[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 26, Volume 18]
[Revised as of April 1, 2004]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 26CFR301.6111-2]

[Page 134-140]
 
                       TITLE 26--INTERNAL REVENUE
 
    CHAPTER I--INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY 
                               (CONTINUED)
 
PART 301_PROCEDURE AND ADMINISTRATION--Table of Contents
 
                         Information and Returns
 
Sec. 301.6111-2  Confidential corporate tax shelters.

    (a) In general.--(1) Under section 6111(d) and this section, a 
confidential corporate tax shelter is treated as a tax shelter subject 
to the requirements of sections 6111 (a) and (b).
    (2) A confidential corporate tax shelter is any transaction--
    (i) A significant purpose of the structure of which is the avoidance 
or evasion of Federal income tax, as described in paragraph (b) of this 
section, for a direct or indirect corporate participant;
    (ii) That is offered to any potential participant under conditions 
of confidentiality, as described in paragraph (c) of this section; and
    (iii) For which the tax shelter promoters may receive fees in excess 
of $100,000 in the aggregate, as described in paragraph (d) of this 
section.
    (3) For purposes of this section, references to the term transaction 
include all of the factual elements relevant to the expected tax 
treatment of any investment, entity, plan, or arrangement, and include 
any series of steps carried out as part of a plan. For purposes of this 
section, the term substantially similar includes any transaction that is 
expected to obtain the same or similar types of tax consequences and 
that is either factually similar or based on the same or similar tax 
strategy. Receipt of an opinion regarding the tax consequences of the 
transaction is not relevant to the determination of whether the 
transaction is the same as or substantially similar to another 
transaction. Further, the term substantially similar must be broadly 
construed in favor of registration. For examples, see Sec. 1.6011-
4(c)(4) of this chapter.
    (4) A transaction described in paragraph (b) of this section is for 
a direct or an indirect corporate participant if it is expected to 
provide Federal income tax benefits to any corporation (U.S. or foreign) 
whether or not that corporation participates directly in the 
transaction.
    (b) Transactions structured for avoidance or evasion of Federal 
income tax--(1) In general. The avoidance or evasion of Federal income 
tax will be considered a significant purpose of the structure of a 
transaction if the transaction is described in paragraph (b)(2) or (3) 
of this section. However, a transaction described in paragraph (b)(3) of 
this section need not be registered if the transaction is described in 
paragraph (b)(4)

[[Page 135]]

of this section. For purposes of this section, Federal income tax 
benefits include deductions, exclusions from gross income, 
nonrecognition of gain, tax credits, adjustments (or the absence of 
adjustments) to the basis of property, status as an entity exempt from 
Federal income taxation, and any other tax consequences that may reduce 
a taxpayer's Federal income tax liability by affecting the amount, 
timing, character, or source of any item of income, gain, expense, loss, 
or credit.
    (2) Listed transactions. A transaction is described in this 
paragraph (b)(2) if the transaction is the same as or substantially 
similar to one of the types of transactions that the Internal Revenue 
Service (IRS) has determined to be a tax avoidance transaction and 
identified by notice, regulation, or other form of published guidance as 
a listed transaction. If a transaction becomes a listed transaction 
after the date on which registration would otherwise be required under 
this section, and if the transaction otherwise satisfies the 
confidentiality and fee requirements of paragraphs (a)(2)(ii) and (iii) 
of this section, registration shall in all events be required with 
respect to any interests in the transaction that are offered for sale 
after the transaction becomes a listed transaction. However, because a 
transaction identified as a listed transaction is generally considered 
to have been structured for a significant tax avoidance purpose, such a 
transaction ordinarily will have been subject to registration under this 
section before becoming a listed transaction if the transaction 
previously satisfied the confidentiality and fee requirements of 
paragraphs (a)(2)(ii) and (iii) of this section.
    (3) Other tax-structured transactions. A transaction is described in 
this paragraph (b)(3) if it has been structured to produce Federal 
income tax benefits that constitute an important part of the intended 
results of the transaction and the tax shelter promoter (or other person 
who would be responsible for registration under this section) reasonably 
expects the transaction to be presented in the same or substantially 
similar form to more than one potential participant, unless the promoter 
reasonably determines that--
    (i) The potential participant is expected to participate in the 
transaction in the ordinary course of its business in a form consistent 
with customary commercial practice (a transaction involving the 
acquisition, disposition, or restructuring of a business, including the 
acquisition, disposition, or other change in the ownership or control of 
an entity that is engaged in a business, or a transaction involving a 
recapitalization or an acquisition of capital for use in the taxpayer's 
business, shall be considered a transaction carried out in the ordinary 
course of a taxpayer's business); and
    (ii) There is a generally accepted understanding that the expected 
Federal income tax benefits from the transaction (taking into account 
any combination of intended tax consequences) are properly allowable 
under the Internal Revenue Code for substantially similar transactions. 
There is no minimum period of time for which such a generally accepted 
understanding must exist. In general, however, a tax shelter promoter 
(or other person who would be responsible for registration under this 
section) cannot reasonably determine whether the intended tax treatment 
of a transaction has become generally accepted unless information 
relating to the tax treatment and tax structure of such transactions has 
been in the public domain (e.g., rulings, published articles, etc.) and 
widely known for a sufficient period of time (ordinarily a period of 
years) to provide knowledgeable tax practitioners and the IRS reasonable 
opportunity to evaluate the intended tax treatment. The mere fact that 
one or more knowledgeable tax practitioners have provided an opinion or 
advice to the effect that the intended tax treatment of the transaction 
should or will be sustained, if challenged by the IRS, is not sufficient 
to satisfy the requirements of this paragraph (b)(3)(ii).
    (4) Excepted transactions. The avoidance or evasion of Federal 
income tax will not be considered a significant purpose of the structure 
of a transaction if the transaction is described in either paragraph 
(b)(4)(i), (ii), or (iii) of this section.

