Upload
others
View
4
Download
0
Embed Size (px)
Citation preview
The Report of Foreign Bank and Financial Accounts: Tough New Requirements
M t i L t t IRS G id d P i fpresents Mastering Latest IRS Guidance and Preparing for FBAR's Increased Data Demands
presents
A Live 110-Minute Teleconference/Webinar with Interactive Q&A
Today's panel features:Brent Lipschultz, Principal, Personal Wealth Advisors Practice Group, Eisner, New York
Neil AJ Sullivan, Owner, International Tax Compliance Strategy, Scarsdale, N.Y.
Q
Tuesday, February 16, 2010
The conference begins at:1 pm Easternp12 pm Central
11 am Mountain10 am Pacific
CLICK ON EACH FILE IN THE LEFT HAND COLUMN TO SEE INDIVIDUAL PRESENTATIONS.
You can access the audio portion of the conference on the telephone or by using your computer's speakers.Please refer to the dial in/ log in instructions emailed to registrations.
If no column is present: click Bookmarks or Pages on the left side of the window.
If no icons are present: Click View, select Navigational Panels, and chose either Bookmarks or Pages.
If you need assistance or to register for the audio portion, please call Strafford customer service at 800-926-7926 ext. 10
For CLE purposes, please let us know how many people are listening at your location by
• closing the notification box • and typing in the chat box your
company name and the number of attendees.
• Then click the blue icon beside the box to send.
The Report Of Foreign Bank andThe Report Of Foreign Bank and Financial Accounts: Tough New
R i t W biRequirements Webinar
Feb. 16, 2010
Brent Lipschultz Neil AJ Sullivan Eisner LLP International Tax Compliance [email protected] [email protected]
Today’s Program
• Review Of Changes To Form TD F 90.22-1, slides 3 through 24
IRS FBAR E f t S F lid 25 th h 26• IRS FBAR Enforcement So Far, slides 25 through 26
• Emerging FBAR Issues To Date, slides 27 through 35
• Future Legislation, slides 36 through 41
2
Review Of Changes To Form TD F 90 22 190.22-1
3
FBAR Overview• FBAR (Form TD F 90-22.1) is a Treasury annual report under USC
Title 31, the Bank Secrecy Act of 1970 (the “BSA”). BSA addressed concerns that U S persons were using foreign bank secrecy laws toconcerns that U.S. persons were using foreign bank secrecy laws to conceal illegal activities
Si FBAR i t t t T C t h j i di ti• Since FBAR is not a tax return, Tax Court has no jurisdiction over FBAR penalties (Williams, 131 TC No. 6 (10/2/08))
FBAR report is in addition to a taxpayer’s obligation to indicate theexistence of a foreign account on:
Form 1040, Schedule B, Part IIIForm 1040, Schedule B, Part IIIForm 1041, Schedule GForm 1065, Schedule BForm 1120 Schedule N Question 6
44
Form 1120, Schedule N, Question 6
Authority To Administer FBAR
• FinCen delegated its authority to enforce the FBAR to the IRS in 2003, reflecting the fact that a major purpose of the FBAR was to identifyreflecting the fact that a major purpose of the FBAR was to identify potential tax evasion
• The IRS can investigate FBAR non-compliance, and assess and collect civil penalties for failure to complycivil penalties for failure to comply
• The authority delegated to the IRS included the authority to revise Form 90-22.1 and instructions
• Currently the IRS is set to release a publication in early December• Currently, the IRS is set to release a publication in early December clarifying the rules, and has a regulation projection
55
Who Must File FBAR?
