[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 26, Volume 11]
[Revised as of April 1, 2004]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 26CFR1.1060-1]

[Page 181-186]
 
                       TITLE 26--INTERNAL REVENUE
 
    CHAPTER I--INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY 
                               (CONTINUED)
 
PART 1_INCOME TAXES--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 1.1060-1  Special allocation rules for certain asset acquisitions.

    (a) Scope--(1) In general. This section prescribes rules relating to 
the requirements of section 1060, which, in the case of an applicable 
asset acquisition, requires the transferor (the seller) and the 
transferee (the purchaser) each to allocate the consideration paid or 
received in the transaction among the assets transferred in the same 
manner as amounts are allocated under section 338(b)(5) (relating to the 
allocation of adjusted grossed-up basis among the assets of the target 
corporation when a section 338 election is made). In the case of an 
applicable asset acquisition described in paragraph (b)(1) of this 
section, sellers and purchasers must allocate the consideration under 
the residual method as described in Sec. Sec. 1.338-6 and 1.338-7 in 
order to determine, respectively, the amount realized from, and the 
basis in, each of the transferred assets. For rules relating to 
distributions of partnership property or transfers of partnership 
interests which are subject to section 1060(d), see Sec. 1.755-2T.
    (2) Effective date. The provisions of this section apply to any 
asset acquisition occurring after March 15, 2001. For rules applicable 
to asset acquisitions on or before March 15, 2001, see Sec. 1.1060-1T 
in effect prior to March 16, 2001 (see 26 CFR part 1 revised April 1, 
2000).
    (3) Outline of topics. In order to facilitate the use of this 
section, this paragraph (a)(3) lists the major paragraphs in this 
section as follows:

(a) Scope.
(1) In general.
(2) Effective date.
(3) Outline of topics.
(b) Applicable asset acquisition.
(1) In general.
(2) Assets constituting a trade or business.
(i) In general.
(ii) Goodwill or going concern value.
(iii) Factors indicating goodwill or going concern value.
(3) Examples.
(4) Asymmetrical transfers of assets.
(5) Related transactions.
(6) More than a single trade or business.
(7) Covenant entered into by the seller.
(8) Partial non-recognition exchanges.
(c) Allocation of consideration among assets under the residual method.
(1) Consideration.
(2) Allocation of consideration among assets.
(3) Certain costs.
(4) Effect of agreement between parties.
(d) Examples.
(e) Reporting requirements.
(1) Applicable asset acquisitions.
(i) In general.
(ii) Time and manner of reporting.
(A) In general.
(B) Additional reporting requirement.
(2) Transfers of interests in partnerships.

    (b) Applicable asset acquisition--(1) In general. An applicable 
asset acquisition is any transfer, whether direct or indirect, of a 
group of assets if the assets transferred constitute a trade or business 
in the hands of either the seller or the purchaser and, except as 
provided in paragraph (b)(8) of this section, the purchaser's basis in 
the transferred assets is determined wholly by reference to the 
purchaser's consideration.
    (2) Assets constituting a trade or business--(i) In general. For 
purposes of this section, a group of assets constitutes a trade or 
business if--
    (A) The use of such assets would constitute an active trade or 
business under section 355; or
    (B) Its character is such that goodwill or going concern value could 
under any circumstances attach to such group.
    (ii) Goodwill or going concern value. Goodwill is the value of a 
trade or business attributable to the expectancy of continued customer 
patronage. This expectancy may be due to the name or

