1 / 61

Managing the Crisis: Brazilian and US Cross-Border Tax Considerations March 25, 2009

Managing the Crisis: Brazilian and US Cross-Border Tax Considerations March 25, 2009. Julio A. de Castro D ewey & LeBoeuf LLP. Luiz Felipe Ferraz D emarest & Almeida Advogados. Lavinia Junqueira Unibanco. Topics to be Covered.

enan
Download Presentation

Managing the Crisis: Brazilian and US Cross-Border Tax Considerations March 25, 2009

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Managing the Crisis: Brazilian and US Cross-Border Tax Considerations March 25, 2009 Julio A. de Castro Dewey & LeBoeuf LLP Luiz Felipe Ferraz Demarest & Almeida Advogados Lavinia Junqueira Unibanco

  2. Topics to be Covered • Overview of cross-border tax issues faced by Brazilian and US companies as a result of the financial crisis • Tax challenges and opportunities • Recognition and acceleration of losses • Acquisitions of loss companies • Debt workouts, acquisition by funds of distressed debt • Cash repatriations to provide liquidity in home jurisdictions • Transfer pricing issues • Brazil-US tax treaty • Q&As

  3. Certain Types of Losses From Economic Downturn • Actual disposition of stock or debt at a loss • Market example • Sales of mortgage-backed securities (MBS) or loans at steep discounts • Write-downs and write-offs of stock and debt assets • Market example • Banks’ write-downs of MBS • Trading (“hedging”) losses • Market example • Foreign exchange derivative losses

  4. Reactions by Tax Authorities to Crisis • Brazil • Deferral of payment deadline for certain federal taxes • New installment tax payment program for delinquent companies • IPI tax exemption/reduction in acquisition of new vehicles • Creation of intermediary income tax rates for individuals (7.5% and 22.5%) • Six-month suspension of requirement to present good standing certificates (CND/FGTS) in loans granted by public banks • Postponement to Dec 2010 of the application of PIS/COFINS cumulative system for the real estate sector • Suspension of IPI, PIS/COFINS levy in the acquisition or importation of goods for manufacturing of goods that will be exported • Creation of subvention (interest rate equalization and compliance bonus on interest) in financing transactions • IOF tax reduction in transactions with individuals and nonresident investors • IRPJ/CSLL offsetting restrictions

  5. Reactions by Tax Authorities to Crisis • United States: Fairly active response • Rev. Proc. 2008-51 (AHYDO relief) • Notice 2008-78 (capital contribution to loss corporation) • Notice 2008-83 (built-in losses of acquired banks) • Rev. Proc. 2008-63 (securities borrower default) • Notice 2008-91 (certain short-term cash repatriations from CFCs) • 2009 Stimulus Bill • Election to defer cancellation of debt income (CODI) • Suspension of applicable high-yield debt (AHYDO) rules • Extension of carryback period for small businesses

  6. Claim and Acceleration of Offshore Tax Losses Scenario 1: Losses from Sale of Loss Subsidiary Shares 1A 1B USCo Brazilian Co $ < tax basis $ < tax basis ≥80% ≥80% Shares Shares Brazilian Co Buyer Buyer USCo Assets Assets

  7. Claim and Acceleration of Offshore Tax Losses Scenario 1: Losses from Sale of Loss Subsidiary Shares • US Tax Treatment of Scenario 1A: • Capital loss allowable in the US cannot offset ordinary income of the corporation • Loss generally from US sources for foreign tax credit purposes • What if Brazilian Co had elected disregarded entity or partnership status? • Brazilian Tax Treatment of Scenario 1B: • Loss in the sale of a foreign subsidiary is not tax deductible. The alternative is to concentrate outbound investments in one sole foreign holding company and have the holding dispose of assets and investments

  8. Claim and Acceleration of Offshore Tax Losses Scenario 2: Losses on Sale of Loss Subsidiary Assets 2A 2B USCo Brazilian Co ≥80% ≥80% $ < tax basis $ < tax basis Brazilian Co Buyer USCo Buyer Assets Assets Assets Assets

