M&A Tax Considerations for Buyers and Sellers When ...
Transcript of M&A Tax Considerations for Buyers and Sellers When ...
M&A Tax Considerations for Buyers and
Sellers When Negotiating, Structuring
and Pricing Deals
Today’s faculty features:
1pm Eastern | 12pm Central | 11am Mountain | 10am Pacific
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 22, 2015
Presenting a live 90-minute webinar with interactive Q&A
Jonathan Golub, Attorney, Royse Law Firm, Palo Alto, Calif.
Michael Kross, Senior Director, BDO USA, LLP, San Francisco
Roger Royse, Attorney, Royse Law Firm, Palo Alto, Calif.
The audio portion of the conference may be accessed via the telephone or by using your computer's
speakers. Please refer to the instructions emailed to registrants for additional information. If you
have any questions, please contact Customer Service at 1-800-926-7926 ext. 10.
NOTE: If you are seeking CPE credit, you must listen via your computer — phone listening
is no longer permitted.
Tips for Optimal Quality
Sound Quality
If you are listening via your computer speakers, please note that the quality
of your sound will vary depending on the speed and quality of your internet connection.
If the sound quality is not satisfactory, you may listen via the phone: dial
1-888-450-9970 and enter your PIN when prompted. Otherwise, please
send us a chat or e-mail [email protected] immediately so we can address the
problem.
If you dialed in and have any difficulties during the call, press *0 for assistance.
NOTE: If you are seeking CPE credit, you must listen via your computer — phone
listening is no longer permitted.
Viewing Quality
To maximize your screen, press the F11 key on your keyboard. To exit full screen,
press the F11 key again.
FOR LIVE EVENT ONLY
Continuing Education Credits
For CLE credits, please let us know how many people are listening online by
completing each of the following steps:
• Close the notification box
• In the chat box, type (1) your company name and (2) the number of
attendees at your location
• Click the SEND button beside the box
For CPE credits, attendees must listen throughout the program, including the Q &
A session, and record verification codes in the corresponding spaces found on the
CPE form, in order to qualify for full continuing education credits. Strafford is
required to monitor attendance.
If you have not printed out the “CPE Form,” please print it now (see “Handouts”
tab in “Conference Materials” box on left-hand side of your computer screen).
Please refer to the instructions emailed to registrants for additional information.
If you have any questions, please contact Customer Service at 1-800-926-7926
ext. 10.
FOR LIVE EVENT ONLY
Program Materials
If you have not printed the conference materials for this program, please
complete the following steps:
• Click on the ^ symbol next to “Conference Materials” in the middle of the left-
hand column on your screen.
• Click on the tab labeled “Handouts” that appears, and there you will see a
PDF of the slides for today's program.
• Double click on the PDF and a separate page will open.
• Print the slides by clicking on the printer icon.
FOR LIVE EVENT ONLY
M&A TAX CONSIDERATIONS FOR
BUYERS AND SELLERS
IRS Circular 230 Disclosure: To ensure compliance with the requirements imposed by the IRS, we inform you that any tax advice contained in this communication, including any attachment to this communication, is not intended or written to be used, and cannot be used, by any taxpayer for the purpose of (1) avoiding penalties under the Internal Revenue Code or (2) promoting, marketing or recommending to any other person any transaction or matter addressed herein.
Royse Law Firm, PC Palo Alto, San Francisco www.rogerroyse.com www.rroyselaw.com Skype: roger.royse Twitter @rroyse00
April 22, 2015
Roger Royse (650) 813-9700 Ext 201 [email protected]
Jonathan Golub (650) 813-9700 Ext 208 [email protected]
OVERVIEW OF TRANSACTIONS • Tax Free Reorganizations:
– Type A – Merger
– Type B – Stock for Stock
– Type C – Stock for Assets
– Type D – Spin Off, Split Off, Split Up, and Type D Acquisitive Reorganizations
– Type E – Recapitalizations
• Compensation Issues
• Taxable Transactions: – Stock Sale
– Asset Sale
• S Corporation Strategies
• Use of LLCs
• Foreign Corporations
6
TAXABLE VS. TAX FREE
• Type of Acquisition Currency – Stock – Securities/Debt – Deferred payments, earn outs – Compensatory
• Nature of the Buyers and Seller – Foreign Parties – Tax Attributes of Parties
• Shareholder Level Considerations – Tax Sensitivity of Shareholders – Appetite for Complexity & Risk
7
CONTINUITY OF INTEREST
8
• IRS – 50% Safe Harbor, Rev. Proc. 77-37 • IRS – 40% in Temp. Reg. 1.368-1T(e)(2)(v), example (1) • John A. Nelson – 38% Stock • Miller v. CIR – 25% Stock • Kass v. CIR – 16% Stock is Insufficient • 2011 Regulations address changes in value between the date of
signing and close; – if fixed consideration (Consideration is “fixed” if contract states exact number of shares
and other cash or property to be exchanged) • Consideration is valued as of last business day before the first day the contract is binding and • If a portion of the fixed consideration is other property identified by value, then the specified
value is used for that portion (see Reg. 1.368-1(e)(2)). – 2011 Proposed Regulations (Prop. Reg. 1.368-1(e)(2)(vi)) – consideration that varies as
the value of issuing corporation stock changes prior to closing will not fall below (or above) contractual floor (or ceiling) markers for purposes of continuity of interest. If binding contract uses average value of issuing corporation stock that average value can be used for continuity of interest.
• Post transaction sales and redemptions
TAX FREE REORGANIZATIONS
• Type A – Merger • Type B – Stock for Stock • Type C – Stock for Assets • Type D – Spin Off, Split Off, Split Up, and Type D
Acquisitive Reorganizations • Type E - Recapitalizations
• Ruling Guidelines – Rev. Rul. 77-37 – Rev. Proc. 86-42 – Rev. Rul. 73-54 (terms) – Rev. Proc. 89-50 – Rev. Proc. 96-30 (Type D Checklist)
9
TYPE A REORGANIZATIONS – SECTION 368(a)(1)(A) STATUTORY MERGER
Requirements: • Necessary Continuity of Interest • Business Purpose • Continuity of Business Enterprise • Plan of Reorganization • Net Value
Tax Effect: • Shareholders – Gain recognized to the extent of boot • Target – No gain recognition • Acquiror takes Target’s basis in assets plus gain
recognized by Shareholders • Busted Merger – taxable asset sale followed by
liquidation
• Statutory Merger – 2 or more corporations combined and only one survives (Rev. Rul. 2000-5)
• Requires strict compliance with statute
• Target can be foreign; Reg. 1.368-2(b)(1)(ii)
• No “substantially all” requirement
• No “solely for voting stock” requirement
Target Acquiror
Shareholders
10
TYPE B REORGANIZATIONS – SECTION 368(a)(1)(B) STOCK FOR STOCK
11
• Acquisition of stock of Target, by Acquiror in exchange for Acquiror voting stock
• Acquiror needs control of Target immediately after the acquisition
• Control = 80% by vote and 80% of each class
Target Acquiror
Shareholders
• Acquiror’s basis in Target stock is the same as the Shareholder’s Solely for voting stock
• No Boot in a B
• Reorganization Expenses – distinguish between Target expenses and Target Shareholder expenses (Rev. Rul. 73-54)
• Creeping B – old and cold stock purchased for cash should not be integrated with stock exchange
TYPE C REORGANIZATIONS – SECTION 368(a)(1)(C) STOCK FOR ASSETS
12
• Acquisition of substantially all of the assets of Target, by Acquiror in exchange for Acquiror voting stock
• “Substantially All” – at least 90% of FMV of Net Assets and at least 70% of FMV of Gross Assets
• Target must liquidate in the reorganization
• 20% Boot Exception – Acquiror can pay boot (non-stock) for Target assets, up to 20% of total consideration; liabilities assumed are not considered boot unless other boot exists
Target Acquiror
Shareholders
Target Assets
Acquiror Stock
Acquiror Stock
• Reorganization Expenses – Aquiror may assume expenses (Rev. Rul. 73-54)
• Assumption of stock options not boot
• Bridge loans by Acquiror are boot
• Redemptions and Dividends – who pays and source of funds
TYPE D REORGANIZATIONS – SECTION 368(a)(1)(D) DIVISIVE SPIN OFF, SPLIT OFF,
SPLIT UP
13
• Divisive – transfer by a corporation of all or part of its assets to another corporation if, immediately after the transfer, the transferor or its shareholders are in control of the transferee corporation. • Stock or securities of the transferee must be distributed under the plan in a
transaction that qualifies under Section 354, 355, or 356.
