[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 26, Volume 7]
[Revised as of April 1, 2004]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 26CFR1.555-2]

[Page 289-291]
 
                       TITLE 26--INTERNAL REVENUE
 
    CHAPTER I--INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY 
                               (CONTINUED)
 
PART 1_INCOME TAXES--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 1.555-2  Additions to gross income.

    (a) If, for any taxable year:
    (1) A foreign corporation meets the stock ownership requirement 
specified in section 552(a)(2) and Sec. 1.552-3, regardless of whatever 
day in its taxable year is the last day on which the required United 
States group exists, and
    (2) Such foreign corporation is a shareholder in a foreign personal 
holding company on any day of a taxable year of the second company which 
ends with or within the taxable year of the first company and such day 
is the last day in the taxable year of the second company in which the 
United States group exists with respect to the second company, then for 
the purpose of:
    (i) Determining whether the first company meets the specified gross 
income requirement so as to come within the classification of a foreign 
personal holding company, and
    (ii) Determining the undistributed foreign personal holding company 
income of the first company which (in the event the first company is a 
foreign personal holding company) is to be included, in whole or in 
part, in the gross income of its shareholders, whether United States 
shareholders or other foreign personal holding companies,

there shall be included as a dividend in the gross income of the first 
company for the taxable year in which or with which the taxable year of 
the second company ends, the amount the first company would have 
received as a dividend, if on the last day referred to in this 
subparagraph there had been distributed by the second company, and 
received by the shareholders, an amount which bears the same ratio to 
the undistributed foreign personal holding company income of the second 
company for its taxable year as the portion of such taxable year up to 
and including such last day bears to the entire taxable year. The 
foregoing rules apply to any chain of foreign corporations regardless of 
the number of corporations included in the chain.
    (b) The application of section 555(b) may be illustrated by the 
following examples:

    Example 1. The X Corporation is a foreign corporation whose stock is 
owned by A, a United States citizen. The X Corporation owns the entire 
stock of the Y Corporation, another foreign corporation. The taxable 
year of the X Corporation is the calendar year and the taxable year of 
the Y Corporation is the fiscal year ending June 30. For the fiscal year 
ending June 30, 1955, more than the required percentage of the Y 
Corporation's gross income consists of foreign personal holding company 
income and no part of the earnings for such year is distributed as 
dividends. On the basis of these facts the Y Corporation is a foreign 
personal holding company for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1955. The X 
Corporation meets the stock

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ownership requirement and constitutes a foreign personal holding company 
for 1955, if it also meets the gross income requirement. For the purpose 
of determining whether the X Corporation meets the gross income 
requirements, the entire undistributed foreign personal holding company 
income of the Y Corporation for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1955, 
must be included as a dividend in the gross income of the X Corporation 
for 1955, since:
    (1) The X Corporation was a shareholder in the Y Corporation on a 
day (June 30, 1955) in the taxable year of the Y Corporation ending with 
or within the taxable year of the X Corporation, which day was the last 
day in the taxable year of the Y Corporation on which the United States 
group required with respect to the Y Corporation existed,
    (2) Such last day was also the end of the Y Corporation's taxable 
year so that the portion of the taxable year of the Y Corporation up to 
and including such last day is equal to 100 percent of the taxable year 
of the Y Corporation, and, therefore, the portion of the undistributed 
foreign personal holding company income of the Y Corporation includible 
in the gross income of its shareholders is likewise equal to 100 
percent, and
    (3) The X Corporation being the sole shareholder of the Y 
Corporation must include such portion in its gross income for 1955, the 
taxable year in which or with which the taxable year of the Y 
Corporation ends. If, after the inclusion of the presumptive dividend in 
its gross income, the X Corporation is a foreign personal holding 
company for 1955, then the undistributed foreign personal holding 
company income of the Y Corporation must also be included as a dividend 
in the gross income of the X Corporation in determining its 
undistributed foreign personal holding company income which is to be 
included in the gross income of A, the sole shareholder in the X 
Corporation. On the other hand, if, after including such presumptive 
dividend, the X Corporation does not constitute a foreign personal 
holding company, the undistributed foreign personal holding company 
income of the Y Corporation is not includible in the gross income of the 
X Corporation.
    Example 2. The X Corporation referred to in example 1 sold the stock 
in the Y Corporation to other interests on September 30, 1955, so that 
after that date no United States group existed with respect to the Y 
Corporation. For the fiscal year ending June 30, 1956, more than the 
required percentage of the gross income of the Y Corporation consists of 
foreign personal holding company income. The taxable income of the Y 
Corporation for such fiscal year amounts to $1,000,000, of which 
$900,000 is distributed in dividends after September 30, 1955. The 
undistributed foreign personal holding company income of the Y 
Corporation for such fiscal year amounts to $100,000. Upon the basis of 
these facts the Y Corporation is a foreign personal holding company for 
the fiscal year ending June 30, 1956, since at one time in such fiscal 
year, or from July 1 to and including September 30, 1955, it meets the 
stock ownership requirement, and the gross income requirement is also 
satisfied. In determining whether the X Corporation constitutes a 
foreign personal holding company for 1956, a portion of the 
undistributed foreign personal holding company income of the Y 
Corporation for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1956 (three-twelfths of 
$100,000, or $25,000), must be included as a dividend in the gross 
income of the X Corporation, since:
    (1) The X Corporation was a shareholder in the Y Corporation on 
September 30, 1955, or on a day in the taxable year of the Y Corporation 
ending with or within the taxable year of the X Corporation which day 
was the last day in the Y Corporation's taxable year on which the United 
States group required with respect to the Y Corporation existed.
    (2) The portion of the taxable year of the Y Corporation up to and 
including such day is three-twelfths of the entire taxable year of the Y 
Corporation and, therefore, the portion of the undistributed foreign 
personal holding company income of the Y Corporation includible in the 
gross income of its shareholders also is equal to three-twelfths, and
    (3) The X Corporation, being the sole shareholder of the Y 
Corporation at the time the United States group with respect to the Y 
Corporation last existed, must include all of such portion in its gross 
income for 1956, the taxable year of the X Corporation in which or with 
which the taxable year of the Y Corporation ends.

