1 / 17

Private Equity Tax Practices 2009

Private Equity Tax Practices 2009. 11943836. Private Equity Tax Practices 2009. Ensuring Accurate Withholding And Regulatory Compliance with Your Inbound Foreign Investors June 17, 2009. Rom Watson Ropes & Gray LLP rom.watson@ropesgray.com (617) 951-7672.

pia
Download Presentation

Private Equity Tax Practices 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. Private Equity Tax Practices 2009 11943836

  2. Private Equity Tax Practices 2009 Ensuring Accurate Withholding And Regulatory Compliance with Your Inbound Foreign Investors June 17, 2009 Rom WatsonRopes & Gray LLProm.watson@ropesgray.com(617) 951-7672 Elaine B. MurphyRopes & Gray LLPelaine.murphy@ropesgray.com(617) 951-7568

  3. General Overview: U.S. Tax Rates for Inbound Foreign Investors • Withholding tax rates if no U.S. “permanent establishment” • Dividends: 30% (15% under most tax treaties) • Interest: Generally 0% (“portfolio interest” exemption) • Capital Gain: 0% for non-real estate investments

  4. General Overview: U.S. Tax Rates for Inbound Foreign Investors Cont’d. • U.S. rates on taxable business income • “Effectively Connected Income” (ECI) if no treaty • “Attributable to a PE” if treaty context • 35% corporate tax • 30% branch profits tax (or 5% under treaty) on earnings after corporate tax • Up to 54.5% combined U.S. tax rate for ECI/PE distributed profits • Potential state income taxation can follow

  5. General Overview: U.S. Tax Rates for Inbound Foreign Investors Cont’d. • U.S. has broad protection from ECI/PE status for investments or trading in “stocks and securities” by foreign persons. Note this type of safe harbor is not generally available in other countries. • Potential withholding by PE Fund equal to 35% of amount of ECI allocated to foreign investors • Triggers U.S. income tax return obligation • Foreign partner in a partnership with ECI must file, even if no tax liability • Withholding by PE Fund is credited as “advance payment” • Failure to file can result in penalties, including denial of deductions and credits

  6. Role of PE Fund Organized in The U.S. • U.S. PE Fund • Provides IRS Form W-9 for U.S. investments • Collects and diligences IRS Forms W-8 from foreign investors • Files U.S. partnership return and provides information returns (Schedules K-1) to foreign investors • Withholds from foreign investors’ share of FDAP (e.g. dividends) and files related reports (e.g., IRS Forms 1042 and 1042-S) • Withholds from foreign investors’ share of ECI investments, including sale or redemption of partnership interests and FIRPTA investments, and files related reports

  7. Role of PE Fund Organized outside The U.S. • Non-U.S. PE Fund • Provides IRS Form W-8IMY for U.S. investments • Non-Withholding Foreign Partnership • Approach to collection and provision of underlying tax forms and allocation information of non-U.S. investors • Fund generally is subject to full withholding tax on FDAP from U.S. investments, will not have U.S. tax return obligation, and may have U.S. reporting obligation to foreign investors • Fund generally is subject to 35% withholding on ECI investments, will have U.S. tax return obligations and U.S. reporting obligations to foreign investors

  8. Role of PE Fund Organized Outside The U.S. Cont’d. • Withholding Foreign Partnership • Approach to collection of underlying tax forms and allocation information of foreign investors • Fund generally is not subject to withholding tax on FDAP from U.S. investments, but generally will have U.S. reporting obligation • Agreement limited to FDAP withholding and does not cover ECI withholding • Agreement limited to certain categories of investors

  9. Legend Partnership for both U.S. and foreign tax purposes Corporation for both U.S. and foreign tax purposes Corporation for U.S. tax purposes, flow-through for foreign tax purposes Investors Ownership Flow of Forms Payment Withholding Tax to IRS

  10. Examples: Withholding on Dividend Foreign Investors Foreign Investors Foreign Investors AppropriateForm W-8 AppropriateForm W-8 AppropriateForm W-8 PEFund I U.S. PEFund IINon-U.S. PEFund IIINon-U.S. Form W-9 Form W-8IMY Form W-8IMY Possible depending on status Foreign Corp. Form W-8BEN U.S. Corp. IRS

  11. Examples: Withholding on Dividend Cont’d. • U.S. corp. pays a dividend to its 3 shareholders • PE Fund I provides Form W-9 to U.S. corp. PE Fund I collects appropriate Forms W-8 from its foreign investors. PE Fund I pays withholding tax in respect of share of dividends allocated to foreign investors • Foreign corp. provides Form W-8BEN to U.S. corp. U.S. corp. withholds 30% (subject to reduced treaty rate) from payment to Foreign corp. Foreign corp. distributes net amount to PE Fund II, which in turn distributes net amount to its foreign investors. • PE Fund III provides Form W-8IMY to U.S. corp. Result depends on if it is a withholding foreign partnership or non-withholding foreign partnership, and if the latter, the information it provides to U.S. corp.

