Highlights of This IssueSPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENTINCOME TAXEXEMPT ORGANIZATIONSADMINISTRATIVEPrefaceThe IRS MissionIntroductionPart III. Administrative, Procedural, and MiscellaneousNotice 2009-25Part IV. Items of General InterestAnnouncement 2009-28Announcement 2009-30Announcement 2009-31Announcement 2009-32Announcement 2009-33Definition of Terms and AbbreviationsDefinition of TermsAbbreviationsNumerical Finding ListNumerical Finding ListEffect of Current Actions on Previously Published ItemsFinding List of Current Actions on Previously Published ItemsHow to get the Internal Revenue BulletinINTERNAL REVENUE BULLETINCUMULATIVE BULLETINSACCESS THE INTERNAL REVENUE BULLETIN ON THE INTERNETINTERNAL REVENUE BULLETINS ON CD-ROMHow to OrderWe Welcome Comments About the Internal Revenue Bulletin Internal Revenue Bulletin: 2009-15 April 13, 2009 Highlights of This Issue These synopses are intended only as aids to the reader in identifying the subject matter covered. They may not be relied upon as authoritative interpretations. SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT Announcement 2009-28 Announcement 2009-28 This document contains the annual report to the public concerning Advance Pricing Agreements (APAs) and the experience of the APA Program during calendar year 2008. This document does not provide guidance regarding the application of the arm’s length standard. Instead, it reports on the structure and activities of the APA Program. INCOME TAX Notice 2009-25 Notice 2009-25 This notice invites public comments on how certain business practices in the retail industry have changed since the promulgation of the uniform capitalization regulations under section 263A of the Code, and whether certain definitions under the regulations should be modified in light of current business practices. EXEMPT ORGANIZATIONS Announcement 2009-32 Announcement 2009-32 The IRS has revoked its determination that Financially Strong America, Inc. (fka Consumer Debt Solutions, Inc.), of Highland, NY, qualifies as an organization described in sections 501(c)(3) and 170(c)(2) of the Code. ADMINISTRATIVE Announcement 2009-30 Announcement 2009-30 This document contains corrections to final and temporary regulations (T.D. 9438, 2009-5 I.R.B. 387) under section 954 of the Code as they relate to foreign base company sales income. Announcement 2009-31 Announcement 2009-31 This document contains corrections to proposed regulations (REG-150066-08, 2009-5 I.R.B. 423) relating to foreign base company sales income. Preface The IRS Mission Provide America’s taxpayers top quality service by helping them understand and meet their tax responsibilities and by applying the tax law with integrity and fairness to all. Introduction The Internal Revenue Bulletin is the authoritative instrument of the Commissioner of Internal Revenue for announcing official rulings and procedures of the Internal Revenue Service and for publishing Treasury Decisions, Executive Orders, Tax Conventions, legislation, court decisions, and other items of general interest. It is published weekly and may be obtained from the Superintendent of Documents on a subscription basis. Bulletin contents are compiled semiannually into Cumulative Bulletins, which are sold on a single-copy basis. It is the policy of the Service to publish in the Bulletin all substantive rulings necessary to promote a uniform application of the tax laws, including all rulings that supersede, revoke, modify, or amend any of those previously published in the Bulletin. All published rulings apply retroactively unless otherwise indicated. Procedures relating solely to matters of internal management are not published; however, statements of internal practices and procedures that affect the rights and duties of taxpayers are published. Revenue rulings represent the conclusions of the Service on the application of the law to the pivotal facts stated in the revenue ruling. In those based on positions taken in rulings to taxpayers or technical advice to Service field offices, identifying details and information of a confidential nature are deleted to prevent unwarranted invasions of privacy and to comply with statutory requirements. Rulings and procedures reported in the Bulletin do not have the force and effect of Treasury Department Regulations, but they may be used as precedents. Unpublished rulings will not be relied on, used, or cited as precedents by Service personnel in the disposition of other cases. In applying published rulings and procedures, the effect of subsequent legislation, regulations, court decisions, rulings, and procedures must be considered, and Service personnel and others concerned are cautioned against reaching the same conclusions in other cases unless the facts and circumstances are substantially the same. The Bulletin is divided into four parts as follows: Part I.—1986 Code. This part includes rulings and decisions based on provisions of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986. Part II.—Treaties and Tax Legislation. This part is divided into two subparts as follows: Subpart A, Tax Conventions and Other Related Items, and Subpart B, Legislation and Related Committee Reports. Part III.—Administrative, Procedural, and Miscellaneous. To the extent practicable, pertinent cross references to these subjects are contained in the other Parts and Subparts. Also included in this part are Bank Secrecy Act Administrative Rulings. Bank Secrecy Act Administrative Rulings are issued by the Department of the Treasury’s Office of the Assistant Secretary (Enforcement). Part IV.—Items of General Interest. This part includes notices of proposed rulemakings, disbarment and suspension lists, and announcements. The last Bulletin for each month includes a cumulative index for the matters published during the preceding months. These monthly indexes are cumulated on a semiannual basis, and are published in the last Bulletin of each semiannual period. Part III. Administrative, Procedural, and Miscellaneous Notice 2009-25 Request for Comments on Certain Section 263A Rules Relating to Property Acquired for Resale PURPOSE This notice invites public comments on how certain business practices in the retail industry have changed since the promulgation of the uniform capitalization regulations under § 263A of the Internal Revenue Code in the 1990s and whether certain definitions under the regulations should be modified in light of current business practices. BACKGROUND Section 263A, enacted by the Tax Reform Act of 1986, Public Law No. 99-514, 100 Stat. 2085, requires taxpayers to capitalize the direct and indirect costs properly allocable to (1) certain real property and tangible personal property produced by the taxpayer; and (2) real property and certain personal property that is acquired by the taxpayer for resale. Section 1.263A-1(e) of the Income Tax Regulations provides that resellers must capitalize the acquisition cost of property acquired for resale, as well as certain indirect costs that are properly allocable to property acquired for resale. Section 1.263A-3 sets forth detailed rules with respect to the proper treatment of purchasing, handling, and storage costs, which are the indirect costs most often incurred by resellers. Section 1.263A-3 was promulgated in 1993 and last amended in 1994. DISCUSSION The IRS and Treasury Department recognize that the retail industry has changed over the last fifteen years due to advancements in technology and service innovations. As a result of these changes, certain provisions in the regulations under § 263A, particularly in § 1.263A-3, may not take into account some present-day retail business practices; therefore, the existing regulations may have unintended consequences for some retailers. More specifically, a significant number of retailers that sell merchandise directly to retail customers in on-site sales also sell merchandise from their sales facilities over the internet and by fax. The existing definitions of on-site storage facility, retail sales facility, on-site sales, and dual-function storage facility under § 1.263A-3(c)(5)(ii) did not contemplate the current volume and types of internet and fax sales that retailers transact from their sales facilities. An on-site storage facility is defined as a storage or warehousing facility that is physically attached to, and an integral part of, a retail sales facility. A retail sales facility is defined as a facility where a taxpayer sells merchandise exclusively to retail customers (final purchasers of the merchandise) in on-site sales. On-site sales are defined as sales made to retail customers physically present at a facility. A dual-function storage facility is defined as (1) a storage facility that serves as both an off-site storage facility (a storage facility that is not an on-site storage facility) and an on-site storage facility, or (2) any facility where sales are made to retail customers in on-site sales and to either (a) retail customers in sales that are not on-site sales, or (b) other customers. Using the above definitions, certain retailers must treat facilities that would otherwise be treated as retail sales facilities and on-site storage facilities as dual-function storage facilities because internet and fax sales generally are not made to retail customers physically present at the facility and thus generally are not considered on-site sales. Retailers that operate dual-function storage facilities generally must capitalize a portion of their handling and storage costs based on the ratio of gross sales of the facility that are not on-site sales to total gross sales of the facility. See § 1.263A-3(c)(5)(iii)(B). Similarly, retailers that enter into arrangements to lease their merchandise to customers and then sell the merchandise in conjunction with the underlying lease contracts to third-party finance companies are required to treat facilities that would otherwise be treated as retail sales facilities and on-site storage facilities as dual-function storage facilities because the retailers sell some merchandise to third-party finance companies that are not retail customers. Retailers that engage in these types of transactions also may be required under § 1.263A-3(c)(5)(iii)(B) to capitalize a portion of their handling and storage costs based on the ratio of gross sales of the facility that are not on-site sales to total gross sales of the facility. REQUEST FOR COMMENTS The IRS and Treasury Department request comments concerning the following issues: 1. How have changed retail business practices, including those resulting from technological advances and current trends, affected the application and administrability of the existing regulations under § 263A to retailers that transact both on-site sales and sales that are not on-site sales from the same sales facility? The IRS and Treasury Department would like to receive descriptions of both common and unique retail business models, operations, and practices, where retailers conduct on-site sales as well as internet or fax sales at a sales facility. The IRS and Treasury Department would also like examples of other types of sales that do not meet the existing definition of on-site sales. 2. How, if at all, should the definitions of on-site sales, a retail customer, a retail sales facility, a dual-function storage facility, and other terms in § 1.263A-3(c)(5)(ii) be modified to reflect current business practices of retailers that transact both on-site sales and sales that are not on-site sales from the same sales facility? Comments should be submitted in writing on or before July 13, 2009, and should include a reference to Notice 2009-25. Send submissions to: CC:PA:LPD:PR (Notice 2009-25), Room 5203, Internal Revenue Service, PO Box 7604, Ben Franklin Station, Washington, DC 20044. Submissions may be hand delivered Monday through Friday between the hours of 8 a.m. and 4 p.m. to CC:PA:LPD:PR (Notice 2009-25), Courier’s Desk, Internal Revenue Service, 1111 Constitution Avenue, NW, Washington, DC. Alternatively, comments may be submitted electronically directly to the IRS via the following e-mail address: Notice.comments@irscounsel.treas.gov. Please include “Notice 2009-25” in the subject line of any electronic communication. All materials submitted will be available for public inspection and copying. DRAFTING INFORMATION The principal author of this notice is Kari Fisher of the Office of the Associate Chief Counsel (Income Tax and Accounting). For further information concerning this notice, contact Ms. Fisher at (202) 622-4970 (not a toll-free number). Part IV. Items of General Interest Announcement 2009-28 Announcement and Report Concerning Advance Pricing Agreements March 27, 2009 This Announcement is issued pursuant to § 521(b) of Pub. L. 106-170, the Ticket to Work and Work Incentives Improvement Act of 1999, which requires the Secretary of the Treasury to report annually to the public concerning Advance Pricing Agreements (APAs) and the APA Program. The first report covered calendar years 1991 through 1999. Subsequent reports covered separately each calendar year 2000 through 2007. This tenth report describes the experience, structure, and activities of the APA Program during calendar year 2008. It does not provide guidance regarding the application of the arm’s length standard. Craig A. Sharon Director, Advance Pricing Agreement Program Background Internal Revenue Code (IRC) § 482 provides that the Secretary may distribute, apportion, or allocate gross income, deductions, credits, or allowances between or among two or more commonly controlled businesses if necessary to reflect clearly the income of such businesses. Under the § 482 regulations, the standard to be applied in determining the true taxable income of a controlled business is that of a business dealing at arm’s length with an unrelated business. The arm’s length standard has also been adopted by the international community and is incorporated into the transfer pricing guidelines issued by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD). OECD, TRANSFER PRICING GUIDELINES FOR MULTINATIONAL ENTERPRISES AND TAX ADMINISTRATORS (1995). Transfer pricing issues by their nature are highly factual and have traditionally been one of the largest issues identified by the IRS in its audits of multinational corporations. The APA Program is designed to resolve actual or potential transfer pricing disputes in a principled, cooperative manner, as an alternative to the traditional examination process. An APA is a binding contract between the IRS and a taxpayer by which the IRS agrees not to seek a transfer pricing adjustment under IRC § 482 for a covered transaction if the taxpayer files its tax return for a covered year consistent with the agreed transfer pricing method (TPM). In 2008, the IRS and taxpayers executed 68 APAs and amended 12 APAs. Since 1991, with the issuance of Rev. Proc. 91-22, 1991-1 C.B. 526, the IRS has offered taxpayers, through the APA Program, the opportunity to reach an agreement in advance of filing a tax return on the appropriate TPM to be applied to related party transactions. In 1996, the IRS issued internal procedures for processing APA requests. Chief Counsel Directives Manual (CCDM), ¶¶ 42.10.10 — 42.10.16 (November 15, 1996).[a] Also in 1996, the IRS updated Rev. Proc. 91-22 with the release of Rev. Proc. 96-53, 1996-2 C.B. 375.[b] In 1998, the IRS published Notice 98-65, 1998-2 C.B. 803,[c] which set forth streamlined APA procedures for small business taxpayers. Then on July 1, 2004, the IRS updated and superseded both Rev. Proc. 96-53 and Notice 98-65 by issuing Rev. Proc. 2004-40, 2004-2 C.B. 50,[d] effective for all APA requests filed on or after August 19, 2004. On December 19, 2005, the IRS again updated the procedural rules for processing and administering APAs with the release of Rev. Proc. 2006-9, 2006-1 C.B. 278.[e] Rev. Proc. 2006-9 supersedes Rev. Proc. 2004-40 and is effective for all APA requests filed on or after February 1, 2006. On May 21, 2008, the IRS released Rev. Proc. 2008-31, 2008-23 I.R.B. 1133, which revised Rev. Proc. 2006-9 to describe further the types of issues that may be resolved in the APA process.[f] Specifically, Rev. Proc. 2008-31 added a new sentence to Section 2.01 of Rev. Proc. 2006-9, to advise that the APA process may be used to resolve any issue for which transfer pricing principles may be relevant, such as attribution of profit to a permanent establishment under certain U.S. income tax treaties, the amount of income effectively connected with the conduct of a U.S. trade or business, and the amount of income derived from sources partly within and partly without the United States. Advance Pricing Agreements An APA generally combines an agreement between a taxpayer and the IRS on an appropriate TPM for the transactions at issue (Covered Transactions) with an agreement between the U.S. and one or more foreign tax authorities (under the authority of the mutual agreement process of our income tax treaties) that the TPM is correct. With such a “bilateral” APA, the taxpayer ordinarily is assured that the income associated with the Covered Transactions will not be subject to double taxation by both the U.S. and the foreign jurisdiction. The policy of the United States, as reflected in §§ 2.08 and 7 of Rev. Proc. 2006-9, is to encourage taxpayers that enter the APA Program to seek bilateral or multilateral APAs when competent authority procedures are available with respect to the foreign country or countries involved. However, the IRS may execute an APA with a taxpayer without reaching a competent authority agreement (a “unilateral” APA). A unilateral APA is an agreement between a taxpayer and the IRS establishing an approved TPM for U.S. tax purposes. A unilateral APA binds the taxpayer and the IRS, but does not prevent foreign tax administrations from taking different positions on the appropriate TPM for a transaction. As stated in § 7.07 of Rev. Proc. 2006-9, should a transaction covered by a unilateral APA be subject to double taxation as the result of an adjustment by a foreign tax administration, the taxpayer may seek relief by requesting that the U.S. Competent Authority consider initiating a mutual agreement proceeding pursuant to an applicable income tax treaty (if any). When a unilateral APA involves taxpayers operating in a country that is a U.S. treaty partner, information relevant to the APA (including a copy of the APA and APA annual reports) may be provided to the treaty partner under normal rules and principles governing the exchange of information under income tax treaties. The APA Program An IRS team headed by an APA team leader is responsible for the consideration of each APA. As of December 31, 2008, the APA Program had 15 team leaders. The team leader is responsible for organizing the IRS APA team. The IRS APA team leader arranges meetings with the taxpayer, secures whatever information is necessary from the taxpayer to analyze the taxpayer’s related party transactions and the available facts under the arm’s length standard of IRC § 482 and the regulations thereunder, and leads the discussions with the taxpayer. The APA team generally includes an economist, an international examiner, LMSB field counsel, and, in a bilateral case, a U.S. Competent Authority analyst who leads the discussions with the treaty partner. The economist may be from the APA Program