[[Page 136]]

    (i) In the case of a transaction other than a transaction described 
in paragraph (b)(2) of this section, the tax shelter promoter (or other 
person who would be responsible for registration under this section) 
reasonably determines that there is no reasonable basis under Federal 
tax law for denial of any significant portion of the expected Federal 
income tax benefits from the transaction. This paragraph (b)(4)(i) 
applies only if the tax shelter promoter (or other person who would be 
responsible for registration under this section) reasonably determines 
that there is no basis that would meet the standard applicable to 
taxpayers under Sec. 1.6662-3(b)(3) of this chapter under which the IRS 
could disallow any significant portion of the expected Federal income 
tax benefits of the transaction. Thus, the reasonable basis standard is 
not satisfied by an IRS position that would be merely arguable or that 
would constitute merely a colorable claim. However, the determination of 
whether the IRS would or would not have a reasonable basis for such a 
position must take into account the entirety of the transaction and any 
combination of tax consequences that are expected to result from any 
component steps of the transaction, must not be based on any 
unreasonable or unrealistic factual assumptions, and must take into 
account all relevant aspects of Federal tax law, including the statute 
and legislative history, treaties, administrative guidance, and judicial 
decisions that establish principles of general application in the tax 
law (e.g., Gregory v. Helvering, 293 U.S. 465 (1935)). The determination 
of whether the IRS would or would not have such a reasonable basis is 
qualitative in nature and does not depend on any percentage or other 
quantitative assessment of the likelihood that the taxpayer would 
ultimately prevail if a significant portion of the expected tax benefits 
were disallowed by the IRS.
    (ii) The IRS makes a determination by published guidance that the 
transaction is not subject to the registration requirements of this 
section.
    (iii) The IRS makes a determination by individual ruling under 
paragraph (b)(5) of this section that a specific transaction is not 
subject to the registration requirements of this section for the 
taxpayer requesting the ruling.
    (5) Requests for ruling. If a tax shelter promoter (or other person 
who would be responsible for registration under this section) is 
uncertain whether a transaction is properly classified as a confidential 
corporate tax shelter or is otherwise uncertain whether registration is 
required under this section, that person may, on or before the date that 
registration would otherwise be required under this section, submit a 
request to the IRS for a ruling as to whether the transaction is subject 
to the registration requirements of this section. If the request fully 
discloses all relevant facts relating to the transaction, that person's 
potential obligation to register the transaction will be suspended 
during the period that the ruling request is pending and, if the IRS 
subsequently concludes that the transaction is a confidential corporate 
tax shelter subject to registration under this section, until the 
sixtieth day after the issuance of the ruling (or, if the request is 
withdrawn, sixty days from the date that the request is withdrawn). In 
the alternative, that person may register the transaction in accordance 
with the requirements of this section and append a statement to the Form 
8264, ``Application for Registration of a Tax Shelter'', which states 
that the person is uncertain whether the transaction is required to be 
registered as a confidential corporate tax shelter, and that the Form 
8264 is being filed on a protective basis.
    (6) Example. The following example illustrates the application of 
paragraphs (b)(1) through (4) of this section. Assume, for purposes of 
the example, that the transaction is not the same as or substantially 
similar to any of the types of transactions that the IRS has identified 
as listed transactions under section 6111 and, thus, is not described in 
paragraph (b)(2) of this section. The example is as follows:

    Example. (i) Facts. Y has designed a combination of financial 
instruments to be issued as a package by corporations. The financial 
instruments are expected to be treated as equity for financial 
accounting purposes and as debt giving rise to allowable interest 
deductions for Federal income tax purposes. Y reasonably expects to 
present this method of raising capital to more than

[[Page 137]]

one potential corporate participant. Assume that, because of the unusual 
nature of the combination of financial instruments, Y cannot conclude 
either that the transaction represented by the financial instruments is 
in customary commercial form or that there is a generally accepted 
understanding that interest deductions are available to issuers of 
substantially similar combinations of financial instruments. Further, 
assume that Y cannot reasonably determine that the IRS would have no 
reasonable basis to deny the deductions.
    (ii) Analysis. The transaction represented by this combination of 
financial instruments is a transaction described in paragraph (b)(3) of 
this section. However, if Y is uncertain whether this transaction is 
described in paragraph (b)(3) of this section, or is otherwise uncertain 
whether registration is required, Y may apply for a ruling under 
paragraph (b)(5) of this section, and Y will not be required to register 
the transaction while the ruling is pending or for sixty days 
thereafter.

    (c) Conditions of confidentiality--(1) In general. All the facts and 
circumstances relating to the transaction will be considered when 
determining whether an offer is made under conditions of confidentiality 
as described in section 6111(d)(2), including prior conduct of the 
parties. Pursuant to section 6111(d)(2)(A), if an offeree's disclosure 
of the tax treatment or tax structure of the transaction is limited in 
any manner by an express or implied understanding or agreement with or 
for the benefit of any tax shelter promoter, an offer is considered made 
under conditions of confidentiality, whether or not such understanding 
or agreement is legally binding. The tax treatment of a transaction is 
the purported or claimed Federal income tax treatment of the 
transaction. The tax structure of a transaction is any fact that may be 
relevant to understanding the purported or claimed Federal income tax 
treatment of the transaction. Pursuant to section 6111(d)(2)(B), an 
offer will also be considered made under conditions of confidentiality 
in the absence of any such understanding or agreement if any tax shelter 
promoter knows or has reason to know that the offeree's use or 
disclosure of information relating to the tax treatment or tax structure 
of the transaction is limited for the benefit of any person other than 
the offeree in any other manner, such as where the transaction is 
claimed to be proprietary or exclusive to the tax shelter promoter or 
any party other than the offeree.
    (2) Exceptions--(i) Securities law. An offer is not considered made 
under conditions of confidentiality if disclosure of the tax treatment 
or tax structure of the transaction is subject to restrictions 
reasonably necessary to comply with securities laws and such disclosure 
is not otherwise limited.
    (ii) Mergers and acquisitions. In the case of a proposed taxable or 
tax-free acquisition of historic assets of a corporation (other than an 
investment company, as defined in section 351(e), that is not publicly 
traded) that constitute an active trade or business the acquirer intends 
to continue, or a proposed taxable or tax-free acquisition of more than 
50 percent of the stock of a corporation (other than an investment 
company, as defined in section 351(e), that is not publicly traded) that 
owns historic assets used in an active trade or business the acquirer 
intends to continue, the transaction is not considered offered under 
conditions of confidentiality under paragraph (c)(1) of this section if 
the offeree is permitted to disclose the tax treatment and tax structure 
of the transaction no later than the earlier of the date of the public 
announcement of discussions relating to the transaction, the date of the 
public announcement of the transaction, or the date of the execution of 
an agreement (with or without conditions) to enter into the transaction. 
However, this exception is not available where the offeree's ability to 
consult any tax advisor (including a tax advisor independent from all 
other entities involved in the transaction) regarding the tax treatment 
or tax structure of the transaction is limited in any way.
    (3) Presumption. Unless facts and circumstances indicate otherwise, 
an offer is not considered made under conditions of confidentiality if 
the tax shelter promoter provides express written authorization to each 
offeree permitting the offeree (and each employee, representative, or 
other agent of such offeree) to disclose to any and all persons, without 
limitation of any

