81_FR_76710 81 FR 76497 - United States Property Held by Controlled Foreign Corporations in Transactions Involving Partnerships; Rents and Royalties Derived in the Active Conduct of a Trade or Business

81 FR 76497 - United States Property Held by Controlled Foreign Corporations in Transactions Involving Partnerships; Rents and Royalties Derived in the Active Conduct of a Trade or Business

DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Internal Revenue Service

Federal Register Volume 81, Issue 213 (November 3, 2016)

Page Range76497-76512
FR Document2016-26425

This document contains final regulations that provide rules regarding the treatment as United States property of property held by a controlled foreign corporation (CFC) in connection with certain transactions involving partnerships. In addition, the final regulations provide rules for determining whether a CFC is considered to derive rents and royalties in the active conduct of a trade or business for purposes of determining foreign personal holding company income (FPHCI), as well as rules for determining whether a CFC holds United States property as a result of certain related party factoring transactions. This document finalizes proposed regulations, and withdraws temporary regulations, published on September 2, 2015. It also finalizes proposed regulations, and withdraws temporary regulations, published on June 14, 1988. The final regulations affect United States shareholders of CFCs.

Federal Register, Volume 81 Issue 213 (Thursday, November 3, 2016)
[Federal Register Volume 81, Number 213 (Thursday, November 3, 2016)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 76497-76512]
From the Federal Register Online  [www.thefederalregister.org]
[FR Doc No: 2016-26425]


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DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY

Internal Revenue Service

26 CFR Part 1

[TD 9792]
RIN 1545-BJ48


United States Property Held by Controlled Foreign Corporations in 
Transactions Involving Partnerships; Rents and Royalties Derived in the 
Active Conduct of a Trade or Business

AGENCY: Internal Revenue Service (IRS), Treasury.

ACTION: Final regulations and removal of temporary regulations.

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SUMMARY: This document contains final regulations that provide rules 
regarding the treatment as United States property of property held by a 
controlled foreign corporation (CFC) in connection with certain 
transactions involving partnerships. In addition, the final regulations 
provide rules for determining whether a CFC is considered to derive 
rents and royalties in the active conduct of a trade or business for 
purposes of determining foreign personal holding company income 
(FPHCI), as well as rules for determining whether a CFC holds United 
States property as a result of certain related party factoring 
transactions. This document finalizes proposed regulations, and 
withdraws temporary regulations, published on September 2, 2015. It 
also finalizes proposed regulations, and withdraws temporary 
regulations, published on June 14, 1988. The final regulations affect 
United States shareholders of CFCs.

DATES: 
    Effective Date: These regulations are effective on November 3, 
2016.
    Applicability Dates: For dates of applicability, see Sec. Sec.  
1.954-2(i), 1.956-1(g), 1.956-2(h), 1.956-3(d), and 1.956-4(f).

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Rose E. Jenkins, (202) 317-6934 (not a 
toll-free number).

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: 

Background

    On September 2, 2015, the Department of the Treasury (Treasury 
Department) and the IRS published final and temporary regulations under 
sections 954 and 956 (TD 9733) (the 2015 temporary regulations) in the 
Federal Register (80 FR 52976, as corrected at 80 FR 66415 and 80 FR 
66416). On the same date, the Treasury Department and the IRS published 
a notice of proposed rulemaking (REG-155164-09) (the 2015 proposed 
regulations) in the Federal Register (80 FR 53058, as corrected at 80 
FR 66485) cross-referencing the temporary regulations and proposing 
additional regulations under section 956 regarding the treatment as 
United States property of property held by a CFC in connection with 
certain transactions involving partnerships. No public hearing was 
requested or held. Formal written comments were received with respect 
to the 2015 proposed regulations under section 956 and are available at 
www.regulations.gov or upon request. No comments were received with 
respect to the 2015 proposed regulations under section 954. This 
Treasury decision adopts the 2015 proposed regulations, with the 
changes described in the Summary of Comments and Explanation of 
Revisions section of this preamble, as final regulations and removes 
the corresponding temporary regulations. No changes are made to the 
regulations under section 954.
    Additionally, on June 14, 1988, the Treasury Department and the IRS 
published temporary regulations under sections 304, 864, and 956 (TD 
8209) in the Federal Register (53 FR 22163), which included guidance 
under section 956(c)(3) treating as United States property certain 
trade or service receivables acquired by a CFC from a related United 
States person in certain factoring transactions (the 1988 temporary 
regulations). On the same date, the Treasury Department and the IRS 
published a notice of proposed rulemaking (INTL-49-86, subsequently 
converted to REG-209001-86) (the 1988 proposed regulations) in the 
Federal Register (53 FR 22186) cross-referencing the 1988 temporary 
regulations. Although formal written comments were received on the 1988 
proposed regulations, none relate to the specific issues addressed in 
these final regulations. This Treasury decision adopts Sec.  1.956-3 of 
the 1988 proposed regulations without substantive change as a final 
regulation (together with the 2015 proposed regulations adopted as 
final regulations, these final regulations) and removes the 
corresponding temporary regulations. This preamble does not discuss the 
formal written comments concerning other rules in the 1988 proposed 
regulations, which are beyond the scope of these final regulations. The 
other portions of the 1988 proposed regulations remain in proposed 
form, except to the extent withdrawn in the partial withdrawal of the 
notice of proposed rulemaking published in the Proposed Rules section 
of this issue of the Federal Register (REG-122387-16).
    The Treasury Department and the IRS published Revenue Ruling 90-112 
(1990-2 CB 186) (see Sec.  601.601(d)(2)(ii)(b)), on December 31, 1990, 
before promulgating the rule in Sec.  1.956-2(a)(3) that, prior to 
modification by this document, addressed the application of section 956 
when a CFC is a partner in a partnership that holds property that would 
be United States property if owned directly by the CFC. This Treasury 
decision withdraws Revenue Ruling 90-112.

Summary of Comments and Explanation of Revisions

    Section 956 determines the amount that a United States shareholder 
(as defined in section 951(b)) of a CFC must include in gross income 
with respect to the CFC under section 951(a)(1)(B). This amount is 
determined, in part, based on the average of the amounts of United 
States property held, directly or indirectly, by the CFC at the close 
of each quarter during its taxable year. For this purpose, in general, 
the amount taken into account with respect to any United States 
property is the adjusted basis of the property, reduced by any 
liability to which the property is subject. See section 956(a) and 
Sec.  1.956-1(e). Section 956(e) grants the Secretary authority to 
prescribe such regulations as may be necessary to carry out the 
purposes of section 956, including regulations to prevent the avoidance 
of section 956 through reorganizations or otherwise.
    These final regulations retain the basic approach and structure of 
the 2015 proposed regulations and the portion of the 1988 proposed 
regulations that relates to Sec.  1.956-3, with certain revisions, as 
discussed in this Summary of Comments and Explanation of Revisions.

1. Changes to Sec.  1.956-1 To Conform to the Current Statute

    These final regulations take into account certain statutory changes 
in section 13232(a) of the Revenue Reconciliation Act of 1993 (Pub. L. 
103-66, 107 Stat. 312) (the 1993 Act) regarding the methodology for

[[Page 76498]]

calculating the amount determined under section 956 with respect to a 
United States shareholder of a CFC. As enacted in section 12 of the 
Revenue Act of 1962 (Pub. L. 87-834, 76 Stat. 960) (the 1962 Act), and 
prior to the modification made by the 1993 Act, section 951(a)(1)(B) 
required a United States shareholder to include an amount in income 
based on its pro rata share of the CFC's ``increase in earnings 
invested in United States property'' for the relevant taxable year. 
Section 956 (as then in effect), in turn, defined the amount of 
earnings of a CFC invested in United States property at the close of a 
taxable year and set forth rules for determining a United States 
shareholder's pro rata share of the CFC's increase in earnings for a 
taxable year.
    The 1993 Act revised the structure and operating rules for 
determining amounts included in income under sections 951(a)(1)(B) and 
956. In general, as revised in 1993, the amount determined under 
section 956 is based on a United States shareholder's pro rata share of 
the average amount of United States property held by the CFC as of the 
close of each quarter of the relevant taxable year. The amendments made 
by the 1993 Act are effective for tax years of CFCs beginning after 
September 30, 1993, and for tax years of United States shareholders in 
which or with which such tax years of CFCs end.
    On February 20, 1964, the Treasury Department and the IRS published 
Sec.  1.956-1 (TD 6704 (29 FR 2599), which was amended by TD 6795 (30 
FR 933) in 1965, TD 7712 (45 FR 52373) in 1980, and TD 8209 (53 FR 
22163) in 1988) when the section 956 amount was still determined based 
on the increase of a CFC's earnings invested in United States property 
during the relevant tax year. Amendments to Sec.  1.956-1 made after 
1993 (TD 9402 (73 FR 35580) and TD 9530 (76 FR 36993, corrected at 76 
FR 43891)) did not revise the regulation to reflect the changes to 
section 956(a) made by the 1993 Act. The Treasury Department and the 
IRS are aware that some taxpayers have attempted to apply parts of 
Sec.  1.956-1 to tax years for which those parts were superseded by the 
1993 Act. In order to avoid confusion, these final regulations revise 
the section heading of Sec.  1.956-1 (as well as the parallel heading 
of Sec.  1.956-1T), and the general rules in Sec.  1.956-1(a), to 
reflect changes made in the 1993 Act. In addition, these final 
regulations remove the text in paragraphs (b)(1) through (3), (c), and 
(d) of Sec.  1.956-1 in order to conform Sec.  1.956-1 to the Code and 
reserve paragraphs (c) and (d). As a result, proposed Sec.  1.956-
1(b)(4) is redesignated as Sec.  1.956-1(b) in these final regulations.

2. Section 1.956-1(b) Anti-Avoidance Rule

    Prior to the 2015 temporary regulations, Sec.  1.956-1T(b)(4) 
provided that a CFC would be considered to hold indirectly investments 
in United States property acquired by any other foreign corporation 
that is controlled by the foreign corporation if one of the principal 
purposes for creating, organizing, or funding (thorugh capital 
contributions or debt) such other foreign corporation is to avoid the 
application of section 956 with respect to the CFC. The 2015 temporary 
regulations modified the anti-avoidance rule in Sec.  1.956-1T(b)(4) so 
that the rule can also apply when a foreign corporation controlled by a 
CFC is funded other than through capital contributions or debt and 
expanded the rule to apply to transactions involving partnerships that 
are controlled by a CFC.
A. Definition of Funding
    In response to the additional guidance on the term funding, a 
comment suggested that the modification gives rise to uncertainty 
concerning the application of the anti-avoidance rule and requested 
that the anti-avoidance rule be revised in these final regulations in 
one of three alternative ways in order to clarify the application of 
the rule: (i) Reverting to the language in Sec.  1.956-1T(b)(4) in 
effect prior to the 2015 temporary regulations; (ii) defining the term 
funding as either a related CFC contributing capital to or holding debt 
of the funded entity, or an unrelated person contributing capital to or 
holding debt of the funded entity, provided that the contribution or 
loan would not have been made or maintained on the same terms but for 
the funding CFC contributing capital to or holding debt of the 
unrelated person; or (iii) clarifying the scope of the term funding 
with examples that depict when the rule applies and illustrating that 
common business transactions conducted on arm's-length terms and 
certain other transactions would not be considered a funding for 
purposes of the rule.
    The Treasury Department and the IRS continue to be concerned about 
tax planning that is inconsistent with the policy underlying section 
956. The policy concerns addressed by the anti-avoidance rule are not 
limited to fundings by debt or equity; rather, the anti-avoidance rule 
should apply to all fundings with a principal purpose of avoiding the 
purposes of section 956, regardless of the form of the funding. The 
Treasury Department and the IRS have concluded that reverting to the 
prior formulation of the rule, which applied when there was a ``funding 
(through capital contributions or debt),'' or adopting the narrow 
definition of funding proposed in the comment could allow taxpayers to 
engage in planning that would inappropriately avoid the application of 
section 956.
    In addition, the Treasury Department and the IRS disagree with the 
view expressed in the comment that the expanded scope of fundings could 
result in common business transactions being subject to the anti-
avoidance rule. Whether a transaction is a ``funding'' does not alone 
determine whether the transaction is subject to the anti-avoidance rule 
because the rule applies only when a principal purpose of the funding 
is to avoid section 956 with respect to the funding CFC. Thus, although 
the 2015 temporary regulations broaden the funding standard, the 
``avoidance'' requirement ensures that ordinary course transactions are 
not subject to the anti-avoidance rule.
    The Treasury Department and the IRS agree, however, that examples 
illustrating that the anti-avoidance rule should not apply to certain 
common transactions would be helpful. Accordingly, these final 
regulations add new examples that address common transactions 
highlighted by the comment to further illustrate the distinction 
between funding transactions that are subject to the anti-avoidance 
rule and common business transactions to which the anti-avoidance rule 
does not apply. See Example 4 through Example 6 of Sec.  1.956-1(b)(4). 
For example, Example 5 and Example 6 illustrate a sale of property for 
cash in the ordinary course of business and a repayment of a loan, 
respectively, to which the anti-avoidance rule does not apply. However, 
Example 4 illustrates that, consistent with the holding in situation 3 
in Revenue Ruling 87-89 (1987-2 CB 195), a CFC may be treated as 
holding United States property as a result of a deposit with an 
unrelated bank if the unrelated bank would not have made a loan to 
another person on the same terms absent the CFC's deposit.
B. Application To Acquisitions of Property by a Partnership Controlled 
by a CFC
    Section 1.956-1(b)(4) of the 2015 proposed regulations expands the 
anti-avoidance rule to include transactions involving partnerships that 
are controlled by a CFC that provides funding to the partnership. 
Proposed Sec.  1.956-1(b)(4)(iii) contains a coordination rule that 
provides that this

[[Page 76499]]

new partnership rule applies only to the extent that the amount of 
United States property that a CFC would be treated as holding under the 
rule exceeds the amount that it would be treated as holding under 
proposed Sec.  1.956-4(b). The coordination rule prevents a CFC from 
being treated as holding duplicative amounts of United States property 
as a result of a single partnership interest pursuant to the 
application of proposed Sec. Sec.  1.956-1(b)(4) and 1.956-4(b). This 
rule is illustrated by Example 4 in proposed Sec.  1.956-1(b)(4)(iv), 
which is included as Example 7 in Sec.  1.956-1(b)(4) of these final 
regulations.
    A comment recommended that the anti-avoidance rule should not apply 
in the case of a partnership in which the funding CFC is a partner, as 
in Example 4 in proposed Sec.  1.956-1(b)(4)(iv). Noting that proposed 
Sec.  1.956-4(b) would treat a funding CFC that is a partner in the 
funded partnership as owning a share of any United States property 
acquired by the partnership using the funding, the comment asserted 
that the inclusion resulting from proposed Sec.  1.956-4(b) is 
sufficient and there is no need for the anti-avoidance rule to apply to 
create a disproportionate inclusion that would deter taxpayers from 
entering into transactions in order to avoid the application of section 
956. The Treasury Department and the IRS, however, do not agree with 
the premise of this comment that the anti-avoidance rule results in a 
disproportionate inclusion in this case. Rather, the Treasury 
Department and the IRS consider that, in the circumstances in which the 
anti-avoidance rule would apply, the funded entity, which is controlled 
by the CFC, essentially serves as a surrogate for the funding CFC with 
respect to the investment in United States property. Accordingly, the 
Treasury Department and the IRS have determined that, when a 
partnership acts as a surrogate for a CFC partner's investment in 
United States property, the CFC partner's interest in the United States 
property should not be limited to the CFC's attributable share of the 
property as determined under Sec.  1.956-4(b). For these reasons, the 
comment is not adopted.
    With respect to the coordination rule in proposed Sec.  1.956-
1(b)(4)(iii), another comment noted that a CFC also could be treated as 
holding duplicative amounts of United States property as a result of a 
single partnership obligation pursuant to the application of proposed 
Sec. Sec.  1.956-1(b)(4) and 1.956-4(c). For example, suppose a 
domestic corporation (P) wholly owns two controlled foreign 
corporations (FS1 and FS2), and P is a 40% partner in a foreign 
partnership (FPRS), while FS1 is a 60% partner. Suppose further that 
FS2 loans $100x to FPRS, which FPRS uses to acquire $100x of United 
States property. In these circumstances, FS2 would be treated as 
holding $40x of United States property under proposed Sec.  1.956-4(c) 
and existing Sec.  1.956-2(a) (and would not be treated as holding any 
United States property under proposed Sec.  1.956-4(b)) and could be 
treated under proposed Sec.  1.956-1(b)(4) and existing Sec.  1.956-
2(a) as holding the $100x of United States property acquired by the 
partnership with its funding. The Treasury Department and the IRS have 
determined that it is appropriate to limit the amount of United States 
property that FS2 is treated as holding in the example to $100x, 
consistent with the result that would apply if FS2 had not funded 
FPRS's acquisition of United States property and instead had acquired 
the United States property itself. (Note that, in a case where proposed 
Sec.  1.956-1(b)(4) would apply, FPRS should not be treated as holding 
the United States property that would be treated under that rule as 
held by FS2, and accordingly, FS1 should not be treated as holding 
United States property under proposed Sec.  1.956-4(b) in this 
example.) Accordingly, the coordination rule in proposed Sec.  1.956-
1(b)(4)(iii) is expanded in final Sec.  1.956-1(b)(3) to prevent a CFC 
from being treated as holding duplicative amounts of United States 
property under the anti-avoidance rule as a result of a partnership 
obligation, and an additional example is added to illustrate this rule. 
See Sec.  1.956-1(b)(4), Example 8.
    Further, as noted in the preamble to the 2015 proposed regulations, 
the references to Sec.  1.956-2(a)(3) in proposed Sec.  1.956-
1(b)(4)(iii) and in the examples in proposed Sec.  1.956-1(b)(4)(iv) 
that illustrate the application of proposed Sec.  1.956-1(b)(4)(i)(C) 
are supplanted in these final regulations with references to Sec.  
1.956-4(b), which replaces Sec.  1.956-2(a)(3) in these final 
regulations as the applicable rule concerning United States property 
held indirectly by a controlled foreign corporation through a 
partnership.

3. Factoring Rules

    As noted in the Background section of this preamble, in 1988, the 
Treasury Department and the IRS proposed Sec.  1.956-3 to address the 
application of section 956 to property acquired by a CFC in certain 
related party factoring transactions. No comments were received on 
these proposed rules. The 2015 proposed regulations proposed revisions 
to these proposed rules in Sec.  1.956-3(b)(2)(ii) with respect to the 
application of section 956 to acquisitions of receivables indirectly 
through a nominee, pass-through entity, or related foreign corporation, 
and no comments were received on these proposed revisions. These final 
regulations adopt these portions of the 2015 proposed regulations 
without change, and also adopt the remainder of the rules in proposed 
Sec.  1.956-3 that were proposed in the 1988 proposed regulations, with 
minor revisions to improve clarity and conform to existing regulations.

4. Partnership Property Indirectly Held by a CFC Partner

    Under proposed Sec.  1.956-4(b)(1), a CFC partner in a partnership 
is treated as holding its attributable share of property held by the 
partnership. In addition, proposed Sec.  1.956-4(b)(1) provides that, 
for purposes of section 956, a partner's adjusted basis in the property 
of the partnership equals the partner's attributable share of the 
partnership's adjusted basis in the property.
    Under proposed Sec.  1.956-4(b)(2), a CFC partner's attributable 
share of partnership property is determined in accordance with the CFC 
partner's liquidation value percentage with respect to the partnership, 
unless the partnership agreement contains a special allocation of 
income (or, where appropriate, gain) with respect to a particular item 
or items of partnership property that differs from the partner's 
liquidation value percentage in a particular taxable year. In that 
case, the partner's attributable share of the property is determined 
solely by reference to the partner's special allocation with respect to 
the property, provided the special allocation does not have a principal 
purpose of avoiding the purposes of section 956.
A. Revenue Ruling 90-112's Outside Basis Limitation
    As noted in the Background section of this Preamble, in 1990, the 
Treasury Department and the IRS published Revenue Ruling 90-112, which 
addressed the treatment under section 956 of United States property 
held by a CFC indirectly through a partnership. The holding in the 
revenue ruling generally is consistent with Sec.  1.956-2(a)(3) (added 
by TD 9008, 67 FR 58020, in 2002), as well as proposed Sec.  1.956-
4(b), in that a CFC that is a partner in a partnership is treated as 
indirectly holding property held by the partnership when the property 
would be United States property if the CFC held

[[Page 76500]]

it directly. However, the revenue ruling includes a limitation on the 
measurement of United States property that is not included in the final 
or proposed regulations. Specifically, the revenue ruling provides that 
the amount of United States property taken into account for purposes of 
section 956 when a CFC partner indirectly owns property through a 
partnership is limited by the CFC's adjusted basis in the partnership.
    The outside basis limitation in Revenue Ruling 90-112 has resulted 
in a lack of clarity concerning the determination of the amount of 
United States property held by a CFC partner through a partnership 
because neither Sec.  1.956-2(a)(3) nor proposed Sec.  1.956-4(b) 
include the limitation. A comment requested that proposed Sec.  1.956-
4(b)(1) be revised to add the outside basis limitation because the 
limitation is reflective of the underlying economics and consistent 
with the policy underlying section 956.
    After consideration of the comment, the Treasury Department and the 
IRS have concluded that the outside basis limitation is not warranted. 
The rule in proposed Sec.  1.956-4(b)(1) is based on an aggregate 
approach to partnerships and measures the amount of United States 
property indirectly held by a CFC partner on a property-by-property 
basis. An overall limitation on the amount of United States property a 
CFC partner is considered to indirectly hold through a partnership is 
inconsistent with this property-by-property aggregate approach to 
United States property held by the partnership. Additionally, a 
limitation determined by reference to a CFC partner's basis in its 
partnership interest is less consistent with section 956(a), which 
provides that the amount of United States property directly or 
indirectly held by a CFC is determined by reference to the adjusted 
basis of the United States property itself. Moreover, the Treasury 
Department and the IRS are concerned that, under the rules of 
subchapter K, adjustments may be made to outside basis through the 
allocation of liabilities pursuant to the regulations under section 752 
that are inconsistent with the policy of section 956. Accordingly, the 
Treasury Department and the IRS have determined that an outside basis 
limitation should not be incorporated into the rule in proposed Sec.  
1.956-4(b)(1). Because proposed Sec.  1.956-4(b)(1) indicates that, for 
purposes of section 956, a partner's adjusted basis in the property of 
the partnership equals the partners' attributable share of the 
partnership's adjusted basis in the property, no revision to the rule 
is necessary to clarify that there is no outside basis limitation.
    Revenue Ruling 90-112 is obsoleted in the Effect on Other Documents 
section of this preamble. For tax years ending prior to the 
obsolescence of the revenue ruling, taxpayers may rely on the outside 
basis limitation provided in the revenue ruling.
B. Consistent Use of Liquidation Value Percentage Method for Purposes 
of Both Sec.  1.956-4(b) and (c)
    In contrast to the rule provided in proposed Sec.  1.956-4(b) 
providing that a CFC partner's attributable share of partnership 
property is determined in accordance with the CFC partner's liquidation 
value percentage, proposed Sec.  1.956-4(c) provided that a partner's 
share of a partnership obligation is determined in accordance with the 
partner's interest in partnership profits. The preamble to the 2015 
proposed regulations requested comments as to whether a single method 
should be used as the general rule for determining both a partner's 
share of partnership assets under proposed Sec.  1.956-4(b) and a 
partner's share of a partnership obligation under proposed Sec.  1.956-
4(c), and, if so, whether the appropriate measure would be a partner's 
interest in partnership profits, liquidation value percentage, or an 
alternative measure. Comments suggested that a liquidation value 
percentage method should be used for purposes of both sets of rules. In 
accordance with these comments, these final regulations retain the 
liquidation value percentage method set forth in proposed Sec.  1.956-
4(b), and, as discussed in Part 5.B of this Summary of Comments and 
Explanation of Revisions, revise the general rule in proposed Sec.  
1.956-4(c) to implement the liquidation value percentage method.
C. Time for Determining the Liquidation Value Percentage
    A comment recommended that the liquidation value percentage of 
partners in a partnership should be determined on an annual basis, 
rather than upon formation and upon the occurrence of events described 
in Sec.  1.704-1(b)(2)(iv)(f)(5) or Sec.  1.704-1(b)(2)(iv)(s)(1) 
(revaluation events) as provided in proposed Sec.  1.956-4(b)(2)(i). 
The comment noted that partnerships do not necessarily book up (or 
adjust) partnership capital accounts in connection with revaluation 
events and suggested that requiring a redetermination of liquidation 
value percentage regardless of whether a book-up occurs would impose a 
burden on such partnerships. The comment also noted that partners' 
relative economic interests in the partnership may change for reasons 
unrelated to revaluation events, such as when a partnership agreement 
provides for different profit sharing percentages that apply based on 
different hurdles.
    The Treasury Department and the IRS continue to consider it 
appropriate for liquidation value percentage to be redetermined upon a 
revaluation event, which may result in a significant change in the 
partners' relative economic interests in a partnership. Accordingly, 
upon a revaluation event, a partnership is required to determine the 
partnership's capital accounts resulting from a hypothetical book up at 
such point in time even if the partnership did not actually book up 
capital accounts in connection with such an event. However, in light of 
the comment's observation that partners' relative economic interests in 
the partnership may change significantly as a result of allocations of 
income or other items under the partnership agreement even in the 
absence of a revaluation event, Sec.  1.956-4(b)(2)(i) of these final 
regulations provides that a partner's liquidation value percentage must 
be redetermined in certain additional circumstances. Specifically, if 
the liquidation value percentage determined for any partner on the 
first day of the partnership's taxable year would differ from the most 
recently determined liquidation value percentage of that partner by 
more than 10 percentage points, then the liquidation value percentage 
must be redetermined on that day even in the absence of a revaluation 
event. For example, if the liquidation value percentage of a partner 
was determined upon a revaluation event to be 40 percent and, on the 
first day of a subsequent year before the occurrence of another 
revaluation event, would be less than 30 percent or more than 50 
percent if redetermined on that day, then the liquidation value 
percentage must be redetermined on that day.
D. Special Allocations
    Proposed Sec.  1.956-4(b)(2)(ii) defines a special allocation as an 
allocation of income (or, where appropriate, gain) from partnership 
property to a partner under a partnership agreement that differs from 
the partner's liquidation value percentage in a particular taxable 
year. In this regard, questions have arisen as to whether allocations 
pursuant to section 704(c) and the regulations thereunder constitute 
special allocations. Although a partnership agreement may reference 
section 704(c) or provide for the adoption of a particular section 
704(c)

[[Page 76501]]

method, allocations under section 704(c) are tax allocations required 
by operation of the Code and regulations. In response to these 
questions, the Treasury Department and the IRS have revised the 
definition of special allocations in final Sec.  1.956-4(b)(2)(ii) to 
clarify that a special allocation is an allocation of book income or 
gain, rather than a tax allocation such as the allocations required 
under section 704(c).
    Questions also have arisen as to whether certain allocations of 
income with respect to all of the property of a partnership, as opposed 
to allocations of income from a specific item or subset of partnership 
property, constitute special allocations described in proposed Sec.  
1.956-4(b)(2)(i). These final regulations clarify that, for purposes of 
these regulations, a special allocation means only an allocation of 
income (or, where appropriate, gain) from a subset of the property of 
the partnership to a partner other than in accordance with the 
partner's liquidation value percentage in a particular taxable year.
    As noted in this Part 4 of this Summary of Comments and Explanation 
of Revisions, proposed Sec.  1.956-4(b)(2)(ii) states that a partner's 
attributable share of an item of partnership property is not determined 
by reference to a special allocation with respect to the property if 
the special allocation has a principal purpose of avoiding the purposes 
of section 956. A comment requested that these final regulations 
provide guidance on the circumstances in which special allocations are 
treated as having a principal purpose of avoiding section 956. 
Specifically, the comment suggested that proposed Sec.  1.956-4(b) be 
revised to include a presumption that a transaction does not have a 
principal purpose of avoiding section 956 when the allocation is 
respected under section 704(b) and is reasonable taking into account 
the facts and circumstances relating to the economic arrangement of the 
partners and the characteristics of the property at issue.
    The determination of whether a special allocation has a principal 
purpose of avoiding the purposes of section 956 must take into account 
all of the relevant facts and circumstances, which include the factors 
set forth in the comment. However, an allocation adopted with a 
principal purpose of avoiding the purposes of section 956 could 
nonetheless be respected under section 704(b), which is not based on, 
and does not take into account, section 956 policy considerations. In 
addition, it is not clear what additional clarity would be added by the 
reasonableness requirement, which itself is necessarily a facts-and-
circumstances determination. After consideration of the comment, the 
Treasury Department and the IRS have determined that the presumption 
requested by the comment is not appropriate, and the comment is not 
adopted.
    A comment noted that determining a partner's attributable share of 
an item of property by reference to a special allocation of income or 
gain with respect to that property could produce results that are 
inconsistent with the liquidation value percentage approach because of 
the forward-looking nature of special allocations. The comment 
described, but did not explicitly recommend, an alternative approach 
that would limit the effect of a special allocation to the portion of 
the liquidation value that represents actual appreciation, as opposed 
to initial book value. The Treasury Department and the IRS recognize 
the conceptual issue highlighted by the comment but have determined 
that the alternative approach described by the comment would entail 
substantial administrative complexity. Additionally, the Treasury 
Department and the IRS continue to consider it appropriate, in cases in 
which special allocations are economically meaningful, to determine a 
partner's attributable share of property in accordance with such 
special allocations, since such allocations replicate the effect of 
owning, outside of the partnership, an interest in the property that is 
proportional to the special allocation.
    However, the Treasury Department and the IRS have determined that 
special allocations with respect to a partnership controlled by a U.S. 
multinational group (a controlled partnership) and its CFCs are 
unlikely to have economic significance for the group as a whole and can 
facilitate inappropriate tax planning. Accordingly, the Treasury 
Department and the IRS are proposing a new rule in a notice of proposed 
rulemaking in the Proposed Rules section of this issue of the Federal 
Register (REG-114734-16) under which a partner's attributable share of 
property of a controlled partnership is determined solely in accordance 
with the partner's liquidation value percentage, without regard to any 
special allocations.

