taxnotes federal ■ Volume 171, Number 4 April 26, 2021 Tax Risk Insurance: Taking It Captive by Ken Brewer and Albert Liguori Reprinted from Tax Notes Federal, April 26, 2021, p. 549 For more Tax Notes content, please visit www.taxnotes.com. © 2021 Tax Analysts. All rights reserved. Analysts does not claim copyright in any public domain or third party content. TAX PRACTICE tax notes federal Tax Risk Insurance: Taking It Captive by Ken Brewer and Albert Liguori is to explore the U.S. tax implications of that meeting. Behold: captive tax risk insurance!3 In our experiences, the use of tax risk insurance has been most prevalent in the mergers and acquisitions context. But as we mentioned in our last article, we have seen it becoming more common in the context of large corporate groups seeking to manage their global tax risks, regardless of whether they are related to M&A.4 In either context, the use of tax risk insurance lends itself to captive arrangements, for the same reasons that have caused captive arrangements to be desirable for other types of insurance risks. Ken Brewer is a senior adviser and Captive Insurance and the U.S. Tax Implications international tax practitioner with Alvarez & Thereof Marsal Taxand LLC in Miami, and Albert Liguori is a managing director in the firm’s New As an alternative to traditional insurance York office. The authors send special thanks to protection, which is obtained from one or more of Brian Pedersen, managing director at Alvarez & the many underwriters offering that coverage to Marsal Taxand, for his contributions and the public, captive insurance is obtained from a review. company that is owned by, or otherwise closely In this article, Brewer and Liguori consider related to, the insured. This company provides the possibility for the insured to use its own coverage to only a relatively small group of captive insurance company, or a shared captive, participating (often closely related) insureds. for select tax risks. In many cases, captive insurance is combined Copyright 2021 Ken Brewer and Albert Liguori. with traditional third-party insurance, with some All rights reserved. layers of risk insured by outside underwriters and other layers insured by the captive. And Tax risk insurance has been around for several regardless of whether outside underwriters are decades. Captive insurance has been around even involved, outside insurance brokers are almost longer.1 But for all but a few early adopters,2 the always involved because of their specialized twain have yet to meet. The purpose of this article knowledge. Presumably there are good and substantial business reasons for using captive insurance, as opposed to simply self-insuring — that is, not 1 3 According to the website of AlliantNational, a firm that is expert in Caveat: We are expert in neither of the twain. But since no one else this area, “Businesses have been creating captive insurance companies seems to be talking about it yet (at least not publicly), an article seemed (CICs) for more than 100 years.” like a reasonable way to start a discussion. 2 4 A few large private equity firms are reportedly using captive Ken Brewer, “Tax Risk Insurance: Another View on the Proper Tax insurance for M&A risks, including some M&A tax risks. Treatment,” Tax Notes Federal, Feb. 15, 2021, p. 1087. TAX NOTES FEDERAL, VOLUME 171, APRIL 26, 2021 549 For more Tax Notes® Federal content, please visit www.taxnotes.com. TAX PRACTICE © 2021 Tax Analysts. All rights reserved. Analysts does not claim copyright in any public domain or third party content. obtaining insurance coverage at all. Perhaps the The case law on captive insurance has evolved most important of which is the ability to gain over the years. Before 1985, the IRS had access to wholesale reinsurance markets. But consistently prevailed in court in its attempts to there are several others — the discussion of which disallow deductions for premiums paid to related is beyond the scope of this article.5 But since one of captive insurance companies. The tide began to the many benefits of using captive insurance is tax turn in Crawford Fitting Co.6 Through numerous savings (for example, deducting estimated future subsequent cases and rulings, the law has evolved losses and shifting income to a low-tax since then, so today there is little question that a jurisdiction), it is no wonder that captive properly structured captive insurance insurance has long been a subject of controversy arrangement can produce the timing and location between taxpayers and the IRS. benefits described above. From a federal tax perspective, the primary To be properly structured, the case law differences between self-insurance and captive suggests that a captive insurance arrangement insurance have to do with timing and location. must: Regarding timing, with self-insurance, the • involve insurable risks; insured is not allowed a deduction for estimated • involve a shifting of the risk of loss from the losses. Losses