CTM18700 - Shadow ACT: utilisation of: allocation of surplus within groups
SI1999/358, Reg. 13
ICTA88/S240 left the parent company to choose whether to
surrender ACT to a subsidiary. If that approach had been followed
for shadow ACT, groups could have been expected to make
distributions out of group members with no unrelieved surplus ACT.
Those with unrelieved surplus ACT would have able to make full use
of their capacity and reduce the surplus at a much faster rate than
expected.
Regulation 13, therefore, obliges the parent company to
allocate any surplus shadow ACT to another member or other members
of the group up to the limit of their capacity.
Where the surplus is insufficient to exhaust the capacity of
all the potential recipients, the parent company determines the
recipient companies and the amount allocated to each.
Where the amount available exceeds the amount that can be
utilised by all the potential recipients, the parent company must
allocate to each an amount equal to its capacity.
Where there is more than one company in the group with
surplus shadow ACT, the parent company decides the order in which
the amounts allocated to a company are to be set-off and that order
has to be followed on any subsequent reallocation. The effect is
that, if the amount available exceeds the group's capacity, the
parent company determines which company or companies will carry
forward a surplus.
A company could be a member of more than one group with
members with surplus shadow ACT. The amount that can be allocated
to the company by the parent companies cannot exceed its capacity.
In determining the maximum amount that can be allocated, the
allocations are to be considered in the order in which they are
made.
A group member's capacity for each accounting period is
determined in the normal way. The maximum amount that can be
allocated to it is that amount less its own shadow ACT to be set
against its liabilities for each of the relevant accounting
periods. This amount is reduced where those accounting periods
include the first or last accounting period in which the
transferring and recipient companies were members of the same
group. The capacity for that accounting period is proportionately
reduced by reference to the part of the period during which the two
companies were not members of the same group.
The relevant accounting periods are those:
- during which the transferring and recipient companies were members of the same group, and which are one of the following:
-
- an accounting period beginning and ending on the same dates, or contained within, the accounting period of the transferring company,
- an accounting period beginning before, but ending in, the transferring company's accounting period,
- an accounting period beginning in, but ending after, the transferring company's accounting period,
- any further period (whether the whole or part of an accounting period) beginning twenty four months or less prior to the end of the transferring company's accounting period.
The allocation must follow that order.
Any remaining surplus is allocated to any other group member
or set-off against any controlled foreign companies liability of
the company or another group member. Any amount that cannot be used
in any of those ways remains with the company that generated it. It
is carried forward and treated as if it were shadow ACT paid in the
next accounting period.