5. Obligations of Foreign Partnerships

A. Use of an Aggregate Approach as the General Rule
    Pursuant to section 956(c), United States property includes an 
obligation of a United States person. In addition, under section 956(d) 
and Sec.  1.956-2(c), a CFC is treated as holding an obligation of a 
United States person if the CFC is a pledgor or guarantor of the 
obligation. Therefore, if a CFC makes or guarantees a loan to a United 
States person, an income inclusion may be required with respect to the 
CFC under sections 951(a)(1)(B) and 956. Under the general rule in 
proposed Sec.  1.956-4(c)(1), an obligation of a foreign partnership 
would be treated as an obligation of its partners in proportion to the 
partners' interest in partnership profits, unless the exception in 
proposed Sec.  1.956-4(c)(2) (for obligations of partnerships in which 
neither the lending CFC nor any person related to the lending CFC is a 
partner) or the special rule in proposed Sec.  1.956-4(c)(3) (regarding 
certain partnership distributions) applies. Thus, the general rule 
adopts an aggregate approach that would treat an obligation of a 
foreign partnership as an obligation of its partners.
    A comment asserted that taking the aggregate approach to a foreign 
partnership for this purpose is overly broad and inconsistent with the 
policy underlying section 956. The comment states that a CFC loan to a 
foreign partnership results in a repatriation of CFC earnings to the 
United States partners in the partnership only when the loan proceeds 
either are used to acquire United States property or are distributed to 
the partners, which, according to the comment, are adequately addressed 
in Sec.  1.956-1T(b)(4) and (5). Accordingly, the comment requested 
that the rules in Sec.  1.956-1T(b)(4) and (5) be finalized, but that 
the general rule in Sec.  1.956-4(c)(1) be removed. Thus, the comment 
generally advocates for the treatment of a foreign partnership as an 
entity, with anti-abuse rules to address certain situations. In 
contrast, another comment indicated that the concerns identified in the 
preamble to the 2015 proposed regulations ``constitute an appropriate 
basis for the general aggregate approach of [proposed Sec.  1.956-
4(c)(1)]''.
    After consideration of the comments, the Treasury Department and 
the IRS have concluded that it is appropriate to retain the aggregate 
approach of the general rule in proposed Sec.  1.956-4(c). The Treasury 
Department and the IRS disagree with the assertion that the aggregate 
approach is not supported by the policy of section 956. As discussed in 
the preamble to the 2015 proposed regulations, failing to treat an 
obligation of a foreign partnership as an obligation of its partners 
could allow for the deferral of U.S. taxation of CFC earnings and 
profits in a manner that is inconsistent with the purpose of section

[[Page 76502]]

956. As discussed in that preamble, the legislative history provides 
that Congress intended section 956 to apply when deferred CFC earnings 
are made available to a United States shareholder, which occurs when a 
United States shareholder conducts operations through a foreign 
partnership that are funded by deferred CFC earnings, without regard to 
whether there is any distribution from the partnership to the United 
States shareholder. In addition, as described in Section C of this Part 
5 of this Summary of Comments and Explanation of Revisions, there are 
exceptions from the treatment of obligations as United States property 
under Sec.  1.956-4(c) that the Treasury Department and the IRS have 
determined mitigate some of the concerns about the breadth of the 
general rule raised by the comment. Accordingly, the final regulations 
do not adopt the recommendation to abandon the aggregate approach.
B. Liquidation Value Percentage Method
    The preamble to the 2015 proposed regulations requested comments on 
whether the liquidation value percentage method or another method would 
be a more appropriate basis for determining a partner's share of a 
foreign partnership's obligation. In addition, as noted in Part 4.B of 
this Summary of Comments and Explanation of Revisions, the 2015 
proposed regulations solicited comments on whether a single method 
should be used for determining both a partner's share of partnership 
assets under proposed Sec.  1.956-4(b) and a partner's share of 
partnership obligations under proposed Sec.  1.956-4(c).
    Comments highlighted a number of issues related to applying a rule 
based on a partner's interest in partnership profits and noted the lack 
of guidance in the 2015 proposed regulations for applying this standard 
for purposes of proposed Sec.  1.956-4(c). The comments stated that a 
partner's interest in partnership profits would be a difficult standard 
to apply for partnerships other than simple partnerships, because a 
partner's interest in partnership profits can fluctuate significantly 
from year to year, as well as during a taxable year. The comments noted 
that the proposed rule did not address whether the determination would 
be made based solely on the partnership's profits in the current year 
or whether the determination would take into account the expected 
profits over the term of the partnership. Moreover, under section 
956(a), the amount of United States property held by a CFC as a result 
of being treated as holding an obligation of a related United States 
person under proposed Sec.  1.956-4(c) would be the average of the 
amounts held by the CFC at the close of each quarter of its taxable 
year. Thus, under proposed Sec.  1.956-4(c), taxpayers would need to 
determine a CFC partner's interest in partnership profits on a 
quarterly basis when a relevant partnership obligation is outstanding 
throughout a taxable year. As a result, calculating the amount of 
United States property held by a CFC in a taxable year could be 
complicated when a partner's interest in partnership profits is not 
known until the end of the taxable year (such as when there are one or 
more tiers of allocations of partnership profits based on various 
internal rate of return hurdles). Furthermore, the requirement to 
determine a CFC's interest in United States property on a quarterly 
basis could result in the calculation of a section 956 amount that is 
inconsistent with the annual profit allocated to the partner from the 
partnership for that year.
    After consideration of these comments, the Treasury Department and 
the IRS have determined that the liquidation value percentage method 
should be used to determine a partner's share of a foreign 
partnership's obligation because of the potential for complexity in 
calculating a partner's interest in partnership profits for purposes of 
proposed Sec.  1.956-4(c) as well as the uncertainty inherent in the 
method. The liquidation value percentage method is a sound indicator of 
a partner's interest in a partnership. Moreover, the objective rules 
provided in proposed Sec.  1.956-4(b) for determining the liquidation 
value percentage provide more certainty than the rule in proposed Sec.  
1.956-4(c). In addition, using the same standard for determining a 
partner's share of partnership property and a partner's share of 
partnership obligations reduces complexity for taxpayers that must 
apply both sets of rules for purposes of section 956 with respect to a 
single partnership. Accordingly, these final regulations provide that 
an obligation of a foreign partnership is treated as an obligation of 
its partners in proportion to the partners' liquidation value 
percentage with respect to the partnership. As described in Part 4.C of 
this Summary of Comments and Explanation of Revisions, a partner's 
liquidation value percentage must be determined upon formation of a 
partnership and any revaluation events and in certain other 
circumstances in which redetermination of the liquidation value 
percentage would result in a significant change from the previously 
determined liquidation value percentage.
C. Exceptions From General Rule of Aggregate Treatment
    Proposed Sec.  1.956-4(c)(2) provides an exception from the 
aggregate treatment of proposed Sec.  1.956-4(c)(1) that applies if 
neither the CFC that holds the obligation (or is treated as holding the 
obligation) nor any person related to the CFC (within the meaning of 
section 954(d)(3)) is a partner in the partnership on the CFC's 
quarterly measuring date on which the treatment of the obligation as 
United States property is being determined. A comment suggested an 
additional exception from the general rule in proposed Sec.  1.956-
4(c)(1) providing for aggregate treatment of partnership obligations. 
The comment requested that an obligation of a foreign partnership not 
be treated as an obligation of its partners to the extent that the 
obligation arises from a routine, ordinary course transaction between 
the lending CFC and the foreign partnership.
    The comment highlighted a fact pattern involving an obligation 
arising from a deposit by a CFC with a foreign partnership that acts as 
a coordination center for a taxpayer's cash pooling system. In this 
case, the comment asserted that any United States partners in the 
partnership should not be considered to have accessed the deferred 
earnings of the CFC deposited with the partnership and that, 
accordingly, the aggregate approach to partnership obligations should 
not apply to treat the CFC as holding an obligation of the United 
States partners for purposes of section 956. Regarding this fact 
pattern, the Treasury Department and the IRS observe that the short-
term obligation exception in Sec.  1.956-2T(d)(2)(iv), which applies 
when a CFC holds obligations of a United States person for a limited 
period of time during a taxable year, generally would prevent an 
inclusion under section 956 in the fact pattern described in the 
comment if the CFC had a net deposit with the partnership only for the 
limited period of time described in that exception. The Treasury 
Department and the IRS have concluded that there is no reason to 
provide a more expansive exception from United States property 
treatment for obligations of a foreign partnership with certain United 
States persons as partners than would apply with respect to obligations 
incurred directly by those same United States persons.
    Another comment recommended adding a new de minimis exception that

[[Page 76503]]

would provide that an obligation of a foreign partnership is not 
treated as an obligation of a United States person that is a partner if 
the United States person and its related persons own less than a 
specified percentage, 10% or 20%, of the profits and capital interests 
in the foreign partnership. The comment noted that a U.S. partner with 
a relatively small interest in a partnership may lack the ability to 
cause the partnership to make a distribution to the U.S. partner.
    Although a U.S. partner with a relatively small partnership 
interest may not be able to compel a distribution from the partnership, 
the potential to directly access partnership assets is not, as the 
comment acknowledges, the sole or overriding consideration motivating 
the aggregate approach to partnerships under the proposed regulations 
and these final regulations. Even if the other partners in a 
partnership in which a United States shareholder of a CFC is a minority 
partner are unrelated to the United States shareholder, the United 
States shareholder would still benefit from the funding of the 
partnership's business with deferred earnings of the CFC to the extent 
of its interest in the partnership. Additionally, as noted in the 
preamble to the 2015 proposed regulations, a standard based on whether 
the funding CFC or a related person is a partner in the partnership, 
rather than whether such persons own a certain minimum interest in the 
partnership, is consistent with the relevant exception adopted by 
Congress in section 956(c)(2)(L).
    Accordingly, the Treasury Department and the IRS have determined 
that the additional exceptions to aggregate treatment suggested in the 
comments are not warranted.
D. Special Obligor Rule in the Case of Certain Distributions
    The 2015 proposed regulations include a special funded distribution 
rule that increases the amount of a foreign partnership obligation that 
is treated as United States property when the following requirements 
are satisfied: (i) A CFC lends funds (or is a pledgor or guarantor with 
respect to a loan) to a foreign partnership whose obligation is, in 
whole or in part, United States property with respect to the CFC 
pursuant to proposed Sec.  1.956-4(c)(1) and existing Sec.  1.956-2(a); 
(ii) the partnership distributes an amount of money or property to a 
partner that is related to the CFC (within the meaning of section 
954(d)(3)) and whose obligation would be United States property if held 
(or treated as held) by the CFC; (iii) the foreign partnership would 
not have made the distribution but for a funding of the partnership 
through an obligation held (or treated as held) by the CFC; and (iv) 
the distribution exceeds the partner's share of the partnership 
obligation as determined in accordance with the partner's interest in 
partnership profits. When these requirements are satisfied, proposed 
Sec.  1.956-4(c)(3) provided that the amount of the partnership 
obligation that is treated as an obligation of the distributee partner 
(and thus as United States property held by the CFC) is the lesser of 
the amount of the distribution that would not have been made but for 
the funding of the partnership and the amount of the partnership 
obligation.
    Comments suggested that taxpayers might take the position that the 
``but for'' requirement in proposed Sec.  1.956-4(c)(3) is not 
satisfied in certain situations in which CFC earnings are effectively 
repatriated to a partner that is a related United States person. For 
example, taxpayers might take the position that a partnership 
distribution could have been made without the funding by the CFC merely 
by establishing that a third party would have loaned the funds needed 
for the partnership to make the distribution. The Treasury Department 
and the IRS have determined that this position is inconsistent with the 
purposes of this rule. Accordingly, these final regulations clarify the 
funded distribution rule by providing with respect to the ``but for'' 
requirement in proposed Sec.  1.956-4(c)(3) that a foreign partnership 
will be treated as if it would not have made a distribution of liquid 
assets but for a funding of the partnership through obligations held 
(or treated as held) by a CFC to the extent the foreign partnership did 
not have sufficient liquid assets to make the distribution immediately 
prior to the distribution, without taking into account the obligations. 
When a CFC holds (or is treated as holding) multiple obligations of the 
foreign partnership to which this rule could potentially apply, its 
applicability is determined first with respect to the obligation 
acquired (or treated as acquired) closest in time to the distribution, 
and then successively to other obligations further in time from the 
distribution until the distribution is fully accounted for.

6. Comments Concerning Multiple Inclusions

    Comments were received in response to the request for comments 
included in the preamble to the 2015 proposed regulations concerning 
whether the Treasury Department and the IRS should exercise the 
authority granted under section 956(e) to prescribe regulations 
concerning situations in which multiple CFCs serve, or are treated, as 
pledgors or guarantors of a single obligation for purposes of section 
956(d) in order to limit the aggregate inclusions of a United States 
shareholder with respect to a CFC under sections 951(a)(1)(B) and 956 
to the unpaid principal amount of the obligation. The Treasury 
Department and the IRS continue to study the comments concerning 
multiple inclusions under section 956(d), which do not impact any of 
the proposed regulations adopted by this Treasury decision.

Effective/Applicability Dates

    The rules in Sec.  1.954-2(c)(1)(i) and (d)(1)(i) (regarding the 
active development test) apply to rents or royalties, as applicable, 
received or accrued during taxable years of CFCs ending on or after 
September 1, 2015, and to taxable years of United States shareholders 
in which or with which such taxable years end, but only with respect to 
property manufactured, produced, developed, or created, or, in the case 
of acquired property, property to which substantial value has been 
added, on or after September 1, 2015. The rules in Sec.  1.954-
2(c)(1)(iv), (c)(2)(ii), (d)(1)(ii), and (d)(2)(ii) (regarding the 
active marketing test), as well as the rules in Sec.  1.954-
2(c)(2)(iii)(E), (c)(2)(viii), (d)(2)(iii)(E), and (d)(2)(v) (regarding 
cost-sharing arrangements), apply to rents or royalties, as applicable, 
received or accrued during taxable years of CFCs ending on or after 
September 1, 2015, and to taxable years of United States shareholders 
in which or with which such taxable years end, to the extent that such 
rents or royalties are received or accrued on or after September 1, 
2015. The section 956 anti-avoidance rules in Sec.  1.956-1(b) apply to 
taxable years of CFCs ending on or after September 1, 2015, and to 
taxable years of United States shareholders in which or with which such 
taxable years end, with respect to property acquired, including 
property treated as acquired as the result of a deemed exchange of 
property pursuant to section 1001, on or after September 1, 2015. The 
rules regarding factoring transactions in Sec.  1.956-3 (other than 
Sec.  1.956-3(b)(2)(ii)) apply to trade or service receivables acquired 
(directly or indirectly) after March 1, 1984.
    The remaining rules in these final regulations apply to taxable 
years of CFCs ending on or after November 3, 2016, and taxable years of 
United States shareholders in which or with which such taxable years 
end. In general, these remaining rules apply to property

[[Page 76504]]

acquired, or pledges or guarantees entered into, on or after September 
1, 2015, including property considered acquired, and pledges and 
guarantees considered entered into, on or after September 1, 2015, as a 
result of a deemed exchange pursuant to section 1001. See Sec.  1.956-
4(c) (dealing with obligations of foreign partnerships); Sec. Sec.  
1.956-2(c), 1.956-4(d), and 1.956-1(e)(2) (dealing with pledges and 
guarantees, including pledges and guarantees by a partnership and with 
respect to obligations of a foreign partnership); and Sec.  1.956-
3(b)(2)(ii) (dealing with trade and service receivables acquired from 
related United States persons indirectly through nominees, pass-through 
entities, or related foreign corporations). Two rules, however, apply 
to all obligations held on or after November 3, 2016. See Sec. Sec.  
1.956-2(a)(3) and 1.956-4(e) (dealing with obligations of disregarded 
entities and domestic partnerships, respectively). Finally, Sec.  
1.956-4(b) (dealing with partnership property indirectly held by a CFC) 
applies to property acquired on or after November 3, 2016. No inference 
is intended as to the application of the provisions amended by these 
final regulations under prior law, including in transactions involving 
obligations of foreign partnerships. The IRS may, where appropriate, 
challenge transactions under the Code, regulatory provisions under 
prior law, or judicial doctrines.

Effect on Other Documents

    Rev. Rul. 90-112 (1990-2 CB 186) is obsolete as of November 3, 
2016.

Special Analyses

    Certain IRS regulations, including these regulations, are exempt 
from the requirements of Executive Order 12866, as supplemented and 
reaffirmed by Executive Order 13563. Therefore, a regulatory assessment 
is not required. It has also been determined that section 553(b) of the 
Administrative Procedure Act (5 U.S.C. Chapter 5) does not apply to 
these regulations, and because the regulations do not impose a 
collection of information on small entities, the Regulatory Flexibility 
Act (5 U.S.C. chapter 6) does not apply. Pursuant to section 7805(f), 
the notice of proposed rulemaking preceding these regulations was 
submitted to the Chief Counsel of Advocacy of the Small Business 
Administration for comment on its impact on small business.

Drafting Information

    The principal author of these regulations is Rose E. Jenkins of the 
Office of Associate Chief Counsel (International). However, other 
personnel from the Treasury Department and the IRS participated in 
their development.

List of Subjects in 26 CFR Part 1

    Income taxes, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.

Adoption of Amendments to the Regulations

    Accordingly, 26 CFR part 1 is amended as follows:

PART 1--INCOME TAXES

0
Paragraph 1. The authority citation for part 1 is amended by adding 
entries in numerical order to read in part as follows:

    Authority: 26 U.S.C. 7805 * * *
    Section 1.956-1 also issued under 26 U.S.C. 956(d) and 956(e).
    Section 1.956-2 also issued under 26 U.S.C. 956(d) and 956(e).
    Section 1.956-3 also issued under 26 U.S.C. 864(d)(8) and 
956(e).
    Section 1.956-4 also issued under 26 U.S.C. 956(d) and 956(e).
* * * * *

0
 Par. 2. Section 1.954-2 is amended by:
0
 1. Revising paragraphs (c)(1)(i), (c)(1)(iv), and (c)(2)(ii).
0
 2. Removing the word ``and'' at the end of paragraph (c)(2)(iii)(C).
0
 3. Removing the period at the end of paragraph (c)(2)(iii)(D) and 
adding in its place a semicolon and the word ``and''.
0
 4. Revising paragraphs (c)(2)(iii)(E) and (c)(2)(viii).
0
5. Revising paragraphs (d)(1)(i), (d)(1)(ii), and (d)(2)(ii).
0
 6. Removing the word ``and'' at the end of paragraph (d)(2)(iii)(C).
0
 7. Removing the period at the end of paragraph (d)(2)(iii)(D), and 
adding in its place a semicolon and the word ``and''.
0
 8. Revising paragraphs (d)(2)(iii)(E) and (d)(2)(v).
0
 9. Revising paragraph (i).
    The revisions and additions read as follows:


Sec.  1.954-2   Foreign personal holding company income.

* * * * *
    (c) * * *
    (1) * * *
    (i) Property that the lessor, through its own officers or staff of 
employees, has manufactured or produced, or property that the lessor 
has acquired and, through its own officers or staff of employees, added 
substantial value to, but only if the lessor, through its officers or 
staff of employees, is regularly engaged in the manufacture or 
production of, or in the acquisition and addition of substantial value 
to, property of such kind;
* * * * *
    (iv) Property that is leased as a result of the performance of 
marketing functions by such lessor through its own officers or staff of 
employees located in a foreign country or countries, if the lessor, 
through its officers or staff of employees, maintains and operates an 
organization either in such country or in such countries 
(collectively), as applicable, that is regularly engaged in the 
business of marketing, or of marketing and servicing, the leased 
property and that is substantial in relation to the amount of rents 
derived from the leasing of such property.
    (2) * * *
    (ii) Substantiality of foreign organization. For purposes of 
paragraph (c)(1)(iv) of this section, whether an organization either in 
a foreign country or in foreign countries (collectively) is substantial 
in relation to the amount of rents is determined based on all the facts 
and circumstances. However, such an organization will be considered 
substantial in relation to the amount of rents if active leasing 
expenses, as defined in paragraph (c)(2)(iii) of this section, equal or 
exceed 25 percent of the adjusted leasing profit, as defined in 
paragraph (c)(2)(iv) of this section. In addition, for purposes of 
aircraft or vessels leased in foreign commerce, an organization will be 
considered substantial if active leasing expenses, as defined in 
paragraph (c)(2)(iii) of this section, equal or exceed 10 percent of 
the adjusted leasing profit, as defined in paragraph (c)(2)(iv) of this 
section. For purposes of paragraphs (c)(1)(iv) and (c)(2) of this 
section and Sec.  1.956-2(b)(1)(vi), the term aircraft or vessels 
includes component parts, such as engines that are leased separately 
from an aircraft or vessel.
    (iii) * * *
    (E) Deductions for CST Payments or PCT Payments (as defined in 
Sec.  1.482-7(b)).
* * * * *
    (viii) Cost sharing arrangements (CSAs). For purposes of paragraphs 
(c)(1)(i) and (iv) of this section, CST Payments or PCT Payments (as 
defined in Sec.  1.482-7(b)(1)) made by the lessor to another 
controlled participant (as defined in Sec.  1.482-7(j)(1)(i)) pursuant 
to a CSA (as defined in Sec.  1.482-7(a)) do not cause the activities 
undertaken by that other controlled participant to be considered to be 
undertaken by the lessor's own officers or staff of employees.
* * * * *

[[Page 76505]]

    (d) * * *
    (1) * * *
    (i) Property that the licensor, through its own officers or staff 
of employees, has developed, created, or produced, or property that the 
licensor has acquired and, through its own officers or staff of 
employees, added substantial value to, but only so long as the 
licensor, through its officers or staff of employees, is regularly 
engaged in the development, creation, or production of, or in the 
acquisition and addition of substantial value to, property of such 
kind; or
    (ii) Property that is licensed as a result of the performance of 
marketing functions by such licensor through its own officers or staff 
of employees located in a foreign country or countries, if the 
licensor, through its officers or staff of employees, maintains and 
operates an organization either in such foreign country or in such 
foreign countries (collectively), as applicable, that is regularly 
engaged in the business of marketing, or of marketing and servicing, 
the licensed property and that is substantial in relation to the amount 
of royalties derived from the licensing of such property.
    (2) * * *
    (ii) Substantiality of foreign organization. For purposes of 
paragraph (d)(1)(ii) of this section, whether an organization either in 
a foreign country or in foreign countries (collectively) is substantial 
in relation to the amount of royalties is determined based on all of 
the facts and circumstances. However, such an organization will be 
considered substantial in relation to the amount of royalties if active 
licensing expenses, as defined in paragraph (d)(2)(iii) of this 
section, equal or exceed 25 percent of the adjusted licensing profit, 
as defined in paragraph (d)(2)(iv) of this section.
    (iii) * * *
    (E) Deductions for CST Payments or PCT Payments (as defined in 
Sec.  1.482-7(b)).
* * * * *
    (v) Cost sharing arrangements (CSAs). For purposes of paragraphs 
(d)(1)(i) and (ii) of this section, CST Payments or PCT Payments (as 
defined in Sec.  1.482-7(b)(1)) made by the licensor to another 
controlled participant (as defined in Sec.  1.482-7(j)(1)(i)) pursuant 
to a CSA (as defined in Sec.  1.482-7(a)) do not cause the activities 
undertaken by that other controlled participant to be considered to be 
undertaken by the licensor's own officers or staff of employees.
* * * * *
    (i) Effective/applicability dates--(1) Paragraphs (c)(2)(v) through 
(vii). Paragraphs (c)(2)(v) through (vii) of this section and Example 6 
of paragraph (c)(3) of this section apply to taxable years of 
controlled foreign corporations beginning on or after May 2, 2006, and 
for taxable years of United States shareholders with or within which 
such taxable years of the controlled foreign corporations end. 
Taxpayers may elect to apply paragraphs (c)(2)(v) through (vii) to 
taxable years of controlled foreign corporations beginning after 
December 31, 2004, and for taxable years of United States shareholders 
with or within which such taxable years of the controlled foreign 
corporations end. If an election is made to apply Sec.  1.956-
2(b)(1)(vi) to taxable years beginning after December 31, 2004, then 
the election must also be made for paragraphs (c)(2)(v) through (vii) 
of this section.
    (2) Other paragraphs. Paragraphs (c)(1)(i) and (d)(1)(i) of this 
section apply to rents or royalties, as applicable, received or accrued 
during taxable years of controlled foreign corporations ending on or 
after September 1, 2015, and to taxable years of United States 
shareholders in which or with which such taxable years end, but only 
with respect to property manufactured, produced, developed, or created, 
or in the case of acquired property, property to which substantial 
value has been added, on or after September 1, 2015. Paragraphs 
(c)(1)(iv), (c)(2)(ii), (c)(2)(iii)(E), (c)(2)(viii), (d)(1)(ii), 
(d)(2)(ii), (d)(2)(iii)(E), and (d)(2)(v) of this section apply to 
rents or royalties, as applicable, received or accrued during taxable 
years of controlled foreign corporations ending on or after September 
1, 2015, and to taxable years of United States shareholders in which or 
with which such taxable years end, to the extent that such rents or 
royalties are received or accrued on or after September 1, 2015. See 
Sec.  1.954-2(c)(1)(i), (c)(1)(iv), (c)(2)(ii), (c)(2)(iii), (d)(1)(i), 
(d)(1)(ii), (d)(2)(ii), and (d)(2)(iii), as contained in 26 CFR part 1 
revised as of April 1, 2015, for rules applicable to rents or 
royalties, as applicable, received or accrued before September 1, 2015.
* * * * *


 Sec.  1.954-2T  [Removed]

0
 Par. 3. Section 1.954-2T is removed.

0
 Par. 4. Section 1.956-1 is amended by:
0
 1. Revising the section heading and paragraphs (a) and (b).
0
 2. Removing and reserving paragraphs (c) and (d).
0
 3. Revising paragraphs (e)(2) and (g).
    The revisions read as follows:


Sec.  1.956-1  Shareholder's pro rata share of the average of the 
amounts of United States property held by a controlled foreign 
corporation.

    (a) In general. Subject to the provisions of section 951(a) and the 
regulations thereunder, a United States shareholder of a controlled 
foreign corporation is required to include in gross income the amount 
determined under section 956 with respect to the shareholder for the 
taxable year but only to the extent not excluded from gross income 
under section 959(a)(2) and the regulations thereunder.
    (b) Amount of United States property held indirectly by a 
controlled foreign corporation--(1) General rule. For purposes of 
section 956, United States property held indirectly by a controlled 
foreign corporation includes--
    (i) United States property held on behalf of the controlled foreign 
corporation by a trustee or a nominee;
    (ii) United States property acquired by any other foreign 
corporation that is controlled by the controlled foreign corporation if 
a principal purpose of creating, organizing, or funding by any means 
(including through capital contributions or debt) the other foreign 
corporation is to avoid the application of section 956 with respect to 
the controlled foreign corporation; and
    (iii) Property acquired by a partnership that is controlled by the 
controlled foreign corporation if the property would be United States 
property if held directly by the controlled foreign corporation, and a 
principal purpose of creating, organizing, or funding by any means 
(including through capital contributions or debt) the partnership is to 
avoid the application of section 956 with respect to the controlled 
foreign corporation.
    (2) Control. For purposes of paragraphs (b)(1)(ii) and (iii) of 
this section, a controlled foreign corporation controls a foreign 
corporation or partnership if the controlled foreign corporation and 
the other foreign corporation or partnership are related within the 
meaning of section 267(b) or section 707(b). For this purpose, in 
determining whether two corporations are members of the same controlled 
group under section 267(b)(3), a person is considered to own stock 
owned directly by such person, stock owned for the purposes of section 
1563(e)(1), and stock owned with the application of section 267(c).
    (3) Coordination rule. Paragraph (b)(1)(iii) of this section 
applies only to the extent that the amount of United States property 
that is treated under that paragraph as held indirectly by a

[[Page 76506]]

controlled foreign corporation through the partnership exceeds the sum 
of--
    (i) The amount of United States property described in paragraph 
(b)(1)(iii) of this section that is treated as held by the controlled 
foreign corporation as a result of the application of Sec.  1.956-4(b) 
with respect to the partnership; and
    (ii) The amount of United States property that is treated as held 
by the controlled foreign corporation as a result of the application of 
Sec.  1.956-4(c) with respect to any portion of an obligation 
attributable to the funding described in paragraph (b)(1)(iii) of this 
section of the partnership by the controlled foreign corporation.
    (4) Examples. The following examples illustrate the rules of this 
paragraph (b). In each example, P is a domestic corporation that wholly 
owns two controlled foreign corporations, FS1 and FS2.

