LEVERAGE SALT BLOG NAMED ONE OF 50 BEST

The LEVERAGE SALT blog has been chosen as one of the Top 50 Best Tax Blogs for 2017 by WalletHub. WalletHub is holding a competition where people vote to determine the final ranking of the 50 tax blogs. The voting starts today, February 27, and runs to March 13, 2017.

If you enjoy this blog, I would appreciate your vote. Help make a solo practitioner's blog on state taxes number #1. To vote, GO HERE.

If you haven't received a copy of my FREE SPECIAL REPORT, "The Top 15 State Tax Blind Spots and Top 20 Issues that Impact Businesses of All Sizes," go get it here.

Make it a great day!

Not All Intercompany Transactions Are Created Equal

For any group of affiliated entities, intercompany transactions, such as intercompany purchases, loans, licensing, services, and management, are a way of life. Even though those transactions are a part of normal business operations, they have created problems and opportunities in states that have not adopted combined reporting. States have sought to disallow the deduction of related-party expenses under the presumption that the transactions were not entered into with business purpose or economic substance, or that they distorted the true reflection of income earned in the state.

It could be argued that taxpayers abused the positive effect of ‘‘true’’ intercompany transactions by using special purpose entities such as sales companies, finance companies, and the infamous intangible holding company to shift income from one entity to another or from one state to another. The use of those types of entities and transactions exploded in the 1990s. Since then, states have worked to end that perceived abuse by enacting related-party expense addback legislation or adopting combined reporting. As a result, the ability to use intercompany transactions to shift income has become very difficult.

Taxpayers argue that economic substance and business purpose other than tax savings have always been integral parts of any state tax planning (even in the 1990s). However, taxpayers today approach state tax planning in terms of focusing on the business objective first, and then seeking to implement that objective in a tax-efficient manner. Some practitioners refer to that as business alignment planning. I like to describe it as not putting the cart before the horse.

To read more, check out my article from Tax Analysts State Tax Notes on October 28, 2013. 

Don't forget to sign up to attend the free Bloomberg BNA webinar tomorrow that I am co-presenting: "State Tax Planning for Related-Party Transactions." 

I hope you can join me to discuss:

  • Triggers which create problems and opportunities (in regards to related-party transactions)
  • Common inter-company transactions
  • 6 ways states may respond to related-party transactions (including recent developments and how to analyze, defend and plan)

The Tightrope of Acceptable Intercompany Transactions

The following are excerpts from my January 6, 2014 article in Tax Analysts State Tax Notes. 

The Tightrope
An Indiana taxpayer paid factoring fees to a related entity that was not included in its Indiana income tax return. The taxpayer subcontracted the collection of its accounts receivable to the related entity by factoring the accounts to the entity. According to the taxpayer, the entity charged an arm’s-length rate based on a transfer pricing study prepared in accordance with IRC section 482 and related regulations. An independent third party prepared the study, and the factoring fees reported on the federal returns fell within the range of acceptable prices listed in the study. A portion of the receivable factoring expense that the taxpayer paid came back to it as dividends and loans from the related entity.

After an audit investigation, the Indiana Department of Revenue disallowed more than $57 million of the factoring fees the taxpayer paid to the related entity, which represented the portion of the fees paid to the entity that exceeded its expenses for providing the factoring services. The DOR argued that the taxpayer group, as an economic entity, did not achieve any business or operational advantage that it did not have before the taxpayer started factoring its receivables. The in-house factoring did not result in lower financing costs, the most common reason for factoring. The same departments, such as accounting, credit and collection, and customer service, that existed before the receivable factoring was put in place still existed.However, the functions became part of the operations of the related entity, which didn’t file in Indiana. Thus, the major benefit of the factoring operations was the minimization of state income tax. According to the DOR, that distorted the reported Indiana adjusted gross income without benefiting the whole organization. The factoring entity reported more income than all other entities in the consolidated group, including the taxpayer, which is supposed to be the most dominant entity.

In Indiana Letter of Findings 02-20120612, the DOR said corporate form will normally be respected unless the form is a sham or unreal. The DOR relied on the fact that courts have been consistent in holding that tax avoidance in and of itself is not a valid business purpose. It also relied on IC section 6-3-2-2(m) to distribute, apportion, or allocate income derived from sources in Indiana among organizations, trades, or businesses to fairly reflect income. According to the DOR, the regulations allow it to use any method to equitably allocate and apportion a taxpayer’s income.

Working Without a Net
The taxpayer argued that the independently prepared transfer pricing study provided enough support for the state to accept the intercompany transactions. However, the DOR stated in its letter of findings that the arm’s-length status of a transaction, considered in isolation, is not relevant to whether the substance of a taxpayer’s overall company structure, intercompany transactions, and consolidated group’s deductions fairly reflect a taxpayer’s consolidated group’s taxable Indiana income. According to the DOR, the problem was that the transfer pricing study was performed to analyze the arm’s-length status of the transactions for federal, not state, tax purposes. In fact, the transfer pricing study itself asserted it was not performed for state tax purposes and should not be used by the taxpayer as advice for state tax purposes.

Perhaps the most troublesome issue for the taxpayer was that a portion of the receivable factoring expense it paid came back to it as dividends and loans. The Indiana DOR has routinely provided guidance in letters of findings regarding the circular flow of funds between related parties, such as (i) when a taxpayer makes Intercompany payments and takes expenses for those payments but cannot explain the nature and substance of the underlying agreement and transactions; (ii) when the deduction of royalty and interest expenses are part of a continual circular flow of money between related entities—with the result of shifting taxable income to out-of-state entities that then return nontaxable income to the Indiana entities, calling into question the need for the transactions and resulting in an unfair reflection of the income earned from Indiana sources; and (iii) when the payment of royalties results in an intercompany circular flow of money that serves no commercial business purpose.

