[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 26, Volume 2]
[Revised as of April 1, 2004]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 26CFR1.148-7]

[Page 718-726]
 
                       TITLE 26--INTERNAL REVENUE
 
    CHAPTER I--INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY 
                               (CONTINUED)
 
PART 1_INCOME TAXES--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 1.148-7  Spending exceptions to the rebate requirement.

    (a) Scope of section--(1) In general. This section provides guidance 
on the spending exceptions to the arbitrage rebate requirement of 
section 148(f)(2). These exceptions are the 6-month exception in section 
148(f)(4)(B) (the 6-month exception), the 18-month exception under 
paragraph (d) of this section (the 18-month exception), and the 2-year 
construction exception under section 148(f)(4)(C) (the 2-year exception) 
(collectively, the spending exceptions).
    (2) Relationship of spending exceptions. Each of the spending 
exceptions is an independent exception to arbitrage rebate. For example, 
a construction issue may qualify for the 6-month exception or the 18-
month exception even though the issuer makes one or more elections under 
the 2-year exception with respect to the issue.
    (3) Spending exceptions not mandatory. Use of the spending 
exceptions is not mandatory. An issuer may apply the arbitrage rebate 
requirement to an issue that otherwise satisfies a spending exception. 
If an issuer elects to pay penalty in lieu of rebate under the 2-year 
exception, however, the issuer must apply those penalty provisions.
    (b) Rules applicable for all spending exceptions. The provisions of 
this paragraph (b) apply for purposes of applying each of the spending 
exceptions.
    (1) Special transferred proceeds rules--(i) Application to prior 
issues. For purposes of applying the spending exceptions to a prior 
issue only, proceeds of the prior issue that become transferred proceeds 
of the refunding issue continue to be treated as unspent proceeds of the 
prior issue. If the prior issue satisfies one of the spending 
exceptions, the proceeds of the prior issue that are excepted from 
rebate under that spending exception are not subject to rebate either as 
proceeds of the prior issue or as transferred proceeds of the refunding 
issue.
    (ii) Application to refunding issues--(A) In general. The only 
spending exception applicable to refunding issues is the 6-month 
exception. For purposes of applying the 6-month exception to a refunding 
issue only, proceeds of the prior issue that become transferred proceeds 
of the refunding issue generally are not treated as proceeds of the 
refunding issue and need not be spent for the refunding issue to satisfy 
that spending exception. Even if the refunding issue qualifies for that 
spending exception, those transferred proceeds are subject to rebate as 
proceeds of the refunding issue unless an exception to rebate applied to 
those proceeds as proceeds of the prior issue.
    (B) Exception. For purposes of applying the 6-month exception to 
refunding issues, those transferred proceeds of the refunding issue 
excluded from the gross proceeds of the prior issue under the special 
definition of gross proceeds in paragraph (c)(3) of this section, and

[[Page 719]]

