The Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation, the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System,
the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, and the Office of Thrift
Supervision (“the agencies”) are issuing this policy statement
to provide guidance to banking organizations and savings associations
regarding the allocation and payment of taxes among a holding company
and its subsidiaries. A holding company and its depository institution
subsidiaries will often file a consolidated group income tax return.
However, each depository institution is viewed as, and reports as,
a separate legal and accounting entity for regulatory purposes. Accordingly,
each depository institution’s applicable income taxes, reflecting
either an expense or benefit, should be recorded as if the institution
had filed on a separate-entity basis.
1 Furthermore, the amount and
timing of payments or refunds should be no less favorable to the subsidiary
than if it were a separate taxpayer. Any practice that is not consistent
with this policy statement may be viewed as an unsafe and unsound
practice prompting either informal or formal corrective action.
Tax-Sharing Agreements A holding company and its subsidiary institutions
are encouraged to enter into a written, comprehensive tax-allocation
agreement tailored to their specific circumstances. The agreement
should be approved by the respective boards of directors. Although
each agreement will be different, tax-allocation agreements usually
address certain issues common to consolidated groups. Therefore, such
an agreement should—
- require a subsidiary depository institution to compute
its income taxes (both current and deferred) on a separate-entity
basis;
- discuss the amount and timing of the institution’s
payments for current tax expense, including estimated tax payments;
- discuss reimbursements to an institution when it has
a loss for tax purposes; and
- prohibit the payment or other transfer of deferred
taxes by the institution to another member of the consolidated group.
Measurement of Current and
Deferred Income Taxes Generally accepted
accounting principles, instructions for the preparation of both the
Thrift Financial Report and the Reports of Condition and Income, and
other guidance issued by the agencies require depository institutions
to provide for their current tax liability or benefit. Institutions
also must provide for deferred income taxes resulting from any temporary
differences and tax carryforwards.
When the depository-institution members of a consolidated
group prepare separate regulatory reports, each subsidiary institution
should record current and deferred taxes as if it files its tax returns
on a separate-entity basis, regardless of the consolidated group’s
tax-paying or -refund status. Certain adjustments for statutory tax
considerations that arise in a consolidated return, e.g., application of
graduated tax rates, may be made to the separate-entity calculation
as long as they are made on a consistent and equitable basis among
the holding company affiliates.
In addition, when an organization’s consolidated
income tax obligation arising from the alternative minimum tax (AMT)
exceeds its regular tax on a consolidated basis, the excess should
be consistently and equitably allocated among the members of the consolidated
group. The allocation method should be based upon the portion of tax
preferences, adjustments, and other items generated by each group
member which causes the AMT to be applicable at the consolidated level.
Tax Payments to the Parent Company Tax payments from a subsidiary institution
to the parent company should not exceed the amount the institution
has properly recorded as its current tax expense on a separate-entity
basis. Furthermore, such payments, including estimated tax payments,
generally should not be made before the institution would have been
obligated to pay the taxing authority had it filed as a separate entity.
Payments made in advance may be considered extensions of credit from
the subsidiary to the parent and may be subject to affiliate transaction
rules, i.e., sections 23A and 23B of the Federal Reserve Act.
A subsidiary institution should
not pay its deferred tax liabilities or the deferred portion of its
applicable income taxes to the parent. The deferred tax account is
not a tax liability required to be paid in the current reporting period.
As a result, the payment of deferred income taxes by an institution
to its holding company is considered a dividend subject to dividend
restrictions,
2 not
the extinguishment of a liability. Furthermore, such payments may
constitute an unsafe and unsound banking practice.
Tax Refunds from the Parent Company An institution incurring a loss for tax purposes
should record a current income tax benefit and receive a refund from
its parent in an amount no less than the amount the institution would
have been entitled to receive as a separate entity. The refund should
be made to the institution within a reasonable period following the
date the institution would have filed its own return, regardless of
whether the consolidated group is receiving a refund. If a refund
is not made to the institution within this period, the institution’s
primary federal regulator may consider the receivable as either an
extension of credit or a dividend from the subsidiary to the parent.
A parent company may reimburse an institution more than the refund
amount it is due on a separate-entity basis. Provided the institution
will not later be required to repay this excess amount to the parent,
the additional funds received should be reported as a capital contribution.
If the institution, as a separate entity, would not be
entitled to a current refund because it has no carry-back benefits
available on a separate-entity basis, its holding company may still
be able to utilize the institution’s tax loss to reduce the
consolidated group’s current tax liability. In this situation,
the holding company may reimburse the institution for the use of the
tax loss. If the reimbursement will be made on a timely basis, the
institution should reflect the tax benefit of the loss in the current
portion of its applicable income taxes in the period the loss is incurred.
Otherwise, the institution should not recognize the tax benefit in
the current portion of its applicable income taxes in the loss year.
Rather, the tax loss represents a loss carry-forward, the benefit
of which is recognized as a deferred tax asset, net of any valuation
allowance.
Regardless of the treatment of an institution’s
tax loss for regulatory reporting and supervisory purposes, a parent
company that receives a tax refund from a taxing authority obtains
these funds as agent for the consolidated group on behalf of the group
members.
3 Accordingly, an organization’s tax-allocation
agreement or other corporate policies should not purport to characterize
refunds attributable
to a subsidiary depository institution that
the parent receives from a taxing authority as the property of the
parent.
