97-25999. Certain Payments Made Pursuant to a Securities Lending Transaction  

  • [Federal Register Volume 62, Number 198 (Tuesday, October 14, 1997)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 53498-53502]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 97-25999]
    
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
    
    Internal Revenue Service
    
    26 CFR Part 1
    
    [TD 8735]
    RIN 1545-AP71
    
    
    Certain Payments Made Pursuant to a Securities Lending 
    Transaction
    
    AGENCY: Internal Revenue Service (IRS), Treasury.
    
    ACTION: Final regulations.
    
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    SUMMARY: This document contains final Income Tax Regulations relating 
    to the taxation of certain payments made pursuant to a cross-border 
    securities lending transaction. These regulations provide guidance 
    concerning the source, character, and income tax treaty treatment of 
    such payments and affect
    
    [[Page 53499]]
    
    United States payors and recipients and foreign payors and recipients.
    
    DATES: These regulations are effective October 14, 1997.
        Applicability: These regulations are applicable to payments made 
    after November 13, 1997.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ramon Camacho or Paul Epstein at (202) 
    622-3870 (not a toll-free number) of the Office of Associate Chief 
    Counsel (International), within the Office of Chief Counsel, Internal 
    Revenue Service, 1111 Constitution Avenue, NW., Washington, DC 20224.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    Background
    
        On January 9, 1992, the IRS published proposed amendments (INTL-
    106-89) to the Income Tax Regulations (26 CFR part 1) under sections 
    861, 871, 881, 894, and 1441 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 
    (Code) in the Federal Register (57 FR 860). A public hearing was 
    scheduled but was subsequently cancelled because no one requested to 
    testify. However, several written comments were received. After 
    consideration of all of the comments, the regulations proposed by INTL-
    106-89 are adopted by this Treasury decision, as modified.
    
    Explanation of Provisions
    
    I. The 1992 Proposed Regulations
    
        On January 9, 1992, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) issued 
    proposed regulations that provided guidance on the source and character 
    of substitute payments made in cross-border securities lending 
    transactions. In general, the regulations proposed to source substitute 
    payments by reference to the source of the payments (dividend or 
    interest) for which they substitute. In addition, the regulations 
    proposed to characterize substitute payments under a transparency rule. 
    Under the transparency rule, substitute payments are treated as having 
    the same character as the dividend or interest income for which they 
    substitute.
        Under the proposed regulations, the source rule applies for all 
    purposes of the Code in cross-border securities lending transactions. 
    In contrast, the transparency rule addressing the character of 
    substitute payments applies only for purposes of determining the tax 
    liability under sections 871 and 881 and nonresident alien withholding 
    under chapter 3 of the Code and for treaty purposes. Generally, public 
    comments welcomed the transparency rule because it eliminated 
    unjustifiable tax biases between similar economic investments. After 
    considering all the public comments, the proposed regulations are 
    adopted as final regulations by this Treasury decision, substantially 
    as proposed.
    