or the IRS field organization. As of December 31, 2008, the APA Program had six economists on staff, plus one economist manager. The APA team may also include an LMSB International Technical Advisor, other LMSB exam personnel, and/or an Appeals Officer. The APA Process The APA process is voluntary. Taxpayers submit an application for an APA, together with a user fee as set forth in Rev. Proc. 2006-9, § 4.12. The APA process can be broken into five phases: (1) application; (2) due diligence; (3) analysis; (4) discussion and agreement; and (5) drafting, review, and execution. (1) Application In many APA cases, the taxpayer’s application is preceded by a pre-file conference with the APA staff in which the taxpayer can solicit the informal views of the APA Program. Pre-file conferences can occur on an anonymous basis, although a taxpayer must disclose its identity when it applies for an APA. The APA Program has been requiring taxpayers interested in an APA under Rev. Proc. 2008-31 to schedule a pre-file conference before submitting a formal APA application. As part of a taxpayer’s APA application, the taxpayer must file the appropriate user fee on or before the due date, including extensions, of the tax return for the first taxable year that the taxpayer proposes to be covered by the APA. (If the taxpayer receives an extension to file its tax return, it must file its user fee no later than the actual filing date of the return.) Many taxpayers file a user fee first and then follow up with a full application later. The procedures for pre-file conferences, user fees, and applications can be found in §§ 3 and 4 of Rev. Proc. 2006-9. The APA application can be a relatively modest document for small businesses. Section 9 of Rev. Proc. 2006-9 describes the special APA procedures for small business taxpayers. For most taxpayers, however, the APA application is a substantial document filling several binders. APA applications must be accompanied by a declaration, signed by an authorized corporate officer, attesting to the accuracy and completeness of the information presented. The application is assigned to an APA team leader who is responsible for the case. The APA team leader’s first responsibility is to organize the APA team. This involves contacting the appropriate LMSB International Territory Manager to secure the assignment of an international examiner to the APA case and the LMSB Counsel’s office to secure a field counsel lawyer. In a bilateral case, the U.S. Competent Authority will assign a U.S. Competent Authority analyst to the team. In a large APA case, the international examiner may invite his or her manager and other LMSB personnel familiar with the taxpayer to join the team. If the APA may affect taxable years in Appeals, the appropriate appellate conferee will be invited to join the team. In cases involving cost-sharing arrangements, other complex intangibles and services transactions, or novel issues, the APA team leader contacts the Manager, LMSB International Technical Advisors, to determine whether or not to include a technical advisor on the team. The APA team leader distributes copies of the APA application to all team members, makes initial contact with the taxpayer to confirm the APA Program’s receipt of the taxpayer’s application, and sets up an opening conference with the taxpayer. Under APA case management procedures revised in September 2008, the APA office strives to (i) make initial contact with the taxpayer within 21 days of its receipt of the APA application and (ii) hold the opening conference within 45 days from the date that the APA team expects to begin actively working the case — the “Start Date” under the revised case management procedures. On or about the opening conference, the APA team leader proposes a case plan appropriate for the case. Case plans are generally targeted to complete a unilateral APA or, in the case of a bilateral APA, the recommended U.S. negotiating position within 12 months from the date the full application is filed. The targeted completion date in a particular case, however, may vary from the 12-month benchmark, depending on the complexity of the case, APA team workloads, taxpayer schedules, and other factors. Case plans are signed by both an APA manager and an authorized official of the taxpayer and, under the new APA case management procedures, will generally be adhered to except in unforeseen or exceptional circumstances. The actual median and average times for completing unilateral and bilateral APAs, recommended negotiating positions for bilateral APAs, and APAs for small business taxpayers are shown below in Tables 2, 5, and 11, respectively. (2) Due Diligence The APA team must satisfy itself that the relevant facts submitted by the taxpayer are complete and accurate. This due diligence aspect of the APA is vital to the process. It is because of this due diligence that the IRS can reach advance agreements with taxpayers in the highly factual setting of transfer pricing. Due diligence can proceed in a number of ways. Typically, the APA team leader will submit in advance of the opening conference a list of questions to the taxpayer for discussion at the conference. The opening conference may result in additional questions and an agreement to meet one or more times in the future. These questions and meetings are not an audit and are focused on the transfer pricing issues associated with the transactions in the taxpayer’s application, or other transactions that the taxpayer and the IRS may agree to add. (3) Analysis A significant part of the analytical work associated with an APA is done typically by the APA economist and/or an IRS field economist assigned to the case. The analysis may result in the need for additional information. Once the IRS APA team has completed its due diligence and analysis, it begins discussions with the taxpayer over the various aspects of the APA including the covered transactions, the TPM, the selection of comparable transactions, asset intensity and other adjustments, the appropriate critical assumptions, the APA term, and other key issues. The APA team leader will discuss particularly difficult issues with his or her managers, but generally the APA team leader is empowered to negotiate the APA. (4) Discussion and Agreement The discussion and agreement phase differs for bilateral and unilateral cases. In a bilateral case, the discussions proceed in two parts and involve two IRS offices — the APA Program and the U.S. Competent Authority. In the first part, the APA team will attempt to reach a consensus with the taxpayer regarding the recommended position that the U.S. Competent Authority should take in negotiations with its treaty partner. This recommended U.S. negotiating position is a paper drafted by the APA team leader, reviewed by APA management, and signed by the APA Director that provides the APA Program’s view of the best TPM for the Covered Transactions, taking into account IRC § 482 and the regulations thereunder, the relevant tax treaty, and the U.S. Competent Authority’s experience with the treaty partner. The experience of the APA office and the U.S. Competent Authority is that APA negotiations are likely to proceed more rapidly with a foreign competent authority if the U.S. negotiating position is fully supported by the taxpayer. Consequently, the APA office works together with the taxpayer in developing the recommended U.S. negotiating position. On occasion, the APA team will agree to disagree with a taxpayer. In these cases, the APA office will send a recommended U.S. negotiating position to the U.S. Competent Authority that includes elements with which the taxpayer does not agree. This disagreement is noted in the paper. The APA team leader also solicits the views of the field members of the APA team, and, in the vast majority of APA cases, the international examiner, LMSB field counsel, and other IRS field team members concur in the position prepared by the APA team leader. Once the APA Program completes the recommended U.S. negotiating position, the APA process shifts from the APA Program to the U.S. Competent Authority. The U.S. Competent Authority analyst assigned to the APA takes the recommended U.S. negotiating position and prepares the final U.S. negotiating position, which is then transmitted to the foreign competent authority. The negotiations with the foreign competent authority are conducted by the U.S. Competent Authority analyst, most often in face-to-face negotiating sessions conducted periodically throughout the year. At the request of the U.S. Competent Authority, APA Program staff may assist in the negotiations. In unilateral APA cases, the discussions proceed solely between the APA Program and the taxpayer. In a unilateral case, the taxpayer and the APA Program must reach agreement to conclude an APA. As in bilateral cases, the APA team leader almost always will achieve a consensus with the IRS field personnel assigned to the APA team regarding the final APA. Under APA Program procedures, IRS field personnel assigned to a case are solicited formally for their concurrence in the final APA. This concurrence, or any item in disagreement, is noted in a memorandum prepared by the APA team leader that accompanies the final APA sent forward for review and execution. (5) Drafting, Review, and Execution Once the IRS and the taxpayer reach agreement, the final APA is drafted. The APA Program has developed standard language that is incorporated into every APA. The current version of this language is found in Attachment A. APAs are reviewed by the APA Branch Chief and the APA Director. In addition, the team leader prepares a summary memorandum for approval by the Associate Chief Counsel (International) (ACC(I)). On March 1, 2001, the ACC(I) delegated to the APA Director the authority to execute APAs on behalf of the IRS. See Chief Counsel Notice CC-2001-016. The APA is executed for the taxpayer by an appropriate corporate officer. Model APA at Attachment A [§ 521(b)(2)(B)] Attachment A contains the current version of the model APA language. [a] Current CCDM provisions regarding APA procedures are available at http://www.irs.gov/irm/part32/ch04s01.html. [b] Available at http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-irbs/irb96-49.pdf. [c] Available at http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-irbs/irb98-52.pdf. [d] Available at http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-irbs/irb04-29.pdf. [e] Available at http://www.irs.gov/irb/2006-02_IRB/ar12.html. [f] Available at http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-irbs/irb08-31.pdf. The Current APA Office Structure, Composition, and Operation In 2008, the APA office consisted of four branches, with Branches 1 and 3 staffed with APA team leaders and Branch 2 staffed with economists based in Washington, D.C. Branch 4, the APA West Coast branch, is headquartered in Laguna Niguel, California, with an additional office in San Francisco, and is staffed with both team leaders and economists. Overall, the APA staff decreased from 37 at the end of 2007 to 33 at the end of 2008. The decrease of four resulted from the departure of five team leaders, a branch chief, and the APA Director, along with the addition of one team leader, an economist, and a paralegal. As of December 31, 2008, the APA staff was as follows: Exhibit A: APA Organizational Chart This exhibit shows the structure and staffing of the Advance Pricing Agreement (APA) Program. Headed by the APA Director, the Program has a staff of thirty-three and is organized into four branches. Please click here for the text description of the image. Consistent with the decrease in APA headcount from the end of 2007 to the end of 2008, total APA staffing measured by hours fell in 2008 compared to 2007. Such decrease was in proportion, however, to the decrease in the number of total staff (approximately 10%). The change in APA professional staffing levels over the last six years is reflected in the table below. Hours of APA attorneys, economists, and paralegal staff by year (excluding holiday and leave): Exhibit B: APA Staff Hours This exhibit shows the annual number of hours worked by APA attorneys, economists, and paralegals, for each of the years 2002 through 2008. Please click here for the text description of the image. APA Issue/Industry Coordination Teams In May 2005, the IRS Chief Counsel announced a series of initiatives to improve APA Program performance. One initiative was to increase specialization within the office by creating teams of select individuals to handle all cases of a particular type. The purpose was to increase efficiency, quality, and consistency. The APA Program selected five categories of cases for specialization — cases involving cost sharing arrangements, financial products, the semiconductor industry, the automotive industry, and the pharmaceutical industry. These categories were selected because they each had a sufficient number of cases and commonality of issues to warrant their assignment to teams. Cases falling within these five categories have historically accounted for about 40 percent of the APA Program’s case load and about half of its total case time. At the end of 2008, cases within these five categories accounted for 64 of the 161 cases pending in the office that were either unilateral APAs or bilateral APAs that had not yet been forwarded to Competent Authority. Staffing of the coordination teams at the end of 2008 is indicated below: Exhibit C: APA Issue/Industry Coordination Teams This exhibit shows the composition of the five APA Program issue/industry coordination teams. The teams specialize in cases involving cost sharing arrangements, financial products, and the semiconductor, automotive, and pharmaceutical industries. Please click here for the text description of the image. The APA Program is mindful that the purpose of the coordination effort is not to impose the same transfer pricing method on all taxpayers in an industry. The appropriate transfer pricing method remains a case-by-case determination, influenced by numerous factors that are not common to all companies operating in a particular industry. While the coordination effort may result in the APA Program promoting a common approach on some issues where appropriate, the Program expects that the greater industry familiarity developed through the coordination effort will also allow it to develop a more sophisticated understanding of issues that will permit more tailored approaches, thereby promoting more (appropriately) varied results than might otherwise be the case. APA Training In 2008, the APA office continued its training activities. Training sessions addressed APA-related current developments, regulatory developments, new APA office practices and procedures, and international tax law issues. The training materials used for new hires are available to the public through the APA internet site at http://www.irs.gov/businesses/corporations/article/0,,id=96221,00.html. These materials do not constitute guidance on the application of the arm’s length standard and are not to be relied upon or cited as precedent. Also available to the public is a spreadsheet model that performs calculations in a Comparable Profits Method (CPM) analysis, which APA economists developed in 2007 and which is now routinely used by the APA office when performing APA analyses. An electronic version of the model may be obtained by contacting the APA office in Washington, D.C. at (202) 435-5220 (not a toll-free number). APA Program Statistical Data [§ 521(b)(2)(C) and (E)] The statistical information required under § 521(b)(2)(C) is contained in Tables 1 and 10 below; the information required under § 521(b)(2)(E) is contained in Tables 2 and 3 below. The 123 APA applications during 2008 were a record one-year high for the Program, with no previous year reaching 110 applications. TABLE 1: APA APPLICATIONS, EXECUTED APAs, AND PENDING APAs Unilateral Bilateral Multilateral Year Total Cumulative Total APA applications filed during 2008 35 88 123 1,252 All APAs executed[a] Year 2008 14 51 3 68 841 1991-2007 350 413 10 773 APA renewals executed during 2008 5 19 24 233 APAs revised or amended during 2008 6 6 12 53 Pending requests for APAs 54 249 303 Pending requests for new APAs 44 167 211 Pending requests for renewal APAs 10 82 92 APAs canceled or revoked 0 1 1 9 APAs withdrawn 3 3 6 132 [a] “All APAs executed” includes APA renewals, but not APAs revised or amended. TABLE 2: MONTHS TO COMPLETE APAs Months to Complete Advance Pricing Agreements in 2008 All New All Renewals All Combined Average 38.6 Average 27.6 Average 34.7 Median 37.1 Median 26.0 Median 29.4 Unilateral New Unilateral Renewals Unilateral Combined Average 23.7 Average 17.6 Average 21.5 Median 18.1 Median 20.2 Median 19.2 Bilateral/Multilateral New Bilateral/Multilateral Renewals Bilateral/Multilateral Combined Average 42.4 Average 30.2 Average 38.1 Median 38.4 Median 26.0 Median 35.9 TABLE 3: APA COMPLETION TIME - MONTHS PER APA Months Number of APAs Months Number of APAs Months Number of APAs 1 26 6 51 2 27 1 52 3 28 3 53 1 4 29 3 54 5 30 1 55 2 6 1 31 56 2 7 1 32 2 57 1 8 33 58 9 34 59 10 1 35 60 11 2 36 3 61 12 2 37 62 13 1 38 3 63 14 39 64 1 15 40 1 65 16 41 66 17 42 4 67 18 2 43 2 68 19 1 44 69 20 2 45 2 70 21 3 46 1 71 22 1 47 72 23 48 1 73 3 24 1 49 2 74 25 4 50 110-120 1 TABLE 4: RECOMMENDED NEGOTIATING POSITIONS Recommended Negotiating Positions Completed in 2008 49 Table 5: MONTHS TO COMPLETE RECOMMENDED NEGOTIATING POSITIONS New Renewal Combined Average 18.7 Average 18.4 Average 18.6 Median 19.7 Median 14.0 Median 19.4 TABLE 6: RECOMMENDED NEGOTIATING POSITIONS COMPLETION TIME - MONTHS PER APA Months Number Months Number Months Number Months Number 1 12 4 23 4 34 1 2 13 2 24 2 35 3 14 7 25 3 36 4 15 1 26 37 5 16 1 27 1 38 6 17 28 39 7 1 18 1 29 1 40 8 2 19 3 30 41 9 1 20 1 31 42 1 10 21 4 32 1 43 11 3 22 4 33 44 Tables 7 and 8 below show how long each APA request pending at the end of 2008 has been in the system as measured from the filing date of the APA submission. The numbers for pending unilateral and bilateral cases differ from the numbers in Table 1 because Tables 7 and 8 reflect only cases for which submissions have been received, while Table 1 includes any case for which a user fee has been paid. TABLE 7: UNILATERAL APAs - TIME IN INVENTORY - MONTHS PER APA Months Number of APAs Months Number of APAs Months Number of APAs Months Number of APAs 1 4 7 2 13 3 19 2 1 8 1 14 20 3 2 9 4 15 1 21 4 2 10 2 16 22 5 2 11 2 17 23-29 3 6 5 12 5 18 1 30+ 4 TABLE 8: BILATERAL APAs - TIME IN INVENTORY - MONTHS PER APA Months Number of APAs Months Number of APAs Months Number of APAs Months Number of APAs 1 10 25 3 49 1 73 1 2 4 26 50 74 3 4 27 1 51 3 75 1 4 7 28 6 52 76 5 9 29 2 53 1 77 6 6 30 1 54 78 7 9 31 2 55 79 2 8 3 32 4 56 2 80 9 13 33 2 57 81 10 8 34 1 58 3 82 1 11 6 35 2 59 83 1 12 8 36 6 60 84 13 7 37 2 61 85 14 4 38 3 62 1 86 15 5 39 5 63 87 16 4 40 1 64 88 17 4 41 2 65 89 18 4 42 1 66 90 19 5 43 1 67 91 1 20 3 44 1 68 92 21 10 45 4 69 93 22 3 46 2 70 94 23 6 47 3 71 1 95 1 24 7 48 2 72 96+ 2 Of the 272 cases in the APA Program’s inventory shown in Tables 7 and 8, 111 cases (all of which are reflected in Table 8) are bilateral cases that have been forwarded to the Competent Authority office for discussion with a treaty partner. This leaves 161 cases in the APA Program’s active inventory at the