Any U.S. person who has a financial interest or signature authorityover foreign financial accounts with an aggregate value exceeding$10,000 at any time during the year must file an FBAR for such year
A person or required to file an FBAR also must check the appropriatebox of his tax return
66
Key Changes To Form TD F 90.22-1
– Requirement for persons in or doing business in U.S. to file FBAR– “Doing business” standard delayed
• IRS guidance forthcoming– Expanded definition of reportable financial accounts– Expanded definition of “financial interest” through ownership in
corporations, partnerships or trusts– Expanded definition of “covered trusts”– Broadened standards for who holds signatory authority over foreign
accountsE d d li f d i i ffi d l h– Expanded list of domestic corporation officers and employees who are exempt from filing requirement
77
“U.S. Person,” For FBAR Purposes• Prior to 2008, a “U.S. person” was: , p
– A U.S. citizen or resident; or– Any domestic legal entity such as a partnership, corporation, estate
or trust
• Pursuant to the revised FBAR (October 2008), a “U.S. person” is:– A U.S. citizen or resident (including entities); or( g );– A person in and doing business in the U.S. – Review of U.S. person definition in Internal Revenue Manual (July
2008)
• Revised definition is significantly expanded, with guidance lacking regarding the “in and doing business” standard
88
“U S Person ” For FBAR PurposesU.S. Person, For FBAR Purposes (Cont.)
Must a single member LLC file an FBAR? FAQ 8 (6/29/09)reads:
• Q. Is a single member LLC, which is a disregarded entity forUS tax purposes, a United States person for FBARpurposes?
A. Yes, the tax rules concerning disregarded entities do notapply with respect to the FBAR reporting requirement.FBARs are required under Title 31 not under any provisionFBARs are required under Title 31, not under any provisionof the Internal Revenue Code.
99
a US Person (cont )a. US Person (cont.)Example (U.S. Person)
Non-U.S. person
100% ownership
U.S. domestic LLC
Foreign financial
In the U S
Outside the
gaccount
10
U.S. U.S.
Key Changes To Form TD F 90.22-1y g“In and Doing Business in U.S.”
• Based on an analysis of the facts and circumstances of each case • A person is not considered to be in and doing business in the U.S. unless that
person is conducting business within the U.S. on a regular and continuousbasisP h “ di ll d b i i h U i d S ” i• Persons who “sporadically conduct business in the United States” are not in and doing business in the U.S.
• The following examples of persons who are not considered to be in and doing business in the U.S. are included in IRS guidance issued in February – Non-resident aliens (NRAs) who are engaged in a business but only
occasionally visit the U.S. to meet customers or business associates– NRA artists, athletes and entertainers who only occasionally come to the
U.S. to participate in exhibits, sporting events or performances; and– NRAs who visit the U.S. to manage their personal investments, such as
rental property, and conduct no other business in the U.S.– Announcement 2009-51 provides that all persons may rely on the
definition of U.S. person found in the 2000 instructions and for filings in
11
2010 added “a person in and doing business in the United States”
11
“Foreign”F i ” fi i l t Foreign” financial accounts
A “foreign” financial account is one maintained outside the U.S.
The geographical location of the account not the nationality of the The geographical location of the account, not the nationality of thefinancial institution, determines whether an account is “foreign”
A financial account with a non-U.S. branch of a U.S. bank or otherU.S. financial institution is “foreign”
A financial account with a U.S. office of a foreign bank or otherforeign institution is a U.S. accountg
An insurance policy is foreign if issued by a non-U.S. office ofinsurer
E l– Examples:• Royal Bank of Canada in New York – no• Citibank in Toronto – FBAR requirement• U.S. mutual fund with foreign investments – no FBAR requirement
12
• Foreign mutual fund with all U.S. investments – FBAR requirement
12
What Is A Financial Account?• A “financial account” includes a bank, securities, derivatives or other financial
instrument account, including any savings, demand, checking, deposit, time deposit, debt card and prepaid credit card account. Safe deposit boxes are not financial accounts unless the institution provides services
• Individual bonds, notes or stock certificates held by the filer, however, are not financial accounts; nor is an unsecured loan to a foreign trade or business that is not a financial institution
• “Financial account” is any “account in which the assets are held in a commingled fund, and the account owner holds an equity interest in the fund (including mutual funds)” ( g )
• IRS view is that a cash surrender value insurance policy is a financial account, and thus if the policy is “foreign” and the value exceeds $10,000, must be reported
13
reported
13
“C i l d F d” Th C t“Commingled Fund”- The Controversy IRS official's position (IRS FBAR Forum 06/12/09) is that a foreign hedge
f d ( d f i f d i t it f d) i f i “fi i lfund (and a foreign feeder or private equity fund) is a foreign “financialaccount” 2009 TNT 122-3 (06/29/09)
IRS official said IRS position was always that FBARs were required tobe filed for foreign hedge funds (WSJ, 06/25/09), which raises prior-yearnon-compliance issues
Under IRS official's stated position, FBARs apparently must be filed by:p , pp y y
−U.S. owners of foreign hedge funds
−U.S. managers of foreign hedge funds and their U.S. employeesg g g p ywith authority; and
−U.S. institutions (and their U.S. employees) that have authorityover foreign hedge funds of their clients
14
over foreign hedge funds of their clients
14
What Is A Financial Interest?
