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Corporations, Corporations, Partnerships, LLCs, Partnerships, LLCs, and S Corporations and S Corporations

Corporations, Partnerships, LLCs, and S Corporations

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Corporations, Partnerships, LLCs, and S Corporations. Business Organizations. Taxpayer = owners = flow-through entities sole proprietorship partnerships LLCs S Corporations Taxpayer = corporation - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Corporations, Partnerships, LLCs, and S Corporations

Corporations, Partnerships, Corporations, Partnerships, LLCs, and S CorporationsLLCs, and S Corporations

Page 2: Corporations, Partnerships, LLCs, and S Corporations

Business OrganizationsBusiness Organizations

Taxpayer = owners = flow-through entities sole proprietorship partnerships LLCs S Corporations

Taxpayer = corporation C Corporation is taxed first, then shareholders may be

taxed on distributions (double taxation).

Page 3: Corporations, Partnerships, LLCs, and S Corporations

•Corporation Legal CharacteristicsCorporation Legal Characteristics

• Limited liability of shareholders– Owners of closely-held corporations often

are required to sign personal liability on bank debt.

• Unlimited life• Free transferability

– Closely-held corporations:buy-sell agreement may prevent transferability.

• Centralized management

Page 4: Corporations, Partnerships, LLCs, and S Corporations

Affiliated Groups and ConsolidationsAffiliated Groups and Consolidations

Parent + all >= 80% domestic subsidiaries. Affiliated groups may elect to file a consolidated tax

return - applies to all members of affiliated group. Advantage: losses and profits of affiliated members

offset. Like financial accounting, intercompany transactions are eliminated.

If the same individual(s) own 80% or more of more than one corporation, these corporations are a ‘controlled group’ (see Ch 11 end). They may not file a consolidated return, but the tax bracket benefits are limited.

Page 5: Corporations, Partnerships, LLCs, and S Corporations

Computing Corporate Taxable IncomeComputing Corporate Taxable Income

Page 1 of the Form 1120 resembles a financial income statement or a Schedule C in a personal tax return (Ch 9).

Use chapters 5, 6, 7 and 8 for general rules on business income.

Deduct only 50% of meals and entertainment expenses.

Deduct charitable contributions up to 10% of taxable income BEFORE charity and before dividends-received deduction.

Page 6: Corporations, Partnerships, LLCs, and S Corporations

Dividends-received DeductionDividends-received Deduction

Ownership Deduction < 20% of stock 70% DRD 20%<= own < 80% 80% DRD 80%<= own 100% DRD Reason for DRD? Mitigate “triple” taxation. Additional details: DRD can’t create loss - tricky

computations not in this text.

Page 7: Corporations, Partnerships, LLCs, and S Corporations

Book Versus Taxable Income - Schedule M-1Book Versus Taxable Income - Schedule M-1

This schedule reconciles book income to taxable income.

net book income - line 1 federal tax expense for books - line 2 lines 3 - 6 explain increases in taxable income

relative to books. lines 7 - 9 explain decreases in taxable income

relative to books. line 10 = taxable income before NOLD and DRD =

line 28 form 1120 Try problem AP7.

Page 8: Corporations, Partnerships, LLCs, and S Corporations

Book Versus Taxable IncomeBook Versus Taxable Income

Book-tax differences are scrutinized by IRS. The Schedule M-1 contains permanent and

temporary items. The tax footnote in the financial statement contains

numerous estimates of amounts that are finalized by the time the return is filed. Thus, Schedule M-1 items will not exactly = amounts in F/S footnotes.

Page 9: Corporations, Partnerships, LLCs, and S Corporations

Computing Regular TaxComputing Regular Tax

The surtax rates of 39% and 38% eliminate bracket benefits for ‘rich’ corporations.

Corporations with taxable income > $18.33 million just pay a flat rate of 35% on all income.

Personal service corporations are taxed at a flat 35% rate.

Page 10: Corporations, Partnerships, LLCs, and S Corporations

Tax CreditsTax Credits

Credits directly reduce computed tax. Deductions only reduce the income subject to tax. Thus, $1 of credit provides $1 of benefit. $1 of deduction only provides $1 x the tax rate.

Tax credits are generally limited to some % of tax before credits. Often a provision permits carry back or carry forward of excess credits.

Biggest credits: R&D credit, foreign tax credit (see Chapter 12).

Page 11: Corporations, Partnerships, LLCs, and S Corporations

Payment and Filing RequirementsPayment and Filing Requirements

Tax return due 15th day of 3rd month, may extend to 15th day of 9th month.