end of 2008 that are either unilateral APAs (44 cases) or bilateral APAs for which the APA Program has not yet completed a recommended negotiating position (117 cases). The table below shows the average age (in months) of the 161 active cases in inventory at the end of 2008, along with a comparison of the number of active cases and their average age at year-end for each year back to 2003. The table also shows the same information for cases that were at least 6-months old or 1-year old (the latter being a subset of the former) at the end of each year to allow comparison without potential distortions caused by year-to-year variations in the number of cases received in the latter half or during the course of the year. The build-up in inventory during 2008 primarily reflects the high turnover in APA personnel combined with the record number of new APA applications during the year. TABLE 9: NUMBER AND AVERAGE AGE OF ACTIVE CASES IN INVENTORY AT YEAR-END 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 Active cases 106 130 133 110 105 161 Average age (months) 15.1 15.2 13.2 10.6 9.1 10.2 Active cases 6+ months 78 106 87 81 66 110 Average age (months) 19.4 17.8 18.5 13.0 13.0 13.5 Active cases 1+ year 46 60 55 32 27 51 Average age (months) 26.8 24.2 23.3 19.4 18.5 18.7 TABLE 10: SMALL BUSINESS TAXPAYER APAs Small Business Taxpayer APAs Completed in 2008 15 New 12 Renewals 3 Unilateral 4 Bilateral 11 TABLE 11: MONTHS TO COMPLETE SMALL BUSINESS TAXPAYER APAs Months to Complete Small Business Taxpayer APAs in 2008 New Renewal Combined Average 30.2 Average 16.0 Average 27.4 Median 28.3 Median 20.8 Median 25.9 TABLE 12: INDUSTRIES COVERED[a] [a] The categories in this table are drawn from the North American Industry Classification System (NAICS), which has replaced the U.S. Standard Industrial Classification (SIC) system. NAICS was developed jointly by the U.S., Canada, and Mexico to provide new comparability in statistics about business activity across North America. Industry Involved - NAICS Codes Number Wholesale trade, durable goods - 421 16-18 Computer and electronic product manufacturing - 334 10-12 Miscellaneous manufacturing - 339 10-12 Electronic equipment, appliance and component manufacturing - 335 7-9 Transportation equipment manufacturing - 336 4-6 Chemical manufacturing - 325 4-6 Professional, scientific and technical services - 545 4-6 Food manufacturing - 311 1-3 Securities, commodity contracts and other intermediary and related activities - 523 1-3 Motor vehicle and parts dealers - 441 1-3 General merchandise stores - 452 1-3 Beverage and tobacco manufacturing - 312 1-3 Apparel manufacturing - 315 1-3 Air transportation - 481 1-3 Machinery manufacturing - 333 1-3 Plastics and rubber products manufacturing - 326 1-3 Health and personal care stores - 446 1-3 Oil and gas extraction - 212 1-3 Accommodation - 721 1-3 Trades or Businesses [§ 521(b)(2)(D)(i)] The nature of the relationships between the related organizations, trades, or businesses covered by APAs executed in 2008 is set forth in Table 13 below: TABLE 13: NATURE OF RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN RELATED ENTITIES Relationship Number of APAs Foreign Parent - U.S. Subsidiary (-ies) 52 Unilateral 13 Bilateral 39 U.S. Parent - Foreign Subsidiary (-ies) ≤ 17 Unilateral ≤ 3 Bilateral 14 Foreign Company and U.S. branch(es) ≤ 3 Unilateral ≤ 3 Bilateral ≤ 3 Covered Transactions [§ 521(b)(2)(D)(ii)] The controlled transactions covered by APAs executed in 2008 are set forth in Tables 14 and 15 below: TABLE 14: TYPES OF COVERED TRANSACTIONS Transaction Type Number Sale of tangible property into the U.S. 44 Performance of services by U.S. entity 19 Performance of services by Non-U.S. entity 12 Use of intangible property by Non-U.S. entity 11 Use of intangible property by U.S. entity 10 Sale of tangible property from the U.S. 5 R&D cost sharing ≤ 3 Financial products — U.S. branch of foreign company ≤ 3 TABLE 15: TYPES OF SERVICES INCLUDED IN COVERED TRANSACTIONS Intercompany Services Involved in the Covered Transactions Number Distribution 26 Marketing 23 Technical support services 20 Logistical support 16 Research and development 13 Purchasing 11 Sales support 10 Product support 9 Administrative 9 Warranty services 9 Management 7 Headquarters costs 7 Contract research and development 5 Assembly 5 Accounting ≤ 3 Communication service ≤ 3 Legal ≤ 3 Billing services ≤ 3 Testing and installation services ≤ 3 Other ≤ 3 Business Functions Performed and Risks Assumed [§ 521(b)(2)(D)(ii)] The general descriptions of the business functions performed and risks assumed by the organizations, trades, or businesses whose results are tested in the Covered Transactions in the APAs executed in 2008 are set forth in Tables 16 and 17 below: TABLE 16: FUNCTIONS PERFORMED BY THE TESTED PARTY Functions Performed Number Distribution functions 61 Marketing functions 39 Manufacturing 35 Transportation and warehousing 22 Managerial, legal, accounting, finance, personnel, and other support services 21 Purchasing and materials management 18 Product service (repairs, etc.) 12 Research and development 11 Product assembly and/or packaging 11 Licensing of intangibles 9 Product testing and quality control 9 Technical training and tech support for sales staff (including sub-distributors) 9 Product design and engineering 8 Training and support 6 Process engineering 5 Engineering and construction related services ≤ 3 Consulting services ≤ 3 Mining and extraction ≤ 3 Trading and risk management of financial products ≤ 3 TABLE 17: RISKS ASSUMED BY THE TESTED PARTY Risks Assumed Number Market risks, including fluctuations in costs, demand, pricing, and inventory 87 Credit and collection risks 64 General business risks (e.g., related to ownership of PP&E) 59 Financial risks, including interest rates and currency 36 Product liability risks 23 R&D risks 7 Discussion The majority of APAs have Covered Transactions that involve numerous business functions and risks. For instance, with respect to functions, multinational groups that manufacture products typically conduct research and development, engage in product design and engineering, manufacture the product, market and distribute the product, and perform support functions such as legal, finance, and human resources services. Regarding risks, these groups are subject to market risks, R&D risks, financial risks, credit and collection risks, product liability risks, and general business risks. In the APA evaluation process, a significant amount of time and effort is devoted to understanding how the functions and risks are allocated among the controlled group of companies that are party to the Covered Transactions. In its APA submission, the taxpayer must provide a functional analysis. The functional analysis identifies the economic activities performed, the assets employed, the economic costs incurred, and the risks assumed by each of the controlled parties. The importance of the functional analysis derives from the economic theory positing that there is a positive relationship between risk and expected return and that different functions provide different value and have different opportunity costs associated with them. It is important that the functional analysis go beyond simply categorizing the tested party as, say, a distributor. It should provide more specific information because, in the example of distributors, not all distributors undertake similar functions and risks. The functional analysis is critical in determining the appropriate TPM (including the selection of comparables, tested party, and profit level indicator (PLI)). In conjunction with evaluating the functional analysis, the APA Program considers contractual terms between the controlled parties, the allocation of risk between the parties, the relevant economic conditions, and the type of property or services at issue. In assessing contractual terms and risk allocations, the APA Program considers not only written agreements between the parties, but also the economic substance of the transactions as indicated by the conduct of the parties over time, the financial capacity of each party to fund losses arising from risks, and the managerial or operational control each party exercises over activities giving rise to risk. Relevant economic conditions reviewed often include the geographic market and level of market in which the functions are performed, and the business cycle or general economic condition of the industry under review. The APA Program’s evaluation of the functional analysis also considers the assets or other resources employed by each controlled party. In this evaluation, each party’s ownership or investment in valuable intangible assets is often an important consideration. Related Organizations, Trades, or Businesses Whose Prices or Results are Tested to Determine Compliance with APA Transfer Pricing Methods [§ 521(b)(2)(D)(iii)] The related organizations, trades, or businesses whose prices or results are tested to determine compliance with TPMs prescribed in APAs executed in 2008 are set forth in Table 18 below: TABLE 18: RELATED ORGANIZATIONS, TRADES, OR BUSINESSES WHOSE PRICES OR RESULTS ARE TESTED[a] [a] “Multiple tested parties” includes covered transactions that utilize profit splits, CUPs, and CUTs. Type of Organization Number U.S. distributor 44 Multiple tested parties 15 U.S. provider of services 12 U.S. manufacturer 12 Non-U.S. provider of services 12 Non-U.S. distributor 8 U.S. licensee of intangible property ≤ 3 U.S. licensor of intangible property ≤ 3 Non-U.S. manufacturer ≤ 3 Non-U.S. licensor of intangible property ≤ 3 Transfer Pricing Methods and the Circumstances Leading to the Use of Those Methods [§ 521(b)(2)(D)(iv)] The TPMs used in APAs executed in 2008 are set forth in Tables 19 and 20 below: TABLE 19: TRANSFER PRICING METHODS USED FOR TRANSFERS OF TANGIBLE AND INTANGIBLE PROPERTY[a] [a] PLIs used with the Comparable Profit Method of Treas. Reg. § 1.482-5, and as used in these TPM tables, are as follows: (1) operating margin (ratio of operating profit to sales); (2) Berry ratio (ratio of gross profit to operating expenses); (3) gross margin (ratio of gross profit to sales); (4) markup on total costs (percentage markup on total costs); and (5) rate of return on assets or capital employed (ratio of operating profit to operating assets). TPM Used Number CPM: PLI is operating margin 38 CPM: PLI is Berry ratio 9 CUT (intangibles only) 8 CPM: PLI is markup on total costs 6 Other 5 Residual profit split ≤ 3 CPM: PLI is gross margin ≤ 3 CPM: PLI is return on assets or capital employed ≤ 3 CPM: PLI is other PLI ≤ 3 Comparable profit split ≤ 3 Cost with no markup ≤ 3 Cost Plus Method (tangibles only) ≤ 3 Resale Price Method (tangibles only) ≤ 3 CUP (tangibles only) — based on published market data ≤ 3 CUP (tangibles only) — not based on published market data ≤ 3 TABLE 20: TRANSFER PRICING METHODS USED FOR SERVICES TPM Used Number Cost plus a markup 9 CPM: PLI is markup on total costs 8 CPM: PLI is operating margin 5 Other 5 CPM: PLI is Berry ratio ≤ 3 Cost with no markup ≤ 3 CPM: PLI is operating margin ≤ 3 PM: PLI is return on assets ≤ 3 Discussion The TPMs used in APAs completed during 2008 were based on the section 482 regulations. Under Treas. Reg. § 1.482-3, the arm’s length amount for controlled transfers of tangible property may be determined using the Comparable Uncontrolled Price (CUP) Method, the Resale Price Method, the Cost Plus Method, the Comparable Profits Method (CPM), or the Profit Split Method. Under Treas. Reg. § 1.482-4, the arm’s length amount for controlled transfers of intangible property may be determined using the Comparable Uncontrolled Transaction (CUT) Method, the CPM, or the Profit Split Method. An “Unspecified Method” may be used for transfers of either tangible or intangible property if it provides a more reliable result than the enumerated methods under the best method rule of Treas. Reg. § 1.482-1(c). For transfers involving the provision of services, Treas. Reg. § 1.482-2(b) provided that services performed for the benefit of another member of a controlled group should bear an arm’s length charge, either deemed to be equal to the cost of providing the services or an amount that would have been charged between independent parties. Generally effective beginning 2007, Temp. Reg. § 1.482-9T provides that the arm’s length charge for controlled services transactions may be determined under the Services Cost Method, the Comparable Uncontrolled Services Price (CUSP) Method, the Gross Services Margin Method, the Cost of Services Plus Method, the CPM, the Profit Split Method, or an Unspecified Method. In addition, Treas. Reg. § 1.482-2(a) provides rules concerning the proper treatment of loans or advances. Treas. Reg. § 1.482-7 provides rules for qualified cost sharing arrangements under which the parties agree to share the costs of developing intangibles in proportion to their shares of reasonably anticipated benefits. APAs involving cost sharing arrangements generally address both the method of allocating costs among the parties as well as determining the appropriate amount of the “buy-in” payment due for the transfer of pre-existing intangibles to the controlled participants. In 2008, the APA Program completed its recommendations on three or fewer bilateral cost sharing/buy-in cases and sent those on to Competent Authority. The buy-in cases included both initial and subsequent buy-in/buy-out transactions. The methods used in the completed and pending buy-in cases included valuations based on discounted cash flows and other types of analyses. In addition, the APA Program is currently working on nearly ten cases involving cost sharing/buy-ins, split almost evenly between bilateral and unilateral. In reviewing the TPMs applicable to transfers of tangible and intangible property reflected in Table 19, the majority of the APAs followed the specified methods. However, several points should be made. The section 482 regulations note that for transfers of tangible property, the CUP Method will generally be the most direct and reliable measure of an arm’s length price for the controlled transaction if sufficiently reliable comparable transactions can be identified. Treas. Reg. § 1.482-3(b)(2)(ii)(A). As in earlier years, it was the experience of the APA Program in 2008, that in the cases that came into the APA Program, sufficiently reliable CUP transactions were difficult to find. Similar to the CUP Method, for transfers of intangible property the CUT Method will generally provide the most reliable measure of an arm’s length result if sufficiently reliable comparables may be found. Treas. Reg. § 1.482-4(c)(2)(ii). It has generally been difficult to identify external comparables, and APAs using the CUT Method tend to rely on internal transactions between the taxpayer and unrelated parties. In 2008, nine Covered Transactions utilized the CUT TPM. The Resale Price Method was applied in 2008 in three or fewer APAs. See Treas. Reg. § 1.482-3(c), (d). The CPM is frequently applied in APAs. That is because reliable public data on comparable business activities of independent companies may be more readily available than potential CUP data, and comparability of resources employed, functions, risks, and other relevant considerations are more likely to exist than comparability of product. The CPM also tends to be less sensitive than other methods to differences in accounting practices between the tested party and comparable companies, e.g., classification of expenses as cost of goods sold or operating expenses. Treas. Reg. § 1.482-3(c)(3)(iii)(B) and -3(d)(3)(iii)(B). In addition, the degree of functional comparability required to obtain a reliable result under the CPM is generally less than that required under the Resale Price or Cost Plus Methods. Lesser functional comparability is required because differences in functions performed often are reflected in operating expenses, and thus taxpayers performing different functions may have very different gross profit margins but earn similar levels of operating profit. Treas. Reg. § 1.482-5(c)(2). Table 19 reflects 87 uses of the CPM (with varying PLIs) in Covered Transactions involving tangible or intangible property. In some APAs, the CPM was also used concurrently with other methods. The CPM has proven to be versatile in part because of the various PLIs that can be used in connection with the method. Reaching agreement on the appropriate PLI has been the subject of much discussion in many of the cases, and it depends heavily on the facts and circumstances. Some APAs have called for different PLIs to apply to different parts of the Covered Transactions or applied a secondary PLI as a check against the primary PLI. The CPM was also used regularly with services as the Covered Transactions in APAs executed in 2008. There were at least 19 services Covered Transactions using the CPM Method with various PLIs according to the specific facts of the taxpayers involved. A small number of the services-related APAs completed in 2008 applied the new Services Cost Method under the § 1.482-9T regulations. Table 20 reflects the methods used to determine the arm’s length results for APAs involving services transactions. In 2008, 11 APAs involving tangible or intangible property used the Residual Profit Split Method. Treas. Reg. § 1.482-6(c)(3). In residual profit split cases, routine contributions by the controlled parties are allocated routine market returns, and the residual income is allocated among the controlled taxpayers based upon the relative value of their contributions of non-routine intangible property to the relevant business activity. Profit splits have also been used in a number of financial product APAs in which the primary income-producing functions are performed in more than one jurisdiction. Critical Assumptions [§ 521(b)(2)(D)(v)] Critical Assumptions used in APAs executed in 2008 are described in Table 21 below: TABLE 21: CRITICAL ASSUMPTIONS Critical Assumptions involving the following: Number of APAs Material changes to the business 67 Material changes to tax and/or financial accounting practices 67 Assets will remain substantially same 18 Changes in affiliated companies ≤ 3 Minimum sales volume ≤ 3 Currency fluctuations ≤ 3 Sales territories substantially same ≤ 3 Sales projections or expectations ≤ 3 Returns based on accurate financial data ≤ 3 Changes involving anti-dumping/countervailing duties ≤ 3 Major regulatory changes ≤ 3 Major technological changes ≤ 3 Changes in market shares ≤ 3 Use of mark-to-market method ≤ 3 Interest rate changes ≤ 3 Other ≤ 3 Discussion APAs include critical assumptions upon which their respective TPMs depend. A critical assumption is any fact (whether or not within the control of the taxpayer) related to the taxpayer, a third party, an industry, or business and economic conditions, the continued existence of which is material to the taxpayer’s proposed TPM. Critical assumptions might include, for example, a particular mode of conducting business operations, a particular corporate or business structure, or a range of expected business volume. Rev. Proc. 2006-9, § 4.05. Failure to meet a critical assumption may render an APA inappropriate or unworkable. Most APAs contain only the standard critical assumption language set forth in Appendix B of the Model APA (Attachment A to this Announcement and Report). Where