  9. Claim and Acceleration of Offshore Tax Losses Scenario 2: Losses from Sale of Loss Subsidiary Assets • US Tax Treatment of Scenario 2A: • Loss derived by Brazilian Co not allowed as a deduction in the United States • If sale at gain, in some circumstances gain could be taxable currently in the US under subpart F/CFC regime (e.g., shares of subsidiaries). Disconnect between treatment of gain and loss • Loss would decrease earnings and profits of Brazilian Co, potentially decreasing future US tax on profits of foreign subsidiary under the subpart F/CFC regime • Alternative planning: electing to treat Brazilian Co as disregarded immediately prior to sale of assets. In that case, loss from sale of asset could be claimed in the US • Hurdles: inbound liquidation basis adjustment rules and “dual consolidated regime”

  10. Claim and Acceleration of Offshore Tax Losses Scenario 2: Losses from Sale of Loss Subsidiary Assets • Brazilian Tax Treatment of Scenario 2B: • Loss derived by US Co not allowed as a deduction in the United States • If US company has an accounting loss in the current year, this loss may be carried forward to offset future accounting income of US company • If sale at a gain, profit would be taxable currently in Brazil under the Brazilian CFC rules

  11. Claim and Acceleration of Offshore Tax Losses Scenario 3: Impairment (Financial Accounting) Losses 3A 3B USCo Brazilian Co Financial Accounting Mark-down, Brazilian Co not insolvent Financial Accounting Mark-down ≥80% ≥80% Brazilian Co USCo Assets Assets

  12. Claim and Acceleration of Offshore Tax Losses Scenario 3: Impairment Losses • US Tax Treatment of Scenario 3A: • No loss allowed for US tax purposes • Planning technique: accelerate tax loss for impaired stock through a so-called Granite Trust structure, under which Brazilian Co is disaffiliated from US group and liquidated into US Co and a related foreign affiliate • Brazilian Tax Treatment of Scenario 3B: • Impairment loss not deductible in Brazil • Planning technique: interposing a foreign holding company so that the markdown becomes an accounting loss of the foreign holding company, thereby offsetting other accounting income of such company in the computation of worldwide income taxable basis

  13. Claim and Acceleration of Offshore Tax Losses Scenario 4: Trading Losses 4A 4B Brazilian Co USCo Position (e.g., USD) with significant loss Position (e.g., BRL) with significant loss Financial Markets Financial Markets

  14. Claim and Acceleration of Offshore Tax Losses Scenario 4: Trading Losses • US Tax Treatment of Scenario 4A: • Loss can be generally claimed upon termination of the position or earlier if mark-to-market regime applies • Subject to certain rules dealing with “straddles” (where there is another inverse position outstanding) • Consider reportable transaction rules • Mark-to-market complicated by valuation issues in the current market • Character of non-mark-to-market loss generally capital

  15. Claim and Acceleration of Offshore Tax Losses Brazilian Tax Treatment of Scenario 4B: Losses incurred directly by Brazilian companies in financial investments overseas are generally not tax deductible unless: in the case of a hedging derivative entered in a foreign futures exchange market the loss is incurred in a variable income transaction (shares, gold, futures, forward, options, swap) and is offset with a variable income gain obtained in the same country/market and within the same year Planning Technique: invest in foreign markets through a foreign subsidiary or a Brazilian proprietary investment fund that invests in offshore funds (among other investments in Brazil) Scenario 4: Trading Losses 15

  16. Claim and Acceleration of Offshore Tax Losses Scenario 5: Worthless Investments 5A 5B USCo Brazilian Co ≥80% ≥80% Worthless Security/Stock Worthless Security/Stock Brazilian Co USCo Worthless Stock Worthless Security/Stock Brazilian S

  17. Worthless Securities – Brazilian Tax Considerations • Brazilian Tax Treatment of Scenario 5B • Accounting losses may be offset with income of the US company, in the case of investments made by this company • Generally, losses in investments held directly by the Brazilian company are not tax deductible

  18. Worthless Securities – US Tax Considerations • Section 165(g)(3) permits ordinary loss for stock of active affiliates • Affiliates need to be in an operating business per legislative history • Subsidiary is “affiliated” with the taxpayer if three tests are satisfied: • Ownership test: direct ownership of at least 80% of the total voting power and value of the subsidiary • Gross receipts test: more than 90% of the aggregate gross receipts of the subsidiary for all years must be from sources other than passive (royalties, rents, dividends, interest, etc.) • Taxpayer must be a domestic corporation • Anti-abuse Rule: stock of the subsidiary cannot be acquired “solely” for purpose of obtaining loss • Source: loss is sourced for foreign tax credit purposes based on the residence of the parent entity. So loss is generally US source • Parent allowed worthless security deduction when election made to change the tax classification of subsidiary from corporation to disregarded entity and fair market value of the subsidiary’s assets does not exceed liabilities • Problem with gross receipt test for tiered structures. Worthless holding subsidiaries may not qualify