Transferor Transferee
Shareholders
Transferee Stock
Transferee Stock
Transferor Assets
TYPE D REORGANIZATIONS – SECTION 368(a)(1)(D) NON-DIVISIVE
14
• If shareholders of Transferor stock receive Acquiror stock and own at least 50% of Acquiror stock, the transaction may be treated as a non-divisive D REORG even if it fails as an A REORG for lack of continuity
Transferor Acquiror
Shareholders with 20%
Acquiror Stock
Acquiror Stock
Transferor Assets Merger
Merger Treated as Acquisitive D
Failed Type C Treated as D
Shareholders
Transferor Acquiror Assets
Cash & Stock
Liquidation / Reincorporation
Shareholders
Transferor Acquiror
NET VALUE RULES
15
• 2005 Proposed Regulation 1.368-1(b)(1): Exchange of no net value (liabilities exceed value) does not qualify as a reorganization
• Example:
– Acquiror owns all of the stock of both Merger Sub and Target. Target has assets with FMV of $100 and liabilities of $160, all of which are owed to B. Target transfers all of its assets to S in exchange for the assumption of Target’s liabilities, and Target dissolves. The obligation to B is outstanding immediately after the transfer. Acquiror receives nothing in exchange for its Target stock.
• Explanation:
– Under paragraph (f)(2)(i) of the Reg, Target does not surrender net value because the FMV of the property transferred by Target ($100) does not exceed the sum of the amount of liabilities of Target assumed by Merger Sub in connection with the exchange ($160). Therefore, under paragraph (f) of the Reg., there is no exchange of net value. See Prop. Reg. 1.368-1(f)(5) Example 3.
• Alabama Asphalt
NON-QUALIFIED PREFERRED STOCK
16
• Preferred Stock – limited and preferred as to dividends; and does not participate in corporate growth if: – (1) shareholder has right to require issuer to redeem
– (2) issuer is required to redeem
– (3) issuer has right to redeem and is more likely than not to exercise that right; or
– (4) dividend rate varies based on interest rate, or commodity price or other index
• Redemption right exercisable within 20 years and not subject to contingency that renders likelihood remote
• Excludes stock compensation that may be repurchased on separation from service
• Conversion feature not enough to participate in growth
• Generally treated as boot to shareholders
TRIANGULAR OR SUBSIDIARY MERGERS
17
2. Reverse Subsidiary Merger
Target Acquiror
Merger Sub
Acquiror Target
Merger Sub
1. Forward Subsidiary Merger
TRIANGULAR OR SUBSIDIARY MERGERS
18
Section 368(a)(2)(D) Forward Triangular Merger
• A statutory merger of Target into Merger Sub (at least 80% owned by Merger Sub)
• Substantially all of Target’s assets acquired by Merger Sub
• Would have been a good Type A merger if Target had merged into Merger Sub
Target Acquiror
Target Shareholders
80%
Tax Consequences • Merger Sub takes Target’s
basis in assets increased by gain recognized by Target
• Acquiror takes “drop down” basis in stock of Merger Sub (same as asset basis)
Merger Sub
TRIANGULAR OR SUBSIDIARY MERGERS
19
Section 368(a)(2)(E) Reverse Triangular Merger
• Merger of Merger Sub into Target where – (i) Target shareholders surrender control (80% of voting and nonvoting classes of stock) for
Acquiror voting stock and
– (ii) Target holds substantially all the assets of Target and Merger Sub
– Shareholder loan issues
Target Acquiror
Target Shareholders
80%
Tax Consequences • Non-taxable to Target and carryover
basis • No gain to Acquiror and Merger Sub
under Sections 1032 and 361 • No gain to Target shareholders except
to the extent of boot • Acquiror’s basis in Target stock
generally is the asset basis, but Acquiror can choose to take Target shareholders basis in stock (if it is also a B)
• If transaction is also a 351, Acquiror can use Target shareholders’ basis plus gain
Merger Sub
DOUBLE MERGER
20
Acquiror
Target Shareholders
Step 2: A-type Forward Merger Step 1: Reverse Triangular Merger
Target Acquiror
Merger Sub
Target Shareholders
80%
Tax Benefit: A taxable reverse merger has just one tax on the shareholders, while a taxable forward merger has two taxes (one on shareholders and one on corporation). Intended that entire transaction be a tax-free A-type merger (where 20% boot limitation does not exist). Pairing the two reduces the risk of incurring the corporate level tax in the event the entire transaction is not treated as an A-type merger.
REV. RUL. 2001-46
Merger Sub Target+Sub
Merger Sub Survives
Slide Intentionally Left Blank
DOUBLE MERGER – WHOLLY OWNED LLC
22
Target+Sub
Acquiror
LLC
Merger LLC Survives
Step 2: A-type Forward Merger Step 1: Reverse Triangular Merger
Target Acquiror
Merger Sub
Target Shareholders
80%
Second step is merger into LLC under Reg 1.368-2(b)(1) (good forward merger)
REV. RUL. 2001-46
Target Shareholders
TYPE E REORGANIZATIONS – SECTION 368(a)(1)(E) RECAPITALIZATIONS
• Useful for single company restructuring
• Often used to transfer control of a company from one generation to the next
• Typical situation = founders of business want to pass on control to children. They engage in a Type E recapitalization to change their voting common stock to non-voting common stock or preferred stock, leaving children with voting control of the company
– There may be estate and/or gift tax consequences to such a transaction
• An important requirement to qualify for tax free treatment under a Type E recapitalization is that the old stock/securities must have the same value as the new stock/securities for which they are exchanged
– A recent IRS Memo (Legal Advice Issued by Field Attorneys 20131601F) stated that where the value of the stock received was in excess of the value of the stock surrendered, there was no Type E recapitalization and therefore the excess amount of stock received was taxable
23
VOTING POWER
Issues to consider in calculating voting power:
“Control” relevant in sections 269, 304, 355(e), 368, 382, 957 and 1504
• What sort of capital structure does the company have? For example:
– One or more classes of stock with the same voting rights;
– Separate classes of stock that vote for different directors;
– Separate classes with a different number votes per share;
– Supermajority provisions;
– Veto powers.
• How do you determine voting power when shareholders have agreement on voting?
– e.g. shareholders agree to abstain from voting, vote together, or transfer shares to a voting trust
• How do you determine voting power with regard to foreign entities that are treated as a corporation for U.S. tax purposes?
