94-30728. Debt Instruments With Original Issue Discount; Contingent Payments  

  • [Federal Register Volume 59, Number 241 (Friday, December 16, 1994)]
    [Unknown Section]
    [Page 0]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 94-30728]
    
    
    [[Page Unknown]]
    
    [Federal Register: December 16, 1994]
    
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
    
    Internal Revenue Service
    
    26 CFR Part 1
    
    [FI-59-91]
    RIN 1545-AQ86
    
     
    
    Debt Instruments With Original Issue Discount; Contingent 
    Payments
    
    AGENCY: Internal Revenue Service (IRS), Treasury.
    
    ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking and notice of public hearing.
    
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    SUMMARY: This document contains proposed regulations relating to the 
    tax treatment of debt instruments that provide for one or more 
    contingent payments. This document also contains proposed regulations 
    that provide for the integration of a contingent payment or variable 
    rate debt instrument with a related hedge and proposed amendments to 
    the final original issue discount regulations that were published in 
    the Federal Register on February 2, 1994. The proposed regulations in 
    this document would provide needed guidance to holders and issuers of 
    contingent payment debt instruments. This document also provides a 
    notice of a public hearing on the proposed regulations.
    
    DATES: Written comments must be received by Thursday, March 16, 1995. 
    Requests to appear and outlines of topics to be discussed at the public 
    hearing scheduled for Thursday, March 16, 1995, at 10 a.m. must be 
    received by Thursday, February 23, 1995.
    
    ADDRESSES: Send submissions to: CC:DOM:CORP:T:R (FI-59-91), room 5228, 
    Internal Revenue Service, POB 7604, Ben Franklin Station, Washington, 
    DC 20044. In the alternative, submissions may be hand delivered between 
    the hours of 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. to: CC:DOM:CORP:T:R (FI-59-91), 
    Courier's Desk, Internal Revenue Service, 1111 Constitution Avenue NW., 
    Washington, DC. A public hearing has been scheduled for Thursday, March 
    16, 1995, at 10 a.m. in the Auditorium, Internal Revenue Building, 1111 
    Constitution Avenue NW., Washington, DC.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Concerning the regulations (other than 
    Sec. 1.1275-6), Andrew C. Kittler, (202) 622-3940, or William E. 
    Blanchard, (202) 622-3950; concerning Sec. 1.1275-6, Michael S. Novey, 
    (202) 622-3900; concerning submissions and the hearing, Michael 
    Slaughter, (202) 622-7190 (not toll-free numbers).
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    Paperwork Reduction Act
    
        The collections of information contained in this notice of proposed 
    rulemaking have been submitted to the Office of Management and Budget 
    for review in accordance with the Paperwork Reduction Act (44 U.S.C. 
    3504(h)). Comments on the collections of information should be sent to 
    the Office of Management and Budget, Attn: Desk Officer for the 
    Department of the Treasury, Office of Information and Regulatory 
    Affairs, Washington, DC 20503, with copies to the Internal Revenue 
    Service, Attn: IRS Reports Clearance Officer, PC:FP, Washington, DC 
    20224.
        The collections of information are in Secs. 1.1275-3(b)(1)(i), 
    1.1275-4(b)(4)(iv), and 1.1275-6(f). This information is required by 
    the IRS to determine the amount of income, deductions, gain, or loss 
    attributable to a contingent payment debt instrument. This information 
    will be used for audit and examination purposes. The likely respondents 
    and recordkeepers are businesses and other organizations.
        Estimated total annual reporting and recordkeeping burden: 95,000 
    hours.
        The estimated annual burden per respondent/recordkeeper varies from 
    .3 to .5 hours, depending on individual circumstances, with an 
    estimated average of .475 hours.
        Estimated number of respondents/recordkeepers: 200,000.
        Estimated annual frequency of responses: 1.
    
    Background
    
        Section 1275(d) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 (Code) grants 
    the Secretary the authority to prescribe regulations under the original 
    issue discount (OID) provisions of the Code, including regulations 
    relating to debt instruments that provide for contingent payments. On 
    April 8, 1986, the IRS published in the Federal Register a notice of 
    proposed rulemaking (51 FR 12022) relating to debt instruments with 
    OID. Section 1.1275-4 of the 1986 proposed regulations provided rules 
    for contingent payment debt instruments. On February 28, 1991, the IRS 
    published in the Federal Register a proposed amendment to Sec. 1.1275-4 
    (56 FR 8308), which would have bifurcated certain contingent payment 
    debt instruments into their component parts (Sec. 1.1275-4(g)).
        On December 22, 1992, the IRS published in the Federal Register a 
    notice of proposed rulemaking that substantially revised the 1986 
    proposed regulations (57 FR 60750), and on February 4, 1994, the IRS 
    published in the Federal Register final OID regulations (59 FR 4799). 
    However, neither the 1992 proposed regulations nor the final OID 
    regulations contained rules for contingent payment debt instruments 
    under Sec. 1.1275-4.
        The IRS received numerous written comments on Sec. 1.1275-4, as 
    originally proposed in 1986 and as amended in 1991. In addition, on 
    November 17, 1986, the IRS held a public hearing to discuss the 1986 
    proposed regulations, including Sec. 1.1275-4.
        Commentators criticized Sec. 1.1275-4 of the 1986 proposed 
    regulations because the regulations ignored the economics of many 
    contingent payment debt instruments. In particular, commentators 
    believed that the 1986 proposed regulations did not reflect the 
    reasonable expectations of the parties because the regulations used a 
    ``wait and see'' approach to the accrual of interest determined by 
    reference to contingencies. The commentators noted that, with respect 
    to certain contingent payment debt instruments, the 1986 proposed 
    regulations resulted in a significant backloading of interest.
        Commentators also criticized the 1991 proposed amendment to 
    Sec. 1.1275-4. Commentators argued that there is rarely a unique set of 
    components into which a contingent payment debt instrument can be 
    bifurcated. In addition, commentators questioned whether it is 
    appropriate to bifurcate a contingent payment debt instrument because 
    it is often unclear how the contingent components should be taxed.
        Some commentators suggested that it is preferable to determine 
    interest accruals on a contingent payment debt instrument by assuming 
    that the issue price of the debt instrument will bear a return at the 
    applicable Federal rate (AFR) or some other specified rate. Other 
    commentators suggested that it is preferable to determine interest 
    accruals by constructing a projected payment schedule and accruing on 
    the basis of the projections.
    
