This guidance applies to periods of account beginning on or after 1 January 2005
Most holders and issuers of convertible or exchangeable
securities, or asset-linked securities, will account separately for
the loan and the embedded derivative.
CFM16630a explains how the company
allocates initial far values to the two elements.
The tax rules have been changed to mirror this accounting
treatment. FA96/S94A provides that where a company accounts for its
rights (or liabilities) as divided between a loan and one or more
embedded derivatives, tax treatment follows. The company is treated
as being a party to both:
The loan element is taxed wholly under the loan relationship
rules, while the derivative element is taxed separately under
FA02/SCH26.
FA96/S94A applies both to hybrid and to compound financial
instruments. Although the legislation uses the term “embedded
derivative”, S94A(1)(b) makes it clear that this takes in
both embedded derivatives in the accounting sense, and the equity
component included in a compound instrument.
However, S94A(2)(b) only treats the “embedded
derivative” as a relevant contract – it does not say
that it is a derivative contract. The resultant option or contract
for differences must still be subjected to the tests at, in
particular, FA02/SCH26/PARA3 (
CFM13078). Because an equity component
is not treated for accounting purposes as a derivative financial
instrument, it will not pass the “accounting test” and,
rather than being a derivative contract, will be a “tax
nothing” – see
CFM16695.
FA96/S94A only provides for separate taxation of the loan relationship and the option where that is the accounting treatment. Although many companies will bifurcate, there are 3 exceptions. These are where:
Where a company accounts for the security as a single
instrument, the security falls wholly within the loan relationship
rules, with all profits gains and losses brought into account as
income under FA96.
However under a transitional rule (F2A05/SCH6/PARA7), a
company in the third category may elect to be treated for tax
purposes as if it had used split accounting. This benefits
companies holding existing securities formerly within FA96/S92, for
which chargeable gains treatment would otherwise be
unavailable.