DocketNumber: Docket No. 8574-80
Citation Numbers: 80 T.C. 551, 1983 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 104, 80 T.C. No. 27
Judges: Drennen,Dawson,Fay,Wiles,Hamblen,Tannenwald,Simpson,Sterrett,Korner,Shields,Cohen
Filed Date: 3/21/1983
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/14/2024
*104
Petitioner borrowed Luxembourg francs from a Luxembourg bank to acquire a 50-percent interest in a Luxembourg corporation. When the first payment on the principal of the loan became due, petitioner borrowed Belgian francs (equal in dollar value to the Luxembourg francs) from a Belgian bank to refinance the loan. Later, after petitioner had sold the stock in the Luxembourg corporation, petitioner acquired Belgian francs from a Chicago bank to pay off the loan from the Belgian bank. Each time petitioner borrowed francs to pay off a bank loan, the value of the francs in U.S. dollars had increased, so petitioner was required to pay more dollars to acquire the francs required to pay the loans than the francs were worth in U.S. dollars at the time the loans were made.
*551 OPINION
Respondent determined deficiencies in petitioner's Federal income tax for its taxable years ending September 30, 1974, and September 30, 1975, in the amounts of $ 179,971 and $ 149,350, respectively. Due to concessions by respondent, the only issue for decision is whether foreign currency exchange losses incurred by petitioner in each of the years in issue are deductible as ordinary losses, or instead, as capital losses.
The facts of this case were fully stipulated pursuant to
National-Standard Co. (petitioner) is a corporation with its principal office and place of business in Niles, Mich. For its fiscal years ending September 30, 1974 and 1975, petitioner*108 filed its consolidated Federal corporate income tax return with *552 the Internal Revenue Service, Cincinnati, Ohio. Petitioner kept its books and reported its income on the accrual method of accounting.
Petitioner is a publicly held corporation whose shares are traded on the New York Stock Exchange and the Midwest Stock Exchange. Petitioner is a diversified manufacturer of wire and other metal products, and of machinery. Most of petitioner's products are raw materials used for fabrication or incorporation into another product, or are components to be used in a larger product. During the taxable years in question, petitioner operated 23 facilities in the United States, 4 facilities in the United Kingdom, and 1 facility each in Canada, France, and South Africa. In addition, petitioner had 4 controlled foreign corporations.
Prior to 1970, petitioner owned a 40-percent interest in a German and a Luxembourg corporation which operated manufacturing facilities in Germany, Luxembourg, and Belgium; the remaining 60 percent was owned by Accerces Ruenies de Burback-Eich-Dudelange S.A. (hereinafter ARBED) or its subsidiary (hereinafter sometimes collectively referred to as the ARBED*109 group). As a result of a series of negotiations which commenced in 1970, petitioner and the ARBED group agreed to establish a new corporation known as FAN International, a Luxembourg corporation, to be owned 50 percent by petitioner and 50 percent by the ARBED group. This corporation was to construct a new manufacturing facility in Luxembourg. Each owner agreed to contribute $ 5 million to the equity of FAN International.
Due to restrictions imposed by the U.S. Government as to the amount which a domestic corporation could invest abroad, petitioner had to borrow from a foreign source to meet its equity contribution requirements for FAN International. In addition, petitioner had to give assurances to the U.S. Government that no part of these funds would be repaid from domestic sources for a minimum of 7 years.
On September 17, 1970, petitioner entered into an agreement with Caisse D'Espargne De L'Etat (hereinafter Caisse), a Luxembourg bank, to borrow 250 million Luxembourg francs (hereinafter LF), then having an equivalent U.S. dollar value of $ 5 million. The interest rate charged on the loan was 8 percent. The agreement expressly provided that the proceeds *553 of the*110 loan were to be used solely for satisfying petitioner's equity contribution obligation in FAN International.
Thereafter, petitioner drew down on the Caisse loan commitment as follows:
Date | Amount |
Dec. 31, 1970 | LF50 million |
June 1, 1971 | LF50 million |
Oct. 19, 1971 | LF50 million |
Dec. 20, 1971 | LF100 million |
Total | LF250 million |
These funds were immediately invested in the stock of FAN International.