    Explanation of Provisions
    
    In general
        The proposed regulations in this document contain new rules for the 
    treatment of contingent payment debt instruments (Sec. 1.1275-4). The 
    proposed regulations provide separate rules for debt instruments that 
    are issued for cash or publicly traded property and for debt 
    instruments that are issued for nonpublicly traded property. The 
    proposed regulations also provide special rules for tax-exempt 
    obligations. Section 1.1275-4, as proposed on April 8, 1986, and 
    amended on February 28, 1991, is superseded as of December 16, 1994.
        The proposed regulations provide a rule to determine the imputed 
    principal amount of a contingent payment debt instrument issued for 
    nonpublicly traded property. The proposed regulations also provide 
    rules for the integration of certain debt instruments with related 
    hedges (Sec. 1.1275-6). In addition, the proposed regulations amend the 
    rules for variable rate debt instruments in Sec. 1.1275-5 of the final 
    OID regulations. Finally, the proposed regulations make conforming 
    changes to certain provisions of the final OID regulations, such as the 
    regulations under section 483.
    
    Section 1.1275-4  Contingent payment debt instruments.
    
    A. Applicability
        Section 1.1275-4 of the proposed regulations generally applies to 
    any debt instrument that provides for one or more contingent payments. 
    The proposed regulations, however, do not apply to a debt instrument 
    that has an issue price determined under section 1273(b)(4), a variable 
    rate debt instrument, a debt instrument subject to Sec. 1.1272-1(c) 
    (certain debt instruments that provide for alternative payment 
    schedules), a debt instrument subject to section 1272(a)(6) (REMIC 
    interests and certain other debt instruments that are subject to 
    prepayment), or, except as provided in section 988, a debt instrument 
    subject to section 988 (a debt instrument that provides for payments 
    denominated in, or determined by reference to, a nonfunctional 
    currency). The IRS and Treasury request comments on whether other types 
    of debt instruments should be excluded from the rules of Sec. 1.1275-4, 
    such as certain prepayable obligations included in a pool.
        Section 1.1275-4 of the proposed regulations applies only to a 
    contingent payment debt instrument that constitutes a debt instrument 
    for federal income tax purposes. No inference is intended under the 
    proposed regulations as to whether a particular instrument constitutes 
    a debt instrument for federal income tax purposes.
        Although the proposed regulations do not define the term contingent 
    payment, the proposed regulations treat certain payments as not being 
    contingent. For example, if a payment is subject to either a remote or 
    incidental contingency, the payment is not a contingent payment. A 
    contingency is remote if there is either a remote likelihood that the 
    contingency will occur or a remote likelihood that the contingency will 
    not occur. A contingency is incidental if the potential amount of the 
    payment under any reasonably expected market conditions is 
    insignificant relative to the total expected payments on the debt 
    instrument. Under the proposed regulations, a debt instrument does not 
    provide for contingent payments merely because it is convertible into 
    stock of the issuer or a related party. However, if a debt instrument 
    is convertible into stock of an unrelated party, the debt instrument is 
    a contingent payment debt instrument.
    B. The Noncontingent Bond Method
        The noncontingent bond method applies to a contingent payment debt 
    instrument that has an issue price determined under Sec. 1.1273-2 or 
    Sec. 1.1274-2(b)(3). For example, the noncontingent bond method 
    generally applies to a contingent payment debt instrument issued for 
    money or publicly traded property.
        Under the noncontingent bond method, a projected payment schedule 
    is determined for a debt instrument, and interest accrues on the debt 
    instrument based on this schedule. The projected payment schedule for a 
    debt instrument consists of all noncontingent payments and a projected 
    amount for each contingent payment. If the actual amount of a 
    contingent payment differs from the projected amount of the payment, 
    appropriate adjustments are taken into account to reflect this 
    difference.
        Although the actual amount of a contingent payment is not fixed or 
    determinable when a contingent payment debt instrument is issued, the 
    noncontingent bond method, in effect, treats the projected amounts of 
    contingent payments like fixed payments and requires interest accruals 
    based on the projected amounts. The IRS and Treasury believe that this 
    method is consistent with Congress' intent under the OID provisions to 
    require a current accrual of interest on a debt instrument.
        While other methods suggested by commentators also require a 
    current accrual of interest, the noncontingent bond method requires 
    interest accruals based on a rate that is implicit in the debt 
    instrument and provides a means of determining whether payments are 
    appropriately treated as interest or principal. The IRS and Treasury 
    believe that the noncontingent bond method is the most appropriate 
    method for achieving this purpose. For example, methods that require 
    accrual at a fixed rate for all debt instruments often will over-accrue 
    or under-accrue interest on a particular debt instrument. In addition, 
    the methods may not always provide an appropriate measure of the 
    interest and principal components of a payment. Because of the 
    inaccuracies under these methods, the IRS and Treasury rejected these 
    methods.
        1. Projected payment schedule.
        The projected payment schedule for a contingent payment debt 
    instrument is determined as of the debt instrument's issue date. Except 
    in the case of a contingent payment that is fixed more than 6 months 
    before it is due, the projected payment schedule remains fixed 
    throughout the term of the debt instrument and any income, deductions, 
    gain, or loss attributable to the debt instrument are based on the 
    schedule.
        The projected payment schedule for a debt instrument consists of 
    all noncontingent payments and a projected amount for each contingent 
    payment. The proposed regulations provide rules for determining the 
    projected amount of each contingent payment included in a projected 
    payment schedule. Under the proposed regulations, contingent payments 
    are either quotable contingent payments or nonquotable contingent 
    payments.
        A quotable contingent payment is a contingent payment that is 
    substantially similar to a property right for which forward price 
    quotes are readily available. In general, the projected amount of a 
    quotable contingent payment is the forward price of the property right. 
    If a contingent payment is substantially similar to an option and 
    forward price quotes are not readily available for the option, the 
    projected amount of the payment is the spot price of the option on the 
