Groups of companies Flashcards
To who is available group loss relief?
- to members of a 75% group relief group
Losses of one member of the group can be surrendered to other group companies, to utilise against their own taxable total profits.
For sub-subsidiaries to be in a group, the parent company must have an effective interest in the sub-subsidiary of at least 75%
Group can be created through companies resident overseas
Two companies are members of a 75% group relief group where:
- one company is the 75% subsidiary of the other, or
- both companies are 75% subsidiaries of a third company
A company (the parent company) has a 75% subsidiary if:
- it owns, directly or indirectly, at least 75% of its ordinary share capital
- it has the right to 75% or more of its distributable profits
- it has the right to 75% or more of its net assets on a winding up
Where a group of companies form a group relief group:
- losses of one group company may be surrendered to other companies in the group
- the recipient company can then relieve the losses against its own taxable total profits
What is the surrendering company?
- is the company that surrenders its loss
What is the claimant company?
- is the company to which to loss is surrendered
The losses which may be surrendered are:
- trading losses: current period; brought forward trading losses to the extent that they cannot be used against the surrendering company’s own total profits
- unrelieved QCDs
- unrelieved property business losses: current period and brought forward losses
- unrelieved QCDs are treated as surrendered before unrelieved property business losses
- capital losses cannot be surrendered to group companies under these rules
QCDs and property losses are only ‘unrelieved’ if:
- they exceed any other income and gains before the deduction of any losses ( current year, brought forward or carried back)
The surrendering company
- may surrender any amount of its current period trading losses, unrelieved QCDs and unrelieved property business losses
- brought forward trading and property losses can be surrendered to extent that the surrendering company is unable to use the loss
- there is no requirement for the surrendering company to actually claim to relieve a trading loss against its own profits first
The claimant company
- offsets the group relieved losses against taxable total profits of its corresponding accounting period
The maximum group loss relief that can be accepted by the claimant company is:
Total profits x
Less: Losses brought forward ( full amount) (x)
Less: Current year losses (x)
Less: QCD relief (x)
The claim for group relief:
- is made by the claimant company on its corporation tax return
- within two years of the end of its AP
- but requires a notice of consent from the surrendering company
Claimant corresponding accounting period
- is any accounting period falling wholly or partly within the surrendering company’s accounting period
- where the companies do not have coterminous (same) year ends, the available profits and losses must be time apportioned, to find the relevant amounts falling within the corresponding accounting period
- the maximum loss that can be surrendered = lower of:
# loss in the surrendering (loss-making) company for the corresponding accounting period
# taxable total profits in the claimant company for the corresponding accounting period
If the claimant company pays the surrendering company for the group relief, the payment is ignored for corporation tax purposes:
- it is not tax allowable in the claimant company’s computation
- it is not taxable income in the surrendering company’s computation
The following points should be considered, when deciding how to offset a trading loss which arises within a 75% group relief group company:
- whether the loss should be surrendered
- order of surrender