A person has a financial interest in a foreign financial account if:
Such person is the owner of record of, or has legal title to, theaccount
The owner of record or holder of legal title is acting as an agent,nominee or attorney or in some other capacity on behalf of suchnominee or attorney, or in some other capacity, on behalf of suchperson; or
Such person is deemed to have a financial interest by attributionfrom a corporation, partnership or trust
1515
Financial Interest Through Company A person has a financial interest in a foreign financial account by A person has a financial interest in a foreign financial account by
attribution from a corporation, if such person owns directly orindirectly more than 50% of the value or vote of a corporation thatowns the foreign financial accountowns the foreign financial account
Thus, if A, a U.S. person, owns 51% of B, a U.S. corporationwith a foreign financial account, both A and B must report the(same) account
Similarly, if A, a U.S. person, wholly owns B, a foreignti (i it i “CFC”) d B h f i fi i lcorporation (i.e., it is a “CFC”), and B has a foreign financial
account, A must report the account on his FBAR
1616
Financial Interest ThroughFinancial Interest Through Partnership
A person has a financial interest in a foreign financial account byattribution from a partnership, if such person owns an interest inmore than 50% of the profits or capital of a partnership that ownsp p p pthe foreign financial account
Profits are defined as the distributive share of partnership income,ki i i l ll itaking into account any special allocations
Like the corporate attribution rules, the partnership attribution rulesrequire a U S partnership and a 50%-plus partner to triggerrequire a U.S. partnership and a 50% plus partner to triggerreporting by the partner of the partnership’s foreign financialaccount
1717
Financial Interest Through Trust A person has a financial interest in a foreign financial account by A person has a financial interest in a foreign financial account by
attribution from a trust that owns the account if such person (1)has a present beneficial interest, directly or indirectly, in more than50% of the assets of that trust; or (2) receives more than 50% of; ( )the trust’s current income
Under this rule, certain actual or potential U.S. beneficiariesof a U.S. or foreign trust may be required to file an FBARreporting the trust’s foreign financial accounts
IRS official’s position is that a beneficiary who can receiveIRS official s position is that a beneficiary who can receive50+% of the income or assets should file an FBAR (6/12/09IRS FBAR Forum)
1818
Financial Interest Through TrustFinancial Interest Through Trust (Cont.)
