Pеtitioners/appellants appeal from a decision of the Tax Court which disallowed their claimed tax deductions for losses incurred as a result of straddle transaction trading on the London Metal Exchange. For the reasons cited herein, we affirm.
I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
At issue in this case is the deductibility of losses allegedly incurred by taxpayers as a result of trading on the London Metal
In the Tax Court, the Cоmmissioner argued that 1) the London options transactions were factual shams; 2) that if the transactions were real, they nevertheless lacked economic substance; and 3) that regardless of the economic substance inquiry, the transactions wеre not deductible under Section 165(c)(2) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 or Section 108 of the Tax Reform Act of 1984 because the taxpayers did not enter into the transactions primarily for profit. The Tax Court assumed, without really reaching the issue, thаt the transactions were not factual shams because they actually occurred. The Tax Court then ruled that the transactions lacked economic substance and were therefore shams in substance.
II. DISCUSSION
It is a well settled rule of law that transactions that lack economic substance will not be recognized for tax purposes. Gregory v. Helvering,
With respect to the Tax Court’s findings of fact, the appropriate appellate standard of review is whether those findings of fact were clearly erroneous. Commissioner v. Duberstein,
[w]e reemphasize ... that the focus of our attention is petitioners’ entire tax straddle scheme and not each separate straddle. It is the overall scheme which taints the deductibility of the year one losses.
Glass v. Commissioner,
[i]t requires no lengthy or elaborate analysis of the facts to demonstrate that [the taxpayers] did not enter into these transactions primarily for economiс profit, and that the transactions under scrutiny were not “the type of tax-motivated transaction which Congress intended to encourage.”
Id. at 1162 (quoting Fox v. Commissioner,
The taxpayers next pay much attention to Section 108 of the Tax Reform Act of 1984, Pub.L. No. 98-369 § 108, 98 Stat. 494, 630 (1984) (“section 108”) and urge thаt its provisions countenance the type of straddle transactions which are at issue in this case. Specifically, the taxpayers argue that because there was an objectively reasonable potential for profit in the transactions, then section 108 applies with full force so as to allow the claimed deductions. The original version of section 108 reads in part as follows:
(a) GENERAL RULE. — For purposes of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, in the case of any disposition of 1 or more positions—
(1) which were entered into before 1982 and form part of a straddle ...
... any loss from such disposition shall be allowed for the taxable year of the disposition if such position is part of a transaction entered into for profit. ...
Pub.L. No. 98-369, § 108, 98 Stat. 494, 630 (1984) (emphasis added).
Before the enactmеnt of section 108, the circumstances under which a taxpayer could deduct the losses from a commodities future straddle were unclear. In a 1977 private letter ruling, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) held that losses on one leg of a straddle were nоt deductible as long as the other leg of the straddle remained open. See Rev.Rul. 77-185,1977-
While Congress, through the enactment of section 108, ostensibly resolved the conflict between the positions of thе Tax Court and the IRS with respect to when losses on one leg of a straddle could be deducted, it created a new problem—the interpretation of section 108’s “entered into for profit” standard. Was the proper construction of the “entered into for profit” language to be the objective “reasonable prospect of any profit” test or the subjective “primarily for profit” standard of section 165? Wrestling with that question, the Tax Court concluded that Congress intended section 108 to mandatе an objective test, namely, whether the particular straddle transaction had a “reasonable prospect of any profit” at the time of its acquisition. Miller v. Commissioner,
After Miller was decided, Congress, in a move which brought section 108 more in line with section 165, amended section 108 by replacing the language “if such position is part of a transaction entered into for profit” with the following language:
if such loss is incurred in a trаde or business, or if such loss is incurred in a transaction entered into for profit though not connected with a trade or business
Section 108(a)(2) of Pub.L. No. 98-369, as amended by Pub.L. No. 99-514, § 1808(d), 100 Stat. 2085, 2817-18 (1986). See also 26 U.S.C. § 165(c). The House Report incident to the above amendment stated that the purpose of the amendment was, in part, to disclose a legislative intent to adopt in section 108 the same subjective “primarily for profit” standard of section 165(c)(2).
The taxpayers in the instant case urge that the test under section 108 is objective and that the proper standard is therefore whether the transactions at issue had a reasonable prospect of profit independent of tax considerations. As we see it, however, еither test yields unfavorable results for the taxpayers. See Yosha, supra at 502. Viewed objectively, the transactions involved appear to be devoid of profit making potential. The Tax Court noted that the taxpayers could have profited from difference gains in the straddles had they not, in every single instance, closed on sold options in the first year of the straddle. Accordingly, the Tax Court reasoned that any profit potential during that year was foreclosed. We agree.
The option transactions wеre designed to deliver ordinary losses which could be deducted against unrelated ordinary income.
III. CONCLUSION
Because we conclude that the Tax Court did not err in finding that the straddle transactions involved in this case were shams in substance, we affirm the Tax Court’s disallowance of appellants’ claimed tax deductions for losses incurred as a result of those transactions. The decision of the Tax Court is
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Yosha, et. al. v. Commissioner,
. For a technical explanation of straddle transactions, see Miller v. Commissioner,
. In Falsetti v. Commissioner,
. The United States Supreme Court earlier indicated that a "for profit” provision in a tax de
losses incurred in any transaction entered into for profit, though not connected with a trade or business ...
26 U.S.C. § 165(c)(2) (West 1988) (emphasis added).
. For a summary of the legislative history of amended § 108, see Glass v. Commissioner,
. Wehrly has been subsequently displaced by Landreth v. Commissioner,