    Example 1.  (i) Facts. FS1 sells inventory to FS2 in exchange 
for trade receivables due in 60 days. Avoiding the application of 
section 956 with respect to FS1 was not a principal purpose of 
establishing the trade receivables. FS2 has no earnings and profits, 
and FS1 has substantial accumulated earnings and profits. FS2 makes 
a loan to P equal to the amount it owes FS1 under the trade 
receivables. FS2 pays the trade receivables according to their 
terms.
    (ii) Result. FS1 will not be considered to indirectly hold 
United States property under this paragraph (b) because the funding 
of FS2 through the sale of inventory in exchange for the 
establishment of trade receivables was not undertaken with a 
principal purpose of avoiding the application of section 956 with 
respect to FS1.
    Example 2.  (i) Facts. The facts are the same as in Example 1 of 
this paragraph (b)(4), except that, with a principal purpose of 
avoiding the application of section 956 with respect to FS1, FS1 and 
FS2 agree to defer FS2's payment obligation, and FS2 does not timely 
pay the receivables.
    (ii) Result. FS1 is considered to hold indirectly United States 
property under this paragraph (b) and Sec.  1.956-2(a) because there 
was a funding of FS2, a principal purpose of which was to avoid the 
application of section 956 with respect to FS1.
    Example 3.  (i) Facts. FS1 has $100x of post-1986 undistributed 
earnings and profits and $100x post-1986 foreign income taxes, but 
does not have any cash. FS2 has earnings and profits of at least 
$100x, no post-1986 foreign income taxes, and substantial cash. 
Neither FS1 nor FS2 has earnings and profits described in section 
959(c)(1) or section 959(c)(2). FS2 loans $100x to FS1. FS1 then 
loans $100x to P. An income inclusion by P of $100x under sections 
951(a)(1)(B) and 956 with respect to FS1 would result in foreign 
income taxes deemed paid by P under section 960. A principal purpose 
of funding FS1 through the loan from FS2 is to avoid the application 
of section 956 with respect to FS2.
    (ii) Result. Under paragraph (b)(1)(ii) of this section, FS2 is 
considered to indirectly hold the $100x obligation of P that is held 
by FS1. As a result, P has an income inclusion of $100x under 
sections 951(a)(1)(B) and 956 with respect to FS2, and the foreign 
income taxes deemed paid by P under section 960 is $0. P does not 
have an income inclusion under sections 951(a)(1)(B) and 956 with 
respect to FS1 related to the $100x loan from FS1 to P.
     Example 4.  (i) Facts. FS1 deposits $100x with BK, an unrelated 
foreign financial institution. FS2 subsequently borrows $100x from 
BK. BK would not have loaned the $100x to FS2 on the same terms 
absent FS1's deposit. FS2 loans the $100x borrowed from BK to P. FS2 
has no earnings and profits, and FS1 has substantial accumulated 
earnings and profits. A principal purpose for the transactions is to 
avoid the application of section 956 with respect to FS1.
    (ii) Result. FS1 is considered to hold indirectly United States 
property under this paragraph (b) and Sec.  1.956-2(a) because FS1's 
deposit with BK, which facilitates BK's loan to FS2, is considered a 
funding by FS1 of FS2, a principal purpose of which was to avoid the 
application of section 956 with respect to FS1.
    Example 5.  (i) Facts. FS1 sells inventory to FS2 in exchange 
for $100x. The sale occurred in the ordinary course of FS1's trade 
or business and FS2's trade or business, and the terms of the sale 
are consistent with terms that would be observed among parties 
dealing at arm's length. FS1 makes a $100x loan to P. FS2 has no 
earnings and profits, and FS1 has substantial accumulated earnings 
and profits.
    (ii) Result. FS2 will not be considered to indirectly hold 
United States property under this paragraph (b) because a sale in 
the ordinary course of business for cash on terms that are 
consistent with those that would be observed among parties dealing 
at arm's length does not constitute a funding.
     Example 6.  (i) Facts. In Year 1, FS2 loans $100x to FS1 to 
finance FS1's trade or business. The terms of the loan are 
consistent with those that would be observed among parties dealing 
at arm's length. In Year 2, FS1 repays the loan in accordance with 
the terms of the loan. Immediately after the repayment by FS1, FS2 
loans $100x to P. FS2 has no earnings and profits, and FS1 has 
substantial accumulated earnings and profits.
    (ii) Result. FS1 will not be considered to indirectly hold 
United States property under this paragraph (b) because a repayment 
of a loan that has terms that are consistent with those that would 
be observed among parties dealing at arm's length and that is repaid 
consistent with those terms does not constitute a funding.
     Example 7.  (i) Facts. FS1 has substantial earnings and 
profits. P and FS1 are the only partners in FPRS, a foreign 
partnership. FS1 contributes $600x cash to FPRS in exchange for a 
60% interest in the partnership, and P contributes real estate 
located outside the United States ($400x value) to FPRS in exchange 
for a 40% interest in the partnership. There are no special 
allocations in the FPRS partnership agreement. FPRS lends $100x to 
P. Under Sec.  1.956-4(b) and Sec.  1.956-2(a), FS1 is treated as 
holding United States property of $60x (60% x $100x) as a result of 
the FPRS loan to P. A principal purpose of creating, organizing, or 
funding FPRS is to avoid the application of section 956 with respect 
to FS1.
    (ii) Result. Before taking into account paragraph (b)(3) of this 
section, because FS1 controls FPRS and a principal purpose of 
creating, organizing, or funding FPRS was to avoid the application 
of section 956 with respect to FS1, FS1 is considered under 
paragraph (b)(1)(iii) of this section to indirectly hold the $100x 
obligation of P that would be United States property if held 
directly by FS1. However, under paragraph (b)(3) of this section, 
FS1 is treated as holding United States property under paragraph 
(b)(1)(iii) only to the extent the amount held indirectly under 
paragraph (b)(1)(iii) of this section exceeds the sum of the amount 
of the United States property that FS1 is treated as holding as a 
result of the application of Sec.  1.956-4(b) with respect to FPRS. 
The amount of United States property that FS1 is treated as 
indirectly holding under paragraph (b)(1)(iii) of this section and 
Sec.  1.956-2(a) ($100x) exceeds the amount determined under Sec.  
1.956-4(b) ($60x) by $40x. Thus, FS1 is considered to hold United 
States property within the meaning of section 956(c) in the amount 
of $100x ($60x under Sec.  1.956-4(b) and $40x under paragraphs 
(b)(1)(iii) and (b)(3) of this section).
     Example 8.  (i) Facts. FS1 and FS2 have substantial earnings 
and profits. P and FS1 are the only partners in FPRS, a foreign 
partnership. There are no special allocations in the FPRS 
partnership agreement. P's liquidation value percentage with respect 
to FPRS is 40%, and FS1's liquidation value percentage with respect 
to FPRS is 60%. FS2 lends $100x to FPRS, and FPRS lends $100x to P. 
Under Sec.  1.956-4(c) and Sec.  1.956-2(a), FS2 is treated as 
holding United States property of $40x (40% x $100x) as a result of 
its loan to FPRS. A principal purpose of funding FPRS is to avoid 
the application of section 956 with respect to FS2.
    (ii) Result. Before taking into account paragraph (b)(3) of this 
section, because FS2 controls FPRS and a principal purpose of 
funding FPRS was to avoid the application of section 956 with 
respect to FS2, FS2 is considered under paragraph (b)(1)(iii) of 
this section to indirectly hold the $100x obligation of P that would 
be United States property if held directly by FS2. However, under 
paragraph (b)(3) of this section, FS2 is treated as holding United 
States property under paragraph (b)(1)(iii) only to the extent the 
amount held indirectly under paragraph (b)(1)(iii) of this section 
exceeds the amount of United States property that FS2 is treated as 
holding as a result of the application of Sec.  1.956-4(c) with 
respect to the obligation with which FS2 funds FPRS. The amount of 
United States property that FS2 is treated as indirectly holding 
under paragraph (b)(1)(iii) of this section and Sec.  1.956-2(a) 
($100x) exceeds the amount determined under Sec.  1.956-4(c) ($40x) 
by $60x. Thus, FS2 is considered to hold United States property 
within the meaning of section 956(c) in the amount of $100x ($40x 
under Sec.  1.956-4(c) and $60x under paragraphs (b)(1)(iii) and

[[Page 76507]]

(b)(3) of this section). P does not have an income inclusion under 
sections 951(a)(1)(B) and 956 with respect to FS1 related to the P 
obligation held by FPRS.

    (c)-(d) [Reserved]
    (e) * * *
    (2) Rule for pledges and guarantees. For purposes of this section, 
the amount of an obligation treated as held (before application of 
Sec.  1.956-4(b)) as a result of a pledge or guarantee described in 
Sec.  1.956-2(c) is the unpaid principal amount of the obligation on 
the applicable determination date.
* * * * *
    (g) Effective/applicability date. (1) Paragraph (a) of this section 
applies to taxable years of controlled foreign corporations ending on 
or after November 3, 2016, and to taxable years of United States 
shareholders in which or with which such taxable years end.
    (2) Paragraph (b) of this section applies to taxable years of 
controlled foreign corporations ending on or after September 1, 2015, 
and to taxable years of United States shareholders in which or with 
which such taxable years end, with respect to property acquired on or 
after September 1, 2015. See paragraph (b)(4) of Sec.  1.956-1T, as 
contained in 26 CFR part 1 revised as of April 1, 2015, for the rules 
applicable to taxable years of controlled foreign corporations ending 
before September 1, 2015, and property acquired before September 1, 
2015. For purposes of this paragraph (g)(2), a deemed exchange of 
property pursuant to section 1001 on or after September 1, 2015 
constitutes an acquisition of the property on or after that date.
    (3) Paragraph (e)(2) of this section applies to taxable years of 
controlled foreign corporations ending on or after November 3, 2016, 
and taxable years of United States shareholders in which or with which 
such taxable years end, with respect to pledges or guarantees entered 
into on or after September 1, 2015. For purposes of this paragraph 
(g)(3), a pledgor or guarantor is treated as entering into a pledge or 
guarantee when there is a significant modification, within the meaning 
of Sec.  1.1001-3(e), of an obligation with respect to which it is a 
pledgor or guarantor on or after September 1, 2015.
* * * * *

0
 Par. 5. Section 1.956-1T is revised to read as follows:


Sec.  1.956-1T  Shareholder's pro rata share of the average of the 
amounts of United States property held by a controlled foreign 
corporation.

    (a) through (e)(4) [Reserved]
    (5) Exclusion for certain recourse obligations. For purposes of 
Sec.  1.956-1(e)(1) of the regulations, in the case of an investment in 
United States property consisting of an obligation of a related person, 
as defined in section 954(d)(3) and paragraph (f) of Sec.  1.954-1, a 
liability will not be recognized as a specific charge if the liability 
representing the charge is with recourse with respect to the general 
credit or other assets of the investing controlled foreign corporation.
    (e)(6) [Reserved]. For further guidance, see Sec.  1.956-1(e)(6).
    (f) Effective/applicability date. Paragraph (e)(5) of this section 
applies to investments made on or after June 14, 1988.
    (g)-(h) [Reserved]

0
Par. 6. Section 1.956-2 is amended by:
0
1. Revising paragraphs (a)(3), (c)(1), and (c)(2).
0
2. Adding Example 4 to paragraph (c)(3).
0
3. Adding paragraph (h).
    The revisions and addition read as follows:


Sec.  1.956-2  Definition of United States property.

    (a) * * *
    (3) Treatment of disregarded entities. For purposes of section 956, 
an obligation of a business entity (as defined in Sec.  301.7701-2(a) 
of this chapter) that is disregarded as an entity separate from its 
owner for federal tax purposes under Sec. Sec.  301.7701-1 through 
301.7701-3 of this chapter is treated as an obligation of its owner.
* * * * *
    (c) Treatment of pledges and guarantees--(1) General rule. Except 
as provided in paragraph (c)(4) of this section, for purposes of 
section 956, any obligation of a United States person with respect to 
which a controlled foreign corporation or a partnership is a pledgor or 
guarantor will be considered to be held by the controlled foreign 
corporation or the partnership, as the case may be. See Sec.  1.956-
1(e)(2) for rules that determine the amount of the obligation treated 
as held by a pledgor or guarantor under this paragraph (c). For rules 
that treat an obligation of a foreign partnership as an obligation of 
the partners in the foreign partnership for purposes of section 956, 
see Sec.  1.956-4(c).
    (2) Indirect pledge or guarantee. If the assets of a controlled 
foreign corporation or a partnership serve at any time, even though 
indirectly, as security for the performance of an obligation of a 
United States person, then, for purposes of paragraph (c)(1) of this 
section, the controlled foreign corporation or partnership will be 
considered a pledgor or guarantor of that obligation. If a partnership 
is considered a pledgor or guarantor of an obligation, a controlled 
foreign corporation that is a partner in the partnership will not also 
be treated as a pledgor or guarantor of the obligation solely as a 
result of its ownership of an interest in the partnership. For purposes 
of this paragraph, a pledge of stock of a controlled foreign 
corporation representing at least 66\2/3\ percent of the total combined 
voting power of all classes of voting stock of such corporation will be 
considered an indirect pledge of the assets of the controlled foreign 
corporation if the pledge is accompanied by one or more negative 
covenants or similar restrictions on the shareholder effectively 
limiting the corporation's discretion to dispose of assets and/or incur 
liabilities other than in the ordinary course of business. See Sec.  
1.956-4(d) for guidance on the treatment of indirect pledges or 
guarantees of an obligation of a partnership attributed to its partners 
under Sec.  1.956-4(c).
    (3) * * *

    Example 4.  (i) Facts. USP, a domestic corporation, owns 70% of 
the stock of FS, a controlled foreign corporation, and a 90% 
interest in FPRS, a foreign partnership. X, an unrelated foreign 
person, owns 30% of the stock of FS. Y, an unrelated foreign person, 
owns a 10% interest in FPRS. There are no special allocations in the 
FPRS partnership agreement. FPRS borrows $100x from Z, an unrelated 
person. FS pledges its assets as security for FPRS's performance of 
its obligation to repay the $100x loan. USP's share of the $100x 
FPRS obligation, determined in accordance with its liquidation value 
percentage, is $90x. Under Sec.  1.956-4(c), $90x of the FPRS 
obligation is treated as an obligation of USP for purposes of 
section 956.
    (ii) Result. For purposes of section 956, under paragraph (c)(1) 
of this section, FS is considered to hold an obligation of USP in 
the amount of $90x, and thus is treated as holding United States 
property in the amount of $90x.

* * * * *
    (h) Effective/applicability date. (1) Paragraph (a)(3) of this 
section applies to taxable years of controlled foreign corporations 
ending on or after November 3, 2016, and taxable years of United States 
shareholders in which or with which such taxable years end, with 
respect to obligations held on or after November 3, 2016.
    (2) Paragraphs (c)(1), (c)(2), and Example 4 of paragraph (c)(3) of 
this section apply to taxable years of controlled foreign corporations 
ending on or after November 3, 2016, and taxable years of United States 
shareholders in which or with which

[[Page 76508]]

such taxable years end, with respect to pledges and guarantees entered 
into on or after September 1, 2015. For purposes of this paragraph 
(h)(2), a pledgor or guarantor is treated as entering into a pledge or 
guarantee when there is a significant modification, within the meaning 
of Sec.  1.1001-3(e), of an obligation with respect to which it is a 
pledgor or guarantor on or after September 1, 2015.
* * * * *

0
Par. 7. Section Sec.  1.956-3 is added to read as follows:


Sec.  1.956-3  Certain trade or service receivables acquired from 
United States persons.

    (a) In general. For purposes of section 956(a) and Sec.  1.956-1, 
the term ``United States property'' also includes any trade or service 
receivable if the trade or service receivable is acquired (directly or 
indirectly) from a related person who is a United States person (as 
defined in section 7701(a)(30)) (a related United States person) and 
the obligor under the receivable is a United States person. A trade or 
service receivable described in this paragraph is considered to be 
United States property notwithstanding the exceptions (other than 
subparagraph (H)) contained in section 956(c)(2). The terms ``trade or 
service receivable'' and ``related person'' have the respective 
meanings given to the terms by section 864(d) and the regulations 
thereunder, including Sec.  1.864-8T(b). For purposes of this section, 
the exception in Sec.  1.956-2T(d)(2)(ii) does not apply to trade or 
service receivables described in this paragraph.
    (b) Acquisition of a trade or service receivable--(1) General rule. 
The rules of Sec.  1.864-8T(c)(1) apply to determine whether a 
controlled foreign corporation has acquired a trade or service 
receivable.
    (2) Indirect acquisitions--(i) Acquisition through unrelated 
person. A trade or service receivable is considered acquired from a 
related person when it is acquired from an unrelated person who 
acquired (directly or indirectly) the receivable from a person who is a 
related person to the acquiring person.
    (ii) Acquisition by nominee, pass-through entity, or related 
foreign corporation. A controlled foreign corporation is treated as 
holding a trade or service receivable that is held by a nominee on its 
behalf, or by a simple trust or other pass-through entity (other than a 
partnership) to the extent of its direct or indirect ownership or 
beneficial interest in such simple trust or other pass-through entity. 
See Sec. Sec.  1.956-1(b) and 1.956-4(b) for rules that may treat a 
controlled foreign corporation as indirectly holding a trade or service 
receivable held by a foreign corporation or partnership. A controlled 
foreign corporation that is treated as holding a trade or service 
receivable held by another person (the direct holder) (or that would be 
treated as holding the receivable if the receivable were United States 
property or would be United States property if held directly by the 
controlled foreign corporation) is considered to have acquired the 
receivable from the person from whom the direct holder acquired the 
receivable. This paragraph (b)(2)(ii) does not limit the application of 
paragraph (b)(2)(iii) of this section. The following examples 
illustrate the application of this paragraph (b)(2)(ii):

    Example 1. (i) Facts. A domestic corporation, P, wholly owns a 
controlled foreign corporation, FS, with substantial earnings and 
profits. FS contributes $200x of cash to a partnership, PRS, in 
exchange for an 80% partnership interest. An unrelated foreign 
person contributes real estate located in a foreign country with a 
fair market value of $50x to PRS for the remaining 20% partnership 
interest. There are no special allocations in the PRS partnership 
agreement. PRS uses the $200x of cash received from FS to purchase 
trade receivables from P. The obligors with respect to the trade 
receivables are United States persons that are not related to any 
partner in PRS. The liquidation value percentage, as determined 
under Sec.  1.956-4(b), for FS with respect to PRS is 80%. A 
principal purpose of funding PRS (through FS's cash contribution) is 
to avoid the application of section 956 with respect to FS.
    (ii) Result. Under Sec.  1.956-4(b)(1), FS is treated as holding 
80% of the trade receivables acquired by PRS from P, with a basis 
equal to $160x (80% x $200x, PRS's basis in the trade receivables). 
However, because FS controls PRS and a principal purpose of FS 
funding PRS was to avoid the application of section 956 with respect 
to FS, under Sec.  1.956-1(b), if the trade receivables would be 
United States property if held directly by FS, FS additionally would 
be treated as holding the trade receivables to the extent that they 
exceed the amount of the receivables it holds under Sec.  1.956-
4(b), which is $40x ($200x-$160x). Accordingly, under this paragraph 
(b)(2)(ii), FS is treated as having acquired from P, a related 
United States person, the trade receivables that it is treated as 
holding with a basis equal to $200x ($160x + $40x). Thus, FS is 
treated as holding United States property with a basis of $200x 
under paragraph (a) of this section.
    Example 2.  (i) Facts. A domestic corporation, P, wholly owns a 
controlled foreign corporation, FS1, that has earnings and profits 
of at least $300x. FS1 organizes a foreign corporation, FS2, with a 
$200x cash contribution. FS2 uses the cash contribution to purchase 
trade receivables from P. The obligors with respect to the trade 
receivables are unrelated United States persons. A principal purpose 
of funding FS2 (through FS1's cash contribution) is to avoid the 
application of section 956 with respect to FS1.
    (ii) Result. Under Sec.  1.956-1(b), if the trade receivables 
held by FS2 were United States property, FS1 would be treated as 
holding the trade receivables held by FS2 because FS1 controls FS2 
and a principal purpose of FS1 funding FS2 was to avoid the 
application of section 956 with respect to FS1. Accordingly, under 
this paragraph (b)(2)(ii), FS1 is treated as having acquired from P, 
a related United States person, the trade receivables that it would 
be treated as holding with a basis equal to $200x. Thus, FS1 is 
treated as holding United States property with a basis of $200x 
under paragraph (a) of this section.

    (iii) Swap or pooling arrangements. A trade or service receivable 
of a United States person is considered to be a trade or service 
receivable acquired from a related United States person and subject to 
the rules of this section when it is acquired in accordance with an 
arrangement that involves two or more groups of related persons, if the 
groups are unrelated to each other and the effect of the arrangement is 
that one or more persons in each group acquire (directly or indirectly) 
trade or service receivables from one or more unrelated United States 
persons who are also parties to the arrangement in exchange for 
reciprocal purchases of receivables from related United States persons. 
The following example illustrates the application of this paragraph 
(b)(2)(iii):

    Example. (i) Facts. Controlled foreign corporations A, B, C, and 
D are wholly-owned subsidiaries of domestic corporations M, N, O, 
and P, respectively. M, N, O, and P are not related persons. 
According to a prearranged plan, A, B, C, and D each acquire trade 
or service receivables from M, N, O, and/or P. The obligors under 
some or all of the receivables acquired by each of A, B, C, and D 
are United States persons.
    (ii) Result. The effect of the prearranged plan is that each of 
A, B, C, and D acquires trade or service receivables of United 
States persons from one or more unrelated United States persons who 
are also parties to the arrangement, in exchange for reciprocal 
purchases of receivables from a related United States person. 
Accordingly, each of A, B, C, and D is treated as holding a trade or 
service receivable acquired from a related United States person and 
is subject to the rules of this section. As a result, each of A, B, 
C, and D is treated as holding an amount of United States property 
equal to its adjusted basis in the receivables acquired pursuant to 
the arrangement with respect to which the obligors are United States 
persons.

    (iv) Financing arrangements. If a controlled foreign corporation 
participates (directly or indirectly) in a lending transaction that 
results in a loan to a United States person who purchases property 
described in section 1221(a)(1) (inventory property) or services from a 
related United States person, or to any

[[Page 76509]]

person who purchases from a related United States person trade or 
service receivables under which the obligor is a United States person, 
or to a person who is a related person with respect to the purchaser, 
and if the loan would not have been made or maintained on the same 
terms but for the corresponding purchase, then the controlled foreign 
corporation is considered to have indirectly acquired a trade or 
service receivable described in paragraph (a) of this section. For 
purposes of this paragraph (b)(2)(iv), it is immaterial that the sums 
lent are not, in fact, the sums used to finance the purchase of the 
inventory property or services or trade or service receivables from a 
related United States person. The amount to be taken into account with 
respect to the United States property treated as held by a controlled 
foreign corporation as a result of the application of this paragraph 
(b)(2)(iv) is the lesser of the amount lent pursuant to a lending 
transaction described in this paragraph (b)(2)(iv) and the purchase 
price of the inventory property, services, or trade or service 
receivables. The following examples illustrate the application of this 
paragraph (b)(2)(iv):

    Example 1.  (i) Facts. P, a domestic corporation, owns all of 
the outstanding stock of FS1, a controlled foreign corporation. P 
sells inventory property for $200x to X, an unrelated United States 
person. FS1 makes a $100x short-term loan to X, which loan would not 
have been made or maintained on the same terms but for X's purchase 
of P's inventory property.
    (ii) Result. FS1 directly participates in a lending transaction 
described in this paragraph (b)(2)(iv). Thus, FS1 is considered to 
have acquired a trade or service receivable described in paragraph 
(a) of this section. That is, FS1 is considered to have acquired a 
trade or service receivable of a United States person from a related 
United States person. As a result, FS1 is treated as holding United 
States property in the amount of $100x.
    Example 2.  (i) Facts. The facts are the same as in Example 1 of 
this paragraph (b)(2)(iv), except that instead of loaning money to X 
directly, FS1 deposits $300x with an unrelated financial institution 
that loans $200x to X in order for X to purchase P's inventory 
property. The loan would not have been made or maintained on the 
same terms but for the corresponding deposit.
    (ii) Result. FS1 is considered to have acquired a trade or 
service receivable described in paragraph (a) of this section 
because FS1 indirectly participates in a lending transaction 
described in this paragraph (b)(2)(iv). See Rev. Rul. 87-89, 1987-2 
CB 195. That is, FS1 is considered to have acquired a trade or 
service receivable of a United States person from a related United 
States person. Thus, FS1 is treated as holding United States 
property in the amount of $200x.
    Example 3. (i) Facts. P, a domestic corporation, owns all of the 
outstanding stock of FS1, a controlled foreign corporation. FS1 
makes a $300x loan to U, an unrelated foreign corporation, in 
connection with U's purchase from P of receivables from the sale of 
inventory property by P to United States obligors for $200x.
    (ii) Result. FS1 is considered to have acquired a trade or 
service receivable described in paragraph (a) of this section 
because FS1 directly participates in a lending transaction described 
in this paragraph (b)(2)(iv). That is, FS1 is considered to have 
acquired a trade or service receivable of a United States person 
from a related United States person. Thus, FS1 is treated as holding 
United States property in the amount of $200x.

    (c) Substitution of obligor. For purposes of this section, the 
substitution of another person for a United States obligor is 
disregarded, unless it can be demonstrated by the parties to the 
transaction that the primary purpose for the arrangement was not the 
avoidance of section 956. The following example illustrates the 
application of this paragraph (c):

    Example. (i) Facts. P, a domestic corporation, owns all of the 
outstanding stock of FS1, a controlled foreign corporation with 
substantial accumulated earnings and profits. P sells inventory 
property to X, a domestic corporation unrelated to P. To pay for the 
inventory property, X arranges for a foreign financing entity to 
issue a note to P. P then sells the note to FS1. P and X cannot 
demonstrate that the primary purpose for X's assignment of the 
payment obligation to the foreign financing entity was not the 
avoidance of section 956.
    (ii) Result. The substitution of the foreign financing entity 
for X is disregarded, and FS1 is treated as holding an obligation of 
a United States person acquired from a related United States person. 
Thus, FS1 is treated as holding United States property in the amount 
of the purchase price of the note.

    (d) Effective/applicability date--(1) Except as provided in 
paragraph (d)(2) of this section, this section applies to trade or 
service receivables acquired (directly or indirectly) after March 1, 
1984.
    (2) Paragraph (b)(2)(ii) of this section applies to taxable years 
of controlled foreign corporations ending on or after November 3, 2016, 
and taxable years of United States shareholders in which or with which 
such taxable years end, with respect to trade or service receivables 
acquired on or after September 1, 2015. For purposes of this paragraph 
(d), a significant modification, within the meaning of Sec.  1.1001-
3(e), of a trade or service receivable on or after September 1, 2015, 
constitutes an acquisition of the trade or service receivable on or 
after that date.


Sec.  1.956-3T  [Removed]

0
Par. 8. Section 1.956-3T is removed.

0
Par. 9. Section 1.956-4 is added to read as follows:


Sec.  1.956-4   Certain rules applicable to partnerships.