  12. Examples: Direct Investment by Foreign Investors in PE Fund • 30% tax on FDAP income, e.g. dividends, except as reduced by an applicable income tax treaty • 35% federal tax on share of ECI investments • Withholding on share of ECI may result in overpayment of tax (need to claim refunds) • Corporate foreign investors may be subject to additional branch profits tax (unless reduced by treaty) • Foreign investors required to file federal (and possible state) tax returns Foreign Investors PE Fund AppropriateForm W-8 Non-ECI and ECI Investments

  13. Examples: PE Fund with U.S. Corporate Feeder • 35% federal tax rate at U.S. corp. level on both non-ECI and ECI investments • Dividends from U.S. corp. subject to 30% withholding (unless reduced by treaty) • Results in effective federal tax rate of up to 54.5% on non-ECI and ECI investments • Leveraging U.S. corp. may reduce but will not eliminate U.S. tax costs • Foreign investors not required to file U.S. tax returns Foreign Investors AppropriateForm W-8 U.S. Corp. PE Fund Form W-9 Non-ECI and ECI Investments

  14. Examples: PE Fund with Feeders And Special Allocations Foreign Investors • 35% federal tax rate at U.S. corp. level on ECI investments only • Dividends from U.S. corp. subject to U.S. withholding • Result effective federal tax rate of up to 54.5% on ECI • No U.S. corp. level tax on non-ECI investments • Leveraging U.S. corp. may reduce but will not eliminate U.S. tax costs • Foreign investors not required to file U.S. tax returns • Foreign investors would have U.S. tax and filing requirements if special allocations are not respected Appropriate Form W-8 AppropriateForm W-8 Non-U.S. Entity U.S. Corp. Appropriate Form W-8 Form W-9 U.S. Partnership Non-ECI Investments ECI Investments From W-9 PEFund Non-ECI and ECI Investments

  15. Examples: PE Fund with Parallel Fund Structure Foreign Investors • Use separate U.S. corp. for each ECI investment. 35% federal tax at U.S. corp. on ECI investments only. Regular distributions from U.S. corp. subject to 30% withholding (unless reduced by treaty). Effective federal tax rate of up to 54.5% • Exit from ECI investments may be structured as sale of stock of U.S. corp. which would not be subject to U.S. tax (unless U.S. corp. is a USRPHC in which case 35% tax applies) • If ECI investment exit is an asset sale, 35% tax on gain will apply but may not be additional 30% withholding or branch profits tax if U.S. corp. is liquidated • Non-U.S. investors invest through non-U.S. hybrid entity. No U.S. tax and filing obligations if U.S. corp. is USRPHC, but non-U.S. hybrid is subject to 35% federal tax • FDAP on non-ECI investments generally would be subject to 30% withholding tax (unless reduced by treaty) • Structure variations: (1) lower-tier partnership structure for carry structuring, (2) direct investment by foreign government investors, (3) separate treaty and non-treaty investors for flexibility on current distributions from U.S. corp. AppropriateForm W-8 Non-U.S. Entity Appropriate Form W-8 PEFund Non-ECI Investments U.S. Corp. Form W-9 ECI Investments

  16. Special Rules for Foreign Investors • Foreign Tax-Exempt Investors • Code §501(c)(3) exemption also applies to foreign entities • Requires IRS ruling or U.S. tax opinion • Provides broader tax exemption than tax treaties • Exempts withholding tax on U.S. dividends • Exemption claimed on Form W-8EXP • No protection if PE Fund income is UBTI

  17. Special Rules for Foreign Investors Cont’d. • Foreign Governments and Sovereign Wealth Funds • Separate exemption regime under §892 • Does not rely on income tax treaties • Generally limited to “investment income” • Does not apply to “commercial activities” (which has a broad overlap with ECI) • Pension Funds and “controlled entities” of foreign government covered, subject to limits on types of income received • FIRPTA Rules • Sale of interests in U.S. real estate is taxable • Sale of stock in USRPHC is exempt • REIT distributions attributable to gain on USRPI are taxable • Sale of REIT stock is exempt

More Related