Income-Tax-Forgiveness
Transactions A parent company may require
a subsidiary institution to pay it less than the full amount of the
current income tax liability that the institution calculated on a
separate-entity basis. Provided the parent will not later require
the institution to pay the remainder of the current tax liability,
the amount of this unremitted liability should be accounted for as
having been paid with a simultaneous capital contribution by the parent
to the subsidiary.
In contrast, a parent cannot make a capital contribution
to a subsidiary institution by “forgiving” some or all
of the subsidiary’s deferred tax liability. Transactions in
which a parent forgives any portion of a subsidiary institution’s
deferred tax liability should not be reflected in the institution’s
regulatory reports. These transactions lack economic substance because
the parent cannot legally relieve the subsidiary of a potential future
obligation to the taxing authorities. Although the subsidiaries have
no direct obligation to remit tax payments to the taxing authorities,
these authorities can collect some or all of a group liability from
any of the group members if tax payments are not made when due.
Interagency statement of Dec. 23, 1998 (SR-98-38).
4-871
Addendum: Interagency Policy Statement
on Income Tax Allocation in a Holding Company Structure * In 1998, the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve
System (Board), the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC),
the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) (collectively,
the “agencies”), and the Office of Thrift Supervision
(OTS) issued the
Interagency Policy Statement on Income Tax Allocation
in a Holding Company Structure.
4 Under the interagency
policy statement, members of a consolidated group, comprised of one
or more insured depository institutions (IDIs) and their holding company
and affiliates (the consolidated group), may prepare and file their
federal and state income tax returns as a group so long as the act
of filing as a group does not prejudice the interests of any one of
the IDIs. That is, the interagency policy statement affirms that intercorporate
tax settlements between an IDI and its parent company should be conducted
in a manner that is no less favorable to the IDI than if it were a
separate taxpayer and that any practice that is not consistent with
the policy statement may be viewed as an unsafe and unsound practice
prompting either informal or formal corrective action.
The interagency policy statement
also addresses the nature of the relationship between an IDI and its
parent company. It states in relevant part that:
- “[A] parent company that receives a tax refund
from a taxing authority obtains these funds as agent for the consolidated
group on behalf of the group members,” and
- A consolidated group’s tax allocation agreement
should not “characterize refunds attributable to a subsidiary
depository institution that the parent receives from a taxing authority
as the property of the parent.”
Since the issuance of the interagency policy statement,
courts have reached varying conclusions regarding whether tax allocation
agreements create a debtor-creditor relationship between a holding
company and its IDI.
5 Some
courts have found that the tax refunds in question were the
property of the holding company in bankruptcy (rather than property
of the subsidiary IDI) and held by the holding company as the IDI’s
debtor.
6 The agencies are issuing this addendum to the
interagency policy statement to explain that consolidated groups should
review their tax allocation agreements to ensure the agreements achieve
the objectives of the interagency policy statement. This addendum
also clarifies how certain of the requirements of sections 23A and
23B of the Federal Reserve Act (FRA) apply to tax allocation agreements
between IDIs and their affiliates.
In reviewing their tax allocation agreements, consolidated
groups should ensure the agreements: (1) clearly acknowledge that
an agency relationship exists between the holding company and its
subsidiary IDIs with respect to tax refunds, and (2) do not contain
other language to suggest a contrary intent.
7 In addition, all consolidated groups should amend
their tax allocation agreements to include the following paragraph
or substantially similar language:
The [holding company] is an agent for the
[IDI and its subsidiaries] (the “Institution”) with respect
to all matters related to consolidated tax returns and refund claims,
and nothing in this agreement shall be construed to alter or modify
this agency relationship. If the [holding company] receives a tax
refund from a taxing authority, these funds are obtained as agent
for the Institution. Any tax refund attributable to income earned,
taxes paid, and losses incurred by the Institution is the property
of and owned by the Institution, and shall be held in trust by the
[holding company] for the benefit of the Institution. The [holding
company] shall forward promptly the amounts held in trust to the Institution.
Nothing in this agreement is intended to be or should be construed
to provide the [holding company] with an ownership interest in a tax
refund that is attributable to income earned, taxes paid, and losses
incurred by the Institution. The [holding company] hereby agrees that
this tax sharing agreement does not give it an ownership interest
in a tax refund generated by the tax attributes of the Institution.
Going forward, the agencies generally will deem tax allocation
agreements that contain this or similar language to acknowledge that
an agency relationship exists for purposes of the interagency policy
statement, this addendum, and sections 23A and 23B of the FRA.
All tax allocation agreements are subject to the requirements
of section 23B of the FRA, and tax allocation agreements that do not
clearly acknowledge that an agency relationship exists may be subject
to additional requirements under section 23A of the FRA.
8 In general, section 23B requires affiliate transactions
to be made on terms and under circumstances that are substantially
the same, or at least as favorable to the IDI, as comparable transactions
involving nonaffiliated companies or, in the absence of comparable
transactions, on terms and circumstances that would in good faith
be offered to non-affiliated companies.
9 Tax allocation
agreements should require the holding company to forward promptly
any payment due the IDI under the tax allocation agreement and specify
the timing of such payment. Agreements that allow a holding company
to hold and not promptly transmit tax refunds received from the taxing
authority and owed to an IDI are inconsistent with the requirements
of section 23B and sub
ject to supervisory action. However, an agency’s
determination of whether such provision, or the tax allocation agreement
in total, is consistent with section 23B will be based on the facts
and circumstances of the particular tax allocation agreement and any
associated refund.
Addendum to the interagency
statement issued June 19, 2014 (SR-14-6).