appropriate, additional critical assumption language may be added but the APA Program generally seeks to limit additional critical assumption language to objective, measurable benchmarks. A critical assumption may change or fail to materialize due to changes in economic circumstances, such as a fundamental and dramatic change in the economic conditions of a particular industry. In addition, a critical assumption may change or fail to materialize due to a taxpayer’s actions that are initiated for good faith business reasons, such as a change in business strategy, mode of conducting operations, or the cessation or transfer of a business segment or entity covered by the APA. If a critical assumption has not been met, the APA may be revised by agreement of the parties. If such an agreement cannot be achieved, the APA is canceled. If a critical assumption has not been met, the taxpayer must notify and discuss the APA terms with the Service, and, in the case of a bilateral APA, competent authority consideration is initiated. Rev. Proc. 2006-9, § 11.05, 11.06. Sources of Comparables, Selection Criteria, and the Nature of Adjustments to Comparables and Tested Parties [§ 521(b)(2)(D)(v), (vi), and (vii)] The sources of comparables, selection criteria, and rationale used in determining the selection criteria for APAs executed in 2008 are described in Tables 22 through 24 below. Various formulas for making adjustments to comparables are included as Attachment B. TABLE 22: SOURCES OF COMPARABLES Comparable Sources Number of Times This Source Used Compustat 61 Disclosure 15 No Comparables used 13 Mergent 9 Worldscope 6 Taxpayer’s information on competition 6 Moody’s 4 Other 4 Taxpayer’s other information ≤ 3 Japanese Accounts and Data on Enterprises (“JADE”) ≤ 3 Osiris ≤ 3 Standard and Poor’s ≤ 3 Compact D ≤ 3 Korean KIS Line ≤ 3 Amadeus ≤ 3 Bloomberg ≤ 3 Sources of comparables unknown or unidentified ≤ 3 Japan Company Handbook ≤ 3 TABLE 23: COMPARABLES SELECTION CRITERIA Selection Criteria Considered Number of Times This Criterion Used Comparable functions 85 Comparable risks 59 Comparable industry 49 Comparable intangibles 39 Comparable products 37 Comparable terms 17 TABLE 24: ADJUSTMENTS TO COMPARABLES OR TESTED PARTIES Adjustment Number of Times Used Balance sheet adjustments Inventory 51 Payables 50 Receivables 50 Property, plant, equipment 4 Other ≤ 3 Accounting adjustments LIFO to FIFO inventory accounting 33 Other 20 Accounting reclassifications (e.g., from COGS to operating expenses) 6 Profit level indicator adjustments (used to “back into” one PLI from another PLI) Operating expense ≤ 3 Miscellaneous adjustments Goodwill value or amortization 6 Other 6 Foreign exchange ≤ 3 Discussion At the core of most APAs are comparables. The APA Program works closely with taxpayers to find the best and most reliable comparables for each Covered Transaction. In some cases, CUPs or CUTs can be identified. In other cases, profit data on comparable business activities of independent companies are used in applying the CPM or a Profit Split Method. Generally, in the APA Program’s experience since 1991, CUPs and CUTs have been most often derived from the internal transactions of the taxpayer. For profit-based methods in which comparable business activities or functions of independent companies are sought, the APA Program typically has selected them using a three-part process. First, a pool of companies with potentially comparable business activities has been identified through broad searches. From this pool, companies performing business activities that are clearly not comparable to those of the tested party have been eliminated through the use of quantitative and qualitative analyses, i.e., quantitative screens and review of business descriptions. Then, based on a review of available descriptive and financial data, a set of comparable independent companies has been finalized. The comparability of the final set has then been enhanced by adjusting their financial data. Sources of Comparables Comparables used in APAs can be U.S. or foreign, depending on the relevant market, the type of transaction being evaluated, the availability of relevant data, and the results of the functional and risk analyses. In general, comparables have been located by searching a variety of databases that provide data on U.S. publicly traded companies and on a combination of public and private non-U.S. companies. Table 22 shows the various databases and other sources used in selecting comparables for the APAs executed in 2008. Although comparables were most often identified from the databases cited in Table 22, in some cases, comparables were found from other sources, such as comparables derived internally from taxpayer transactions with third parties. Selecting Comparables Initial pools of potential comparables generally are derived from the databases using a combination of industry and keyword identifiers. Then, the pool is refined using a variety of selection criteria specific to the transaction or business activity being tested and the TPM being used. The listed databases allow for searches by industrial classification, by keywords, or by both. These searches can yield a number of companies whose business activities may or may not be comparable to those of the entity being tested. Therefore, comparables based solely on industry classification or keyword searches are rarely used in APAs. Instead, the pool of comparables is examined closely, and companies are selected based on a combination of screens, business descriptions, and other information such as that found in the companies’ Annual Reports to shareholders and filings with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), company websites, and investment analyst reports. Business activities of independent companies generally must meet certain basic comparability criteria to be considered comparable. The independent company’s functions, risks, and economic conditions, and the property (product or intangible) and services associated with the company’s business activities, must be comparable to those involved in the Covered Transaction. Determining comparability requires judgment — the goal has been to use comparability criteria restrictive enough to eliminate business activities that are not comparable, but yet not so restrictive as to leave no comparables remaining. The APA Program normally has begun with relatively strict comparability criteria and then has relaxed them slightly if necessary to derive a pool of reliable comparables. A determination on the appropriate size of the comparables set, as well as the business activities that comprise the set, is highly fact-specific and depends on the reliability of the results. In addition, the APA Program, consistent with the section 482 regulations, generally has looked at the results of comparables over a multi-year period. Often this has been a three-year or a five-year period, but other periods are sometimes used depending on the circumstances of the controlled transaction. Using a shorter period might result in the inclusion of comparables in different stages of economic development or use of atypical years of a comparable due to cyclical fluctuations in business conditions. Many Covered Transactions have been tested with comparables that have been chosen using additional criteria and/or screens. These include sales level criteria and tests for financial distress and product comparability. These common selection criteria and screens have been used to increase the overall comparability of a group of companies and as a basis for further research. The sales level screen, for example, has been used to remove companies that, due to their smaller size, might face fundamentally different economic conditions from those of the transaction or business activities being tested. In addition, APA analyses have incorporated selection criteria designed to identify and remove companies experiencing “financial distress” because of concerns that companies in financial distress face unusual circumstances and operational constraints that render them not comparable to the business activity being tested. These “financial distress” criteria may include an unfavorable auditor’s opinion, bankruptcy, failure to comply with financial obligations (e.g., debt covenants), and, in certain circumstances, operating losses in a given number of years. An additional important class of selection criteria is the development and ownership of intangible property. Most often, comparables are sought to test the results of a business activity that does not employ significant intangible assets or engage in intangible development. Thus, for example, in some cases in which the tested business activity is manufacturing conducted by a controlled entity that does not own significant manufacturing intangibles or conduct research and development (R&D), several criteria have been used to ensure that the comparables similarly do not own significant intangibles or conduct R&D. These selection criteria have included determining the importance of patents to a company or screening for R&D expenditures as a percentage of sales. Similar selection criteria may be applied to ensure, where appropriate, that the comparables do not own or develop significant marketing intangibles such as valuable trademarks. Again, quantitative screens related to identifying comparables with significant intangible property generally have been used in conjunction with an understanding of the comparable derived from publicly available business information. Selection criteria relating to asset comparability and operating expense comparability have also been used at times. A screen of property, plant, and equipment (PP&E) as a percentage of sales or assets, combined with a reading of a company’s SEC filings, has been used to help ensure that distributors (generally lower PP&E) were not compared with manufacturers (generally higher PP&E), regardless of their industry classification. Similarly, a test involving the ratio of operating expenses to sales has helped to determine whether a company undertakes a significant marketing and distribution function. Table 25 shows the number of times various screens were used in APAs executed in 2008: TABLE 25: COMPARABILITY SCREENS Comparability/Financial Distress Screen Times Used Comparability screens used R&D/ sales 42 Sales 33 Other 22 Foreign sales/ total sales 9 PP&E/ sales 5 Operating expenses/ sales ≤ 3 Non-startup or start-up ≤ 3 PP&E/ total assets ≤ 3 Financial distress Bankruptcy 38 Unfavorable auditor’s opinion 37 Losses in one or more years 19 Other 9 Adjusting Comparables After the comparables have been selected, the regulations require that “[i]f there are material differences between the controlled and uncontrolled transactions, adjustments must be made if the effect of such differences on prices or profits can be ascertained with sufficient accuracy to improve the reliability of the results.” Treas. Reg. § 1.482-1(d)(2). In almost all cases involving income-statement-based PLIs used in the CPM or the Residual Profit Split Method, certain “asset intensity” or “balance sheet” adjustments for factors that have generally agreed-upon effects on profits are calculated. In addition, in specific cases, additional adjustments are performed to improve reliability. The most common balance sheet adjustments used in APAs are adjustments for differences in accounts receivable, inventories, and accounts payable. The APA Program generally has required adjustments for receivables, inventory, and payables based on the principle that there is an opportunity cost for holding assets. For these assets, it is generally assumed that the cost is appropriately measured by the interest rate on short-term debt. To compare the profits of two business activities with different relative levels of receivables, inventory, or payables, the APA Program estimates the carrying costs of each item and adjusts profits accordingly. Although different formulas have been used in specific APA cases, Attachment B presents one set of formulas used in many APAs. Underlying these formulas are the notions that (1) balance sheet items normally should be expressed as mid-year averages, (2) formulas should try to avoid using data items that are being tested by the TPM (for example, if sales are controlled, then the denominator of the balance sheet ratio should not be sales), (3) a short term interest rate should be used, and (4) an interest factor should recognize the average holding period of the relevant asset. As in 2007, during the course of 2008, the APA Program used an interest rate equal to LIBOR (3 months) plus 200 basis points for purposes of calculating adjustments for accounts receivable and accounts payable for U.S. companies in many cases. In addition, the APA Program often used an interest rate equal to the Corporate Bonds (Moody’s) Baa rate for purposes of calculating inventory adjustments for U.S. companies. However, the facts and circumstances surrounding a given case will ultimately determine the reliability of making balance sheet adjustments and the selection of the most reliable interest rate. The APA Program also requires that financial data be compared on a consistent accounting basis. For example, although financial statements may be prepared on a first-in first-out (FIFO) basis, cross-company comparisons are less meaningful if one or more of the comparables use last-in first-out (LIFO) inventory accounting methods. This adjustment directly affects costs of goods sold and inventories, and therefore affects both profitability measures and inventory adjustments. In some cases, the APA Program has made an adjustment to account for differences in relative levels of PP&E between a tested business activity and the comparables. Ideally, comparables and the business activity being tested will have fairly similar relative levels of PP&E, since major differences can be a sign of fundamentally different functions and risks. Typically, the PP&E adjustment is made using a medium-term interest rate. During the course of 2008, the APA Program often used the Corporate Bonds (Moody’s) Baa rate as the interest rate for purposes of calculating adjustments for inventory and PP&E for U.S. companies. Again, however, the facts and circumstances surrounding a given case will ultimately determine the reliability of making balance sheet adjustments and the selection of the most reliable interest rate. Additional adjustments used less frequently include those for differences in other balance sheet items, operating expenses, R&D, or currency risk. Accounting adjustments, such as reclassifying items from cost of goods sold to operating expenses, are also made when warranted to increase reliability. Often, data are not available for both the controlled and uncontrolled transactions in sufficient detail to allow for these types of adjustments. The adjustments made to comparables or tested parties in APAs executed in 2008 are reflected in Table 24 above. Ranges, Targets, and Adjustment Mechanisms [§ 521(b)(2)(D)(viii)-(ix)] The types of ranges, targets, and adjustment mechanisms used in APAs executed in 2008 are described in Tables 26 and 27 below. TABLE 26: RANGES AND TARGETS[a] [a] The numbers do not include TPMs with cost or cost-plus methodologies. Type of Range Number Interquartile range 62 Specific point (royalty) 11 Other 9 Full range ≤ 3 Other range ≤ 3 Specific point within CPM range (not floor or ceiling) ≤ 3 Specific point (CUP) ≤ 3 Specific point (gross profit split) ≤ 3 Floor (i.e., result must be no less than x) or ceiling (i.e., result must be no more than x) ≤ 3 TABLE 27: ADJUSTMENTS WHEN OUTSIDE THE RANGE Adjustment mechanism Number Taxpayer makes an adjustment: to closest edge of multi-year average 43 Taxpayer makes an adjustment: to specified point or royalty rate 23 Taxpayer makes an adjustment: to closest edge of single year 21 Taxpayer makes an adjustment: to median of current year ≤ 3 Taxpayer makes an adjustment: to median of multi-year average ≤ 3 Taxpayer makes an adjustment: to a specific dollar amount ≤ 3 Other ≤ 3 Discussion Treas. Reg. § 1.482-1(e)(1) states that sometimes a pricing method will yield “a single result that is the most reliable measure of an arm’s length result.” Sometimes, however, a method may yield “a range of reliable results,” called the “arm’s length range.” A taxpayer whose results fall within the arm’s length range will not be subject to adjustment. Under Treas. Reg. § 1.482-1(e)(2)(i), such a range is normally derived by considering a set of more than one comparable uncontrolled transaction of similar comparability and reliability. If these comparables are of very high quality, as defined in the section 482 regulations, then under Treas. Reg. § 1.482-1(e)(2)(iii)(A), the arm’s length range includes the results of all of the comparables (from the least to the greatest). However, the APA Program has only rarely identified cases meeting the requirements for the full range. If the comparables are of lesser quality, then under Treas. Reg. § 1.482-1(e)(2)(iii)(B), “the reliability of the analysis must be increased, when it is possible to do so, by adjusting the range through application of a valid statistical method to the results of all of the uncontrolled comparables.” One such method, the “interquartile range,” is ordinarily acceptable, although a different statistical method “may be applied if it provides a more reliable measure.” The “interquartile range” is defined as, roughly, the range from the 25th to the 75th percentile of the comparables’ results. See Treas. Reg. § 1.482-1(e)(2)(iii)(C). The interquartile range was used 62 times in 2008. Up to 20 Covered Transactions reflected on Table 26 were tested against a single, specific result. Some APAs — deliberately infrequent — specify not a point or a range, but a “floor” or a “ceiling.” When a floor is used, the tested party’s result must be greater than or equal to some particular value. When a ceiling is used, the tested party’s result must be less than or equal to some particular value. Three or fewer APAs executed in 2008 used a floor or a ceiling. Some APAs look to a tested party’s results over a period of years (multi-year averaging) to determine whether a taxpayer has complied with the APA. In 2008, rolling multi-year averaging was used for 11 Covered Transactions. Six of those used three-year averages. Fourteen Covered Transactions used a cumulative multi-year average, while 35 Covered Transactions used term averages and four Covered Transactions used partial-term averages. Adjustments Where a taxpayer’s actual transactions do not produce results that conform to the TPM, a taxpayer must nonetheless report its taxable income in an amount consistent with the TPM (an APA primary adjustment), as further discussed in § 11.02 of Rev. Proc. 2006-9. When the TPM specifies an arm’s length range, an APA primary adjustment is necessary only if the taxpayer’s actual transactional result falls outside the specified range. Under Treas. Reg. § 1.482-1(e)(3), if a taxpayer’s results fall outside the arm’s length range, the Service may adjust the result “to any point within the arm’s length range.” Accordingly, an APA may permit or require a taxpayer to make an adjustment after the year’s end to put the year’s results within the range, or at the point specified by the APA. Similarly, to enforce the terms of an APA, the