[[Page 138]]

kind, the tax treatment and tax structure of the transaction, and all 
materials of any kind (including opinions or other tax analyses) that 
are provided to the offeree related to such tax treatment and tax 
structure. Except as provided in paragraph (c)(2) of this section, this 
presumption is available only in cases in which each written 
authorization permits the offeree to disclose the tax treatment and tax 
structure of the transaction immediately upon commencement of 
discussions with the tax shelter promoter providing the authorization 
and each written authorization is given no later than 30 days from the 
day the tax shelter promoter commenced discussions with the offeree. A 
transaction that is exclusive or proprietary to any party other than the 
offeree will not be considered offered under conditions of 
confidentiality if written authorization to disclose is provided to the 
offeree in accordance with this paragraph (c)(3) and the transaction is 
not otherwise confidential.
    (d) Determination of fees. All the facts and circumstances relating 
to the transaction will be considered when determining the amount of 
fees, in the aggregate, that the tax shelter promoters may receive. For 
purposes of this paragraph (d), all consideration that tax shelter 
promoters may receive is taken into account, including contingent fees, 
fees in the form of equity interests, and fees the promoters may receive 
for other transactions as consideration for promoting the tax shelter. 
For example, if a tax shelter promoter may receive a fee for arranging a 
transaction that is a confidential corporate tax shelter and a separate 
fee for another transaction that is not a confidential corporate tax 
shelter, part or all of the fee paid with respect to the other 
transaction may be treated as a fee paid with respect to the 
confidential corporate tax shelter if the facts and circumstances 
indicate that the fee paid for the other transaction is in consideration 
for the confidential corporate tax shelter. For purposes of determining 
whether the tax shelter promoters may receive fees in excess of 
$100,000, the fees from all substantially similar transactions are 
considered part of the same tax shelter and must be aggregated.
    (e) Registration--(1) Time for registering--(i) In general. A tax 
shelter must be registered not later than the day on which the first 
offering for sale of interests in the shelter occurs. An offer to 
participate in a confidential corporate tax shelter shall be treated as 
an offer for sale. If interests in a confidential corporate tax shelter 
were first offered for sale on or before February 28, 2000, the first 
offer for sale of interests in the shelter that occurs after February 
28, 2000 shall be considered the first offer for sale under this 
section.
    (ii) Special rule. If a transaction becomes a confidential corporate 
tax shelter (e.g., because of a change in the law or factual 
circumstances, or because the transaction becomes a listed transaction) 
subsequent to the first offering for sale after February 28, 2000, and 
the transaction was not previously required to be registered as a 
confidential corporate tax shelter under this section, the transaction 
must be registered under this section if interests are offered for sale 
after the transaction becomes a confidential corporate tax shelter. The 
transaction must be registered by the next offering for sale of 
interests in the shelter. If, subsequent to the first offering for sale, 
a transaction becomes a confidential corporate tax shelter because the 
transaction becomes a listed transaction on or after February 28, 2003, 
and the transaction was not previously required to be registered as a 
confidential corporate tax shelter under this section, the transaction 
must be registered under this section within 60 days after the 
transaction becomes a listed transaction/confidential corporate tax 
shelter if any interests were offered for sale within the previous six 
years.
    (2) Procedures for registering. To register a confidential corporate 
tax shelter, the person responsible for registering the tax shelter must 
file Form 8264, ``Application for Registration of a Tax Shelter''. (Form 
8264 is also used to register tax shelters defined in section 6111(c).) 
Similar to the treatment provided under Q&A-22 and Q&A-48 of Sec. 
301.6111-1T, transactions involving

[[Page 139]]