  19. Claim and Acceleration of Offshore Tax Losses Incurred by US and Brazilian Companies – Scenarios Scenario 6: Investments in Brazil by US Disregarded entities Cayman Fund Delaware LLC Portfolio Security/Stock Brazilian Co

  20. New Brazilian Tax Haven Rules – US a Tax Haven? • “Privileged tax regime” is a tax system that: • Does not tax income or taxes income at rates lower than 20% • Does not tax income earned abroad or taxes such income at rates lower than 20% • Grants tax benefits to nonresident parties: • With no requirement of substantial economic activity in the tested jurisdiction • Bound to the non-performance of substantial economic activity therein • Does not allow access to information re: corporate interest, ownership of goods or rights, or to the economic transactions performed • New rule specifically applies for transfer pricing purposes. Presumption that payor and payee are commonly controlled. Remittances other than for importation, exportation or payment of interest should not be included • Risk that US LLCs could be treated as formed in privileged tax regime because (unless elected otherwise), they are not subject to tax on a stand-alone basis • In principle, not applicable to investments in financial markets

  21. Acquisition of Companies with Net Operating or Built-in Losses • Brazilian Rules: • Income tax code allows the use of NOLs by companies after the corporate interest is changed • Exception: cumulative change of corporate interest and corporate purpose, case in which NOLs should be written off • Mergers: merged companies must write off NOLs

  22. Acquisition of Companies with Net Operating or Built-in Losses – US Rules • Section 382 limits use of net operating losses (NOLs), built-in losses and built-in deductions following an “ownership change” • Ownership change: more than 50% increase in shareholder ownership of loss corporation during three-year “testing” period • If loss corporation has net unrealized built-in loss that exceeds a threshold amount, built-in losses and built-in deductions generally will be subject to limitation • NOLs, built-in losses and built-in deductions may offset taxable income in amount equal to the fair market value of the loss corporation’s stock multiplied by the long-term tax-exempt interest rate • What is fair market value these days?

  23. Acquisition Losses/“Net Unrealized Built-in Losses” –US Rules • Notice 2008-83: any deduction allowed after an ownership change (as defined in Section 382(g)) to a bank with respect to losses on loans or bad debts shall not be treated as built-in loss or deduction attributable to periods before the change date • Stimulus Bill repealed Notice 2008-83 prospectively for any ownership change occurring after January 16, 2009 • Notice 2008-83 still applicable with respect to ownership change after January 16, 2009, if change is pursuant to written binding contract or publicly disclosed agreement entered into on or before such date

  24. Acquisition Losses/“Net Unrealized Built-in Losses”US Rules • Notice 2009-14: acquisitions pursuant to various programs established under the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008 • Instruments denominated debt will be treated as debt and preferred stock will not be taken into account in determining if an ownership change has occurred. Generally determination of debt vs. equity based on specific facts • Warrants bought by Treasury will be treated as options (and not stock). Not deemed exercised 24

  25. Acquisition Losses/Capital Contributions to an Old Loss Corporation • Section 382(l)(1): • For purposes of determining value of stock of loss corporation for purposes of computing limitations, capital contributions are part of a plan a principal purpose of which is to avoid or increase any limitation not taken into account • Any capital contribution made during the two-year period ending on the change date shall, except as provided in regulations, be treated as part of a tax avoidance plan • No regulations dealing with these matters have been issued to date

  26. Acquisition Losses/Capital Contributions to an Old Loss Corporation • Notice 2008-78 (September 26, 2008): regulations under Section 382(l)(1) will be issued as described in the notice. The notice also provides that, pending the issuance of further guidance, taxpayers may rely on the rules set forth in the notice. • Notice 2008-78 sets forth the following: • capital contributions not presumed to be part of tax avoidance plan solely as a result of having been made during the two-year period ending on the change date • capital contributions received by an old loss corporation shall be taken into account (and will not reduce the value of the old loss corporation) unless the contribution is part of a tax avoidance plan • whether a capital contribution is part of a tax avoidance plan is determined based on facts and circumstances, unless (i) the contribution is described in one of the four safe harbors or (ii) Section 382(l)(1) does not apply to the contribution pursuant to Treas. Reg. § 1.382-9(k)