    issue date, if readily available, compounded at the AFR from the issue 
    date to the date the payment is due.
        Under the proposed regulations, a property right includes a right, 
    an obligation, or a combination of rights or obligations. For example, 
    options and forward contracts are property rights. More complicated 
    contingent payments are constructed from combinations of rights and 
    obligations.
        A contingent payment is substantially similar to a property right 
    if, under reasonably expected market conditions, the value and timing 
    of the amount to be paid or received pursuant to the property right are 
    expected to be substantially the same as the value and timing of the 
    contingent payment. It is irrelevant for purposes of testing 
    substantial similarity whether the property right must be settled in 
    cash or in property or whether the credit rating of the issuer is 
    different from the party giving the price quote. It is also irrelevant 
    whether a property right is available in the same denomination as the 
    measure of the contingent payments.
        Quotes for the substantially similar property right are readily 
    available if they are readily available from brokers, traders, or 
    dealers during specified time periods. Although price quotes for over-
    the-counter property rights often are not widely disseminated because 
    the rights may be privately tailored for a particular transaction, 
    quotes for over-the-counter property rights generally will be treated 
    as readily available if customers could obtain quotes from brokers, 
    traders, or dealers.
        Commentators have stated that any method requiring taxpayers to 
    create payment schedules using expected values would be difficult to 
    apply. They have said that there is too much variation in the expected 
    values of the property rights embedded in contingent payment debt 
    instruments to allow for the creation of payment schedules that are not 
    susceptible to abuse or to challenge upon examination on the basis of 
    hindsight.
        The noncontingent bond method, however, generally sets the 
    projected amounts of market-based contingent payments by using forward 
    prices for the embedded property rights rather than expected values. It 
    is the understanding of the IRS and Treasury that forward prices are 
    available for almost all of the market-based property rights embedded 
    in contingent payment debt instruments. For example, these property 
    rights generally may be obtained on a separate basis for hedging 
    purposes. Moreover, the IRS and Treasury understand that dealers and 
    certain information services provide daily quotations of the prices of 
    contingent payment debt instruments held by regulated investment 
    companies to allow the companies to determine their net asset values. 
    To do this, the price of the separate elements of the contingent 
    payment debt instruments, including the embedded property rights, must 
    be determined. Thus, the IRS and Treasury believe that, in general, it 
    will not be difficult for issuers of contingent payment debt 
    instruments to obtain forward price quotes for the property rights 
    embedded in the debt instruments.
        The proposed regulations include a number of provisions designed to 
    address other concerns with the pricing requirement. First, the pricing 
    requirement only applies if quotes are readily available. Therefore, 
    when it is not feasible to obtain a quote, pricing is not required.
        Second, the IRS and Treasury understand that the price a broker or 
    dealer develops for any property right embedded in a contingent payment 
    debt instrument when pricing the debt instrument as a whole will not 
    necessarily translate into a forward price for the property right 
    determined on a separate basis. For example, the price of the property 
    right embedded in a contingent payment debt instrument may include 
    charges for financial intermediation that would not be imposed if the 
    property right were purchased separately. Thus, the rules that apply to 
    an issuer who must set a projected payment schedule allow substantial 
    flexibility.
        Further, the IRS and Treasury recognize that quotes for thinly 
    traded property rights may vary and that the bid-ask spread may be 
    substantial. The proposed regulations, therefore, provide that a 
    taxpayer may use any reasonable quote to determine the projected amount 
    of a payment. The proposed regulations also provide that the taxpayer 
    may use bid price, ask price, or midpoint price quotes to determine the 
    projected amounts of quotable contingent payments. However, the 
    taxpayer must make this determination on a consistent basis. For 
    example, a taxpayer cannot use ask prices to determine the projected 
    amounts for some contingent payments on a debt instrument and bid 
    prices to determine the projected amounts for other contingent payments 
    on the instrument. Finally, if a contingent payment is equivalent to 
    more than one combination of property rights, taxpayers may use any 
    reasonable combination. However, it is not reasonable to construct a 
    combination of property rights that contains property rights for which 
    forward price quotes are unavailable if there are other possible 
    combinations that consist only of property rights for which forward 
    price quotes are readily available.
        A nonquotable contingent payment is any contingent payment that is 
    not a quotable contingent payment. For example, contingent payments 
    based on oil production or the issuer's gross receipts are generally 
    nonquotable contingent payments.
        The projected amount of a nonquotable contingent payment is 
    generally based on the projected yield of the contingent payment debt 
    instrument. The projected yield is a reasonable rate for the debt 
    instrument that, as of the issue date, reflects general market 
    conditions, the credit quality of the issuer, and the terms and 
    conditions of the debt instrument. For this purpose, the proposed 
    regulations provide that a reasonable rate is not less than the AFR or 
    the yield on the debt instrument determined without regard to the 
    nonquotable contingent payments. In many cases, a reasonable rate will 
    substantially exceed the AFR. Once the projected yield is determined, 
    the projected amount of each nonquotable contingent payment is 
    determined so that the projected payment schedule reflects the 
    projected yield. The projected amount of each payment, however, must 
    reasonably reflect the relative expected values of the nonquotable 
    contingent payments.
        The proposed regulations provide simplifying rules to determine the 
    projected payment schedule of a contingent payment debt instrument that 
    would be a variable rate debt instrument except that it provides for a 
    single quotable contingent payment at maturity or does not guarantee a 
    sufficient return of stated principal. Under the proposed regulations, 
    the projected amounts of the variable interest payments are determined 
    using the rules of Sec. 1.1275-5(e), rather than the general rules for 