    (a) Overview. This section provides rules concerning the 
application of section 956 to certain obligations of and property held 
by a partnership. Paragraph (b) of this section provides rules 
concerning United States property held indirectly by a controlled 
foreign corporation through a partnership. Paragraph (c) of this 
section provides rules that generally treat obligations of a foreign 
partnership as obligations of the partners in the foreign partnership, 
as well as a special rule that treats a partner that is a United States 
person as owing additional amounts of a partnership obligation in 
certain circumstances. Paragraph (d) of this section sets forth a rule 
concerning the application of the indirect pledge or guarantee rule to 
obligations of partnerships. Paragraph (e) of this section provides 
that obligations of a domestic partnership are obligations of a United 
States person. Paragraph (f) of this section provides effective and 
applicability dates. See Sec. Sec.  1.956-1(b) and 1.956-2(c) for 
additional rules applicable to partnerships.
    (b) Property held indirectly through a partnership--(1) General 
rule. For purposes of section 956, a partner in a partnership is 
treated as holding its attributable share of any property held by the 
partnership (including an obligation that the partnership is treated as 
holding as a result of the application of Sec.  1.956-2(c)). A 
partner's attributable share of partnership property is determined 
under the rules set forth in paragraph (b)(2) of this section. An 
upper-tier partnership's attributable share of the property of a lower-
tier partnership is treated as property of the upper-tier partnership 
for purposes of applying this paragraph (b)(1) to the partners of the 
upper-tier partnership. For purposes of section 956, a partner's 
adjusted basis in the property of the partnership equals the partner's 
attributable share of the partnership's adjusted basis in the property, 
as determined under the rules set forth in paragraph (b)(2) of this 
section, taking into account any adjustments to basis under section 
743(b) (with respect to the partner) or section 734(b) or any similar 
adjustments to basis. The rules in Sec.  1.956-1(e)(2) apply to 
determine the amount of an obligation treated as held by a partnership 
as a result of the application of Sec.  1.956-2(c). See Sec.  1.956-

[[Page 76510]]

1(b) for special rules that may treat a controlled foreign corporation 
as holding a greater amount of United States property held by a 
partnership than the amount determined under this section.
    (2) Methodology--(i) Liquidation value percentage--(A) Calculation. 
Except as otherwise provided in paragraph (b)(2)(ii) of this section, 
for purposes of paragraph (b)(1) of this section, a partner's 
attributable share of partnership property is determined in accordance 
with the partner's liquidation value percentage. For purposes of this 
paragraph (b)(2)(i) and paragraph (c)(1) of this section, the 
liquidation value of a partner's interest in a partnership is the 
amount of cash the partner would receive with respect to the interest 
if, on the applicable determination date, as provided in paragraph 
(b)(2)(i)(B) of this section, the partnership sold all of its assets 
for cash equal to the fair market value of such assets (taking into 
account section 7701(g)), satisfied all of its liabilities (other than 
those described in Sec.  1.752-7), paid an unrelated third party to 
assume all of its Sec.  1.752-7 liabilities in a fully taxable 
transaction, and then liquidated. A partner's liquidation value 
percentage is the ratio (expressed as a percentage) of the liquidation 
value of the partner's interest in the partnership divided by the 
aggregate liquidation value of all of the partners' interests in the 
partnership.
    (B) Determination date. The determination date with respect to a 
partnership is the most recent of--
    (1) The formation of the partnership;
    (2) An event described in Sec.  1.704-1(b)(2)(iv)(f)(5) or Sec.  
1.704-1(b)(2)(iv)(s)(1) (a revaluation event), irrespective of whether 
the capital accounts of the partners are adjusted in accordance with 
Sec.  1.704-1(b)(2)(iv)(f); or
    (3) The first day of the partnership's taxable year, as determined 
under section 706, provided the liquidation value percentage determined 
for any partner on that day would differ from the most recently 
determined liquidation value percentage of that partner by more than 10 
percentage points.
    (ii) Special allocations. For purposes of paragraph (b)(1) of this 
section, if a partnership agreement provides for the allocation of book 
income (or, where appropriate, book gain) from a subset of the property 
of the partnership to a partner other than in accordance with the 
partner's liquidation value percentage in a particular taxable year (a 
special allocation), then the partner's attributable share of that 
property is determined solely by reference to the partner's special 
allocation with respect to the property, provided the special 
allocation does not have a principal purpose of avoiding the purposes 
of section 956.
    (3) Examples. The following examples illustrate the rule of this 
paragraph (b):

    Example 1.  (i) Facts. USP, a domestic corporation, wholly owns 
FS, a controlled foreign corporation, which, in turn, owns an 
interest in FPRS, a foreign partnership. The remaining interest in 
FPRS is owned by an unrelated foreign person. FPRS holds non-
depreciable property with an adjusted basis of $100x (the ``FPRS 
property'') that would be United States property if held by FS 
directly. At the close of quarter 1 of year 1, the liquidation value 
percentage, as determined under paragraph (b)(2) of this section, 
for FS with respect to FPRS is 25%. There are no special allocations 
in the FPRS partnership agreement.
    (ii) Result. Under paragraph (b)(1) of this section, for 
purposes of section 956, FS is treated as holding its attributable 
share of the property held by FPRS with an adjusted basis equal to 
its attributable share of FPRS's adjusted basis in such property. 
Under paragraph (b)(2) of this section, FS's attributable share of 
property held by FPRS is determined in accordance with FS's 
liquidation value percentage, which is 25%. Thus, FS's attributable 
share of the FPRS property is 25%, and its attributable share of 
FPRS's basis in the FPRS property is $25x. Accordingly, for purposes 
of determining the amount of United States property held by FS as of 
the close of quarter 1 of year 1, FS is treated as holding United 
States property with an adjusted basis of $25x.
    Example 2.  (i) Facts. The facts are the same as in Example 1 of 
this paragraph (b)(3), except that the FPRS partnership agreement, 
which satisfies the requirements of section 704(b), specially 
allocates 80% of the income with respect to the FPRS property to FS. 
The special allocation does not have a principal purpose of avoiding 
the purposes of section 956.
    (ii) Result. Under paragraph (b)(1) of this section, for 
purposes of section 956, FS is treated as holding its attributable 
share of property held by FPRS with an adjusted basis equal to its 
attributable share of FPRS's adjusted basis in such property. In 
general, FS's attributable share of property held by FPRS is 
determined in accordance with FS's liquidation value percentage. 
However, because the special allocation does not have a principal 
purpose of avoiding the purposes of section 956, under paragraph 
(b)(2)(ii) of this section, FS's attributable share of the FPRS 
property is determined by reference to its special allocation. FS's 
special allocation percentage for the FPRS property is 80%, and thus 
FS's attributable share of the FPRS property is 80% and its 
attributable share of FPRS's basis in the FPRS property is $80x. 
Accordingly, for purposes of determining the amount of United States 
property held by FS as of the close of quarter 1 of year 1, FS is 
treated as holding United States property with an adjusted basis of 
$80x.
    Example 3.  (i) Facts. USP, a domestic corporation, wholly owns 
FS, a controlled foreign corporation, which, in turn, owns an 
interest in FPRS, a foreign partnership. USP owns the remaining 
interest in FPRS. FPRS holds property (the ``FPRS property'') that 
would be United States property if held by FS directly. The FPRS 
property has an adjusted basis of $100x and is anticipated to 
appreciate in value but generate relatively little income. The FPRS 
partnership agreement, which satisfies the requirements of section 
704(b), specially allocates 80% of the income with respect to the 
FPRS property to USP and 80% of the gain with respect to the 
disposition of FPRS property to FS. The special allocation does not 
have a principal purpose of avoiding the purposes of section 956.
    (ii) Result. Because the special allocation does not have a 
principal purpose of avoiding the purposes of section 956, under 
paragraph (b)(2)(ii) of this section, FS's attributable share of the 
FPRS property is determined by reference to a special allocation 
with respect to the FPRS property. Given the income and gain 
anticipated with respect to the FPRS property, it is appropriate to 
determine FS's attributable share of the property in accordance with 
the special allocation of gain. Accordingly, for purposes of 
determining the amount of United States property held by FS in each 
year that FPRS holds the FPRS property, FS's attributable share of 
the FPRS property is 80% and its attributable share of FPRS's basis 
in the FPRS property is $80x. Thus, FS is treated as holding United 
States property with an adjusted basis of $80x.

    (c) Obligations of a foreign partnership--(1) In general. Except as 
provided in paragraphs (c)(2) and (c)(3) of this section, for purposes 
of section 956, an obligation of a foreign partnership is treated as a 
separate obligation of each of the partners in the partnership to the 
extent of each partner's share of the obligation. A partner's share of 
the partnership's obligation is determined in accordance with the 
partner's liquidation value percentage, as determined under the rules 
set forth in paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this section, without regard to the 
rules set forth in paragraph (b)(2)(ii) of this section. An upper-tier 
partnership's share of an obligation of a lower-tier partnership is 
treated as an obligation of the upper-tier partnership for purposes of 
applying this paragraph (c)(1) to the partners of the upper-tier 
partnership.
    (2) Exception for obligations of partnerships in which neither the 
lending controlled foreign corporation nor any person related to the 
lending controlled foreign corporation is a partner. For purposes of 
applying section 956 with respect to a controlled foreign corporation, 
an obligation of a foreign partnership is treated as an obligation of a 
foreign partnership, and not as an obligation of its partners, if 
neither the controlled foreign corporation nor any person related to

[[Page 76511]]

the controlled foreign corporation within the meaning of section 
954(d)(3) is a partner in the partnership. For purposes of section 956, 
an obligation treated as an obligation of a foreign partnership 
pursuant to this paragraph (c)(2) is not an obligation of a United 
States person.
    (3) Special obligor rule in the case of certain partnership 
distributions--(i) General rule. For purposes of determining a 
partner's share of a foreign partnership's obligation under section 
956, if the foreign partnership distributes an amount of money or 
property to a partner that is related to a controlled foreign 
corporation within the meaning of section 954(d)(3) and whose 
obligation would be United States property if held (or if treated as 
held) by the controlled foreign corporation, and the foreign 
partnership would not have made the distribution but for a funding of 
the partnership through an obligation held (or treated as held) by a 
controlled foreign corporation, notwithstanding Sec.  1.956-1(e), the 
partner's share of the partnership obligation is the greater of--
    (A) The partner's share of the partnership obligation as determined 
under paragraph (c)(1) of this section; and
    (B) The lesser of the amount of the distribution to the partner 
that would not have been made but for the funding of the partnership 
and the amount of the obligation (as determined under Sec.  1.956-
1(e)).
    (ii) Deemed treatment--(A) For purposes of applying paragraph 
(c)(3)(i) of this section, in the case of a distribution of liquid 
assets by a foreign partnership to a partner, the foreign partnership 
is treated as if it would not have made the distribution of liquid 
assets to the partner but for the funding of the partnership through an 
obligation or obligations held (or treated as held) by the controlled 
foreign corporation to the extent the foreign partnership does not have 
sufficient liquid assets to make the distribution immediately prior to 
the distribution, without taking into account the obligation or 
obligations.
    (B) If the controlled foreign corporation holds (or is treated as 
holding) multiple obligations of the foreign partnership, paragraph 
(c)(3)(ii)(A) of this section applies to the obligations in reverse 
chronological order starting with the obligation that was acquired (or 
the obligation with respect to which a pledge or guarantee was entered 
into) closest in time to the distribution. Paragraph (c)(3)(ii)(A) of 
this section applies to an obligation only to the extent that the full 
amount of the distribution is not otherwise treated, pursuant to 
paragraph (c)(3)(ii)(A) of this section, as if it would not have been 
made but for the funding of the partnership through one or more other 
obligations.
    (C) For purposes of paragraph (c)(3)(ii) of this section, a 
significant modification, within the meaning of Sec.  1.1001-3(e), of 
an obligation constitutes an acquisition of the obligation on or after 
that date, and a pledgor or guarantor is treated as entering into a 
pledge or guarantee when there is a significant modification, within 
the meaning of Sec.  1.1001-3(e), of an obligation with respect to 
which it is a pledgor or guarantor.
    (D) For purposes of paragraph (c)(3)(ii) of this section, liquid 
assets means cash or cash equivalents, marketable securities within the 
meaning of section 453(f)(2), or an obligation owed by a related person 
(within the meaning of section 954(d)(3)).
    (4) Examples. The following examples illustrate the rules of this 
paragraph (c):

    Example 1.  (i) Facts. USP, a domestic corporation, wholly owns 
FS, a controlled foreign corporation, and owns an interest in FPRS, 
a foreign partnership. At the close of quarter 1 of year 1, the 
liquidation value percentage, as determined under paragraph 
(b)(2)(i) of this section, for USP with respect to FPRS is 90%. X, a 
foreign person that is unrelated to USP or FS, owns the remaining 
interest in FPRS. FPRS borrows $100x from FS. FS's basis in the FPRS 
obligation is $100x.
    (ii) Result. Under paragraph (c)(1) of this section, for 
purposes of section 956, the obligation of FPRS is treated as 
obligations of its partners (USP and X) in proportion to each 
partner's liquidation value percentage with respect to FPRS. Because 
USP, a partner in FPRS, is related to FS within the meaning of 
section 954(d)(3), the exception in paragraph (c)(2) of this section 
does not apply. Based on its liquidation value percentage, USP's 
share of the FPRS obligation is $90x. Accordingly, for purposes of 
section 956, $90x of the FPRS obligation held by FS is treated as an 
obligation of USP and is United States property within the meaning 
of section 956(c). Therefore, on the date the loan is made, FS is 
treated as holding United States property of $90x.
    Example 2.  (i) Facts. The facts are the same as in Example 1 of 
this paragraph (c)(4), except that USP owns 40% of the stock of FS 
and is not a related person (as defined in section 954(d)(3)) with 
respect to FS. Y, a United States person that is unrelated to USP or 
X, owns the remaining 60% of the stock of FS.
    (ii) Result. Because neither FS nor any person related to FS 
within the meaning of section 954(d)(3) is a partner in FPRS, the 
exception in paragraph (c)(2) of this section applies to treat the 
FPRS obligation as an obligation of a foreign partnership and not an 
obligation of a United States person. Therefore, paragraph (c)(1) of 
this section does not apply, and FS is not treated as holding United 
States property.
    Example 3.  (i) Facts. USP, a domestic corporation, wholly owns 
FS, a controlled foreign corporation. USP and FS own interests in 
FPRS, a foreign partnership. USP's liquidation value percentage with 
respect to FPRS is 60%, and FS's liquidation value percentage with 
respect to FPRS is 30%. U.S.C., a domestic corporation that is 
unrelated to USP and FS, also owns an interest in FPRS; its 
liquidation value percentage is 10%. FPRS borrows $100x from an 
unrelated person. FS guarantees the FPRS obligation.
    (ii) Result. Under paragraph (c)(1) of this section, for 
purposes of section 956, the obligation of FPRS is treated as 
obligations of its partners (USP, FS, and U.S.C.) in proportion to 
each partner's liquidation value percentage. Because USP, a partner 
in FPRS, is related to FS within the meaning of section 954(d)(3), 
and because FS is a partner in FPRS, the exception in paragraph 
(c)(2) of this section does not apply. Based on their liquidation 
value percentages, USP's share of the FPRS obligation is $60x, and 
U.S.C.'s share of the FPRS obligation is $10x. For purposes of 
section 956, $60x of the FPRS obligation is treated as an obligation 
of USP, and $10x of the FPRS obligation is treated as an obligation 
of U.S.C. Under Sec.  1.956-2(c)(1), FS is treated as holding the 
obligations of USP and U.S.C. that FS guaranteed. All of the 
exceptions to the definition of United States property contained in 
section 956 and Sec.  1.956-2 must be considered to determine 
whether the obligations of USP and U.S.C. that are treated as held 
by FS constitute United States property. Accordingly, the obligation 
of U.S.C. is not United States property under section 956(c)(2)(F) 
and Sec.  1.956-2(b)(1)(viii). The obligation of USP, however, is 
United States property within the meaning of section 956(c). 
Therefore, on the date the guarantee is made, FS is treated as 
holding United States property of $60x.
    Example 4.  (i) Facts. USP, a domestic corporation, wholly owns 
FS, a controlled foreign corporation. USP owns an interest in FPRS, 
a foreign partnership; its liquidation value percentage with respect 
to FPRS is 70%. A domestic corporation that is unrelated to USP and 
FS owns the remaining interest in FPRS; its liquidation value 
percentage is 30%. FPRS borrows $100x from FS and makes a 
distribution of $80x to USP. FPRS would not have made the 
distribution to USP but for the funding of FPRS by FS.
    (ii) Result. Because USP, a partner in FPRS, is related to FS 
within the meaning of section 954(d)(3), the exception in paragraph 
(c)(2) of this section does not apply. Moreover, an obligation of 
USP held by FS would be United States property. USP's share of the 
FPRS obligation as determined under paragraph (c)(1) of this section 
in accordance with USP's liquidation value percentage is $70x. Under 
paragraph (c)(3) of this section, USP's share of the FPRS obligation 
is the greater of (i) USP's attributable share of the obligation, 
$70x, or (ii) the lesser of the amount of the distribution, $80x, or 
the amount of the obligation, $100x. For purposes of section 956, 
therefore, $80x of the FPRS obligation is treated as an

[[Page 76512]]

obligation of USP and is United States property within the meaning 
of section 956(c). Thus, on the date the loan is made, FS is treated 
as holding United States property of $80x.

    (d) Limitation on a partner's indirect pledge or guarantee. For 
purposes of section 956 and Sec.  1.956-2(c), a controlled foreign 
corporation that is a partner in a partnership is not considered a 
pledgor or guarantor of the portion of an obligation of the partnership 
attributed to its partners that are United States persons under 
paragraph (c) of this section solely as a result of the attribution of 
a portion of the partnership's assets to the controlled foreign 
corporation under paragraph (b) of this section.
    (e) Obligations of a domestic partnership. For purposes of section 
956, an obligation of a domestic partnership is an obligation of a 
United States person. See section 956(c)(2)(L) for an exception from 
the treatment of such an obligation as United States property.
    (f) Effective/applicability dates. (1) Paragraph (b) of this 
section applies to taxable years of controlled foreign corporations 
ending on or after November 3, 2016, and taxable years of United States 
shareholders in which or with which such taxable years end, with 
respect to property acquired on or after November 3, 2016. For purposes 
of this paragraph (f)(1), a deemed exchange of property pursuant to 
section 1001 on or after November 3, 2016, constitutes an acquisition 
of the property on or after that date. See Sec.  1.956-2(a)(3), as 
contained in 26 CFR part 1 revised as of April 1, 2016, for the rules 
applicable to taxable years of a controlled foreign corporation 
beginning on or after July 23, 2002, and ending before November 3, 
2016, and with respect to property acquired before November 3, 2016, to 
taxable years of a controlled foreign corporation beginning on or after 
July 23, 2002.
    (2) Except as otherwise provided in this paragraph (f)(2), 
paragraph (c) of this section applies to taxable years of controlled 
foreign corporations ending on or after November 3, 2016, and taxable 
years of United States shareholders in which or with which such taxable 
years end, with respect to obligations acquired, or pledges or 
guarantees entered into, on or after September 1, 2015, and, for 
purposes of paragraph (c)(3) of this section, in the case of 
distributions made on or after September 1, 2015. Paragraph (c)(3)(ii) 
of this section applies to taxable years of controlled foreign 
corporations ending on or after November 3, 2016, and taxable years of 
United States shareholders in which or with which such taxable years 
end, with respect to obligations acquired, or pledges or guarantees 
entered into, on or after September 1, 2015, and distributions made on 
or after November 3, 2016. For purposes of this paragraph (f)(2), a 
significant modification, within the meaning of Sec.  1.1001-3(e), of 
an obligation on or after September 1, 2015 constitutes an acquisition 
of the obligation on or after that date. Furthermore, for purposes of 
this paragraph (f)(2), a pledgor or guarantor is treated as entering 
into a pledge or guarantee when there is a significant modification, 
within the meaning of Sec.  1.1001-3(e), of an obligation with respect 
to which it is a pledgor or guarantor on or after September 1, 2015. 
See Sec.  1.956-1T(b)(5), as contained in 26 CFR part 1 revised as of 
April 1, 2016, for rules applicable to taxable years of controlled 
foreign corporations ending on or after September 1, 2015, and before 
November 3, 2016, and to taxable years of United States shareholders in 
which or with which such taxable years end, in the case of 
distributions made on or after September 1, 2015.
    (3) Paragraph (d) of this section applies to taxable years of 
controlled foreign corporations ending on or after November 3, 2016, 
and taxable years of United States shareholders in which or with which 
such taxable years end, with respect to pledges or guarantees entered 
into on or after September 1, 2015. For purposes of this paragraph 
(f)(3), a pledgor or guarantor is treated as entering into a pledge or 
guarantee when there is a significant modification, within the meaning 
of Sec.  1.1001-3(e), of an obligation with respect to which it is a 
pledgor or guarantor on or after September 1, 2015.
    (4) Paragraph (e) of this section applies to taxable years of 
controlled foreign corporations ending on or after November 3, 2016, 
and to taxable years of United States shareholders in which or with 
which such taxable years end, with respect to obligations held on or 
after November 3, 2016.

John Dalrymple,
Deputy Commissioner for Services and Enforcement.
    Approved: October 17, 2016.
 Mark J. Mazur,
Assistant Secretary of the Treasury (Tax Policy).
[FR Doc. 2016-26425 Filed 11-2-16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4830-01-P



                                                                 Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 213 / Thursday, November 3, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                      76497

                                                to buy new hardware to expand the                       Background                                            temporary regulations. This preamble
                                                computing power. * * *                                                                                        does not discuss the formal written
                                                                                                           On September 2, 2015, the
                                                *      *     *       *      *                           Department of the Treasury (Treasury                  comments concerning other rules in the
                                                                                                        Department) and the IRS published final               1988 proposed regulations, which are
                                                Martin V. Franks,
                                                                                                        and temporary regulations under                       beyond the scope of these final
                                                Chief, Publications and Regulations Branch,                                                                   regulations. The other portions of the
                                                Legal Processing Division, Associate Chief              sections 954 and 956 (TD 9733) (the
                                                                                                        2015 temporary regulations) in the                    1988 proposed regulations remain in
                                                Counsel, (Procedure and Administration).
                                                                                                        Federal Register (80 FR 52976, as                     proposed form, except to the extent
                                                [FR Doc. 2016–26522 Filed 10–31–16; 4:15 pm]
                                                                                                        corrected at 80 FR 66415 and 80 FR                    withdrawn in the partial withdrawal of
                                                BILLING CODE 4830–01–P
                                                                                                        66416). On the same date, the Treasury                the notice of proposed rulemaking
                                                                                                        Department and the IRS published a                    published in the Proposed Rules section
                                                                                                        notice of proposed rulemaking (REG–                   of this issue of the Federal Register
                                                DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY                                                                                    (REG–122387–16).
                                                                                                        155164–09) (the 2015 proposed
                                                Internal Revenue Service                                                                                        The Treasury Department and the IRS
                                                                                                        regulations) in the Federal Register (80
                                                                                                                                                              published Revenue Ruling 90–112
                                                                                                        FR 53058, as corrected at 80 FR 66485)
                                                                                                                                                              (1990–2 CB 186) (see
                                                26 CFR Part 1                                           cross-referencing the temporary
                                                                                                                                                              § 601.601(d)(2)(ii)(b)), on December 31,
                                                                                                        regulations and proposing additional
                                                [TD 9792]                                                                                                     1990, before promulgating the rule in
                                                                                                        regulations under section 956 regarding
                                                RIN 1545–BJ48                                                                                                 § 1.956–2(a)(3) that, prior to
                                                                                                        the treatment as United States property
                                                                                                                                                              modification by this document,
                                                                                                        of property held by a CFC in connection               addressed the application of section 956
                                                United States Property Held by                          with certain transactions involving
                                                Controlled Foreign Corporations in                                                                            when a CFC is a partner in a partnership
                                                                                                        partnerships. No public hearing was                   that holds property that would be
                                                Transactions Involving Partnerships;                    requested or held. Formal written
                                                Rents and Royalties Derived in the                                                                            United States property if owned directly
                                                                                                        comments were received with respect to                by the CFC. This Treasury decision
                                                Active Conduct of a Trade or Business                   the 2015 proposed regulations under                   withdraws Revenue Ruling 90–112.
                                                AGENCY:  Internal Revenue Service (IRS),                section 956 and are available at
                                                Treasury.                                               www.regulations.gov or upon request.                  Summary of Comments and
                                                                                                        No comments were received with                        Explanation of Revisions
                                                ACTION: Final regulations and removal of
                                                temporary regulations.                                  respect to the 2015 proposed regulations                 Section 956 determines the amount
                                                                                                        under section 954. This Treasury                      that a United States shareholder (as
                                                SUMMARY:   This document contains final                 decision adopts the 2015 proposed                     defined in section 951(b)) of a CFC must
                                                regulations that provide rules regarding                regulations, with the changes described               include in gross income with respect to
                                                the treatment as United States property                 in the Summary of Comments and                        the CFC under section 951(a)(1)(B). This
                                                of property held by a controlled foreign                Explanation of Revisions section of this              amount is determined, in part, based on
                                                corporation (CFC) in connection with                    preamble, as final regulations and                    the average of the amounts of United
                                                certain transactions involving                          removes the corresponding temporary                   States property held, directly or
                                                partnerships. In addition, the final                    regulations. No changes are made to the               indirectly, by the CFC at the close of
                                                regulations provide rules for                           regulations under section 954.                        each quarter during its taxable year. For
                                                determining whether a CFC is                               Additionally, on June 14, 1988, the                this purpose, in general, the amount
                                                considered to derive rents and royalties                Treasury Department and the IRS                       taken into account with respect to any
                                                in the active conduct of a trade or                     published temporary regulations under                 United States property is the adjusted
                                                business for purposes of determining                    sections 304, 864, and 956 (TD 8209) in               basis of the property, reduced by any
                                                foreign personal holding company                        the Federal Register (53 FR 22163),                   liability to which the property is
                                                income (FPHCI), as well as rules for                    which included guidance under section                 subject. See section 956(a) and § 1.956–
                                                determining whether a CFC holds                         956(c)(3) treating as United States                   1(e). Section 956(e) grants the Secretary
                                                United States property as a result of                   property certain trade or service                     authority to prescribe such regulations
                                                certain related party factoring                         receivables acquired by a CFC from a                  as may be necessary to carry out the
                                                transactions. This document finalizes                   related United States person in certain               purposes of section 956, including
                                                proposed regulations, and withdraws                     factoring transactions (the 1988                      regulations to prevent the avoidance of
                                                temporary regulations, published on                     temporary regulations). On the same                   section 956 through reorganizations or
                                                September 2, 2015. It also finalizes                    date, the Treasury Department and the                 otherwise.
                                                proposed regulations, and withdraws                     IRS published a notice of proposed                       These final regulations retain the
                                                temporary regulations, published on                     rulemaking (INTL–49–86, subsequently                  basic approach and structure of the 2015
                                                June 14, 1988. The final regulations                    converted to REG–209001–86) (the 1988                 proposed regulations and the portion of
                                                affect United States shareholders of                    proposed regulations) in the Federal                  the 1988 proposed regulations that
                                                CFCs.                                                   Register (53 FR 22186) cross-referencing              relates to § 1.956–3, with certain
                                                                                                        the 1988 temporary regulations.                       revisions, as discussed in this Summary
                                                DATES:
                                                                                                        Although formal written comments                      of Comments and Explanation of
                                                   Effective Date: These regulations are                were received on the 1988 proposed
                                                effective on November 3, 2016.                                                                                Revisions.
                                                                                                        regulations, none relate to the specific
                                                   Applicability Dates: For dates of                    issues addressed in these final                       1. Changes to § 1.956–1 To Conform to
                                                applicability, see §§ 1.954–2(i), 1.956–
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                                                                                                        regulations. This Treasury decision                   the Current Statute
                                                1(g), 1.956–2(h), 1.956–3(d), and 1.956–                adopts § 1.956–3 of the 1988 proposed                    These final regulations take into
                                                4(f).                                                   regulations without substantive change                account certain statutory changes in
                                                FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Rose                   as a final regulation (together with the              section 13232(a) of the Revenue
                                                E. Jenkins, (202) 317–6934 (not a toll-                 2015 proposed regulations adopted as                  Reconciliation Act of 1993 (Pub. L. 103–
                                                free number).                                           final regulations, these final regulations)           66, 107 Stat. 312) (the 1993 Act)
                                                SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:                              and removes the corresponding                         regarding the methodology for