those that transferred from a prior taxable issue, are generally treated 
as gross proceeds of the refunding issue. Thus, for the refunding issue 
to qualify for the 6-month exception, those proceeds must be spent 
within 6 months of the issue date of the refunding issue, unless those 
amounts continue to be used in a manner that does not cause those 
amounts to be gross proceeds under paragraph (c)(3) of this section.
    (2) Application of multipurpose issue rules. Except as otherwise 
provided, if any portion of an issue is treated as a separate issue 
allocable to refunding purposes under Sec. 1.148-9(h) (relating to 
multipurpose issues), for purposes of this section, that portion is 
treated as a separate issue.
    (3) Expenditures for governmental purposes of the issue. For 
purposes of this section, expenditures for the governmental purpose of 
an issue include payments for interest, but not principal, on the issue, 
and for principal or interest on another issue of obligations. The 
preceding sentence does not apply for purposes of the 18-month and 2-
year exceptions if those payments cause the issue to be a refunding 
issue.
    (4) De minimis rule. Any failure to satisfy the final spending 
requirement of the 18-month exception or the 2-year exception is 
disregarded if the issuer exercises due diligence to complete the 
project financed and the amount of the failure does not exceed the 
lesser of 3 percent of the issue price of the issue or $250,000.
    (5) Special definition of reasonably required reserve or replacement 
fund. For purposes of this section only, a reasonably required reserve 
or replacement fund also includes any fund to the extent described in 
Sec. 1.148-5(c)(3)(i)(E) or (G).
    (6) Pooled financing issue--(i) In general. Except as otherwise 
provided in this paragraph (b)(6), the spending exceptions apply to a 
pooled financing issue as a whole, rather than to each loan separately.
    (ii) Election to apply spending exceptions separately to each loan--
(A) In general. At the election (made on or before the issue date) of 
the issuer of a pooled financing issue, the spending exceptions are 
applied separately to each conduit loan, and the applicable spending 
requirements for a loan begin on the earlier of the date the loan is 
made, or the first day following the 1-year period beginning on the 
issue date of the pooled financing issue. If this election is made, the 
rebate requirement applies to, and none of the spending exceptions are 
available for, gross proceeds of the pooled financing bonds before the 
date on which the spending requirements for those proceeds begin.
    (B) Application of spending exceptions. If the issuer makes the 
election under this paragraph (b)(6)(ii), the rebate requirement is 
satisfied for proceeds used to finance a particular conduit loan to the 
extent that the loan satisfies a spending exception or the small issuer 
exception under Sec. 1.148-8, regardless of whether any other conduit 
loans allocable to the issue satisfy such an exception. A pooled 
financing issue is an issue of arbitrage bonds, however, unless the 
entire issue satisfies the requirements of section 148. An issuer may 
pay rebate for some conduit loans and 1\1/2\ percent penalty for other 
conduit loans from the same pooled financing issue. The 1\1/2\ percent 
penalty is computed separately for each conduit loan.
    (C) Elections under 2-year exception. If the issuer makes the 
election under this paragraph (b)(6)(ii), the issuer may make all 
elections under the 2-year exception separately for each loan. Elections 
regarding a loan that otherwise must be made by the issuer on or before 
the issue date instead may be made on or before the date the loan is 
made (but not later than 1 year after the issue date).
    (D) Example. The operation of this paragraph (b)(6) is illustrated 
by the following example:

    Example. Pooled financing issue. On January 1, 1994, Authority J 
issues bonds. As of the issue date, J reasonably expects to use the 
proceeds of the issue to make loans to City K, County L, and City M. J 
does not reasonably expect to use more than 75 percent of the available 
construction proceeds of the issue for construction expenditures. On or 
before the issue date, J elects to apply the spending exceptions 
separately for each loan, with spending requirements beginning on the 
earlier of the date the loan is made or the first day following the 1-
year period beginning on the issue date. On February 1, 1994, J loans a 
portion of the proceeds to K, and K

[[Page 720]]

reasonably expects that 45 percent of those amounts will be used for 
construction expenditures. On the date this loan is made, J elects under 
paragraph (j) of this section to treat 60 percent of the amount loaned 
to K as a separate construction issue, and also elects the 1\1/2\ 
percent penalty under paragraph (k) of this section for the separate 
construction issue. On March 1, 1994, J loans a portion of the proceeds 
to L, and L reasonably expects that more than 75 percent of those 
amounts will be used for construction expenditures. On March 1, 1995, J 
loans the remainder of the proceeds to M, and none of those amounts will 
be used for construction expenditures. J must satisfy the rebate 
requirement for all gross proceeds before those amounts are loaned. For 
the loan to K, the spending periods begin on February 1, 1994, and the 
1\1/2\ percent penalty must be paid for any failure to meet a spending 
requirement for the portion of the loan to K that is treated as a 
separate construction issue. Rebate must be paid on the remaining 
portion of the loan to K, unless that portion qualifies for the 6-month 
exception. For the loan to L, the spending periods begin on March 1, 
1994, and the rebate requirement must be satisfied unless the 6-month, 
18-month, or the 2-year exception is satisfied with respect to those 
amounts. For the loan to M, the spending periods begin on January 2, 
1995, and the rebate requirement must be satisfied for those amounts 
unless the 6-month or 18-month exception is satisfied.