Service may make such an adjustment. When the APA specifies a range, the adjustment is sometimes to the closest edge of the range, and sometimes to another point such as the median of the interquartile range. Depending on the facts of each case, automatic adjustments are not always permitted. APAs may specify that in such a case there will be a negotiation between the competent authorities involved to determine whether and to what extent an adjustment should be made. APAs may permit automatic adjustments unless the result is far outside the range specified in the APA. Thus, APAs provide flexibility and efficiency, permitting adjustments when normal business fluctuations and uncertainties push the result somewhat outside the range. APA Term and Rollback Lengths [§ 521(b)(2)(D)(x)] The various term lengths for APAs executed in 2008 are set forth in Table 28 below: TABLE 28: TERMS OF APAs APA Term in Years Number of APAs 2 ≤ 3 3 ≤ 3 4 ≤ 3 5 42 6 13 7 ≤ 3 8 ≤ 3 9 ≤ 3 10 or more 5 The number of rollback years to which an APA TPM was applied in 2008 is set forth in Table 29 below: TABLE 29: NUMBER OF YEARS COVERED BY ROLLBACK OF APA TPM Number of Rollback Years Number of APAs 1 4 2 5 3 ≤ 3 4 ≤ 3 5 or more ≤ 3 Nature of Documentation Required [§ 521(b)(2)(D)(xi)] APAs executed in 2008 required that taxpayers provide various documents with their annual reports. These documents are described in Table 30 below: TABLE 30: NATURE OF DOCUMENTATION REQUIRED Documentation Number of Times Required Statement identifying all material differences between Taxpayer’s business operations during APA Year and description of Taxpayer’s business operations contained in Taxpayer’s request for APA, or if there have been no such material differences, a statement to that effect 68 Description of any failure to meet Critical Assumptions or, if there have been none, a statement to that effect 68 Statement identifying all material changes in Taxpayer’s accounting methods and classifications, and methods of estimation, from those described or used in Taxpayer’s request for APA, or if there have been none, statement to that effect 68 Copy of the APA 68 Financial analysis demonstrating Taxpayer’s compliance with TPM 65 Organizational chart 65 Description of, reason for, and financial analysis of, any Compensating Adjustments with respect to APA Year, including means by which any Compensating Adjustment has been or will be satisfied 64 Financial statements as prepared in accordance with U.S. GAAP 60 Certified public accountant’s opinion that financial statements present fairly financial position of Taxpayer and the results of its operations, in accordance with U.S. GAAP 57 Book-to-tax reconciliations 11 Financial statements as prepared in accordance with a foreign GAAP 10 Certified public accountant’s opinion that financial statements present fairly financial position of Taxpayer and the results of its operations, in accordance with a foreign GAAP 7 Other 4 Certified public accountant’s review of financial statements ≤ 3 Profit & loss statement ≤ 3 Pertinent intercompany agreements ≤ 3 Cash flow statement ≤ 3 Form 5471 or 5472 ≤ 3 Description of any matters economically or substantively related to the covered transactions, but that are not subject to the APA ≤ 3 Foreign tax return ≤ 3 Narrative description of taxpayer’s business ≤ 3 Various work papers ≤ 3 U.S. income tax return ≤ 3 Approaches for Sharing of Currency or Other Risks [§ 521(b)(2)(D)(xii)] During 2008, there were 37 tested parties that faced financial risks, including interest rate and currency risks. In appropriate cases, APAs may provide specific approaches for dealing with currency risk, such as adjustment mechanisms and/or critical assumptions. Efforts to Ensure Compliance with APAs [§ 521(b)(2)(F)] As described in Rev. Proc. 2006-9, § 11.01, APA taxpayers are required to file annual reports to demonstrate compliance with the terms and conditions of the APA. The filing and review of annual reports is a critical part of the APA process. Through annual report review, the APA Program monitors taxpayer compliance with the APA on a contemporaneous basis. Annual report review provides current information on the success or problems associated with the various TPMs adopted in the APA process. All reports received by the APA Program are assigned to a designated APA team leader. Whenever possible, annual report reviews are assigned to the team leader who negotiated the case, since that person will already be familiar with the relevant facts and terms of the agreement. Other team leaders and economists may assist the assigned team leader as well. Once received by the APA Program, the annual report is also sent to the field personnel with exam jurisdiction over the taxpayer. The statistics for the review of APA annual reports are reflected in Table 31 below. As of December 31, 2008, there were 305 pending annual reports. In 2008, 336 reports were closed. TABLE 31: STATISTICS OF ANNUAL REPORTS Number of APA annual reports pending as of December 31, 2008 305 Number of APA annual reports closed in 2008 336 Number of APA annual reports requiring adjustment in 2008 15 Number of taxpayers involved in adjustments 9 Number of APA annual report cases over one-year old 231 Attachment A Model APA — Based on Revenue Procedure 2006-9 ADVANCE PRICING AGREEMENT between [Insert Taxpayer’s Name] and THE INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE PARTIES The Parties to this Advance Pricing Agreement (APA) are the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) and [Insert Taxpayer’s Name], EIN . RECITALS [Insert Taxpayer Name] is the common parent of an affiliated group filing consolidated U.S. tax returns (collectively referred to as “Taxpayer”), and is entering into this APA on behalf of itself and other members of its consolidated group. Taxpayer’s principal place of business is [City, State]. [Insert general description of taxpayer and other relevant parties]. This APA contains the Parties’ agreement on the best method for determining arm’s-length prices of the Covered Transactions under I.R.C. section 482, any applicable tax treaties, and the Treasury Regulations. {If renewal, add} [Taxpayer and IRS previously entered into an APA covering taxable years ending to , executed on .] AGREEMENT The Parties agree as follows: 1. Covered Transactions. This APA applies to the Covered Transactions, as defined in Appendix A. 2. Transfer Pricing Method. Appendix A sets forth the Transfer Pricing Method (TPM) for the Covered Transactions. 3. Term. This APA applies to Taxpayer’s taxable years ending through (APA Term). 4. Operation. a. Revenue Procedure 2006-9 governs the interpretation, legal effect, and administration of this APA. b. Nonfactual oral and written representations, within the meaning of sections 10.04 and 10.05 of Revenue Procedure 2006-9 (including any proposals to use particular TPMs), made in conjunction with the APA Request constitute statements made in compromise negotiations within the meaning of Rule 408 of the Federal Rules of Evidence. 5. Compliance. a. Taxpayer must report its taxable income in an amount that is consistent with Appendix A and all other requirements of this APA on its timely filed U.S. Return. However, if Taxpayer’s timely filed U.S. Return for an APA Year is filed prior to, or no later than 60 days after, the effective date of this APA, then Taxpayer must report its taxable income for that APA Year in an amount that is consistent with Appendix A and all other requirements of this APA either on the original U.S. Return or on an amended U.S. Return filed no later than 120 days after the effective date of this APA, or through such other means as may be specified herein. b. {Insert when U.S. Group or Foreign Group contains more than one member.} [This APA addresses the arm’s-length nature of prices charged or received in the aggregate between Taxpayer and Foreign Participants with respect to the Covered Transactions. Except as explicitly provided, this APA does not address and does not bind the IRS with respect to prices charged or received, or the relative amounts of income or loss realized, by particular legal entities that are members of U.S. Group or that are members of Foreign Group.] c. For each taxable year covered by this APA (APA Year), if Taxpayer complies with the terms and conditions of this APA, then the IRS will not make or propose any allocation or adjustment under I.R.C. section 482 to the amounts charged in the aggregate between Taxpayer and Foreign Participant[s] with respect to the Covered Transactions. d. If Taxpayer does not comply with the terms and conditions of this APA, then the IRS may: enforce the terms and conditions of this APA and make or propose allocations or adjustments under I.R.C. section 482 consistent with this APA; cancel or revoke this APA under section 11.06 of Revenue Procedure 2006-9; or revise this APA, if the Parties agree. e. Taxpayer must timely file an Annual Report (an original and four copies) for each APA Year in accordance with Appendix C and section 11.01 of Revenue Procedure 2006-9. Taxpayer must file the Annual Report for all APA Years through the APA Year ending [insert year] by [insert date]. Taxpayer must file the Annual Report for each subsequent APA Year by [insert month and day] immediately following the close of that APA Year. (If any date falls on a weekend or holiday, the Annual Report shall be due on the next date that is not a weekend or holiday.) The IRS may request additional information reasonably necessary to clarify or complete the Annual Report. Taxpayer will provide such requested information within 30 days. Additional time may be allowed for good cause. f. The IRS will determine whether Taxpayer has complied with this APA based on Taxpayer’s U.S. Returns, Financial Statements, and other APA Records, for the APA Term and any other year necessary to verify compliance. For Taxpayer to comply with this APA, an independent certified public accountant must {use the following or an alternative} render an opinion that Taxpayer’s Financial Statements present fairly, in all material respects, Taxpayer’s financial position under U.S. GAAP. g. In accordance with section 11.04 of Revenue Procedure 2006-9, Taxpayer will (1) maintain its APA Records, and (2) make them available to the IRS in connection with an examination under section 11.03. Compliance with this subparagraph constitutes compliance with the record-maintenance provisions of I.R.C. sections 6038A and 6038C for the Covered Transactions for any taxable year during the APA Term. h. The True Taxable Income within the meaning of Treasury Regulations sections 1.482-1(a)(1) and (i)(9) of a member of an affiliated group filing a U.S. consolidated return will be determined under the I.R.C. section 1502 Treasury Regulations. i. {Optional for US Parent Signatories} To the extent that Taxpayer’s compliance with this APA depends on certain acts of Foreign Group members, Taxpayer will ensure that each Foreign Group member will perform such acts. 6. Critical Assumptions. This APA’s critical assumptions, within the meaning of Revenue Procedure 2006-9, section 4.05, appear in Appendix B. If any critical assumption has not been met, then Revenue Procedure 2006-9, section 11.06, governs. 7. Disclosure. This APA, and any background information related to this APA or the APA Request, are: (1) considered “return information” under I.R.C. section 6103(b)(2)(C); and (2) not subject to public inspection as a “written determination” under I.R.C. section 6110(b)(1). Section 521(b) of Pub. L. 106-170 provides that the Secretary of the Treasury must prepare a report for public disclosure that includes certain specifically designated information concerning all APAs, including this APA, in a form that does not reveal taxpayers’ identities, trade secrets, and proprietary or confidential business or financial information. 8. Disputes. If a dispute arises concerning the interpretation of this APA, the Parties will seek a resolution by the IRS Associate Chief Counsel (International) to the extent reasonably practicable, before seeking alternative remedies. 9. Materiality. In this APA the terms “material” and “materially” will be interpreted consistently with the definition of “material facts” in Revenue Procedure 2006-9, section 11.06(4). 10. Section Captions. This APA’s section captions, which appear in italics, are for convenience and reference only. The captions do not affect in any way the interpretation or application of this APA. 11. Terms and Definitions. Unless otherwise specified, terms in the plural include the singular and vice versa. Appendix D contains definitions for capitalized terms not elsewhere defined in this APA. 12. Entire Agreement and Severability. This APA is the complete statement of the Parties’ agreement. The Parties will sever, delete, or reform any invalid or unenforceable provision in this APA to approximate the Parties’ intent as nearly as possible. 13. Successor in Interest. This APA binds, and inures to the benefit of, any successor in interest to Taxpayer. 14. Notice. Any notices required by this APA or Revenue Procedure 2006-9 must be in writing. Taxpayer will send notices to the IRS at the address and in the manner set forth in Revenue Procedure 2006-9, section 4.11. The IRS will send notices to: Taxpayer Corporation Attn: Jane Doe, Sr. Vice President (Taxes) 1000 Any Road Any City, USA 10000 (phone: ) 15. Effective Date and Counterparts. This APA is effective starting on the date, or later date of the dates, upon which all Parties execute this APA. The Parties may execute this APA in counterparts, with each counterpart constituting an original. WITNESS, The Parties have executed this APA on the dates below. [Taxpayer Name in all caps] By: Date: , 20 Jane Doe Sr. Vice President (Taxes) IRS By: Date: , 20 Craig A. Sharon Director, Advance Pricing Agreement Program APPENDIX A COVERED TRANSACTIONS AND TRANSFER PRICING METHOD (TPM) 1. Covered Transactions. [Define the Covered Transactions.] 2. TPM. {Note: If appropriate, adapt language from the following examples.} [The Tested Party is .] • CUP Method The TPM is the comparable uncontrolled price (CUP) method. The Arm’s Length Range of the price charged for is between and per unit. • CUT Method The TPM is the CUT Method. The Arm’s Length Range of the royalty charged for the license of is between % and % of [Taxpayer’s, Foreign Participants’, or other specified party’s] Net Sales Revenue. [Insert definition of net sales revenue or other royalty base.] • Resale Price Method (RPM) The TPM is the resale price method (RPM). The Tested Party’s Gross Margin for any APA Year is defined as follows: the Tested Party’s gross profit divided by its sales revenue (as those terms are defined in Treasury Regulations sections 1.482-5(d)(1) and (2)) for that APA Year. The Arm’s Length Range is between % and %, and the Median of the Arm’s Length Range is %. • Cost Plus Method The TPM is the cost plus method. The Tested Party’s Cost Plus Markup is defined as follows for any APA Year: the Tested Party’s ratio of gross profit to production costs (as those terms are defined in Treasury Regulations sections 1.482-3(d)(1) and (2)) for that APA Year. The Arm’s Length Range is between % and %, and the Median of the Arm’s Length Range is %. • CPM with Berry Ratio PLI The TPM is the comparable profits method (CPM). The profit level indicator is a Berry Ratio. The Tested Party’s Berry Ratio is defined as follows for any APA Year: the Tested Party’s gross profit divided by its operating expenses (as those terms are defined in Treasury Regulations sections 1.482-5(d)(2) and (3)) for that APA Year. The Arm’s Length Range is between and , and the Median of the Arm’s Length Range is . • CPM using an Operating Margin PLI The TPM is the comparable profits method (CPM). The profit level indicator is an operating margin. The Tested Party’s Operating Margin is defined as follows for any APA Year: the Tested Party’s operating profit divided by its sales revenue (as those terms are defined in Treasury Regulations section 1.482-5(d)(1) and (4)) for that APA Year. The Arm’s Length Range is between % and %, and the Median of the Arm’s Length Range is %. • CPM using a Three-year Rolling Average Operating Margin PLI The TPM is the comparable profits method (CPM). The profit level indicator is an operating margin. The Tested Party’s Three-Year Rolling Average operating margin is defined as follows for any APA Year: the sum of the Tested Party’s operating profit (within the meaning of Treasury Regulations section 1.482-5(d)(4) for that APA Year and the two preceding years, divided by the sum of its sales revenue (within the meaning of Treasury Regulations section 1.482-5(d)(1)) for that APA Year and the two preceding years. The Arm’s Length Range is between % and %, and the Median of the Arm’s Length Range is %. • Residual Profit Split Method The TPM is the residual profit split method. [Insert description of routine profit level determinations and residual profit-split mechanism]. [Insert additional provisions as needed.] 3. Application of TPM. For any APA Year, if the results of Taxpayer’s actual transactions produce a [price per unit, royalty rate for the Covered Transactions] [or] [Gross Margin, Cost Plus Markup, Berry Ratio, Operating Margin, Three-Year Rolling Average Operating Margin for the Tested Party] within the Arm’s Length Range, then the amounts reported on Taxpayer’s U.S. Return must clearly reflect such results. For any APA year, if the results of Taxpayer’s actual transactions produce a [price per unit, royalty rate] [or] [Gross Margin, Cost Plus Markup, Berry Ratio, Operating Margin, Three-Year Rolling Average Operating Margin for the Tested Party] outside the Arm’s Length Range, then amounts reported on Taxpayer’s U.S. Return must clearly reflect an adjustment that brings the [price per unit, royalty rate] [or] [Tested Party’s Gross Margin, Cost Plus Markup, Berry Ratio, Operating Margin, Three-Year Rolling Average Operating Margin] to the Median. For purposes of this Appendix A, the “results of Taxpayer’s actual transactions” means the results reflected in Taxpayer’s and Tested Party’s books and records as computed under U.S. GAAP [insert another relevant accounting standard if applicable], with the following adjustments: (a) [The fair value of stock-based compensation as disclosed in the Tested Party’s audited financial statements shall be treated as an operating expense]; and (b) To the extent that the results in any prior APA Year are relevant (for example, to compute a multi-year average), such results shall be adjusted to reflect the amount of any adjustment made for that prior APA Year under this Appendix A. 4. APA Revenue Procedure Treatment If Taxpayer makes a primary adjustment under the terms of this Appendix A, Taxpayer may elect APA Revenue Procedure Treatment in accordance with section 11.02(3) of Revenue Procedure 2006-9. [Insert additional provisions as needed.] APPENDIX B CRITICAL ASSUMPTIONS This APA’s critical assumptions are: 1. The business activities, functions performed, risks assumed, assets employed, and financial and tax accounting methods and classifications [and methods of estimation] of Taxpayer in relation to the Covered Transactions will remain materially the same as described or used in Taxpayer’s APA Request. A mere change in business results will not be a material change. [Insert additional provisions as needed.] APPENDIX C APA RECORDS AND ANNUAL REPORT APA RECORDS The APA Records will consist of: 1. All documents listed below for inclusion in the Annual Report, as well as all documents, notes, work papers, records, or other writings that support the information provided in such documents. ANNUAL REPORT The Annual Report will include two copies of a properly completed APA Annual Report Summary in the form of Exhibit E to this APA, one copy of the form bound with, and one copy bound separately from, the rest of the Annual Report. In addition, the Annual Report will include a table of contents and the information and exhibits identified below, organized as follows. 