
October 10, 2019
Thomas Zanata
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Proposed Regulations Released on Applicable Financial Statement for All-Events Test
For a taxpayer using an accrual method of accounting, the all events test is not met for item of gross income any later than when is included in revenue on an applicable financial statement (AFS) or other financial statement specified by the Treasury Secretary. How the AFS income inclusion rule applies to accrual method taxpayers with an AFS is described and clarified by Proposed Reg. §1.451-3.
Year-by-Year Application
The proposed regulations
provide that the AFS income inclusion rule generally applies to accrual
method taxpayers with an AFS when the timing of income inclusion for
one or more items of income is determined using the all events test.
They further clarify that the AFS income inclusion rule applies only to
taxpayers that have one or more AFS covering the entire tax year.
The AFS income inclusion rule applies on a year-by-year basis and, therefore, an accrual taxpayer with an AFS in one tax year that does not have an AFS in another tax year must apply the AFS income inclusion rule in the tax year that it has an AFS, and does not apply the rule in the tax year in which it does not have an AFS.
No Change to Income Tax Treatment
The proposed
regulations also clarify that AFS income inclusion rule does not change
the treatment of a transaction for federal income tax purposes:
- The treatment of a transaction or event in a tax year may be different for federal income tax and AFS purposes.
- The applicability of any exclusion provision, or the treatment of nonrecognition transactions, in the Code, the Income Tax Regulations, or other guidance does not change.
Partial Payment
The proposed regulations provide
that an amount included in the transaction price for AFS purposes may
not be treated as contingent on the occurrence or nonoccurrence of a
future event if the taxpayer has been paid or has an equitable,
contractual, or other right to partial payment for performance completed
to date. Additionally, that transaction price may not be reduced for
amounts subject to Code Sec. 461, including reward amounts in credit
card transactions.
Special Methods and Multi-Year Contracts
The
proposed regulations clarify that when a taxpayer uses a special method
of accounting, the special method of accounting determines the timing of
the income inclusion.
Proposed regulations also provide guidance for taxpayers with a financial reporting period that is different than the taxpayer’s tax year. The taxpayer must use one of three permissible methods in order to determine whether an item of income has been included in revenue on an AFS.
For a contract with multiple performance obligations, the allocation of the transaction price to each performance obligation equals the amount allocated to each performance obligation for purposes of including the item in revenue in the taxpayer’s AFS. The proposed regulations clarify that a transaction price does not include amounts collected on behalf of third parties, or amounts that are contingent on the occurrence or nonoccurrence of a future event.
A taxpayer with a multi-year contract applies the all events test by applying a cumulative approach reflecting amounts previously included under Code Sec. 451 rather than an annualized approach.
Fees
Under the proposed regulations if the
taxpayer does not treat a fee as discount or as an adjustment to the
yield of a debt instrument over the life of the instrument (such as
points) in its AFS, and the fee otherwise would be treated as creating
or increasing original issue discount (OID) for federal income tax
purposes (specified fee), then the rules in the proposed regulations
under Code Sec. 451(b) apply before the rules in Code Secs. 1271 through
Code Sec. 1275. Removing specified fees and specified credit card fees
from the calculation of OID will permit taxpayers to apply only the
rules of Code Sec. 451(b) to these fees, without also having to apply
the rules relevant to OID.
The proposed section regulations would not apply to determine the time at which OID generally is includible in income.
Effective Date
The regulations are proposed
generally to apply to tax years beginning on or after the date the final
regulations are published in the Federal Register. However, in the case
of a specified fee, Proposed Reg. §1.451-3(i)(2) is proposed to apply
for a taxpayer’s first tax year beginning one year after the date the
Treasury Decision adopting these regulations as final is published in
the Federal Register.
A taxpayer may rely on the proposed regulations (other than the
proposed regulations relating to specified fees) for tax years beginning
after December 31, 2017 (after December 31, 2018, for specified credit
card fees), as long as the taxpayer: (1) applies all the applicable
rules contained in the proposed regulations for specified credit card
fees; and (2) consistently applies the proposed regulations to all items
of income during the tax year (other than specified fees).