    (c) 6-month exception-- (1)General rule. An issue is treated as 
meeting the rebate requirement if--
    (i) The gross proceeds (as modified by paragraph (c)(3) of this 
section) of the issue are allocated to expenditures for the governmental 
purposes of the issue within the 6-month period beginning on the issue 
date (the 6-month spending period); and
    (ii) The rebate requirement is met for amounts not required to be 
spent within the 6-month spending period (excluding earnings on a bona 
fide debt service fund).
    (2) Additional period for certain bonds. The 6-month spending period 
is extended for an additional 6 months in certain circumstances 
specified under section 148(f)(4)(B)(ii).
    (3) Amounts not included in gross proceeds. For purposes of 
paragraph (c)(1)(i) of this section only, gross proceeds has the meaning 
used in Sec. 1.148-1, except it does not include amounts--
    (i) In a bona fide debt service fund;
    (ii) In a reasonably required reserve or replacement fund (see Sec. 
1.148-7(b)(5));
    (iii) That, as of the issue date, are not reasonably expected to be 
gross proceeds but that become gross proceeds after the end of the 6-
month spending period;
    (iv) Representing sale or investment proceeds derived from payments 
under any purpose investment of the issue; and
    (v) Representing repayments of grants (as defined in Sec. 1.148-
6(d)(4)) financed by the issue.
    (4) Series of refundings. If a principal purpose of a series of 
refunding issues is to exploit the difference between taxable and tax-
exempt interest rates by investing proceeds during the temporary periods 
provided in Sec. 1.148-9(d), the 6-month spending period for all issues 
in the series begins on the issue date of the first issue in the series.
    (d) 18-month exception--(1) General rule. An issue is treated as 
meeting the rebate requirement if all of the following requirements are 
satisfied--
    (i) 18-month expenditure schedule met. The gross proceeds (as 
defined in paragraph (d)(3) of this section) are allocated to 
expenditures for a governmental purpose of the issue in accordance with 
the following schedule (the 18-month expenditure schedule) measured from 
the issue date--
    (A) At least 15 percent within 6 months (the first spending period);
    (B) At least 60 percent within 12 months (the second spending 
period); and
    (C) 100 percent within 18 months (the third spending period).
    (ii) Rebate requirement met for amounts not required to be spent. 
The rebate requirement is met for all amounts not required to be spent 
in accordance with the 18-month expenditure schedule (other than 
earnings on a bona fide debt service fund).
    (iii) Issue qualifies for initial temporary period. All of the gross 
proceeds (as defined in paragraph (d)(3)(i) of this section) of the 
issue qualify for the initial temporary period under Sec. 1.148-
2(e)(2).
    (2) Extension for reasonable retainage. An issue does not fail to 
satisfy the spending requirement for the third spending period as a 
result of a reasonable retainage if the reasonable retainage is 
allocated to expenditures within 30 months of the issue date.

[[Page 721]]

Reasonable retainage has the meaning under paragraph (h) of this 
section, as modified to refer to net sale proceeds on the date 18 months 
after the issue date.
    (3) Gross proceeds--(i) Definition of gross proceeds. For purposes 
of paragraph (d)(1) of this section only, gross proceeds means gross 
proceeds as defined in paragraph (c)(3) of this section, as modified to 
refer to ``18 months'' in paragraph (c)(3)(iii) of this section in lieu 
of ``6 months.''
    (ii) Estimated earnings. For purposes of determining compliance with 
the first two spending periods under paragraph (d)(1)(i) of this 
section, the amount of investment proceeds included in gross proceeds of 
the issue is determined based on the issuer's reasonable expectations on 
the issue date.
    (4) Application to multipurpose issues. This paragraph (d) does not 
apply to an issue any portion of which is treated as meeting the rebate 
requirement under paragraph (e) of this section (relating to the 2-year 
exception).
    (e) 2-year exception--(1) General rule. A construction issue is 
treated as meeting the rebate requirement for available construction 
proceeds if those proceeds are allocated to expenditures for 
governmental purposes of the issue in accordance with the following 
schedule (the 2-year expenditure schedule), measured from the issue 
date--
    (i) At least 10 percent within 6 months (the first spending period);
    (ii) At least 45 percent within 1 year (the second spending period);
    (iii) At least 75 percent within 18 months (the third spending 
period); and
    (iv) 100 percent within 2 years (the fourth spending period).
    (2) Extension for reasonable retainage. An issue does not fail to 
satisfy the spending requirement for the fourth spending period as a 
result of unspent amounts for reasonable retainage (as defined in 
paragraph (h) of this section) if those amounts are allocated to 
expenditures within 3 years of the issue date.
    (3) Definitions. For purposes of the 2-year exception, the following 
definitions apply:
    (i) Real property means land and improvements to land, such as 
buildings or other inherently permanent structures, including interests 
in real property. For example, real property includes wiring in a 
building, plumbing systems, central heating or air-conditioning systems, 
pipes or ducts, elevators, escalators installed in a building, paved 
parking areas, roads, wharves and docks, bridges, and sewage lines.
    (ii) Tangible personal property means any tangible property other 
than real property, including interests in tangible personal property. 
For example, tangible personal property includes machinery that is not a 
structural component of a building, subway cars, fire trucks, 
automobiles, office equipment, testing equipment, and furnishings.
    (iii) Substantially completed. Construction may be treated as 
substantially completed when the issuer abandons construction or when at 
least 90 percent of the total costs of the construction reasonably 
expected, as of that date, to be financed with the available 
construction proceeds have been allocated to expenditures.
    (f) Construction issue--(1) Definition. Construction issue means any 
issue that is not a refunding issue if--
    (i) The issuer reasonably expects, as of the issue date, that at 
least 75 percent of the available construction proceeds of the issue 
will be allocated to construction expenditures (as defined in paragraph 
(g) of this section) for property owned by a governmental unit or a 
501(c)(3) organization; and
    (ii) Any private activity bonds that are part of the issue are 
qualified 501(c)(3) bonds or private activity bonds issued to finance 
property to be owned by a governmental unit or a 501(c)(3) organization.
    (2) Use of actual facts. For the provisions of paragraphs (e) 
through (m) of this section that apply based on the issuer's reasonable 
expectations, an issuer may elect on or before the issue date to apply 
all of those provisions based on actual facts, except that this election 
does not apply for purposes of determining whether an issue is a 
construction issue under paragraph (f)(1) of this section if the 1\1/2\ 
percent penalty election is made under paragraph (k) of this section.