[[Page 182]]

reputation of a trade or business or any other factor. Going concern 
value is the additional value that attaches to property because of its 
existence as an integral part of an ongoing business activity. Going 
concern value includes the value attributable to the ability of a trade 
or business (or a part of a trade or business) to continue functioning 
or generating income without interruption notwithstanding a change in 
ownership. It also includes the value that is attributable to the 
immediate use or availability of an acquired trade or business, such as, 
for example, the use of the revenues or net earnings that otherwise 
would not be received during any period if the acquired trade or 
business were not available or operational.
    (iii) Factors indicating goodwill or going concern value. In making 
the determination in this paragraph (b)(2), all the facts and 
circumstances surrounding the transaction are taken into account. 
Whether sufficient consideration is available to allocate to goodwill or 
going concern value after the residual method is applied is not relevant 
in determining whether goodwill or going concern value could attach to a 
group of assets. Factors to be considered include--
    (A) The presence of any intangible assets (whether or not those 
assets are section 197 intangibles), provided, however, that the 
transfer of such an asset in the absence of other assets will not be a 
trade or business for purposes of section 1060;
    (B) The existence of an excess of the total consideration over the 
aggregate book value of the tangible and intangible assets purchased 
(other than goodwill and going concern value) as shown in the financial 
accounting books and records of the purchaser; and
    (C) Related transactions, including lease agreements, licenses, or 
other similar agreements between the purchaser and seller (or managers, 
directors, owners, or employees of the seller) in connection with the 
transfer.
    (3) Examples. The following examples illustrate paragraphs (b)(1) 
and (2) of this section:

    Example 1. S is a high grade machine shop that manufactures 
microwave connectors in limited quantities. It is a successful company 
with a reputation within the industry and among its customers for 
manufacturing unique, high quality products. Its tangible assets consist 
primarily of ordinary machinery for working metal and plating. It has no 
secret formulas or patented drawings of value. P is a company that 
designs, manufactures, and markets electronic components. It wants to 
establish an immediate presence in the microwave industry, an area in 
which it previously has not been engaged. P is acquiring assets of a 
number of smaller companies and hopes that these assets will 
collectively allow it to offer a broad product mix. P acquires the 
assets of S in order to augment its product mix and to promote its 
presence in the microwave industry. P will not use the assets acquired 
from S to manufacture microwave connectors. The assets transferred are 
assets that constitute a trade or business in the hands of the seller. 
Thus, P's purchase of S's assets is an applicable asset acquisition. The 
fact that P will not use the assets acquired from S to continue the 
business of S does not affect this conclusion.
    Example 2. S, a sole proprietor who operates a car wash, both leases 
the building housing the car wash and sells all of the car wash 
equipment to P. S's use of the building and the car wash equipment 
constitute a trade or business. P begins operating a car wash in the 
building it leases from S. Because the assets transferred together with 
the asset leased are assets which constitute a trade or business, P's 
purchase of S's assets is an applicable asset acquisition.
    Example 3. S, a corporation, owns a retail store business in State X 
and conducts activities in connection with that business enterprise that 
meet the active trade or business requirement of section 355. P is a 
minority shareholder of S. S distributes to P all the assets of S used 
in S's retail business in State X in complete redemption of P's stock in 
S held by P. The distribution of S's assets in redemption of P's stock 
is treated as a sale or exchange under sections 302(a) and 302(b)(3), 
and P's basis in the assets distributed to it is determined wholly by 
reference to the consideration paid, the S stock. Thus, S's distribution 
of assets constituting a trade or business to P is an applicable asset 
acquisition.
    Example 4. S is a manufacturing company with an internal financial 
bookkeeping department. P is in the business of providing a financial 
bookkeeping service on a contract basis. As part of an agreement for P 
to begin providing financial bookkeeping services to S, P agrees to buy 
all of the assets associated with S's internal bookkeeping operations 
and provide employment to any of S's bookkeeping department employees 
who choose to accept a position with P. In addition to selling P the 
assets associated with its bookkeeping operation, S will enter into a 
long term contract with P for bookkeeping

[[Page 183]]

services. Because assets transferred from S to P, along with the related 
contract for bookkeeping services, are a trade or business in the hands 
of P, the sale of the bookkeeping assets from S to P is an applicable 
asset acquisition.