    II. The Final Regulations
    
    1. General rule
        The final regulations, like the proposed regulations, provide that 
    a substitute payment made with respect to a securities lending or sale-
    repurchase transaction is sourced using the general rules governing the 
    source of interest or dividend income contained in sections 861 and 
    862. The definitions of securities lending transactions and sale-
    repurchase transactions are provided in Secs. 1.861-2(a)(7) and 1.861-
    3(a)(6) of the regulations. These provisions define a substitute 
    payment as a payment made to the transferor of a security of an amount 
    equal to any distributions of dividends or interest which the owner of 
    the transferred security would normally receive. The regulations also 
    provide that substitute interest or dividend payments have the same 
    character as interest or dividend income, respectively, for purposes of 
    applying sections 864(c)(4)(B), 871, 881, 894, 4948(a) and the 
    withholding provisions under chapter 3 of the Internal Revenue Code.
    2. Scope of regulation
        Some commentators questioned whether a sale-repurchase transaction 
    is considered a transaction that is substantially similar to a 
    securities lending transaction for purposes of the proposed 
    regulations. They noted that most sale-repurchase transactions 
    contractually permit the purchaser to deal freely with the underlying 
    securities, specifying only that substantially identical securities be 
    returned on the repurchase date. In such cases the purchaser must also 
    make substitute payments to the seller. The final regulations clarify 
    that substitute payments made in a sale-repurchase transaction are 
    sourced and characterized in the same manner that substitute payments 
    are sourced and characterized in securities lending transactions.
        The final regulations only address the tax treatment of substitute 
    payments received by the transferor in securities lending or sale-
    repurchase transactions. The regulations do not address the treatment 
    of fees or interest paid to the transferee in such transactions. For 
    example, the transparency rule does not extend to characterize the 
    interest component of the repurchase price of a sale-repurchase 
    agreement, which is treated as interest and sourced under the general 
    source rules for interest contained in sections 861 and 862. See Rev. 
    Rul. 74-27 (1974-1 C.B. 24); Rev. Rul. 77-59 (1977-1 C.B. 196); 
    Nebraska Department of Revenue v. Loewenstein, 115 S. Ct. 557 (1994).
        In response to comments, the final regulations apply for purposes 
    of determining the source of substitute payments, regardless of whether 
    the recipient of the income is U.S. or foreign. When source is 
    determined under these regulations, it applies for all purposes of the 
    Code (e.g., foreign tax credit limitations under sections 904 and 906). 
    However, with respect to the characterization of substitute payments, 
    the IRS and Treasury believe that it is appropriate, and more 
    consistent with existing guidance regarding the treatment of substitute 
    payments, to apply the transparency rule only with respect to foreign 
    taxpayers and only for limited purposes. Accordingly, the transparency 
    rule applies to determine character only for certain purposes of 
    sections 864, 871, 881, 894, 4948(a) and chapter 3 of the Code. For 
    example, under this rule, substitute payments to a foreign person with 
    respect to stocks and securities that, absent the securities lending 
    transaction, would give rise to foreign source effectively connected 
    income in the hands of such person, will retain their character as 
    dividend or interest income for purposes of determining whether the 
    income is effectively connected to the U.S. trade or business of such 
    person.
        The transparency rule does not apply, however, to characterize the 
    U.S. source income of U.S. trades or businesses of foreign taxpayers. 
    Accordingly, U.S. source effectively connected income of foreign 
    taxpayers and U.S. source income of U.S. taxpayers will be treated the 
    same. In this regard, the final regulations do not affect existing 
    guidance applicable to both U.S. and foreign taxpayers concerning the 
    characterization of substitute payments for purposes of other sections 
    not specifically identified in these final regulations. See, e.g., ev. 
    Rul. 60-177 (1960-1 C.B. 9), (substitute payments are ineligible for 
    the dividends received deduction under section 243); Rev. Rul. 80-135 
    (1980-1 C.B. 18), (substitute payments are ineligible for the tax-
    exemption on state and local bonds under section 103).
        Because the transparency rule does not apply for purposes of 
    sections 901 and 903, nothing in the final regulations affects the 
    determination required under Sec. 1.901-2(f) concerning the identity of 
    the person by whom a foreign tax is considered paid for purposes of 
    sections 901 and 903.
    
    [[Page 53500]]
    