[[Page 722]]

    (3) Ownership requirement--(i) In general. A governmental unit or 
501(c)(3) organization is treated as the owner of property if it would 
be treated as the owner for Federal income tax purposes. For obligations 
issued on behalf of a State or local governmental unit, the entity that 
actually issues the bonds is treated as a governmental unit.
    (ii) Safe harbor for leases and management contracts. Property 
leased by a governmental unit or a 501(c)(3) organization is treated as 
owned by the governmental unit or 501(c)(3) organization if the lessee 
complies with the requirements of section 142(b)(1)(B). For a bond 
described in section 142(a)(6), the requirements of section 142(b)(1)(B) 
apply as modified by section 146(h)(2).
    (g) Construction expenditures--(1) Definition. Except as otherwise 
provided, construction expenditures means capital expenditures (as 
defined in Sec. 1.150-1) that are allocable to the cost of real 
property or constructed personal property (as defined in paragraph 
(g)(3) of this section). Except as provided in paragraph (g)(2) of this 
section, construction expenditures do not include expenditures for 
acquisitions of interests in land or other existing real property.
    (2) Certain acquisitions under turnkey contracts treated as 
construction expenditures. Expenditures are not for the acquisition of 
an interest in existing real property other than land if the contract 
between the seller and the issuer requires the seller to build or 
install the property (e.g., a turnkey contract), but only to the extent 
that the property has not been built or installed at the time the 
parties enter into the contract.
    (3) Constructed personal property. Constructed personal property 
means tangible personal property (or, if acquired pursuant to a single 
acquisition contract, properties) or specially developed computer 
software if--
    (i) A substantial portion of the property or properties is completed 
more than 6 months after the earlier of the date construction or 
rehabilitation commenced and the date the issuer entered into an 
acquisition contract;
    (ii) Based on the reasonable expectations of the issuer, if any, or 
representations of the person constructing the property, with the 
exercise of due diligence, completion of construction or rehabilitation 
(and delivery to the issuer) could not have occurred within that 6-month 
period; and
    (iii) If the issuer itself builds or rehabilitates the property, not 
more than 75 percent of the capitalizable cost is attributable to 
property acquired by the issuer (e.g., components, raw materials, and 
other supplies).
    (4) Specially developed computer software. Specially developed 
computer software means any programs or routines used to cause a 
computer to perform a desired task or set of tasks, and the 
documentation required to describe and maintain those programs, provided 
that the software is specially developed and is functionally related and 
subordinate to real property or other constructed personal property.
    (5) Examples. The operation of this paragraph (g) is illustrated by 
the following examples:

    Example 1. Purchase of construction materials. City A issues bonds 
to finance a new office building. A uses proceeds of the bonds to 
purchase materials to be used in constructing the building, such as 
bricks, pipes, wires, lighting, carpeting, heating equipment, and 
similar materials. Expenditures by A for the construction materials are 
construction expenditures because those expenditures will be 
capitalizable to the cost of the building upon completion, even though 
they are not initially capitalizable to the cost of existing real 
property. This result would be the same if A hires a third-party to 
perform the construction, unless the office building is partially 
constructed at the time that A contracts to purchase the building.
    Example 2. Turnkey contract. City B issues bonds to finance a new 
office building. B enters into a turnkey contract with developer D under 
which D agrees to provide B with a completed building on a specified 
completion date on land currently owned by D. Under the agreement, D 
holds title to the land and building and assumes any risk of loss until 
the completion date, at which time title to the land and the building 
will be transferred to B. No construction has been performed by the date 
that B and D enter into the agreement. All payments by B to D for 
construction of the building are construction expenditures because all 
the payments are properly capitalized to the cost of the building, but 
payments by B to D allocable to the acquisition of the land are not 
construction expenditures.
    Example 3. Right-of-way. P, a public agency, issues bonds to finance 
the acquisition of a

[[Page 723]]

right-of-way and the construction of sewage lines through numerous 
parcels of land. The right-of-way is acquired primarily through P' s 
exercise of its powers of eminent domain. As of the issue date, P 
reasonably expects that it will take approximately 2 years to acquire 
the entire right-of-way because of the time normally required for 
condemnation proceedings. No expenditures for the acquisition of the 
right-of-way are construction expenditures because they are costs 
incurred to acquire an interest in existing real property.
    Example 4. Subway cars. City C issues bonds to finance new subway 
cars. C reasonably expects that it will take more than 6 months for the 
subway cars to be constructed to C's specifications. The subway cars are 
constructed personal property. Alternatively, if the builder of the 
subway cars informs C that it will only take 3 months to build the 
subway cars to C's specifications, no payments for the subway cars are 
construction expenditures.
    Example 5. Fractional interest in property. U, a public agency, 
issues bonds to finance an undivided fractional interest in a newly 
constructed power-generating facility. U contributes its ratable share 
of the cost of building the new facility to the project manager for the 
facility. U's contributions are construction expenditures in the same 
proportion that the total expenditures for the facility qualify as 
construction expenditures.
    Example 6. Park land. City D issues bonds to finance the purchase of 
unimproved land and the cost of subsequent improvements to the land, 
such as grading and landscaping, necessary to transform it into a park. 
The costs of the improvements are properly capitalizable to the cost of 
the land, and therefore, are construction expenditures, but expenditures 
for the acquisition of the land are not.

    (h) Reasonable retainage definition. Reasonable retainage means an 
amount, not to exceed 5 percent of available construction proceeds as of 
the end of the fourth spending period, that is retained for reasonable 
business purposes relating to the property financed with the proceeds of 
the issue. For example, a reasonable retainage may include a retention 
to ensure or promote compliance with a construction contract in 
circumstances in which the retained amount is not yet payable, or in 
which the issuer reasonably determines that a dispute exists regarding 
completion or payment.
    (i) Available construction proceeds--(1) Definition in general. 
Available construction proceeds has the meaning used in section 
148(f)(4)(C)(vi). For purposes of this definition, earnings include 
earnings on any tax-exempt bond. Pre-issuance accrued interest and 
earnings thereon may be disregarded. Amounts that are not gross proceeds 
as a result of the application of the universal cap under Sec. 1.148-
6(b)(2) are not available construction proceeds.
    (2) Earnings on a reasonably required reserve or replacement fund. 
Earnings on any reasonably required reserve or replacement fund are 
available construction proceeds only to the extent that those earnings 
accrue before the earlier of the date construction is substantially 
completed or the date that is 2 years after the issue date. An issuer 
may elect on or before the issue date to exclude from available 
construction proceeds the earnings on such a fund. If the election is 
made, the rebate requirement applies to the excluded amounts from the 
issue date.
    (3) Reasonable expectations test for future earnings. For purposes 
of determining compliance with the spending requirements as of the end 
of each of the first three spending periods, available construction 
proceeds include the amount of future earnings that the issuer 
reasonably expected as of the issue date.
    (4) Issuance costs. Available construction proceeds do not include 
gross proceeds used to pay issuance costs financed by an issue, but do 
include earnings on such proceeds. Thus, an expenditure of gross 
proceeds of an issue for issuance costs does not count toward meeting 
the spending requirements. The expenditure of earnings on gross proceeds 
used to pay issuance costs does count toward meeting those requirements. 
If the spending requirements are met and the proceeds used to pay 
issuance costs are expended by the end of the fourth spending period, 
those proceeds and the earnings thereon are treated as having satisfied 
the rebate requirement.
    (5) One and one-half percent penalty in lieu of arbitrage rebate. 
For purposes of the spending requirements of paragraph (e) of this 
section, available construction proceeds as of the end of any spending 
period are reduced by the amount of penalty in lieu of arbitrage rebate 
(under paragraph (k) of this section) that the issuer has paid from