    quotable contingent payments. For example, if the contingent payment 
    debt instrument provides for stated interest at a single qualified 
    floating rate and a quotable contingent payment at maturity, the 
    projected amounts of the interest payments are based on the value of 
    the rate as of the instrument's issue date and the projected amount of 
    the contingent payment is determined under the rules for quotable 
    contingent payments.
        The proposed regulations require the issuer to construct the 
    projected payment schedule. If an issuer fails to produce a projected 
    payment schedule as required, the issuer will be treated as failing to 
    meet the recordkeeping requirements under section 6001 necessary to 
    support the deduction of interest. To avoid potential audit disputes 
    about the projected amount of a contingent payment, the proposed 
    regulations provide that the issuer's projected payment schedule will 
    be respected unless the schedule is unreasonable. A projected payment 
    schedule generally will be considered unreasonable if it is set with a 
    purpose to accelerate or defer interest accruals. In determining 
    whether a projected payment schedule is unreasonable, consideration 
    will be given to whether the interest on a contingent payment debt 
    instrument determined under the schedule has a significant effect on 
    the issuer's or the holder's U.S. tax liability. For example, a 
    projected payment schedule prepared by an issuer that is a non-U.S. 
    taxpayer will be given special scrutiny because no schedule would have 
    an effect on the issuer's U.S. tax liability.
        The proposed regulations provide that all holders of a contingent 
    payment debt instrument are bound by the issuer's projected payment 
    schedule and that an issuer must provide the schedule to the holders. A 
    holder may vary from the projected payment schedule provided by the 
    issuer only if the projected payment schedule is unreasonable. If an 
    issuer does not create a projected payment schedule as required or the 
    issuer's schedule is unreasonable, a holder must apply the projected 
    payment schedule rules to determine a reasonable projected payment 
    schedule. If a holder is not using the issuer's projected payment 
    schedule, the holder must explicitly disclose this fact on its timely 
    filed federal income tax return and must explain why it is not using 
    the issuer's schedule.
        Because the proposed regulations allow considerable flexibility, 
    taxpayers may attempt to create uneconomic accruals by intentionally 
    overstating or understating the projected amounts of the contingent 
    payments. Taxpayers must use actual prices in setting the payment 
    schedule and are given flexibility only within the range of reasonable 
    prices. For example, the prices of an issuer's or a holder's hedges may 
    be used to determine reasonableness. Under the rules of section 6001, 
    taxpayers must maintain adequate contemporaneous records to support the 
    projected payment schedule. In addition, the rules of Sec. 1.1275-2T(g) 
    (the OID anti-abuse rule) apply to transactions subject to the proposed 
    regulations, including transactions in which the taxpayer attempts to 
    create payment schedules that cause uneconomic accruals. Attempts to 
    overstate or understate the amounts of the projected payments will give 
    rise to adjustments of tax liability, and, if appropriate, penalties.
        2. Adjustments.
        Under the noncontingent bond method, if the actual amount of a 
    contingent payment differs from the projected amount of the payment, 
    the difference results in either a positive or negative adjustment that 
    must be taken into account by the taxpayer. The purpose of the 
    adjustments is to correct the interest accruals that have occurred to 
    date on the debt instrument. Therefore, the adjustments generally 
    increase or decrease the amount of interest on a contingent payment 
    debt instrument.
        If the actual amount of a contingent payment is greater than the 
    projected amount of the payment, the difference is a positive 
    adjustment. If the projected amount of a contingent payment is greater 
    than the actual amount of the payment, the difference is a negative 
    adjustment. Positive and negative adjustments for a taxable year are 
    netted for each taxable year.
        A net positive adjustment for a taxable year is treated by the 
    taxpayer as additional interest for the year. A net negative adjustment 
    for a taxable year is taken into account as follows.
        First, a net negative adjustment for a taxable year offsets the 
    interest that accrued on the debt instrument for the year based on the 
    projected payment schedule.
        Second, if the net negative adjustment exceeds the amount of 
    interest that accrued on the debt instrument for the taxable year, the 
    excess is treated as an ordinary loss by the holder or as ordinary 
    income by the issuer. However, the amount treated as ordinary loss by 
    the holder is limited to the amount by which the holder's total prior 
    interest inclusions on the debt instrument (including all net positive 
    adjustments) exceed the total net negative adjustments on the debt 
    instrument previously treated as ordinary loss by the holder. 
    Similarly, the amount treated as ordinary income by the issuer is 
    limited to the amount by which the issuer's total prior interest 
    deductions on the debt instrument (including all net positive 
    adjustments) exceed the total net negative adjustments on the debt 
    instrument previously treated as ordinary income by the issuer.
        Third, because a negative adjustment adjusts interest accruals, if 
    the net negative adjustment exceeds the sum of the amount of interest 
    that accrued on the debt instrument for the taxable year and the amount 
    treated as ordinary loss (or income) for the taxable year, the excess 
    is treated as a negative adjustment that occurs on the first day of the 
    succeeding taxable year. As a result, the excess offsets interest 
    accruals on the debt instrument in future taxable years.
        Fourth, any unused net negative adjustment reduces the amount 
    realized by the holder on the sale, exchange, or retirement of a 
    contingent payment debt instrument. Similarly, any unused net negative 
    adjustment is taken into account by the issuer on retirement of a 
    contingent payment debt instrument as income from the discharge of 
    indebtedness. The IRS and Treasury request comments on whether the 
    regulations should provide specific rules governing the treatment of 
    net negative adjustments determined on the occurrence of other events.
        The IRS and Treasury chose this method for taking adjustments into 
    account because it provided a relatively simple method for adjusting 
    the yield. However, the method may produce inappropriate results, for 
    example, if there are large adjustments in the early years of a debt 
    instrument. Other methods, such as a method that spreads adjustments 
    over the term of the debt instrument, would produce more accurate 
    results but would be more complex. The IRS and Treasury request 
