[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 26, Volume 10]
[Revised as of April 1, 2004]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 26CFR1.963-3]

[Page 449-453]
 
                       TITLE 26--INTERNAL REVENUE
 
    CHAPTER I--INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY 
                               (CONTINUED)
 
PART 1_INCOME TAXES--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 1.963-3  Distributions counting toward a minimum distribution.

    (a) Conditions under which earnings and profits are counted toward a 
minimum distribution--(1) In general. A distribution to the United 
States shareholder by a single first-tier corporation or by a foreign 
corporation included in a chain or group shall count toward a minimum 
distribution for the taxable year of such shareholder to which the 
election under section 963 relates only to the extent that--
    (i) It is received by such shareholder during such year or within 
180 days thereafter,
    (ii) It is a distribution of the type described in paragraph (b) of 
this section,
    (iii) Under paragraph (c) of this section, it is deemed to be 
distributed from the earnings and profits of the foreign corporations 
for the taxable year of such corporation to which the election relates, 
and
    (iv) Such shareholder chooses to include it in gross income for the 
taxable year of such shareholder to which the election relates 
notwithstanding that such distribution, by reason of its receipt after 
the close of such year, would ordinarily be includible in the gross 
income of a subsequent year.

Amounts taken into account under this subparagraph as gross income of 
the United States shareholder for the taxable year to which the election 
relates shall not be considered to be includible in the gross income of 
such shareholder for a subsequent taxable year. For purposes of 
determining the foreign tax credit under sections 901 through 905, 
foreign income tax paid or accrued by such shareholder on or with 
respect to such amounts shall be treated as paid or accrued during the 
taxable year of such election.
    (2) Distributions made prior to acquisition of stock. A United 
States shareholder which owns within the meaning of section 958(a) stock 
in a foreign corporation with respect to which such shareholder elects 
to secure an exclusion under section 963 for the taxable year may count 
toward the minimum distribution any distribution made with respect to 
such stock, and before its acquisition by the United States shareholder, 
to any other domestic corporation not exempt from income tax under 
chapter 1 of the Code, to the extent that such distribution is made out 
of the United States shareholder's proportionate share, as determined 
under paragraph (d)(2) of Sec. 1.963-2, of such corporation's earnings 
and profits for the taxable year and would have counted toward a minimum 
distribution if it had been distributed to such United States 
shareholder. The application of this subparagraph may be illustrated by 
the following examples:

    Example 1. Controlled foreign corporation A, which uses the calendar 
year as the taxable year, has for 1963 $100 of earnings and profits and 
100 shares of only one class of stock outstanding. Domestic corporation 
M, not exempt from income tax under chapter 1 of the Code, directly owns 
all of such shares during the period from January 1, 1963, through June 
30, 1963. On June 30, 1963, M Corporation transfers all of such shares 
to domestic corporation N, which owns them throughout the remainder of 
1963 and elects to secure an exclusion under section 963 for such year 
with respect to the subpart F income of A Corporation. During June 1963, 
M Corporation receives a dividend of $75 from A Corporation, which would 
count toward a minimum distribution if it had been distributed to N 
Corporation for such year. Corporation N's proportionate share of the 
earnings and profits of A Corporation for 1963 is

[[Page 450]]

$100; N Corporation may count toward a minimum distribution for 1963 the 
entire dividend of $75 paid to M Corporation.
    Example 2. The facts are the same as in example 1 except that M is a 
nonresident alien individual. Since A Corporation is not a controlled 
foreign corporation from January 1, 1963, through June 30, 1963, N 
Corporation's proportionate share of the earnings and profits of A 
Corporation for 1963 is $50.41 ($100x184/365), as determined under 
paragraph (d)(2)(iii) of Sec. 1.963-2. Although $25.41 ($75-$49.59) of 
the $75 distribution to M is paid from N Corporation's proportionate 
share of A Corporation's 1963 earnings and profits, N Corporation may 
not count toward a minimum distribution any part of the $75 dividend 
distributed to M, since M is not a domestic corporation.

