In this сase, Compaq Computer Corporation engaged in a foreign stock transaction involving the purchase and resale of American Depository Receipts (ADRs). The Tax Court held that because the ADR transaction lacked economic substance, the transaction should be disregarded for federal income tax purposes.
BACKGROUND
The facts are stated in the opinion of thе Tax Court and are set out only briefly here. An ADR is a trading unit, issued by a trust, that represents ownership of stock in a foreign corporation. Foreign stocks are customarily traded on U.S. stock exchanges using ADRs. An ADR transaction of the kind at issue in this case begins with the purchase of ADRs with the settlement date at a time when the purchaser is entitled to a declared dividend — that is, before or on the record date of the dividend. The transaction ends with the immediate resale of the same ADR with the settlement date at a time when the purchaser is no longer entitled to the declared dividend — that is, after the record date. In the terminology of the market, the ADR is purchased “cum dividend” and resold “ex dividend.”
Twenty-First Securities Corporation, an investment firm specializing in arbitrage transactions, proposed to Compaq that Compaq engage in an ADR transaction. Compaq’s assistant treasurer, James Tempesta, and treasurer, John Foster, had a one-hour meeting with Twenty-First to discuss this possibility. After a discussion among Tempesta, Foster, and Compaq’s chief financial officer, Darryl White, it was decided to go forward with an ADR transaction. Tempesta did not perform a cash-flow analysis before agreeing to the transaction. His investigation of the transaction and of Twenty-First was limited to telephoning a referеnce and reviewing a Twenty-First spreadsheet analyzing the transaction.
The securities chosen for the transaction were ADR shares of Royal Dutch Petroleum Company. Compaq knew little or nothing about Royal Dutch other than gen
On September 16, 1992, Twenty-First, acting on Compaq’s behalf, bought ten million Royal Dutch ADRs from the designated seller, which was another client of Twenty-First. Twenty-First immediately sold the ADRs back to the seller. The trades were made in 46 separate New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) floor transactions — 23 purchase transactions and 23 corresponding resale transactions — of about 450,000 ADRs each and were all completed in a little over an hour. Any trader on the floor was able to break up any of these transactions by taking part or all of the trade; but none, it appears, did. Because the trades were completed at market prices, no trader had an incentive to break up the transaction. The aggregate purchase price was about $887.6 million, cum dividend. The aggregate resale price was about $868.4 million, ex dividend. Commissions, margin account interest, and fees were about $1.5 million. Pursuant to special NYSE settlement terms, the purchase trades were formally settled on September 17. Pursuant to regular NYSE terms, the resale trades were settled on September 21. Compaq used a margin account with Bear Stearns & Co., a well known securities brokerage firm. Compaq was the shareholder of record of the ADRs on the dividend record date and was therefore entitled to a gross dividend of about $22.5 million. About $3.4 million in Netherlands tax was withheld from Compaq’s dividend by Royal Dutch and paid to the Netherlands government. The net dividend, about $19.2 million, was paid directly to Compaq.
On its 1992 U.S. income tax return, Compaq reported about $20.7 million in capital losses on the purchases and resales, about $22.5 million in gross dividend income, and a foreign tax credit of about $3.4 million for the Netherlands tax withheld from the gross dividend. Compaq used the capital loss to offset part of a capital gain of about $231.7 million that Compaq had realized in 1992 from the sale of stock in another company.
The Commissioner sent a notice of deficiency to Compaq for its federal income taxes that cited, among other things, the Royal Dutch transaction. Compaq filed a petition in the Tax Court for redetermination of the deficiencies and of an accuracy-related penalty for negligence asserted for 1992 under Internal Revenue Code (26 U.S.C.) § 6662. Concluding that the transaction should be disregarded for U.S. income tax purposes, the court upheld the deficiencies and the negligence penalty. The court disallowed the gross dividend income, the foreign tax credit, and the capital losses reported by Compaq on its tax return. Compaq then argued that it should at least be allowed to deduct the out of pocket losses — commissions, margin account interest, and fees — that it had incurred in the course of the transaction, but the court held that the expenses could not be deducted. Compaq appealed.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
This court reviews the Tax Court’s conclusions of law de novo and its factual findings for clear error.
See Frank Lyon Co. v. United States,
DISCUSSION
“[Wjhere ... there is a genuine multiple-party transаction with economic substance which is compelled or encouraged by business or regulatory realities, is imbued with tax-independent considerations, and is not shaped solely by tax-avoidance features that have meaningless labels attached, the Government should honor the allocation of rights and duties effectuated by the parties.”