    comments on whether another method should be used for taking 
    adjustments into account.
        3. Adjusted issue price, basis, and retirement.
        Under the noncontingent bond method, the adjusted issue price of a 
    contingent payment debt instrument, adjustments to the holder's basis 
    in the debt instrument, and the amount of any contingent payment 
    treated as made on the scheduled retirement of the debt instrument are 
    determined using the projected payment schedule rather than actual 
    contingent payments. This rule is appropriate because positive or 
    negative adjustments are used to take into account the difference 
    between actual amounts and projected amounts of contingent payments. 
    This difference would be counted twice if adjusted issue price, 
    adjusted basis, and the amount deemed paid on retirement were based on 
    the actual amounts of contingent payments rather than the projected 
    amounts.
        4. Character on sale, exchange, or retirement.
        Under the noncontingent bond method, any gain recognized by a 
    holder on the sale, exchange, or retirement of a contingent payment 
    debt instrument is treated as interest income. Similarly, any loss 
    recognized by a holder on the sale, exchange, or retirement of a 
    contingent payment debt instrument is treated as ordinary loss to the 
    extent of the holder's prior interest inclusions (reduced by prior 
    ordinary losses attributable to net negative adjustments) on the 
    instrument. Although this rule is inconsistent with the treatment of 
    noncontingent debt instruments, the rule is necessary because of the 
    treatment of net positive and net negative adjustments. The rule 
    prevents a taxpayer who sells a contingent payment debt instrument 
    immediately before a positive adjustment occurs from converting the 
    interest income from the adjustment into capital gain or from 
    converting the amount by which a negative adjustment would reduce 
    interest income into capital loss. Consistent with the rule's purpose, 
    the rule does not apply to a sale, exchange, or retirement that occurs 
    when there are no outstanding contingent payments due on a debt 
    instrument.
        5. Other special rules.
        Although most contingent payment debt instruments can be dealt with 
    under the above provisions, the proposed regulations provide additional 
    rules for certain other circumstances. For example, the proposed 
    regulations provide rules for a holder whose basis in a contingent 
    payment debt instrument is different from the debt instrument's 
    adjusted issue price (e.g., a secondary market purchaser of the debt 
    instrument). Under the proposed regulations, the holder continues to 
    accrue interest and determine adjustments based on the original 
    projected payment schedule. The holder, however, must allocate the 
    difference between basis and adjusted issue price to the accruals or 
    projected payments on the debt instrument over the remaining term of 
    the debt instrument. Amounts allocated to a taxable year are recovered 
    as if they were positive or negative adjustments, as appropriate.
        The proposed regulations require only a reasonable, rather than an 
    exact, allocation of the difference between basis and adjusted issue 
    price. For example, if almost all of the difference is attributable to 
    changes in the expected value of a contingent payment, the holder may 
    allocate the difference to the contingent payment. Similarly, a 
    taxpayer may allocate a portion of the difference to accruals if the 
    taxpayer determines that the portion is attributable to changes in 
    interest rates. A taxpayer may make this determination by comparing 
    rates on similar debt instruments, by looking to changes in standard 
    interest rate indices that have occurred since the date the contingent 
    payment debt instrument was issued, or by other appropriate means. The 
    proposed regulations require the holder's allocation to be reasonable 
    based on all the facts and circumstances.
        In the case of a contingent payment debt instrument that is 
    exchange listed property (within the meaning of Sec. 1.1273-2(f)(2)), 
    the proposed regulations provide a safe harbor that allows holders to 
    account for the difference between the debt instrument's adjusted issue 
    price and the holder's basis under the same rules that apply to 
    acquisition premium on a noncontingent debt instrument under section 
    1272(a)(7) and Sec. 1.1272-2.
        The IRS and Treasury recognize that the method provided in the 
    proposed regulations for allocating the difference between basis and 
    adjusted issue price may be difficult to apply because the difference 
    may be attributable to both changes in interest rates and in the 
    expected values of the contingent payments. Other methods for making 
    the allocation were considered in drafting the proposed regulations, 
    but were not adopted because they were not believed to be sufficiently 
    accurate. The IRS and Treasury believe that contingent payment debt 
    instruments (other than exchange listed debt instruments) rarely trade 
    in the secondary market and, therefore, the need to make the allocation 
    will occur only infrequently. The IRS and Treasury request comments on 
    this issue.
        The proposed regulations also provide rules for a debt instrument 
    that has a contingent payment that is fixed more than 6 months before 
    the payment is due. Under the proposed regulations, an adjustment is 
    made on the date the payment is fixed, and the amount of the adjustment 
    is equal to the difference between the present value of the fixed 
    amount and the present value of the projected amount of the contingent 
    payment. The adjusted issue price is modified to reflect the adjustment 
    and the projected payment schedule is changed to reflect the fixed 
    payment. The IRS and Treasury are concerned about whether this method 
    may produce inappropriate accelerations of income or deductions and 
    request comments on whether other methods, such as a method that 
    spreads the income or deductions, are more appropriate.
        In addition, the proposed regulations provide rules for debt 
    instruments that have both payments that are contingent as to time and 
    payments that are contingent as to amount. If a taxpayer has an option 
    to put or call the debt instrument, to exchange the debt instrument for 
    other property, or to extend the maturity date of the debt instrument, 
    the projected payment schedule is determined by using the principles of 
    Sec. 1.1272-1(c)(5). Under the proposed regulations, if an option to 
    put, call, or exchange the debt instrument is assumed to be exercised 
    under the principles of Sec. 1.1272-1(c)(5), it is generally reasonable 
    to assume that the option is exercised immediately before it expires. 
    If the option is exercised at an earlier time, the exercise is treated 
    as a sale or exchange of the debt instrument.
        The proposed regulations reserve on other types of timing 
    contingencies. The IRS and Treasury request comments on the appropriate 
    treatment of other types of timing contingencies.
    