A person can also have a financial interest in a foreign financialaccount by attribution from a trust if:
Such person established a trust that actually or beneficiallyowns the foreign financial account; and
A “trust protector” has been appointed A trust protector has been appointed
A trust protector is a person who is responsible for monitoring theactivities of a trustee, with the authority to influence the decisionsof the trustee or to replace, or recommend the replacement of, thetrustee
1919
What Is “Signature Or OtherWhat Is Signature Or Other Authority”
• A person has “signature authority” over an account if such person• A person has signature authority over an account if such personcan control the disposition of money or other property in it by deliveryof a document containing his or her signature (or his or her signatureand that of one or more other persons) to the bank or other person withand that of one or more other persons) to the bank or other person withwhom the account is maintained
• Other authority” over an account exists when a person can exercisecomparable power over an account by oral or some other means ofcommunication, either directly or through an agent, nominee, attorneyor other person in similar capacity, to the bank or other person withwhom the account is maintained
In the IRS 06/12/09 FBAR Forum, the “other authority” wasdescribed as including a substance over form standard
20
described as including a substance-over-form standard
20
Exceptions To Filing FBAR
• NRAs
• If foreign account is in a U S military facility or operated by U S• If foreign account is in a U.S. military facility or operated by U.S.institution for the military
Offi / l f bli l U S ti hi h h• Officers/employees of publicly U.S. corporations, or which has morethan $10M and at least 500 SHs, if no personal financial interest, andreceives letter from chief financial officer stating that the corporationhas compliedhas complied.
• Officers/employees of federally-regulated bank, if no personalfinancial interest
21
financial interest
21
FBAR Filing Deadlines
• Filing deadlines– Brief history of original deadlines and changes along the way
IRS Announcement 2009 62: Current June 30 2010 extension for– IRS Announcement 2009- 62: Current June 30, 2010 extension for U.S. persons with only signature authority over foreign financial accounts, and U.S. persons with beneficial ownership of foreign comingled fundscomingled funds
• Does this extend to U.S. persons who have owned hedge funds for the last six years?
• IRS has not released guidance as of Feb 12 2010 (IRS in• IRS has not released guidance as of Feb. 12, 2010 (IRS in January 2010 did release fact sheet, with no further guidance)
• IRS regulation project in progress
2222
Is Information On FBAR Confidential?
Information provided on an FBAR may be provided to the officers andemployees of any constituent unit of the Department of the Treasurywho have a need for the records in the performance of their duties
Th i f ti l b f d t th d t t The information also may be referred to any other department oragency of the U.S. upon the request of the head of such department oragency for use in a criminal, tax or regulatory investigation orproceedingproceeding
The information collected may also be provided to appropriate state,local and law enforcement and regulatory personnel in the performanceg y p pof their official duties. Disclosure of this information is mandatory
By contrast, dissemination of information on a tax return is strictlyli i d S C § 6103
23
limited. See IRC § 6103
23
FBAR- Penalty Regime Non-willful noncompliance:
Civil penalties of up to $10,000 for each violation, absent reasonable cause.
• Willful non-compliance
Civil penalties of up to the greater of $100,000 or 50% of the account value foreach violation per personeach violation per person
Criminal penalties are up to a $250,000 fine and a five-year prison term, althoughunder certain circumstances, it can be 10 years and up to a $500,000 fine
The IRS has the burden of proving willfulness
However, the Administration proposes (in the Green Book) certain rebuttablepresumptions for civil proceedings, including that generally a failure to report an
$account would be presumed to be willful if that account exceeds $200,000 duringthe year and is held with a certain intermediary that is not required to reportinformation with respect to U.S. account holders
2424
IRS FBAR Enforcement So Far
25
IRS FBAR Enforcement To Date
Sl f h dli f fil d f• Slow pace of handling forms filed so far• Extra auditors and compliance staff assigned to international• IRM penalty guidelines of July 2008 and applicability to quiet filings• Penalty structure: How FBAR penalty is determined, assessed and
collected (statute of limitations, JB Williams and Simonelli cases)• Too early to tell how IRS investigations will proceed from voluntary y g p y
disclosures though inconsistent penalty application apparent• Does an income tax examination automatically include an FBAR
examination?• May an FBAR violation be referred to criminal investigation?• What is the difference between “willfulness” used in a criminal
context, and in a civil context?
2626
context, and in a civil context?