1. Statements that fully identify, describe, analyze, and explain: a. All material differences between any of the U.S. Entities’ business operations (including functions, risks assumed, markets, contractual terms, economic conditions, property, services, and assets employed) during the APA Year and the description of the business operations contained in the APA Request. If there have been no material differences, the Annual Report will include a statement to that effect. b. All material changes in the U.S. Entities’ accounting methods and classifications, and methods of estimation, from those described or used in Taxpayer’s request for this APA. If any such change was made to conform to changes in U.S. GAAP (or other relevant accounting standards), Taxpayer will specifically identify such change. If there has been no material change in accounting methods and classifications or methods of estimation, the Annual Report will include a statement to that effect. c. Any change to the Taxpayer notice information in section 14 of this APA. d. Any failure to meet any critical assumption. If there has been no failure, the Annual Report will include a statement to that effect. e. Any change to any entity classification for federal income tax purposes (including any change that causes an entity to be disregarded for federal income tax purposes) of any Worldwide Group member that is a party to the Covered Transactions or is otherwise relevant to the TPM. f. The amount, reason for, and financial analysis of any compensating adjustments under paragraph 4 of Appendix A and Revenue Procedure 2006-9, section 11.02(3), for the APA Year, including but not limited to: the amounts paid or received by each affected entity; the character (such as capital, ordinary, income, expense) and country source of the funds transferred, and the specific affected line item(s) of any affected U.S. Return; and the date(s) and means by which the payments are or will be made. g. The amounts, description, reason for, and financial analysis of any book-tax difference relevant to the TPM for the APA Year, as reflected on Schedule M-1 or Schedule M-3 of the U.S. Return for the APA Year. 2. The Financial Statements, and any necessary account detail to show compliance with the TPM, with a copy of the independent certified public accountant’s opinion required by paragraph 5(f) of this APA. 3. A financial analysis that reflects Taxpayer’s TPM calculations for the APA Year. The calculations must reconcile with and reference the Financial Statements in sufficient account detail to allow the IRS to determine whether Taxpayer has complied with the TPM. 4. An organizational chart for the Worldwide Group, revised annually to reflect all ownership or structural changes of entities that are parties to the Covered Transactions or are otherwise relevant to the TPM. 5. A copy of the APA. APPENDIX D DEFINITIONS The following definitions control for all purposes of this APA. The definitions appear alphabetically below: Term Definition Annual Report A report within the meaning of Revenue Procedure 2006-9, section 11.01. APA This Advance Pricing Agreement, which is an “advance pricing agreement” within the meaning of Revenue Procedure 2006-9, section 2.04. APA Records The records specified in Appendix C. APA Request Taxpayer’s request for this APA dated including any amendments or supplemental or additional information thereto. Covered Transaction(s) This term is defined in Appendix A. Financial Statements Financial statements prepared in accordance with U.S. GAAP and stated in U.S. dollars. Foreign Group Worldwide Group members that are not U.S. persons. Foreign Participants [name the foreign entities involved in Covered Transactions]. I.R.C. The Internal Revenue Code of 1986, 26 U.S.C., as amended. Pub. L. 106-170 The Ticket to Work and Work Incentives Improvement Act of 1999. Revenue Procedure 2006-9 Rev. Proc. 2006-9, 2006-1 C.B. 278. Transfer Pricing Method (TPM) A transfer pricing method within the meaning of Treasury Regulations section 1.482-1(b) and Revenue Procedure 2006-9, section 2.04. U.S. GAAP U.S. generally-accepted accounting principles. U.S. Group Worldwide Group members that are U.S. persons. U.S. Return For each taxable year, the “returns with respect to income taxes under subtitle A” that Taxpayer must “make” in accordance with I.R.C. section 6012. {Or substitute for partnership: For each taxable year, the “return” that Taxpayer must “make” in accordance with I.R.C. section 6031.} Worldwide Group Taxpayer and all organizations, trades, businesses, entities, or branches (whether or not incorporated, organized in the United States, or affiliated) owned or controlled directly or indirectly by the same interests. APPENDIX E APA ANNUAL REPORT SUMMARY FORM The APA Annual Report Summary on the next page is a required APA Record. The APA Team Leader has supplied some of the information requested on the form. Taxpayer is to supply the remaining information requested by the form and submit the form as part of its Annual Report. APA Annual Report SUMMARY Department of the Treasury— Internal Revenue ServiceOffice of Associate Chief Counsel (International) Advance Pricing Agreement Program APA no. Team Leader Economist Intl Examiner CA Analyst APA Information Taxpayer Name: Taxpayer EIN: NAICS: APA Term: Taxable years ending to . Original APA [ ] Renewal APA [ ] Annual Report due dates: , 200 for all APA Years through APA Year ending in 200; for each APA Year thereafter, on [month and day] immediately following the close of the APA Year. Principal foreign country(ies) involved in covered transaction(s): Type of APA: [ ] unilateral [ ] bilateral with Tested party is [ ] US [ ] foreign [ ] both Approximate dollar volume of covered transactions (on an annual basis) involving tangible goods and services: [ ] N/A [ ] <$50 million [ ] $50-100 million [ ] $100-250 million [ ] $250-500 million [ ] >$500 million APA tests on (check all that apply): [ ] annual basis [ ] multi-year basis [ ] term basis APA provides (check all that apply) a: [ ] range [ ] point [ ] floor only [ ] ceiling only [ ] other APA provides for adjustment (check all that apply) to: [ ] nearest edge [ ] median [ ] other point APA Annual Report Information (to be completedby the Taxpayer) APA date executed: , 200 This APA Annual Report Summary is for APA Year(s) ending in 200 and was filed on , 200 Check here [ ] if Annual Report was filed after original due date but in accordance with extension. Has this APA been amended or changed? [ ] yes[ ] no Effective Date: Has Taxpayer complied with all APA terms and conditions? [ ] yes[ ] no Were all the critical assumptions met? [ ] yes[ ] no Has a Primary Compensating Adjustment been made in any APA Year covered by this Annual Report?[ ] yes[ ] noIf yes, which year(s): 200 Have any necessary Secondary Compensating Adjustments been made? [ ] yes[ ] no Did Taxpayer elect APA Revenue Procedure treatment? [ ] yes[ ] no Any change to the entity classification of a party to the APA? [ ] yes[ ] no Taxpayer notice information contained in the APA remains unchanged? [ ] yes[ ] no Taxpayer’s current US principal place of business: (City, State) APA Annual Report Checklist of Key Contents (to be completed by the Taxpayer) Financial analysis reflecting TPM calculations [ ] yes[ ] no Financial statements showing compliance with TPM(s) [ ] yes[ ] no Schedule M-1 or M-3 book-tax differences [ ] yes[ ] no Current organizational chart of relevant portion of world-wide group [ ] yes[ ] no Attach copy of APA [ ] yes[ ] no Other APA records and documents included: [The information required in the following section should be tailored to the particular case] [ ] yes[ ] no [ ] yes[ ] no [ ] yes[ ] no [ ] yes[ ] no [ ] yes[ ] no Contact Information Authorized Representative Phone Number Affiliation and Address ATTACHMENT B EXAMPLE FORMULAS FOR BALANCE SHEET ADJUSTMENTS The formulas below provide examples of the balance sheet adjustment formulas used in the APA Program’s CPM spreadsheet model.[a] The formulas below are applicable to the operating margin profit level indicator. The APA Program’s calculations measure balance sheet intensity by reference to the denominator of the profit level indicator (e.g., for the Berry ratio, the denominator used is operating expenses). Therefore, the formulas vary for each profit level indicator. Definitions of Variables: AP = average accounts payable AR = average trade accounts receivable, net of allowance for bad debt cogs = cost of goods sold INV = average inventory, stated on FIFO basis opex = operating expenses (general, sales, administrative, and depreciation expenses) PPE = property, plant, and equipment, net of accumulated depreciation sales = net sales h = average accounts payable or trade accounts receivable holding period, stated as a fraction of a year i = interest rate t = entity being tested c = comparable [a] Copies of the APA Program’s CPM spreadsheet model are available from the APA Program by calling (202) 435-5220 (not a toll-free number) or by writing to the Office of Associate Chief Counsel (International), Advance Pricing Agreement Program, Attn: CC:INTL:APA, MA2-266, 1111 Constitution Ave. NW, Washington DC, 20224. Equations: Example Assuming Profit Level Indicator is Operating Margin: Receivables Adjustment (“RA”): RA = {[(ARt / salest) x salesc] - ARc} x {i/[1+(i x hc)]} Payables Adjustment (“PA”): PA = {[(APt / salest) x salesc] - APc} x {i/[1+(i x hc)]} Inventory Adjustment (“IA”): IA = {[(INVt / salest) x salesc] - INVc } x i PP&E Adjustment (“PPEA”): PPEA = {[(PPEt / salest) x salesc] - PPEc} x i Then Adjust Comparables as Follows: adjusted salesc = salesc + RA adjusted cogsc = cogsc + PA - IA adjusted opexc = opexc - PPEA Announcement 2009-30 Guidance Regarding Foreign Base Company Sales Income; Correction AGENCY: Internal Revenue Service (IRS), Treasury. ACTION: Correction to final and temporary regulations SUMMARY: This document contains corrections to final and temporary regulations (T.D. 9438, 2009-5 I.R.B. 387) that were published in the Federal Register on Monday December 29, 2008 (73 FR 79334) relating to foreign base company sales income. DATES: The corrections are effective July 1, 2009. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ethan Atticks, (202) 622-3840 (not a toll-free number). SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Background The final and temporary regulations that are subject to these corrections are under section 954 of the Internal Revenue Code. Need for Correction As published the final and temporary regulations (T.D. 9438) contain errors that may prove to be misleading and are in need of correction. Correction of Publication Accordingly, the publication of the final and temporary regulations (T.D. 9438) that were the subject of FR Doc. E8-30727 is corrected as follows: 1. On page 79340, column 2, in the preamble under paragraph caption Determination of Hypothetical Effective Tax Rate, the first paragraph, line 8 of the paragraph, the language “effective tax rate of tax.” is corrected to read “effective tax rate.”. 2. On page 79340, column 3, in the preamble under paragraph caption Determination of Hypothetical Effective Tax Rate, lines 2, 3, and 4, the language “In contrast, if a sales affiliate in the country of manufacturing can theoretically receive certain tax relief by” is corrected to read “In contrast, if a manufacturing branch could receive tax relief with respect to sales income derived from sources within the country in which the manufacturing branch is located by”. 3. On page 79341, column 3, in the preamble, the first paragraph, the language “Under the temporary regulations, if a demonstrably greater amount of manufacturing activity with respect to the personal property occurs in jurisdictions without tax rate disparity relative to the sales or purchase branch, the location of the sales or purchase branch will be deemed to be the location of manufacture of the personal property. In that case, the purchase or sales activities with respect to the property purchased or sold by or through the sales or purchase branch of the CFC will not, for purposes of determining FBCSI in connection with the sale of that property, be deemed to have substantially the same tax effect as if a branch were a wholly owned subsidiary corporation of the CFC. Otherwise, the location of manufacture of the personal property will be deemed to be the location of a manufacturing branch (or remainder) that has tax rate disparity relative to the sales or purchase branch. In that case, the purchase or sales activities with respect to the property purchased or sold by or through the sales or purchase branch of the CFC will be deemed to have substantially the same tax effect as if a branch were a wholly owned subsidiary corporation of the CFC, and that branch will be treated as a separate corporation for purposes of applying the regulations.” is corrected to read “Under the temporary regulations, if a demonstrably greater amount of manufacturing activity with respect to the income derived by a sales or purchase branch with respect to the personal property occurs in jurisdictions without tax rate disparity relative to that sales or purchase branch, the location of that sales or purchase branch will be deemed to be the location of manufacture of the personal property with respect to the income derived by that sales or purchase branch from the purchase or sale of the property. In that case, the use of the purchase or sales branch for purchase or sales activities with respect to the property purchased or sold by or through that sales or purchase branch of the CFC will not, for purposes of determining FBCSI in connection with the income derived by that sales or purchase branch from the purchase or sale of that property, be deemed to have substantially the same tax effect as if a branch were a wholly owned subsidiary corporation of the CFC. Otherwise, the location of manufacture of the personal property with respect to the income derived by that sales or purchase branch from the purchase or sale of that property will be deemed to be the location of a manufacturing branch (or remainder) that has tax rate disparity relative to that sales or purchase branch. In that case, the use of the purchase or sales branch for purchase or sales activities with respect to the property purchased or sold by or through that sales or purchase branch of the CFC will, for purposes of determining FBCSI in connection with the income derived by that sales or purchase branch from the purchase or sale of that property, be deemed to have substantially the same tax effect as if a branch were a wholly owned subsidiary corporation of the CFC, and that branch will be treated as a separate corporation for purposes of applying the regulations.”. 4. On page 79342, column 1, in the preamble under the paragraph caption Clarifying Application of the Rule for Determining the Remainder of the CFC When Activities are Performed in Multiple Locations, the first paragraph, line 18 of the paragraph, the language “the CFC when activities are preformed” is corrected to read “the CFC when activities are performed”. §1.954-3 [Corrected]. 5. On page 79344, column 1, under amendatory instruction paragraph 2, item 3, line 5, the language “Example (3).” is corrected to read “Examples (3), (6), and (7).”. 6. On page 79345, column 3, paragraph (a)(4)(iv)(d), Example 1 (ii), line 3, the language “to sale were undertaken by FS through the” is corrected to read “to sale had been undertaken by FS through the”. 7. On page 79346, column 1, paragraph (a)(4)(iv)(d), Example 2 (ii), line 3, the language “to sale were undertaken by FS through the” is corrected to read “to sale had been undertaken by FS through the”. 8. On page 79346, column 1, paragraph (a)(4)(iv)(d), Example 3 (i), line 11, the language “FS for use outside of FS’s country of” is corrected to read “FS to a related person for use outside of FS’s country of”. 9. On page 79346, column 1, paragraph (a)(4)(iv)(d), Example 3 (ii), line 3, the language “to sale were undertaken by FS through the” is corrected to read “to sale had been undertaken by FS through the”. 10. On page 79346, column 2, paragraph (a)(4)(iv)(d), Example 4 (ii), line 3, the language “to sale were undertaken by FS through the” is corrected to read “to sale had been undertaken by FS through the”. 11. On page 79346, column 3, paragraph (a)(4)(iv)(d), Example 5 (ii), line 3, the language “to sale were undertaken by FS through the” is corrected to read “to sale had been undertaken by FS through the”. 12. On page 79346, column 3, paragraph (a)(4)(iv)(d), Example 6 (ii), line 3, the language “to sale were undertaken by FS through the” is corrected to read “to sale had been undertaken by FS through the”. 13. On page 79347, column 1, paragraph (a)(4)(iv)(d), Example 7 (ii), line 3, the language “to sale were undertaken by FS through the” is corrected to read “to sale had been undertaken by FS through the”. 14. On page 79347, column 2, paragraph (a)(4)(iv)(d), Example 8 (ii), line 1, the language “to sale were undertaken by FS through the” is corrected to read “to sale had been undertaken by FS through the”. 15. On page 79347, column 2, paragraph (a)(4)(iv)(d), Example 8 (ii), line 9, the language “X, it is irrelevant to the substantial” is corrected to read “X, it is not important to the substantial”. 16. On page 79347, column 2, paragraph (a)(4)(iv)(d), Example 9 (ii), line 3, the language “to sale were undertaken by FS1 or FS2” is corrected to read “to sale had been undertaken by FS1 or FS2”. 17. On page 79347, column 3, paragraph (a)(4)(iv)(d), Example 10 (ii), line 3, the language “to sale were undertaken by FS through the” is corrected to read “to sale had been undertaken by FS through the”. 18. On page 79348, column 1, paragraph (a)(4)(iv)(d), Example 11 (ii), line 3, the language “to sale were undertaken by FS through the” is corrected to read “to sale had been undertaken by FS through the”. 19. On page 79348, column 1, paragraph (b)(2)(i)(d), the language “[Reserved]. For further guidance, see §1.954-3(b)(2)(i)(d).” is corrected to read “[Reserved].”. 20. On page 79348, column 2, following the language “Example (3). [Reserved]. For further guidance, see §1.954-3(b)(4) Example (3).”, the language “Example (6). [Reserved].” is added on the next line. 21. On page 79348, column 2, following the new language “Example (6). [Reserved].”, the language “Example (7). [Reserved].” is added on the next line. 22. On page 79348, column 2, paragraph (d), the last two lines, the language “subsequent taxable years of the taxpayer.” is corrected to read “subsequent taxable years.”. §1.954-3T [Corrected]. 