24
PROPOSED REGULATIONS ON LOSS IMPORTATION
• General Rule: The acquirer's basis in assets acquired under Section 368 is usually the transferor’s basis
– Section 362(e)(1) provides an exception for assets with built-in losses on the date of the transfer
– The IRS has issued Proposed Regulations explaining how these “anti-loss importation” rules apply (also applies to Section 334(b) transactions)
• Under the Proposed Regulations, if the aggregate basis of all “Importation Property” is greater than the aggregate value of such property then the basis of all the Importation Property is its value on the date of transfer
– Importation Property is property where:
• (1) the gain or loss is not subject to US tax in the hands of the transferor on a hypothetical sale immediately before the transfer; and
• (2) the gain or loss is subject to US tax in the hands of the transferee on a hypothetical sale immediately after the transfer
25
PROPOSED REGULATIONS ON LOSS IMPORTATION
Issues to Consider
• Flow-through entities
– For flow-through entities such as a partnerships or S Corps, the importation property test is made by reference to the partners or shareholders, not the entity itself
– The hypothetical sale will consider allocations of gains and losses as per the organizing instrument
– The Proposed Regulations contain an anti-avoidance principal for REITs and RICs which applies the look-through principal above if the REIT/RIC acquired the property as part of a plan to avoid the anti-importation rules
• Controlled Foreign Companies (CFCs) and Passive Foreign Investment Companies (PFICs)
– Under the Importation Property test, a gain or loss on the sale of an asset by a PFIC or CFC is not considered subject to US tax even though it may result in an inclusion under Section 951(a)
– The IRS is aware of the issue and has invited comments
26
TARGET DEBT SECURITIES
27
• Exchange of Target securities for Acquiror securities is tax free under Sections 354 and 356, to the extent that the principal amount of Acquiror debt is less than the principal amount of Target debt
• Portion attributable to cash basis accrued interest is taxable
• Possible COD income
– Example: • Target bonds with an issue price (stated principal amount) of
$1,000 exchanged for Acquiror stock or debt worth $900; Target has COD of $100
DIVIDEND EQUIVALENCY
28
• Section 356(a)(2) – Boot as dividend or capital gain; post-reorganization redemption test of Rev. Rul. 93-61
• Clark – hypothetical post-reorganization redemption reduced shareholder’s interest from 1.32% to .92% - substantially disproportionate under Section 302(b)(2)
• Section 302(b)(1) – redemption that results in meaningful reduction in voting power is redemption and not essentially equivalent to a dividend
• Section 302(b)(2) – greater than 20% reduction is substantially disproportionate
• E&P Limitation on Dividend – should be Target’s E&P but unclear if Merger Sub’s E&P counted; PLR 9118025, PLR 9041086, and PLR 9039029
CONTINGENT STOCK, ESCROWS, AND EARN-OUTS
29
• Escrows: – Target shareholders usually treated as owner of escrowed Acquiror shares unless
otherwise agreed – Especially true if Target shareholders have right to vote and receive dividends – Not clear who is owner if Target shareholders do not have right to vote or receive
dividends
• Earn-Out Stock: – Target shareholders not considered owners until Acquiror shares are issued – Not treated as boot – Imputed Interest
• Rev. Proc. 84-42 Ruling Guidelines – use of escrow or contingent stock – (1) stock must be distributed within 5 years, subject to escrow or contingency – (2) valid business purpose – (3) maximum number of shares cannot exceed 50% – (4) trigger event not controlled by Target shareholders and not based on tax liability – (5) Formula is objective and readily ascertainable – (6) Restrictions on assignment and substitution – (7) In the case of escrows, Acquiror shares shown as issued to Target shareholders,
current voting and dividend rights, and vested
UNVESTED STOCK RECEIVED IN A TAXABLE OR NON-TAXABLE DEAL
30
• Rev. Rul. 2007-49 - The revenue ruling addresses: – (1) the exchange of fully vested stock for unvested stock of an
acquiring corporation in a tax-free reorganization, and
– (2) the exchange of fully vested stock for unvested stock of an acquiring corporation in a taxable exchange
• Under either (1) or (2), the Rev. Rul. provides that the exchange constitutes a transfer of property subject to Section 83. – The service provider would need to file an 83(b) election to avoid
the recognition of compensation income in the future as the shares vest.
– The Rev. Rul. also provides that the spread will be zero, so there is no downside to the service provider’s 83(b) election.
OPTIONS
31
• Assumption or Substitution
– No tax on substitution of NSO
– No tax on substitution of ISO, so long as the substitution is not a modification. There is no “modification” so long as:
• (1) the aggregate spread in new option does not exceed the spread in the old; and
• (2) the new option does not have more favorable terms than the old; see Sections 424(a) and 424(h)(3)
OPTIONS – CASH OUT
32
• Cancel options for cash payment
– NSO • Ordinary income – compensation – withholding or 1099
• Deduction to Target or Acquiror? – TAM 9024002 – employer deducts based on method of accounting; not clear if cash
out at close is pre-acquisition Target deduction or post-close Acquiror deduction in absence of scripting the timing
– Under the cash method, the deduction generally arises when the employer has “paid” the property to the employee. See Regs. §1.461-1(a)(1). Under the accrual method, the deduction arises when the employer's obligation to make the property transfer becomes fixed, the property's value is determinable and economic performance occurs. See Regs. §§1.461-1(a)(2) and -4(d)(2)(iii)(B)
– ISO • FICA
• Exercise and disqualifying disposition treated differently
409A
33
• Deferred compensation
— A deferral of compensation occurs whenever the service provider (employee) has a legally binding right during a taxable year to compensation that will be paid to such person in a later year. Treasury Regulation Section 1.409A-1(b)
• Consequences of violating 409A
— Amounts which were to be deferred are subject to immediate taxation
— Additional 20% penalty on such amounts
— Interest penalty
— CA state tax penalty
• Bonus or Carve Out Plans
• Participation in Earn Outs (Reg. 1.409A-3(i)(5)(iv))
— Payments of compensation in this context may be treated as paid at a designated date or pursuant to a schedule that complies with 409A if the transaction-based compensation is paid on the same schedule and under the same terms and conditions as apply to payments to shareholders generally pursuant to the change in control event
280G GOLDEN PARACHUTE RULES
34
• 20% excise tax and loss of deduction on Excess Parachute Payment – “Excess Parachute Payment” means the amount by which the Parachute Payment
exceeds the Base Amount
– “Parachute Payment” means a payment, the present value of which, exceeds three times the Base Amount
– “Base Amount” means the average annual compensation for past 5 years
– Must be paid to a disqualified individual (meaning employee, officer, shareholder, or highly compensated individual)
– As compensation, AND
– Contingent on a change in control (50% change ownership or effective control, or ownership change in a substantial portion of the company’s assets)
• Reduce Excess for reasonable compensation
• Exclude reasonable compensation for future services
• Exception for small business corporation and non publicly traded corporation that has 75% uninterested shareholder approval
• Withholding requirement
280G – OTHER ISSUES
35
• Non-Publicly Traded Stock
– Approval of 75% of shareholders after adequate disclosure
– Vote determines the right of the shareholder to the payment
– Ignore shares held by persons receiving the payment
• Reduction for Excess (299% of payments)
WARRANT TERMINATION PAYMENTS
36
• Companies frequently grant stock warrants to investors
• Stock warrants are often held for many years before being exercised, however the holding period for the stock does not start until the date of exercise
– Stock therefore needs to be held for another year after exercise to get long term capital gains treatment
• However, if the stock warrant is terminated instead of being exercised then any gain on the warrant termination payment is treated as gain on the sale of the warrant
– The holding period is the holding period of the warrant
– The warrant shall have the same character as the underlying asset
TAXABLE STOCK PURCHASES
37
Cash Reverse Triangular Merger
• Treated as Stock Sale
• Shareholders have gain or loss
• Acquiror takes cost basis in Target shares
Merger Sub
Target Shareholders
Target Acquiror
PERSONAL GOODWILL
• Key questions: (1) Who owns the goodwill (individual or company)? And (2) Was that goodwill ever transferred?
• Two key cases:
– Bross Trucking, Inc. – goodwill may be transferred to a company via an employment contract if that employment contract grants the company a right to future services (e.g., through a non-compete provision)
• Note: non-compete provisions are generally invalid in California absent the sale of a business
– Martin Ice Cream – the court held that customer relationships and distribution lists were an asset of the shareholder because they were never transferred to the company (the business began as a sole proprietorship and then part of the business was specifically transferred to a new company)
38
PERSONAL GOODWILL
• Issues:
– Is a buy/sell non-compete sufficient to satisfy the right to future services?
• What does the scope of the non-compete need to be? (geographic area, time, etc.)
– Is a fiduciary obligation not to compete sufficient?
– Is a non-solicitation and/or non-use of trade secrets provision sufficient?