    3. Substitute payments on portfolio debt instruments
        Under the final regulations, substitute interest payments made with 
    respect to a debt instrument, the interest on which qualifies as 
    portfolio interest under section 871(h) or section 881(c) in the hands 
    of the lender, is characterized as portfolio interest if, in the case 
    of an obligation in registered form, the lender provides the 
    withholding agent with a beneficial owner withholding certificate or 
    documentary evidence in accordance with Sec. 1.871-14(c) and no 
    exception from the portfolio interest exemption applies. For example, 
    if a bank lends securities in a transaction that the facts and 
    circumstances indicate in substance is an extension of credit pursuant 
    to a loan agreement in the ordinary course of the bank's trade or 
    business, the substitute payment may be characterized as interest which 
    would not qualify as portfolio interest under section 881(c)(3)(A).
    4. Tax treaties
        Some commentators noted that the transparency rule adversely 
    affects foreign taxpayers that might otherwise rely on a different 
    characterization of substitute payments in order to claim benefits 
    under certain income tax treaties. The transparency rule would 
    eliminate these benefits in a number of cases. Those commentators 
    questioned the government's authority to issue regulations that would 
    characterize substitute payments as dividend or interest income in 
    light of U.S. income tax treaty provisions.
        The IRS and Treasury believe that the transparency rule in general 
    is properly issued pursuant to the general grant of authority under 
    section 7805 because it eliminates opportunities for abuse that arise 
    from a rule that would characterize substitute payments in a manner 
    different from the treatment of the underlying payment. A transparency 
    approach provides uniform results for economically similar investments.
        Moreover, the IRS and Treasury believe that, in the absence of a 
    transparency rule, many taxpayers would use securities lending 
    transactions in order to avoid tax under tax treaties or under the 
    Code. For this reason, authority to characterize substitute payments 
    for Code and treaty purposes in the manner proposed in 1992 also is 
    amply provided in section 7701(l), which was enacted after these 
    comments were received. Section 7701(l) provides a broad grant of 
    authority to issue regulations recharacterizing multiple party 
    financing arrangements to prevent the avoidance of any tax.
        In this regard, the legislative history provides that ``the 
    committee seeks to bolster the Treasury's ability to prevent 
    unwarranted avoidance of tax through multiple-party financial 
    engineering as well as to provide a mechanism for issuing additional 
    guidance to taxpayers entering into financial transactions.'' See H.R. 
    Rep. No. 103-111, 103rd Cong., 1st Sess. 729 (1993). The committee also 
    made clear that this authority was not limited to the types of back-to-
    back loan transactions addressed in prior rulings. See Rev. Rul. 84-152 
    (1984-2 C.B. 381); Rev. Rul. 84-153 (1984-2 C.B. 383); Rev. Rul. 87-89 
    (1987-2 C.B. 195). Section 7701(l) in fact has been applied to a broad 
    range of financial transactions. See, e.g., Prop. Regs. Sec. 1.7701(l)-
    2 (treatment of obligation-shifting transactions); and Notice 97-21 
    (IRB 1997-11, March 17, 1997), (tax avoidance using self-amortizing 
    investments in conduit financing entities).
        The 1992 proposed regulation under section 894 provided that where 
    an income tax convention refers to United States law, the relevant law 
    is the section or sections of the Internal Revenue Code and regulations 
    thereunder governing the tax which is the subject of the provision. 
    Some commentators have suggested that the proposed securities lending 
    regulations would be invalid for purposes of characterizing dividends 
    that are specifically defined by treaties. However, under conduit 
    principles and additional authority to characterize payments pursuant 
    to section 7701(l), the regulations adopted under Sec. 1.894-1(c) 
    address the identity of the owner of dividend and interest income for 
    treaty purposes as opposed to the character of the payments received 
    under varying treaty definitions. These regulations therefore are 
    consistent with the government's authority under treaties to determine 
    the identity of the beneficial owner of income.
    
    Special Analyses
    
        It has been determined that this Treasury decision is not a 
    significant regulatory action as defined in EO 12866. Therefore, a 
    regulatory assessment is not required. It is hereby certified that 
    these regulations will not have a significant economic impact on a 
    substantial number of small entities. Accordingly, a regulatory 
    flexibility analysis is not required. This certification is based on 
    the information that follows. These regulations affect entities engaged 
    in cross-border multiple-party financing arrangements. These 
    regulations affect the tax treatment of substitute payments made with 
    respect to stocks and debt securities. The primary participants who 
    engage in cross-border multiple party financing arrangements of this 
    type are large regulated commercial banks and brokerage firms. In 
    addition, comments received in response to the notice of proposed 
    rulemaking were from law associations, other associations that 
    represent large regulated financial companies or from individuals. 
    Accordingly, Treasury and IRS do not believe that a substantial number 
    of small entities engages in cross-border multiple party financing 
    arrangements of the type covered by these regulations. Pursuant to 
    section 7805(f) of the Code, the notice of proposed rulemaking 
    preceding these regulations was submitted to the Small Business 
    Administration for comment on its impact on small business.
        Drafting Information: The principal author of these regulations is 
    Ramon Camacho of the Office of the Associate Chief Counsel 
    (International).
        However, other personnel from the IRS and Treasury Department 
    participated in their development.
    