    (4) Asymmetrical transfers of assets. A purchaser is subject to 
section 1060 if--
    (i) Under general principles of tax law, the seller is not treated 
as transferring the same assets as the purchaser is treated as 
acquiring;
    (ii) The assets acquired by the purchaser constitute a trade or 
business; and
    (iii) Except as provided in paragraph (b)(8) of this section, the 
purchaser's basis in the transferred assets is determined wholly by 
reference to the purchaser's consideration.
    (5) Related transactions. Whether the assets transferred constitute 
a trade or business is determined by aggregating all transfers from the 
seller to the purchaser in a series of related transactions. Except as 
provided in paragraph (b)(8) of this section, all assets transferred 
from the seller to the purchaser in a series of related transactions are 
included in the group of assets among which the consideration paid or 
received in such series is allocated under the residual method. The 
principles of Sec. 1.338-1(c) are also applied in determining which 
assets are included in the group of assets among which the consideration 
paid or received is allocated under the residual method.
    (6) More than a single trade or business. If the assets transferred 
from a seller to a purchaser include more than one trade or business, 
then, in applying this section, all of the assets transferred (whether 
or not transferred in one transaction or a series of related 
transactions and whether or not part of a trade or business) are treated 
as a single trade or business.
    (7) Covenant entered into by the seller. If, in connection with an 
applicable asset acquisition, the seller enters into a covenant (e.g., a 
covenant not to compete) with the purchaser, that covenant is treated as 
an asset transferred as part of a trade or business.
    (8) Partial non-recognition exchanges. A transfer may constitute an 
applicable asset acquisition notwithstanding the fact that no gain or 
loss is recognized with respect to a portion of the group of assets 
transferred. All of the assets transferred, including the non-
recognition assets, are taken into account in determining whether the 
group of assets constitutes a trade or business. The allocation of 
consideration under paragraph (c) of this section is done without taking 
into account either the non-recognition assets or the amount of money or 
other property that is treated as transferred in exchange for the non-
recognition assets (together, the non-recognition exchange property). 
The basis in and gain or loss recognized with respect to the non-
recognition exchange property are determined under such rules as would 
otherwise apply to an exchange of such property. The amount of the money 
and other property treated as exchanged for non-recognition assets is 
the amount by which the fair market value of the non-recognition assets 
transferred by one party exceeds the fair market value of the non-
recognition assets transferred by the other (to the extent of the money 
and the fair market value of property transferred in the exchange). The 
money and other property that are treated as transferred in exchange for 
the non-recognition assets (and which are not included among the assets 
to which section 1060 applies) are considered to come from the following 
assets in the following order: first from Class I assets, then from 
Class II assets, then from Class III assets, then from Class IV assets, 
then from Class V assets, then from Class VI assets, and then from Class 
VII assets. For this purpose, liabilities assumed (or to which a non-
recognition exchange property is subject) are treated as Class I assets. 
See Example 1 in paragraph (d) of this section for an example of the 
application of section 1060 to a single transaction which is, in part, a 
non-recognition exchange.
    (c) Allocation of consideration among assets under the residual 
method--(1) Consideration. The seller's consideration is the amount, in 
the aggregate, realized from selling the assets in the applicable asset 
acquisition under section 1001(b). The purchaser's consideration is the 
amount, in the aggregate, of its cost of purchasing the assets in

[[Page 184]]