• Best practice = shareholders should sell their “personal goodwill” separate from the stock/asset sale
39
QSBS ISSUE FOR CASH FREE STOCK SALES
• Target companies may be acquired on a cash free/debt free basis, however this often necessitates a cash dividend to shareholders immediately prior to the sale
• During negotiations, both Acquiror and Target shareholders typically treat this dividend as part of the acquisition price, however the form of the transaction is a dividend
• This pre-sale dividend can create problems for shareholders’ QSBS relief:
– Under the QSBS rules, the maximum taxable gain considered available for relief is the higher of $10 million or ten times stock basis
– If the dividend payment is treated as a pre-sale distribution then it will reduce the basis of the stock and may therefore reduce the amount of gain available for QSBS relief
• Taxpayer may choose to file on the basis that the dividend is, in substance, part of the sale proceeds, however this could be subject to challenge by the tax authorities
40
CASH FORWARD MERGER
41
Asset Sale Followed by Liquidation of Target
• Target has gain on sale
• Target shareholders have gain on liquidation (unless 332 applies)
• Acquiror takes cost basis in Target assets
• S corporations with no h10 election
Target Shareholders
Merger Acquiror Survives
Target Shareholders
Variation with Merger Sub:
Target
Target
Acquiror
Acquiror
Merger Sub
SECTION 382 – LIMITATION ON LOSSES AFTER CHANGE IN OWNERSHIP
42
• Section 381 – Survival of Tax Attributes
• Section 382 – When there has been an ownership change of a
corporation with loss carry forwards, use of Net Operating Losses (NOLs) against future income is limited to the product of the value of the Target and the long term interest rate.
– “Ownership Change” occurs if, within a 3 year testing period, the percentage of stock of Target held by 5 Percent Shareholders increases by more than 50% over lowest percentage held by such shareholders during the test period.
BUSTED 351
43
Shareholders Target Shareholder
Business
Acquiror
Target
Stock
Merger
Acquiror
Stock
Rev. Ruling 70-140
Weikel v CIR, 51 TCM 432 (1986)
Substantial business purpose Step 1: Incorporate Target Step 2: Merge Target into Acquiror
USE OF WHOLLY OWNED LLC
44
Target Acquiror
LLC
T Shareholders
Merger of Corporation into LLC • Reg. 1.368-2(b)(1) – by operation of law, all assets and liabilities of
Target become those of LLC, and Target ceases legal existence • A Type Reorganization
“CHECK AND MERGE” TRANSACTION
45
• The Code provides for tax-free mergers of corporations into other corporations and partnerships into other partnerships, but there is no provision for a tax free merger of a partnership (or an LLC taxable as a partnership) into a corporation
• Two-step check and merge process:
– (1) the LLC elects to change its entity classification from a partnership to a corporation; and
– (2) the LLC (now taxable as a corporation) merges into another corporation
• Will the step-transaction doctrine merge the two steps?
– An entity classification does not need a business purpose and applies to all parts of the Code including the step transaction doctrine (Reg. 301.7701-3(g)(2)(i))
– Courts have to respect the entity classification election and therefore the two steps should be respected
• 351 “holding” requirement problem
SECTION 351 / 721 ROLLOVER
46
Target
Target Shareholders
PEG
• 80% vote & value • Taxation of boot • Debt + non-qualified
voting stock • Assumption of liabilities
Cash out some and rollover
Target
Target
Target Shareholders PEG
PEG
NewCo
NewCo
Target Shareholders
Target Shares
Cash
Cash
Cash
Cash
Cash Assets
Assets
LLC TECHNIQUES
47
Acquiror
Step 1 Step 2
LLC
Former Target Shareholders
Target
$
Target
Target Corp.
LLC
T Shareholders
1. Cherry picking consideration
2. Partial purchase of shares or put/calls
3. Collapsing investor groups into one owner
INSTALLMENT METHOD
48
• Gain on each payment = gross profit ratio times payment – Gross profit ratio = ratio of total gain to purchase price
– Pre-transaction planning opportunities to utilize basis
• Section 453A – interest charge to the extent taxpayer holds more than $5 million face amount of Section 453 obligations
• Section 453 Limits – Not available for publicly held stock or securities, or inventory
– Not available for sales for demand notes or readily tradable notes
– Not available for instruments secured by cash or cash equivalents
– Obligor must be purchaser (cannot use parent debt)
• Section 453 applies unless taxpayer affirmatively elects out
• Section 453(h) – Target shareholders who receive Acquiror debt in liquidation of Target allowed to use installment reporting
CONTINGENT PAYMENTS AND EARN-OUTS
49
• Distinguish Equity vs. Debt • 3 Issues
– (1) allocation between interest and sales proceeds; – (2) timing of realization of sales proceeds; and – (3) timing of basis recovery
• Interest – 1.1275-4(b)
• Contingent payment debt for cash or publicly traded property – use non-contingent bond method; projected non-contingent and contingent payments
– 1.1275-4(c) • Contingent debt instrument issued for non-publicly traded property –
bifurcate into non-contingent debt instrument and contingent debt instrument; contingent payment treated as principal based on present value, excess is interest
• Buyer’s basis is non-contingent portion plus contingent payments treated as principal
CONTINGENT PAYMENTS AND GAIN RECOGNITION
50
Reg. 15A.453-1(c)
• If capped by maximum amounts, assume maximum for purposes of gross profit percentage (accelerates gain, backloads basis) – If no cap, but term, basis recovered ratably over term
– If neither time nor amount is capped, basis recovered ratably over 15 years
• Election out of Section 453 – FMV of contingent obligation is amount realized
• Open transaction treatment – rare and extraordinary situations only
SECTION 338 ELECTION
51
• Section 338(g) – Target in stock sale treated as selling all its assets followed by liquidation post close (soaks up NOLs)
• Section 338(h)(10) – Sale and liquidation deemed to occur pre-close; joint election; S corporation or sale out of a consolidated group
• Adjusted Grossed-Up Basis – New Asset basis is basis in recently purchased stock (last 12 months) grossed up to reflect minority shareholder’s basis + liabilities of Target (including taxes in 338(g))
• Adjusted Deemed Sale Price – grossed up amount realized of recently purchased stock plus liabilities of old T (on day after acquisition date)
Partnership Structure with Profits Interest
52
Target
Acquisition Structure:
Hold Co, LLC
Post Acquisition:
Target converts to wholly-owned LLC - treated as a tax-free liquidation into Hold Co, LLC if a single member LLC
Target Shareholders
100%
100% 100%
Merger
$$
Merger Co
Acquiror
Hold Co, LLC
Target Shareholders 100% less
profits interest
100%
Issuance of unvested profits
interest
Acquiror
Target, LLC
338(g) ELECTIONS
53
• If there is a US Buyer of a foreign owned foreign target, then 338(g) election steps up basis and eliminates E&P and foreign tax credits
• Target may be able to offset 338(g) gains with NOLs
PURCHASE PRICE ALLOCATION
54
• Asset Sale or 338 Election – Sections 1060 and 338 classes based on FMV – Class I – cash and equivalents – Class II – actively traded personal property under 1092 – Class III – debt instruments and marked to market – Class IV – inventory – Class V – assets other than those in I-IV or VI – Class VI – goodwill and going concern
• Agreement Allocations – Danielson Rule – Parties bound by agreement unless IRS determines that the allocation
is NOT appropriate
• SFAS 141R – Purchase Price Allocations – Assets booked at FMV as of closing date (not signing date) – Bargain purchase results in accounting gain – Earn Outs – estimated and recorded – Deferred tax assets for excess tax deductible goodwill over book value – Transaction related costs recognized (expensed)
S CORPORATIONS AND 338(h)(10)
55
T (S Corp) Acquiror
Merger Sub
Target Shareholders
• Character difference – ordinary income assets
• California 1.5% tax on S corporations
• All Target shareholders must consent on Form 8023
• Deemed 338 election for subsidiaries
• 1374 – BIG Tax • Minority shareholders in rollover • Hidden tax in liquidation or
deemed liquidation in installment sale.
