Stock Buyback Excise Tax Guidance A Mixed Bag For SPACs
*Originally published by Law360
The Inflation Reduction Act, which was signed into law on Aug. 16, 2022, created a new 1% excise tax on certain repurchases of the stock of publicly traded corporations.
A repurchase subject to the excise tax is generally defined under Section 4501 of the Internal Revenue Code as either a redemption or an economically similar transaction.[1]
Since its enactment, the excise tax has been viewed as a significant development for all publicly traded corporations, but in particular, it has become a matter of significant concern for publicly traded special purpose acquisition companies, or SPACs.
A SPAC raises cash for the purpose of acquiring an operating company — any such acquisition is typically referred to as a de-SPAC transaction. A SPAC’s shareholders generally have a redemption option that may be exercised in connection with a de-SPAC transaction.
If a SPAC does not find a suitable acquisition target within a certain period of time — generally not more than two years — it is typically required to liquidate.
SPACs and their advisers have been watching intently for guidance on the excise tax, which finally arrived on Dec. 27, 2022, mere days before the excise tax was set to take effect in the form of interim guidance from the US Department of the Treasury and the Internal Revenue Service, set forth in Notice 2023-2.
The Notice
The notice states that the Treasury and the IRS intend to issue proposed regulations addressing the application of the excise tax, and describes the rules that the Treasury and the IRS anticipate including in those regulations, together with 26 examples of the application of those rules.[2] Until the forthcoming proposed regulations are issued, taxpayers may rely on the operating rules set forth in the notice.[3]
The notice also describes the anticipated procedural rules for reporting and paying new excise tax liabilities, requiring the reporting of the new excise tax for a given tax year on a Form 720 quarterly federal excise tax return — together with the new Form 7208 dedicated to the new excise tax, a draft of which was released by the IRS on Dec. 28.
These returns are due for the first full quarter after the close of the year, with the new tax being payable on the filing deadline for that Form 720.[4]
The notice anticipates that the forthcoming proposed regulations will provide that rules consistent with the operating rules in the notice generally will apply to stock repurchases made after Dec. 31, 2022, and to issuances of stock made during a taxable year ending after Dec. 31, 2022.[5]
Finally, the Treasury and the IRS invited comments from the public on a number of specific questions identified in the notice, addressing rules both included and not included in the notice.[6]
The notice provides welcome relief for SPACs by generally excluding from the application of the excise tax any distribution in complete liquidation of a covered corporation — which typically would include a publicly traded SPAC.[7] Except as discussed below under “Complete Liquidation,” redemptions in connection with a de-SPAC transaction, however, continue to be included in the tax base for the excise tax.
The tax base for the excise tax is generally the aggregate fair market value of repurchases in connection with any such redemption during the taxable year, reduced by the fair market value of stock issued pursuant to the netting rule, described below.
Complete Liquidation
Under the notice, a distribution in complete liquidation of a SPAC is not an economically similar transaction, and is therefore exempt from the excise tax.[8]
The notice also appears to exclude from the excise tax any distribution during the tax year in which a SPAC liquidates by including such distribution in the list of transactions that are not economically similar, and stating that such distribution is not a repurchase.[9]
The notice does not appear to explicitly require that such a distribution be made in connection with the liquidation, provided that the distribution and the liquidation occur in the same taxable year.
Therefore, it would seem that, if (1) a SPAC redeems its stock in anticipation of the closing of a de-SPAC transaction; (2) the transaction does not close, and (3) the SPAC instead liquidates during the year in which the redemption occurs, distributions in connection with such a redemption may be exempt from the excise tax. However, there is some ambiguity in the drafting of this exception.[10]
Hopefully, in future guidance the IRS will clarify that a distribution covered by this exception includes a distribution in connection with a redemption, and not only a distribution that is economically similar to a redemption.
Netting Rule
As noted above, a SPAC’s excise tax base is generally reduced by the aggregate fair market value of any stock that the SPAC issues during the taxable year — this is the netting rule.[11]
In a typical domestic de-SPAC transaction, a SPAC acquires a corporate target using (1) a reverse triangular merger, pursuant to which the SPAC’s newly formed merger subsidiary merges into the target, (2) a two-step merger, pursuant to which, in step one, a SPAC’s newly formed merger subsidiary merges into the target, and, in step two, the target merges into a newly formed limited liability company that is wholly owned by the SPAC, or (3) a forward merger pursuant to which the target merges into the SPAC.
