The use test focuses on where the property is ultimately used, consumed, or disposed; and
• Property sold to any person whose principal business consists of selling from inventory to retail customers at retail outlets outside of the U.S. will be considered to be used predominantly outside the U.S.
At least 50% of the property’s fair market value must be from articles made in the U.S.
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QUALIFIED EXPORT PROPERTY EXCLUSIONS Property leased or rented by a DISC for use by any member of a controlled group;
Certain Intangible Property -Patents, inventions, models, designs, formulas, or processes, whether or not patented, copyrights (other than books, films, tapes, records, or similar reproductions, for commercial or home use), good will, trademarks, trade brands, franchises, or other like property (Computer software may qualify as export property);
Depletable Products - Products of a character with respect to which a deduction for depletion is allowable (including oil, gas, coal, or uranium products) under section 613 or 613A;
Export Controlled Products - Products whose export is prohibited or curtailed under section 7(a) of the Export Administration Act of 1979 to effectuate the policy set forth in paragraph (2)(c) of section 3 of such Act (relating to the protection of the domestic economy); or
Any unprocessed timber that is a softwood.
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QUALIFIED EXPORT RECEIPTS
Gross receipts from the sale, exchange, or other disposition of export property;
Gross receipts from the lease or rental of export property, which is used by the lessee of such property outside the U.S.;
Gross receipts for services which are related and subsidiary to any qualified sale, exchange, lease, rental, or other disposition of export property by such corporation;
Gross receipts from the sale, exchange, or other disposition of qualified export assets (other than export property);
Dividends (or amounts includible in gross income under section 951) with respect to stock of a related foreign export corporation (as defined in subsection (e));
Interest on any obligation which is a qualified export asset;
Gross receipts for engineering or architectural services for construction projects located (or proposed for location) outside the U.S.; and
Gross receipts for the performance of managerial services in furtherance of the production of other qualified export receipts of a DISC.
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QUALIFIED EXPORT RECEIPTS -EXCLUSIONS
Sales, exchanges, leases, rentals, or other
dispositions, or furnishing of services that is for ultimate
use in the U.S.;
Receipts that are accomplished by a subsidy granted by the U.S. or any
instrumentality thereof; and
Receipts from the U.S. or any instrumentality thereof where the use of such
export property or services is required by law or
regulation.
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ESTABLISHING THE IC-DISC
• The corporation must have only one class of stock;
• The par value of the stock must be at least $2,500 for each day of the tax year;
The IC-DISC must be set up as a U.S. corporation; and
• The election is made on Form 4876-A, Election to Be Treated as an Interest Charge DISC.
• Must be filed within 90 days of the beginning of the tax year in which the election will take effect.
An election is made to treat the entity as an IC-DISC.
The corporation maintains separate books and records.
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FOREIGN ASPECTS
The dividends paid from an IC-DISC to its shareholders are generally considered to be foreign-source income. This makes the use of an IC-DISC particularly valuable to U.S. shareholders with passive foreign tax
credit carryovers because this foreign income may be eligible to release the
foreign tax credits.
An IC-DISC is also allowed to have foreign shareholders as long as the foreign shareholder agrees to be treated as
engaged in a trade or business in the U.S.
(Note: Certain tax treaties may serve to override this rule).
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DEEMED DISTRIBUTIONS
An IC-DISC shareholder is taxable on the last day of the IC-DISC’s tax year on a deemed distribution, whether or not actually received, on the following amounts:
• IC-DISC income attributable to qualified export receipts in excess of $10 million;
• Gross income derived on producers loans;
• Gain recognized by the IC-DISC on the sale of property, whether or not the property is a qualified export asset;
• 50% of IC-DISC income attributable to military property;
• One seventeenth of IC-DISC taxable income for the year before the deemed distributions;
• Income attributable to international boycott operations; and
• Illegal bribes, kickbacks, or other payments made on behalf of an IC-DISC.
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DEEMED DISTRIBUTION EXAMPLE
• $20 million qualified export receipts
• $8 million in net income on these receipts
• 50% of net income or $4 million is able to be paid in commission income to the IC-DISC
Facts
• Because $20 million is twice $10 million, half of the commission income is considered to be a deemed dividend
• Therefore, $2 million is deemed distributed while $2 million can remain in the DISC tax deferred.
Result
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MOST COMMON MISTAKES
MUST keep a separate bank account with at least $2,500 for the par value of the stock and a separate set of books and records.
Timing of the elections and timing of the commission payment.
Rushing to complete the IC-DISC return before the related supplier’s return is finalized and its taxable income has been determined.
An entity structure other than a C Corporation being established to be used as an IC-DISC.
Assets on the balance sheet that are invested in securities accounts.
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State implications
• Some states follow federal treatment of zero tax
• Some states treat the IC-DISC as an ordinary corporation subject to the state’s corporate tax rate
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IC-DISC AND ROTH IRA!
Roth IRA
Holding Company
IC-DISC
Roth IRA
Summa Holdings Inc
Commissions
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REFERENCES
1. Form 4876-A, Election To Be Treated as an Interest Charge DISC and Instructions.
2. Form 8404, Interest Charge on DISC-Related Deferred Tax Liability and Instructions.
3. Form 1120-IC-DISC, Schedule K, Shareholder’s Statement of IC-DISC Distributions and Instructions.
4. IRC §1.995(f)-(1)(j)(2).
5. IRC §991-996.
6. IRC §1.991-1(a).
7. Treas. Reg. §1.993-4.
8. Treas. Reg. § §1.993-1; 1.993-3.
9. Treas. Reg. §1.994-1.
10. IRS’ IC-DISC Audit Guide
11. Summa Holdings Inc., v Commissioner of Internal Revenue
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Michelle Rizzo, CPA, MBATax Manager International Tax Group(609) 945 [email protected]
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