In the fall of 1973, petitioner considered either delaying repayment of or refinancing the Caisse loan because, as the time for the first payment thereon approached, petitioner was experiencing certain cash flow difficulties due to expansion. Because of favorable European interest rates and in anticipation of a rise in the dollar's market exchange rate with European currency, petitioner concluded that it would refinance the Caisse loan through Caisse or some other foreign source.
Also during the fall of 1973, petitioner began to reassess its investment in the three FAN entities and began negotiations with ARBED to sell its interests therein. On January 2, 1974, petitioner sold its interest in FAN International and certain other foreign corporations in which ARBED also had*111 an interest, to ARBED for $ 8,684,875. Petitioner reported a gain on the sale of its FAN International stock on its fiscal 1974 income tax return as long-term capital gain.
Since petitioner was liquidating its Luxembourg investment, Caisse could not, pursuant to its bylaws, refinance its loan to petitioner. Subsequently, petitioner entered into an agreement with Societe Generale Alsacienne De Banque (hereinafter Societe Generale), a Belgian bank, to borrow 250 million Belgian francs (hereinafter BF), the proceeds of which were to be used to pay off its Caisse loan. *554 pursuant to petitioner's instructions, Societe Generale paid BF250 million to Caisse in repayment of the Caisse loan.
On December 26, 1974, petitioner purchased BF266,944,444 from the First National Bank of Chicago. On the same date, these funds were used to pay off the Societe Generale loan of BF250 million plus accrued*112 interest of BF16,944,444. These francs cost petitioner $ 7,207,499.99.
The exchange rates existing between either the Luxembourg franc or the Belgian franc, on one hand, and the dollar, on the other hand, at the respective relevant dates were as follows:
U.S. dollar equivalent | |
of 1 Luxembourg | |
Date | or Belgian franc |
Sept. 17, 1970 | $ 0.02 |
Dec. 31, 1970 | 0.0201 |
June 1, 1971 | 0.0201 |
Oct. 19, 1971 | 0.0214 |
Dec. 20, 1971 | 0.0220 |
Feb. 28, 1974 | 0.02461 |
Dec. 26, 1974 | 0.0270 |
For its fiscal year ending September 30, 1974, petitioner claimed an ordinary loss of $ 1,162,500 as a result of the fluctuation in the exchange rates between the time it agreed to borrow LF250 million from Caisse, and the time it borrowed BF250 million from Societe Generale to repay the Caisse loan. *113 For the fiscal year ending September 30, 1975, petitioner claimed an ordinary loss of $ 587,500 as a result of the fluctuation in the exchange rate between the time it borrowed BF250 million from Societe Generale and the time it purchased Belgian francs to pay off that loan. *555 Luxembourg corporation, using Luxembourg francs to pay for the investment. The stock acquired was undoubtedly a capital asset in petitioner's hands.
But when foreign currency, which fluctuates in value with the U.S. dollar, is involved in such a transaction, the simplistic, direct approach to the tax results cannot be, or has not been, applied. The law seems to be (see
The parties are in agreement as to the amounts of the losses sustained by petitioner on the foreign currency transactions, which are computed without reference to any gain or loss petitioner may have realized on the sale of the FAN International stock. But we must determine the character of the losses realized by petitioner from having to pay more in U.S. dollars to buy the francs necessary to repay the Caisse loan than the francs were worth in U.S. dollars when the Caisse loan was made, and from having to pay more in U.S. dollars to buy the *556 francs necessary to repay the Societe Generale loan than the francs were worth when that loan was made.
The introduction of foreign currency into business transactions such as this has given rise to a rather limited, but sometimes inconsistent and indecisive, number of court opinions on how to characterize such transactions for tax purposes. Slight differences in circumstances seem*116 to have been relied on by the courts to reach different conclusions with respect to somewhat similar transactions. This opinion will attempt to explain why we arrive at our conclusion in this particular case without discussion of many of the nuances that come to mind when considering foreign currency transactions.
