Finance Leasing Manual - FLM12.63
Guarantee fees
Guarantee fees are more likely to arise where the leased asset
may not be adequate security for rents due under the finance lease
(for example where there are back-loaded rents; any case structured
so that the value of the lease commitments exceeds the book value
of asset; and certain examples of cross-border 'inward leasing').
In these and other situations you may find that the lease is
guaranteed and that the lessee pays guarantee fees. If such fees
arise under a guarantee entered into in order to secure the funding
or the lease, the fees paid may be capital in nature (see Ascot Gas
Water Heaters Ltd v Duff, 24TC171).
In a recent Special Commissioners' decision, Caledonian Paper
plc v CIR (SpC 159/1998), the Commissioners drew a distinction
between a management fee which contributed to the securing of a
finance lease (a capital asset, and so capital expenditure) and
other recurring payments which were not instalments of
consideration for the acquisition of a capital asset (revenue
expenditure). The nature of the advantage the other payments
secured for the taxpayer was the continuation of the lease, an
advantage similar to that secured by the regular payments of rent
(revenue expenditure).