    List of Subjects in 26 CFR Part 1
    
        Income taxes, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
    
    Adoption of Amendments to the Regulations
    
        Accordingly, 26 CFR part 1 is amended as follows:
    
    PART 1--INCOME TAXES
    
        Paragraph 1. The authority citation for part 1 is amended by adding 
    entries in numerical order to read as follows:
    
        Authority: 26 U.S.C. 7805 * * *
    
    Section 1.861-2 also issued under 26 U.S.C. 863(a).
    Section 1.861-3 also issued under 26 U.S.C. 863(a). * * *
    Section 1.864-5 also issued under 26 U.S.C. 7701(l). * * *
    Section 1.871-7 also issued under 26 U.S.C. 7701(l). * * *
    Section 1.881-2 also issued under 26 U.S.C. 7701(l). * * *
    Section 1.894-1 also issued under 26 U.S.C. 7701(l). * * *
    
        Par. 2. Section 1.861-2 is amended by adding a sentence at the end 
    of paragraph (a)(1); adding paragraph (a)(7); and revising paragraph 
    (e) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 1.861-2  Interest.
    
        (a) * * * (1) * * * See paragraph (a)(7) of this section for 
    special rules concerning substitute interest paid or
    
    [[Page 53501]]
    
    accrued pursuant to a securities lending transaction.
    * * * * *
        (7) A substitute interest payment is a payment, made to the 
    transferor of a security in a securities lending transaction or a sale-
    repurchase transaction, of an amount equivalent to an interest payment 
    which the owner of the transferred security is entitled to receive 
    during the term of the transaction. A securities lending transaction is 
    a transfer of one or more securities that is described in section 
    1058(a) or a substantially similar transaction. A sale-repurchase 
    transaction is an agreement under which a person transfers a security 
    in exchange for cash and simultaneously agrees to receive substantially 
    identical securities from the transferee in the future in exchange for 
    cash. A substitute interest payment shall be sourced in the same manner 
    as the interest accruing on the transferred security for purposes of 
    this section and Sec. 1.862-1. See also Secs. 1.864-5(b)(2)(iii), 
    1.871-7(b)(2), 1.881-2(b)(2) and for the character of such payments and 
    Sec. 1.894-1(c) for the application tax treaties to these transactions.
    * * * * *
        (e) Effective dates. Except as otherwise provided, this section 
    applies with respect to taxable years beginning after December 31, 
    1966. For corresponding rules applicable to taxable years beginning 
    before January 1, 1967, (see 26 CFR part 1 revised April 1, 1971). 
    Paragraph (a)(7) of this section is applicable to payments made after 
    November 13, 1997.
        Par. 3. Section 1.861-3 is amended by adding a sentence at the end 
    of paragraph (a)(1); adding paragraph (a)(6); and removing the first 
    sentence of paragraph (d) and adding three sentences in its place to 
    read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 1.861-3  Dividends.
    