Emerging FBAR Issues To Date
27
Hot Topics: Voluntary Disclosure AndHot Topics: Voluntary Disclosure And Voluntary Compliance
• Proper protocol if a taxpayer has already filed an FBAR and later discovers another account– If so, need to consider filing an amended FBAR, using the 2008 tax form– If account relates to another year, use 2008 FBAR and that year’s
instructions• Suppose the taxpayer has unreported income
– If the taxpayer hasn’t filed an FBAR, taxpayer is outside the scope of the IRS voluntary compliance initiative
– Taxpayer would want to consider hiring legal counsel to evaluate whether taxpayer would come in through normal voluntary compliance process
2828
Hot Topics: Voluntary Disclosure AndHot Topics: Voluntary Disclosure And Voluntary Compliance (Cont.)
• Representing amnesty non participants that instead came forward with• Representing amnesty non-participants that instead came forward with “quiet” or “noisy” filing– Cover letter– IRM Guidelines (July 1 2008)– IRM Guidelines (July 1, 2008)
2929
Hot Topics: Voluntary Disclosure AndHot Topics: Voluntary Disclosure And Voluntary Compliance (Cont.)
• Conflicts of interest among family members involved with unreported account, and with differing levels of involvement or culpability. Oneaccount, and with differing levels of involvement or culpability. One way to come in now under the normal protocol is the voluntary compliance process– Suppose some family members want to come in but others don’tSuppose some family members want to come in but others don t– A conflict is likely to arise
Di l• Disclosure
• Address in engagement letter
30
Hot Topics: Voluntary Disclosure AndHot Topics: Voluntary Disclosure And Voluntary Compliance (Cont.)
• Innocent spouse relief– Tax– FBAR penalties -- reasonable cause
31
Hot Topics: Voluntary Disclosure AndHot Topics: Voluntary Disclosure And Voluntary Compliance (Cont.)
• Need for criminal counsel if IRS investigates taxpayers that made• Need for criminal counsel if IRS investigates taxpayers that made filings outside “amnesty” program
3232
Hot Topics: Voluntary Disclosure AndHot Topics: Voluntary Disclosure And Voluntary Compliance (Cont.)
• Practical difficulties with future proceedings on non filers that came• Practical difficulties with future proceedings on non-filers that came forward under now-closed amnesty– Retrieval of records from offshore financial institution
R d d d t d t i b th ( ) hi h t b l d (b)– Records needed to determine both (a) highest balances and (b) income earned
3333
Hot Topics: Voluntary Disclosure AndHot Topics: Voluntary Disclosure And Voluntary Compliance (Cont.)
• What is happening after one has submitted voluntary disclosure• What is happening after one has submitted voluntary disclosure– Government information document request– Obtaining account records from foreign banks– Inconsistent penalty treatment is prevalent
34
Hot Topics For Taxpayers, Advisors With FBAR – Bank Secrecy And y
Offshore Tax Havens• Future of offshore tax havens, given that piercing has occurred, g p g• Exchange of information agreements
– Increased information-sharing among tax authorities• 84 OECD and non-OECD countries have implemented transparency and effective
exchange of information standards.• 3,600 bilateral tax conventions currently in force; 1,700 include provisions that
permit information exchange• 50 tax information exchange agreements are signed or in force
• Treasury announced tax information exchange agreement between U.S. and Monaco in September 2009
• Similar agreements reached with Gibraltar and Luxembourg (May 20, 2009)• Luxembourg agreement is the first one entered into by Luxembourg with an OECD
country that meets OECD standards for information exchangeU S S i b d d id f i d h f i f i• U.S.-Swiss tax treaty to be amended to provide for increased exchange of tax information
• New tax information exchange agreement between U.K. and Liechtenstein announced on Aug. 11, 2009
• Switzerland’s Federal Administrative Court granted UBS client appeal on Jan. 21, 2010 to prevent Swiss government from disclosing account information under Aug 29 2009
3535
prevent Swiss government from disclosing account information under Aug. 29, 2009 agreement with U.S. government
Future Legislation
36
Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act Of 2009