Estimated payments are due on the 15th day of 4th, 6th, 9th, and 12th months.

Must pay 100% of tax due (small corporations (TI < $1 mill) may use safe-harbor rule of paying 100% of prior year tax).

Underpayment penalty is computed like interest expense but is nondeductible.

Page 12: Corporations, Partnerships, LLCs, and S Corporations

Distributions to InvestorsDistributions to Investors

Interest payments are deductible. Payments on stock are non-deductible. Payments on stock are taxable dividends to the

shareholder if the corporation has either current or cumulative earnings and profits. E&P similar to tax basis retained earnings

Payments in excess of earnings and profits are first a return of capital and then a gain to the shareholder.

Page 13: Corporations, Partnerships, LLCs, and S Corporations

Distributions to InvestorsDistributions to Investors

Nondeductibility of dividends makes paying dividends hard to explain.

One result is the high leverage of many corporations, because interest expense is deductible.

Investors may prefer that the corporation keep the funds and reinvest them; sell stock for a capital gain in future.

Will administration eliminate double taxation?

Page 14: Corporations, Partnerships, LLCs, and S Corporations

PartnershipsPartnerships

The partnership agreement states the rights and obligations of partners, and the % of profits and losses allocable to each partner. Such agreements permit flexibility.

General partnership: all partners have unlimited liability; joint and severable

Limited partnership: one or more limited partners are only liable for their contributed capital. Legally, all limited partnerships have at least one general partner.

Limited liability partnership (LLP) used for professional services. General partners are not liable for malpractice of other partners.

Page 15: Corporations, Partnerships, LLCs, and S Corporations

Tax Basis in Partnership InterestTax Basis in Partnership Interest

Cash plus adjusted basis contributed. + Share of partnership debt for which partner could

be responsible.

Page 16: Corporations, Partnerships, LLCs, and S Corporations

Partnership ReportingPartnership Reporting

The partnership files an information return, Form 1065.

Included with the Form 1065 are Forms K-1, which show EACH partner’s share of income and deductions.

EACH partner reports his or her share on partnership income on Schedule E, as part of his or her Form 1040. “Non-ordinary” items are SEPARATELY STATED and retain their character on the partner’s return. Q9

Because the partnership does not pay tax, the partnership is referred to as a FLOW-THROUGH ENTITY.

Page 17: Corporations, Partnerships, LLCs, and S Corporations

Guaranteed PaymentsGuaranteed Payments

A guaranteed payment is a special allocation of ordinary income to the partner receiving it - similar in nature to a salary.

The receiving partner reports as ordinary income BOTH: 1) his guaranteed payment 2) his share of partnership income after the guaranteed

payment.

Other partners report their shares of partnership income after the guaranteed payment.

Page 18: Corporations, Partnerships, LLCs, and S Corporations

Self-Employment Income From PartnershipSelf-Employment Income From Partnership

SE tax must be paid by the partner on Guaranteed payments + Distributive share of ordinary business income from

partnership

Limited partners do NOT pay SE tax on share of ordinary income.

Page 19: Corporations, Partnerships, LLCs, and S Corporations

Adjusting Partnership BasisAdjusting Partnership Basis

These things increases basis: Contributions (initial and ongoing): cash + adjusted basis

contributed Positive income (taxable and tax-exempt) Share of partnership liabilities for which partner is liable.

(Also allow nonrecourse real estate loans for limited partners).

These things decrease basis: Distributions Losses and deductions (and shares of nondeductible

expenses).

Page 20: Corporations, Partnerships, LLCs, and S Corporations

Partnership Losses Limited to BasisPartnership Losses Limited to Basis

Partners CANNOT deduct losses in excess of basis. See AP13, 14

Excess losses are carried forward indefinitely until additional basis is restored. by additional contributions or additional positive income.

This rule applies to EACH partnership separately. AP 11, 12 Are there questions about examples in the text?

This can be complicated.

Page 21: Corporations, Partnerships, LLCs, and S Corporations

Limited Liability CompanyLimited Liability Company

Treated as a corporation for liability purposes, but as a partnership for federal tax purposes.

Relatively new organizational form - less legal precedence.

Every state (and DC) permits LLCs. Still unclear whether LLC income is subject to SE

tax.

Page 22: Corporations, Partnerships, LLCs, and S Corporations

S CorporationsS Corporations

Legally a corporation under state law. An S Corporation is a flow-through entity for tax

purposes. Income and loss items are allocated among

shareholders based on their % ownership of stock (this allocation is not flexible like partnership agreements).