• 3.8% NIIT Tax
S CORP 338(h)(10) ELECTION AND 453B(h) BASIS ALLOCATION ISSUE
56
• Gain to Shareholders in year of sale: $1 million x 80% = $800,000; A/B of Shareholder = $1.8 million
• No 331 liquidation: $1 million cash decreases A/B by $1 million to $800,000; $800,000 A/B in Note = $3.2 million gain
• 331 liquidation – apportion basis: $1.8 million basis apportioned $360,000 to cash and $1,440,000 to Note; Gain in cash of $640,000 and gain in note of $2,560,000 for a total of $3.2 million gain (GP % on liquidation is 64%)
• Defer cash portion and include in installment obligation: gain on liquidation equal to zero; Shareholder A/B in note of $1 million; profit % is 80%
Target Acquiror
Shareholders
$1 million cash $4 million 453 Note
Stock Sale
$1 million basis
Cash - $1 million / $1 million A/B Assets - $4 million / zero A/B
Reg. 1.338(h)(10) – 1(e) Example 10
S CORP NO 338(h)(10) ELECTION – DISAPPEARING BASIS
57
Liquidate Target into Merger Sub or check the
box Q-Sub
T (S Corp) Acquiror
Merger Sub
T Shareholders
Carryover Basis
S CORP INVESTMENT STRUCTURE
58
Holdings, Inc. (S Corp)
Target, Inc. (QSSS)
T Shareholders
Step One:
Holdings, Inc. (S Corp)
Target, LLC (QSSS)
Step Two:
T Shareholders
Holdings, Inc. (S Corp)
Target, LLC (QSSS)
T Shareholders
Step Three:
Investor
$$
Membership interest
Step One: Shareholders of Target, Inc. transfer all Target, Inc. stock to Holdings, Inc. in
exchange for Holdings, Inc. stock. Holdings, Inc. makes an S election and Target, Inc.
elects to be treated as a qualified subchapter S subsidiary (QSSS).
Step Two: Target, Inc. converts to an LLC for state law purposes (Target, LLC).
Step Three: Investor purchases a membership interest in Target, LLC from Holdings,
Inc.
Slide Intentionally Left Blank
Section 336(e)
60
Acquiror
Shareholder $
Target Stock
Basic Model (for stock sales): Target is treated as selling all of its assets to an
unrelated person while owned by its former shareholders and then reacquiring
same upon acquisition by Acquiror.
$
$ Assets
Assets
= Actual
Component
= Deemed
Component
Acquiror Shareholder
Target Target 3rd Party
Section 336(e) does not apply to sales to a “related person.” The attribution
rules could give rise to an unexpected “related person” situation where the
seller acquires at least 5% of the acquiring partnership as part of the
transaction. For example, where an investment partnership acquires a target
and provides a modest partnership interest to the selling shareholders.
FOREIGN CORPORATIONS
61
• Section 367(a) – outbound transactions – Foreign corporation not treated as a corporation except as provided in
regulations
– Generally, gain recognized unless: • No more than 50% of stock of foreign Acquiror received by US transferors,
• No more than 50% of stock of foreign Acquiror owned after the transfer by US persons that are officers or directors or 5% Target shareholders,
• Gain Recognition Agreement ("GRA") is entered into by 5% US transferee shareholders
• 36 month active trade or business test met,
• No intent to substantially dispose of or discontinue such trade or business,
• FMV of the assets of transferee must be at least equal to the FMV of the US target, and
• Tax reporting
• Section 367(b) – inbound and foreign to foreign transfers – US Acquiror and foreign Target
• Target can be treated as a corporation
• May be income to Target’s US shareholders to extent of Target’s accumulated E&P
FOREIGN CORPORATIONS
62
• Anti-Inversion Rules – tax outbound reorganization and/or tax foreign Acquiror as a U.S. taxpayer; Code Section 7874
– If ownership of former U.S. Target shareholders in foreign Acquiror is 80% or more; foreign Acquiror is treated as a U.S. company
– If ownership continuity is between 60-80%; foreign Acquiror is NOT treated as a U.S. company, but U.S. tax attributes cannot be used to offset gains
– 20% excise tax on stock-based compensation upon certain corporate inversion transactions
– 7874 exception available for companies with “substantial business activities” in the foreign jurisdiction which exist when:
• (1) The number of employees and the amount of employee compensation in the foreign jurisdiction is at least 25% of the number of employees and amount of employee compensation in the total group;
• (2) The value of group assets (only tangible property held for use in the trade or business) located in the foreign jurisdiction is at least 25% of the total group assets; and
• (3) The income derived from the foreign jurisdiction is at least 25% of the group income
FOREIGN CORPORATIONS
63
• Anti-Inversion Rules cont.
– New Regulations under Section 7874(c)(6) will disregard a portion of foreign acquiring stock where more than 50% of the foreign group property is foreign group non-qualified property
– Foreign group property is all group property except that held by the domestic target
– Foreign group non-qualified property is cash and marketable securities other than that relating to the active conduct of a banking or insurance business
• Controlled Foreign Corporations (“CFCs”)
– A foreign entity is classified as a CFC if it has “United States Shareholders” who collectively own more than 50% of the voting power or value of the company. For the purposes of the CFC rules, a “United States Shareholder” is defined as US persons holding at least a 10% interest in the foreign corporation.
1248 AMOUNT ON SALE OF CONTROLLED FOREIGN CORPORATION
64
Section 1248
• Seller of Controlled Foreign Corporation (CFC) must treat as dividend gain to extent of E&P
• 1248 inclusion carries foreign tax credits
• 1248 amount determined at year end and pro rated based on day count, so post closing events can have an effect on the 1248 amount
JOINT VENTURE STRUCTURES
65
• Section 367 Issues
• Disguised Sale – Effect of assumed
liabilities
US Company Foreign
Company
LLC
US & Foreign Assets
TRANSACTION COSTS
66
• Must capitalize “Facilitative Costs” that relate to a “Categorized Transaction” unless an exception applies
• Categorized Transactions
– (1) Acquisition of assets constituting a trade or business
– (2) Acquisition of an ownership interest in an entity if the acquirer and target are related after the transaction
– (3) Acquisition of an ownership interest in the taxpayer
– (4) Restructuring, recapitalization, or reorganization of the capital structure of the entity
– (5) A Section 351 transfer
– (6) Formation of a disregarded entity
– (7) Acquisition of capital
– (8) Stock issuance
– (9) A burrowing; and
– (10) Writing an option
TRANSACTION COSTS
67
• “Facilitative Costs”
– Costs incurred in the process of investigating or pursuing a Categorized Transaction
• Includes valuation costs and registrar and transfer agent fees
• Excludes consideration for the transaction (not a Facilitative Cost, but may be capitalized under other principles) and business integration costs
– Exceptions
• Does not include costs relating to a “Covered Transaction”
– Covered Transaction
» Taxable acquisition by the taxpayer of assets constituting a trade or business
» Taxable acquisition of ownership interest, regardless of whether taxpayer is the target or acquirer, if the two parties are related after the transaction
» Type A, B, C, or Acquisitive D reorganizations
TRANSACTION COSTS
68
• “Facilitative Costs” cont.
– Exceptions cont.
• Bright Line Date
– Unless the cost is an “Inherently Facilitative Cost” then costs incurred before the “Bright Line Date” are not Facilitative Costs
– The Bright Line Date is the earlier of: (a) the execution of the letter of intent (or similar document); or (b) the authorization of the company’s board of directors
– Inherently Facilitative Costs are: (1) valuation; (2) costs to structure the transaction; (3) draft and review of documents; (4) regulatory approval; (5) shareholder approval; and (6) conveyance of property
– Success-Based Fees
• Costs for which the obligation to pay is contingent upon a successful closing are presumed to be Facilitative Costs, however the taxpayer may overcome this presumption by maintaining sufficient documentation
• Rev. Proc. 2011-29 provides a safe harbor permitting taxpayers to treat 70% of the success-based fees as being non-Facilitative Costs and treating the remaining 30% as Facilitative Costs.