23. On page 79349, column 2, in paragraph (b)(1)(ii)(c)(2), Example (i), line 18, the language “effective rate imposed in Country M on the” is corrected to read “effective rate of tax imposed in Country M on the”. 24. On page 79349, column 3, paragraph (b)(1)(ii)(c)(3)(i), a new sentence is added after the first sentence to read “This paragraph (b)(1)(ii)(c)(3) is applied separately with respect to the income derived by each purchasing or selling branch (or similar establishment) or purchasing or selling remainder of the controlled foreign corporation as provided under paragraphs (b)(1)(i) and (b)(1)(ii) of this section and §§ 1.954-3(b)(1)(i) and (b)(1)(ii).”. 25. On page 79350, column 2, line 2, in paragraph (b)(1)(ii)(c)(3)(iii), the language “construction with respect to that” is corrected to read “construction with respect to the income derived by a purchasing or selling branch (or similar establishment) or the purchasing or selling remainder of the controlled foreign corporation in connection with the purchase or sale of that”. 26. On page 79350, column 2, line 15, in paragraph (b)(1)(ii)(c)(3)(iii), the language “any, and that would, after applying” is corrected to read “any, that would, after applying”. 27. On page 79350, column 2, the second full sentence, in paragraph (b)(1)(ii)(c)(3)(iii), the language “The tested sales location is the location where the branch (or similar establishment) or the remainder of the controlled foreign corporation purchases or sells the personal property.” is corrected to read “The tested sales location is the location of the purchasing or selling branch (or similar establishment) or the remainder of the controlled foreign corporation by or through which the purchasing or selling activities are carried on with respect to the personal property.”. 28. On page 79350, column 2, the last line, in paragraph (b)(1)(ii)(c)(3)(iii), the language “(b)(1)(ii)(c)(3)(v) Examples 4, 5, and 6 of” is corrected to read “(b)(1)(ii)(c)(3)(v) Examples 3, 4, 5, and 6 of”. 29. On page 79350, column 3, lines 13, 14, and 15, in paragraph (b)(1)(ii)(c)(3)(iii), the language “apply with respect to the sales income related to that property and the use of the purchasing or selling branch (or” is corrected to read “apply with respect to the income derived by the tested sales location in connection with the purchase or sale of that property and the use of that purchasing or selling branch (or”. 30. On page 79351, column 1, line 4, in paragraph (b)(1)(ii)(c)(3)(v), Example 1 (i), the language “branches. Employees of FS located in” is corrected to read “branches. The activities of the remainder of FS in Country M do not independently satisfy §1.954-3(a)(4)(i). Employees of FS located in”. 31. On page 79351, column 2, paragraph (b)(1)(ii)(c)(3)(v), Example 3 (ii), lines 14, 15, 16, and 17, the language “(b)(1)(ii)(c)(3)(iii) of this section The tested sales location is Country M because the remainder of FS performs the selling activities with respect to Product X. The” is corrected to read “(b)(1)(ii)(c)(3)(iii) of this section. The tested sales location is Country M because the selling activities with respect to Product X are carried on by the remainder of FS. The”. 32. On page 79351, column 3, paragraph (b)(1)(ii)(c)(3)(v), Example 4, the paragraph heading, the language “Manufacturing activities performed by multiple branches, no branch independently satisfies §1.954-3(a)(4)(i), selling activities performed by remainder of the controlled foreign corporation, remainder contribution includes branch manufacturing activities.” is corrected to read “Manufacturing activities performed by multiple branches, no branch independently satisfies §1.954-3(a)(4)(i), selling activities carried on by remainder of the controlled foreign corporation, remainder contribution includes branch manufacturing activities.”. 33. On page 79351, column 3, paragraph (b)(1)(ii)(c)(3)(v), Example 4 (ii), the fourth sentence, the language “The tested sales location is Country M because the remainder of FS performs the selling activities with respect to Product X.” is corrected to read “The tested sales location is Country M because the selling activities with respect to Product X are carried on by the remainder of FS.”. 34. On page 79351, column 3, paragraph (b)(1)(ii)(c)(3)(v), Example 4 (ii), the last sentence, the language “Therefore, the rules of paragraph (b)(1)(ii)(a) of this section will not apply and neither Branch A nor Branch B will be treated as a separate corporation for purposes of paragraph (b)(2)(ii) of this section and §1.954-3(b)(2)(ii).” is corrected to read “Therefore, the rules of paragraph (b)(1)(ii)(a) of this section will not apply with respect to the income derived by the remainder of FS in connection with the sale of Product X, and neither Branch A nor Branch B will be treated as a separate corporation for purposes of paragraph (b)(2)(ii) of this section and §1.954-3(b)(2)(ii).”. 35. On page 79351, column 3, paragraph (b)(1)(ii)(c)(3)(v), Example 5, the paragraph heading, the language “Manufacturing activities performed by multiple branches, no branch independently satisfies §1.954-3(a)(4)(i), selling activities performed by remainder of the controlled foreign corporation and a sales branch.” is corrected to read “Manufacturing activities performed by multiple branches, no branch independently satisfies §1.954-3(a)(4)(i), selling activities carried on by remainder of the controlled foreign corporation and a sales branch.”. 36. On page 79352, column 1, paragraph (b)(1)(ii)(c)(3)(v), Example 5 (i), the first sentence, the language “The facts are the same as Example 3, except that selling activities are also performed by Branch D in Country D, and Country D imposes a 16% effective rate of tax on sales income.” is corrected to read “The facts are the same as Example 3, except that sales of Product X are also carried on through Branch D in Country D, and Country D imposes a 16% effective rate of tax on sales income.”. 37. On page 79352, column 1, paragraph (b)(1)(ii)(c)(3)(v), Example 5 (ii), the fifth sentence, the language “The results with respect to the remainder of FS in this Example 6 are the same as in Example 3.” is corrected to read “The results with respect to income derived by the remainder of FS in connection with the sale of Product X in this Example 5 are the same as in Example 3.”. 38. On page 79352, column 1, in paragraph (b)(1)(ii)(c)(3)(v), Example 5 (ii), the sixth sentence, the language “However, paragraph (b)(1)(ii)(c)(3)(iii) of this section must also be applied with respect to Branch D because Branch D performs selling activities with respect to Product X.” is corrected to read “However, paragraph (b)(1)(ii)(c)(3)(iii) of this section must also be applied with respect to Branch D because the sale of Product X is also carried on through Branch D.”. 39. On page 79352, column 1, paragraph (b)(1)(ii)(c)(3)(v), Example 5 (ii), line 29, the language “rate of tax imposed on the Branch D’s sales” is corrected to read “rate of tax imposed on Branch D’s sales”. 40. On page 79352, column 1, paragraph (b)(1)(ii)(c)(3)(v), Example 5 (ii), the last sentence, the language “Therefore, the rules of paragraph (b)(1)(ii)(a) of this section will not apply to Branch D and neither Branch A nor Branch D will be treated as a separate corporation for purposes of paragraph (b)(2)(ii) of this section and §1.954-3(b)(2)(ii).” is corrected to read “Therefore, the rules of paragraph (b)(1)(ii)(a) of this section will not apply with respect to the income derived by Branch D in connection with the sale of Product X and the use of Branch D to sell Product X will not result in a branch being treated as a separate corporation for purposes of paragraph (b)(2)(ii) of this section and §1.954-3(b)(2)(ii).”. 41. On page 79352, column 2, paragraph (b)(1)(ii)(c)(3)(v), Example 6 (ii), the fourth sentence, the language “The tested sales location is Country M because the remainder of FS performs the selling activities with respect to Product X.” is corrected to read “The tested sales location is Country M because the selling activities with respect to Product X are carried on by the remainder of FS.”. 42. On page 79352, column 3, paragraph (b)(2)(i)(b) is corrected to read as follows: “(b) Activities treated as performed on behalf of the remainder of corporation. (1) With respect to purchasing or selling activities performed by or through the branch or similar establishment, such purchasing or selling activities will, with respect to personal property manufactured, produced, constructed, grown, or extracted by the remainder of the controlled foreign corporation, be treated as performed on behalf of the remainder of the controlled foreign corporation. (2) With respect to purchasing or selling activities performed by or through the branch or similar establishment, such purchasing or selling activities will, with respect to personal property (other than property described in paragraph (b)(2)(i)(b)(1) of this section) purchased or sold, or purchased and sold, by the remainder of the controlled foreign corporation (or any branch treated as the remainder of the controlled foreign corporation), be treated as performed on behalf of the remainder of the controlled foreign corporation.”. 43. On page 79352, column 3, paragraph (b)(2)(i)(c), the language “(c) [Reserved]. For further guidance, see §1.954-3(b)(2)(i)(c).” is corrected to read “(c) through (e) [Reserved]. For further guidance, see §1.954-3(b)(2)(i)(c) and (e).”. 44. On page 79352, column 3, paragraph (b)(2)(i)(d) is removed. 45. On page 79353, column 1, paragraph (b)(2)(i)(e) is removed. 46. On page 79353, columns 1 and 2, paragraph (b)(2)(ii)(b) is corrected to read as follows: “(b) Activities treated as performed on behalf of the remainder of corporation. (1) With respect to purchasing or selling activities performed by or through the branch or similar establishment, such purchasing or selling activities will, with respect to personal property manufactured, produced, constructed, grown, or extracted by the remainder of the controlled foreign corporation, be treated as performed on behalf of the remainder of the controlled foreign corporation. (2) With respect to purchasing or selling activities performed by or through the branch or similar establishment, such purchasing or selling activities will, with respect to personal property (other than property described in paragraph (b)(2)(ii)(b)(1) of this section) purchased or sold, or purchased and sold, by the remainder of the controlled foreign corporation (or any branch treated as the remainder of the controlled foreign corporation), be treated as performed on behalf of the remainder of the controlled foreign corporation.”. 47. On page 79353, column 3, paragraph (b)(4), Examples (4) through (7), the language “[Reserved]. For further guidance, see §1.954-3(b)(4) Examples (4) through (7).” is corrected to read “[Reserved]. For further guidance, see §1.954-3(b)(4) Examples (4) and (5).”. 48. On page 79353, column 3, paragraph (b)(4), Example 8 (i), line 13, the language “located in Country M perform only sales” is corrected to read “located in Country M carry on only sales”. 49. On page 79354, column 1, paragraph (b)(4), Example 9, the paragraph heading, the language “Manufacturing activities performed by multiple branches, no branch independently satisfies §1.954-3(a)(4)(i), selling activities performed by remainder of the controlled foreign corporation, branch manufacturing activities included in remainder contribution.” is corrected to read “Manufacturing activities performed by multiple branches, no branch independently satisfies §1.954-3(a)(4)(i), selling activities carried on by remainder of the controlled foreign corporation, some branch manufacturing activities included in remainder contribution.”. 50. On page 79354, column 1, paragraph (b)(4), Example 9 (i), the first sentence, the language “FS, a controlled foreign corporation organized in Country M, has two branches, Branch A and Branch B, located in Country A and Country B respectively.” is corrected to read “FS, a controlled foreign corporation organized in Country M, has three branches, Branch A, Branch B, and Branch C, located in Country A, Country B, and Country C respectively.”. 51. On page 79354, column 1, paragraph (b)(4), Example 9 (i), line 33, the language “Country B, provides quality control and” is corrected to read “Country B, provides quality control. Branch C, through the activities of employees of FS located in Country C, provides”. 52. On page 79354, column 1, paragraph (b)(4), Example 9 (i), the eleventh sentence, the language “Country A imposes an effective rate of tax on sales income of 12%, and Country B imposes an effective rate of tax on sales income of 24%.” is corrected to read “Country A imposes an effective rate of tax on sales income of 12%, Country B imposes an effective rate of tax on sales income of 24%, and Country C imposes an effective rate of tax on sales income of 25%.”. 53. On page 79354, column 1, paragraph (b)(4), Example 9 (i), the twelfth sentence, the language “None of the remainder of FS, Branch A, or Branch B independently satisfies §1.954-3(a)(4)(i).” is corrected to read “None of the remainder of FS, Branch A, Branch B, or Branch C independently satisfies §1.954-3(a)(4)(i).”. 54. On page 79354, column 1, paragraph (b)(4), Example 9 (i), the fourteenth sentence, the language “Under the facts and circumstances of the business, the activities of the remainder of FS and Branch A, if considered together, would not provide a demonstrably greater contribution to the manufacture of Product X than the activities of Branch B.” is corrected to read “Under the facts and circumstances of the business, the activities of the remainder of FS and Branch A, if considered together, would not provide a demonstrably greater contribution to the manufacture of Product X than the activities of Branch B and Branch C, if considered together.”. 55. On page 79354, columns 1 and 2, paragraph (b)(4), Example 9 (ii), the second sentence, the language “The remainder of FS, Branch A, and Branch B each provide a contribution through the activities of employees to the manufacture of Product X.” is corrected to read “The remainder of FS, Branch A, Branch B, and Branch C each provide a contribution through the activities of employees to the manufacture of Product X.”. 56. On page 79354, column 2, paragraph (b)(4), Example 9 (ii), the fourth sentence, the language “The tested sales location is Country M because the remainder of FS performs the selling activities with respect to Product X.” is corrected to read “The tested sales location is Country M because the selling activities with respect to Product X are carried on by the remainder of FS.”. 57. On page 79354, column 2, paragraph (b)(4), Example 9 (ii), the fifth sentence, the language “The location of Branch B is the tested manufacturing location because the effective rate of tax imposed on FS’s sales income by Country M (10%) is less than 90% of, and at least 5 percentage points less than, the effective rate of tax that would apply to such income in Country B (24%): and Branch B is the only manufacturing branch that would, after applying §1.954-3(b)(1)(ii)(b), be treated as a separate corporation.” is corrected to read “The location of Branch B is the tested manufacturing location because the effective rate of tax imposed on FS’s sales income by Country M (10%) is less than 90% of, and at least 5 percentage points less than the effective rate of tax that would apply to such income in Country B (24%), and Country B has the lowest effective rate of tax among the manufacturing branches that would, after applying §1.954-3(b)(1)(ii)(b), be treated as a separate corporation.”. 58. On page 79354, column 2, paragraph (b)(4), Example 9 (ii), line nineteen from the top of the column, the language “Country A will be included in the” is corrected to read “Country A by Branch A, will be included in the”. 59. On page 79354, column 2, paragraph (b)(4), Example 9 (ii), a new sentence is added between the sixth and seventh sentences to read “The manufacturing activities performed in Country C by Branch C will be included in the contribution of Branch B for purposes of determining the location of manufacture of Product X because the effective rate of tax imposed on the sales income by Country M (10%) is less than 90% of, and at least 5 percentage points less than, the effective rate of tax that would apply to such income in Country C (25%).”. 60. On page 79354, column 2, paragraph (b)(4), Example 9 (ii), the seventh sentence, the language “Under the facts and circumstances of the business, the manufacturing activities of the remainder of FS and Branch A, considered together, would not provide a demonstrably greater contribution to the manufacture of Product X than the activities of Branch B.” is corrected to read “Under the facts and circumstances of the business, the manufacturing activities of the remainder of FS and Branch A, considered together, would not provide a demonstrably greater contribution to the manufacture of Product X than the activities of Branch B and Branch C, considered together.”. Guy R. Traynor, Federal Register Liaison, Publications & Regulations Br., Associate Chief Counsel Procedure & Administration. Note (Filed by the Office of the Federal Register on March 19, 2009, 8:45 a.m., and published in the issue of the Federal Register for March 20, 2009, 74 F.R. 11843) Announcement 2009-31 Guidance Regarding Foreign Base Company Sales Income AGENCY: Internal Revenue Service (IRS), Treasury. ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking by cross-reference to temporary regulations and notice of public hearing; correction. SUMMARY: This document contains corrections to a notice of proposed rulemaking (REG-150066-08, 2009-5 I.R.B. 423) and notice of public hearing that was published in the Federal Register on Monday, December 29, 2008 (73 FR 79421), relating to foreign base company sales income. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ethan Atticks, (202) 622-3840 (not a toll-free number). SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Background The notice of proposed rulemaking and notice of public hearing that is subject to these corrections are under section 954 of the Internal Revenue Code. Need for correction As published the notice of proposed rulemaking and notice of public hearing contains errors that may prove to be misleading and are in need of correction. Correction of Publication Accordingly, the publication of the notice of proposed rulemaking and notice of public hearing (REG-150066-08), which was the subject of FR Doc. E8-30729, is corrected as follows: 1. On page 79422, column 1, in the preamble under the heading Background and Explanation of Provision, the last sentence, the language “The preamble to the temporary regulations explains these proposed regulations.” is corrected to read “The preamble to the temporary regulations explains the amendments.” 2. On page 79422, column 2, in the preamble under the heading Comments and Public Hearing, the first paragraph, line 3 the language “consideration will be give to any written” is corrected to read “consideration will be given to any written”. 3. On page 79422, column 3, in the preamble under the heading Part 1—Income Taxes, instructional paragraph 2, lines 5 and 6, the language “(b)(2)(ii)(e), (b)(4) Example (3), (c), and (d), and adding Examples 8 and 9 to” is corrected to read “(b)(2)(ii)(e) and (b)(4) Example (3), and adding Examples (8) and (9) to”. 