        (a) * * * (1) * * * See also paragraph (a)(6) of this section for 
    special rules concerning substitute dividend payments received pursuant 
    to a securities lending transaction.
    * * * * *
        (6) Substitute dividend payments. A substitute dividend payment is 
    a payment, made to the transferor of a security in a securities lending 
    transaction or a sale-repurchase transaction, of an amount equivalent 
    to a dividend distribution which the owner of the transferred security 
    is entitled to receive during the term of the transaction. A securities 
    lending transaction is a transfer of one or more securities that is 
    described in section 1058(a) or a substantially similar transaction. A 
    sale-repurchase transaction is an agreement under which a person 
    transfers a security in exchange for cash and simultaneously agrees to 
    receive substantially identical securities from the transferee in the 
    future in exchange for cash. A substitute dividend payment shall be 
    sourced in the same manner as the distributions with respect to the 
    transferred security for purposes of this section and Sec. 1.862-1. See 
    also Secs. 1.864-5(b)(2)(iii), 1.871-7(b)(2) and 1.881-2(b)(2) for the 
    character of such payments and Sec. 1.894-1(c) for the application of 
    tax treaties to these transactions.
    * * * * *
        (d) * * * Except as otherwise provided in this paragraph this 
    section applies with respect to dividends received or accrued after 
    December 31, 1966. Paragraph (a)(5) of this section applies to certain 
    dividends from a DISC or former DISC in taxable years ending after 
    December 31, 1971. Paragraph (a)(6) of this section is applicable to 
    payments made after November 13, 1997. * * *
        Par. 4. Section 1.864-5 is amended by redesignating paragraph 
    (b)(2)(ii) as paragraph (b)(2)(iii) and adding new paragraph (b)(2)(ii) 
    to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 1.864-5  Foreign source income effectively connected with U.S. 
    business.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) * * *
        (2) * * *
        (ii) Substitute payments. For purposes of this paragraph (b)(2), a 
    substitute interest payment (as defined in Sec. 1.861-2(a)(7)) received 
    by a foreign person subject to tax under this paragraph (b) pursuant to 
    a securities lending transaction or a sale-repurchase transaction (as 
    defined in Sec. 1.861-2(a)(7)) with respect to a security (as defined 
    in Sec. 1.864-6(b)(2)(ii)(c)) shall have the same character as interest 
    income paid or accrued with respect to the terms of the transferred 
    security. Similarly, for purposes of this paragraph (b)(2), a 
    substitute dividend payment (as defined in Sec. 1.861-3(a)(6)) received 
    by a foreign person pursuant to a securities lending transaction or a 
    sale-repurchase transaction (as defined in Sec. 1.861-3(a)(6)) with 
    respect to a stock shall have the same character as a distribution 
    received with respect to the transferred security. This paragraph 
    (b)(2)(ii) is applicable to payments made after November 13, 1997.
    * * * * *
        Par. 5. Section 1.871-7 is amended by redesignating the text of 
    paragraph (b) as paragraph (b)(1); adding a paragraph heading for newly 
    designated paragraph (b)(1); adding paragraph (b)(2); and removing the 
    first sentence of paragraph (f) and adding two sentences in its place 
    to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 1.871-7  Taxation of nonresident alien individuals not engaged in 
    U.S. business.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) Fixed or determinable annual or periodical income--(1) General 
    rule. * * *
        (2) Substitute payments. For purposes of this section, a substitute 
    interest payment (as defined in Sec. 1.861-2(a)(7)) received by a 
    foreign person pursuant to a securities lending transaction or a sale-
    repurchase transaction (as defined in Sec. 1.861-2(a)(7)) shall have 
    the same character as interest income paid or accrued with respect to 
    the terms of the transferred security. Similarly, for purposes of this 
    section, a substitute dividend payment (as defined in Sec. 1.861-
    3(a)(6)) received by a foreign person pursuant to a securities lending 
    transaction or a sale-repurchase transaction (as defined in Sec. 1.861-
    3(a)(6)) shall have the same character as a distribution received with 
    respect to the transferred security. Where, pursuant to a securities 
    lending transaction or a sale-repurchase transaction, a foreign person 
    transfers to another person a security the interest on which would 
    qualify as portfolio interest under section 871(h) in the hands of the 
    lender, substitute interest payments made with respect to the 
    transferred security will be treated as portfolio interest, provided 
    that in the case of interest on an obligation in registered form (as 
    defined in Sec. 1.871-14(c)(1)(i)), the transferor complies with the 
    documentation requirement described in Sec. 1.871-14(c)(1)(ii)(C) with 
    respect to the payment of the substitute interest and none of the 
    exceptions to the portfolio interest exemption in sections 871(h) (3) 
    and (4) apply. See also Sec. 1.861-2(b)(2) and 1.894-1(c).
    * * * * *
        (f) * * * Except as otherwise provided in this paragraph, this 
    section shall apply for taxable years beginning after December 31, 
    1966. Paragraph (b)(2) of this section is applicable to payments made 
    after November 13, 1997. * * *
        Par. 6. Section 1.881-2 is amended by redesignating the text of 
    paragraph (b) as paragraph (b)(1); adding a paragraph heading for newly 
    designated paragraph (b)(1); adding a paragraph (b)(2); and removing 
    the first sentence of paragraph (e) and adding two sentences in its 
    place to read as follows:
    
    [[Page 53502]]
    