    (b) Qualifying distributions--(1) Amounts not counted toward a 
minimum distribution. No distribution received by a United States 
shareholder shall count toward a minimum distribution for the taxable 
year with respect to such shareholder to the extent the distribution is 
excludable from gross income to the extent gain on the distribution is 
not recognized, or to the extent the distribution is treated as a 
distribution in part or full payment in exchange for stock. 
Undistributed amounts required to be included in gross income under 
section 551 as undistributed foreign personal holding company income or 
under section 951 as undistributed amounts of a controlled foreign 
corporation shall not count toward a minimum distribution under section 
963. An amount received by a United States shareholder as a distribution 
which under section 302 or section 331 is treated as a distribution in 
part or full payment in exchange for stock shall not count toward a 
minimum distribution even though such amount is includible in gross 
income under section 1248 as a dividend. For purposes of this 
subparagraph, any portion of a distribution of earnings and profits 
which is attributable to an increase in current earnings, invested in 
United States property which, but for paragraph (e) of this section, 
would be included in the gross income of the United States shareholder 
under section 951(a)(1)(B) shall not be treated as an amount excludable 
from gross income.
    (2) Inclusion of tax on intercorporate distributions. In the case of 
a chain or group election, the United States shareholder's proportionate 
share of the amount of the foreign income tax paid or accrued for the 
taxable year by a foreign corporation in the chain or group with respect 
to distributions received by such corporation from the earnings and 
profits, of another foreign corporation in such chain or group, for the 
taxable year of such other corporation to which the election relates 
shall count toward a minimum distribution from such chain or group for 
the taxable year, but only if the United States shareholder does not 
choose under paragraph (d)(1)(iii) of Sec. 1.963-2 to take such tax 
into account in determining the effective foreign tax rate of such chain 
or group for the taxable year. To the extent that foreign income tax 
counts toward a minimum distribution under this subparagraph, it shall 
be applied against and reduce the amount of the minimum distribution 
required to be received by the United States shareholder, determined 
without regard to this paragraph.
    (c) Rules for allocation of distributions to earnings and profits 
for a taxable year. To determine whether a distribution to the United 
States shareholder by a single first-tier corporation or by a foreign 
corporation in a chain or group is made from the earnings and profits of 
such corporation for the taxable year to which the election under 
section 963 relates, the following subparagraphs shall apply:
    (1) Exception to section 316. Section 316 shall apply except that a 
distribution of earnings and profits made by a foreign corporation 
either to another foreign corporation or to the United States 
shareholder shall be treated as having been paid from the earnings and 
profits of the distributing corporation for the taxable year of such 
corporation to which the election relates only if it is made during its 
distribution period (described in paragraph (g) of this section) for 
such year.
    (2) Distributions from other corporations. The earnings and profits 
of a foreign corporation shall be determined in accordance with 
paragraph (d)(1) of Sec. 1.963-2 (applied as though the United States 
shareholder had chosen under subparagraph (1)(iii) of such paragraph to 
take the tax described therein into

[[Page 451]]