[[Page 724]]

available construction proceeds before the last day of the spending 
period.
    (6) Payments on purpose investments and repayments of grants. 
Available construction proceeds do not include--
    (i) Sale or investment proceeds derived from payments under any 
purpose investment of the issue; or
    (ii) Repayments of grants (as defined in Sec. 1.148-6(d)(4)) 
financed by the issue.
    (7) Examples. The operation of this paragraph (i) is illustrated by 
the following examples:

    Example 1. Treatment of investment earnings. City F issues bonds 
having an issue price of $10,000,000. F deposits all of the proceeds of 
the issue into a construction fund to be used for expenditures other 
than costs of issuance. F estimates on the issue date that, based on 
reasonably expected expenditures and rates of investment, earnings on 
the construction fund will be $800,000. As of the issue date and the end 
of each of the first three spending periods, the amount of available 
construction proceeds is $10,800,000. To qualify as a construction 
issue, F must reasonably expect on the issue date that at least 
$8,100,000 (75 percent of $10,800,000) will be used for construction 
expenditures. In order to meet the 10 percent spending requirement at 
the end of the first spending period, F must spend at least $1,080,000. 
As of the end of the fourth spending period, F has received $1,100,000 
in earnings. In order to meet the spending requirement at the end of the 
fourth spending period, however, F must spend all of the $11,100,000 of 
actual available construction proceeds (except for reasonable retainage 
not exceeding $555,000).
    Example 2. Treatment of investment earnings without a reserve fund. 
City G issues bonds having an issue price of $11,200,000. G does not 
elect to exclude earnings on the reserve fund from available 
construction proceeds. G uses $200,000 of proceeds to pay issuance costs 
and deposits $1,000,000 of proceeds into a reasonably required reserve 
fund. G deposits the remaining $10,000,000 of proceeds into a 
construction fund to be used for construction expenditures. On the issue 
date, G reasonably expects that, based on the reasonably expected date 
of substantial completion and rates of investment, total earnings on the 
construction fund will be $800,000, and total earnings on the reserve 
fund to the date of substantial completion will be $150,000. G 
reasonably expects that substantial completion will occur during the 
fourth spending period. As of the issue date, the amount of available 
construction proceeds is $10,950,000 ($10,000,000 originally deposited 
into the construction fund plus $800,000 expected earnings on the 
construction fund and $150,000 expected earnings on the reserve fund). 
To qualify as a construction issue, G must reasonably expect on the 
issue date that at least $8,212,500 will be used for construction 
expenditures.
    Example 3. Election to exclude earnings on a reserve fund. The facts 
are the same as Example 2, except that G elects on the issue date to 
exclude earnings on the reserve fund from available construction 
proceeds. The amount of available construction proceeds as of the issue 
date is $10,800,000.

    (j) Election to treat portion of issue used for construction as 
separate issue--(1) In general. For purposes of paragraph (e) of this 
section, if any proceeds of an issue are to be used for construction 
expenditures, the issuer may elect on or before the issue date to treat 
the portion of the issue that is not a refunding issue as two, and only 
two, separate issues, if--
    (i) One of the separate issues is a construction issue as defined in 
paragraph (f) of this section;
    (ii) The issuer reasonably expects, as of the issue date, that this 
construction issue will finance all of the construction expenditures to 
be financed by the issue; and
    (iii) The issuer makes an election to apportion the issue under this 
paragraph (j)(1) in which it identifies the amount of the issue price of 
the issue allocable to the construction issue.
    (2) Example. The operation of this paragraph (j) is illustrated by 
the following example.