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                                                76498            Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 213 / Thursday, November 3, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                calculating the amount determined                       redesignated as § 1.956–1(b) in these                 have concluded that reverting to the
                                                under section 956 with respect to a                     final regulations.                                    prior formulation of the rule, which
                                                United States shareholder of a CFC. As                                                                        applied when there was a ‘‘funding
                                                                                                        2. Section 1.956–1(b) Anti-Avoidance
                                                enacted in section 12 of the Revenue                                                                          (through capital contributions or debt),’’
                                                                                                        Rule
                                                Act of 1962 (Pub. L. 87–834, 76 Stat.                                                                         or adopting the narrow definition of
                                                960) (the 1962 Act), and prior to the                      Prior to the 2015 temporary                        funding proposed in the comment could
                                                modification made by the 1993 Act,                      regulations, § 1.956–1T(b)(4) provided                allow taxpayers to engage in planning
                                                section 951(a)(1)(B) required a United                  that a CFC would be considered to hold                that would inappropriately avoid the
                                                States shareholder to include an amount                 indirectly investments in United States               application of section 956.
                                                in income based on its pro rata share of                property acquired by any other foreign                   In addition, the Treasury Department
                                                the CFC’s ‘‘increase in earnings invested               corporation that is controlled by the                 and the IRS disagree with the view
                                                in United States property’’ for the                     foreign corporation if one of the                     expressed in the comment that the
                                                relevant taxable year. Section 956 (as                  principal purposes for creating,                      expanded scope of fundings could result
                                                then in effect), in turn, defined the                   organizing, or funding (thorugh capital               in common business transactions being
                                                amount of earnings of a CFC invested in                 contributions or debt) such other foreign             subject to the anti-avoidance rule.
                                                United States property at the close of a                corporation is to avoid the application               Whether a transaction is a ‘‘funding’’
                                                taxable year and set forth rules for                    of section 956 with respect to the CFC.               does not alone determine whether the
                                                determining a United States                             The 2015 temporary regulations                        transaction is subject to the anti-
                                                shareholder’s pro rata share of the CFC’s               modified the anti-avoidance rule in                   avoidance rule because the rule applies
                                                increase in earnings for a taxable year.                § 1.956–1T(b)(4) so that the rule can also            only when a principal purpose of the
                                                                                                        apply when a foreign corporation                      funding is to avoid section 956 with
                                                   The 1993 Act revised the structure
                                                                                                        controlled by a CFC is funded other                   respect to the funding CFC. Thus,
                                                and operating rules for determining
                                                                                                        than through capital contributions or                 although the 2015 temporary regulations
                                                amounts included in income under
                                                                                                        debt and expanded the rule to apply to                broaden the funding standard, the
                                                sections 951(a)(1)(B) and 956. In
                                                                                                        transactions involving partnerships that              ‘‘avoidance’’ requirement ensures that
                                                general, as revised in 1993, the amount
                                                                                                        are controlled by a CFC.                              ordinary course transactions are not
                                                determined under section 956 is based
                                                on a United States shareholder’s pro rata               A. Definition of Funding                              subject to the anti-avoidance rule.
                                                                                                                                                                 The Treasury Department and the IRS
                                                share of the average amount of United                      In response to the additional guidance             agree, however, that examples
                                                States property held by the CFC as of                   on the term funding, a comment                        illustrating that the anti-avoidance rule
                                                the close of each quarter of the relevant               suggested that the modification gives                 should not apply to certain common
                                                taxable year. The amendments made by                    rise to uncertainty concerning the                    transactions would be helpful.
                                                the 1993 Act are effective for tax years                application of the anti-avoidance rule                Accordingly, these final regulations add
                                                of CFCs beginning after September 30,                   and requested that the anti-avoidance                 new examples that address common
                                                1993, and for tax years of United States                rule be revised in these final regulations            transactions highlighted by the
                                                shareholders in which or with which                     in one of three alternative ways in order             comment to further illustrate the
                                                such tax years of CFCs end.                             to clarify the application of the rule: (i)           distinction between funding
                                                   On February 20, 1964, the Treasury                   Reverting to the language in § 1.956–                 transactions that are subject to the anti-
                                                Department and the IRS published                        1T(b)(4) in effect prior to the 2015                  avoidance rule and common business
                                                § 1.956–1 (TD 6704 (29 FR 2599), which                  temporary regulations; (ii) defining the              transactions to which the anti-avoidance
                                                was amended by TD 6795 (30 FR 933)                      term funding as either a related CFC                  rule does not apply. See Example 4
                                                in 1965, TD 7712 (45 FR 52373) in 1980,                 contributing capital to or holding debt               through Example 6 of § 1.956–1(b)(4).
                                                and TD 8209 (53 FR 22163) in 1988)                      of the funded entity, or an unrelated                 For example, Example 5 and Example 6
                                                when the section 956 amount was still                   person contributing capital to or holding             illustrate a sale of property for cash in
                                                determined based on the increase of a                   debt of the funded entity, provided that              the ordinary course of business and a
                                                CFC’s earnings invested in United States                the contribution or loan would not have               repayment of a loan, respectively, to
                                                property during the relevant tax year.                  been made or maintained on the same                   which the anti-avoidance rule does not
                                                Amendments to § 1.956–1 made after                      terms but for the funding CFC                         apply. However, Example 4 illustrates
                                                1993 (TD 9402 (73 FR 35580) and TD                      contributing capital to or holding debt               that, consistent with the holding in
                                                9530 (76 FR 36993, corrected at 76 FR                   of the unrelated person; or (iii)                     situation 3 in Revenue Ruling 87–89
                                                43891)) did not revise the regulation to                clarifying the scope of the term funding              (1987–2 CB 195), a CFC may be treated
                                                reflect the changes to section 956(a)                   with examples that depict when the rule               as holding United States property as a
                                                made by the 1993 Act. The Treasury                      applies and illustrating that common                  result of a deposit with an unrelated
                                                Department and the IRS are aware that                   business transactions conducted on                    bank if the unrelated bank would not
                                                some taxpayers have attempted to apply                  arm’s-length terms and certain other                  have made a loan to another person on
                                                parts of § 1.956–1 to tax years for which               transactions would not be considered a                the same terms absent the CFC’s
                                                those parts were superseded by the 1993                 funding for purposes of the rule.                     deposit.
                                                Act. In order to avoid confusion, these                    The Treasury Department and the IRS
                                                final regulations revise the section                    continue to be concerned about tax                    B. Application To Acquisitions of
                                                heading of § 1.956–1 (as well as the                    planning that is inconsistent with the                Property by a Partnership Controlled by
                                                parallel heading of § 1.956–1T), and the                policy underlying section 956. The                    a CFC
                                                general rules in § 1.956–1(a), to reflect               policy concerns addressed by the anti-                  Section 1.956–1(b)(4) of the 2015
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                                                changes made in the 1993 Act. In                        avoidance rule are not limited to                     proposed regulations expands the anti-
                                                addition, these final regulations remove                fundings by debt or equity; rather, the               avoidance rule to include transactions
                                                the text in paragraphs (b)(1) through (3),              anti-avoidance rule should apply to all               involving partnerships that are
                                                (c), and (d) of § 1.956–1 in order to                   fundings with a principal purpose of                  controlled by a CFC that provides
                                                conform § 1.956–1 to the Code and                       avoiding the purposes of section 956,                 funding to the partnership. Proposed
                                                reserve paragraphs (c) and (d). As a                    regardless of the form of the funding.                § 1.956–1(b)(4)(iii) contains a
                                                result, proposed § 1.956–1(b)(4) is                     The Treasury Department and the IRS                   coordination rule that provides that this


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                                                                 Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 213 / Thursday, November 3, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                       76499

                                                new partnership rule applies only to the                40% partner in a foreign partnership                  revisions to these proposed rules in
                                                extent that the amount of United States                 (FPRS), while FS1 is a 60% partner.                   § 1.956–3(b)(2)(ii) with respect to the
                                                property that a CFC would be treated as                 Suppose further that FS2 loans $100x to               application of section 956 to
                                                holding under the rule exceeds the                      FPRS, which FPRS uses to acquire                      acquisitions of receivables indirectly
                                                amount that it would be treated as                      $100x of United States property. In                   through a nominee, pass-through entity,
                                                holding under proposed § 1.956–4(b).                    these circumstances, FS2 would be                     or related foreign corporation, and no
                                                The coordination rule prevents a CFC                    treated as holding $40x of United States              comments were received on these
                                                from being treated as holding                           property under proposed § 1.956–4(c)                  proposed revisions. These final
                                                duplicative amounts of United States                    and existing § 1.956–2(a) (and would                  regulations adopt these portions of the
                                                property as a result of a single                        not be treated as holding any United                  2015 proposed regulations without
                                                partnership interest pursuant to the                    States property under proposed § 1.956–               change, and also adopt the remainder of
                                                application of proposed §§ 1.956–1(b)(4)                4(b)) and could be treated under                      the rules in proposed § 1.956–3 that
                                                and 1.956–4(b). This rule is illustrated                proposed § 1.956–1(b)(4) and existing                 were proposed in the 1988 proposed
                                                by Example 4 in proposed § 1.956–                       § 1.956–2(a) as holding the $100x of                  regulations, with minor revisions to
                                                1(b)(4)(iv), which is included as                       United States property acquired by the                improve clarity and conform to existing
                                                Example 7 in § 1.956–1(b)(4) of these                   partnership with its funding. The                     regulations.
                                                final regulations.                                      Treasury Department and the IRS have
                                                   A comment recommended that the                                                                             4. Partnership Property Indirectly Held
                                                                                                        determined that it is appropriate to limit
                                                anti-avoidance rule should not apply in                                                                       by a CFC Partner
                                                                                                        the amount of United States property
                                                the case of a partnership in which the                  that FS2 is treated as holding in the                    Under proposed § 1.956–4(b)(1), a
                                                funding CFC is a partner, as in Example                 example to $100x, consistent with the                 CFC partner in a partnership is treated
                                                4 in proposed § 1.956–1(b)(4)(iv). Noting               result that would apply if FS2 had not                as holding its attributable share of
                                                that proposed § 1.956–4(b) would treat a                funded FPRS’s acquisition of United                   property held by the partnership. In
                                                funding CFC that is a partner in the                    States property and instead had                       addition, proposed § 1.956–4(b)(1)
                                                funded partnership as owning a share of                 acquired the United States property                   provides that, for purposes of section
                                                any United States property acquired by                  itself. (Note that, in a case where                   956, a partner’s adjusted basis in the
                                                the partnership using the funding, the                  proposed § 1.956–1(b)(4) would apply,                 property of the partnership equals the
                                                comment asserted that the inclusion                     FPRS should not be treated as holding                 partner’s attributable share of the
                                                resulting from proposed § 1.956–4(b) is                 the United States property that would                 partnership’s adjusted basis in the
                                                sufficient and there is no need for the                 be treated under that rule as held by                 property.
                                                anti-avoidance rule to apply to create a                FS2, and accordingly, FS1 should not be                  Under proposed § 1.956–4(b)(2), a
                                                disproportionate inclusion that would                   treated as holding United States                      CFC partner’s attributable share of
                                                deter taxpayers from entering into                      property under proposed § 1.956–4(b) in               partnership property is determined in
                                                transactions in order to avoid the                      this example.) Accordingly, the                       accordance with the CFC partner’s
                                                application of section 956. The Treasury                coordination rule in proposed § 1.956–                liquidation value percentage with
                                                Department and the IRS, however, do                     1(b)(4)(iii) is expanded in final § 1.956–            respect to the partnership, unless the
                                                not agree with the premise of this                      1(b)(3) to prevent a CFC from being                   partnership agreement contains a
                                                comment that the anti-avoidance rule                    treated as holding duplicative amounts                special allocation of income (or, where
                                                results in a disproportionate inclusion                 of United States property under the anti-             appropriate, gain) with respect to a
                                                in this case. Rather, the Treasury                      avoidance rule as a result of a                       particular item or items of partnership
                                                Department and the IRS consider that,                   partnership obligation, and an                        property that differs from the partner’s
                                                in the circumstances in which the anti-                 additional example is added to                        liquidation value percentage in a
                                                avoidance rule would apply, the funded                  illustrate this rule. See § 1.956–1(b)(4),            particular taxable year. In that case, the
                                                entity, which is controlled by the CFC,                 Example 8.                                            partner’s attributable share of the
                                                essentially serves as a surrogate for the                  Further, as noted in the preamble to               property is determined solely by
                                                funding CFC with respect to the                         the 2015 proposed regulations, the                    reference to the partner’s special
                                                investment in United States property.                   references to § 1.956–2(a)(3) in proposed             allocation with respect to the property,
                                                Accordingly, the Treasury Department                    § 1.956–1(b)(4)(iii) and in the examples              provided the special allocation does not
                                                and the IRS have determined that, when                  in proposed § 1.956–1(b)(4)(iv) that                  have a principal purpose of avoiding the
                                                a partnership acts as a surrogate for a                 illustrate the application of proposed                purposes of section 956.
                                                CFC partner’s investment in United                      § 1.956–1(b)(4)(i)(C) are supplanted in               A. Revenue Ruling 90–112’s Outside
                                                States property, the CFC partner’s                      these final regulations with references to
                                                                                                                                                              Basis Limitation
                                                interest in the United States property                  § 1.956–4(b), which replaces § 1.956–
                                                should not be limited to the CFC’s                      2(a)(3) in these final regulations as the               As noted in the Background section of
                                                attributable share of the property as                   applicable rule concerning United                     this Preamble, in 1990, the Treasury
                                                determined under § 1.956–4(b). For                      States property held indirectly by a                  Department and the IRS published
                                                these reasons, the comment is not                       controlled foreign corporation through a              Revenue Ruling 90–112, which
                                                adopted.                                                partnership.                                          addressed the treatment under section
                                                   With respect to the coordination rule                                                                      956 of United States property held by a
                                                in proposed § 1.956–1(b)(4)(iii), another               3. Factoring Rules                                    CFC indirectly through a partnership.
                                                comment noted that a CFC also could be                     As noted in the Background section of              The holding in the revenue ruling
                                                treated as holding duplicative amounts                  this preamble, in 1988, the Treasury                  generally is consistent with § 1.956–
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                                                of United States property as a result of                Department and the IRS proposed                       2(a)(3) (added by TD 9008, 67 FR 58020,
                                                a single partnership obligation pursuant                § 1.956–3 to address the application of               in 2002), as well as proposed § 1.956–
                                                to the application of proposed §§ 1.956–                section 956 to property acquired by a                 4(b), in that a CFC that is a partner in
                                                1(b)(4) and 1.956–4(c). For example,                    CFC in certain related party factoring                a partnership is treated as indirectly
                                                suppose a domestic corporation (P)                      transactions. No comments were                        holding property held by the
                                                wholly owns two controlled foreign                      received on these proposed rules. The                 partnership when the property would be
                                                corporations (FS1 and FS2), and P is a                  2015 proposed regulations proposed                    United States property if the CFC held


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                                                76500            Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 213 / Thursday, November 3, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                it directly. However, the revenue ruling                clarify that there is no outside basis                interests in the partnership may change
                                                includes a limitation on the                            limitation.                                           for reasons unrelated to revaluation
                                                measurement of United States property                     Revenue Ruling 90–112 is obsoleted                  events, such as when a partnership
                                                that is not included in the final or                    in the Effect on Other Documents                      agreement provides for different profit
                                                proposed regulations. Specifically, the                 section of this preamble. For tax years               sharing percentages that apply based on
                                                revenue ruling provides that the amount                 ending prior to the obsolescence of the               different hurdles.
                                                of United States property taken into                    revenue ruling, taxpayers may rely on                    The Treasury Department and the IRS
                                                account for purposes of section 956                     the outside basis limitation provided in              continue to consider it appropriate for
                                                when a CFC partner indirectly owns                      the revenue ruling.                                   liquidation value percentage to be
                                                property through a partnership is                                                                             redetermined upon a revaluation event,
                                                                                                        B. Consistent Use of Liquidation Value
                                                limited by the CFC’s adjusted basis in                                                                        which may result in a significant change
                                                                                                        Percentage Method for Purposes of Both
                                                the partnership.                                                                                              in the partners’ relative economic
                                                                                                        § 1.956–4(b) and (c)
                                                   The outside basis limitation in                                                                            interests in a partnership. Accordingly,
                                                Revenue Ruling 90–112 has resulted in                      In contrast to the rule provided in                upon a revaluation event, a partnership
                                                a lack of clarity concerning the                        proposed § 1.956–4(b) providing that a                is required to determine the
                                                determination of the amount of United                   CFC partner’s attributable share of                   partnership’s capital accounts resulting
                                                States property held by a CFC partner                   partnership property is determined in                 from a hypothetical book up at such
                                                through a partnership because neither                   accordance with the CFC partner’s                     point in time even if the partnership did
                                                § 1.956–2(a)(3) nor proposed § 1.956–                   liquidation value percentage, proposed                not actually book up capital accounts in
                                                4(b) include the limitation. A comment                  § 1.956–4(c) provided that a partner’s                connection with such an event.
                                                requested that proposed § 1.956–4(b)(1)                 share of a partnership obligation is                  However, in light of the comment’s
                                                be revised to add the outside basis                     determined in accordance with the                     observation that partners’ relative
                                                limitation because the limitation is                    partner’s interest in partnership profits.            economic interests in the partnership
                                                reflective of the underlying economics                  The preamble to the 2015 proposed                     may change significantly as a result of
                                                and consistent with the policy                          regulations requested comments as to                  allocations of income or other items
                                                underlying section 956.                                 whether a single method should be used                under the partnership agreement even
                                                   After consideration of the comment,                  as the general rule for determining both              in the absence of a revaluation event,
                                                the Treasury Department and the IRS                     a partner’s share of partnership assets               § 1.956–4(b)(2)(i) of these final
                                                have concluded that the outside basis                   under proposed § 1.956–4(b) and a                     regulations provides that a partner’s
                                                limitation is not warranted. The rule in                partner’s share of a partnership                      liquidation value percentage must be
                                                proposed § 1.956–4(b)(1) is based on an                 obligation under proposed § 1.956–4(c),               redetermined in certain additional
                                                aggregate approach to partnerships and                  and, if so, whether the appropriate                   circumstances. Specifically, if the
                                                measures the amount of United States                    measure would be a partner’s interest in              liquidation value percentage determined
                                                property indirectly held by a CFC                       partnership profits, liquidation value                for any partner on the first day of the
                                                partner on a property-by-property basis.                percentage, or an alternative measure.                partnership’s taxable year would differ
                                                An overall limitation on the amount of                  Comments suggested that a liquidation                 from the most recently determined
                                                United States property a CFC partner is                 value percentage method should be                     liquidation value percentage of that
                                                considered to indirectly hold through a                 used for purposes of both sets of rules.              partner by more than 10 percentage
                                                partnership is inconsistent with this                   In accordance with these comments,                    points, then the liquidation value
                                                property-by-property aggregate                          these final regulations retain the                    percentage must be redetermined on
                                                approach to United States property held                 liquidation value percentage method set               that day even in the absence of a
                                                by the partnership. Additionally, a                     forth in proposed § 1.956–4(b), and, as               revaluation event. For example, if the
                                                limitation determined by reference to a                 discussed in Part 5.B of this Summary                 liquidation value percentage of a partner
                                                CFC partner’s basis in its partnership                  of Comments and Explanation of                        was determined upon a revaluation
                                                interest is less consistent with section                Revisions, revise the general rule in                 event to be 40 percent and, on the first
                                                956(a), which provides that the amount                  proposed § 1.956–4(c) to implement the                day of a subsequent year before the
                                                of United States property directly or                   liquidation value percentage method.                  occurrence of another revaluation event,
                                                indirectly held by a CFC is determined                                                                        would be less than 30 percent or more
                                                                                                        C. Time for Determining the Liquidation
                                                by reference to the adjusted basis of the                                                                     than 50 percent if redetermined on that
                                                                                                        Value Percentage
                                                United States property itself. Moreover,                                                                      day, then the liquidation value
                                                the Treasury Department and the IRS                        A comment recommended that the                     percentage must be redetermined on
                                                are concerned that, under the rules of                  liquidation value percentage of partners              that day.
                                                subchapter K, adjustments may be made                   in a partnership should be determined
                                                to outside basis through the allocation                 on an annual basis, rather than upon                  D. Special Allocations
                                                of liabilities pursuant to the regulations              formation and upon the occurrence of                     Proposed § 1.956–4(b)(2)(ii) defines a
                                                under section 752 that are inconsistent                 events described in § 1.704–                          special allocation as an allocation of
                                                with the policy of section 956.                         1(b)(2)(iv)(f)(5) or § 1.704–                         income (or, where appropriate, gain)
                                                Accordingly, the Treasury Department                    1(b)(2)(iv)(s)(1) (revaluation events) as             from partnership property to a partner
                                                and the IRS have determined that an                     provided in proposed § 1.956–4(b)(2)(i).              under a partnership agreement that
                                                outside basis limitation should not be                  The comment noted that partnerships                   differs from the partner’s liquidation
                                                incorporated into the rule in proposed                  do not necessarily book up (or adjust)                value percentage in a particular taxable
                                                § 1.956–4(b)(1). Because proposed                       partnership capital accounts in                       year. In this regard, questions have
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                                                § 1.956–4(b)(1) indicates that, for                     connection with revaluation events and                arisen as to whether allocations
                                                purposes of section 956, a partner’s                    suggested that requiring a                            pursuant to section 704(c) and the
                                                adjusted basis in the property of the                   redetermination of liquidation value                  regulations thereunder constitute
                                                partnership equals the partners’                        percentage regardless of whether a book-              special allocations. Although a
                                                attributable share of the partnership’s                 up occurs would impose a burden on                    partnership agreement may reference
                                                adjusted basis in the property, no                      such partnerships. The comment also                   section 704(c) or provide for the
                                                revision to the rule is necessary to                    noted that partners’ relative economic                adoption of a particular section 704(c)


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                                                                 Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 213 / Thursday, November 3, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                        76501

                                                method, allocations under section                       requirement, which itself is necessarily              under section 956(d) and § 1.956–2(c), a
                                                704(c) are tax allocations required by                  a facts-and-circumstances                             CFC is treated as holding an obligation
                                                operation of the Code and regulations.                  determination. After consideration of                 of a United States person if the CFC is
                                                In response to these questions, the                     the comment, the Treasury Department                  a pledgor or guarantor of the obligation.
                                                Treasury Department and the IRS have                    and the IRS have determined that the                  Therefore, if a CFC makes or guarantees
                                                revised the definition of special                       presumption requested by the comment                  a loan to a United States person, an
                                                allocations in final § 1.956–4(b)(2)(ii) to             is not appropriate, and the comment is                income inclusion may be required with
                                                clarify that a special allocation is an                 not adopted.                                          respect to the CFC under sections
                                                allocation of book income or gain, rather                  A comment noted that determining a                 951(a)(1)(B) and 956. Under the general
                                                than a tax allocation such as the                       partner’s attributable share of an item of            rule in proposed § 1.956–4(c)(1), an
                                                allocations required under section                      property by reference to a special                    obligation of a foreign partnership
                                                704(c).                                                 allocation of income or gain with                     would be treated as an obligation of its
                                                   Questions also have arisen as to                     respect to that property could produce                partners in proportion to the partners’
                                                whether certain allocations of income                   results that are inconsistent with the                interest in partnership profits, unless
                                                with respect to all of the property of a                liquidation value percentage approach                 the exception in proposed § 1.956–
                                                partnership, as opposed to allocations of               because of the forward-looking nature of              4(c)(2) (for obligations of partnerships in
                                                income from a specific item or subset of                special allocations. The comment                      which neither the lending CFC nor any
                                                partnership property, constitute special                described, but did not explicitly                     person related to the lending CFC is a
                                                allocations described in proposed                       recommend, an alternative approach                    partner) or the special rule in proposed
                                                § 1.956–4(b)(2)(i). These final                         that would limit the effect of a special              § 1.956–4(c)(3) (regarding certain
                                                regulations clarify that, for purposes of               allocation to the portion of the                      partnership distributions) applies. Thus,
                                                these regulations, a special allocation                 liquidation value that represents actual              the general rule adopts an aggregate
                                                means only an allocation of income (or,                 appreciation, as opposed to initial book              approach that would treat an obligation
                                                where appropriate, gain) from a subset                  value. The Treasury Department and the                of a foreign partnership as an obligation
                                                of the property of the partnership to a                 IRS recognize the conceptual issue                    of its partners.
                                                partner other than in accordance with                   highlighted by the comment but have                      A comment asserted that taking the
                                                the partner’s liquidation value                         determined that the alternative                       aggregate approach to a foreign
                                                percentage in a particular taxable year.                approach described by the comment                     partnership for this purpose is overly
                                                   As noted in this Part 4 of this                      would entail substantial administrative               broad and inconsistent with the policy
                                                Summary of Comments and Explanation                     complexity. Additionally, the Treasury                underlying section 956. The comment
                                                of Revisions, proposed § 1.956–                         Department and the IRS continue to                    states that a CFC loan to a foreign
                                                4(b)(2)(ii) states that a partner’s                     consider it appropriate, in cases in                  partnership results in a repatriation of
                                                attributable share of an item of                        which special allocations are                         CFC earnings to the United States
                                                partnership property is not determined                  economically meaningful, to determine                 partners in the partnership only when
                                                by reference to a special allocation with               a partner’s attributable share of property            the loan proceeds either are used to
                                                respect to the property if the special                  in accordance with such special                       acquire United States property or are
                                                allocation has a principal purpose of                   allocations, since such allocations                   distributed to the partners, which,
                                                avoiding the purposes of section 956. A                 replicate the effect of owning, outside of            according to the comment, are
                                                comment requested that these final                      the partnership, an interest in the                   adequately addressed in § 1.956–
                                                regulations provide guidance on the                                                                           1T(b)(4) and (5). Accordingly, the
                                                                                                        property that is proportional to the
                                                circumstances in which special                                                                                comment requested that the rules in
                                                                                                        special allocation.
                                                allocations are treated as having a                        However, the Treasury Department                   § 1.956–1T(b)(4) and (5) be finalized, but
                                                principal purpose of avoiding section                   and the IRS have determined that                      that the general rule in § 1.956–4(c)(1)
                                                956. Specifically, the comment                          special allocations with respect to a                 be removed. Thus, the comment
                                                suggested that proposed § 1.956–4(b) be                 partnership controlled by a U.S.                      generally advocates for the treatment of
                                                revised to include a presumption that a                 multinational group (a controlled                     a foreign partnership as an entity, with
                                                transaction does not have a principal                                                                         anti-abuse rules to address certain
                                                                                                        partnership) and its CFCs are unlikely to
                                                purpose of avoiding section 956 when                                                                          situations. In contrast, another comment
                                                                                                        have economic significance for the
                                                the allocation is respected under section                                                                     indicated that the concerns identified in
                                                                                                        group as a whole and can facilitate
                                                704(b) and is reasonable taking into                                                                          the preamble to the 2015 proposed
                                                                                                        inappropriate tax planning.
                                                account the facts and circumstances                                                                           regulations ‘‘constitute an appropriate
                                                                                                        Accordingly, the Treasury Department
                                                relating to the economic arrangement of                                                                       basis for the general aggregate approach
                                                                                                        and the IRS are proposing a new rule in
                                                the partners and the characteristics of                                                                       of [proposed § 1.956–4(c)(1)]’’.
                                                                                                        a notice of proposed rulemaking in the
                                                the property at issue.                                                                                           After consideration of the comments,
                                                   The determination of whether a                       Proposed Rules section of this issue of
                                                                                                                                                              the Treasury Department and the IRS
                                                special allocation has a principal                      the Federal Register (REG–114734–16)                  have concluded that it is appropriate to
                                                purpose of avoiding the purposes of                     under which a partner’s attributable                  retain the aggregate approach of the
                                                section 956 must take into account all                  share of property of a controlled                     general rule in proposed § 1.956–4(c).
                                                of the relevant facts and circumstances,                partnership is determined solely in                   The Treasury Department and the IRS
                                                which include the factors set forth in                  accordance with the partner’s                         disagree with the assertion that the
                                                the comment. However, an allocation                     liquidation value percentage, without                 aggregate approach is not supported by
                                                adopted with a principal purpose of                     regard to any special allocations.                    the policy of section 956. As discussed
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                                                avoiding the purposes of section 956                    5. Obligations of Foreign Partnerships                in the preamble to the 2015 proposed
                                                could nonetheless be respected under                                                                          regulations, failing to treat an obligation
                                                section 704(b), which is not based on,                  A. Use of an Aggregate Approach as the                of a foreign partnership as an obligation
                                                and does not take into account, section                 General Rule                                          of its partners could allow for the
                                                956 policy considerations. In addition,                   Pursuant to section 956(c), United                  deferral of U.S. taxation of CFC earnings
                                                it is not clear what additional clarity                 States property includes an obligation of             and profits in a manner that is
                                                would be added by the reasonableness                    a United States person. In addition,                  inconsistent with the purpose of section