Petitioner has the burden of proving that its losses were not capital losses. Petitioner's basic argument appears to be that gain or loss arising from the retirement of a liability, as in the instant case, can only give rise to an ordinary gain or loss. This is based, in part, on a statement made by the Court of Claims in its opinion in
Respondent maintains that the losses in controversy must be treated as capital losses because the foreign currencies constituted capital assets in petitioner's hands, and the use of those currencies to repay the loans to Caisse and Societe Generale constituted sales or exchanges of capital assets. This is based primarily on the theory that the foreign currencies were properties, hence assets, and that since they were acquired and used directly in connection with the acquisition by petitioner of capital assets (the FAN International stock), the acquisition and disposition of the francs should be accorded *557 the same character as the underlying transaction, i.e., a capital transaction.
From the above can be distilled the proposition that for the deduction for the losses here involved to be*119 limited to capital loss treatment they must have arisen from (1) a sale or exchange of (2) property (3) that qualified as a capital asset.
Where the U.S. dollar value of foreign currency borrowed by a taxpayer fluctuates between the time of borrowing and the time of repayment, a profit or loss may be realized by the taxpayer for Federal income tax purposes.
Initially, we note that neither party has asserted that the foreign currencies fit within any of the defined exclusions of
Petitioner's argument that it did not acquire or hold the francs as assets in the true sense of the words is inconsistent with its contention that the foreign currency transaction and the underlying transaction must be treated separately. If petitioner did not acquire and theoretically hold the francs, even for a short time, what transaction was there to separate from the underlying transaction, the purchase of the FAN International stock, which we have determined to be a capital transaction? If the francs were simply a medium of exchange, then the only transaction that would have produced a gain or loss would have been the acquisition*123 and sale of the stock. The fact that the francs were transferred directly from the lender to the obligee does not, in the modern day commercial world, mean that petitioner never owned or held the francs it borrowed.
Having found that the francs were capital assets, we must now determine whether there was a sale or exchange of those assets within the meaning of sections 165(f) and 1211(a). *124 foreign currency transactions consisted simply of borrowing foreign currency to pay off obligations and that the payment of one's obligation in this manner does not constitute a sale or exchange of an asset. Petitioner's losses were not sustained, so it claims, due to the decline in value of any asset it had acquired but rather because of the increase in the measuring unit of liabilities it had incurred. Petitioner points out that it received value upon the disposition of the francs exactly equal to their cost, the acquisition and disposition thereof having been almost simultaneous.
Respondent's position is that the use of a capital asset by a debtor to satisfy a claim is a sale or exchange of that asset, *560 citing
While respondent's argument that the purpose for which the francs were borrowed, to buy a capital asset, should control the character of the loss on the currency transactions is appealing, a close analysis of what happened does not support the argument, nor does the case law. The loss we are concerned with resulted from the increase in the value of the francs against the U.S. dollar, and whether petitioner realized a gain or loss on the sale of the FAN International stock is in no way involved, unless the basis of the FAN stock was adjusted to reflect the change in the value of the francs used to purchase it. But both parties agree that such an adjustment should not be made and that the transactions should be considered*126 separately, which finds support in the case law.
*561 This Court has considered several cases involving gain or loss resulting from changes in foreign exchange rates*127 where the taxpayer had borrowed foreign currency to purchase assets. *128 In
In
These cases are of little help to us herein since, as we have found, the foreign currency transactions were not an integral part of petitioner's ordinary trade or business, and consequently such currencies were capital assets.
More recently, the Court of Claims, in
Respondent has relied on
In short, the losses incurred herein were the result of the repayment of an indebtedness with more U.S. dollars than *564 were originally borrowed.
*134 Accordingly, having found that the repayment of the debts herein with francs having a greater U.S. dollar value than at the time francs were borrowed did not constitute a "sale or exchange," we hold for petitioner. Decision will be entered *135
Dawson,
At first blush, the facts of this case have all the markings of a short sale, and hence sale or exchange treatment would be provided under section 1233(a).
Tannenwald,
First, the parties agree that the borrowing and repayment of foreign currency, on the one hand, and the investment in and sale of the FAN International stock, on the other, are to be treated as separate transactions in the*139 sense that each transaction produces separate tax consequences. See
Second, it is also agreed that petitioner suffered losses of $ 1,152,500 and $ 597,000 in its taxable years ending September 30, 1974, and September 30, 1975, as a result of the repayment of the loans.
