This guidance applies to periods of account beginning on or after 1 January 2005
For the issuer of either:
the embedded obligation to convert or exchange is classified for accounting purposes as a derivative financial instrument - an option. That is, the issuer is the counterparty to the option it has granted the holder. The option is a derivative contract for tax purposes.
The required accounting, as for any derivative, is to carry the
option at its fair value, taking any movements through profit and
loss account. Accounting debits and credits may therefore arise in
each accounting period.
Where the issuer accounts separately for the loan and option,
FA96/S94A requires the option to be dealt with under the derivative
contract rules of FA02/SCH26. Under those rules, credits and
arising from an option are generally taxed or relieved as income.
This would create a significant mismatch in tax treatment between a
company issuing such a security, and one issuing a bond with an
attached warrant conferring similar rights.
The grantor of a “stand alone” option that is
settled in cash will have a capital loss (or, more rarely, a gain)
under TCGA92/S144A (2). Similarly, if the option is settled by a
transfer of shares, the premium received for the option forms part
of the capital gains computation on the share disposal –
TCGA92/S144 (2). But TCGA92 does not recognise an embedded option
as an asset separate from the security itself.
The purpose of FA02/SCH26/PARA45J is therefore to ensure that
the issuer’s loss (or profit) from an option embedded within
a security is brought into account as an allowable loss, or a
chargeable gain, on a realisation basis – in other words, in
a manner comparable to TCGA92 treatment.
The rules in FA02/SCH26/PARA45J work in two stages as
follows.
See CFM16710 for the rules for computing the PARA45J chargeable gain or allowable loss.
PARA45J does not disapply “income” treatment, or allow the issuer to compute a terminal chargeable gain or allowable loss, where:
For periods beginning on or after 1 January 2005 and ending before 16 March 2005, capital gains treatment was also denied where the option was one to which any of FA02/SCH26/PARA6 to 8 applied. These paragraphs were repealed for accounting periods ending on or after 16 March 2005.