Comment on the carried Interest and the UK’s new QAHC rules

21 March 2023

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Partners from international law firm Akin Gump comment on changes expected in the Spring Finance Bill on carried interest and Qualifying Asset Holding Company rules.

Serena Lee, partner comments on carried interest:

US citizens realising carry while tax resident in the United Kingdom may currently face punitive rates of tax, due to double taxation caused by mismatches in the timing of income inclusions under the US and UK tax systems.

In brief, private fund agreements often cause the United States to tax carry returns on a hypothetical asset liquidation basis, giving rise to taxable income before there is any corresponding cash entitlement. The UK, on the other hand, generally taxes carry on an arising basis in accordance with the cash distribution waterfall.

The UK-US Tax Treaty does not provide relief in this regard, because the US is authorised to tax its citizens at all times in accordance with domestic law.

In principle, a dollar-for-dollar foreign tax credit may be available in the US in respect of UK tax liability when incurred, but uncredited UK tax can be carried back for only one year (and carried forward 10 years).

It may therefore not be possible to obtain the benefit that the foreign tax credit is designed to achieve where the two tax liabilities arise in different periods.

While the UK carried interest rules allow adjustments to be made to prevent double taxation, HMRC take the view that no relief is available for foreign taxes.

The UK government has announced that legislation will be introduced in Spring Finance Bill 2023 that allows an individual who is expecting to receive carried interest to make a voluntary and irrevocable election for their carried interest to be taxed in the UK on an accruals basis. We are still awaiting further detail of how this is intended to operate in practice.

Whether the new election will actually permit claiming an improved foreign tax credit position in the US remains to be seen, as the new rules will need to be scrutinised from a US tax perspective. Namely, it is possible that the voluntary nature of the UK tax accrual or the comparability to the US realisation based system may call such a claim into question.

The new election is expected to be available in respect of tax year 2022/23 and subsequent tax years.”

Matthew Durward-Thomas, partner, comments on the UK’s new Qualifying Asset Holding Company (QAHC) rules:

The government has made a number of helpful changes to the UK’s new Qualifying Asset Holding Company (QAHC) rules. In particular, it has made it easier for a fund entity to satisfy the ownership condition. In order to qualify for the QAHC regime, the QAHC must be held by 70% or more “good” or “Category A” investors. A “qualifying fund” is a Category A investor. As such, if a QAHC is wholly owned by a “qualifying fund”, the ownership condition will be met.

There are a few different ways that a fund can constitute a “qualifying fund”: the first requires the fund to meet the Genuine Diversity of Ownership (GDO) condition. The government has announced that it will make amendments to the GDO condition to make it easier for multi-fund arrangements (for example, funds involving feeders and parallel fund structures) to satisfy the condition. This will apply for the purposes of the QAHC regime, as well as the UK REIT and Non-Resident Capital Gains regimes. This change is expected to take effect from the date of Royal Assent to Spring Finance Bill 2023.

As currently drafted, only funds that constitute a collective investment scheme (CIS) can rely on the GDO condition. The government has confirmed that this will be expanded to include certain entities which would be a CIS if they were not bodies corporate. In particular, this is expected to ease concerns around funds constituted as Delaware limited partnerships, as it is not clear whether these meet the CIS definition due to the fact that they have separate legal personality. This change is expected to take effect retroactively from the date the QAHC rules were introduced (April 2022).

The government has also announced that the rules will be amended (with effect from the date of Royal Assent of Spring Finance Bill 2023) such that, upon making a separate election, a QAHC can hold listed securities and still meet the investment strategy condition. However, the QAHC will be taxable on the dividend income received in respect of such securities.

Professional Paraplanner