similar business assets and similar plans or arrangements that are 
offered to corporate taxpayers by the same person or related persons are 
aggregated and considered part of a single tax shelter. However, in 
contrast with the requirement of Q&A-48 of Sec. 301.6111-1T, the tax 
shelter promoter may file a single Form 8264 with respect to any such 
aggregated tax shelter, provided an amended Form 8264 is filed to 
reflect any material changes and to include any additional or revised 
written materials presented in connection with an offer to participate 
in the shelter. Furthermore, all transactions that are part of the same 
tax shelter and that are to be carried out by the same corporate 
participant (or one or more other members of the same affiliated group 
within the meaning of section 1504) must be registered on the same Form 
8264.
    (f) Definition of tax shelter promoter. For purposes of section 
6111(d)(2) and this section, the term tax shelter promoter includes a 
tax shelter organizer and any other person who participates in the 
organization, management or sale of a tax shelter (as those persons are 
described in section 6111(e)(1) and Sec. 301.6111-1T (Q&A-26 through 
Q&A-33) or any person related (within the meaning of section 267 or 707) 
to such tax shelter organizer or such other person.
    (g) Person required to register--(1) Tax shelter promoters. The 
rules in section 6111 (a) and (e) and Sec. 301.6111-1T (Q&A-34 through 
Q&A-39) determine who is required to register a confidential corporate 
tax shelter. A promoter of a confidential corporate tax shelter must 
register the tax shelter only if it is a person required to register 
under the rules in section 6111(a) and (e) and Sec. 301.6111-1T (Q&A-34 
through Q&A-39).
    (2) Persons who discuss the transaction; all promoters are foreign 
persons--(i) In general. If all of the tax shelter promoters of a 
confidential corporate tax shelter are foreign persons, any person who 
discusses participation in the transaction must register the shelter 
under this section within 90 days after beginning such discussions.
    (ii) Exceptions. Registration by a person discussing participation 
in a transaction is not required if either--
    (A) The person does not participate, directly or indirectly, in the 
shelter and notifies the tax shelter promoter in writing, within 90 days 
of beginning such discussions, that the person will not participate; or
    (B) Within 90 days after beginning such discussions, the person 
obtains and reasonably relies on both--
    (1) A written statement from one of the tax shelter promoters that 
such promoter has registered the tax shelter under this section; and
    (2) A copy of the registration.
    (iii) Determination of foreign status. For purposes of this 
paragraph (g)(2), a person must presume that all tax shelter promoters 
are foreign persons unless the person either--
    (A) Discusses participation in the tax shelter with a promoter that 
is a United States person; or
    (B) Obtains and reasonably relies on a written statement from one of 
the promoters that at least one of the promoters is a United States 
person.
    (iv) Discussion. Discussing participation in a transaction includes 
discussing such participation with any person that conveys the tax 
shelter promoter's proposal. For purposes of this paragraph (g)(2), any 
person that participates directly or indirectly in a transaction will be 
treated as having discussed participation in the transaction not later 
than the date of the agreement to participate. Thus, a tax shelter 
participant will be treated as having discussed participation in the 
transaction even if all discussions were conducted by an intermediary 
and the agreement to participate was made indirectly through another 
person acting on the participant's behalf (for example, through an 
intermediary empowered to commit the participant to participate in the 
shelter).
    (v) Special rule for controlled entities. A person (first person) 
will be treated as participating indirectly in a confidential corporate 
tax shelter if a foreign person controlled by the first person 
participates in the shelter, and a significant purpose of the shelter is 
the avoidance or evasion of the first person's Federal income tax. For 
purposes of this paragraph (g)(2)(v), control of a foreign corporation 
or partnership will

[[Page 140]]

be determined under the rules of section 6038(e)(2) and (3), except that 
such section shall be applied by substituting ``10'' for ``50'' each 
place it appears and ``at least'' for ``more than'' each place it 
appears. In addition, section 6038(e)(2) shall be applied for these 
purposes without regard to the constructive ownership rules of section 
318 and by treating stock as owned if it is owned directly or 
indirectly. Section 6038(e)(3) shall be applied for these purposes 
without regard to the last sentence of section 6038(e)(3)(B). Any 
beneficiary with a 10 percent or more interest in a foreign trust or 
estate shall be treated as controlling that trust or estate for purposes 
of this paragraph (g)(2)(v).
    (vi) Other rules. (A) For purposes of the registration requirements 
under section 6111(d)(3), it is presumed that the tax shelter promoters 
will receive fees in excess of $100,000 in the aggregate unless the 
person responsible for registering the tax shelter can show otherwise.
    (B) Any person treated as a tax shelter promoter under section 
6111(d) solely by reason of being related (within the meaning of section 
267 or 707) to a foreign promoter will be treated as a foreign promoter 
for purposes of this paragraph (g)(2).
    (h) Effective dates. This section applies to confidential corporate 
tax shelters in which any interests are offered for sale after February 
28, 2000. If an interest is sold after February 28, 2000, it is treated 
as offered for sale after February 28, 2000, unless the sale was 
pursuant to a written binding contract entered into on or before 
February 28, 2000. However, paragraphs (a) through (g) of this section 
apply to confidential corporate tax shelters in which any interests are 
offered for sale on or after February 28, 2003, and to transactions 
described in paragraph (e)(1)(ii) of this section. The rules that apply 
to confidential corporate tax shelters in which any interests are 
offered for sale after February 28, 2000, and before February 28, 2003, 
are contained in Sec. 301.6111-2T in effect prior to February 28, 2003 
(see 26 CFR part 301 revised as of April 1, 2002, 2002-28 I.R.B 91, and 
2002-45 I.R.B. 823 (see Sec. 601.601(d)(2) of this chapter)).

[T.D. 9046, 68 FR 10170, Mar. 4, 2003]