account in determining the effective foreign tax rate) except that, in 
the case of a chain or group election, a distribution received by a 
foreign corporation in the chain or group from another foreign 
corporation in such chain or group shall be taken into account as 
earnings and profits of the recipient corporation for the taxable year 
of such recipient corporation to which the election relates but only to 
the extent that--
    (i) The distribution is received by the recipient corporation during 
the distribution period for the taxable year of such recipient 
corporation to which the election relates,
    (ii) If the distribution had been received by the United States 
shareholder, it would have constituted a distribution of the type 
described in paragraph (b) of this section, and
    (iii) The distribution is made from the earnings and profits of the 
distributing corporation for the taxable year of such distributing 
corporation to which the election relates.
    (d) Year of inclusion in income of foreign corporation and effect 
upon subpart F income. To the extent that a distribution to the United 
States shareholder counting toward a minimum distribution from a chain 
or group consists of earnings and profits distributed to a foreign 
corporation in the chain or group after the close of the recipient 
corporation's taxable year but during its distribution period for such 
year by another foreign corporation in such chain or group, such amount 
shall be treated as received by the recipient corporation on the last 
day of such taxable year and shall not be regarded as foreign personal 
holding company income (within the meaning of section 553(a) or 954(c)) 
of such corporation for the taxable year in which such amount is 
actually received. The extent to which a distribution counting toward a 
minimum distribution consists of earnings and profits distributed to a 
foreign corporation in a chain or group shall be determined under the 
ordering rules of paragraph (b)(3) of Sec. 1.963-4 (applied in each 
instance as though the United States shareholder had not chosen under 
paragraph (d)(1)(iii) of Sec. 1.963-2 to take the tax described therein 
into account in determining the effective foreign tax rate). However, 
for such purpose, the amount of foreign income tax, if any, which counts 
toward the minimum distribution shall be determined without regard to 
paragraph (b)(2) of this section but in accordance with paragraph 
(b)(3)(iii) of Sec. 1.963-4.
    (e) Distribution of current earnings invested in United States 
property. A distribution made by a foreign corporation during its 
distribution period for a taxable year shall, notwithstanding section 
959(c), first be attributed to earnings and profits for such year 
described in section 959(c)(3) and then to other earnings and profits. 
For such purposes, earnings and profits of such foreign corporation for 
such year attributable to amounts which would otherwise be included in 
gross income of the United States shareholder under section 951(a)(1)(B) 
for such year shall be treated as earnings and profits to which section 
959(c)(3) applies, shall not be excluded from gross income under section 
959 (a) or (b), and shall count toward a minimum distribution for such 
year. See paragraph (c)(1)(v) of Sec. 1.960-1 and paragraph (a) of 
Sec. 1.960-2.
    (f) Cumulative dividends in arrears. A distribution in satisfaction 
of arrearages shall be treated as being made out of earnings and profits 
of the foreign corporation for the taxable year to which the election 
under section 963 applies only to the extent the dividend is not 
attributed, under paragraph (d)(2)(i)(d) of Sec. 1.963-2, to the 
earnings and profits of such corporation remaining from prior taxable 
years beginning after December 31, 1962. The application of this 
paragraph may be illustrated by the following example:

    Example. For 1963, single first-tier corporation A, which uses the 
calendar year as the taxable year, has earnings and profits of $50; for 
1964, a deficit in earnings and profits of $20; for 1965, earnings and 
profits of $100; and for 1966, earnings and profits of $240. For each of 
such years preferred dividends accumulate at the rate of $60; but no 
dividend is paid until 1966 during which year the current dividend is 
paid and $180 is distributed toward the arrearages. Of this $180, only 
$50 ($180-$130) shall be treated as paid from 1966 earnings and profits.

    (g) Distribution period of a foreign corporation--(1) General 
distribution period. Except as provided by subparagraph (2)

[[Page 452]]

of this paragraph, the distribution period with respect to a foreign 
corporation for its taxable year shall begin immediately after the close 
of the distribution period for the preceding taxable year and shall end 
with the close of the 60th day of the next succeeding taxable year. If 
no election to secure an exclusion under section 963 applied to the 
preceding taxable year, the distribution period for the taxable year 
shall begin with the 61st day of the taxable year.
    (2) Special extended distribution period. If the United States 
shareholder of the foreign corporation so elects in statement filed with 
its return for the taxable year for which the election to secure the 
exclusion under section 963 is made, the distribution period with 
respect to such foreign corporation for its taxable year to which the 
election to secure the exclusion applies shall end with any day which 
occurs no earlier than the last day of such taxable year of such foreign 
corporation and no later than the 180th day after the close of such 
taxable year. The statement shall designate the day so elected as the 
end of the distribution period.
    (h) Illustrations. The application of this section may be 
illustrated by the following examples:

    Example 1. For 1963 domestic corporation M makes a chain election 
with respect to controlled foreign corporation A, all of whose one class 
of stock M Corporation directly owns, and controlled foreign corporation 
B, all of whose one class of stock is directly owned by A Corporation. 
All such corporations use the calendar year as the taxable year, and the 
distribution periods of corporations A and B for 1963 coincide. 
Corporations A and B each have earnings and profits (before 
distributions) of $100 for 1963. On June 1, 1963, B Corporation 
distributes earnings and profits of $120, of which $100 is from its 
earnings and profits for 1963 and $20 is from prior earnings. For 1963, 
A Corporation pays no income tax and distributes earnings and profits of 
$150 to M Corporation. Under paragraph (c) of this section, such $150 is 
allocated to A Corporation's earnings and profits of $200 for 1963, 
consisting of its total earnings and profits for that year of $220 less 
the $20 received as a distribution from B Corporation's prior earnings.
    Example 2. Domestic corporation M directly owns all of the one class 
of stock of controlled foreign corporation A. Both corporations use the 
calendar year as the taxable year, and A Corporation's taxable year and 
its distribution period for 1963 coincide. For 1963, $50 is included in 
the gross income of M Corporation under section 951(a)(1)(B) as A 
Corporation's increase in earnings invested for such year in United 
States property. For 1964, M Corporation makes a first-tier election 
with respect to A Corporation. For 1964, A Corporation has earnings and 
profits of $100, including $10 attributable to an increase in earnings 
invested for such year in United States property. During 1964, A 
Corporation distributes earnings and profits of $80 to M Corporation. 
Without regard to paragraph (e) of this section, $10 of this 
distribution is attributable under section 959(c)(1) to A Corporation's 
1964 earnings and profits required to be included in M Corporation's 
gross income under section 951(a)(1)(D). Pursuant to paragraph (e) of 
this section, however, the entire distribution of $80 counts toward a 
minimum distribution for 1964 and is considered to be from earnings and 
profits of A Corporation for 1964 described in section 959(c)(3). Thus 
the entire distribution of $80 is included in M Corporation's gross 
income as a dividend and the foreign tax credit in respect of such 
amount is determined in accordance with section 902 as modified by the 
regulations under section 963. On the other hand, if A Corporation made 
no distributions for 1964, no part of the $10 of A Corporation's 
increase in earnings invested in United States property for such year 
would count toward a minimum distribution for any other year but would 
be included in the gross income for M Corporation for 1964 under section 
951(a)(1)(B), and the foreign tax credit in respect of such amount would 
be determined in accordance with Sec. 1.960-1.
    Example 3. For 1964 domestic corporation M makes a chain election 
with respect to controlled foreign corporation A, all the one class of 
stock of which is owned directly by M Corporation, and controlled 
foreign corporation B, all the one class of stock of which is owned 
directly by A Corporation. Corporation M makes no election under section 
963 for 1963 or 1965. Corporations M and B use the calendar year as the 
taxable year, and A Corporation uses for its taxable year a fiscal year 
ending on September 30. Corporation M elects to have the distribution 
period for each controlled foreign corporation end on March 29, 1965, 
such date being the 180th day after the close of A Corporation's taxable 
year ending on September 30, 1964. Corporation A's distribution period 
for its taxable year ending on September 30, 1964, begins on November 
30, 1963, the 61st day of such taxable year. The distribution period of 
B Corporation for 1964 begins on March 1, 1964, the 61st day of such 
taxable year. A distribution counting toward a minimum distribution for 
1964 may be made from the earnings and profits of B Corporation only if

[[Page 453]]

the amount thereof is distributed by B Corporation to A Corporation, and 
in turn by A Corporation to M Corporation, during the period of March 1, 
1964, through March 29, 1965.
    Example 4. The facts are the same as in example 3, except that for 
their taxable years ending in 1964, corporations A and B each have 
earnings and profits (before distributions) of $100. On March 10, 1965, 
B Corporation distributes to A Corporation a dividend of $80 upon which 
A Corporation incurs foreign income tax at the rate of 10 percent. On 
March 15, 1965, A Corporation distributes to M Corporation a dividend of 
$50. Corporation M chooses to take into account as gross income for 1964 
from such distribution only $40. For purposes of applying this section, 
the distribution counting toward a minimum distribution is $44.44, 
consisting of the $40 of earnings and profits actually received by M 
Corporation plus the $4.44 ($40/$72x$8) of foreign income tax incurred 
by A Corporation attributable thereto; A Corporation is deemed to have 
received $44.44 ($40/0.90) of the distribution from B Corporation on 
September 30, 1964, the last day of the taxable year of A Corporation to 
which the election relates; and the foreign personal holding company 
income derived by A Corporation for its taxable year ending in 1965 from 
the distribution from B is only $35.56 ($80-$44.44). Assuming that no 
exceptions, exclusions, or exemptions were applicable, subpart F income 
would be realized by A Corporation for its taxable year ending on 
September 30, 1965, upon the distribution by B Corporation to A 
Corporation, but only in the amount of $32 ($35.56 less a deduction 
under section 954(b)(5) for taxes of $3.56).

[T.D. 7100, 36 FR 10860, June 4, 1971; 36 FR 11924, June 23, 1971, as 
amended by T.D. 7334, 39 FR 44214, Dec. 23, 1974]