    C. Method for Debt Instruments Not Subject to the Noncontingent Bond 
    Method
    
        The proposed regulations provide a method for contingent payment 
    debt instruments not subject to the noncontingent bond method. In 
    general, the method applies to a debt instrument that has an issue 
    price determined under Sec. 1.1274-2 (e.g., a nonpublicly traded debt 
    instrument issued in a sale or exchange of nonpublicly traded 
    property). The method in the proposed regulations is generally similar 
    to the rules prescribed in Sec. 1.1275-4(c) of the 1986 proposed 
    regulations.
        Under the proposed regulations, the payments on a contingent 
    payment debt instrument (the overall debt instrument) are divided into 
    two components: (1) a noncontingent component consisting of all 
    noncontingent payments and the projected amounts of any quotable 
    contingent payments, and (2) a contingent component consisting of all 
    nonquotable contingent payments.
        The noncontingent component is treated as a separate debt 
    instrument and is taxed under the general OID rules (including the 
    noncontingent bond method if the separate debt instrument provides for 
    quotable contingent payments). However, no interest payments on the 
    separate debt instrument are qualified stated interest payments and the 
    de minimis rules do not apply to the separate debt instrument. The 
    issue price of the separate debt instrument is the issue price of the 
    overall debt instrument. See the discussion below for the determination 
    of the stated principal amount and the imputed principal amount of the 
    overall debt instrument for purposes of section 1274.
        In general, a nonquotable contingent payment is not taken into 
    account until the payment is made. When a nonquotable contingent 
    payment (other than a contingent payment accompanied by a payment of 
    adequate stated interest) is made, a portion of the payment is treated 
    as principal, based on the amount determined by discounting the payment 
    at the AFR from the payment date to the issue date, and the remainder 
    is treated as interest. Special rules are provided if a nonquotable 
    contingent payment becomes fixed more than 6 months before it is due.
    
    D. Tax-Exempt Obligations
    
        The proposed regulations provide special rules for tax-exempt 
    obligations. The IRS and Treasury believe that, given the limited 
    exclusion provided in section 103, it is generally inappropriate to 
    treat payments on a property right embedded in a tax-exempt obligation 
    as interest on an obligation of a State or political subdivision (i.e., 
    as tax-exempt interest). Therefore, while the noncontingent bond method 
    generally applies to tax-exempt contingent payment obligations, all 
    positive adjustments are treated as taxable gain from the sale or 
    exchange of the obligation rather than as interest. Negative 
    adjustments are treated as reducing tax-exempt interest, and, 
    therefore, are generally not taken into account as deductible losses. 
    If negative adjustments on a tax-exempt obligation exceed the total 
    tax-exempt interest a holder receives or accrues on a tax-exempt 
    obligation, the excess is treated as loss from the sale or exchange of 
    the obligation. This rule is similar to the rule that applies to 
    exchange gains and losses on tax-exempt obligations under Sec. 1.988-
    3(c)(2). In addition, the proposed regulations provide that the 
    projected yield determined for a tax-exempt obligation may not exceed 
    the greater of the yield on the obligation determined without regard to 
    contingent payments and the tax-exempt AFR that applies to the 
    obligation. If the projected payment schedule results in a higher 
    yield, projected payments must be reduced appropriately.
    
    E. Cross Border Transactions
    
        The IRS and Treasury are concerned about various issues relating to 
    the treatment of foreign holders of contingent payment debt 
    instruments. For example, the IRS and Treasury are concerned about the 
    possibility for tax avoidance that may arise when a contingent payment 
    debt instrument is structured with payments that approximate the yield 
    on an equity security. The IRS and Treasury invite comments on this 
    issue and other issues concerning the proper taxation of foreign 
    holders of contingent payment debt instruments issued by U.S. persons 
    or U.S. holders of contingent payment debt instruments issued by 
    foreign persons.
    