69
www.rroyselaw.com
Palo Alto 1717 Embarcadero Road
Palo Alto, CA 94303
San Francisco 135 Main Street
12th Floor San Francisco, CA 94105
BDO USA, LLP, a Delaware limited liability partnership, is the U.S.
member of BDO International Limited, a UK company limited by
guarantee, and forms part of the international BDO network of
independent member firms. BDO is the brand name for the BDO
network and for each of the BDO Member Firms.
M & A Tax Considerations for Buyers &
Sellers
Selected Tax Issues
Webinar
Michael Kross, CPA JD
April 22, 2015
M&A Tax Considerations for Buyers and Sellers - Selected Tax Issues
Page 71
Initial Considerations
Identify Non-Tax and Tax Goals of Each Party
Understand the Economics of the Deal
Buyer’s Perspective vs. Seller’s Perspective
Types of Consideration
Cash?
Continuing Equity Interests?
Installment Payments (Notes/Debt/Contingent)?
M&A Tax Considerations for Buyers and Sellers - Selected Tax Issues
Page 72
Basic Tax Structuring Alternatives
Taxable Stock Acquisitions
Taxable Asset Acquisitions
Tax-Free Stock Acquisitions
Tax-Free Asset Acquisitions
Tax-Free Contribution to Capital
This presentation will principally address selected tax issues with respect to
taxable stock and taxable asset acquisitions.
M&A Tax Considerations for Buyers and Sellers - Selected Tax Issues
Page 73
Tax Considerations in Structuring Acquisitions
Legal and Tax Structure of Target and of Purchaser (or Purchaser Group)
Legal Form of Target such as Corporation or Partnership or LLC
Tax Treatment of Target such as C Corporation, S Corporation, Partnership or Disregarded Entity
Types of Shareholders of Target (i.e., Corporate, Individual, Tax-exempt)
Legal Form of Purchaser such as Individuals, Corporation, Partnership or LLC
Tax Treatment of Purchaser such as C Corporation, S Corporation, Partnership or Disregarded
Entity
Overlap in Ownership among Owners of Target and Between Target and Purchaser
Tax Aspects of Target
Outside Tax Basis of Stock vs. Inside Tax Basis of Assets
Built-in-Gain or Built in Loss Income or Deduction Items
Tax Attributes, such as Net Operating Losses (NOLs) and Tax Credits
M&A Tax Considerations for Buyers and Sellers - Selected Tax Issues
Page 74
Tax Considerations in Structuring Acquisition
Taxable Acquisitions vs. Tax-Free Reorganizations
Carry Over Basis to Purchaser vs. Deferral of Gain to Seller in Tax-Free Reorganization
Taxable Stock Acquisitions vs. Taxable Asset Acquisitions with C Corporations
Double Taxation of C Corporation Liquidations (since 1986 repeal of General Utilities Doctrine)
Double Taxation generally imposed on Buyers in Stock Acquisitions vs. Sellers in Asset Acquisitions
Section 338(h)(10) Elections
Qualified Stock Purchase of S Corporation or Corporate Subsidiary treated as Asset Acquisition for
Income Tax Purposes
Substance vs. Form – Step Transaction Doctrine
M&A Tax Considerations for Buyers and Sellers - Selected Tax Issues
Page 75
Some Consolidated Return Considerations
Consolidated Return Issues when Target is Member of Consolidated Group
Deferred Intercompany Transactions
Excess Loss Accounts
Tax Sharing Agreements
Loss Carrybacks
NOL Elections
Intercompany Loans
Uniform Loss Disallowance Rules
M&A Tax Considerations for Buyers and Sellers - Selected Tax Issues
Page 76
Taxable Acquisitions of Target
Asset acquisitions
Stock acquisitions, without Section 338(h)(10) Election
Stock acquisitions, with Section 338(h)(10) Election
Stock acquisitions, with Section 336(e) Election
M&A Tax Considerations for Buyers and Sellers - Selected Tax Issues
Page 77
Financial Accounting (GAAP) Verses Tax
Accounting
For Financial Accounting (GAAP) purposes, purchase accounting applies and the purchase
price is generally allocated among the assets of Target to determine the beginning balance
sheet of the Target.
M&A Tax Considerations for Buyers and Sellers - Selected Tax Issues
Page 78
Financial Accounting (GAAP) Verses Tax
Accounting
For Tax Accounting purposes, the treatment depends on the form of the transaction:
In a Stock Acquisition of the Target, the purchase price is generally allocated only to the stock of the Target and the Target (now owned by Acquirer) retains its existing tax balance sheet and tax attributes (pre-acquisition tax basis in assets, net operating losses (“NOL's”), credits, tax liabilities, etc.).
In an Asset Acquisition of Target, the purchase price is generally allocated to the purchased assets based on fair market values and Target (owned by Seller) retains tax attributes (NOL's, credits, tax liabilities, etc).
It is sometimes possible to elect “deemed” Asset Acquisition treatment for tax purposes in a Stock Acquisition (make an IRC “Section 338, 338(h)(10) election or 336(e) election”).
M&A Tax Considerations for Buyers and Sellers - Selected Tax Issues
Page 79
Taxable Asset Acquisitions - General Tax Treatment
1. Purchaser obtains a tax basis in Target’s assets based on purchase price. (This may
produce a future tax benefit to Purchaser.)
2. Tax attributes of Target (such as NOL’s and R&D credits) stay with Seller (through its
ownership of Seller) and do not carry over to Purchaser group.
3. Pre-acquisition liabilities of Target (including income tax liabilities) remain with Target
(i.e. Seller).
4. Two levels of income tax imposed on Seller. Corporation pays income tax based on its
tax basis in sold assets (but often may use NOL’s and credits to offset gain). Seller pays
income tax based on its tax basis in Target stock.
5. Sales taxes and/or transfer taxes are generally not imposed on purchase but may be
imposed in some jurisdictions.
6. Purchaser may be deemed to assume liability for pre-acquisition indirect taxes such as
sales tax and VAT/GST.
7. Tax Accounting Methods do not generally carry over to Purchaser group.
M&A Tax Considerations for Buyers and Sellers - Selected Tax Issues
Page 80
Tax Considerations with Taxable Asset Acquisitions
Major Tax Considerations for Seller of Assets Amount realized on disposition of each asset
Overall gain or loss
Character of gain or loss
Timing of gain or loss recognition
Tax attributes available to offset gain recognized
Major Tax Considerations for Purchaser of Assets Initial cost basis of each asset
Potential additional adjustments to the tax basis of each asset due to contingent liabilities
Cost recovery for each asset or category
M&A Tax Considerations for Buyers and Sellers - Selected Tax Issues
Page 81
Section 1060 as It Applies to Taxable Asset
Acquisitions
Defined as any transfer (directly or indirectly)
Of assets constituting a trade or business; and
With respect to which the transferee’s basis in such assets is determined wholly by reference to the
amount of consideration paid for such assets
Consideration allocated to assets in each class subject to fair market value limitation
Allocated within each class based on relative fair market values of assets
No limitation applies to Class VII (residual class)
Form 8594 compliance
M&A Tax Considerations for Buyers and Sellers - Selected Tax Issues
Page 82
Identification of Asset Classes for Purchase Price
Allocation to Assets under Section 1060
Class I - cash and cash equivalents
Class II - marketable securities
Class III - accounts receivable
Class IV - inventories and other property held for sale to customers
Class V - all other assets
Class VI - section 197 intangible assets other than Class VII assets
Class VII - goodwill and going concern value
M&A Tax Considerations for Buyers and Sellers - Selected Tax Issues
Page 83
Taxable Stock Acquisitions (without 338 Elections)
- General Tax Treatment of Corporate Target
1. Purchaser obtains a tax basis in Target stock based on purchase price. (Target’s tax basis
in assets is not adjusted due to purchase.)