Third, I agree with the majority that the francs
*141 Fourth, when property is used to satisfy an obligation, the courts have consistently held that such property has been sold or exchanged. See, e.g.,
Against the foregoing background, I turn to my analysis of why I disagree with the majority's conclusion that petitioner's transfers of francs to Caisse and Societe Generale did not constitute sales or exchanges. In so concluding, the majority, mistakenly, I believe, deals with the issue in the context of the cases involving the discharge of an indebtedness and, so it seems to me, falls into a trap by treating the francs as money akin to dollars despite its recognition that francs are property.
In my opinion, the appropriate way to deal with the issue is by way of analogy to a short sale. *142 and used them to repay the loan, it closed the "short sale." At that time, it realized and was entitled to recognize its losses. The measure of its losses is the difference between the value of those francs at the time of the original borrowing and the value of the francs used for repayment at the time they were acquired, i.e., their cost, and its holding period is determined by the period of time the francs acquired in repayment were held -- in this case, less than 1 day. Thus, petitioner in effect bought and sold francs *568 and, in this frame of reference, there was clearly a sale or exchange. To be sure, the situation herein is the reverse of the usual situation, where the acquisition of the asset used precedes, rather than follows, the sale or exchange, but that fact does not require a different conclusion. Cf. sec. 1233(a). See
*143 At this point, I observe that the value of the franc at the time of repayment of the loan is irrelevant, as is the case with any short sale. *144 In making the foregoing analysis, I am not unaware of the fact that certain cases have held that a borrowing and repayment in the same foreign currency and in the same amount does not give rise to taxable gain or loss.
Similarly, I am not unaware of the fact that the short-sale*146 analogy has been advocated and rejected. See
I agree with the majority that respondent's reliance on
Nor does
The majority relies on
Nor do I believe, as does the majority, that
*151 I would hold that petitioner's losses were short-term capital losses and not ordinary losses.
1. At all times relevant herein, the Luxembourg franc and the Belgian franc had an equal dollar value.↩
2. The loss claimed on the Caisse loan was calculated by multiplying the exchange rate of Sept. 17, 1970, .02, by LF250 million, and subtracting the product thereof from an amount equal to the exchange rate on Feb. 28, 1974, .02461, multiplied by BF250 million. This yields a loss of $ 1,152,500 rather than $ 1,162,500. Petitioner conceded on brief that the correct calculation was $ 1,152,500.↩
3. The loss claimed on the Societe Generale loan was calculated by multiplying the exchange rate on Feb. 28, 1974, .02461, by BF250 million, and subtracting the product thereof from an amount equal to the exchange rate on Dec. 26, 1974, .0270, multiplied by BF250 million. This yields a loss of $ 597,500, rather than $ 587,500. Petitioner claimed on brief that the correct calculation was $ 597,500.↩
4. All section references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, unless otherwise indicated.↩
5. Petitioner hints that these losses may be deductible as ordinary business expenses under sec. 162, but, it does not argue the point and we will not address it.↩
6. Because the Luxembourg and Belgian francs were, at all times relevant therein, of equal U.S. dollar value, we shall refer to the foreign currencies borrowed and repaid as "francs."↩
7. Since respondent conceded on brief that the repayment of the Caisse loan by borrowing an equivalent amount of francs from Societe Generale resulted in a loss for the fiscal year 1974, and that the repayment of the Societe Generale loan by buying an equivalent amount of francs from First National Bank of Chicago resulted in a loss for the fiscal year 1975, the timing issue is no longer before us.↩
8. Neither party cited
9. See
The Court also considered the character of the gain or loss on transactions in foreign currency in
10. See
11. While the Court of Claims held the character of the gain involved to be ordinary income from the discharge of an indebtedness for less than face value, relying on
We also recognize that the facts in
12. Respondent would find a capital loss by calculating the "amount realized" as the U.S. dollar value of the francs at the time borrowed, less the "adjusted basis" calculated as the U.S. dollar value of the francs at the time the respective debts were repaid. See sec. 1001(a). However, the amount petitioner "realized" was not the U.S. dollar value of francs when borrowed. Rather, it was the extinguishment of a debt at a time that debt had a U.S. dollar value equal to the cost of the francs used to pay off such debt.↩