Flow-through items retain their character on the individual tax return (e.g. ordinary income, capital losses, charitable contributions, etc).

Page 23: Corporations, Partnerships, LLCs, and S Corporations

S Corporation EligibilityS Corporation Eligibility

Only individuals, estates and some trusts may be shareholders.

The number of shareholders (not including spouses) is limited to 100.

The corporation may only have one class of outstanding common stock.

Shareholders must unanimously elect S Corp status.

Page 24: Corporations, Partnerships, LLCs, and S Corporations

Shareholder BasisShareholder Basis

Initial basis = cash + adjusted basis of contributed property.

Loan FROM a shareholder to S Corp increases basis for THAT shareholder. Any other debt of the S Corp does NOT increase shareholder basis. (E.g., a bank loan guaranteed by shareholder does not increase basis for any shareholder, even the one that guaranteed the loan).

Like partnerships, basis is increased by contributions and income items. Basis is decreased by distributions and loss items.

Page 25: Corporations, Partnerships, LLCs, and S Corporations

S Corporation OperationS Corporation Operation

Shareholders can be paid a salary. Salary is subject to payroll taxes and reduces ordinary

income of the S Corporation. S Corp can use corporate employee benefit plans for

shareholder/employees. Share of ordinary income is NOT subject to Self-

Employment tax.

Allocable share of loss items can only be deducted up to BASIS, like with partnerships. Losses in excess of basis are carried over until the shareholder has basis again.

Page 26: Corporations, Partnerships, LLCs, and S Corporations

Limitations on the Deduction of Allocated LossesLimitations on the Deduction of Allocated LossesLimitations on the Deduction of Allocated LossesLimitations on the Deduction of Allocated Losses

3 Provisions limit the deductibility of partnership/LLC and S corporation losses Overall Basis rules – partners/LLC member and S corporation

shareholders may deduct losses only to the extent of their respective basis

Sec. 465 - partners may not deduct losses in excess of his/her at risk amount

Sec. 469 - prohibits individuals and closely held corporations from deducting PALs in excess of PAI

Page 27: Corporations, Partnerships, LLCs, and S Corporations

Section 704(d)Section 704(d)Section 704(d)Section 704(d)

A partners deduction cannot exceed his/her total investment including share of debt. -

If allocated share of partnership losses exceeds his/her basis in the partnership interest - excess does not reduce basis, but is carried forward

indefinitely and may be deducted when the partner has basis.

For purposes of this limitation - any distributions made to the partner during the year are accounted for before the application of the basis limitation

The allocation of loss is the last adjustment to basis to be applied.

Page 28: Corporations, Partnerships, LLCs, and S Corporations

At Risk LimitationsAt Risk LimitationsAt Risk LimitationsAt Risk Limitations

While partners get tax basis in all debts, they are generally at risk for their investment in the partnership + their portion of recourse debt or qualified non-recourse debt.

S corporation shareholders are not at-risk for S corporation debt unless it is directly from the shareholder to the corporation

Qualified non-recourse debt - nonrecourse debt secured by real estate, which are obtained from a bank, S&L, or other commercial lender. Excludes seller financed loans, and non-real estate non recourse loans

This means tax basis for partners/LLC members may differ from at-risk basis because of the classification of debt as recourse v. non-recourse.

Page 29: Corporations, Partnerships, LLCs, and S Corporations

At Risk Limitations At Risk Limitations ContinuedContinuedAt Risk Limitations At Risk Limitations ContinuedContinued Regular tax basis rules and Sec. 465 limitations are applied

sequentially Only losses allowed by Sec. 704(d) can be limited by Sec.

465. Where basis and at risk are the same, losses will be

disallowed under the general tax basis rules. Where basis and at risk differ, losses can be disallowed

under both sections Sec. 465(e) discusses at risk recapture, when at risk basis

is negative (excess distributions or debt reduction), amount taken into income is typically ordinary income rather than capital

Page 30: Corporations, Partnerships, LLCs, and S Corporations

Sec 469 - Passive Activity Loss LimitationsSec 469 - Passive Activity Loss LimitationsSec 469 - Passive Activity Loss LimitationsSec 469 - Passive Activity Loss Limitations

. If a partner cannot take a loss because of the above

limitations, the passive activity loss rules cannot be applied until the above limitations are lifted.

General rule - passive activity losses are disallowed to the extent the passive activity losses exceed passive activity income.