It is to be observed that three-twelfths of the undistributed foreign 
personal holding company income of the Y Corporation for the entire 
taxable year and not the earnings realized by the Y Corporation up to 
and including September 30, 1955, the last day on which the United 
States group with respect to the Y Corporation existed, must be included 
in the gross income of the X Corporation.
    Example 3. The X Corporation referred to in example 1 sold the stock 
in the Y Corporation to other interests on September 30, 1955, so that 
after that date a different United States group existed with respect to 
the Y Corporation. Assuming that the Y Corporation is a foreign personal 
holding company for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1956, no part of the 
undistributed foreign personal holding company income of the Y 
Corporation for such fiscal year would, in this instance, be includible 
in the gross income of the X Corporation for the year 1956, in 
determining whether the X Corporation is a foreign personal holding 
company for that year. In such case, the undistributed foreign personal 
holding company income of the Y Corporation is includible in the gross 
income of

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the other foreign personal holding companies, if any, and of the United 
States shareholders who are shareholders in the Y Corporation the day 
after September 30, 1955, which was the last day in the taxable year of 
the Y Corporation on which the United States group withrespect to the Y 
Corporation existed. If, however, the X Corporation sells 90percent of 
its stock in the Y Corporation and thus is a minority shareholder in the 
Y Corporation on the last day of the taxable year of the Y Corporation 
on which the United States group with respect to the Y Corporation 
exists, the portion of the undistributed foreign personal holding 
company income allocable to the minority interests of the X Corporation 
would be includible in the gross income of the X Corporation, even 
though on such last day the United States group is not the same with 
respect to both corporations.
    Example 4. If the Y Corporation in example 1 owns all of the stock 
of the Z Corporation, another foreign corporation, there would be a 
chain of three foreign corporations. In such case, assuming that the Z 
Corporation is a foreign personal holding company for a taxable year 
ending with or within the taxable year of the Y Corporation, the 
undistributed foreign personal holding company income of the Z 
Corporation would be included in the gross income of the Y Corporation 
for the purpose of determining whether the Y Corporation comes within 
the classification of a foreign personal holding company. If, after the 
inclusion of such presumptive dividend, the Y Corporation is a foreign 
personal holding company, the undistributed foreign personal holding 
company income of the Z Corporation would be included in the gross 
income of the Y Corporation in determining the undistributed foreign 
personal holding company income of the Y Corporationwhich is includible 
in the gross income of its shareholder, the X Corporation. The same 
process would be repeated with respect to determining whether the X 
Corporation is a foreign personal holding company and in determining its 
undistributed foreign personal holding company income. If all three 
corporations are foreign personal holding companies, the undistributed 
foreign personal holding company income of each would, in this manner, 
be reflected as a dividend in the gross income of A, the ultimate 
beneficial shareholder of the chain. In the event that after the 
inclusion of the undistributed foreign personal holding company income 
of the Z Corporation in the gross income of the Y Corporation, the Y 
Corporation is not a foreign personal holding company, then no part of 
the income of either the Z Corporation or the Y Corporation would be 
includible in the gross income of the X Corporation. In that event, 
whether the X Corporation is a foreign personal holding company, and its 
undistributed foreign personal holding company income, would be 
determined independently of the income of the Y Corporation and the Z 
Corporation.