are not deductible by the self- insured to the insurer; insured until the all-events test is satisfied (that is, • involve a sufficient distribution of risk; and not until the losses arise). With captive insurance, • be insurance in the commonly accepted if properly structured, the insured is allowed a sense.7 current deduction for insurance premiums paid Regarding risk shifting, there is considerable to the related captive insurance company, while case law support for the IRS’s position that the captive insurance company may offset its insurance premiums paid to a captive insurance premium income by a deduction for a reserve for company by a direct or indirect shareholder of the estimated losses. captive do not shift risk because any loss suffered In contrast, for state tax purposes captives can by the captive has a corresponding negative provide permanent tax savings. This is because, as impact on the balance sheet of the shareholder. To it is for federal purposes, the insured receives a avoid this issue, the prudent course of action may deduction for premiums paid, but the captive be to not have any of the insured group insurance company is typically located in a companies own (directly or indirectly) shares in favorable state or foreign jurisdiction where the 8 the captive insurance company. premium income is not subject to state tax. As for risk distribution, this excerpt from Rev. Regarding location, because captive insurance Rul. 2002-91, 2002-2 C.B. 991, provides a arrangements involve two separate (albeit reasonably concise explanation of the related) operating locations, they provide an requirement: opportunity to shift income from an insured entity that may be subject to a relatively high Risk distribution incorporates the effective tax rate to the related insurance company statistical phenomenon known as the law whose income may be subject to a lower effective of large numbers. Distributing risk allows tax rate. the insurer to reduce the possibility that a single costly claim will exceed the amount taken in as premiums and set aside for the payment of such a claim. By assuming 5 According to Vermont’s state website, the reasons to use captive insurance include coverage tailored to meet your needs, greater control over claims, reduced operating costs, control of cash flow, funding and 6 underwriting flexibility, access to the reinsurance market, incentive for Crawford Fitting Co. v. United States, 606 F. Supp. 136 (N.D. Ohio loss control, capture underwriting profit, pricing stability, potential tax 1985). benefits, investment income, potential additional profit center, and 7 Harper Group v. Commissioner, 96 T.C. 45, 58 (1991), aff’d, 979 F.2d flexibility in managing risk. Given the length of this list and that 1341 (9th Cir. 1992); and AMERCO v. Commissioner, 96 T.C. 18, 38 (1991), Vermont puts potential tax benefits near the bottom, it would appear aff’d, 979 F.2d 162 (9th Cir. 1992). safe to assume that the principal purpose for the use of captive insurance 8 is not to obtain tax benefits. See, e.g., Securitas Holdings Inc. v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2014-225. 550 TAX NOTES FEDERAL, VOLUME 171, APRIL 26, 2021 For more Tax Notes® Federal content, please visit www.taxnotes.com. TAX PRACTICE © 2021 Tax Analysts. All rights reserved. Analysts does not claim copyright in any public domain or third party content. numerous relatively small, independent satisfy one or more of the four requirements for risks that occur randomly over time, the captive insurance in general or some other insurer smooths out losses to match more requirement that the IRS might conjure up closely its receipt of premiums. Clougherty specially for tax risk insurance. Packing Co. v. Commissioner, 811 F.2d 1297, 1300 (9th Cir. 1987). Risk distribution Insurable Risk necessarily entails a pooling of premiums, Perhaps the IRS will take the position that tax so that a potential insured is not in risk is not an insurable risk. That would seem to significant part paying for its own risks. fly in the face of marketplace reality, given the See Humana Inc. v. Commissioner, 881 F.2d number of major insurance companies that we 247, 257 (6th Cir. 1989). have worked with that are issuing tax risk The other two requirements (insurable risk insurance policies and the number of major and insurance in the commonly accepted sense) insurance brokers involved in placing that seem to get glossed over a bit in many of the coverage. So, unless the IRS can come up with authorities. The requirement for insurable risk some novel argument to distinguish tax risk from seems to go to the nature of the risk: It must the universe of other risks that have been deemed involve some element of chance, and it must be insurable, this requirement would appear to be the type of risk that bona fide insurance achievable.
Details
-
File Typepdf
-
Upload Time-
-
Content LanguagesEnglish
-
Upload UserAnonymous/Not logged-in
-
File Pages6 Page
-
File Size-