  27. Debt Workouts/CODI • Renegotiations of debt instruments • Stock-for-debt exchange • Property-for-debt exchange • Debt-for-debt exchange • Repurchases by issuers or affiliated companies at discount • Consequences to issuers and holders

  28. Debt Workouts – Brazilian Tax Considerations • Consequences to the issuer: • If the issuer pays or purchases its own debt at a discount, the discount becomes a taxable gain (income tax and social contribution) • Alternatives: • To postpone taxation: punctuality discount (uncertain ex nunc condition clause); negotiation of a present value discount without formally reducing the amount of nominal accrued interest and principal • Shareholder purchases and capitalizes debt • In case of securities or debt that may have a secondary market either now or in the future, use of a financial structure facility to intermediate purchase and holding of the security

  29. Debt Workouts – Brazilian Tax Considerations • Consequences to Holder: loss on sale of securities or renegotiation of debt at a discount is deductible if: • loss is incurred in Brazil and debt was originally issued and acquired in Brazil (losses in outbound investments are generally not tax deductible) • loss is classified as an ordinary and operational expense, necessary in holder’s due course of business. In general: if the debt is sold/renegotiated at its fair or market value, to prevent further losses of the holder; if the debt/security is linked to the holders operational activity; if the transaction is a true sale • Tax authorities regularly assess these types of losses. Alternatives that allow to postpone issuers gain and holders loss may reduce holders exposure • If renegotiation triggers indeed a current accounting/tax loss, it is advisable to homologate the renegotiation agreement in the due course of a judicial execution procedure or judicial debt restructuring arrangement (for Law 9,430-96 purposes) 29

  30. Debt Workouts – Brazilian Tax Considerations • General rule for the deduction of losses in defaulted credits (rather than losses in renegotiation or sale of credits), according to Law 9,430/96 • For secured credits of any amount: after two years of default, as long as judicial action has been initiated and maintained for the recovery of the loan and arrest of the guarantees • For unsecured credits: Deduction as expenses is allowed for credits: [a] after six months of default, for credit amount up to R$ 5,000; [b] after one year of default, for credit amounts higher than R$ 5,000 lower than R$ 30,000, provided there is evidence of collection procedures; and [c] after two years of default, amounts higher than R$ 30,000, as long as judicial collection or execution procedures have been initiated • Alternative: Securitization or sale of credits (private sale, SPE, FIDC). Renegotiations may also fall aside of this rule (assessment risk) 30

  31. Debt Workouts/CODI – US Tax ConsiderationsDeemed debt-for-debt exchanges Reg. 1001-3: Significant modifications include: Change in yield (greater than 5% or 25 basis points) Change in timing or amount of payment (material deferral of payment, subject to safe harbor) Change in obligor or collateral (subject to certain exceptions for reorganizations) Change from non-recourse to recourse (and vice versa) 31

  32. Debt Workouts/CODI – US Tax Considerations • Issuer recognizes CODI upon repurchase of a debt instrument for an amount less than its adjusted issue price • Exception for taxpayers that have filed for bankruptcy or are insolvent • These taxpayers are required to reduce certain tax attributes, including NOLs, by the amount of the CODI (or a portion thereof, as applicable, in the case of insolvency) • If debtor issues a debt instrument in satisfaction of indebtedness, the debtor is treated as having satisfied the indebtedness with an amount of money equal to the issue price of the debt instrument • Potential for unanticipated cancellation of debt income • Debt vs. Equity concerns

  33. Debt Workouts/CODI – US Tax Considerations • OID: difference between issue price of a debt instrument and its stated redemption price at maturity • Issue price is important to determine the amount of OID, CODI (if an outstanding debt is satisfied with a new debt), and gain or loss if property is exchanged for a debt instrument • In the case of public offering, issue price generally is the initial offering price to the public • In the case of a private placement for cash, the issue price is the price paid by the first buyer • In the case of a debt instrument issued for property and which is either traded on an established securities market, or issued for property traded on an established securities market, the issue price is the fair market value of the property

  34. Debt Workouts/CODI – US Tax Considerations • Excess of the issue price and unpaid stated interest of the debt instrument over its purchase price generally treated as CODI for the issuer • but also creates OID, deductible over the remaining term of the instrument (timing mismatch) • Interest deduction can be deferred until paid or even permanently disallowed in part if debt instrument is an AHYDO, i.e., provides for: • a maturity date in excess of five years, • a yield to maturity equal to or in excess of the sum of the AFR + 5%, and • “significant OID”