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                                                76502            Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 213 / Thursday, November 3, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                956. As discussed in that preamble, the                 a related United States person under                  result in a significant change from the
                                                legislative history provides that                       proposed § 1.956–4(c) would be the                    previously determined liquidation value
                                                Congress intended section 956 to apply                  average of the amounts held by the CFC                percentage.
                                                when deferred CFC earnings are made                     at the close of each quarter of its taxable
                                                                                                                                                              C. Exceptions From General Rule of
                                                available to a United States shareholder,               year. Thus, under proposed § 1.956–                   Aggregate Treatment
                                                which occurs when a United States                       4(c), taxpayers would need to determine
                                                shareholder conducts operations                         a CFC partner’s interest in partnership                  Proposed § 1.956–4(c)(2) provides an
                                                through a foreign partnership that are                  profits on a quarterly basis when a                   exception from the aggregate treatment
                                                funded by deferred CFC earnings,                        relevant partnership obligation is                    of proposed § 1.956–4(c)(1) that applies
                                                without regard to whether there is any                  outstanding throughout a taxable year.                if neither the CFC that holds the
                                                distribution from the partnership to the                As a result, calculating the amount of                obligation (or is treated as holding the
                                                United States shareholder. In addition,                 United States property held by a CFC in               obligation) nor any person related to the
                                                as described in Section C of this Part 5                a taxable year could be complicated                   CFC (within the meaning of section
                                                of this Summary of Comments and                         when a partner’s interest in partnership              954(d)(3)) is a partner in the partnership
                                                Explanation of Revisions, there are                     profits is not known until the end of the             on the CFC’s quarterly measuring date
                                                exceptions from the treatment of                        taxable year (such as when there are one              on which the treatment of the obligation
                                                obligations as United States property                   or more tiers of allocations of                       as United States property is being
                                                under § 1.956–4(c) that the Treasury                    partnership profits based on various                  determined. A comment suggested an
                                                Department and the IRS have                             internal rate of return hurdles).                     additional exception from the general
                                                determined mitigate some of the                         Furthermore, the requirement to                       rule in proposed § 1.956–4(c)(1)
                                                concerns about the breadth of the                       determine a CFC’s interest in United                  providing for aggregate treatment of
                                                general rule raised by the comment.                     States property on a quarterly basis                  partnership obligations. The comment
                                                Accordingly, the final regulations do not               could result in the calculation of a                  requested that an obligation of a foreign
                                                adopt the recommendation to abandon                     section 956 amount that is inconsistent               partnership not be treated as an
                                                the aggregate approach.                                 with the annual profit allocated to the               obligation of its partners to the extent
                                                                                                        partner from the partnership for that                 that the obligation arises from a routine,
                                                B. Liquidation Value Percentage Method                                                                        ordinary course transaction between the
                                                                                                        year.
                                                   The preamble to the 2015 proposed                                                                          lending CFC and the foreign
                                                regulations requested comments on                          After consideration of these                       partnership.
                                                whether the liquidation value                           comments, the Treasury Department                        The comment highlighted a fact
                                                percentage method or another method                     and the IRS have determined that the                  pattern involving an obligation arising
                                                would be a more appropriate basis for                   liquidation value percentage method                   from a deposit by a CFC with a foreign
                                                determining a partner’s share of a                      should be used to determine a partner’s               partnership that acts as a coordination
                                                foreign partnership’s obligation. In                    share of a foreign partnership’s                      center for a taxpayer’s cash pooling
                                                addition, as noted in Part 4.B of this                  obligation because of the potential for               system. In this case, the comment
                                                Summary of Comments and Explanation                     complexity in calculating a partner’s                 asserted that any United States partners
                                                of Revisions, the 2015 proposed                         interest in partnership profits for                   in the partnership should not be
                                                regulations solicited comments on                       purposes of proposed § 1.956–4(c) as                  considered to have accessed the
                                                whether a single method should be used                  well as the uncertainty inherent in the               deferred earnings of the CFC deposited
                                                for determining both a partner’s share of               method. The liquidation value                         with the partnership and that,
                                                partnership assets under proposed                       percentage method is a sound indicator                accordingly, the aggregate approach to
                                                § 1.956–4(b) and a partner’s share of                   of a partner’s interest in a partnership.             partnership obligations should not
                                                partnership obligations under proposed                  Moreover, the objective rules provided                apply to treat the CFC as holding an
                                                § 1.956–4(c).                                           in proposed § 1.956–4(b) for                          obligation of the United States partners
                                                   Comments highlighted a number of                     determining the liquidation value                     for purposes of section 956. Regarding
                                                issues related to applying a rule based                 percentage provide more certainty than                this fact pattern, the Treasury
                                                on a partner’s interest in partnership                  the rule in proposed § 1.956–4(c). In                 Department and the IRS observe that the
                                                profits and noted the lack of guidance                  addition, using the same standard for                 short-term obligation exception in
                                                in the 2015 proposed regulations for                    determining a partner’s share of                      § 1.956–2T(d)(2)(iv), which applies
                                                applying this standard for purposes of                  partnership property and a partner’s                  when a CFC holds obligations of a
                                                proposed § 1.956–4(c). The comments                     share of partnership obligations reduces              United States person for a limited
                                                stated that a partner’s interest in                     complexity for taxpayers that must                    period of time during a taxable year,
                                                partnership profits would be a difficult                apply both sets of rules for purposes of              generally would prevent an inclusion
                                                standard to apply for partnerships other                section 956 with respect to a single                  under section 956 in the fact pattern
                                                than simple partnerships, because a                     partnership. Accordingly, these final                 described in the comment if the CFC
                                                partner’s interest in partnership profits               regulations provide that an obligation of             had a net deposit with the partnership
                                                can fluctuate significantly from year to                a foreign partnership is treated as an                only for the limited period of time
                                                year, as well as during a taxable year.                 obligation of its partners in proportion              described in that exception. The
                                                The comments noted that the proposed                    to the partners’ liquidation value                    Treasury Department and the IRS have
                                                rule did not address whether the                        percentage with respect to the                        concluded that there is no reason to
                                                determination would be made based                       partnership. As described in Part 4.C of              provide a more expansive exception
                                                solely on the partnership’s profits in the              this Summary of Comments and                          from United States property treatment
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                                                current year or whether the                             Explanation of Revisions, a partner’s                 for obligations of a foreign partnership
                                                determination would take into account                   liquidation value percentage must be                  with certain United States persons as
                                                the expected profits over the term of the               determined upon formation of a                        partners than would apply with respect
                                                partnership. Moreover, under section                    partnership and any revaluation events                to obligations incurred directly by those
                                                956(a), the amount of United States                     and in certain other circumstances in                 same United States persons.
                                                property held by a CFC as a result of                   which redetermination of the                             Another comment recommended
                                                being treated as holding an obligation of               liquidation value percentage would                    adding a new de minimis exception that


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                                                                 Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 213 / Thursday, November 3, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                         76503

                                                would provide that an obligation of a                   but for a funding of the partnership                  regulations concerning situations in
                                                foreign partnership is not treated as an                through an obligation held (or treated as             which multiple CFCs serve, or are
                                                obligation of a United States person that               held) by the CFC; and (iv) the                        treated, as pledgors or guarantors of a
                                                is a partner if the United States person                distribution exceeds the partner’s share              single obligation for purposes of section
                                                and its related persons own less than a                 of the partnership obligation as                      956(d) in order to limit the aggregate
                                                specified percentage, 10% or 20%, of                    determined in accordance with the                     inclusions of a United States
                                                the profits and capital interests in the                partner’s interest in partnership profits.            shareholder with respect to a CFC under
                                                foreign partnership. The comment noted                  When these requirements are satisfied,                sections 951(a)(1)(B) and 956 to the
                                                that a U.S. partner with a relatively                   proposed § 1.956–4(c)(3) provided that                unpaid principal amount of the
                                                small interest in a partnership may lack                the amount of the partnership obligation              obligation. The Treasury Department
                                                the ability to cause the partnership to                 that is treated as an obligation of the               and the IRS continue to study the
                                                make a distribution to the U.S. partner.                distributee partner (and thus as United               comments concerning multiple
                                                   Although a U.S. partner with a                       States property held by the CFC) is the               inclusions under section 956(d), which
                                                relatively small partnership interest may               lesser of the amount of the distribution              do not impact any of the proposed
                                                not be able to compel a distribution                    that would not have been made but for                 regulations adopted by this Treasury
                                                from the partnership, the potential to                  the funding of the partnership and the                decision.
                                                directly access partnership assets is not,              amount of the partnership obligation.
                                                as the comment acknowledges, the sole                      Comments suggested that taxpayers                  Effective/Applicability Dates
                                                or overriding consideration motivating                  might take the position that the ‘‘but                   The rules in § 1.954–2(c)(1)(i) and
                                                the aggregate approach to partnerships                  for’’ requirement in proposed § 1.956–                (d)(1)(i) (regarding the active
                                                under the proposed regulations and                      4(c)(3) is not satisfied in certain                   development test) apply to rents or
                                                these final regulations. Even if the other              situations in which CFC earnings are                  royalties, as applicable, received or
                                                partners in a partnership in which a                    effectively repatriated to a partner that             accrued during taxable years of CFCs
                                                United States shareholder of a CFC is a                 is a related United States person. For                ending on or after September 1, 2015,
                                                minority partner are unrelated to the                   example, taxpayers might take the                     and to taxable years of United States
                                                United States shareholder, the United                   position that a partnership distribution              shareholders in which or with which
                                                States shareholder would still benefit                  could have been made without the                      such taxable years end, but only with
                                                from the funding of the partnership’s                   funding by the CFC merely by                          respect to property manufactured,
                                                business with deferred earnings of the                  establishing that a third party would                 produced, developed, or created, or, in
                                                CFC to the extent of its interest in the                have loaned the funds needed for the                  the case of acquired property, property
                                                partnership. Additionally, as noted in                  partnership to make the distribution.                 to which substantial value has been
                                                the preamble to the 2015 proposed                       The Treasury Department and the IRS                   added, on or after September 1, 2015.
                                                regulations, a standard based on                        have determined that this position is                 The rules in § 1.954–2(c)(1)(iv), (c)(2)(ii),
                                                whether the funding CFC or a related                    inconsistent with the purposes of this                (d)(1)(ii), and (d)(2)(ii) (regarding the
                                                person is a partner in the partnership,                 rule. Accordingly, these final                        active marketing test), as well as the
                                                rather than whether such persons own                    regulations clarify the funded                        rules in § 1.954–2(c)(2)(iii)(E),
                                                a certain minimum interest in the                       distribution rule by providing with                   (c)(2)(viii), (d)(2)(iii)(E), and (d)(2)(v)
                                                partnership, is consistent with the                     respect to the ‘‘but for’’ requirement in             (regarding cost-sharing arrangements),
                                                relevant exception adopted by Congress                  proposed § 1.956–4(c)(3) that a foreign               apply to rents or royalties, as applicable,
                                                in section 956(c)(2)(L).                                partnership will be treated as if it would            received or accrued during taxable years
                                                   Accordingly, the Treasury Department                 not have made a distribution of liquid                of CFCs ending on or after September 1,
                                                and the IRS have determined that the                    assets but for a funding of the                       2015, and to taxable years of United
                                                additional exceptions to aggregate                      partnership through obligations held (or              States shareholders in which or with
                                                treatment suggested in the comments                     treated as held) by a CFC to the extent               which such taxable years end, to the
                                                are not warranted.                                      the foreign partnership did not have                  extent that such rents or royalties are
                                                                                                        sufficient liquid assets to make the                  received or accrued on or after
                                                D. Special Obligor Rule in the Case of
                                                                                                        distribution immediately prior to the                 September 1, 2015. The section 956
                                                Certain Distributions
                                                                                                        distribution, without taking into                     anti-avoidance rules in § 1.956–1(b)
                                                   The 2015 proposed regulations                        account the obligations. When a CFC                   apply to taxable years of CFCs ending
                                                include a special funded distribution                   holds (or is treated as holding) multiple             on or after September 1, 2015, and to
                                                rule that increases the amount of a                     obligations of the foreign partnership to             taxable years of United States
                                                foreign partnership obligation that is                  which this rule could potentially apply,              shareholders in which or with which
                                                treated as United States property when                  its applicability is determined first with            such taxable years end, with respect to
                                                the following requirements are satisfied:               respect to the obligation acquired (or                property acquired, including property
                                                (i) A CFC lends funds (or is a pledgor                  treated as acquired) closest in time to               treated as acquired as the result of a
                                                or guarantor with respect to a loan) to                 the distribution, and then successively               deemed exchange of property pursuant
                                                a foreign partnership whose obligation                  to other obligations further in time from             to section 1001, on or after September
                                                is, in whole or in part, United States                  the distribution until the distribution is            1, 2015. The rules regarding factoring
                                                property with respect to the CFC                        fully accounted for.                                  transactions in § 1.956–3 (other than
                                                pursuant to proposed § 1.956–4(c)(1)                                                                          § 1.956–3(b)(2)(ii)) apply to trade or
                                                and existing § 1.956–2(a); (ii) the                     6. Comments Concerning Multiple                       service receivables acquired (directly or
                                                partnership distributes an amount of                    Inclusions                                            indirectly) after March 1, 1984.
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                                                money or property to a partner that is                     Comments were received in response                    The remaining rules in these final
                                                related to the CFC (within the meaning                  to the request for comments included in               regulations apply to taxable years of
                                                of section 954(d)(3)) and whose                         the preamble to the 2015 proposed                     CFCs ending on or after November 3,
                                                obligation would be United States                       regulations concerning whether the                    2016, and taxable years of United States
                                                property if held (or treated as held) by                Treasury Department and the IRS                       shareholders in which or with which
                                                the CFC; (iii) the foreign partnership                  should exercise the authority granted                 such taxable years end. In general, these
                                                would not have made the distribution                    under section 956(e) to prescribe                     remaining rules apply to property


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                                                76504            Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 213 / Thursday, November 3, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                acquired, or pledges or guarantees                      Office of Associate Chief Counsel                     production of, or in the acquisition and
                                                entered into, on or after September 1,                  (International). However, other                       addition of substantial value to,
                                                2015, including property considered                     personnel from the Treasury                           property of such kind;
                                                acquired, and pledges and guarantees                    Department and the IRS participated in                *       *    *      *    *
                                                considered entered into, on or after                    their development.                                       (iv) Property that is leased as a result
                                                September 1, 2015, as a result of a                                                                           of the performance of marketing
                                                deemed exchange pursuant to section                     List of Subjects in 26 CFR Part 1
                                                                                                                                                              functions by such lessor through its own
                                                1001. See § 1.956–4(c) (dealing with                      Income taxes, Reporting and                         officers or staff of employees located in
                                                obligations of foreign partnerships);                   recordkeeping requirements.                           a foreign country or countries, if the
                                                §§ 1.956–2(c), 1.956–4(d), and 1.956–                   Adoption of Amendments to the                         lessor, through its officers or staff of
                                                1(e)(2) (dealing with pledges and                       Regulations                                           employees, maintains and operates an
                                                guarantees, including pledges and                                                                             organization either in such country or in
                                                guarantees by a partnership and with                      Accordingly, 26 CFR part 1 is                       such countries (collectively), as
                                                respect to obligations of a foreign                     amended as follows:                                   applicable, that is regularly engaged in
                                                partnership); and § 1.956–3(b)(2)(ii)                                                                         the business of marketing, or of
                                                (dealing with trade and service                         PART 1—INCOME TAXES
                                                                                                                                                              marketing and servicing, the leased
                                                receivables acquired from related                       ■ Paragraph 1. The authority citation                 property and that is substantial in
                                                United States persons indirectly through                for part 1 is amended by adding entries               relation to the amount of rents derived
                                                nominees, pass-through entities, or                     in numerical order to read in part as                 from the leasing of such property.
                                                related foreign corporations). Two rules,               follows:                                                 (2) * * *
                                                however, apply to all obligations held                                                                           (ii) Substantiality of foreign
                                                on or after November 3, 2016. See                         Authority: 26 U.S.C. 7805 * * *
                                                                                                                                                              organization. For purposes of paragraph
                                                §§ 1.956–2(a)(3) and 1.956–4(e) (dealing                  Section 1.956–1 also issued under 26
                                                                                                        U.S.C. 956(d) and 956(e).                             (c)(1)(iv) of this section, whether an
                                                with obligations of disregarded entities                                                                      organization either in a foreign country
                                                                                                          Section 1.956–2 also issued under 26
                                                and domestic partnerships,                              U.S.C. 956(d) and 956(e).                             or in foreign countries (collectively) is
                                                respectively). Finally, § 1.956–4(b)                      Section 1.956–3 also issued under 26                substantial in relation to the amount of
                                                (dealing with partnership property                      U.S.C. 864(d)(8) and 956(e).                          rents is determined based on all the
                                                indirectly held by a CFC) applies to                      Section 1.956–4 also issued under 26                facts and circumstances. However, such
                                                property acquired on or after November                  U.S.C. 956(d) and 956(e).                             an organization will be considered
                                                3, 2016. No inference is intended as to                 *     *      *     *      *                           substantial in relation to the amount of
                                                the application of the provisions                       ■  Par. 2. Section 1.954–2 is amended                 rents if active leasing expenses, as
                                                amended by these final regulations                      by:                                                   defined in paragraph (c)(2)(iii) of this
                                                under prior law, including in                           ■ 1. Revising paragraphs (c)(1)(i),                   section, equal or exceed 25 percent of
                                                transactions involving obligations of                   (c)(1)(iv), and (c)(2)(ii).                           the adjusted leasing profit, as defined in
                                                foreign partnerships. The IRS may,                      ■ 2. Removing the word ‘‘and’’ at the                 paragraph (c)(2)(iv) of this section. In
                                                where appropriate, challenge                            end of paragraph (c)(2)(iii)(C).                      addition, for purposes of aircraft or
                                                transactions under the Code, regulatory                 ■ 3. Removing the period at the end of                vessels leased in foreign commerce, an
                                                provisions under prior law, or judicial                 paragraph (c)(2)(iii)(D) and adding in its            organization will be considered
                                                doctrines.                                              place a semicolon and the word ‘‘and’’.               substantial if active leasing expenses, as
                                                                                                        ■ 4. Revising paragraphs (c)(2)(iii)(E)               defined in paragraph (c)(2)(iii) of this
                                                Effect on Other Documents
                                                                                                        and (c)(2)(viii).                                     section, equal or exceed 10 percent of
                                                  Rev. Rul. 90–112 (1990–2 CB 186) is                   ■ 5. Revising paragraphs (d)(1)(i),                   the adjusted leasing profit, as defined in
                                                obsolete as of November 3, 2016.                        (d)(1)(ii), and (d)(2)(ii).                           paragraph (c)(2)(iv) of this section. For
                                                Special Analyses                                        ■ 6. Removing the word ‘‘and’’ at the                 purposes of paragraphs (c)(1)(iv) and
                                                                                                        end of paragraph (d)(2)(iii)(C).                      (c)(2) of this section and § 1.956–
                                                  Certain IRS regulations, including                    ■ 7. Removing the period at the end of
                                                these regulations, are exempt from the                                                                        2(b)(1)(vi), the term aircraft or vessels
                                                                                                        paragraph (d)(2)(iii)(D), and adding in               includes component parts, such as
                                                requirements of Executive Order 12866,                  its place a semicolon and the word
                                                as supplemented and reaffirmed by                                                                             engines that are leased separately from
                                                                                                        ‘‘and’’.                                              an aircraft or vessel.
                                                Executive Order 13563. Therefore, a                     ■ 8. Revising paragraphs (d)(2)(iii)(E)                  (iii) * * *
                                                regulatory assessment is not required. It               and (d)(2)(v).                                           (E) Deductions for CST Payments or
                                                has also been determined that section                   ■ 9. Revising paragraph (i).                          PCT Payments (as defined in § 1.482–
                                                553(b) of the Administrative Procedure                     The revisions and additions read as                7(b)).
                                                Act (5 U.S.C. Chapter 5) does not apply                 follows:
                                                to these regulations, and because the                                                                         *       *    *      *    *
                                                regulations do not impose a collection                  § 1.954–2 Foreign personal holding                       (viii) Cost sharing arrangements
                                                of information on small entities, the                   company income.                                       (CSAs). For purposes of paragraphs
                                                Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C.                    *     *      *    *      *                            (c)(1)(i) and (iv) of this section, CST
                                                chapter 6) does not apply. Pursuant to                    (c) * * *                                           Payments or PCT Payments (as defined
                                                section 7805(f), the notice of proposed                   (1) * * *                                           in § 1.482–7(b)(1)) made by the lessor to
                                                rulemaking preceding these regulations                    (i) Property that the lessor, through its           another controlled participant (as
                                                was submitted to the Chief Counsel of                   own officers or staff of employees, has               defined in § 1.482–7(j)(1)(i)) pursuant to
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                                                Advocacy of the Small Business                          manufactured or produced, or property                 a CSA (as defined in § 1.482–7(a)) do
                                                Administration for comment on its                       that the lessor has acquired and,                     not cause the activities undertaken by
                                                impact on small business.                               through its own officers or staff of                  that other controlled participant to be
                                                                                                        employees, added substantial value to,                considered to be undertaken by the
                                                Drafting Information                                    but only if the lessor, through its officers          lessor’s own officers or staff of
                                                  The principal author of these                         or staff of employees, is regularly                   employees.
                                                regulations is Rose E. Jenkins of the                   engaged in the manufacture or                         *       *    *      *    *


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                                                                 Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 213 / Thursday, November 3, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                         76505

                                                   (d) * * *                                            (c)(3) of this section apply to taxable                § 1.956–1 Shareholder’s pro rata share of
                                                   (1) * * *                                            years of controlled foreign corporations               the average of the amounts of United States
                                                   (i) Property that the licensor, through              beginning on or after May 2, 2006, and                 property held by a controlled foreign
                                                its own officers or staff of employees,                 for taxable years of United States                     corporation.
                                                has developed, created, or produced, or                 shareholders with or within which such                    (a) In general. Subject to the
                                                property that the licensor has acquired                 taxable years of the controlled foreign                provisions of section 951(a) and the
                                                and, through its own officers or staff of               corporations end. Taxpayers may elect                  regulations thereunder, a United States
                                                employees, added substantial value to,                  to apply paragraphs (c)(2)(v) through                  shareholder of a controlled foreign
                                                but only so long as the licensor, through               (vii) to taxable years of controlled                   corporation is required to include in
                                                its officers or staff of employees, is                  foreign corporations beginning after                   gross income the amount determined
                                                regularly engaged in the development,                   December 31, 2004, and for taxable                     under section 956 with respect to the
                                                creation, or production of, or in the                   years of United States shareholders with               shareholder for the taxable year but only
                                                acquisition and addition of substantial                 or within which such taxable years of                  to the extent not excluded from gross
                                                value to, property of such kind; or                     the controlled foreign corporations end.               income under section 959(a)(2) and the
                                                   (ii) Property that is licensed as a result           If an election is made to apply § 1.956–               regulations thereunder.
                                                of the performance of marketing                         2(b)(1)(vi) to taxable years beginning                    (b) Amount of United States property
                                                functions by such licensor through its                  after December 31, 2004, then the                      held indirectly by a controlled foreign
                                                own officers or staff of employees                      election must also be made for                         corporation—(1) General rule. For
                                                located in a foreign country or                         paragraphs (c)(2)(v) through (vii) of this             purposes of section 956, United States
                                                countries, if the licensor, through its                 section.                                               property held indirectly by a controlled
                                                officers or staff of employees, maintains                  (2) Other paragraphs. Paragraphs                    foreign corporation includes—
                                                and operates an organization either in                  (c)(1)(i) and (d)(1)(i) of this section                   (i) United States property held on
                                                such foreign country or in such foreign                 apply to rents or royalties, as applicable,            behalf of the controlled foreign
                                                countries (collectively), as applicable,                received or accrued during taxable years               corporation by a trustee or a nominee;
                                                that is regularly engaged in the business               of controlled foreign corporations                        (ii) United States property acquired by
                                                of marketing, or of marketing and                       ending on or after September 1, 2015,                  any other foreign corporation that is
                                                servicing, the licensed property and that               and to taxable years of United States                  controlled by the controlled foreign
                                                is substantial in relation to the amount                shareholders in which or with which                    corporation if a principal purpose of
                                                of royalties derived from the licensing of              such taxable years end, but only with                  creating, organizing, or funding by any
                                                such property.                                          respect to property manufactured,                      means (including through capital
                                                   (2) * * *                                            produced, developed, or created, or in                 contributions or debt) the other foreign
                                                   (ii) Substantiality of foreign                       the case of acquired property, property                corporation is to avoid the application
                                                organization. For purposes of paragraph                 to which substantial value has been                    of section 956 with respect to the
                                                (d)(1)(ii) of this section, whether an                  added, on or after September 1, 2015.                  controlled foreign corporation; and
                                                organization either in a foreign country                Paragraphs (c)(1)(iv), (c)(2)(ii),                        (iii) Property acquired by a
                                                or in foreign countries (collectively) is               (c)(2)(iii)(E), (c)(2)(viii), (d)(1)(ii),              partnership that is controlled by the
                                                substantial in relation to the amount of                (d)(2)(ii), (d)(2)(iii)(E), and (d)(2)(v) of           controlled foreign corporation if the
                                                royalties is determined based on all of                 this section apply to rents or royalties,              property would be United States
                                                the facts and circumstances. However,                   as applicable, received or accrued                     property if held directly by the
                                                such an organization will be considered                 during taxable years of controlled                     controlled foreign corporation, and a
                                                substantial in relation to the amount of                foreign corporations ending on or after                principal purpose of creating,
                                                royalties if active licensing expenses, as              September 1, 2015, and to taxable years                organizing, or funding by any means
                                                defined in paragraph (d)(2)(iii) of this                of United States shareholders in which                 (including through capital contributions
                                                section, equal or exceed 25 percent of                  or with which such taxable years end,                  or debt) the partnership is to avoid the
                                                the adjusted licensing profit, as defined               to the extent that such rents or royalties             application of section 956 with respect
                                                in paragraph (d)(2)(iv) of this section.                are received or accrued on or after                    to the controlled foreign corporation.
                                                   (iii) * * *                                          September 1, 2015. See § 1.954–                           (2) Control. For purposes of
                                                   (E) Deductions for CST Payments or                   2(c)(1)(i), (c)(1)(iv), (c)(2)(ii), (c)(2)(iii),       paragraphs (b)(1)(ii) and (iii) of this
                                                PCT Payments (as defined in § 1.482–                    (d)(1)(i), (d)(1)(ii), (d)(2)(ii), and                 section, a controlled foreign corporation
                                                7(b)).                                                  (d)(2)(iii), as contained in 26 CFR part               controls a foreign corporation or
                                                *       *     *     *     *                             1 revised as of April 1, 2015, for rules               partnership if the controlled foreign
                                                   (v) Cost sharing arrangements (CSAs).                applicable to rents or royalties, as                   corporation and the other foreign
                                                For purposes of paragraphs (d)(1)(i) and                applicable, received or accrued before                 corporation or partnership are related
                                                (ii) of this section, CST Payments or                   September 1, 2015.                                     within the meaning of section 267(b) or
                                                PCT Payments (as defined in § 1.482–                    *      *      *     *      *                           section 707(b). For this purpose, in
                                                7(b)(1)) made by the licensor to another                                                                       determining whether two corporations
                                                controlled participant (as defined in                   § 1.954–2T     [Removed]                               are members of the same controlled
                                                § 1.482–7(j)(1)(i)) pursuant to a CSA (as                                                                      group under section 267(b)(3), a person
                                                defined in § 1.482–7(a)) do not cause the               ■     Par. 3. Section 1.954–2T is removed.             is considered to own stock owned
                                                activities undertaken by that other                     ■  Par. 4. Section 1.956–1 is amended                  directly by such person, stock owned for
                                                controlled participant to be considered                 by:                                                    the purposes of section 1563(e)(1), and
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                                                to be undertaken by the licensor’s own                  ■ 1. Revising the section heading and                  stock owned with the application of
                                                officers or staff of employees.                         paragraphs (a) and (b).                                section 267(c).
                                                *       *     *     *     *                                                                                       (3) Coordination rule. Paragraph
                                                                                                        ■ 2. Removing and reserving paragraphs
                                                   (i) Effective/applicability dates—(1)                                                                       (b)(1)(iii) of this section applies only to
                                                                                                        (c) and (d).
                                                Paragraphs (c)(2)(v) through (vii).                                                                            the extent that the amount of United
                                                Paragraphs (c)(2)(v) through (vii) of this              ■ 3. Revising paragraphs (e)(2) and (g).               States property that is treated under that
                                                section and Example 6 of paragraph                         The revisions read as follows:                      paragraph as held indirectly by a