    Example. City D issues bonds having an issue price of $19,000,000. 
On the issue date, D reasonably expects to use $10,800,000 of bond 
proceeds (including investment earnings) for construction expenditures 
for the project being financed. D deposits $10,000,000 in a construction 
fund to be used for construction expenditures and $9,000,000 in an 
acquisition fund to be used for acquisition of equipment not qualifying 
as construction expenditures. D estimates on the issue date, based on 
reasonably expected expenditures and rates of investment, that total 
earnings on the construction fund will be $800,000 and total earnings on 
the acquisition fund will be $200,000. Because the total construction 
expenditures to be financed by the issue are expected to be $10,800,000, 
the maximum available construction proceeds for a construction issue is 
$14,400,000 ($10,800,000 divided by 0.75). To determine the maximum 
amount of the issue price allocable to a construction issue, the 
estimated investment earnings allocable to the construction issue are 
subtracted. The entire $800,000 of earnings on the construction fund are 
allocable to the construction

[[Page 725]]

issue. Only a portion of the $200,000 of earnings on the acquisition 
fund, however, are allocable to the construction issue. The total amount 
of the available construction proceeds that is expected to be used for 
acquisition is $3,600,000 ($14,400,000-$10,800,000). The portion of 
earnings on the acquisition fund that is allocable to the construction 
issue is $78,261 ($200,000x$3,600,000/$9,200,000). Accordingly, D may 
elect on or before the issue date to treat up to $13,521,739 of the 
issue price as a construction issue ($14,400,000-$800,000-$78,261). D's 
election must specify the amount of the issue price treated as a 
construction issue. The balance of the issue price is treated as a 
separate nonconstruction issue that is subject to the rebate requirement 
unless it meets another exception to arbitrage rebate. Because the 
financing of a construction issue is a separate governmental purpose 
under Sec. 1.148-9(h), the election causes the issue to be a 
multipurpose issue under that section.

    (k) One and one-half percent penalty in lieu of arbitrage rebate--
(1) In general. Under section 148(f)(4)(C)(vii), an issuer of a 
construction issue may elect on or before the issue date to pay a 
penalty (the 1\1/2\ percent penalty) to the United States in lieu of the 
obligation to pay the rebate amount on available construction proceeds 
upon failure to satisfy the spending requirements of paragraph (e) of 
this section. The 1\1/2\ percent penalty is calculated separately for 
each spending period, including each semiannual period after the end of 
the fourth spending period, and is equal to 1.5 percent times the 
underexpended proceeds as of the end of the spending period. For each 
spending period, underexpended proceeds equal the amount of available 
construction proceeds required to be spent by the end of the spending 
period, less the amount actually allocated to expenditures for the 
governmental purposes of the issue by that date. The 1\1/2\ percent 
penalty must be paid to the United States no later than 90 days after 
the end of the spending period to which it relates. The 1\1/2\ percent 
penalty continues to apply at the end of each spending period and each 
semiannual period thereafter until the earliest of the following--
    (i) The termination of the penalty under paragraph (l) of this 
section;
    (ii) The expenditure of all of the available construction proceeds; 
or
    (iii) The last stated final maturity date of bonds that are part of 
the issue and any bonds that refund those bonds.
    (2) Application to reasonable retainage. If an issue meets the 
exception for reasonable retainage except that all retainage is not 
spent within 3 years of the issue date, the issuer must pay the 1\1/2\ 
percent penalty to the United States for any reasonable retainage that 
was not so spent as of the close of the 3-year period and each later 
spending period.
    (3) Coordination with rebate requirement. The rebate requirement is 
treated as met with respect to available construction proceeds for a 
period if the 1\1/2\ percent penalty is paid in accordance with this 
section.
    (l) Termination of 1\1/2\ percent penalty--(1)Termination after 
initial temporary period. The issuer may terminate the 1\1/2\ percent 
penalty after the initial temporary period (a section 148(f)(4)(C)(viii) 
penalty termination) if--
    (i) Not later than 90 days after the earlier of the end of the 
initial temporary period or the date construction is substantially 
completed, the issuer elects to terminate the 1\1/2\ percent penalty; 
provided that solely for this purpose, the initial temporary period may 
be extended by the issuer to a date ending 5 years after the issue date;
    (ii) Within 90 days after the end of the initial temporary period, 
the issuer pays a penalty equal to 3 percent of the unexpended available 
construction proceeds determined as of the end of the initial temporary 
period, multiplied by the number of years (including fractions of years 
computed to 2 decimal places) in the initial temporary period;
    (iii) For the period beginning as of the close of the initial 
temporary period, the unexpended available construction proceeds are not 
invested in higher yielding investments; and
    (iv) On the earliest date on which the bonds may be called or 
otherwise redeemed, with or without a call premium, the unexpended 
available construction proceeds as of that date (not including any 
amount earned after the date on which notice of the redemption was 
required to be given) must be used to redeem the bonds. Amounts used to 
pay any call premium are treated as used to redeem bonds. This 
redemption

