Issue
Can subsection 230-15(5) of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (ITAA 1997) apply to limit deductions under subsection 230-15(4A) of the ITAA 1997 for a loss that is a dividend on a redeemable preference share (RPS) which is a debt interest under Division 974 of the ITAA 1997?
Decision
Yes. Where a loss that is a dividend on a RPS, which is a debt interest for the purposes of Division 974 of the ITAA 1997, exceeds the benchmark rate of return for the debt interest increased by 150 basis points, subsection 230-15(5) of the ITAA 1997 can apply to limit the deductions allowable under subsection 230-15(4A) of the ITAA 1997.
Facts
The taxpayer is a company which has issued a RPS. The RPS is characterised as a debt interest for the purposes of Division 974 of the ITAA 1997. The RPS is a financial arrangement as defined in section 230-45 of the ITAA 1997.
The terms of the RPS allow a non-cumulative dividend to be paid each year. If all non-cumulative dividends are paid over the life of the RPS the return on the RPS will exceed the benchmark rate of return (as defined in section 974-145 of the ITAA 1997) increased by 150 basis points.
All financial arrangements of the taxpayer are subject to Division 230 of the ITAA 1997.
Reasons for Decision
All legislative references are to the ITAA 1997 unless otherwise indicated.
Subsection 230-15(2) provides the general test for deductibility of a loss under Division 230. The deduction will be available to the extent the loss is made in gaining or producing the relevant taxpayer's assessable income or is necessarily made in carrying on a business for that purpose.
Where a loss is made to secure a permanent or enduring benefit it may not have the requisite nexus to gaining or producing of assessable income or carrying on a business for that purpose (see for example Macquarie Finance Ltd v. Commissioner of Taxation (2005) 146 FCR 77; 2005 ATC 4829; (2005) 61 ATR 1.
Similarly a loss may not be deductible where it is in substance a distribution of profit as the liability to pay the amount will be contingent on the existence of profits, rather than being incurred in the course of deriving income. Therefore such a loss does not have the requisite nexus to gaining or producing assessable income as it constitutes the application of profits already derived. As stated by Dixon J in Federal Commissioner of Taxation v. The Midland Railway Co of Western Australia Ltd (1952) 85 CLR 306; (1952) 9 ATD 372; at CLR 316: ...a distribution of the share of profits has not been considered to be an outgoing incurred for the purpose of earning profits and so to be antecedently deductible as a trade expense before the ascertainment of the taxable fund...
Subsection 230-15(4) modifies the operation of subsection 230-15(2), effectively removing these two obstacles to deductibility. Subsection 230-15(4) does this by stating that these characteristics (on their own) will not prevent a loss from being deductible under subsection 230-15(2). The loss must still otherwise satisfy the requirements of subsection 230-15(2) to be deductible under this provision. In the case of a distribution of profits, even disregarding the fact that the liability to make the payment is dependent on the availability of profits, it is not possible to otherwise identify an actual nexus to gaining or producing assessable income.
Subsection 230-15(4A) contains rules to facilitate the deductibility of a loss where that loss can be said to be a dividend on a debt interest. The scope of the deduction is determined by the assumptions in paragraphs 230-15(4A)(a) to 230-15(4A)(c) and the test in subsection 230-15(2). That is, a loss that can be said to be a dividend on a debt interest will be deductible to the extent that a deduction would be available under subsection 230-15(2) if the payment of the dividend was the incurring of an equivalent amount of interest on the same finance.
The deductibility of an amount of interest is typically determined through an examination of the purpose of the borrowing and the use to which the borrowed funds are put ( Federal Commissioner of Taxation v. Munro (1926) 38 CLR 153; Fletcher & Ors v. Federal Commissioner of Taxation (1991) 173 CLR 1; 91 ATC 4950; (1991) 22 ATR 613). Therefore if the funds in respect of which the dividend was paid or provided were used in, or borrowed for the purpose of, gaining or producing assessable income (or carrying on a business for that purpose), the assumptions in subsection 230-15(4A) prima facie supply a nexus for the purposes of subsection 230-15(2).
It is clear from the structure of section 230-15 that the extent to which a loss is deductible under subsection 230-15(2) will be affected by the benchmark rate of return rule in subsection 230-15(5) if subsection 230-15(4) is relied upon to enable the nexus in subsection 230-15(2) to be satisfied.
Although subsection 230-15(4A) is itself a source of a deduction, it does so by reference to 'the extent to which it would have been a deductible loss under subsection (2)'.
The assumptions in subsection 230-15(4A) do not overcome the fact that the dividend is actually the post-derivation application of profit. In considering whether the dividend would have been a deductible loss under subsection 230-15(2) if the assumptions in paragraphs 230-15(4A)(a) to 230-15(4A)(c) are made, it is therefore still necessary to have regard to the modifications to subsection 230-15(2) under subsection 230-15(4). That is, even if the assumptions in paragraphs 230-15(4A)(a) to 230-15(4A)(c) are made, the loss will not be deductible unless regard is had to one or both of the things provided for in subsection 230-15(4).
The reference to subsection 230-15(4) in paragraph 230-15(4A)(c) supports the conclusion that a deduction under subsection 230-15(4A) inherently requires the application of subsection 230-15(4) (and incorporates the latter through the reference to subsection 230-15(2)).
Subsection 230-15(5) imposes a 'cap' on deductions for a loss on a debt interest to the extent that the compounded internal rate of return exceeds the benchmark rate of return for the debt interest increased by 150 basis points. This is done by 'turning off' subsection 230-15(4), and its effect of removing obstacles to deductibility under subsection 230-15(2). Although subsection 230-15(5) on its terms only expressly affects the application of subsection 230-15(4), the interrelationship between the subsections is such that deductibility of an amount under subsection 230-15(4A) must be compared with the position under subsection 230-15(2), as affected by subsections 230-15(4) and 230-15(5).
As such, where the dividends on the RPS result in the return on the RPS exceeding the benchmark rate of return increased by 150 basis points, the cap in subsection 230-15(5) can apply in determining a deduction for such losses under subsection 230-15(4A).