13. This is not to say that the amount repaid was in fact more than the face amount of the debt. To the contrary, exactly what was owed, was paid, to wit, BF250 million. Rather the U.S. dollar cost of repaying that loan had increased.↩
14. Some of the more recent cases which considered foreign currency transactions cited in note 8, involved short-sale transactions which, if sec. 1233 is applicable, produce capital gains or losses, and/or transactions for hedging purposes, which normally result in ordinary gain or loss. We have not discussed them because we can find no short or forward sales of the foreign currencies in this case, and the evidence does not support a finding that petitioner engaged in the foreign currency transaction for hedging purposes. Petitioner entered into these transactions to acquire an interest in a foreign subsidiary and was required to use foreign currency by the laws of the United States and the bylaws of the Luxembourg bank.↩
1. Respondent's hesitancy to argue that this constitutes a short sale might result from the risk, if he were successful, of allowing taxpayers in subsequent cases to be able to choose whether a sale or exchange occurs. If sale or exchange treatment depended solely upon the application of sec. 1233(a) to the closing of a short sale, a taxpayer might avoid that section's provisions merely by retiring a foreign currency loan with cash.↩
2. We are informed that the Caisse loan proceeds were "invested" in FAN International stock in what appears to be either a sec. 351 or sec. 118-type transaction. Thus, it is not clear whether petitioner was ever "short," that is, at risk with respect to the LF 25 million. For example, we do not know whether the francs were irrevocably invested in assets by the subsidiary; whether petitioner could compel its subsidiary to repay its capital contribution in the same amount of francs; or whether the
3. "Since section 1233 is a very specific, detailed, and intricately interwoven statute, extending it by analogy is unwarranted."
4. See and compare Newman, "Tax Consequences of Foreign Currency Transactions: A look at Current Law and an Analysis of the Treasury Department Discussion Draft,"
Aside from the tautologous notion that a short sale necessarily involves a sale or exchange, no authority is offered which supports this analogy. On the contrary, the dissent's view would render sec. 1233(a) as mere surplusage. Indeed, the dissent's argument is unavoidably premised on the statement that (p. 567):
"When petitioner originally borrowed the francs, it in effect sold those francs short * * *"
I am at a loss to understand how a taxpayer's
1. No attempt is made in this opinion, and none appears necessary, to distinguish between the Luxembourg franc and the Belgian franc, because at all pertinent times they had an equal dollar value.↩
2. I recognize that the short-sale ground was not argued by the parties. But we are nevertheless entitled to decide a case for respondent on any appropriate legal theory. See
3. Although the articulation in the decided cases seems to consider the value of the foreign currency at the time of repayment as one of the two prongs of measurement, the issue of the relevancy of that standard of measurement has, as far as I can determine, never been directly considered. See
4. Of course, if a taxpayer borrowed foreign currency, continued to hold it, and used it to make repayment, there would be no gain or loss, because the value at the time of borrowing and the cost of acquisition would be the same. See Roberts, "Borrowings in Foreign Currencies,"
5. It is unclear to me the extent to which the majority adopts the reasoning of the Court of Claims. Compare pp. 562, 563, 564 with note 11.↩
6. Indeed, we went even further and announced that to the extent that our view in
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Seaboard Finance Company v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue , 225 F.2d 808 ( 1955 )
Church's English Shoes, Ltd. v. Commissioner of Internal ... , 229 F.2d 957 ( 1956 )
Kentucky & Indiana Terminal Railroad Company v. United ... , 330 F.2d 520 ( 1964 )
Fairbanks v. United States , 59 S. Ct. 607 ( 1939 )
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Provost v. United States , 46 S. Ct. 152 ( 1926 )
International Flavors & Fragrances Inc. v. Commissioner of ... , 524 F.2d 357 ( 1975 )
Willard Helburn, Inc. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue , 214 F.2d 815 ( 1954 )
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W. W. Windle Company v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue , 550 F.2d 43 ( 1977 )
Fifth Avenue-Fourteenth Street Corp. v. Commissioner of ... , 147 F.2d 453 ( 1945 )
John A. Gillin v. The United States , 423 F.2d 309 ( 1970 )
United States v. Davis , 82 S. Ct. 1190 ( 1962 )
Bowers v. Kerbaugh-Empire Co. , 46 S. Ct. 449 ( 1926 )
United States v. Kirby Lumber Co , 52 S. Ct. 4 ( 1931 )