The Internal Revenue Service and the Treasury Department released
The final regulations describe a transaction in which taxpayers purport to eliminate ordinary income and/or capital gain on the sale of property.
In abusive transactions of this type, the IRS noted, property with a fair market value in excess of its basis, for example, interests in a closely-held business, and/or assets used or produced in a trade or business, is transferred to a purported Charitable Remainder Annuity Trusts. The purported CRAT then sells the property and uses some or all of the net proceeds to purchase a single premium immediate annuity, or SPIA.
By misapplying the rules under Sections 72 and 664 of the Internal Revenue Code, the taxpayer, or beneficiary, claims the CRAT annuity is taxable to the recipient only to the extent of the income portion of the SPIA annuity payment. The IRS included CRATs on its
The final regulations basically follow the previously proposed regulations from the Treasury and the IRS identifying certain CRAT transactions and substantially similar transactions as "listed transactions" for tax reporting purposes.
The Treasury and the IRS have been moving away from issuing notices about tax shelters after running afoul of the Administrative Procedures Act during
"As a matter of risk mitigation, practitioners must immediately identify any client structures matching these criteria," wrote Ed Zollars of Thomas, Zollars & Lynch in his
He noted that the "listed transaction" designation serves as a "high-powered monitoring tool" for the IRS's Office of Tax Shelter Analysis, mandating transparency for both participants and advisors.







