CTM34505 - Residence: dual resident companies: introduction
Broadly, dual resident companies are companies that
simultaneously satisfy the residence rules of the UK and another
country. ICTA88/S404 and ICTA88/SCH17 prevent certain dual resident
companies from setting off their losses by way of group relief.
ICTA88/S343 (2), TCGA92/S171 (2), TCGA92/S175 (2), CAA90/S26
(1)(b), CAA90/S77 (1) and CAA90/S158 (3) also restrict access to
other types of relief normally available to group or associated
companies. The legislation was introduced to deal with dual
resident companies that were used to exploit the UK group relief
provisions and their overseas equivalent.
These dual resident companies included companies incorporated
in the United States or Australia. Such companies could get relief
by setting off their losses against the profits of other companies
incorporated within the jurisdiction concerned where those
companies were under common control with the company making the
losses. Typically such dual resident companies had no taxable
income against which to set interest payments and these payments
created tax losses, which could be relieved against profits arising
in both countries.
The most common example of these dual resident companies were
companies which were managed and controlled in the UK but were
incorporated in the State of Delaware. This device was called the
'Delaware Link'. There were also many examples where companies were
managed and controlled in the UK and incorporated within a State
other than Delaware.