4. On page 79423, column 1, §1.954-3, the third line of Example (8), the language “(8) is the same as the text of §1.954-3T” is corrected to read “(8) is the same as the text of §1.954-3T(b)(4)”. 5. On page 79423, column 1, §1.954-3, the third line of Example (9), the language “(9) is the same as the text of §1.954-3T(b)(4)”. Guy R. Traynor, Federal Register Liaison, Procedure & Administration, Associate Chief Counsel Publications & Regulations. Note (Filed by the Office of the Federal Register on March 19, 2009, 8:45 a.m., and published in the issue of the Federal Register for March 20, 2009, 74 F.R. 11888) Announcement 2009-32 Deletions From Cumulative List of Organizations Contributions to Which are Deductible Under Section 170 of the Code The Internal Revenue Service has revoked its determination that the organizations listed below qualify as organizations described in sections 501(c)(3) and 170(c)(2) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986. Generally, the Service will not disallow deductions for contributions made to a listed organization on or before the date of announcement in the Internal Revenue Bulletin that an organization no longer qualifies. However, the Service is not precluded from disallowing a deduction for any contributions made after an organization ceases to qualify under section 170(c)(2) if the organization has not timely filed a suit for declaratory judgment under section 7428 and if the contributor (1) had knowledge of the revocation of the ruling or determination letter, (2) was aware that such revocation was imminent, or (3) was in part responsible for or was aware of the activities or omissions of the organization that brought about this revocation. If on the other hand a suit for declaratory judgment has been timely filed, contributions from individuals and organizations described in section 170(c)(2) that are otherwise allowable will continue to be deductible. Protection under section 7428(c) would begin on April 13, 2009, and would end on the date the court first determines that the organization is not described in section 170(c)(2) as more particularly set forth in section 7428(c)(1). For individual contributors, the maximum deduction protected is $1,000, with a husband and wife treated as one contributor. This benefit is not extended to any individual, in whole or in part, for the acts or omissions of the organization that were the basis for revocation. Org. Name City State Financially Strong America, Inc. (fka Consumer Debt Solutions, Inc.) Highland NY Announcement 2009-33 Section 7428(c) Validation of Certain Contributions Made During Pendency of Declaratory Judgment Proceedings This announcement serves notice to potential donors that the organization listed below has recently filed a timely declaratory judgment suit under section 7428 of the Code, challenging revocation of its status as an eligible donee under section 170(c)(2). Protection under section 7428(c) of the Code begins on the date that the notice of revocation is published in the Internal Revenue Bulletin and ends on the date on which a court first determines that an organization is not described in section 170(c)(2), as more particularly set forth in section 7428(c)(1). In the case of individual contributors, the maximum amount of contributions protected during this period is limited to $1,000.00, with a husband and wife being treated as one contributor. This protection is not extended to any individual who was responsible, in whole or in part, for the acts or omissions of the organization that were the basis for the revocation. This protection also applies (but without limitation as to amount) to organizations described in section 170(c)(2) which are exempt from tax under section 501(a). If the organization ultimately prevails in its declaratory judgment suit, deductibility of contributions would be subject to the normal limitations set forth under section 170. Org. Name City State Capital Gymnastics Booster Club, Inc. Springfield GA Definition of Terms and Abbreviations Definition of Terms Amplified describes a situation where no change is being made in a prior published position, but the prior position is being extended to apply to a variation of the fact situation set forth therein. Thus, if an earlier ruling held that a principle applied to A, and the new ruling holds that the same principle also applies to B, the earlier ruling is amplified. (Compare with modified, below). Clarified is used in those instances where the language in a prior ruling is being made clear because the language has caused, or may cause, some confusion. It is not used where a position in a prior ruling is being changed. Distinguished describes a situation where a ruling mentions a previously published ruling and points out an essential difference between them. Modified is used where the substance of a previously published position is being changed. Thus, if a prior ruling held that a principle applied to A but not to B, and the new ruling holds that it applies to both A and B, the prior ruling is modified because it corrects a published position. (Compare with amplified and clarified, above). Obsoleted describes a previously published ruling that is not considered determinative with respect to future transactions. This term is most commonly used in a ruling that lists previously published rulings that are obsoleted because of changes in laws or regulations. A ruling may also be obsoleted because the substance has been included in regulations subsequently adopted. Revoked describes situations where the position in the previously published ruling is not correct and the correct position is being stated in a new ruling. Superseded describes a situation where the new ruling does nothing more than restate the substance and situation of a previously published ruling (or rulings). Thus, the term is used to republish under the 1986 Code and regulations the same position published under the 1939 Code and regulations. The term is also used when it is desired to republish in a single ruling a series of situations, names, etc., that were previously published over a period of time in separate rulings. If the new ruling does more than restate the substance of a prior ruling, a combination of terms is used. For example, modified and superseded describes a situation where the substance of a previously published ruling is being changed in part and is continued without change in part and it is desired to restate the valid portion of the previously published ruling in a new ruling that is self contained. In this case, the previously published ruling is first modified and then, as modified, is superseded. Supplemented is used in situations in which a list, such as a list of the names of countries, is published in a ruling and that list is expanded by adding further names in subsequent rulings. After the original ruling has been supplemented several times, a new ruling may be published that includes the list in the original ruling and the additions, and supersedes all prior rulings in the series. Suspended is used in rare situations to show that the previous published rulings will not be applied pending some future action such as the issuance of new or amended regulations, the outcome of cases in litigation, or the outcome of a Service study. Revenue rulings and revenue procedures (hereinafter referred to as “rulings”) that have an effect on previous rulings use the following defined terms to describe the effect: Abbreviations The following abbreviations in current use and formerly used will appear in material published in the Bulletin. A—Individual. Acq.—Acquiescence. B—Individual. BE—Beneficiary. BK—Bank. B.T.A.—Board of Tax Appeals. C—Individual. C.B.—Cumulative Bulletin. CFR—Code of Federal Regulations. CI—City. COOP—Cooperative. Ct.D.—Court Decision. CY—County. D—Decedent. DC—Dummy Corporation. DE—Donee. Del. Order—Delegation Order. DISC—Domestic International Sales Corporation. DR—Donor. E—Estate. EE—Employee. E.O.—Executive Order. ER—Employer. ERISA—Employee Retirement Income Security Act. EX—Executor. F—Fiduciary. FC—Foreign Country. FICA—Federal Insurance Contributions Act. FISC—Foreign International Sales Company. FPH—Foreign Personal Holding Company. F.R.—Federal Register. FUTA—Federal Unemployment Tax Act. FX—Foreign corporation. G.C.M.—Chief Counsel’s Memorandum. GE—Grantee. GP—General Partner. GR—Grantor. IC—Insurance Company. I.R.B.—Internal Revenue Bulletin. LE—Lessee. LP—Limited Partner. LR—Lessor. M—Minor. Nonacq.—Nonacquiescence. O—Organization. P—Parent Corporation. PHC—Personal Holding Company. PO—Possession of the U.S. PR—Partner. PRS—Partnership. PTE—Prohibited Transaction Exemption. Pub. L.—Public Law. REIT—Real Estate Investment Trust. Rev. Proc.—Revenue Procedure. Rev. Rul.—Revenue Ruling. S—Subsidiary. S.P.R.—Statement of Procedural Rules. Stat.—Statutes at Large. T—Target Corporation. T.C.—Tax Court. T.D. —Treasury Decision. TFE—Transferee. TFR—Transferor. T.I.R.—Technical Information Release. TP—Taxpayer. TR—Trust. TT—Trustee. U.S.C.—United States Code. X—Corporation. Y—Corporation. Z —Corporation. Numerical Finding List Numerical Finding List A cumulative list of all revenue rulings, revenue procedures, Treasury decisions, etc., published in Internal Revenue Bulletins 2008-27 through 2008-52 is in Internal Revenue Bulletin 2008-52, dated December 29, 2008. Bulletins 2009-1 through 2009-15 Announcements Article Issue Link Page 2009-1 2009-1 I.R.B. 2009-1 242 2009-2 2009-5 I.R.B. 2009-5 424 2009-3 2009-6 I.R.B. 2009-6 459 2009-4 2009-8 I.R.B. 2009-8 597 2009-5 2009-8 I.R.B. 2009-8 569 2009-6 2009-9 I.R.B. 2009-9 643 2009-7 2009-10 I.R.B. 2009-10 663 2009-8 2009-8 I.R.B. 2009-8 598 2009-9 2009-9 I.R.B. 2009-9 643 2009-10 2009-9 I.R.B. 2009-9 644 2009-11 2009-10 I.R.B. 2009-10 663 2009-12 2009-11 I.R.B. 2009-11 686 2009-13 2009-11 I.R.B. 2009-11 686 2009-14 2009-11 I.R.B. 2009-11 687 2009-15 2009-11 I.R.B. 2009-11 687 2009-16 2009-11 I.R.B. 2009-11 691 2009-17 2009-12 I.R.B. 2009-12 714 2009-18 2009-12 I.R.B. 2009-12 714 2009-19 2009-12 I.R.B. 2009-12 715 2009-20 2009-12 I.R.B. 2009-12 716 2009-21 2009-13 I.R.B. 2009-13 730 2009-22 2009-13 I.R.B. 2009-13 731 2009-23 2009-13 I.R.B. 2009-13 731 2009-24 2009-13 I.R.B. 2009-13 732 2009-25 2009-14 I.R.B. 2009-14 755 2009-26 2009-14 I.R.B. 2009-14 755 2009-27 2009-14 I.R.B. 2009-14 756 2009-28 2009-15 I.R.B. 2009-15 2009-29 2009-14 I.R.B. 2009-14 757 2009-30 2009-15 I.R.B. 2009-15 2009-31 2009-15 I.R.B. 2009-15 2009-32 2009-15 I.R.B. 2009-15 2009-33 2009-15 I.R.B. 2009-15 Notices Article Issue Link Page 2009-1 2009-2 I.R.B. 2009-2 250 2009-2 2009-4 I.R.B. 2009-4 344 2009-3 2009-2 I.R.B. 2009-2 250 2009-4 2009-2 I.R.B. 2009-2 251 2009-5 2009-3 I.R.B. 2009-3 309 2009-6 2009-3 I.R.B. 2009-3 311 2009-7 2009-3 I.R.B. 2009-3 312 2009-8 2009-4 I.R.B. 2009-4 347 2009-9 2009-5 I.R.B. 2009-5 419 2009-10 2009-5 I.R.B. 2009-5 419 2009-11 2009-5 I.R.B. 2009-5 420 2009-12 2009-6 I.R.B. 2009-6 446 2009-13 2009-6 I.R.B. 2009-6 447 2009-14 2009-7 I.R.B. 2009-7 516 2009-15 2009-6 I.R.B. 2009-6 449 2009-16 2009-8 I.R.B. 2009-8 572 2009-17 2009-8 I.R.B. 2009-8 575 2009-18 2009-10 I.R.B. 2009-10 648 2009-19 2009-10 I.R.B. 2009-10 660 2009-20 2009-12 I.R.B. 2009-12 711 2009-21 2009-13 I.R.B. 2009-13 724 2009-22 2009-14 I.R.B. 2009-14 741 2009-25 2009-15 I.R.B. 2009-15 Proposed Regulations Article Issue Link Page 144615-02 2009-7 I.R.B. 2009-7 561 148568-04 2009-5 I.R.B. 2009-5 421 160872-04 2009-4 I.R.B. 2009-4 358 158747-06 2009-4 I.R.B. 2009-4 362 116699-07 2009-13 I.R.B. 2009-13 727 138326-07 2009-9 I.R.B. 2009-9 638 143686-07 2009-8 I.R.B. 2009-8 579 150670-07 2009-4 I.R.B. 2009-4 378 113462-08 2009-4 I.R.B. 2009-4 379 147636-08 2009-9 I.R.B. 2009-9 641 150066-08 2009-5 I.R.B. 2009-5 423 Revenue Procedures Article Issue Link Page 2009-1 2009-1 I.R.B. 2009-1 1 2009-2 2009-1 I.R.B. 2009-1 87 2009-3 2009-1 I.R.B. 2009-1 107 2009-4 2009-1 I.R.B. 2009-1 118 2009-5 2009-1 I.R.B. 2009-1 161 2009-6 2009-1 I.R.B. 2009-1 189 2009-7 2009-1 I.R.B. 2009-1 226 2009-8 2009-1 I.R.B. 2009-1 229 2009-9 2009-2 I.R.B. 2009-2 256 2009-10 2009-2 I.R.B. 2009-2 267 2009-11 2009-3 I.R.B. 2009-3 313 2009-12 2009-3 I.R.B. 2009-3 321 2009-13 2009-3 I.R.B. 2009-3 323 2009-14 2009-3 I.R.B. 2009-3 324 2009-15 2009-4 I.R.B. 2009-4 356 2009-16 2009-6 I.R.B. 2009-6 449 2009-17 2009-7 I.R.B. 2009-7 517 2009-18 2009-11 I.R.B. 2009-11 670 2009-19 2009-14 I.R.B. 2009-14 747 2009-20 2009-14 I.R.B. 2009-14 749 Revenue Rulings Article Issue Link Page 2009-1 2009-2 I.R.B. 2009-2 248 2009-2 2009-2 I.R.B. 2009-2 245 2009-3 2009-5 I.R.B. 2009-5 382 2009-4 2009-5 I.R.B. 2009-5 408 2009-5 2009-6 I.R.B. 2009-6 432 2009-6 2009-12 I.R.B. 2009-12 694 2009-7 2009-13 I.R.B. 2009-13 717 2009-8 2009-10 I.R.B. 2009-10 645 2009-9 2009-14 I.R.B. 2009-14 735 2009-10 2009-14 I.R.B. 2009-14 738 Tax Conventions Article Issue Link Page 2009-5 2009-8 I.R.B. 2009-8 569 Treasury Decisions Article Issue Link Page 9434 2009-4 I.R.B. 2009-4 339 9435 2009-4 I.R.B. 2009-4 333 9436 2009-3 I.R.B. 2009-3 268 9437 2009-4 I.R.B. 2009-4 341 9438 2009-5 I.R.B. 2009-5 387 9439 2009-5 I.R.B. 2009-5 416 9440 2009-5 I.R.B. 2009-5 409 9441 2009-7 I.R.B. 2009-7 460 9442 2009-6 I.R.B. 2009-6 434 9443 2009-8 I.R.B. 2009-8 564 9444 2009-9 I.R.B. 2009-9 603 9445 2009-9 I.R.B. 2009-9 635 9446 2009-9 I.R.B. 2009-9 607 9447 2009-12 I.R.B. 2009-12 694 Effect of Current Actions on Previously Published Items Finding List of Current Actions on Previously Published Items A cumulative list of current actions on previously published items in Internal Revenue Bulletins 2008-27 through 2008-52 is in Internal Revenue Bulletin 2008-52, dated December 29, 2008. Bulletins 2009-1 through 2009-15 Notices Old Article Action New Article Issue Link Page 99-35 Obsoleted by Notice 2009-15 2009-6 I.R.B. 2009-6 449 2001-55 Modified by Notice 2009-1 2009-2 I.R.B. 2009-2 250 2002-27 Modified by Notice 2009-9 2009-5 I.R.B. 2009-5 419 2005-74 Obsoleted by T.D. 9446 2009-9 I.R.B. 2009-9 607 2007-26 Modified by Notice 2009-15 2009-6 I.R.B. 2009-6 449 2007-54 Obsoleted by T.D. 9436 2009-3 I.R.B. 2009-3 268 2008-11 Obsoleted by T.D. 9436 2009-3 I.R.B. 2009-3 268 2008-12 Obsoleted by T.D. 9436 2009-3 I.R.B. 2009-3 268 2008-12 Obsoleted by Rev. Proc. 2009-11 2009-3 I.R.B. 2009-3 313 2008-13 Obsoleted by T.D. 9436 2009-3 I.R.B. 2009-3 268 2008-13 List of forms modified and superseded by Rev. Proc. 2009-11 2009-3 I.R.B. 2009-3 313 2008-13 Modified and clarified by Notice 2009-5 2009-3 I.R.B. 2009-3 309 2008-46 Obsoleted by T.D. 9436 2009-3 I.R.B. 2009-3 268 2008-46 Obsoleted by Rev. Proc. 2009-11 2009-3 I.R.B. 2009-3 313 2008-100 Amplified and superseded by Notice 2009-14 2009-7 I.R.B. 2009-7 516 Proposed Regulations Old Article Action New Article Issue Link Page 144615-02 Corrected by Ann. 2009-19 2009-12 I.R.B. 2009-12 715 149519-03 Withdrawn by Ann. 2009-4 2009-8 I.R.B. 2009-8 597 148326-05 Corrected by Ann. 2009-14 2009-11 I.R.B. 2009-11 687 158747-06 Hearing scheduled by Ann. 2009-29 2009-14 I.R.B. 2009-14 757 150066-08 Corrected by Ann. 2009-31 2009-15 I.R.B. 2009-15 Revenue Procedures Old Article Action New Article Issue Link Page 2007-17 Superseded by Rev. Proc. 2009-14 2009-3 I.R.B. 2009-3 324 2007-68 Superseded by Rev. Proc. 2009-17 2009-7 I.R.B. 2009-7 517 2007-71 Modified by Notice 2009-3 2009-2 I.R.B. 2009-2 250 2008-1 Superseded by Rev. Proc. 2009-1 2009-1 I.R.B. 2009-1 1 2008-2 Superseded by Rev. Proc. 2009-2 2009-1 I.R.B. 2009-1 87 2008-3 Superseded by Rev. Proc. 2009-3 2009-1 I.R.B. 2009-1 107 2008-4 Superseded by Rev. Proc. 2009-4 2009-1 I.R.B. 2009-1 118 2008-5 Superseded by Rev. Proc. 2009-5 2009-1 I.R.B. 2009-1 161 2008-6 Superseded by Rev. Proc. 2009-6 2009-1 I.R.B. 2009-1 189 2008-7 Superseded by Rev. Proc. 2009-7 2009-1 I.R.B. 2009-1 226 2008-8 Superseded by Rev. Proc. 2009-8 2009-1 I.R.B. 2009-1 229 2008-9 Superseded by Rev. Proc. 2009-9 2009-2 I.R.B. 2009-2 256 2008-17 Obsoleted in part by Rev. Proc. 2009-18 2009-11 I.R.B. 2009-11 670 2008-61 Superseded by Rev. Proc. 2009-3 2009-1 I.R.B. 2009-1 107 2008-65 Amplified and supplemented by Rev. Proc. 2009-16 2009-6 I.R.B. 2009-6 449 2008-68 Amplified and superseded by Rev. Proc. 2009-15 2009-4 I.R.B. 2009-4 356 Revenue Rulings Old Article Action New Article Issue Link Page 65-286 Obsoleted by T.D. 9435 2009-4 I.R.B. 2009-4 333 71-381 Obsoleted in part by Rev. Rul. 2009-9 2009-14 I.R.B. 2009-14 735 76-54 Obsoleted by T.D. 9435 2009-4 I.R.B. 2009-4 333 92-19 Supplemented by Rev. Rul. 2009-3 2009-5 I.R.B. 2009-5 382 2008-19 Modified by Rev. Rul. 2009-3 2009-5 I.R.B. 2009-5 382 Treasury Decisions Old Article Action New Article Issue Link Page 9436 Corrected by Ann. 2009-15 2009-11 I.R.B. 2009-11 687 9438 Corrected by Ann. 2009-30 2009-15 I.R.B. 2009-15 9439 Corrected by Ann. 2009-12 2009-11 I.R.B. 2009-11 686 9441 Corrected by Ann. 2009-18 2009-12 I.R.B. 2009-12 714 9442 Corrected by Ann. 2009-13 2009-11 I.R.B. 2009-11 686 9442 Corrected by Ann. 2009-20 2009-12 I.R.B. 2009-12 716 9446 Corrected by Ann. 2009-23 2009-13 I.R.B. 2009-13 731 How to get the Internal Revenue Bulletin INTERNAL REVENUE BULLETIN The Introduction at the beginning of this issue describes the purpose and content of this publication. The weekly Internal Revenue Bulletin is sold on a yearly subscription basis by the Superintendent of Documents. Current subscribers are notified by the Superintendent of Documents when their subscriptions must be renewed. CUMULATIVE BULLETINS The contents of this weekly Bulletin are consolidated semiannually into a permanent, indexed, Cumulative Bulletin. These are sold on a single copy basis and are not included as part of the subscription to the Internal Revenue Bulletin. Subscribers to the weekly Bulletin are notified when copies of the Cumulative Bulletin are available. Certain issues of Cumulative Bulletins are out of print and are not available. Persons desiring available Cumulative Bulletins, which are listed on the reverse, may purchase them from the Superintendent of Documents. ACCESS THE INTERNAL REVENUE BULLETIN ON THE INTERNET You may view the Internal Revenue Bulletin on the Internet at www.irs.gov. Select Businesses. Under Businesses Topics, select More Topics. Then select Internal Revenue Bulletins. INTERNAL REVENUE BULLETINS ON CD-ROM Internal Revenue Bulletins are available annually as part of Publication 1796 (Tax Products CD-ROM). The CD-ROM can be purchased from National Technical Information Service (NTIS) on the Internet at www.irs.gov/cdorders (discount for online orders) or by calling 1-877-233-6767. The first release is available in mid-December and the final release is available in late January. How to Order Check the publications and/or subscription(s) desired on the reverse, complete the order blank, enclose the proper remittance, detach entire page, and mail to the P.O. Box 371954, Pittsburgh PA, 15250-7954. Please allow two to six weeks, plus mailing time, for delivery. We Welcome Comments About the Internal Revenue Bulletin If you have comments concerning the format or production of the Internal Revenue Bulletin or suggestions for improving it, we would be pleased to hear from you. You can email us your suggestions or comments through the IRS Internet Home Page (www.irs.gov) or write to the IRS Bulletin Unit, SE:W:CAR:MP:T:T:SP, Washington, DC 20224.