Net disallowed PALs are carried forward to tax years when PAI is available.

Passive Activities are aggregated to determine the limitation.

Page 31: Corporations, Partnerships, LLCs, and S Corporations

Sec. 469 (continued)Sec. 469 (continued)Sec. 469 (continued)Sec. 469 (continued)

Passive Activity TP does not materially participate in the activity Partner is a limited partner Partnership is engaged in a rental activity (2 exceptions, real estate

professionals and general partners who actively participate but make less than $150,000)

Passive losses disallowed must be allocated to all passive activities on a pro-rata basis. You cannot choose which passive activities you want to take the losses from, etc.

Suspended passive losses can be taken in the year the passive activity is disposed by the taxpayer.

Page 32: Corporations, Partnerships, LLCs, and S Corporations

The Choice of Business The Choice of Business EntityEntity

Page 33: Corporations, Partnerships, LLCs, and S Corporations

Choice of EntityChoice of Entity

This is a tax planning chapter - HOW to use rules Pass-through losses After-tax cash flows to individual investor. Family income shifting Partnership versus S Corp characteristics Closely-held corporations

Constructive dividends limit corporate tax avoidance. accumulated earnings tax, personal holding company

tax, tax rates on members of a controlled group.

Page 34: Corporations, Partnerships, LLCs, and S Corporations

Passthrough EntitiesPassthrough Entities

Partnerships (includes LLCs) and S Corps are not taxed as entities. Investors pay tax on their share of entity income.

Single level of taxation. Cash distributions are generally NOT taxable.

Page 35: Corporations, Partnerships, LLCs, and S Corporations

Benefits of Passthrough LossesBenefits of Passthrough Losses

Passthrough loss is generally deductible in the year the loss is generated at the individual’s marginal tax rate.

Corporation loss must be carried (back) forward and used to offset income in a taxable year where profits are reported. NOL deduction provides a benefit at the corporation’s tax rate in the year the NOL offsets profits.

Page 36: Corporations, Partnerships, LLCs, and S Corporations

Passthrough Entities Only Have a Single Level of Passthrough Entities Only Have a Single Level of TaxTax

The preceding example illustrates the benefits of a pass-through entity:

a) use losses immediately b) single level of taxation

Page 37: Corporations, Partnerships, LLCs, and S Corporations

Partnership versus S CorporationPartnership versus S Corporation

S Corps require an IRS election, incorporation documents, possible corporate state tax payments.

Partnership agreements have more flexibility, but require more careful legal drafting.

Partners (but not S Corp shareholders) receive tax basis for liabilities of the partnership.

S Corporation shares are transferable. Partnership interests are not - requires new partnership agreement.

Employee benefit planning favors S Corp.

Page 38: Corporations, Partnerships, LLCs, and S Corporations

Types of Flow-Through EntityTypes of Flow-Through Entity

Liability Full - General partnership

Limited liability partnership - general partners are not personally liable for malpractice-related claims of another general partner.

Limited partnership - at least one general partner, but other partners have no liability.

Limited liability partnership - partners not responsible for other parter’s malpractice.

Limited liability company (treated like partnership for tax, corporation legally).

S Corporation creates limited liability.

Page 39: Corporations, Partnerships, LLCs, and S Corporations

Closely-held CorporationsClosely-held Corporations

Biggest challenge is how can the investors avoid double taxation of corporate earnings.

If shareholders are also creditors, interest expense is deductible to corporation.

If shareholders are also employees, wage expense is deductible to corporation.

If shareholders are also landlords, rent expense is deductible to corporation.

Page 40: Corporations, Partnerships, LLCs, and S Corporations

Closely-held CorporationsClosely-held Corporations

IRS challenge turns “unreasonable” payments into constructive dividends.

How does the IRS decide what is unreasonable? (AP6) interest wages rent

Page 41: Corporations, Partnerships, LLCs, and S Corporations

Accumulating Corporate Profits as a Tax ShelterAccumulating Corporate Profits as a Tax Shelter

Keep earnings in corporation. Small corporations are taxed at low rates. Delay paying dividends. Possibly convert ordinary dividend to capital gain by

selling stock.

Page 42: Corporations, Partnerships, LLCs, and S Corporations

Controlled Group Tax RatesControlled Group Tax Rates

Aggregate the taxable income of all members of a controlled group (>= 80% common ownership).

Compute tax. Allocate tax according to proportion of taxable income. These rules prevent disbursing corporate income into

numerous legal entities all taxed at 15%.