    Section 1.1274-2  Imputed Principal Amount
    
        In general, the issue price of a debt instrument subject to section 
    1274 is determined by reference to the instrument's imputed principal 
    amount. The 1992 proposed regulations under section 1274 provided that, 
    in the case of a contingent payment debt instrument, the imputed 
    principal amount of the debt instrument was the present value of the 
    fixed payments plus the fair market value of the contingent payments. A 
    number of commentators objected to the rule, especially because of the 
    difficulty in valuing the contingent payments typically provided for in 
    debt instruments subject to section 1274. Other commentators objected 
    to the rule's effect on the buyer's basis in the property acquired and 
    the seller's amount realized on the sale or exchange. In response to 
    these comments, the final OID regulations reserved on the issue to 
    allow further study and to coordinate the issue with the regulations 
    relating to contingent payment debt instruments.
        Under the proposed regulations, the imputed principal amount of a 
    contingent payment debt instrument subject to section 1274 is the sum 
    of the present values of the fixed payments and the present values of 
    the projected amounts of any quotable contingent payments. Consistent 
    with the treatment of the fixed payments and any quotable contingent 
    payments as a separate debt instrument under Sec. 1.1275-4 of the 
    proposed regulations, nonquotable contingent payments are not taken 
    into account to determine the stated principal amount or the imputed 
    principal amount of a contingent payment debt instrument. This rule is 
    generally consistent with the 1986 proposed regulations under section 
    1274.
        The proposed regulations also provide that the imputed principal 
    amount of a variable rate debt instrument that provides for payments at 
    a single objective rate is determined by assuming that the payments on 
    the debt instrument are the same as the payments on the equivalent 
    fixed rate debt instrument determined under Sec. 1.1275-5(e).
        The IRS and Treasury request comments on the effect of the proposed 
    regulations on other provisions of the Code, including section 
    108(e)(11), which measures the amount of discharge of indebtedness 
    income in a debt-for-debt exchange by the issue price of the newly 
    issued debt instrument.
    Conforming Amendments to Section 483.
        The proposed regulations provide rules under section 483 for the 
    treatment of contingent payments under a contract for the sale or 
    exchange of property (Sec. 1.483-4). In general, the rules are the same 
    as the rules for a debt instrument subject to section 1274, except that 
    a taxpayer takes interest into account under its own method of 
    accounting.
    
    Section 1.1275-5  Variable Rate Debt Instruments.
    
        In response to comments, the proposed regulations include changes 
    to the final regulations under Sec. 1.1275-5 regarding the treatment of 
    variable rate debt instruments. The proposed regulations redefine an 
    objective rate as a rate (other than a qualified floating rate) that is 
    determined using a single fixed formula and that is based on objective 
    financial or economic information. The rate, however, must not be based 
    on information that is within the control of the issuer (or a related 
    party) or that is, in general, unique to the circumstances of the 
    issuer (or a related party), such as dividends, profits, or the value 
    of the issuer's stock. The new definition of objective rate is broader 
    than the definition in the final regulations and includes, for example, 
    a rate based on changes in a general inflation index.
        The proposed regulations also make it clear that a variable rate 
    debt instrument may not provide for any contingent payments other than 
    certain variable rates of interest. Finally, the proposed regulations 
    clarify the treatment of a variable rate debt instrument under 
    Sec. 1.1275-5(e)(2). In general, a variable rate debt instrument 
    described in Sec. 1.1275-5(e)(2) is treated like a fixed payment debt 
    instrument for purposes of OID and qualified stated interest accruals. 
    The changes to Sec. 1.1275-5(e)(2) clarify the final OID regulations 
    and, therefore, are proposed to be effective for debt instruments 
    issued on or after April 4, 1994.
        Because of the special rules for tax-exempt contingent payment 
    obligations in the proposed regulations, the IRS and Treasury request 
    comments on the definition of an objective rate for tax-exempt 
    obligations under Sec. 1.1275-5(c)(5).
    
