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US GAAP Conversion of Foreign Financials: Most Common Issues | Form 5471 Lawyer

Form 5471 generally requires US GAAP (Generally Accepted Accounting Practices) conversion of foreign financial statements for the purposes of reporting book income, because foreign accountants usually prepare these statements based on a different foreign standard.  While Treas. Reg. Reg. §1.964-1(a)(2) contains a limited exception to the US GAAP conversion adjustments for “non-material” items (the same exception applies to tested/income loss calculation for GILTI purposes; see Treas. Reg. §1.951A-2(c)(2) (which refers to Treas. Reg. §1.952-2, which, in turn, mention the “materiality” rules of the §964 regulation)), the translation of foreign financial statements to US GAAP is a common problem for tax professionals who deal with Form 5471.

In this article, I will outline the most common issues related to the conversion of foreign financial statements to US GAAP.

US GAAP Conversion Issues: Depreciation

At the top of the US GAAP adjustments are different methods of depreciation and amortization. These differences cover pretty much all types of depreciable assets: fixed assets and intangible assets (including goodwill).

When we at Sherayzen Law Office prepare Forms 5471 for our clients, it is our standard practice to request that foreign accountants provide a detailed depreciation report, including amounts and dates concerning the purchase/sale of assets, the amortization/depreciation conventions used in foreign financial statements and the methods of accounting for increase/decrease in the value of depreciable assets.

US GAAP Conversion Issues: Inventory

Another very common area of US GAAP adjustments involves inventory. Here there could be an array of variations from FIFO/LIFO to expense capitalization methods and valuation of inventory.  Common problems arise when the inventory valuation adjustments result from related-party transactions.

For example, in one of our cases, our client had contracts of sale drafted between the head office in the United States and a foreign branch office (due to the foreign country’s requirements), making it impossible to directly rely on the foreign branch’s financial statements to determine the Cost of Goods Sold (COGS) due to varying mark-ups on tens of thousands of items.

US GAAP Conversion Issues: Valuation of Assets

One highly-problematic area for US GAAP adjustments is the valuation of assets in the foreign financial statements.  Oftentimes and in a large number of tax jurisdictions, historic cost of assets is replaced with another valuation method allowed by a local accounting standard but not by US GAAP.

We see this problem appear often in tax jurisdictions as varied as Czech Republic, Jamaica, Nigeria, Pakistan, Poland, et cetera.

US GAAP Conversion Issues: Mergers, Dissolutions and Acquisitions

Mergers, dissolutions and acquisitions may result in a bewildering array of differences between foreign financial statements and US GAAP requirements: from income recognition to asset valuation, treatment of reserve, E&P calculations and so on. Sometimes, there may be a break in the continuity of financial statements due to a dissolution of one entity and creation of another entity for US GAAP purposes while entities are treated as one entity in a foreign jurisdiction. I remember one case from Pakistan and one case from Poland where we had to make just an enormous amount of changes to bring these financial statements into compliance with US GAAP precisely due to the issues of mergers and acquisitions.

US GAAP Conversion Issues: Hyperinflation

Hyperinflation may present a US international tax attorney with its own challenges. As it is especially common in Latin America, local financials would incorporate inflationary adjustments that are incompatible with US GAAP.  An international tax lawyer has to identify these adjustments, reverse them and, if necessary, replace with adjustments required by GAAP.

US GAAP Conversion Issues: Reserves

Finally, the last most common area of problems has to do with reserves.  The problem usually arises in situations where local accounting rules permit allocation of certain reserves in a manner incompatible with US GAAP rules.

US GAAP Conversion Issues: Special Case of Consolidated Financial Statements

In a situation where a US parent company of a foreign subsidiary prepares consolidated financial statements, problems may arise with respect to whether these statements provide all relevant information needed to create a GAAP-compliant Form 5471. There are four main areas of concern in this type of cases: artificial consolidations through check-the-box rules, foreign currency fluctuations, deductions related to pensions and transfers within the group.  I will discuss these issues in more detail in a future article.

E&P Adjustments

I want to mention here that, in addition to GAAP adjustments to local financial statements, Form 5471 also requires E&P adjustments to GAAP-compliant financial statements. I will explore this topic in a future article.

Contact Sherayzen Law Office For Professional Help with Form 5471 Preparation and Offshore Voluntary Disclosures

If you are a US person who owns (fully or partially) a foreign corporation and you need to prepare a Form 5471 for a current year or any previous years, then you should contact Sherayzen Law Office for professional help.

Our international tax team, led by an international tax attorney and founder of Sherayzen Law office, Mr. Eugene Sherayzen, is a group of highly experienced and creative tax professionals with profound knowledge of US international tax law and US international tax accounting rules. We have filed hundreds of Forms 5471 in the past helping clients around the globe with their current US tax compliance as well as offshore voluntary disclosures related to prior Form 5471 noncompliance. We can help You!

Contact Us Today to Schedule Your Confidential Consultation!

2024 Form 5471 Penalties | International Tax Lawyer & Attorney

Failure to timely and correctly submit Form 5471 with a US tax return may lead to an imposition of Form 5471 penalties. In this article, I will discus the most important 2024 Form 5471 penalties that US taxpayers may face if they fail to comply with the Form 5471 requirements.

