Chap. 3 - Capital Structure of
the Corporation
Options
- Structuring Corporation’s Capital:
1) Common Stock,
including:
a)
voting stock;
b)
non-voting stock; and,
c)
rights and warrants.
2) Preferred Stock - (a)
nonqualified preferred stock; (b) qualified preferred stock; (c)
convertible preferred stock.
continued
Capital Structure Options,
continued
3) Debt:
a) Convertible
into stock; or,
b)
Nonconvertible:
bonds,
including “junk bonds;” debentures;
notes;
trade
payables.
Reasons for Corporation to Use
Debt (Rather than Equity)
1) Interest on debt is
deductible; dividends paid are not deductible to the corporation.
2) Repayment of the debt
constitutes tax basis recovery to the lender and not a dividend
distribution; redemption of the stock may be an ordinary dividend event, not a
capital gains event (but both 15% tax).
3) Bad debt deduction
(nonbusiness bad debt treatment?) and not a capital loss.
Beneficial Effects of Corporate
Debt Leveraging
Enhance the corporation’s
return on equity (ROE) component and, thereby, increase the corporation’s
earnings per share.
If shares are normally selling
at some multiple of earnings per share, what should happen when the earnings
per share are increased by significant debt leveraging?
What is a permissible debt to
equity ratio?
Caution: Leverage is a “two
edged sword”.
Impact of the 2003 Legislation
re Dividends Tax Rate
1) Dividends
(and capital gains) are taxed at a maximum 15% to individuals.
Expiration
of 15% rate at end of 2010.
2) Cf., interest income
(to the lender) taxed at up to 35 percent (i.e., a 20 percent tax rate
differential from 15% rate).
3) But, interest expense
is deductible at the corporation level; dividend distributions
are not deductible to the corporation.
Alternative Shareholder
Beneficial Tax Planning
Hold the shares for
capital appreciation and eventual recognition of deferred capital gains (or §1014
tax basis step-up at death).
Corporation can use stock
buy-backs (market repurchase programs) to compress the shareholder equity base
and increase the per share earnings (and, thereby -hopefully- contribute to
increased stock appreciation).
Debt vs. Equity
Characterization p.139
Significant factors in
differentiating between debt and equity (a fact question) include:
1) The form of the obligation –
existence of indicia of a debt, e.g., promissory note.
2) Debt/equity ratio -
"thin capitalization”?
3) Intent to create a debt (is
interest paid?).
4) Proportionality - really a
“super factor”?
5) Subordination - inside
debt/hard to avoid?
Certain Debt vs. Equity
Issues p.140
Is an IRS private letter ruling
available to assure classification of debt as such for tax purposes? No. Rev.
Proc. 2010-3, §4.02(1) - this is a fact issue (p. 140, fn. 4).
Treatment of shareholder guaranteed
debt: recharacterized as equity contribution? Plantation Patterns case (p.
141) says yes.
Fin Hay Realty p.142
Demand debt outstanding for a
long period.
Issue re deduction of interest
expense - §163.
Tax refund action - held equity
& not debt.
Important factors: (see the
16 factors)
Proportionality as the
critical element.
Debt was committed for
equity investment by the corporation in real estate and prompt liquidation of
corporate assets was difficult.
What Varieties of Debt (?)
p. 148
Monthly income preferred
securities (MIPs).
Contingent convertible debt
securities:
limited cash
interest; OID; and, conversion into equity.
Rev. Rul. 2002-31 – concerning
this debt
Rev. Rul. 2003-97, Merrill
Lynch’s “feline prides” – 5 year note and 3 year forward contract to purchase
issuer’s stock; the interest expense is deductible. Similar ACES Units, PEPS
Units, and Upper DECS.
Code §163(l)
p. 149
The debt is payable in the equity
of the issuer (or a related party).
No deduction is allowed for
interest paid or accrued on this “disqualified debt instrument.”
Code §385
p.150
Authorizes the promulgation of
regulations.
Issues re: proportionality;
and,
inside/outside debt ratios
Regulations withdrawn (1969 to
1980 to abandonment) but a continuing impact? Possible bifurcation of putative
debt instruments? Code §385(a) (parenthetical).
Example: equity kickers.
Code §385(b) Factors
p.150
1) Form – written
instrument?
2) Subordination to other
corporate debt
3) Debt/equity ratio
4) Convertibility of debt
into stock
5) Proportionality in
the holdings of the several shareholders
Problem Facts
p.153
& Balance Sheet
Assets Adj.
Basis F.M.V. Liabilities & Cap. Cash
$1,920,000 $1,920,000 a) Liabilities: Bldg. 20,000
80,000 x) Bank --Goodwill 0 40,000
$900,000
y) Sh. Loans
$900,000
b) Cap. Stock $240,000
$1,940,000 $2,040,000 $2,040,000
Problem
1 p.153
Debt-Equity Ratios
(a) Transaction: Three
shareholder loans for $300,000 each; for five years; variable interest rate
one point below prime, determined annually.