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                                                76506            Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 213 / Thursday, November 3, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                controlled foreign corporation through                     (ii) Result. Under paragraph (b)(1)(ii) of         § 1.956–2(a), FS1 is treated as holding United
                                                the partnership exceeds the sum of—                     this section, FS2 is considered to indirectly         States property of $60x (60% x $100x) as a
                                                   (i) The amount of United States                      hold the $100x obligation of P that is held           result of the FPRS loan to P. A principal
                                                property described in paragraph                         by FS1. As a result, P has an income                  purpose of creating, organizing, or funding
                                                                                                        inclusion of $100x under sections                     FPRS is to avoid the application of section
                                                (b)(1)(iii) of this section that is treated             951(a)(1)(B) and 956 with respect to FS2, and         956 with respect to FS1.
                                                as held by the controlled foreign                       the foreign income taxes deemed paid by P                (ii) Result. Before taking into account
                                                corporation as a result of the application              under section 960 is $0. P does not have an           paragraph (b)(3) of this section, because FS1
                                                of § 1.956–4(b) with respect to the                     income inclusion under sections 951(a)(1)(B)          controls FPRS and a principal purpose of
                                                partnership; and                                        and 956 with respect to FS1 related to the            creating, organizing, or funding FPRS was to
                                                   (ii) The amount of United States                     $100x loan from FS1 to P.                             avoid the application of section 956 with
                                                property that is treated as held by the                    Example 4. (i) Facts. FS1 deposits $100x           respect to FS1, FS1 is considered under
                                                controlled foreign corporation as a                     with BK, an unrelated foreign financial               paragraph (b)(1)(iii) of this section to
                                                result of the application of § 1.956–4(c)               institution. FS2 subsequently borrows $100x           indirectly hold the $100x obligation of P that
                                                                                                        from BK. BK would not have loaned the                 would be United States property if held
                                                with respect to any portion of an                       $100x to FS2 on the same terms absent FS1’s           directly by FS1. However, under paragraph
                                                obligation attributable to the funding                  deposit. FS2 loans the $100x borrowed from            (b)(3) of this section, FS1 is treated as
                                                described in paragraph (b)(1)(iii) of this              BK to P. FS2 has no earnings and profits, and         holding United States property under
                                                section of the partnership by the                       FS1 has substantial accumulated earnings              paragraph (b)(1)(iii) only to the extent the
                                                controlled foreign corporation.                         and profits. A principal purpose for the              amount held indirectly under paragraph
                                                   (4) Examples. The following examples                 transactions is to avoid the application of           (b)(1)(iii) of this section exceeds the sum of
                                                illustrate the rules of this paragraph (b).             section 956 with respect to FS1.                      the amount of the United States property that
                                                In each example, P is a domestic                           (ii) Result. FS1 is considered to hold             FS1 is treated as holding as a result of the
                                                corporation that wholly owns two                        indirectly United States property under this          application of § 1.956–4(b) with respect to
                                                                                                        paragraph (b) and § 1.956–2(a) because FS1’s          FPRS. The amount of United States property
                                                controlled foreign corporations, FS1 and                deposit with BK, which facilitates BK’s loan          that FS1 is treated as indirectly holding
                                                FS2.                                                    to FS2, is considered a funding by FS1 of             under paragraph (b)(1)(iii) of this section and
                                                   Example 1. (i) Facts. FS1 sells inventory            FS2, a principal purpose of which was to              § 1.956–2(a) ($100x) exceeds the amount
                                                to FS2 in exchange for trade receivables due            avoid the application of section 956 with             determined under § 1.956–4(b) ($60x) by
                                                in 60 days. Avoiding the application of                 respect to FS1.                                       $40x. Thus, FS1 is considered to hold United
                                                section 956 with respect to FS1 was not a                  Example 5. (i) Facts. FS1 sells inventory          States property within the meaning of section
                                                principal purpose of establishing the trade             to FS2 in exchange for $100x. The sale                956(c) in the amount of $100x ($60x under
                                                receivables. FS2 has no earnings and profits,           occurred in the ordinary course of FS1’s              § 1.956–4(b) and $40x under paragraphs
                                                and FS1 has substantial accumulated                     trade or business and FS2’s trade or business,        (b)(1)(iii) and (b)(3) of this section).
                                                earnings and profits. FS2 makes a loan to P             and the terms of the sale are consistent with            Example 8. (i) Facts. FS1 and FS2 have
                                                equal to the amount it owes FS1 under the               terms that would be observed among parties            substantial earnings and profits. P and FS1
                                                trade receivables. FS2 pays the trade                   dealing at arm’s length. FS1 makes a $100x            are the only partners in FPRS, a foreign
                                                receivables according to their terms.                   loan to P. FS2 has no earnings and profits,           partnership. There are no special allocations
                                                   (ii) Result. FS1 will not be considered to           and FS1 has substantial accumulated                   in the FPRS partnership agreement. P’s
                                                indirectly hold United States property under            earnings and profits.                                 liquidation value percentage with respect to
                                                this paragraph (b) because the funding of FS2              (ii) Result. FS2 will not be considered to         FPRS is 40%, and FS1’s liquidation value
                                                through the sale of inventory in exchange for           indirectly hold United States property under          percentage with respect to FPRS is 60%. FS2
                                                the establishment of trade receivables was              this paragraph (b) because a sale in the              lends $100x to FPRS, and FPRS lends $100x
                                                not undertaken with a principal purpose of              ordinary course of business for cash on terms         to P. Under § 1.956–4(c) and § 1.956–2(a),
                                                avoiding the application of section 956 with            that are consistent with those that would be          FS2 is treated as holding United States
                                                respect to FS1.                                         observed among parties dealing at arm’s               property of $40x (40% x $100x) as a result
                                                   Example 2. (i) Facts. The facts are the              length does not constitute a funding.                 of its loan to FPRS. A principal purpose of
                                                same as in Example 1 of this paragraph (b)(4),             Example 6. (i) Facts. In Year 1, FS2 loans         funding FPRS is to avoid the application of
                                                except that, with a principal purpose of                $100x to FS1 to finance FS1’s trade or                section 956 with respect to FS2.
                                                avoiding the application of section 956 with            business. The terms of the loan are consistent           (ii) Result. Before taking into account
                                                respect to FS1, FS1 and FS2 agree to defer              with those that would be observed among               paragraph (b)(3) of this section, because FS2
                                                FS2’s payment obligation, and FS2 does not              parties dealing at arm’s length. In Year 2, FS1       controls FPRS and a principal purpose of
                                                timely pay the receivables.                             repays the loan in accordance with the terms          funding FPRS was to avoid the application of
                                                   (ii) Result. FS1 is considered to hold               of the loan. Immediately after the repayment          section 956 with respect to FS2, FS2 is
                                                indirectly United States property under this            by FS1, FS2 loans $100x to P. FS2 has no              considered under paragraph (b)(1)(iii) of this
                                                paragraph (b) and § 1.956–2(a) because there            earnings and profits, and FS1 has substantial         section to indirectly hold the $100x
                                                was a funding of FS2, a principal purpose of            accumulated earnings and profits.                     obligation of P that would be United States
                                                which was to avoid the application of section              (ii) Result. FS1 will not be considered to         property if held directly by FS2. However,
                                                956 with respect to FS1.                                indirectly hold United States property under          under paragraph (b)(3) of this section, FS2 is
                                                   Example 3. (i) Facts. FS1 has $100x of               this paragraph (b) because a repayment of a           treated as holding United States property
                                                post-1986 undistributed earnings and profits            loan that has terms that are consistent with          under paragraph (b)(1)(iii) only to the extent
                                                and $100x post-1986 foreign income taxes,               those that would be observed among parties            the amount held indirectly under paragraph
                                                but does not have any cash. FS2 has earnings            dealing at arm’s length and that is repaid            (b)(1)(iii) of this section exceeds the amount
                                                and profits of at least $100x, no post-1986             consistent with those terms does not                  of United States property that FS2 is treated
                                                foreign income taxes, and substantial cash.             constitute a funding.                                 as holding as a result of the application of
                                                Neither FS1 nor FS2 has earnings and profits               Example 7. (i) Facts. FS1 has substantial          § 1.956–4(c) with respect to the obligation
                                                described in section 959(c)(1) or section               earnings and profits. P and FS1 are the only          with which FS2 funds FPRS. The amount of
                                                959(c)(2). FS2 loans $100x to FS1. FS1 then             partners in FPRS, a foreign partnership. FS1          United States property that FS2 is treated as
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                                                loans $100x to P. An income inclusion by P              contributes $600x cash to FPRS in exchange            indirectly holding under paragraph (b)(1)(iii)
                                                of $100x under sections 951(a)(1)(B) and 956            for a 60% interest in the partnership, and P          of this section and § 1.956–2(a) ($100x)
                                                with respect to FS1 would result in foreign             contributes real estate located outside the           exceeds the amount determined under
                                                income taxes deemed paid by P under                     United States ($400x value) to FPRS in                § 1.956–4(c) ($40x) by $60x. Thus, FS2 is
                                                section 960. A principal purpose of funding             exchange for a 40% interest in the                    considered to hold United States property
                                                FS1 through the loan from FS2 is to avoid the           partnership. There are no special allocations         within the meaning of section 956(c) in the
                                                application of section 956 with respect to              in the FPRS partnership agreement. FPRS               amount of $100x ($40x under § 1.956–4(c)
                                                FS2.                                                    lends $100x to P. Under § 1.956–4(b) and              and $60x under paragraphs (b)(1)(iii) and



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                                                                 Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 213 / Thursday, November 3, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                          76507

                                                (b)(3) of this section). P does not have an             1(e)(1) of the regulations, in the case of            that obligation. If a partnership is
                                                income inclusion under sections 951(a)(1)(B)            an investment in United States property               considered a pledgor or guarantor of an
                                                and 956 with respect to FS1 related to the P            consisting of an obligation of a related              obligation, a controlled foreign
                                                obligation held by FPRS.
                                                                                                        person, as defined in section 954(d)(3)               corporation that is a partner in the
                                                   (c)–(d) [Reserved]                                   and paragraph (f) of § 1.954–1, a liability           partnership will not also be treated as a
                                                   (e) * * *                                            will not be recognized as a specific                  pledgor or guarantor of the obligation
                                                   (2) Rule for pledges and guarantees.                 charge if the liability representing the              solely as a result of its ownership of an
                                                For purposes of this section, the amount                charge is with recourse with respect to               interest in the partnership. For purposes
                                                of an obligation treated as held (before                the general credit or other assets of the             of this paragraph, a pledge of stock of
                                                application of § 1.956–4(b)) as a result of             investing controlled foreign corporation.             a controlled foreign corporation
                                                a pledge or guarantee described in                         (e)(6) [Reserved]. For further                     representing at least 662⁄3 percent of the
                                                § 1.956–2(c) is the unpaid principal                    guidance, see § 1.956–1(e)(6).                        total combined voting power of all
                                                amount of the obligation on the                            (f) Effective/applicability date.                  classes of voting stock of such
                                                applicable determination date.                          Paragraph (e)(5) of this section applies              corporation will be considered an
                                                *      *     *     *    *                               to investments made on or after June 14,              indirect pledge of the assets of the
                                                   (g) Effective/applicability date. (1)                1988.                                                 controlled foreign corporation if the
                                                Paragraph (a) of this section applies to                   (g)–(h) [Reserved]                                 pledge is accompanied by one or more
                                                taxable years of controlled foreign                     ■ Par. 6. Section 1.956–2 is amended                  negative covenants or similar
                                                corporations ending on or after                         by:                                                   restrictions on the shareholder
                                                November 3, 2016, and to taxable years                  ■ 1. Revising paragraphs (a)(3), (c)(1),              effectively limiting the corporation’s
                                                of United States shareholders in which                  and (c)(2).                                           discretion to dispose of assets and/or
                                                or with which such taxable years end.                   ■ 2. Adding Example 4 to paragraph                    incur liabilities other than in the
                                                   (2) Paragraph (b) of this section                    (c)(3).                                               ordinary course of business. See
                                                applies to taxable years of controlled                  ■ 3. Adding paragraph (h).                            § 1.956–4(d) for guidance on the
                                                foreign corporations ending on or after                    The revisions and addition read as                 treatment of indirect pledges or
                                                September 1, 2015, and to taxable years                 follows:                                              guarantees of an obligation of a
                                                of United States shareholders in which                                                                        partnership attributed to its partners
                                                                                                        § 1.956–2    Definition of United States
                                                or with which such taxable years end,                   property.                                             under § 1.956–4(c).
                                                with respect to property acquired on or                                                                          (3) * * *
                                                after September 1, 2015. See paragraph                    (a) * * *
                                                                                                          (3) Treatment of disregarded entities.                 Example 4. (i) Facts. USP, a domestic
                                                (b)(4) of § 1.956–1T, as contained in 26
                                                                                                        For purposes of section 956, an                       corporation, owns 70% of the stock of FS, a
                                                CFR part 1 revised as of April 1, 2015,                                                                       controlled foreign corporation, and a 90%
                                                                                                        obligation of a business entity (as
                                                for the rules applicable to taxable years                                                                     interest in FPRS, a foreign partnership. X, an
                                                                                                        defined in § 301.7701–2(a) of this
                                                of controlled foreign corporations                                                                            unrelated foreign person, owns 30% of the
                                                                                                        chapter) that is disregarded as an entity
                                                ending before September 1, 2015, and                                                                          stock of FS. Y, an unrelated foreign person,
                                                                                                        separate from its owner for federal tax
                                                property acquired before September 1,                                                                         owns a 10% interest in FPRS. There are no
                                                                                                        purposes under §§ 301.7701–1 through                  special allocations in the FPRS partnership
                                                2015. For purposes of this paragraph
                                                                                                        301.7701–3 of this chapter is treated as              agreement. FPRS borrows $100x from Z, an
                                                (g)(2), a deemed exchange of property
                                                                                                        an obligation of its owner.                           unrelated person. FS pledges its assets as
                                                pursuant to section 1001 on or after
                                                                                                        *     *     *     *     *                             security for FPRS’s performance of its
                                                September 1, 2015 constitutes an
                                                                                                          (c) Treatment of pledges and                        obligation to repay the $100x loan. USP’s
                                                acquisition of the property on or after                                                                       share of the $100x FPRS obligation,
                                                that date.                                              guarantees—(1) General rule. Except as
                                                                                                        provided in paragraph (c)(4) of this                  determined in accordance with its
                                                   (3) Paragraph (e)(2) of this section                                                                       liquidation value percentage, is $90x. Under
                                                applies to taxable years of controlled                  section, for purposes of section 956, any
                                                                                                                                                              § 1.956–4(c), $90x of the FPRS obligation is
                                                foreign corporations ending on or after                 obligation of a United States person                  treated as an obligation of USP for purposes
                                                November 3, 2016, and taxable years of                  with respect to which a controlled                    of section 956.
                                                United States shareholders in which or                  foreign corporation or a partnership is a                (ii) Result. For purposes of section 956,
                                                with which such taxable years end, with                 pledgor or guarantor will be considered               under paragraph (c)(1) of this section, FS is
                                                respect to pledges or guarantees entered                to be held by the controlled foreign                  considered to hold an obligation of USP in
                                                                                                        corporation or the partnership, as the                the amount of $90x, and thus is treated as
                                                into on or after September 1, 2015. For
                                                                                                        case may be. See § 1.956–1(e)(2) for                  holding United States property in the amount
                                                purposes of this paragraph (g)(3), a                                                                          of $90x.
                                                pledgor or guarantor is treated as                      rules that determine the amount of the
                                                entering into a pledge or guarantee                     obligation treated as held by a pledgor               *     *     *    *     *
                                                when there is a significant modification,               or guarantor under this paragraph (c).                  (h) Effective/applicability date. (1)
                                                within the meaning of § 1.1001–3(e), of                 For rules that treat an obligation of a               Paragraph (a)(3) of this section applies
                                                an obligation with respect to which it is               foreign partnership as an obligation of               to taxable years of controlled foreign
                                                a pledgor or guarantor on or after                      the partners in the foreign partnership               corporations ending on or after
                                                September 1, 2015.                                      for purposes of section 956, see § 1.956–             November 3, 2016, and taxable years of
                                                                                                        4(c).                                                 United States shareholders in which or
                                                *      *     *     *    *                                 (2) Indirect pledge or guarantee. If the            with which such taxable years end, with
                                                ■ Par. 5. Section 1.956–1T is revised to                assets of a controlled foreign                        respect to obligations held on or after
                                                read as follows:                                        corporation or a partnership serve at any             November 3, 2016.
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                                                § 1.956–1T Shareholder’s pro rata share of              time, even though indirectly, as security               (2) Paragraphs (c)(1), (c)(2), and
                                                the average of the amounts of United States             for the performance of an obligation of               Example 4 of paragraph (c)(3) of this
                                                property held by a controlled foreign                   a United States person, then, for                     section apply to taxable years of
                                                corporation.                                            purposes of paragraph (c)(1) of this                  controlled foreign corporations ending
                                                  (a) through (e)(4) [Reserved]                         section, the controlled foreign                       on or after November 3, 2016, and
                                                  (5) Exclusion for certain recourse                    corporation or partnership will be                    taxable years of United States
                                                obligations. For purposes of § 1.956–                   considered a pledgor or guarantor of                  shareholders in which or with which


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                                                76508            Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 213 / Thursday, November 3, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                such taxable years end, with respect to                 corporation as indirectly holding a trade             application of section 956 with respect to
                                                pledges and guarantees entered into on                  or service receivable held by a foreign               FS1.
                                                or after September 1, 2015. For purposes                corporation or partnership. A controlled                (ii) Result. Under § 1.956–1(b), if the trade
                                                                                                                                                              receivables held by FS2 were United States
                                                of this paragraph (h)(2), a pledgor or                  foreign corporation that is treated as                property, FS1 would be treated as holding
                                                guarantor is treated as entering into a                 holding a trade or service receivable                 the trade receivables held by FS2 because
                                                pledge or guarantee when there is a                     held by another person (the direct                    FS1 controls FS2 and a principal purpose of
                                                significant modification, within the                    holder) (or that would be treated as                  FS1 funding FS2 was to avoid the application
                                                meaning of § 1.1001–3(e), of an                         holding the receivable if the receivable              of section 956 with respect to FS1.
                                                obligation with respect to which it is a                were United States property or would be               Accordingly, under this paragraph (b)(2)(ii),
                                                pledgor or guarantor on or after                        United States property if held directly               FS1 is treated as having acquired from P, a
                                                September 1, 2015.                                      by the controlled foreign corporation) is             related United States person, the trade
                                                                                                                                                              receivables that it would be treated as
                                                *     *     *     *     *                               considered to have acquired the
                                                                                                                                                              holding with a basis equal to $200x. Thus,
                                                ■ Par. 7. Section § 1.956–3 is added to                 receivable from the person from whom                  FS1 is treated as holding United States
                                                read as follows:                                        the direct holder acquired the                        property with a basis of $200x under
                                                                                                        receivable. This paragraph (b)(2)(ii) does            paragraph (a) of this section.
                                                § 1.956–3 Certain trade or service                      not limit the application of paragraph
                                                receivables acquired from United States                                                                          (iii) Swap or pooling arrangements. A
                                                                                                        (b)(2)(iii) of this section. The following
                                                persons.                                                                                                      trade or service receivable of a United
                                                                                                        examples illustrate the application of
                                                   (a) In general. For purposes of section                                                                    States person is considered to be a trade
                                                                                                        this paragraph (b)(2)(ii):
                                                956(a) and § 1.956–1, the term ‘‘United                                                                       or service receivable acquired from a
                                                States property’’ also includes any trade                  Example 1. (i) Facts. A domestic                   related United States person and subject
                                                                                                        corporation, P, wholly owns a controlled              to the rules of this section when it is
                                                or service receivable if the trade or
                                                                                                        foreign corporation, FS, with substantial             acquired in accordance with an
                                                service receivable is acquired (directly                earnings and profits. FS contributes $200x of
                                                or indirectly) from a related person who                                                                      arrangement that involves two or more
                                                                                                        cash to a partnership, PRS, in exchange for
                                                is a United States person (as defined in                an 80% partnership interest. An unrelated
                                                                                                                                                              groups of related persons, if the groups
                                                section 7701(a)(30)) (a related United                  foreign person contributes real estate located        are unrelated to each other and the
                                                States person) and the obligor under the                in a foreign country with a fair market value         effect of the arrangement is that one or
                                                receivable is a United States person. A                 of $50x to PRS for the remaining 20%                  more persons in each group acquire
                                                trade or service receivable described in                partnership interest. There are no special            (directly or indirectly) trade or service
                                                this paragraph is considered to be                      allocations in the PRS partnership agreement.         receivables from one or more unrelated
                                                United States property notwithstanding                  PRS uses the $200x of cash received from FS           United States persons who are also
                                                the exceptions (other than subparagraph                 to purchase trade receivables from P. The             parties to the arrangement in exchange
                                                (H)) contained in section 956(c)(2). The                obligors with respect to the trade receivables        for reciprocal purchases of receivables
                                                                                                        are United States persons that are not related
                                                terms ‘‘trade or service receivable’’ and                                                                     from related United States persons. The
                                                                                                        to any partner in PRS. The liquidation value
                                                ‘‘related person’’ have the respective                  percentage, as determined under § 1.956–
                                                                                                                                                              following example illustrates the
                                                meanings given to the terms by section                  4(b), for FS with respect to PRS is 80%. A            application of this paragraph (b)(2)(iii):
                                                864(d) and the regulations thereunder,                  principal purpose of funding PRS (through                Example. (i) Facts. Controlled foreign
                                                including § 1.864–8T(b). For purposes of                FS’s cash contribution) is to avoid the               corporations A, B, C, and D are wholly-
                                                this section, the exception in § 1.956–                 application of section 956 with respect to FS.        owned subsidiaries of domestic corporations
                                                2T(d)(2)(ii) does not apply to trade or                    (ii) Result. Under § 1.956–4(b)(1), FS is          M, N, O, and P, respectively. M, N, O, and
                                                service receivables described in this                   treated as holding 80% of the trade                   P are not related persons. According to a
                                                paragraph.                                              receivables acquired by PRS from P, with a            prearranged plan, A, B, C, and D each acquire
                                                   (b) Acquisition of a trade or service                basis equal to $160x (80% × $200x, PRS’s              trade or service receivables from M, N, O,
                                                receivable—(1) General rule. The rules                  basis in the trade receivables). However,             and/or P. The obligors under some or all of
                                                                                                        because FS controls PRS and a principal               the receivables acquired by each of A, B, C,
                                                of § 1.864–8T(c)(1) apply to determine                  purpose of FS funding PRS was to avoid the            and D are United States persons.
                                                whether a controlled foreign corporation                application of section 956 with respect to FS,           (ii) Result. The effect of the prearranged
                                                has acquired a trade or service                         under § 1.956–1(b), if the trade receivables          plan is that each of A, B, C, and D acquires
                                                receivable.                                             would be United States property if held               trade or service receivables of United States
                                                   (2) Indirect acquisitions—(i)                        directly by FS, FS additionally would be              persons from one or more unrelated United
                                                Acquisition through unrelated person. A                 treated as holding the trade receivables to the       States persons who are also parties to the
                                                trade or service receivable is considered               extent that they exceed the amount of the             arrangement, in exchange for reciprocal
                                                acquired from a related person when it                  receivables it holds under § 1.956–4(b),              purchases of receivables from a related
                                                                                                        which is $40x ($200x¥$160x). Accordingly,             United States person. Accordingly, each of A,
                                                is acquired from an unrelated person
                                                                                                        under this paragraph (b)(2)(ii), FS is treated        B, C, and D is treated as holding a trade or
                                                who acquired (directly or indirectly) the                                                                     service receivable acquired from a related
                                                                                                        as having acquired from P, a related United
                                                receivable from a person who is a                       States person, the trade receivables that it is       United States person and is subject to the
                                                related person to the acquiring person.                 treated as holding with a basis equal to $200x        rules of this section. As a result, each of A,
                                                   (ii) Acquisition by nominee, pass-                   ($160x + $40x). Thus, FS is treated as                B, C, and D is treated as holding an amount
                                                through entity, or related foreign                      holding United States property with a basis           of United States property equal to its
                                                corporation. A controlled foreign                       of $200x under paragraph (a) of this section.         adjusted basis in the receivables acquired
                                                corporation is treated as holding a trade                  Example 2. (i) Facts. A domestic                   pursuant to the arrangement with respect to
                                                or service receivable that is held by a                 corporation, P, wholly owns a controlled              which the obligors are United States persons.
                                                nominee on its behalf, or by a simple                   foreign corporation, FS1, that has earnings              (iv) Financing arrangements. If a
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                                                trust or other pass-through entity (other               and profits of at least $300x. FS1 organizes          controlled foreign corporation
                                                                                                        a foreign corporation, FS2, with a $200x cash
                                                than a partnership) to the extent of its                                                                      participates (directly or indirectly) in a
                                                                                                        contribution. FS2 uses the cash contribution
                                                direct or indirect ownership or                         to purchase trade receivables from P. The             lending transaction that results in a loan
                                                beneficial interest in such simple trust                obligors with respect to the trade receivables        to a United States person who purchases
                                                or other pass-through entity. See                       are unrelated United States persons. A                property described in section 1221(a)(1)
                                                §§ 1.956–1(b) and 1.956–4(b) for rules                  principal purpose of funding FS2 (through             (inventory property) or services from a
                                                that may treat a controlled foreign                     FS1’s cash contribution) is to avoid the              related United States person, or to any


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                                                                 Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 213 / Thursday, November 3, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                        76509

                                                person who purchases from a related                        Example 3. (i) Facts. P, a domestic                § 1.956–3T   [Removed]
                                                United States person trade or service                   corporation, owns all of the outstanding
                                                                                                        stock of FS1, a controlled foreign                    ■ Par. 8. Section 1.956–3T is removed.
                                                receivables under which the obligor is a
                                                                                                        corporation. FS1 makes a $300x loan to U, an          ■ Par. 9. Section 1.956–4 is added to
                                                United States person, or to a person who
                                                                                                        unrelated foreign corporation, in connection          read as follows:
                                                is a related person with respect to the                 with U’s purchase from P of receivables from
                                                purchaser, and if the loan would not                    the sale of inventory property by P to United         § 1.956–4 Certain rules applicable to
                                                have been made or maintained on the                     States obligors for $200x.                            partnerships.
                                                same terms but for the corresponding                       (ii) Result. FS1 is considered to have                (a) Overview. This section provides
                                                purchase, then the controlled foreign                   acquired a trade or service receivable                rules concerning the application of
                                                corporation is considered to have                       described in paragraph (a) of this section            section 956 to certain obligations of and
                                                indirectly acquired a trade or service                  because FS1 directly participates in a lending
                                                                                                                                                              property held by a partnership.
                                                receivable described in paragraph (a) of                transaction described in this paragraph
                                                                                                        (b)(2)(iv). That is, FS1 is considered to have        Paragraph (b) of this section provides
                                                this section. For purposes of this                                                                            rules concerning United States property
                                                                                                        acquired a trade or service receivable of a
                                                paragraph (b)(2)(iv), it is immaterial that             United States person from a related United            held indirectly by a controlled foreign
                                                the sums lent are not, in fact, the sums                States person. Thus, FS1 is treated as holding        corporation through a partnership.
                                                used to finance the purchase of the                     United States property in the amount of               Paragraph (c) of this section provides
                                                inventory property or services or trade                 $200x.                                                rules that generally treat obligations of
                                                or service receivables from a related                                                                         a foreign partnership as obligations of
                                                United States person. The amount to be                     (c) Substitution of obligor. For                   the partners in the foreign partnership,
                                                taken into account with respect to the                  purposes of this section, the substitution            as well as a special rule that treats a
                                                United States property treated as held                  of another person for a United States                 partner that is a United States person as
                                                by a controlled foreign corporation as a                obligor is disregarded, unless it can be              owing additional amounts of a
                                                result of the application of this                       demonstrated by the parties to the                    partnership obligation in certain
                                                paragraph (b)(2)(iv) is the lesser of the               transaction that the primary purpose for              circumstances. Paragraph (d) of this
                                                amount lent pursuant to a lending                       the arrangement was not the avoidance                 section sets forth a rule concerning the
                                                transaction described in this paragraph                 of section 956. The following example                 application of the indirect pledge or
                                                (b)(2)(iv) and the purchase price of the                illustrates the application of this                   guarantee rule to obligations of
                                                inventory property, services, or trade or               paragraph (c):                                        partnerships. Paragraph (e) of this
                                                service receivables. The following                         Example. (i) Facts. P, a domestic                  section provides that obligations of a
                                                examples illustrate the application of                  corporation, owns all of the outstanding              domestic partnership are obligations of
                                                this paragraph (b)(2)(iv):                              stock of FS1, a controlled foreign corporation        a United States person. Paragraph (f) of
                                                                                                        with substantial accumulated earnings and             this section provides effective and
                                                   Example 1. (i) Facts. P, a domestic
                                                                                                        profits. P sells inventory property to X, a
                                                corporation, owns all of the outstanding
                                                                                                        domestic corporation unrelated to P. To pay
                                                                                                                                                              applicability dates. See §§ 1.956–1(b)
                                                stock of FS1, a controlled foreign                                                                            and 1.956–2(c) for additional rules
                                                                                                        for the inventory property, X arranges for a
                                                corporation. P sells inventory property for                                                                   applicable to partnerships.
                                                                                                        foreign financing entity to issue a note to P.
                                                $200x to X, an unrelated United States                                                                           (b) Property held indirectly through a
                                                                                                        P then sells the note to FS1. P and X cannot
                                                person. FS1 makes a $100x short-term loan
                                                to X, which loan would not have been made
                                                                                                        demonstrate that the primary purpose for X’s          partnership—(1) General rule. For
                                                                                                        assignment of the payment obligation to the           purposes of section 956, a partner in a
                                                or maintained on the same terms but for X’s
                                                                                                        foreign financing entity was not the                  partnership is treated as holding its
                                                purchase of P’s inventory property.
                                                   (ii) Result. FS1 directly participates in a          avoidance of section 956.                             attributable share of any property held
                                                lending transaction described in this                      (ii) Result. The substitution of the foreign       by the partnership (including an
                                                paragraph (b)(2)(iv). Thus, FS1 is considered           financing entity for X is disregarded, and FS1
                                                                                                        is treated as holding an obligation of a United
                                                                                                                                                              obligation that the partnership is treated
                                                to have acquired a trade or service receivable                                                                as holding as a result of the application
                                                described in paragraph (a) of this section.             States person acquired from a related United
                                                                                                        States person. Thus, FS1 is treated as holding        of § 1.956–2(c)). A partner’s attributable
                                                That is, FS1 is considered to have acquired                                                                   share of partnership property is
                                                a trade or service receivable of a United               United States property in the amount of the
                                                States person from a related United States              purchase price of the note.                           determined under the rules set forth in
                                                person. As a result, FS1 is treated as holding                                                                paragraph (b)(2) of this section. An
                                                                                                           (d) Effective/applicability date—(1)               upper-tier partnership’s attributable
                                                United States property in the amount of
                                                $100x.                                                  Except as provided in paragraph (d)(2)                share of the property of a lower-tier
                                                   Example 2. (i) Facts. The facts are the              of this section, this section applies to              partnership is treated as property of the
                                                same as in Example 1 of this paragraph                  trade or service receivables acquired                 upper-tier partnership for purposes of
                                                (b)(2)(iv), except that instead of loaning              (directly or indirectly) after March 1,               applying this paragraph (b)(1) to the
                                                money to X directly, FS1 deposits $300x with            1984.                                                 partners of the upper-tier partnership.
                                                an unrelated financial institution that loans                                                                 For purposes of section 956, a partner’s
                                                                                                           (2) Paragraph (b)(2)(ii) of this section
                                                $200x to X in order for X to purchase P’s
                                                inventory property. The loan would not have             applies to taxable years of controlled                adjusted basis in the property of the
                                                been made or maintained on the same terms               foreign corporations ending on or after               partnership equals the partner’s
                                                but for the corresponding deposit.                      November 3, 2016, and taxable years of                attributable share of the partnership’s
                                                   (ii) Result. FS1 is considered to have               United States shareholders in which or                adjusted basis in the property, as
                                                acquired a trade or service receivable                  with which such taxable years end, with               determined under the rules set forth in
                                                described in paragraph (a) of this section              respect to trade or service receivables               paragraph (b)(2) of this section, taking
                                                because FS1 indirectly participates in a                acquired on or after September 1, 2015.               into account any adjustments to basis
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                                                lending transaction described in this                   For purposes of this paragraph (d), a                 under section 743(b) (with respect to the
                                                paragraph (b)(2)(iv). See Rev. Rul. 87–89,                                                                    partner) or section 734(b) or any similar
                                                                                                        significant modification, within the
                                                1987–2 CB 195. That is, FS1 is considered to
                                                have acquired a trade or service receivable of          meaning of § 1.1001–3(e), of a trade or               adjustments to basis. The rules in
                                                a United States person from a related United            service receivable on or after September              § 1.956–1(e)(2) apply to determine the
                                                States person. Thus, FS1 is treated as holding          1, 2015, constitutes an acquisition of the            amount of an obligation treated as held
                                                United States property in the amount of                 trade or service receivable on or after               by a partnership as a result of the
                                                $200x.                                                  that date.                                            application of § 1.956–2(c). See § 1.956–