In connection with any of the foregoing merger structures, the SPAC generally issues new stock in the SPAC to the target’s shareholders as consideration, redeems shareholders in the SPAC that exercise their redemption option, and sells new stock in the SPAC in a private investment in public equity, or PIPE, transaction.
In computing a SPAC’s excise tax base under the netting rule, the aggregate fair market value of the shares issued to the target’s shareholders — if the target is not publicly traded — and to the PIPE purchasers may generally be netted against, and is often expected to fully offset, the fair market value of the redeemed shares.
If the fair market value of the redeemed shares is fully offset under the netting rule, generally there is no excise tax in connection with the redemption.
However, if the target is publicly traded, then the SPAC’s shares issued to the target’s shareholders may not be used to reduce the SPAC’s excise tax base.[12] Under current market conditions, the volume of any PIPE issuance is expected to be significantly less than — and insufficient to fully offset — the volume of redemptions.
Therefore, if the above de-SPAC structure involves a publicly traded target, the SPAC may not fully benefit from the netting rule and a significant portion of the redemption may be subject to the excise tax.
Certain other common de-SPAC structures do not benefit from the netting rule altogether under the notice.
One of the structures, generally known as a double dummy, involves a newly formed publicly traded holding company acquiring both a SPAC and a target, and is often utilized in flow-through target acquisitions. The holding company forms two merging subsidiaries — i.e., dummy companies — one of which merges into the operating target company and the other merges into the SPAC.
In the double-dummy structure, the new holding company, rather than the SPAC, issues stock to PIPE investors and target shareholders — under the notice such stock issuances are not permitted to reduce the excise tax base of a SPAC.[13]
A similar issue arises in the context of a publicly traded target company acting as the acquirer of the SPAC — any stock issued by such target, including stock issued to PIPE investors, may not reduce a SPAC’s excise tax base.
Further guidance from the Treasury and the IRS on the excise tax is expected in the form of proposed regulations, which may address additional lingering questions relating to the excise tax not covered by Notice 2023-2, although the timing of the issuance of any such guidance is not clear at the moment.
[1] Internal Revenue Code Section 4501(c)(1). For additional background on the excise tax, see our previous alert at https://www.afslaw.com/perspectives/energy-cleantech- counsel/key-tax-changes-impacting-businesses-the-new-inflation.
[2] Notice Section 3. All references to the Notice are to Notice 2023-2.
[3] Notice Section 5.03.
[4] Notice Section 4.
[5] Notice Section 5.01.
[6] Notice Section 6.
[7] Notice Section 3.04(4)(b)(i).
[8] See Notice Section 3.04(4)(b)(i)(A).
[9] See Notice Section 3.04(4)(b)(i)(B) (“If a covered corporation or a covered surrogate foreign corporation (as appropriate) completely liquidates and dissolves (within the meaning of Section 1.331-1(d)(1)(ii)) during a taxable year (that is, has a final distribution in complete liquidation to which Section 331 applies during that taxable year), no distribution by that covered corporation or covered surrogate foreign corporation during that taxable year is a repurchase.”).
[10] For example, this exception is contained in the section of the notice describing what constitutes an “economically similar” transaction, which is distinct from the category of redemptions that are generally covered by the excise tax. Compare Notice Section 3.04(2) (stating that a repurchase for excise tax purposes is solely (1) an IRS Section 317(b) redemption, except as provided in Section 3.04(3) of the notice; or (2) an “economically similar” transaction described in Section 3.04(4) of the Notice); and Notice Section 3.04(3) (providing an exclusive list of transactions that are IRC Section 317(b) redemptions but are not repurchases for excise tax purposes), with Notice Section 3.04(4) (providing an exclusive list of transactions that are “economically similar” transactions and a nonexclusive list of specific transactions that are not “economically similar” transactions).
[11] See Notice Section 3.08.
[12] The value of the shares issued to the public target’s shareholders may not offset the value of the redeemed shares under the netting rule because (1) the SPAC stock constitutes property permitted to be received under Code Section 354 without the recognition of gain; (2) the SPAC stock is used by a covered corporation — i.e., the target — to repurchase its stock in a transaction that is a repurchase under Section 3.08(4)(a)(i) of the notice; and (3) the repurchase by the target is not included in target’s excise tax base because it is a qualifying property repurchase. See Notice Section 3.08(4)(d) and Section 3.09, Example 19.
[13] The benefit of the netting rule applies only to stock issued by the covered corporation itself during the taxable year. See Notice Section 3.08(1); see also IRC Section 4501(c)(3).
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