2. Tax attributes of Target (such as NOL's and research and development (“R&D”) credits)
carry over to Purchaser group (through its ownership of Target) but their use may be
limited.
3. Pre-acquisition liabilities of Target (including tax liabilities) attach with Target (i.e.
Purchaser).
4. One level of income tax imposed on Seller. Seller pays income tax based on Seller’s tax
basis in Target stock and tax rate.
5. Sales taxes and/or transfer taxes are generally not imposed.
6. Liability for pre-acquisition taxes, such as income taxes, sales tax and VAT/GST, attach
with Target.
7. Accounting methods of Target generally carry over to Purchaser group (through
ownership of Target) but may not if, for example, Target becomes member of
Consolidated Group
Slide Intentionally Left Blank
M&A Tax Considerations for Buyers and Sellers - Selected Tax Issues
Page 85
Taxable Stock Acquisitions (without Section 338
Elections)
Major Tax Considerations for Seller of Stock Generally only one level of taxable gain.
Major Tax Considerations for Purchaser of Stock Purchased Target Corporation Generally Continues with Existing Assets and Liabilities
Tax Attributes generally carry over but may be limited
Attributes belong to corporation, and are generally transferred together with other corporate
assets
A stock transfer does not affect basis of target corporation’s assets or generally its accounting
methods
Sections 382 and 383 may limit purchaser’s ability to use acquired attributes following
ownership change
M&A Tax Considerations for Buyers and Sellers - Selected Tax Issues
Page 86
Taxable Stock Acquisitions (without Section 338
Elections)
Taxable Year and Accounting Methods generally continue but there are
exceptions.
Consolidated Return Rules apply when Target Joins a Consolidated Group:
Target’s tax year ends (short period, closing of the books treatment of Target) when Target
becomes a member of the consolidated group.
Purchase of S Corporations:
Target’s tax year ends if Target ceases to qualify as an S corporation
(1) For example, if purchaser is a non-qualifying shareholder or Target becomes a member of
a consolidated group.
Pro-rata method of allocating items to pre and post period generally applies, but closing of the
books allocation method applies if there an exchange of 50% or more of the stock in the
corporation during such year or if all shareholders elect to apply closing of the books method to
pre and post acquisition periods.
M&A Tax Considerations for Buyers and Sellers - Selected Tax Issues
Page 87
Taxable Stock Acquisitions (without 338 Elections)
- General Operation of Section 382 Limitations
Section 382 limitations on use of losses generally apply following an “ownership
change”.
Use of “pre-change” losses to offset “post-change” income subject to annual
section 382 limitation.
Limitations may also apply to recognized built-in losses.
Limitation generally equals the value of the loss corporation’s stock immediately
before the ownership change, multiplied by the long-term tax-exempt rate.
M&A Tax Considerations for Buyers and Sellers - Selected Tax Issues
Page 88
Stock Acquisitions (without 338 Elections) -
General Policies of Section 382
Anti-trafficking rules - purpose of acquisition is irrelevant
An “ownership change” occurs on a testing date when the stock of the loss
corporation owned by one or more five-percent shareholders increases by more
than 50 percentage points during a testing period when compared with the lowest
ownership by each shareholder during that period
Rules for determining applicable testing period can require determining stock
ownership and stock transactions from formation of target.
Notice 2003-65, Section 338 Approach vs. Section 1374 Approach
M&A Tax Considerations for Buyers and Sellers - Selected Tax Issues
Page 89
Stock Acquisitions (without 338 Elections)
General Operation of Section 383
Similar limitations apply to other attributes, such as:
Capital losses
Business credits
Foreign tax credits
Alternative minimum tax credits
Annual Section 382 NOL limitation must be converted to “credit equivalent”
M&A Tax Considerations for Buyers and Sellers - Selected Tax Issues
Page 90
Taxable Stock Acquisitions (with Section 338
Elections) Deemed asset purchase and sale treatment requires Qualified stock purchase; and
Election on Form 8023
Qualified stock purchase Purchaser must be corporation
Stock meeting section 1504(a)(2) requirements must be acquired by “purchase”
Requires 12-month acquisition period
Fictions apply for most income tax purposes, but not for — Payroll tax purposes;
Information reporting purposes; or
Most employee benefit plan purposes.
M&A Tax Considerations for Buyers and Sellers - Selected Tax Issues
Page 91
Taxable Stock Acquisitions (Section 338(g) vs.
338(h)(10) Elections)
Section 338(g) elections re-characterize old and new target transactions only Purchaser of stock has stock purchase
Sellers of stock have stock sale
The “old target” and “new target” have deemed asset purchases and sales
Very rarely made except for foreign target entities
Section 338(h)(10) election re-characterize certain seller’s transactions as well Sellers of S corporation stock have deemed taxable liquidation following deemed sale of assets
Eligible corporate sellers may have Section 332 treatment for deemed liquidation
M&A Tax Considerations for Buyers and Sellers - Selected Tax Issues
Page 92
Taxable Stock Acquisitions (with Section
338(h)(10) Election)
1. Form is a Stock Acquisition.
2. Target is a member of a consolidated group or an “S” corporation.
3. Purchaser and Seller elect to treat acquisition as an Asset Acquisition for income tax
purposes under IRC Section 338(h)(10).
4. Purchaser generally obtains benefits of Purchase Accounting for income tax purposes.
5. Seller is subject to income tax, as if Target had sold assets and liquidated. NOL's and tax
credits remain with Seller and often may be used to offset gains and tax from deemed
asset sale.
6. Sales taxes and/or transfer taxes generally do not apply.
7. Pre-acquisition non-income tax liabilities remain with Target (now held by Purchaser).
(Note: Some exposure to income tax liabilities can also remain with Target.)
M&A Tax Considerations for Buyers and Sellers - Selected Tax Issues
Page 93
Taxable Stock Acquisitions (Section 338(h)(10)
Election Requirements)
Qualified stock purchase of one of the following types of corporations: S corporation
Subsidiary member of consolidated group
Subsidiary member of non-consolidated affiliated group
Election on Form 8023
Joint election by all S corporation shareholders
Some states require separate state “Section 338” elections
M&A Tax Considerations for Buyers and Sellers - Selected Tax Issues
Page 94
Benefits of Section 338(h)(10) Election to
Purchaser in a Taxable Stock Acquisition
Cost basis of assets deemed acquired
New accounting methods
New cost recovery methods
New elections
Elimination of earnings and profits
Eliminate reliance on old tax and accounting records
Tax consequences not dependent on form of transaction
M&A Tax Considerations for Buyers and Sellers - Selected Tax Issues
Page 95
Taxable Stock Acquisitions (with Section
338(h)(10) Election) Considerations with S
Corporation Target
Consequences of an S corporation section 338(h)(10) election Deemed sale of assets by “old target” corporation, followed by liquidation
Deemed purchase of assets by “new target” corporation
Subject to built-in gains tax and state corporate level taxes for S corporations, only one level of tax is imposed on sale gains Deemed sale gain is allocated to shareholders on Schedule K-1 under normal S corporation rules
Basis increase reduces deemed liquidation gain
M&A Tax Considerations for Buyers and Sellers - Selected Tax Issues
Page 96
Tax Free Mergers and Acquisitions
The tax treatment of tax free mergers and acquisitions is not discussed in detail in this
presentation.
In general, the purchaser in a tax free merger receives a carry over basis in the assets of the
target and the seller defers gain with respect to shares of the target it exchanges for shares
of the acquirer. The seller generally recognized income, or a taxable gain, with respect to
boot it receives in the form or cash or property.
M&A Tax Considerations for Buyers and Sellers - Selected Tax Issues
Page 97
Liabilities of Target
In a Stock Acquisition (without a 338(h)(10) election), liabilities of the target generally
continue as liabilities of the target and are not included in the purchase price paid for the
stock of the target.