the applicable asset acquisition that is properly taken into account in 
basis.
    (2) Allocation of consideration among assets. For purposes of 
determining the seller's amount realized for each of the assets sold in 
an applicable asset acquisition, the seller allocates consideration to 
all the assets sold by using the residual method under Sec. Sec. 1.338-
6 and 1.338-7, substituting consideration for ADSP. For purposes of 
determining the purchaser's basis in each of the assets purchased in an 
applicable asset acquisition, the purchaser allocates consideration to 
all the assets purchased by using the residual method under Sec. Sec. 
1.338-6 and 1.338-7, substituting consideration for AGUB. In allocating 
consideration, the rules set forth in paragraphs (c)(3) and (4) of this 
section apply in addition to the rules in Sec. Sec. 1.338-6 and 1.338-
7.
    (3) Certain costs. The seller and purchaser each adjusts the amount 
allocated to an individual asset to take into account the specific 
identifiable costs incurred in transferring that asset in connection 
with the applicable asset acquisition (e.g., real estate transfer costs 
or security interest perfection costs). Costs so allocated increase, or 
decrease, as appropriate, the total consideration that is allocated 
under the residual method. No adjustment is made to the amount allocated 
to an individual asset for general costs associated with the applicable 
asset acquisition as a whole or with groups of assets included therein 
(e.g., non-specific appraisal fees or accounting fees). These latter 
amounts are taken into account only indirectly through their effect on 
the total consideration to be allocated.
    (4) Effect of agreement between parties. If, in connection with an 
applicable asset acquisition, the seller and purchaser agree in writing 
as to the allocation of any amount of consideration to, or as to the 
fair market value of, any of the assets, such agreement is binding on 
them to the extent provided in this paragraph (c)(4). Nothing in this 
paragraph (c)(4) restricts the Commissioner's authority to challenge the 
allocations or values arrived at in an allocation agreement. This 
paragraph (c)(4) does not apply if the parties are able to refute the 
allocation or valuation under the standards set forth in Commissioner v. 
Danielson, 378 F.2d 771 (3d Cir.), cert. denied, 389 U.S. 858 (1967) (a 
party wishing to challenge the tax consequences of an agreement as 
construed by the Commissioner must offer proof that, in an action 
between the parties to the agreement, would be admissible to alter that 
construction or show its unenforceability because of mistake, undue 
influence, fraud, duress, etc.).
    (d) Examples. The following examples illustrate this section:

    Example 1. (i) On January 1, 2001, A transfers assets X, Y, and Z to 
B in exchange for assets D, E, and F plus $1,000 cash.
    (ii) Assume the exchange of assets constitutes an exchange of like-
kind property to which section 1031 applies. Assume also that goodwill 
or going concern value could under any circumstances attach to each of 
the DEF and XYZ groups of assets and, therefore, each group constitutes 
a trade or business under section 1060.
    (iii) Assume the fair market values of the assets and the amount of 
money transferred are as follows:

------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                  Fair
                             Asset                               market
                                                                  value
------------------------------------------------------------------------
By A:
  X...........................................................     $ 400
  Y...........................................................       400
  Z...........................................................       200
                                                               ---------
    Total.....................................................     1,000
                                                               =========
By B:
  D...........................................................        40
  E...........................................................        30
  F...........................................................        30
  Cash (amount)...............................................     1,000
                                                               ---------
    Total.....................................................     1,100
------------------------------------------------------------------------

    (iv) Under paragraph (b)(8) of this section, for purposes of 
allocating consideration under paragraph (c) of this section, the like-
kind assets exchanged and any money or other property that are treated 
as transferred in exchange for the like-kind property are excluded from 
the application of section 1060.
    (v) Since assets X, Y, and Z are like-kind property, they are 
excluded from the application of the section 1060 allocation rules.
    (vi) Since assets D, E, and F are like-kind property, they are 
excluded from the application of the section 1060 allocation rules. 
Thus, the allocation rules of section 1060 do not apply in determining 
B's gain or loss with respect to the disposition of assets D, E, and F, 
and the allocation rules of section 1060 and paragraph (c) of this 
section are not

[[Page 185]]

applied to determine A's bases of assets D, E, and F. In addition, $900 
of the $1,000 cash B gave to A for A's like-kind assets (X, Y, and Z) is 
treated as transferred in exchange for the like-kind property in order 
to equalize the fair market values of the like-kind assets. Therefore, 
$900 of the cash is excluded from the application of the section 1060 
allocation rules.
    (vii) $100 of the cash is allocated under section 1060 and paragraph 
(c) of this section.
    (viii) A received $100 that must be allocated under section 1060 and 
paragraph (c) of this section. Since A transferred no Class I, II, III, 
IV, V, or VI assets to which section 1060 applies, in determining its 
amount realized for the part of the exchange to which section 1031 does 
not apply, the $100 is allocated to Class VII assets (goodwill and going 
concern value).
    (ix) B gave A $100 that must be allocated under section 1060 and 
paragraph (c) of this section. Since B received from A no Class I, II, 
III, IV, V, or VI assets to which section 1060 applies, the $100 
consideration is allocated by B to Class VII assets (goodwill and going 
concern value).
    Example 2. (i) On January 1, 2001, S, a sole proprietor, sells to P, 
a corporation, a group of assets that constitutes a trade or business 
under paragraph (b)(2) of this section. S, who plans to retire 
immediately, also executes in P's favor a covenant not to compete. P 
pays S $3,000 in cash and assumes $1,000 in liabilities. Thus, the total 
consideration is $4,000.
    (ii) On the purchase date, P and S also execute a separate agreement 
that states that the fair market values of the Class II, Class III, 
Class V, and Class VI assets S sold to P are as follows:

------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                  Fair
        Asset  class                       Asset                 market
                                                                  value
------------------------------------------------------------------------
II.........................  Actively traded securities.......      $500
                                                               ---------
                                Total Class II................       500
                                                               =========
III........................  Accounts receivable..............       200
                                                               ---------
                                Total Class III...............       200
                                                               =========
V..........................  Furniture and fixtures...........       800
                             Building.........................       800
                             Land.............................       200
                             Equipment........................       400
                                                               ---------
                                Total Class V.................     2,200
                                                               =========
VI.........................  Covenant not to compete..........       900
                                                               ---------
                                Total Class VI................       900
------------------------------------------------------------------------

    (iii) P and S each allocate the consideration in the transaction 
among the assets transferred under paragraph (c) of this section in 
accordance with the agreed upon fair market values of the assets, so 
that $500 is allocated to Class II assets, $200 is allocated to the 
Class III asset, $2,200 is allocated to Class V assets, $900 is 
allocated to Class VI assets, and $200 ($4,000 total consideration less 
$3,800 allocated to assets in Classes II, III, V, and VI) is allocated 
to the Class VII assets (goodwill and going concern value).
    (iv) In connection with the examination of P's return, the 
Commissioner, in determining the fair market values of the assets 
transferred, may disregard the parties' agreement. Assume that the 
Commissioner correctly determines that the fair market value of the 
covenant not to compete was $500. Since the allocation of consideration 
among Class II, III, V, and VI assets results in allocation up to the 
fair market value limitation, the $600 of unallocated consideration 
resulting from the Commissioner's redetermination of the value of the 
covenant not to compete is allocated to Class VII assets (goodwill and 
going concern value).

    (e) Reporting requirements--(1) Applicable asset acquisitions--(i) 
In general. Unless otherwise excluded from this requirement by the 
Commissioner, the seller and the purchaser in an applicable asset 
acquisition each must report information concerning the amount of 
consideration in the transaction and its allocation among the assets 
transferred. They also must report information concerning subsequent 
adjustments to consideration.
    (ii) Time and manner of reporting--(A) In general. The seller and 
the purchaser each must file asset acquisition statements on Form 8594, 
``Asset Allocation Statement,'' with their income tax returns or returns 
of income for the taxable year that includes the first date assets are 
sold pursuant to an applicable asset acquisition. This reporting 
requirement applies to all asset acquisitions described in this section. 
For reporting requirements relating to asset acquisitions occurring 
before March 16, 2001, as described in paragraph (a)(2) of this section, 
see the temporary regulations under section 1060 in effect prior to 
March 16, 2001 (see 26 CFR part 1 revised April 1, 2000).
    (B) Additional reporting requirement. When an increase or decrease 
in consideration is taken into account after the close of the first 
taxable year that includes the first date assets are sold in an 
applicable asset acquisition, the seller and the purchaser each must 
file a supplemental asset acquisition statement on Form 8594 with the 
income tax

[[Page 186]]

return or return of income for the taxable year in which the increase 
(or decrease) is properly taken into account.
    (2) Transfers of interests in partnerships. For reporting 
requirements relating to the transfer of a partnership interest, see 
Sec. 1.755-1(d).

[T.D. 8940, 66 FR 9954, Feb. 13, 2001, as amended by T.D. 9059, 68 FR 
34299, June 9, 2003]

                   Changes To Effectuate F.C.C. Policy