  35. US Tax Considerations – Relief in US Stimulus Bill • CODI resulting from certain debt repurchase after December 31, 2008, and before January 1, 2011, can be deferred. CODI can be included rateably over the following five taxable years: • For debt-for-debt exchanges (or deemed exchanges), any OID deduction with respect to the newly issued debt instrument not in excess of the deferred CODI also deferred • If new debt instrument is issued and proceeds used by the issuer to repurchase pre-existing debt instrument, new debt instrument treated as issued in satisfaction of the repurchased debt instrument • OID deductions deferred under same rules • General exception for insolvent or bankrupt debtors does not apply if taxpayer elects to defer tax due on CODI • AHYDO rules are suspended for debt instrument issued between September 1, 2008, and December 31, 2009, in exchange (or deemed exchange) for a pre-existing obligation which is not itself an AHYDO • However, suspension does not apply to certain contingent debt obligations and to any obligation issued to a related person

  36. US Tax Considerations – Administrative Relief • Rev. Proc. 2008-51: IRS will not treat the following debt instruments as AHYDOs: • Debt instrument issued for money pursuant to financing commitment if it would not be an AHYDO if issue price were net cash proceeds actually received by issuer • Debt instrument exchanged/indirectly exchanged for debt instrument issued pursuant to a financing commitment if: • debt instrument issued within 15 months of issuance of old debt instrument, • debt instrument would not be an AHYDO if issue price were net cash proceeds actually received by issuer, • If debt instrument issued on or after August 8, 2008: • maturity date not more than one year later than the maturity date of the old maturity date • stated redemption price not greater than the stated redemption price of the old instrument

  37. Case Study 1 • Issuer defaults on a $1 billion note and wants to cure the default • Lenders agree to waive the relevant covenant subject to an increase in interest rate • Note is worth $700 million • Issuer treated as satisfying the old note with a new note with an issue price of $700 million • Debtor realizes $300 million of CODI • Lenders realize $300 million of loss • New note has $300 million of OID and could be an AHYDO

  38. Foreign Funds Investing in Distressed Debt • ManCo investment advisor for Hedge Fund only • ManCo can bind HF • ManCo operates exclusively in either US or BR • ManCo receives investment advisory fees • Hedge Fund (through ManCo) either: • originates loans in the US/BR; • buys US/BR debt in secondary market; • buys US/BR loans in anticipation of renegotiating them, or • Forecloses on underlying collateral (e.g., real estate). ManCo Investors Hedge Fund Tax Haven Jurisdiction Delaware LLC Distressed Loans US Distressed Loans BR 38

  39. Foreign Funds Investing in Distressed Debt – Brazilian Tax Considerations • If an investment fund acquires distressed debt of a Brazilian company, the following issues should be addressed: • Fair sale/purchase value (evaluation of credit portfolio x fund MTM) • True sale verification • Due diligence of credit portfolio: credit exists and is definable • Succession of credit rights: silent or formal assignment? Replacement of creditor in judicial suits (x moral or financial hazard demands linked to collection procedures)? • For purchaser: holding structure for the portfolio x WHT levy (FIDC is advisable) • For seller: sale will trigger a net operating loss carry-forward? (should be avoided)

  40. Foreign Funds Investing in Distressed Debt – US Tax Considerations • Non-resident individual or corporation engaged in business in the US is taxable on income effectively connected with that trade or business • Foreign person considered engaged in a US business if it: • Makes personal, mortgage or other loans to the public • Buys, sells for the public notes, drafts, checks etc. • Loan origination: how many does it take to create trade or business? • Secondary purchases: level of involvement in connection with original loan? • Renegotiations?

  41. IRS Office of Chief Counsel studying issues surrounding foreign funds investing in US distressed debt If fund buying distressed debt engages in purchase of debt with a view towards restructuring the issuer and selling quickly, it will likely be viewed as engaging in a trade or business in the United States Consequence: net basis taxation in the US If hedge fund makes passive investments, buying distressed debt and helping manage the company with a view toward making a capital gain on the sale of stock, it may not be viewed as engaging in a trade or business in the United States No net basis taxation Foreign Funds Investing in Distressed Debt – US Tax Considerations 41

  42. Cash Repatriations – Sample Scenario Parent company needs liquidity Income of Brazilian Co not subpart F USCo Brazilian Co IOF tax (0.38% flat + up to 1.5% for the first year) Interest is tax deductible (34%) and taxable at source (15% WHT). ≥80% ≥80% Loan Loan Foreign Co USCo Assets Assets Alternative: investment in offshore financial markets and extension of loan within financial markets.