In an Asset Acquisition, liabilities of the target assumed, or taken subject to, as part of the
acquisition are generally included in the purchase price deemed paid for the assets of the
target.
In a Stock Acquisition (with a 338(h)(10) election), liabilities of the target are generally
included in the purchase price deemed paid for the assets of the target.
The purchase price paid for target is often subject to adjustment as liabilities of the target
are determined or become fixed.
Most acquisitions provide for working capital adjustments to the purchase price. Tax
liabilities of target are typically among the liabilities taken into account in determining the
amount of a working capital adjustment.
M&A Tax Considerations for Buyers and Sellers - Selected Tax Issues
Page 98
Transaction Costs
Inherently facilitative costs incurred paid by the taxpayer in the process of investigating or
otherwise pursuing a “covered transaction” generally must be capitalized as a cost of the
transaction.
Other than inherently facilitative costs, amounts paid by the taxpayer in the process of
investigating or otherwise pursuing a “covered transaction” facilitates the transaction and
must generally be capitalized only if the amount relates to activities performed on or after
the earlier of the following dates: (1) the date on which a letter of intent, exclusivity
agreement, or similar written communication (other than a confidentiality agreement) is
executed by representatives of the purchaser and the target; or (2) the date on which the
material terms of the transaction, as tentatively agreed to by representatives of the
purchaser and the target, are authorized or approved by the taxpayer's board of directors (or
its committee) or, for a taxpayer that is not a corporation, are authorized or approved by
the appropriate governing officials of the taxpayer.
For a transaction that does not require authorization or approval of the taxpayer's board of
directors or appropriate governing officials, the date determined under the above rules is
the date on which the purchaser and the target execute a binding written contract reflecting
the terms of the transaction.
M&A Tax Considerations for Buyers and Sellers - Selected Tax Issues
Page 99
Transaction Costs
A “covered transaction” includes the following transactions:
A taxable acquisition by the taxpayer of assets that constitute a trade or business;
A taxable acquisition of an ownership interest in a business entity (whether the
taxpayer is the purchaser or the target) if, immediately after the acquisition, the
acquirer and the target are related within the meaning of IRC Section 267(b) and
IRC Section 707(b); or
Most a tax-free corporate reorganizations.
M&A Tax Considerations for Buyers and Sellers - Selected Tax Issues
Page 100
Transaction Costs
Success based fees, which are fees contingent on the completion of the transaction, must
generally be capitalized, except to the extent the taxpayers satisfies certain documentation
requirements. Taxpayers meeting certain requirements may elect a safe harbor allocation.
Taxpayers who make the election can treat 70% of the success-based fee as an amount that
doesn't facilitate the transaction and is therefore currently deductible. The remaining 30% of
the fee must be capitalized.
Borrowing costs generally must be capitalized as a cost of the borrowing as opposed to into
the cost of the transaction.
Certain de-minimis costs need not be capitalized as a cost of the transaction.
Costs not capitalized under these rules under IRC Section 263(a) may still be subject to
capitalization under IRC Sections 195 or 248.
M&A Tax Considerations for Buyers and Sellers - Selected Tax Issues
Page 101
Transaction Costs
In a stock acquisition, transaction costs incurred by the target corporation to facilitate the
transaction may be considered incurred by the target on behalf of, and to benefit, the
selling shareholders and treated as a dividend or included in the consideration deemed
received by the selling shareholders from the sale, increasing their gain from the sale of the
target stock. However, if so treated, such costs may also be deemed expenditures of the
selling shareholders with respect to their sale of stock in the target, which may reduce their
gain from the sale of stock in the target.
Transaction costs incurred by the purchaser to facilitate the transaction would generally be
considered a cost of acquiring the stock and capitalized into the purchaser’s stock basis in
the purchased stock.
M&A Tax Considerations for Buyers and Sellers - Selected Tax Issues
Page 102
Transaction Costs
In an asset acquisition, transaction costs incurred by the target corporation to facilitate the
transaction are generally considered incurred by the target reducing its gain from the sale of
assets by the target.
Transaction costs incurred by the purchaser to facilitate the transaction would generally be
considered a cost of acquiring the assets and capitalized into the purchaser’s basis in the
purchased assets.
M&A Tax Considerations for Buyers and Sellers - Selected Tax Issues
Page 103
Contingent Liabilities
In an acquisition, the purchaser often assumes (directly or through its ownership of target)
certain contingent liabilities of target.
For income tax purposes, in an asset acquisition, or a stock acquisition with a 338(h)(10)
election, such contingent liabilities are generally to be treated by the seller as an additional
amount realized from the sale and by the purchaser as an adjustment to the asset purchase
price, as they accrue, or costs with respect to such liabilities are incurred. This means that
the purchaser may not generally receive a current income tax deduction, as these liabilities
accrue or costs with respect to such liabilities are incurred.
Similar treatment is often thought to apply to deferred revenue, which is a liability
commonly found on the balance sheets of targets.
M&A Tax Considerations for Buyers and Sellers - Selected Tax Issues
Page 104
Deferred Revenue There is often a difference between the amount of deferred revenue booked for GAAP
purposes and the amount of the target’s deferred revenue for income tax purposes.
In an asset acquisition, tax deferred revenue assumed by the purchaser in the transaction is
generally to be recognized by the seller as an additional amount realized from the sale. For
the purchaser, as the purchaser incurs costs with respect to this deferred revenue, the
treatment of these costs for income tax purposes is not entirely clear under existing
authority. It is often thought that the purchaser should capitalize these costs as they are
incurred, into the purchase price of the purchased assets. Under this treatment, often these
capitalized costs would be allocated to increased goodwill, under Section 1060, which
increase could only be recovered over 15 years.
Alternatively, under a line of authorities (mainly dealing with subscription fees and services)
or through agreement, the seller may be treated as having paid the purchaser a separate
payment for agreeing to assume the obligation to perform the services required to generate
the deferred revenue. This separate payment should generate a deduction to the seller and
income to the purchaser, but the purchaser would then generally be entitled to deduct
currently its costs with respect to the deferred revenue. This treatment can be favorable or
unfavorable to the purchaser depending on timing and the amounts of the costs to be
incurred with respect to the deferred revenue.
M&A Tax Considerations for Buyers and Sellers - Selected Tax Issues
Page 105
Deferred Revenue
In most taxable asset acquisitions, or stock acquisitions with a Section 338(h)(10) election,
the parties should consider the tax treatment to the parties resulting from the target’s
deferred revenue and their options with respect to the treatment of same.
See, New York State Bar Association Tax Section, Report on the Treatment of “Deferred
Revenue” by the Buyer in Taxable Asset Acquisitions, January 7, 2013.
M&A Tax Considerations for Buyers and Sellers - Selected Tax Issues
Page 106
Accounting Methods
Purchasers and Sellers must generally apply their own method of tax accounting in reporting
a transaction.
M&A Tax Considerations for Buyers and Sellers - Selected Tax Issues
Page 107
Common Tax Due Diligence Issues
1. Accounting methods including revenue recognition.
2. Limitations on NOL and tax credit use due to prior ownership changes.
3. State income tax compliance and exposure.
4. State sales and use tax compliance and exposure.
5. Foreign income and transfer tax (VAT) Compliance and Reporting.
6. Review prior acquisitions by Target.
7. Compensation and benefits compliance and exposure.
Payroll tax compliance and exposure.
Possible IRC Section 409A deferred compensation penalty exposure.
IRC Section 280G golden parachute penalty exposure.
IRC Section 162(M) exposure.
Stock option compliance related to IRC Sec 422.
8. Computational issues on all tax credits previously taken or carried forward.
Often it is possible to estimate the possible exposure for several of these items and negotiate indemnities, holdbacks and purchase price reductions.
Possible exposure may result in a restructuring of the acquisition.
M&A Tax Considerations for Buyers and Sellers - Selected Tax Issues
Page 108
Disclosure
This outline is for information purposes only. Taxpayers are encouraged to consult their
own tax advisors with respect to these issues.