2024 Form 5471 Penalties: Purpose of Form 5471

We first need to understand the purpose of Form 5471 and broadly identify who may need to file this form. The IRS Form 5471 is an extremely complex form that is used to satisfy the reporting requirements of mainly two esoteric sections of the Internal Revenue Code: 26 U.S.C. § 6038 (“Information reporting with respect to certain foreign corporations and partnerships”) and 26 U.S.C. § 6046 (“Returns as to organization or reorganization of foreign corporations and as to acquisitions of their stock”).

It should be noted that Form 5471 is used to satisfy other US tax provisions, especially after the 2017 tax reform. IRS §§ 6038 and 6046, however, are most relevant for our discussion of Form 5471 penalties.

Certain US citizens and US tax residents who are officers, directors or US shareholders of a foreign corporation may need to file Form 5471 and accurately comply with its reporting requirements. Failure to file Form 5471 or failure to file a correct Form 5471 may result in the imposition of steep IRS penalties.

The First Set of 2024 Form 5471 Penalties: Failure to file information required under section 26 U.S.C. § 6038(a)

From the outset, it is important to note that 26 U.S.C. § 6038 applies to two different parts of Form 5471: the Form 5471 proper (i.e. the first six pages containing the identifying information and Schedules A through I plus Schedules H and I-1) and Schedule M of Form 5471. Failure to file either is enough to trigger a $10,000 penalty for each annual accounting period of each foreign corporation. If the IRS sends the taxpayer a notice of a failure to file, an additional $10,000 penalty (per foreign corporation) will be charged for each 30-day period (or fraction thereof), during which the failure continues after the 90-day period in which the notification occurred, has expired. This additional penalty is limited to a maximum of $50,000 for each failed filing.

Furthermore, there is an income tax penalty associated with the failure to comply with 26 U.S.C. § 6038 in a timely manner – the taxpayer may be subject to a 10% reduction of certain available Foreign Tax Credits. A further 5% reduction may be applied for each 3-month period (or fraction thereof), during which the failure to timely report or file continues after the 90-day period of IRS notification has expired. (26 U.S.C. § 6038(c)(2) places certain limitations on this penalty).

The Second Set of 2024 Form 5471 Penalties: Failure to file information required by 26 U.S.C. § 6046 and related regulations (Form 5471 and Schedule O)

In addition to 26 U.S.C. § 6038 Form 5471 penalties, there is also an additional set of Form 5471 penalties associated with 26 U.S.C. § 6046 (Form 5471 and Schedule O). Failure to comply with 26 U.S.C. § 6046 will subject the taxpayer to another $10,000 penalty for each failure to file for each reportable transaction. Additionally, if the failure to report or file continues for more than 90 days after the date the IRS mails notice of this failure, an additional $10,000 penalty will apply for each 30-day period (or fraction thereof) during which the failure continues after the 90-day period has expired. This additional penalty is limited to a maximum of $50,000.

2024 Form 5471 Non-Compliance May Result in Criminal Penalties

In addition to civil penalties under 26 U.S.C. § 6038 and 26 U.S.C. § 6046, criminal penalties may apply to Form 5471 filers in certain circumstances. In particular, a willful failure to file an accurate Form 5471 may activate the broad provisions of 26 U.S.C. § 7203 (“Willful failure to file return, supply information, or pay tax”), 26 U.S.C. § 7206 (“Fraud and false statements”), and 26 U.S.C. § 7207 (“Fraudulent returns, statements, or other documents”).

2024 Form 5471 Penalties and Persons Other Than the Filer

In situations where the filer should have filed Forms 5471 for other persons, but failed to do so, Form 5471 penalties may be extended to these other persons.

Contact Sherayzen Law Office For Help With 2024 Form 5471 Penalties and Compliance

If you partially or fully own a foreign corporation, you may be subject to the Form 5471 requirements. As explained in this article, failure to timely and/or correctly comply with your Form 5471 filing obligations may result in steep Form 5471 penalties.

Contact Sherayzen Law Office today for professional help concerning Form 5471 penalties, including engaging in offshore voluntary disclosures involving Form 5471.

Contact Us Now to Schedule Your Confidential Consultation!

2023 Form 5471 Deadline in 2024 | International Tax Lawyer & Attorney

IRS Form 5471 is one of the most important US international information returns. In this brief essay, I will discuss the tax year 2023 Form 5471 deadline in the calendar year 2024.

2023 Form 5471 Deadline: What is Form 5471

Form 5471 is a US international information return. In general, the IRS uses Form 5471 to collect information about certain US persons who are officers, directors, or shareholders in certain foreign corporations. These US persons, in turn, use Form 5471 to satisfy the reporting requirements of the IRC (Internal Revenue Code) §§9656038 and 6046 as well as related regulations. In other words, US taxpayers utilize Form 5471 to comply with their reporting obligations concerning their ownership of and transactions with a foreign corporation.

