One choice a parent company had was to match an FID paid with a
DFP of a 51% subsidiary company (see
CTM21340). It did this by the
subsidiary's DFP being treated as an 'eligible profit' of the
parent with which an FID could be matched.
Both companies had to be bodies corporate.
The accounting periods of the parent and subsidiary had to be considered.
If so a DFP of the subsidiary for its accounting period was an eligible profit for the parent's accounting period.
If the subsidiary had a DFP for its accounting period, then part
- the 'appropriate fraction' - of the DFP was an eligible profit
for the parent's accounting period.
The 'appropriate fraction' was the number of days of the two
companies accounting periods that coincided divided by the number
of days in the subsidiary’s accounting period.
A parent company could elect for all or part of an FID to be
matched with all or part of an eligible profit, but written consent
of the subsidiary was required. An entry in the parent's
computations showing the matching with the eligible profit could be
accepted as an election. The consent by the subsidiary had to be
signed by the company secretary or an authorised person
(TMA70/S108).
All or part of one or more FID could be matched with all or
part of one or more eligible profits. FID could be matched with
eligible profits of that or the immediately preceding accounting
period of the parent. The parent could match with eligible profits
of those two periods as it chose.
If there was no eligible profit derived from a subsidiary for
that or the preceding accounting period with which an FID could be
matched, it could be matched with eligible profits of any
subsequent accounting period.
A DFP of a subsidiary was an 'eligible profit' of the parent.
A parent's FID could be matched with an eligible profit
of:
To prevent double relief there could be no matching between an
FID paid and all or part of an eligible profit more than once.
A parent company may have had DFPs of its own and eligible
profits deriving from one or more subsidiaries which were all
capable of being matched with an FID paid. The legislation did not
specify any order for matching and the company could match as it
wishes.
When a parent company elected to match an FID with an eligible profit for an accounting period:
The following rules prevented double matching.