CFM20470 - Securitisation: taxation: periods beginning on or after 1 January 2007: the regulations: ‘retained profit’
Meaning of ‘retained profit’: regulation 10
Regulation 4(3) requires that a securitisation company must have
a retained profit. Regulation 10 defines "retained profit". This is
both a requirement that each company in the securitisation chain
must satisfy, and a component part of the basis on which the CT
charge is imposed on a securitisation company under Regulation 14 (
CFM20550).
Retained profit does not take its normal accountancy meaning
of ‘profit after tax and dividends’. It is the amount
‘required by the capital market arrangement or a related
transaction, or ‘warehouse arrangement’ (
CFM20450) to be retained, made available
to be retained, or designated as profits of the securitisation
company (however described)’. The legal documents setting up
the securitisation (see
CFM20490) will commonly include a
priority of payments, applicable to the company's income receipts,
which will specify the amount to be retained (normally on a
periodic basis) by the company by way of profit as one of the items
in the priority of payments. This may in practice be either a small
margin (expressed as a percentage of asset value, amount of funding
or annual income) or a specific amount.
In other cases, there may be no specific provision for the
company to retain a profit, but the relevant provision may take the
form of (for example) a margin between the different rates of
interest receivable and payable by an intermediate borrowing
company on its loan to an asset- holding company and its borrowings
from a note-issuing company. In any of the preceding cases, the
provision for margin or other retention will satisfy the retained
profit requirement.
The requirement is for the terms of the capital market
arrangement or a related transaction to include provision for the
company to have a retained profit, not that it actually has a cash
surplus in each accounting period. Nor is there any tax requirement
for any particular minimum amount of retained profit that will be
regarded as being acceptable for the purposes of the regulations.
This is purely a matter for the directors of the company.
The requirement will not be satisfied if, having regard to
all the circumstances, there was no real possibility at the outset
that the company would have sufficient cash to retain the amount of
profit provided for after meeting all prior-ranking liabilities.
However, this is likely to occur only in an extreme case.
The amount of the retained profit must be apportioned on a
just and reasonable basis between different accounting periods to
which it relates (where applicable). However, there is no
requirement for an amount of profit to be retained for each
accounting period of the company.
If the company has insufficient funds to meet the retained
profit required, the retained profit is the amount of the cash
profit actually retained (and the company will be liable to tax
only on the amount retained (subject to any adjustments under the
charging provisions in Regulation 14). It this happens, the terms
of the relevant documentation will in some cases provide for a
‘make-up’ retention in a later period, to compensate
for the shortfall in the earlier period. Any such make-up retention
which is actually made in a later period will be included in the
retained profit for the later period. This ensures that no amount
actually falls out of charge as a consequence of the profit
retention being deferred.