• The Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act of 2009 (H R 3933 S 1934)• The Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act of 2009 (H.R. 3933, S. 1934), introduced in the House by Ways and Means Committee Chair Charles B. Rangel, D-N.Y., and in the Senate by Finance Committee Chair Max Baucus, D-Mont., would impose significant tax withholding penalties on foreign financial institutions that do not disclose holdings by U S individuals or firmsfinancial institutions that do not disclose holdings by U.S. individuals or firms and would create several new information-reporting requirements. According to the Joint Committee on Taxation, the legislation would raise $8.5 billion over 10 years
• Could likely be tacked on to an extenders bill or potentially the Health Care Bill
• Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner endorsed the measure, saying in a release that it “fits well into the Administration’s dual-track strategy of improving our domestic tax laws while increasing global cooperation on tax information exchange”
3737
information exchange
Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act Of 2009 HighlightsOf 2009 - Highlights
• Require foreign financial institutions to provide the identity of any U.S. individual or foreign entity with substantial U.S. owners, and relevant account g yinformation, to Treasury or face a 30% withholding tax on income from the bank’s U.S. assets
• Mandate that foreign corporations provide withholding agents with the name, address and tax identification number of any U.S. individual with at least 10% ownership in the firm, or face a 30% withholding tax
• Extend bearer-bond tax penalties to such bonds marketed to offshore investors, and prevent the U.S. government from offering any bearer bonds
• Subject dividend equivalent payments included in notional principal contracts and paid to overseas corporations to the same 30% withholding tax levied on dividends paid to foreign investors
3838
Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act of 2009 – Highlights (Cont.)
• Impose penalties as high as $50,000 on U.S. taxpayers who own at least $50 000 in offshore accounts or assets but fail to report the accounts on their$50,000 in offshore accounts or assets but fail to report the accounts on their annual income tax return
• Levy a 40% on the amount of any understatement attributed to undisclosed foreign assets
• Extend to six years the statute of limitations for “substantial” omissions (exceeding $5,000 and 25% of reported income) derived from offshore assets
• Require tax or investment advisers to disclose the identities of any clients they i i b i ff h ll h h dassist in buying offshore assets, as well as the assets purchased
• Require that shareholders in passive foreign investment companies file annual returns, and also give Treasury authority to mandate that financial firms file returns dealing with withholding taxes even if they file fewer than 250 returnsreturns dealing with withholding taxes, even if they file fewer than 250 returns annually
• Make it easier for Treasury to presume that foreign trusts have U.S. beneficiaries, and establish a $10,000 minimum failure-to-file penalty for
39
p ycertain foreign-trust-related information returns
39
2010 Legislation: Highlights
• FACTA legislation– Introduced by Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus
in the Senate Finance Committee jobs billin the Senate Finance Committee jobs bill– Hiring Incentives to Restore Employment (HIRE) Act provisions
estimated to raise more than $9 billion over 10 years• Obama releases 2011 revenue proposals• Obama releases 2011 revenue proposals
– Require increased reporting on certain foreign accounts of foreign financial institutions including hedge fund, private equity fundsR i i d ti ith t t t i i i t f– Require increased reporting with respect to certain recipients of FDAP or gross proceeds
– Require disclosure of foreign financial assets to be filed with tax ret rn
40
return
2010 Legislation: Highlights (Cont.)
• Obama releases 2011 revenue proposals (Cont.)Impose penalties for underpayments attributable to undisclosed– Impose penalties for underpayments attributable to undisclosed foreign financial assets
– Extend statute of limitations for significant omission of income attributable to foreign financial assetsattributable to foreign financial assets
– Require reporting of certain transfers of assets to or from foreign financial accounts R i thi d t i f ti ti di t f f– Require third-party information reporting regarding transfer of assets to or from foreign financial accounts
41