    Sec. 1.881-2  Taxation of foreign corporations not engaged in U.S. 
    business.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) Fixed or determinable annual or periodical income--(1) General 
    rule.
        (2) Substitute payments. For purposes of this section, a substitute 
    interest payment (as defined in Sec. 1.861-2(a)(7)) received by a 
    foreign person pursuant to a securities lending transaction or a sale-
    repurchase transaction (as defined in Sec. 1.861-2(a)(7)) shall have 
    the same character as interest income received pursuant to the terms of 
    the transferred security. Similarly, for purposes of this section, a 
    substitute dividend payment (as defined in Sec. 1.861-3(a)(6)) received 
    by a foreign person pursuant to a securities lending transaction or a 
    sale-repurchase transaction (as defined in Sec. 1.861-2(a)(7)) shall 
    have the same character as a distribution received with respect to the 
    transferred security. Where, pursuant to a securities lending 
    transaction or a sale-repurchase transaction, a foreign person 
    transfers to another person a security the interest on which would 
    qualify as portfolio interest under section 881(c) in the hands of the 
    lender, substitute interest payments made with respect to the 
    transferred security will be treated as portfolio interest, provided 
    that in the case of interest on an obligation in registered form (as 
    defined in Sec. 1.871-14(c)(1)(i)), the transferor complies with the 
    documentation requirement described in Sec. 1.871-14(c)(1)(ii)(C) with 
    respect to the payment of substitute interest and none of the 
    exceptions to the portfolio interest exemption in sections 881(c) (3) 
    and (4) apply. See also Secs. 1.871-7(b)(2) and 1.894-1(c).
    * * * * *
        (e) * * * Except as otherwise provide in this paragraph, this 
    section applies for taxable years beginning after December 31, 1966. 
    Paragraph (b)(2) of this section is applicable to payments made after 
    November 13, 1997. * * *
        Par. 7. Section 1.894-1 is amended by revising paragraph (c) and 
    adding paragraph (d) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 1.894-1  Income affected by treaty.
    
    * * * * *
        (c) Substitute interest and dividend payments. The provisions of an 
    income tax convention dealing with interest or dividends paid to or 
    derived by a foreign person include substitute interest or dividend 
    payments that have the same character as interest or dividends under 
    Sec. 1.864-5(b)(2)(ii), 1.871-7(b)(2) or 1.881-2(b)(2). The provisions 
    of this paragraph (c) shall apply for purposes of securities lending 
    transactions or sale-repurchase transactions as defined in Sec. 1.861-
    2(a)(7) and Sec. 1.861-3(a)(6).
        (d) Effective dates. Paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section apply 
    for taxable years beginning after December 31, 966. For corresponding 
    rules applicable to taxable years beginning before January 1, 1967, 
    (see 26 CFR part 1 revised April 1, 1971). Paragraph (c) of this 
    section is applicable to payments made after November 13, 1997.
    
    
    Sec. 1.7701(l)-1  [Amended]
    
        Par. 10. Section 1.7701(l)-1 is amended as follows:
        1. Paragraph (a) is amended by removing the paragraph designation 
    (a) and the heading.
        2. Paragraph (b) is removed.
    Michael P. Dolan,
    Acting Commissioner of Internal Revenue.
    
        Approved: August 28, 1997.
    Donald C. Lubick,
    Acting Assistant Secretary of the Treasury.
    [FR Doc. 97-25999 Filed 10-6-97; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 4830-01-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
10/14/1997
Published:
10/14/1997
Department:
Internal Revenue Service
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Final regulations.
Document Number:
97-25999
Dates:
These regulations are effective October 14, 1997.
Pages:
53498-53502 (5 pages)
Docket Numbers:
TD 8735
RINs:
1545-AP71: Certain Payments Made Pursuant to a Securities Lending Transaction
RIN Links:
https://www.federalregister.gov/regulations/1545-AP71/certain-payments-made-pursuant-to-a-securities-lending-transaction
PDF File:
97-25999.pdf
CFR: (9)
26 CFR 1.864-5(b)(2)(ii)
26 CFR 1.894-1(c)
26 CFR 1.7701(l)-1
26 CFR 1.861-2
26 CFR 1.861-3
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