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                                                76510            Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 213 / Thursday, November 3, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                1(b) for special rules that may treat a                 partner’s special allocation with respect             foreign corporation, which, in turn, owns an
                                                controlled foreign corporation as                       to the property, provided the special                 interest in FPRS, a foreign partnership. USP
                                                holding a greater amount of United                      allocation does not have a principal                  owns the remaining interest in FPRS. FPRS
                                                                                                                                                              holds property (the ‘‘FPRS property’’) that
                                                States property held by a partnership                   purpose of avoiding the purposes of
                                                                                                                                                              would be United States property if held by
                                                than the amount determined under this                   section 956.                                          FS directly. The FPRS property has an
                                                section.                                                   (3) Examples. The following examples               adjusted basis of $100x and is anticipated to
                                                   (2) Methodology—(i) Liquidation                      illustrate the rule of this paragraph (b):            appreciate in value but generate relatively
                                                value percentage—(A) Calculation.                          Example 1. (i) Facts. USP, a domestic              little income. The FPRS partnership
                                                Except as otherwise provided in                         corporation, wholly owns FS, a controlled             agreement, which satisfies the requirements
                                                paragraph (b)(2)(ii) of this section, for               foreign corporation, which, in turn, owns an          of section 704(b), specially allocates 80% of
                                                purposes of paragraph (b)(1) of this                    interest in FPRS, a foreign partnership. The          the income with respect to the FPRS property
                                                section, a partner’s attributable share of              remaining interest in FPRS is owned by an             to USP and 80% of the gain with respect to
                                                partnership property is determined in                   unrelated foreign person. FPRS holds non-             the disposition of FPRS property to FS. The
                                                                                                        depreciable property with an adjusted basis           special allocation does not have a principal
                                                accordance with the partner’s                                                                                 purpose of avoiding the purposes of section
                                                liquidation value percentage. For                       of $100x (the ‘‘FPRS property’’) that would
                                                                                                        be United States property if held by FS               956.
                                                purposes of this paragraph (b)(2)(i) and                directly. At the close of quarter 1 of year 1,           (ii) Result. Because the special allocation
                                                paragraph (c)(1) of this section, the                   the liquidation value percentage, as                  does not have a principal purpose of
                                                liquidation value of a partner’s interest               determined under paragraph (b)(2) of this             avoiding the purposes of section 956, under
                                                in a partnership is the amount of cash                  section, for FS with respect to FPRS is 25%.          paragraph (b)(2)(ii) of this section, FS’s
                                                the partner would receive with respect                  There are no special allocations in the FPRS          attributable share of the FPRS property is
                                                to the interest if, on the applicable                   partnership agreement.                                determined by reference to a special
                                                determination date, as provided in                         (ii) Result. Under paragraph (b)(1) of this        allocation with respect to the FPRS property.
                                                                                                        section, for purposes of section 956, FS is           Given the income and gain anticipated with
                                                paragraph (b)(2)(i)(B) of this section, the                                                                   respect to the FPRS property, it is
                                                partnership sold all of its assets for cash             treated as holding its attributable share of the
                                                                                                        property held by FPRS with an adjusted basis          appropriate to determine FS’s attributable
                                                equal to the fair market value of such                  equal to its attributable share of FPRS’s             share of the property in accordance with the
                                                assets (taking into account section                     adjusted basis in such property. Under                special allocation of gain. Accordingly, for
                                                7701(g)), satisfied all of its liabilities              paragraph (b)(2) of this section, FS’s                purposes of determining the amount of
                                                (other than those described in § 1.752–                 attributable share of property held by FPRS           United States property held by FS in each
                                                7), paid an unrelated third party to                    is determined in accordance with FS’s                 year that FPRS holds the FPRS property, FS’s
                                                assume all of its § 1.752–7 liabilities in              liquidation value percentage, which is 25%.           attributable share of the FPRS property is
                                                a fully taxable transaction, and then                   Thus, FS’s attributable share of the FPRS             80% and its attributable share of FPRS’s basis
                                                                                                        property is 25%, and its attributable share of        in the FPRS property is $80x. Thus, FS is
                                                liquidated. A partner’s liquidation value                                                                     treated as holding United States property
                                                percentage is the ratio (expressed as a                 FPRS’s basis in the FPRS property is $25x.
                                                                                                        Accordingly, for purposes of determining the          with an adjusted basis of $80x.
                                                percentage) of the liquidation value of                 amount of United States property held by FS
                                                the partner’s interest in the partnership                                                                       (c) Obligations of a foreign
                                                                                                        as of the close of quarter 1 of year 1, FS is         partnership—(1) In general. Except as
                                                divided by the aggregate liquidation                    treated as holding United States property
                                                value of all of the partners’ interests in              with an adjusted basis of $25x.
                                                                                                                                                              provided in paragraphs (c)(2) and (c)(3)
                                                the partnership.                                           Example 2. (i) Facts. The facts are the            of this section, for purposes of section
                                                   (B) Determination date. The                          same as in Example 1 of this paragraph (b)(3),        956, an obligation of a foreign
                                                determination date with respect to a                    except that the FPRS partnership agreement,           partnership is treated as a separate
                                                partnership is the most recent of—                      which satisfies the requirements of section           obligation of each of the partners in the
                                                   (1) The formation of the partnership;                704(b), specially allocates 80% of the income         partnership to the extent of each
                                                   (2) An event described in § 1.704–                   with respect to the FPRS property to FS. The          partner’s share of the obligation. A
                                                1(b)(2)(iv)(f)(5) or § 1.704–                           special allocation does not have a principal          partner’s share of the partnership’s
                                                                                                        purpose of avoiding the purposes of section           obligation is determined in accordance
                                                1(b)(2)(iv)(s)(1) (a revaluation event),                956.
                                                irrespective of whether the capital                        (ii) Result. Under paragraph (b)(1) of this
                                                                                                                                                              with the partner’s liquidation value
                                                accounts of the partners are adjusted in                section, for purposes of section 956, FS is           percentage, as determined under the
                                                accordance with § 1.704–1(b)(2)(iv)(f); or              treated as holding its attributable share of          rules set forth in paragraph (b)(2)(i) of
                                                   (3) The first day of the partnership’s               property held by FPRS with an adjusted basis          this section, without regard to the rules
                                                taxable year, as determined under                       equal to its attributable share of FPRS’s             set forth in paragraph (b)(2)(ii) of this
                                                section 706, provided the liquidation                   adjusted basis in such property. In general,          section. An upper-tier partnership’s
                                                value percentage determined for any                     FS’s attributable share of property held by           share of an obligation of a lower-tier
                                                partner on that day would differ from                   FPRS is determined in accordance with FS’s            partnership is treated as an obligation of
                                                the most recently determined                            liquidation value percentage. However,                the upper-tier partnership for purposes
                                                                                                        because the special allocation does not have
                                                liquidation value percentage of that                    a principal purpose of avoiding the purposes
                                                                                                                                                              of applying this paragraph (c)(1) to the
                                                partner by more than 10 percentage                      of section 956, under paragraph (b)(2)(ii) of         partners of the upper-tier partnership.
                                                points.                                                 this section, FS’s attributable share of the            (2) Exception for obligations of
                                                   (ii) Special allocations. For purposes               FPRS property is determined by reference to           partnerships in which neither the
                                                of paragraph (b)(1) of this section, if a               its special allocation. FS’s special allocation       lending controlled foreign corporation
                                                partnership agreement provides for the                  percentage for the FPRS property is 80%, and          nor any person related to the lending
                                                allocation of book income (or, where                    thus FS’s attributable share of the FPRS              controlled foreign corporation is a
                                                appropriate, book gain) from a subset of                property is 80% and its attributable share of         partner. For purposes of applying
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                                                the property of the partnership to a                    FPRS’s basis in the FPRS property is $80x.            section 956 with respect to a controlled
                                                                                                        Accordingly, for purposes of determining the
                                                partner other than in accordance with                                                                         foreign corporation, an obligation of a
                                                                                                        amount of United States property held by FS
                                                the partner’s liquidation value                         as of the close of quarter 1 of year 1, FS is         foreign partnership is treated as an
                                                percentage in a particular taxable year (a              treated as holding United States property             obligation of a foreign partnership, and
                                                special allocation), then the partner’s                 with an adjusted basis of $80x.                       not as an obligation of its partners, if
                                                attributable share of that property is                     Example 3. (i) Facts. USP, a domestic              neither the controlled foreign
                                                determined solely by reference to the                   corporation, wholly owns FS, a controlled             corporation nor any person related to


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                                                                 Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 213 / Thursday, November 3, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                           76511

                                                the controlled foreign corporation                      pursuant to paragraph (c)(3)(ii)(A) of                does not apply, and FS is not treated as
                                                within the meaning of section 954(d)(3)                 this section, as if it would not have been            holding United States property.
                                                is a partner in the partnership. For                    made but for the funding of the                          Example 3. (i) Facts. USP, a domestic
                                                                                                                                                              corporation, wholly owns FS, a controlled
                                                purposes of section 956, an obligation                  partnership through one or more other                 foreign corporation. USP and FS own
                                                treated as an obligation of a foreign                   obligations.                                          interests in FPRS, a foreign partnership.
                                                partnership pursuant to this paragraph                     (C) For purposes of paragraph (c)(3)(ii)           USP’s liquidation value percentage with
                                                (c)(2) is not an obligation of a United                 of this section, a significant                        respect to FPRS is 60%, and FS’s liquidation
                                                States person.                                          modification, within the meaning of                   value percentage with respect to FPRS is
                                                   (3) Special obligor rule in the case of              § 1.1001–3(e), of an obligation                       30%. U.S.C., a domestic corporation that is
                                                certain partnership distributions—(i)                   constitutes an acquisition of the                     unrelated to USP and FS, also owns an
                                                General rule. For purposes of                           obligation on or after that date, and a               interest in FPRS; its liquidation value
                                                determining a partner’s share of a                      pledgor or guarantor is treated as                    percentage is 10%. FPRS borrows $100x from
                                                foreign partnership’s obligation under                                                                        an unrelated person. FS guarantees the FPRS
                                                                                                        entering into a pledge or guarantee                   obligation.
                                                section 956, if the foreign partnership                 when there is a significant modification,                (ii) Result. Under paragraph (c)(1) of this
                                                distributes an amount of money or                       within the meaning of § 1.1001–3(e), of               section, for purposes of section 956, the
                                                property to a partner that is related to                an obligation with respect to which it is             obligation of FPRS is treated as obligations of
                                                a controlled foreign corporation within                 a pledgor or guarantor.                               its partners (USP, FS, and U.S.C.) in
                                                the meaning of section 954(d)(3) and                       (D) For purposes of paragraph                      proportion to each partner’s liquidation value
                                                whose obligation would be United                        (c)(3)(ii) of this section, liquid assets             percentage. Because USP, a partner in FPRS,
                                                States property if held (or if treated as               means cash or cash equivalents,                       is related to FS within the meaning of section
                                                held) by the controlled foreign                         marketable securities within the                      954(d)(3), and because FS is a partner in
                                                corporation, and the foreign partnership                                                                      FPRS, the exception in paragraph (c)(2) of
                                                                                                        meaning of section 453(f)(2), or an                   this section does not apply. Based on their
                                                would not have made the distribution                    obligation owed by a related person                   liquidation value percentages, USP’s share of
                                                but for a funding of the partnership                    (within the meaning of section                        the FPRS obligation is $60x, and U.S.C.’s
                                                through an obligation held (or treated as               954(d)(3)).                                           share of the FPRS obligation is $10x. For
                                                held) by a controlled foreign                              (4) Examples. The following examples               purposes of section 956, $60x of the FPRS
                                                corporation, notwithstanding § 1.956–                   illustrate the rules of this paragraph (c):           obligation is treated as an obligation of USP,
                                                1(e), the partner’s share of the                           Example 1. (i) Facts. USP, a domestic              and $10x of the FPRS obligation is treated as
                                                partnership obligation is the greater of—               corporation, wholly owns FS, a controlled             an obligation of U.S.C. Under § 1.956–2(c)(1),
                                                   (A) The partner’s share of the                       foreign corporation, and owns an interest in          FS is treated as holding the obligations of
                                                partnership obligation as determined                    FPRS, a foreign partnership. At the close of          USP and U.S.C. that FS guaranteed. All of the
                                                under paragraph (c)(1) of this section;                 quarter 1 of year 1, the liquidation value            exceptions to the definition of United States
                                                and                                                     percentage, as determined under paragraph             property contained in section 956 and
                                                   (B) The lesser of the amount of the                  (b)(2)(i) of this section, for USP with respect       § 1.956–2 must be considered to determine
                                                                                                        to FPRS is 90%. X, a foreign person that is           whether the obligations of USP and U.S.C.
                                                distribution to the partner that would                                                                        that are treated as held by FS constitute
                                                not have been made but for the funding                  unrelated to USP or FS, owns the remaining
                                                                                                        interest in FPRS. FPRS borrows $100x from             United States property. Accordingly, the
                                                of the partnership and the amount of the                                                                      obligation of U.S.C. is not United States
                                                                                                        FS. FS’s basis in the FPRS obligation is
                                                obligation (as determined under                         $100x.                                                property under section 956(c)(2)(F) and
                                                § 1.956–1(e)).                                             (ii) Result. Under paragraph (c)(1) of this        § 1.956–2(b)(1)(viii). The obligation of USP,
                                                   (ii) Deemed treatment—(A) For                        section, for purposes of section 956, the             however, is United States property within the
                                                purposes of applying paragraph (c)(3)(i)                obligation of FPRS is treated as obligations of       meaning of section 956(c). Therefore, on the
                                                of this section, in the case of a                       its partners (USP and X) in proportion to             date the guarantee is made, FS is treated as
                                                distribution of liquid assets by a foreign              each partner’s liquidation value percentage           holding United States property of $60x.
                                                partnership to a partner, the foreign                   with respect to FPRS. Because USP, a partner             Example 4. (i) Facts. USP, a domestic
                                                                                                        in FPRS, is related to FS within the meaning          corporation, wholly owns FS, a controlled
                                                partnership is treated as if it would not
                                                                                                        of section 954(d)(3), the exception in                foreign corporation. USP owns an interest in
                                                have made the distribution of liquid                                                                          FPRS, a foreign partnership; its liquidation
                                                                                                        paragraph (c)(2) of this section does not
                                                assets to the partner but for the funding                                                                     value percentage with respect to FPRS is
                                                                                                        apply. Based on its liquidation value
                                                of the partnership through an obligation                percentage, USP’s share of the FPRS                   70%. A domestic corporation that is
                                                or obligations held (or treated as held)                obligation is $90x. Accordingly, for purposes         unrelated to USP and FS owns the remaining
                                                by the controlled foreign corporation to                of section 956, $90x of the FPRS obligation           interest in FPRS; its liquidation value
                                                the extent the foreign partnership does                 held by FS is treated as an obligation of USP         percentage is 30%. FPRS borrows $100x from
                                                not have sufficient liquid assets to make               and is United States property within the              FS and makes a distribution of $80x to USP.
                                                the distribution immediately prior to the               meaning of section 956(c). Therefore, on the          FPRS would not have made the distribution
                                                                                                        date the loan is made, FS is treated as               to USP but for the funding of FPRS by FS.
                                                distribution, without taking into
                                                                                                        holding United States property of $90x.                  (ii) Result. Because USP, a partner in FPRS,
                                                account the obligation or obligations.                                                                        is related to FS within the meaning of section
                                                                                                           Example 2. (i) Facts. The facts are the
                                                   (B) If the controlled foreign                        same as in Example 1 of this paragraph (c)(4),        954(d)(3), the exception in paragraph (c)(2) of
                                                corporation holds (or is treated as                     except that USP owns 40% of the stock of FS           this section does not apply. Moreover, an
                                                holding) multiple obligations of the                    and is not a related person (as defined in            obligation of USP held by FS would be
                                                foreign partnership, paragraph                          section 954(d)(3)) with respect to FS. Y, a           United States property. USP’s share of the
                                                (c)(3)(ii)(A) of this section applies to the            United States person that is unrelated to USP         FPRS obligation as determined under
                                                obligations in reverse chronological                    or X, owns the remaining 60% of the stock             paragraph (c)(1) of this section in accordance
                                                order starting with the obligation that                 of FS.                                                with USP’s liquidation value percentage is
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                                                was acquired (or the obligation with                       (ii) Result. Because neither FS nor any            $70x. Under paragraph (c)(3) of this section,
                                                                                                        person related to FS within the meaning of            USP’s share of the FPRS obligation is the
                                                respect to which a pledge or guarantee
                                                                                                        section 954(d)(3) is a partner in FPRS, the           greater of (i) USP’s attributable share of the
                                                was entered into) closest in time to the                exception in paragraph (c)(2) of this section         obligation, $70x, or (ii) the lesser of the
                                                distribution. Paragraph (c)(3)(ii)(A) of                applies to treat the FPRS obligation as an            amount of the distribution, $80x, or the
                                                this section applies to an obligation only              obligation of a foreign partnership and not an        amount of the obligation, $100x. For
                                                to the extent that the full amount of the               obligation of a United States person.                 purposes of section 956, therefore, $80x of
                                                distribution is not otherwise treated,                  Therefore, paragraph (c)(1) of this section           the FPRS obligation is treated as an



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                                                76512            Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 213 / Thursday, November 3, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                obligation of USP and is United States                  shareholders in which or with which                   DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND
                                                property within the meaning of section                  such taxable years end, with respect to               SECURITY
                                                956(c). Thus, on the date the loan is made,
                                                                                                        obligations acquired, or pledges or
                                                FS is treated as holding United States                                                                        Coast Guard
                                                property of $80x.                                       guarantees entered into, on or after
                                                                                                        September 1, 2015, and distributions
                                                   (d) Limitation on a partner’s indirect                                                                     33 CFR Part 117
                                                                                                        made on or after November 3, 2016. For
                                                pledge or guarantee. For purposes of
                                                                                                        purposes of this paragraph (f)(2), a                  [Docket No. USCG–2016–0966]
                                                section 956 and § 1.956–2(c), a
                                                controlled foreign corporation that is a                significant modification, within the
                                                                                                        meaning of § 1.1001–3(e), of an                       Drawbridge Operation Regulation;
                                                partner in a partnership is not                                                                               Harlem River, New York City, NY
                                                considered a pledgor or guarantor of the                obligation on or after September 1, 2015
                                                portion of an obligation of the                         constitutes an acquisition of the                     AGENCY: Coast Guard, DHS.
                                                partnership attributed to its partners                  obligation on or after that date.                     ACTION:Notice of deviation from
                                                that are United States persons under                    Furthermore, for purposes of this                     drawbridge regulation.
                                                paragraph (c) of this section solely as a               paragraph (f)(2), a pledgor or guarantor
                                                result of the attribution of a portion of               is treated as entering into a pledge or               SUMMARY:    The Coast Guard has issued a
                                                the partnership’s assets to the controlled              guarantee when there is a significant                 temporary deviation from the operating
                                                foreign corporation under paragraph (b)                 modification, within the meaning of                   schedule that governs the Spuyten
                                                of this section.                                        § 1.1001–3(e), of an obligation with                  Duyvil Bridge across the Harlem River,
                                                   (e) Obligations of a domestic                        respect to which it is a pledgor or                   mile 7.9, New York City, New York.
                                                partnership. For purposes of section                    guarantor on or after September 1, 2015.              This deviation is necessary to allow the
                                                956, an obligation of a domestic                        See § 1.956–1T(b)(5), as contained in 26              bridge owner to perform a test of the
                                                partnership is an obligation of a United                CFR part 1 revised as of April 1, 2016,               submarine cables at the bridge.
                                                States person. See section 956(c)(2)(L)                 for rules applicable to taxable years of              DATES: This deviation is effective from
                                                for an exception from the treatment of                  controlled foreign corporations ending                10 p.m. on December 9, 2016 to 7 a.m.
                                                such an obligation as United States                                                                           on December 11, 2016.
                                                                                                        on or after September 1, 2015, and
                                                property.
                                                                                                        before November 3, 2016, and to taxable               ADDRESSES: The docket for this
                                                   (f) Effective/applicability dates. (1)
                                                Paragraph (b) of this section applies to                years of United States shareholders in                deviation, [USCG–2016–0966] is
                                                taxable years of controlled foreign                     which or with which such taxable years                available at http://www.regulations.gov.
                                                corporations ending on or after                         end, in the case of distributions made                Type the docket number in the
                                                November 3, 2016, and taxable years of                  on or after September 1, 2015.                        ‘‘SEARCH’’ box and click ‘‘SEARCH’’.
                                                United States shareholders in which or                                                                        Click on Open Docket Folder on the line
                                                                                                           (3) Paragraph (d) of this section
                                                with which such taxable years end, with                                                                       associated with this deviation.
                                                                                                        applies to taxable years of controlled
                                                respect to property acquired on or after                                                                      FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: If
                                                                                                        foreign corporations ending on or after
                                                November 3, 2016. For purposes of this                                                                        you have questions on this temporary
                                                                                                        November 3, 2016, and taxable years of
                                                paragraph (f)(1), a deemed exchange of                                                                        deviation, call or email Judy Leung-Yee,
                                                                                                        United States shareholders in which or
                                                property pursuant to section 1001 on or                                                                       Project Officer, First Coast Guard
                                                                                                        with which such taxable years end, with               District, telephone (212) 514–4330,
                                                after November 3, 2016, constitutes an
                                                                                                        respect to pledges or guarantees entered              email judy.k.leung-yee@uscg.mil.
                                                acquisition of the property on or after
                                                                                                        into on or after September 1, 2015. For
                                                that date. See § 1.956–2(a)(3), as                                                                            SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
                                                                                                        purposes of this paragraph (f)(3), a
                                                contained in 26 CFR part 1 revised as of                                                                      Spuyten Duyvil Bridge, mile 7.9, across
                                                April 1, 2016, for the rules applicable to              pledgor or guarantor is treated as                    the Harlem River, has a vertical
                                                taxable years of a controlled foreign                   entering into a pledge or guarantee                   clearance in the closed position of 5 feet
                                                corporation beginning on or after July                  when there is a significant modification,             at mean high water and 9 feet at mean
                                                23, 2002, and ending before November                    within the meaning of § 1.1001–3(e), of               low water. The existing bridge operating
                                                3, 2016, and with respect to property                   an obligation with respect to which it is             regulations are found at 33 CFR
                                                acquired before November 3, 2016, to                    a pledgor or guarantor on or after                    117.789(d).
                                                taxable years of a controlled foreign                   September 1, 2015.                                       The waterway is transited by
                                                corporation beginning on or after July                     (4) Paragraph (e) of this section                  commercial vessels.
                                                23, 2002.                                               applies to taxable years of controlled                   The bridge owner, National Railroad
                                                   (2) Except as otherwise provided in                  foreign corporations ending on or after               Passenger Corporation (Amtrak),
                                                this paragraph (f)(2), paragraph (c) of                 November 3, 2016, and to taxable years                requested a temporary deviation from
                                                this section applies to taxable years of                of United States shareholders in which                the normal operating schedule to
                                                controlled foreign corporations ending                  or with which such taxable years end,                 perform a test of the submarine cables
                                                on or after November 3, 2016, and                                                                             at the bridge.
                                                                                                        with respect to obligations held on or
                                                taxable years of United States                                                                                   Under this temporary deviation, the
                                                                                                        after November 3, 2016.
                                                shareholders in which or with which                                                                           Spuyten Duyvil Bridge shall remain in
                                                such taxable years end, with respect to                 John Dalrymple,                                       the closed position from 10 p.m. on
                                                obligations acquired, or pledges or                     Deputy Commissioner for Services and                  December 9, 2016 to 7 a.m. on December
                                                guarantees entered into, on or after                    Enforcement.                                          11, 2016.
                                                September 1, 2015, and, for purposes of                   Approved: October 17, 2016.                            Vessels able to pass under the bridge
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                                                paragraph (c)(3) of this section, in the                                                                      in the closed position may do so at any
                                                                                                        Mark J. Mazur,
                                                case of distributions made on or after                                                                        time. The bridge will be able to open for
                                                September 1, 2015. Paragraph (c)(3)(ii)                 Assistant Secretary of the Treasury (Tax              emergencies and there is an alternate
                                                of this section applies to taxable years                Policy).                                              route for vessels to pass.
                                                of controlled foreign corporations                      [FR Doc. 2016–26425 Filed 11–2–16; 8:45 am]              The Coast Guard will inform the users
                                                ending on or after November 3, 2016,                    BILLING CODE 4830–01–P                                of the waterways through our Local and
                                                and taxable years of United States                                                                            Broadcast Notices to Mariners of the


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Document Created: 2016-11-03 03:24:15
Document Modified: 2016-11-03 03:24:15
CategoryRegulatory Information
CollectionFederal Register
sudoc ClassAE 2.7:
GS 4.107:
AE 2.106:
PublisherOffice of the Federal Register, National Archives and Records Administration
SectionRules and Regulations
ActionFinal regulations and removal of temporary regulations.
ContactRose E. Jenkins, (202) 317-6934 (not a toll-free number).
FR Citation81 FR 76497 
RIN Number1545-BJ48
CFR AssociatedIncome Taxes and Reporting and Recordkeeping Requirements

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