[[Page 726]]

requirement may be met by purchases of bonds by the issuer on the open 
market at prices not exceeding fair market value. A portion of the 
annual principal payment due on serial bonds of a construction issue may 
be paid from the unexpended amount, but only in an amount no greater 
than the amount that bears the same ratio to the annual principal due 
that the total unexpended amount bears to the issue price of the 
construction issue.
    (2) Termination before end of initial temporary period. If the 
construction to be financed by the construction issue is substantially 
completed before the end of the initial temporary period, the issuer may 
elect to terminate the 1\1/2\ percent penalty before the end of the 
initial temporary period (a section 148(f)(4)(C)(ix) penalty 
termination) if--
    (i) Before the close of the initial temporary period and not later 
than 90 days after the date the construction is substantially completed, 
the issuer elects to terminate the 1\1/2\ percent penalty;
    (ii) The election identifies the amount of available construction 
proceeds that will not be spent for the governmental purposes of the 
issue; and
    (iii) The issuer has met all of the conditions for a section 
148(f)(4)(C)(viii) penalty termination, applied as if the initial 
temporary period ended as of the date the required election for a 
section 148(f)(4)(C)(ix) penalty termination is made. That penalty 
termination election satisfies the required election for a section 
148(f)(4)(C)(viii) termination.
    (3) Application to reasonable retainage. Solely for purposes of 
determining whether the conditions for terminating the 1\1/2\ percent 
penalty are met, reasonable retainage may be treated as spent for a 
governmental purpose of the construction issue. Reasonable retainage 
that is so treated continues to be subject to the 1\1/2\ percent 
penalty.
    (4) Example. The operation of this paragraph (l) is illustrated by 
the following example.

    Example. City I issues a construction issue having a 20-year 
maturity and qualifying for a 3-year initial temporary period. The bonds 
are first subject to optional redemption 10 years after the issue date 
at a premium of 3 percent. I elects, on or before the issue date, to pay 
the 1\1/2\ percent penalty in lieu of arbitrage rebate. At the end of 
the 3-year temporary period, the project is not substantially completed, 
and $1,500,000 of available construction proceeds of the issue are 
unspent. At that time, I reasonably expects to need $500,000 to complete 
the project. I may terminate the 1\1/2\ percent penalty in lieu of 
arbitrage rebate with respect to the excess $1,500,000 by electing to 
terminate within 90 days of the end of the initial temporary period; 
paying a penalty to the United States of $135,000 (3 percent of 
$1,500,000 multiplied by 3 years); restricting the yield on the 
investment of unspent available construction proceeds for 7 years until 
the first call date, although any portion of these proceeds may still be 
spent on the project prior to that call date; and using the available 
construction proceeds that, as of the first call date, have not been 
allocated to expenditures for the governmental purposes of the issue to 
redeem bonds on that call date. If I fails to make the termination 
election, I is required to pay the 1\1/2\ percent penalty on unspent 
available construction proceeds every 6 months until the latest maturity 
date of bonds of the issue (or any bonds of another issue that refund 
such bonds).

    (m) Payment of penalties. Each penalty payment under this section 
must be paid in the manner provided in Sec. 1.148-3(g). See Sec. 
1.148-3(h) for rules on failures to pay penalties under this section.

[T.D. 8476, 58 FR 33535, June 18, 1993; 58 FR 44452, Aug. 23, 1993]