  43. Cash Repatriations – Brazilian Tax Considerations • No capital gain tax up to capital amount invested in foreign currency • Accumulated losses • Tax incentive reserves • Dividends: exempt of withholding tax • Payment of Interest on Equity: 15% of income withholding income tax. Deductible up to 50% of the profit reserves or 50% of the year profit (the highest) • Interest: subject to 15% withholding tax (or 25% if to a low tax jurisdiction) • Thin capitalization rules • Transfer pricing limitation

  44. Services/Royalties – Brazilian Tax Considerations • Payment of: • Services (import): High taxation - 15% of withholding income tax, 9.25% of PIS/COFINS social contributions, 5% of ISS (tax on services); 10% of CIDE • Royalties: 15% of withholding income tax, 10% of CIDE in certain cases. Deduction of the expenses. Conditions: certificate approval from the Central Bank of Brazil and the National Institute of Industrial Property 44

  45. Cash Repatriations – US Tax Considerations • Undistributed income and losses of Brazilian Co not included in USCo’s taxable income subject to (i) entity classification considerations, and (ii) US anti-deferral regimes generally applicable to “passive” income under subpart F • Operation of Subpart F • Subpart F rules require “US Shareholders” of a controlled foreign corporation (or CFC) to include their pro rata share of the CFC’s Subpart F income in their own taxable income, whether or not the CFC has made actual distributions • Controlled Foreign Corporation • A CFC is a foreign corporation that is more than 50 percent (measured by vote or value) owned by US Shareholders • Foreign Co is a CFC • US Shareholder • A US Shareholder is a US person who owns 10 percent or more of the total combined voting power of all classes of stock of the CFC. • Ownership may be direct or indirect, or by attribution from certain related parties • USCo is a US Shareholder

  46. Cash Repatriations – US Tax Considerations • If a CFC invests its earnings and profits in certain “US property,” the US Shareholders of the CFC may be taxable on the amount of such investment • Earnings and profits of a CFC that have been previously taxed as Subpart F income that are invested in US property are generally not subject to this tax • A loan made by a CFC to a US Shareholder or certain related parties is generally treated as an investment in US property

  47. Cash Repatriations – US Tax Considerations • Notice 2008-91: parent companies of CFCs can receive certain 60-day term loans without these loans being treated as “obligations” of US persons • Previously, Notice 88-108 permitted 30-day term loans • The purpose of the Notice, the IRS stated, was “[t]o facilitate liquidity in the near term” • Notice 2008-91 only covers loans made during the 2008 and 2009 tax years • Limit on the aggregate time a corporation can have an outstanding loan: 180 days/year • Therefore, USCo can take as many 60-day loans from Foreign Co over nearly half a year • No restrictions on how the loans may be used

  48. Cash Repatriations – US Tax Considerations • On May 27, 2008, Treasury and IRS published Rev. Proc. 2008-26: • IRS won't question whether security is “readily marketable security” which is one exception to definition of “US property”, as long as security is of type that was readily marketable at any time within 3 years before 5/12/2008 • Safe harbor was considered necessary due to “current market conditions and liquidity constraints” which have created uncertainty as to marketability of previously marketable securities • Notice 2009-10 extends the application of Rev. Proc. 2008-26 to any day during calendar year 2009, for which it is relevant whether securities are readily marketable for purposes of section 956(c)(2)(J)

  49. Cash Repatriations – Brazilian Tax Considerations • Brazilian CFC regime – controlled and associated companies • Supreme Court yet to decide on associated companies • Taxation of profits on availability (accrual) • Compensation of losses in the same country • Foreign tax credit is allowable 49

  50. Brazilian Securitization Vehicles • Brazilian company holds credit portfolio directly: - Non deductibility of credit provisions. Postponement of credit loss deductibility (6 months to 2 years). Possible to empower control of deductibility (rather than in the case of sale and renegotiations) - Losses and recoveries accounted for in different tax periods may not be off settable (taxation of recoveries at a gain x freezing of losses, etc.) - Financial revenues not taxable by PIS/COFINS (non-financial companies, non-cumulative PIS/COFINS tax regime)

More Related