Form 5471, however, is more than just an international information return. It also contains the relevant schedules related to income recognition by US owners of foreign corporations through the operation of anti-deferral tax regimes such as Subpart F rules965 tax and GILTI tax.

2023 Form 5471 Deadline: Who Must File It

Determining whether you are required to file a Form 5471 and which schedules you must attach to it may also be very complicated. As a result of the 2017 tax reform, Form 5471 now sports a total of five categories of required filers; two of these categories contain three sub-categories. In other words, the instructions to Form 5471 describe now a total of nine categories of filers!

Once you determine that you fall into one of these categories, you must carefully determine which schedules, statements and attachments you must complete in order to fully comply with your Form 5471 obligations.

I should also note that a separate Form 5471 is required for each applicable foreign corporation. This is the case even if one foreign corporation owns the other; there is no consolidated group filing under Form 5471.

2023 Form 5471 Deadline: Complexity

Form 5471 is incredibly complex. It forces its filers to convert foreign financial statements to US GAAP. It further requires reporting of an astounding range of transactions between a foreign corporation and its US owners as well as the affiliates of US owners. Finally, as it was already mentioned above, US taxpayers use Form 5471 schedules to calculate the income that they must recognize under the various anti-deferral tax regimes.

Thus, completing a Form 5471 may require a significant effort and a lot of time. This is why you need plan well ahead to make sure that you file your Form 5471 timely.

2023 Form 5471 Deadline: Penalties

A failure to timely file an accurate Form 5471 may result in imposition of large IRS penalties. Moreover, since Form 5471 is used to satisfy a variety of tax obligations, different penalties may be imposed under different IRC sections.

For example, a failure to file Form 5471 Schedule M may result in the imposition of a $10,000 penalty pursuant to §6038(a). A failure to file Form 5471 Schedule O is a violation of §6046 and the IRS may assess a separate section 6046 is subject to a $10,000 penalty for each reportable transaction.

2023 Form 5471 Deadline: When to File and Where

All filers (unless they fall under an exception) must attach their Forms 5471 to their income tax returns (if applicable, a partnership return or tax exempt organization return). Both, the income tax return and Form 5471 must be filed by the due date, including extensions, for that return.

In other words, if you are an individual filing Form 1040, your 2023 Form 5471 deadline is April 15, 2024. If you file an extension, the deadline will shift to October 15, 2024.

Contact Sherayzen Law Office for Professional Help With Your 2023 Form 5471 Deadline

If you are required to file a Form 5471 for the tax year 2023, contact Sherayzen Law Office for professional help. We have successfully helped US taxpayers around the world with their Form 5471 compliance, and we can help you!

Contact Us Today to Schedule Your Confidential Consultation!

Importance of Outbound Business Tax Planning | International Tax Attorney

Outbound business tax planning should form part of every outbound business transaction, whether it is in technology transfers, export of goods or an investment overseas. In this article, I would like to discuss the main goal of the outbound business tax planning and identify the overall “global” (i.e. looking at the entire genre of outbound transactions) strategies which are utilized to achieve this goal.

The Main Purpose of the Outbound Business Tax Planning

The main goal of the outbound business tax planning is not difficult to discern – legal reduction of tax burden and, thereby, maximization of profits. What is important to understand is that the outbound business tax planning seeks to optimize the after-tax financial return from a transaction by reducing the taxes paid. It is not concerned so much with the pre-tax business details of the outbound transaction (although, these details may play a very important role in tax planning, but as a strategy and not a goal).

In other words, instead of treating taxes as just another cost of doing business, a business can significantly increase its real return from an outbound transaction through careful business tax planning.

Three Global Strategies to Achieve the Main Goal of the Outbound Business Tax Planning

How can the goal of after-tax financial return be achieved? There are three main strategies that can be utilized by an international tax attorney. The first strategy is to avoid the existence of any taxing jurisdiction in the destination country (i.e. the foreign country that is the object of the outbound business transaction). In other words, the transaction is structured in such a way as to avoid (or, at least, significantly reduce) the taxation of profits overseas.

The second strategy is to postpone for a significant period of time the US taxation of foreign profits until these profits are repatriated into the United States. Since US businesses are taxed on their worldwide income, the focus of this strategy is on deferral of US income tax, rather than its complete avoidance. The economic benefits of such deferral can be very significant, because the profits can be either reinvested tax-free, accumulate interest (also tax-free) or serve as a collateral for borrowing in the United States.

What happens if the income taxation in the destination country cannot be avoided? Does the outbound business tax planning have anything to offer in this case?

The answer is yes – the prevention of significant double-taxation of foreign income in the United States. This is the third main strategy of the outbound business tax planning. A prominent example of such strategy is the utilization of foreign tax credit to offset US tax liability.

Contact Sherayzen Law Office for Help with Your Outbound Business Tax Planning

If you are planning to expand your business overseas, contact Sherayzen Law Office for professional help. We will thoroughly analyze your planned business transaction, create a tax plan for you and implement it. Moreover, our firm will also provide you with the annual US tax compliance support with respect to US tax compliance requirements that may arise as a result of the tax plan (such as Form 5471 or 8865 compliance).

Contact Us Today to Schedule Your Confidential Consultation!