What is the “debt-equity
ratio”?
1.8 mil (all debt)
to 240,000? (7.5 to 1) or,
1.8 mil (all debt)
to 140,000? (12.8 to 1)
Or, is the ratio computed as
follows: 900,000 (inside debt only) to either: (i) 240,000 or (ii)
140,000 (i.e., ratios of 3.75 and 6.42)?
Problem
1 p.153
Interest Paid from Profits
(b) Transaction:
Three shareholders - each makes
a loan for $300,000;
each for a 10% 20 year
subordinated income debenture;
interest expense is payable
only from the net profits of the business.
Problem
1 p.154
Guaranteed Loans
(c) Transaction:
$900,000 (additional) loan from
the bank; unsecured but personally guaranteed by the shareholders;
joint and several liability to
the three shareholders for this additional loan.
Are the bank loans equity
because of the guarantee? Plantation Patterns
Problem
1 p.154
One Shareholder Lender
(d) Transaction:
A (only) loans the $900,000
(additional) loan. Terms:
five year term;
variable interest rate one
point below prime, determined annually.
Note: no proportionality, but
high debt-equity ratio.
Problem
1 p.154
Default Two Years Later
(e) Transaction:
A (only) loans the $900,000
(additional) loan. Same terms (as (d)): five years & variable interest
rate one point below prime, determined annually.
Borrower fails to pay interest
on the debt.
Issue: What impact on A’s
“original intent” to create a debtor/creditor relationship?
Problem
2 p.154
Avoiding equity status
Avoiding attributes of hybrid
stock:
reasonable interest
rate
fixed or floating
interest paid with
regularity
fixed maturity date
no convertibility
feature
Quite difficult to avoid equity
status if:
(i) proportionality and (ii)
subordination.
Character of Gain or Loss on
Corporate Investment
Equity and debt
securities held by investors as capital assets (i.e., not traders).
Capital gain for gains on
sales.
Special 50 percent
exclusion (§1202) for gain on Qualified Small Business Stock (but only 50% of
28% rate; 25% (not 50% for 2010).
Code §1045 gain rollover
provision – postponement when investment in qualified small business stock.
Tax Character of a Loss on
Corporate Debt Investment
§§165(g)(1) & (2)
(worthless securities)
capital loss
treatment upon sale or becoming worthless.
§166 (bad debts – not a
security) –
- business bad debt
as an ordinary loss.
- nonbusiness bad
debt as a short-term capital loss.
Loan as employee – see Generes
(next slide)
Generes case note, p.155
Issue re business or
non-business bad debt status (i.e., what value of the deduction).
Generes owned 44 percent
of the stock and was part-time president - salary $12,000.
He advanced funds to the
corporation and also guaranteed corporate debts.
Dominant motivation was
as an investment, not to protect his employment status (i.e., his
“business”).
Section 1244 Stock – Ordinary
Loss Deduction p.155
1. Individuals (and
partnerships) only.
2. Common or preferred stock
issued for money or property, but not for services.
3. Small business.
4. Gross receipts test:
requires active business income and not passive income.
5. Annual limit on the ordinary
loss amount.
No formal Section 1244 plan is
required.
Problem
p.157
Alternative Investments
Hi-Tech capital structure
for venture capital investment.
a) Five year note - No
participation in equity growth; §166 governs if the note defaults.
Nonbusiness bad
debt status unless the lender’s business is loaning money.
b) Registered bond -
market interest rate.
Security
categorization under §165(g)(2).
Problem, p.157 cont.
c) Registered bond; Bond loss
would be worthless security. Code §165(g)(1).
Concept of "security"
includes subscription right. Loss on warrants - $10,000 – is governed by Code
§165(g)(2)(B) &, therefore, a $10,000 LTCL.
d) Common stock - qualifies as
§1244 stock. Ordinary loss treatment available? Yes, for 50K (or 100K, if
married).
Problem, p.157, cont.
e) Convertible preferred stock.
Does qualify
under §1244. Eligibility of up to $50,000 loss (or $100,000 on a joint
return) if other requirements are satisfied.
f) Original contributions of
$500,000 & $500,000. Not a "small business corporation" at
the time it issues the additional common stock because aggregate amount
of money received for original stock exceeds $1 mil.
Problem, p.157, cont.
g) Wedding gift. Donees
do not qualify for §1244 treatment. Son is limited to $200,000 capital loss
under Code §165(g)(1). Reg. §1.1244(a)-1(b).
h) Purchase of
stock through a partnership. Partnership is eligible for an ordinary loss
deduction under Code §1244.
Loss will flow
through to the eligible partners (not corporations).