Frank Lyon Co.,
In
Rice’s Toyota World, Inc. v. Comm’r,
The Tax Court reasoned that Compaq’s ADR transaction had neither economic substance nor a non-tax business purpose. The court first concluded that Compaq had no reasonable opportunity for profit apart from the income tax consequences of the transaction. The court reached this conclusion by employing a curious method of calculation: in computing what it called Compaq’s net “cash flow” from the trаnsaction, the court assessed neither the transaction’s pre-tax profitability nor its post-tax profitability. Instead, the court assessed profitability by looking at the transaction after Netherlands tax had been imposed but before considering U.S. income tax consequences. The court subtracted Compaq’s $20.7 million in capital losses, not from the $22.5 million gross dividend, but from the $19.2 million net dividend. 2 The court then ignored the $3.4 million U.S. foreign tax credit that Compaq claimed corresponding to the $3.4 million Netherlands tax. Put otherwise, in determining whether the ADR transaction was profitable, the court treated the Netherlands tax as a cost of the transaction, but did nоt treat the corresponding U.S. tax credit as a benefit of the transaction. The result of this half pre-tax, half after-tax calculation was a net loss figure of roughly $1.5 million.
The court rejected Compaq’s argument that it had a profit prior to the assessment of tax.
[Compaq] used tax reporting strategies to give the illusion of profit, while simultaneously claiming a tax credit in an amount (nearly $3.4 million) that far exceeds the U.S. tax (of $640,000) attributed to the alleged profit, and thus is available to offset tax on unrelated transactions.... By reporting the gross amount of the dividend, when only the net amount was received, petitioner created a fictional $1.9 million profit as a predicate for a $3.4 million tax credit.
As for Compaq’s business purpose, the Tax Court concluded that Compaq was motivated only by the expected tax benefits of the ADR transaction. Among other things, the court said, Compaq had not engaged in a businesslike evaluation of the transaction. See id. at 224-25.
The Tax Court’s decision is in conflict with
IES Indus., Inc. v. United States,
Turning first to economic substance, the court rejected the argument that the taxpayer purchased only the right to the net dividend, not the gross dividend. “[T]he economic benefit to IES was the amount of the
gross
dividend, before the foreign taxes were paid. IES was the legal owner of the ADRs on the record date. As such, it was legally entitled to retain the benefits of ownership, that is, the dividends due on the record date.”
Id.
at 354. The court said that the part of the gross dividend withheld as taxes by the Dutch government was as much income to the taxpayer as the net dividend remaining after taxes. The court relied on the venerable principle, articulated in
Old Colony Trust Co. v. Comm’r,
The
IES
court saw no reason why the
Old Colony Trust Co.
principle should not apply to the payment of foreign tax by withholding. “The foreign corporation’s withholding and payment of the tax on IES’s behalf is no different from an employer's] withholding and paying to the government income taxes for an employee: the full amount before taxes are paid is considered income to the employee.”
IES,
As for business purpose, the court said that “[a] taxpayer’s subjective intent to avoid taxes ... will not by itself determine whether there was a business purpose to a transaction.”
Id.
at 355. Compare
Holladay,
The court further noted that the ADR transactions had not been conducted by alter egos or by straw entities created by the taxpayer simply for the purpose of facilitating the transactions. Instead, “[a]ll of the parties involved ... were entities separate and apart from IES, doing legitimate business before IES started trading ADRs and (as far as we know) continuing such legitimate business after that time.” Id. Each individual ADR trade was an arm’s-length transaction. See id. at 356.
We agree with the IES court and conclude that the Tax Cоurt erred as a matter of law by disregarding the gross amount of the Royal Dutch dividend and thus ignoring Compaq’s pre-tax profit on the ADR transaction. We add the following comments.
First, as to economic substance: the Commissioner does not explain why the
Old Colony Trust Co.
principle does not apply here. That the tax was imposed by the Netherlands rather than by the United States, or that it was withheld rather than paid at the end of the tax year, is irrelevant to how the part of the dividend corresponding to the tax should be treated for U.S. income tax purposes. Pre-tax income is pre-tax income regardless of the timing or origin of the tax.
See Old Colony Trust Co.,
The Tax Court also erred by failing to include Compаq’s $3.4 million U.S. tax credit when it calculated Compaq’s after-tax profit.
To un-stack the deck and include the foreign tax credit in calculating Compaq’s after-tax profit from the Royal Dutch transaction does not give Compaq a windfall. The purpose of the Revenue Code’s foreign tax credit provisions is to reduce international double taxation.
See, e.g., Norwest Corp. v. Comm’r,
If the effects of the transaction are computed consistently, Compaq made both a pre-tax profit and an after-tax profit from the ADR transaction. Subtracting Compaq’s capital losses from the gross dividend rather than the net dividend results in a net pre-tax profit of about $1,894 million. Compaq’s U.S. tax on that net pre-tax profit wаs roughly $644,000. Subtracting $644,000 from the $1,894 million results in an after-tax profit of about $1.25 million. The transaction had economic substance.
Second, as to business purpose: even assuming that Compaq sought primarily to get otherwise unavailable tax benefits in order to offset unrelated tax liabilities and unrelated capital gains, this need not invalidate the transaction.