The taxpayer argued that its position should be sustained because the business purpose and substance of the related factoring entity were substantially similar to that of the factoring company described in Letter of Findings 02-20090805. However, the DOR argued that the taxpayers’ situations were not factually similar because there was no evidence that the other taxpayer had a circular flow of funds in the form of either loans or dividends. Letter of Findings 02-20090805 simply stated that the facts presented little to indicate that the factoring fees constituted an abusive tax avoidance scheme even though the claimed expenses significantly reduced the income subject to Indiana tax. In fact, the DOR held in Letter of Findings 02-20090805 that the related entity incurred legitimate and reasonable expenses associated with the collection of the factored Receivables. In this case, the DOR did request additional documentation regarding the circular flow of funds, but the taxpayer did not provide it. Thus, the DOR held it had legitimate concerns that the taxpayer exploited the company’s structure and the intercompany transactions to shift a substantial portion of its Indiana income outside the state.

Balancing Act
A related factoring entity can withstand audit scrutiny, but taxpayers should take proper steps to support the path to acceptance. Although each state differs, the lessons from the Indiana letters of findings can be used to substantiate the validity of the transactions. First, taxpayers should have a business or operational purpose for the creation of related entities when large intercompany transactions will occur. Second, taxpayers should realize some type of business benefit, such as liquidity or lower interest rates, for the whole organization as a result of the new entity or structure. Third, taxpayers should not rely on federal transfer pricing studies to substantiate state tax consequences of intercompany transactions. Lastly, taxpayers should avoid the circular flow of funds between related parties. Tax planning is each taxpayer’s right and obligation, but finding the balance between what is and isn’t acceptable is like walking a tightrope. As the Indiana letters of finding show, finding the balance is difficult, but not impossible.

Sidenote: Happy Valentine's Day!

State Tax Planning for Related-Party Transactions

I am pleased to be co-presenting a Bloomberg BNA Webinar this week, "State Tax Planning for Related-Party Transactions." I hope you can join me to discuss:

  • Triggers which create problems and opportunities (in regards to related-party transactions)
  • Common inter-company transactions
  • 6 ways states may respond to related-party transactions (including recent developments and how to analyze, defend and plan)

Every affiliated group has related-party transactions. They are a necessity for business and legal reasons. However, the state tax impact is complex and controversial. All phases of the tax life-cycle are impacted by related-party transactions (provision, compliance, planning and controversy). The states have responded to perceived abuses with many justifiable tools. The states may or may not soon receive additional tools from the federal government. Regardless of a state's response, taxpayers must be proactive in defending legitimate expenses and be able to analyze and plan for audit assertions and adjustments.

WHY IS SALT THOUGHT LEADERSHIP SO HARD?

When you think of state and local tax (SALT) thought leadership, what firm do you think of? 

Why don't you think of your firm?

Not enough content?

Not timely?

Are alerts too technical?

As I have been talking to different firms about providing state tax thought leadership services (National Tax Office), the following have been the key points for most firms:

  • Marketing folks in the firm need more content.
  • Tax pros in the firm are too busy to write, review or edit content.
  • Marketing departments generally hire external writers, but those writers don't know tax, so they need to interview tax pros in the firm or need tax pros to review, edit work.
  • So the cycle makes the process of creating tax content take too long, or sometimes non-existent.  

Other firms may have so much 'red-tape' that it is almost impossible to get content out in a timely manner. Some marketing departments may even think the firm needs less content or the firm should be more particular about the items it picks to write about.

Regardless of the firm, each firm agrees that thought leadership is important. The question is how to achieve its goals by making the 'right' investment of time and money.

STATE TAX REQUIRES 'DEEP WORK'

DEEP WORK: Professional activities performed in a state of distraction-free concentration that push your cognitive capabilities to the limit. These efforts create new value, improve your skill, and are hard to replicate. - definition by Cal Newport

I started reading "Deep Work: Rules for Focused Success in a Distracted World" by Cal Newport last night. I am only in about 60 pages, but so, so good. I highly recommend all knowledge workers to read this book, especially accounting and law firms that have adopted the open office concept, instant messaging and collaborative meetings upon collaborative meetings.

Cal first emphasizes the value of Deep Work or batching work in blocks of time to allow yourself to really go deep and focus. Stop checking e-mail, instant messaging, etc. Our brains are easily distracted. We will also feel like we are busy and doing valuable work by simply responding to messages, e-mails all day and going from meeting to meeting, but did you really do anything valuable? With that said, Cal does caveat this with the fact that some management roles require quick connectivity and rely on others to do the deep work and come to them with conclusions. High level execs may produce value by being connected and not being isolated or disconnected to do deep work. 

For those who are not high-level execs, deep work is required and a necessity. Cal mentions in the book that "as knowledge work makes more complex demands of the labor force, it becomes harder to measure the value of an individual's efforts." So true. Why do you think accounting and law firms have timesheets? Why do we have performance reviews that seem like a waste of time? This supports Cal's thesis that we need to do deep work. Deep work produces value.

He mentions that we all follow the principle of least resistance. This is why, even if we agree with Cal, we will default into the 'fragmented' attention, as he calls it, simply because of the workplace culture we are in. In other words, we won't change unless our culture allows or supports us to change.

Accounting firms and law firms (and corporate tax departments) rely on their associates to do complex work, yet expect that to get done while listening to other people talk on the phone, conduct conversations a few feet away or while having a meeting every hour. 

We need to get back to doing deep work, focused work. We need to block out time. Our clients and companies deserve the best we have to offer, and we owe it to ourselves.

The above was some random reflections from reading the first 60 pages. More to come. Let me know what you think and if you have read the book.