See Frank Lyon Co.,
Although, as the Tax Court found, the parties attempted to minimize the risks incident to the transaction, those risks did exist and were not by any means insignificant. The transaction occurred on a public market, not in an environment controlled by Compaq or its agents. The market prices of the ADRs could have changed during the course of the transaction (they in fact did change,
Because the Royal Dutch ADR transaction had both economic substanсe and a non-tax business purpose, it should have been recognized as valid for U.S. income tax purposes. This court’s decisions applying the economic substance doctrine to disregard various transactions are not to the contrary. Without enumerating all of the decisions, we mention some to give a flavor of the differences between the facts at issue in the decisions and in this case. In
Freytag v. Comm’r,
In this case, by contrast, the ADR transaction had both a reasonable possibility of profit attended by a real risk of loss and an adequate non-tax business purpose. The transaction was not a mere formality or artifice but occurred in a real market subject to real risks. And, as has been discussed, the transaction gave rise to a real profit whether one looks at the transaction prior to the imposition of tax or afterwards.
For the foregoing reasons, the Tax Court erred as a matter of law in disallowing Compaq’s identification of gross dividend income, a foreign tax credit, and capital losses associated with the Royal Dutch ADR arbitrage transaction. It is unnecessary to reach the alternative arguments for reversal offered by Compaq: first, that the statutory foreign tax credit regime implicitly displaces the economic substance doctrine; and second, that a 1997 amendment to the foreign tax credit scheme, which added what is now Intеrnal Revenue Code § 901(k), implies that ADR transactions that took place before the amendment are to be recognized for tax purposes. Because we reverse the Tax Court’s decision concerning the underlying transaction, it follows that the court erred in imposing the negligence penalty and that the court’s holding that Compaq was not entitled to deduct its out of pocket losses becomes superfluous.
The decision of the Tax Court is REVERSED.
Notes
. Decisions such as
Freytag v. Comm’r,
. The Tax Court did this even though the Government had admitted that according to generally accepted accounting principles (to which the Government cited no exceptions), the entire amount of the gross dividend must be reported as income.
. The Tax Court's decision in this case has been subject to extensive commentary, friendly and not so friendly.
See, e.g.,
Marc D. Teitelbaum,
Compaq Computer and IES Industries
— The
Empire Strikes Back,
20 Tax Notes Int’l 791 (2000) (disagreeing sharply with Tax Court); David P. Hariton,
Sorting Out the Tangle of Economic Substance, 52
Tax Law. 235, 273 (1999) ("... I am not sure Compaq is getting away with enough in this transaction for a court to disallow the results for lack of economic substance; to find otherwise might represent too great an incursion into our objective system for determining tax liabilities.”); Peter C. Canellos,
A Tax Practitioner’s Perspective on Substance, Form and Business Puipose in Structuring Business Transactions and in Tax Shelters,
54 SMU L.Rev. 47, 54 (2001) ("Transactions involving ... foreign tax-credits on dividend-stripping transactions exist in the hinterland between merely aggressive transactions and tax shel
. The Commissioner concedes that the transaction at issue in IES is identical to that at issue in this case.
. Indeed, the Internal Revenue Service has stated in a revenue ruling that "United States shareholders of foreign corporations should report, for Federal income tax purposes, the gross amount of dividends received from such corporations without reduction for withholding of the foreign income tax thereon.” Rev. Rui. 57-516, 1957-
. The Tax Court's assertion that "[i]f we follow [Compaql's logic, ... we would conclude that [Compaq] paid approximately $4 million in worldwide income taxes on ... $1.9 million in profit” suffers from the same flaw.
. At oral argument, counsel for the Government admitted that he had found no case supporting the proposition that foreign tax on a transaction should be treated as an expense in determining whether the transaction was profitable.
. In particular, the fact that Compaq had a large unrelated capital gain in 1992 does not mean that Compaq had an impermissible motive in seeking to engage in the transaction. The capital gain, of course, made it possible for Compaq to obtain an otherwise unavailable tax benefit from the ADR transaction by offsetting its $20.7 million in capital losses from the transaction against the gain. 26 U.S.C. § 1211(a) (corрoration’s "losses from sales or exchanges of capital assets shall be allowed only to the extent of gains from such sales or exchanges”);
Circle K Corp. v. United States,
According to the Commissioner, tax-exempt organizations with no use for U.S. income tax credits have an incentive to loan out their ADRs to non-tax-exempt persons in transactions of the kind at issue in this case. The non-exempt persons can use the capital losses and tax credits resulting from ADR transactions to offset unrelated capital gains and tax liabilities. The fact that the differing tax attributes of investors make ADRs more valuable for some investors than for others does not deprive ADR transactions of economic substance for purposes of the tax laws. The possible benefits from ADR transactions for
. In
IES,
the court noted the Tax Court’s assertion in this case that in light of Compaq's limited investigation of the risks of the Royal Dutch transaction, Compaq had had no non-tax business purpose in agreeing to the transaction.
. Similarly, in
Fender v. United States,