    Section 1.1275-6  Integration
    
        Many commentators suggested that the integration of contingent 
    payment debt instruments with associated hedges provides the best 
    method of taxing contingent payment debt instruments that are hedged. 
    The proposed regulations respond to this suggestion by providing for 
    the integration of contingent or variable rate debt instruments with 
    certain financial instruments (Sec. 1.1275-6). The integration rules 
    are issued under the authority of section 1275(d), and until the 
    proposed regulations under Sec. 1.1275-6 are finalized, the integration 
    rules are not a permissible means of determining the character and 
    timing of income, deductions, gains, and losses.
        The rules in the proposed regulations are modeled after the 
    integration rules of section 988(d) and Sec. 1.988-5(a). The rules in 
    the proposed regulations, however, have been modified to reflect the 
    different policy concerns underlying the rules for taking currency gain 
    or loss into account and for taking interest income or deductions into 
    account. The IRS and Treasury intend to make conforming changes to 
    Sec. 1.988-5(a) and request comments on the extent to which Sec. 1.988-
    5(a) should be modified to conform to the proposed regulations.
        The integration rules apply to qualifying debt instruments, which 
    are defined as contingent payment debt instruments, variable rate debt 
    instruments, and the synthetic debt instruments that are the result of 
    integration under the proposed regulations. Thus, the integration rules 
    do not apply to fixed rate debt instruments.
        For a financial instrument to qualify as a hedge under the proposed 
    regulations (a Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge), the combined cash flows of the 
    qualifying debt instrument and the financial instrument must permit the 
    calculation of a yield to maturity or must be the same as the cash 
    flows on a variable rate debt instrument that pays interest at a 
    qualified floating rate or rates. Thus, the proposed regulations 
    generally require a perfect hedge. Section 1.1275-6 hedges, however, 
    are not limited to hedging transactions as defined in Sec. 1.1221-2(b). 
    For example, a Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge need not reduce risk from all of the 
    operations of a business. A debt instrument held by a taxpayer cannot 
    be a Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge of a debt instrument issued by the taxpayer 
    and a debt instrument issued by a taxpayer cannot be a Sec. 1.1275-6 
    hedge of a debt instrument held by the taxpayer. Physical assets, such 
    as inventory, generally will not be treated as Sec. 1.1275-6 hedges 
    because they do not provide the predictable cash flows necessary to 
    create a perfect hedge. A supply or sales contract, however, may 
    qualify as a Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge. Stock does not qualify as a 
    Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge.
        To qualify as an integrated transaction, the taxpayer must issue or 
    acquire a qualifying debt instrument, enter into a Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge, 
    and meet six requirements. First, the taxpayer must satisfy the 
    identification requirements of the proposed regulations, such as by 
    entering a description of the qualifying debt instrument and the 
    Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge in its books and records. Second, the Sec. 1.1275-6 
    hedge must not be with a related party (other than a member of the same 
    consolidated group making the separate-entity election under 
    Sec. 1.1221-2(d)). Third, the same taxpayer must enter into the 
    qualifying debt instrument and the Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge. Fourth, if the 
    taxpayer is a foreign person engaged in a U.S. trade or business who 
    issues or acquires the qualifying debt instrument or enters into the 
    Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge through the trade or business, all items of income 
    and expense associated with the debt instrument or hedge (other than 
    interest expense that is subject to Sec. 1.882-5) must be effectively 
    connected with the U.S. trade or business. Fifth, the qualifying debt 
    instrument, any other debt instrument that is part of the same issue as 
    the qualifying debt instrument, or the Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge cannot have 
    been part of an integrated transaction that was previously legged out 
    of by the taxpayer. Finally, the Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge must be entered 
    into by the taxpayer on or after the date the taxpayer issues or 
    acquires the qualifying debt instrument. If the taxpayer meets these 
    requirements, the qualifying debt instrument and the Sec. 1.1275-6 
    hedge are integrated and the resulting synthetic debt instrument is 
    taxed accordingly.
        The Commissioner may require integration if a qualifying debt 
    instrument and a financial instrument have, in substance, the same 
    combined cash flows as a fixed or variable rate debt instrument. 
    Therefore, even if the taxpayer fails one or more of the requirements 
    for integration, the Commissioner may integrate a qualifying debt 
    instrument and a financial instrument. For example, if the taxpayer 
    fails to meet the identification requirements, or enters into a hedge 
    with a related party, the Commissioner may integrate the transaction. 
    The Commissioner also may integrate a transaction even if the hedge is 
    not perfect. Thus, taxpayers may not avoid integration by altering the 
    hedge so that there is a small amount of basis risk or the payments 
    under the hedge do not fully match the payments on the qualifying debt 
    instrument. The Commissioner will not integrate a debt instrument with 
    an imperfect hedge, however, if the taxpayer retains substantial risk.
        The proposed regulations provide rules for legging into and legging 
    out of an integrated transaction. Legging into an integrated 
    transaction generally means entering into the hedge after the 
    qualifying debt instrument is issued or acquired by the taxpayer. If a 
    taxpayer legs into an integrated transaction, the qualifying debt 
    instrument is subject to the separate transaction rules up to the leg-
    in date, except that the day before the leg-in date is treated as the 
    end of an accrual period for purposes of computing OID and interest 
    accruals on the qualifying debt instrument.
        After the taxpayer legs in, the qualifying debt instrument and the 
    Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge are integrated. Built-in gain or loss on the 
    qualifying debt instrument is not treated as realized on the leg-in 
    date (contrary to the rule for currency gain or loss in Sec. 1.988-
    5(a)(6)(i)). Because the built-in gain or loss will be reflected in the 
    accruals on the synthetic debt instrument, the built-in gain or loss on 
    the leg-in date will be recognized over the term of the synthetic debt 
    instrument.
        This approach allows taxpayers to alter the timing of income or 
    deductions on a qualifying debt instrument. For example, a taxpayer 
    expecting a large positive adjustment on a contingent payment debt 
    instrument before the maturity date can spread the adjustment over the 
    remaining term of the debt instrument by legging into an integrated 
    transaction. Other approaches to legging in, however, create similar 
    opportunities. For example, an approach that would mark a qualifying 
    debt instrument to market and defer any built-in gain or loss would 
    present even greater opportunities for deferral. Requiring mark-to-
    market gain or loss to be taken into account immediately would provide 
    opportunities for acceleration. The IRS and Treasury believe that 
    taking the built-in gain or loss into account over the term of the 
    qualifying debt instrument produces the most reasonable result. To 
    prevent abuse, however, the proposed regulations include a special rule 
    providing that if a taxpayer legs into an integrated transaction with a 
    principal purpose of deferring or accelerating income, the Commissioner 
    may treat the qualifying debt instrument as sold or otherwise 
    terminated and reacquired or reissued on the leg-in date or may refuse 
    to allow integration.
        Legging out of an integrated transaction generally means disposing 
    of or otherwise terminating the Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge or the qualifying 
    debt instrument. If the Commissioner has integrated a qualifying debt 
    instrument and a financial instrument, the taxpayer is treated as 
    legging out only if the taxpayer ceases to meet the requirements for 
    Commissioner integration. If a taxpayer legs out, the synthetic debt 
    instrument is treated as sold or otherwise disposed of for its fair 
    market value and any income, deduction, gain, or loss is taken into 
    account immediately. The component the taxpayer retains (either the 
    Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge or the qualifying debt instrument) is treated as 
    immediately reacquired for, or entered into at, its fair market value 
    on the leg-out date. In order to prevent taxpayers from inappropriately 
    generating tax losses by legging into and immediately legging out of an 
    integrated transaction, the proposed regulations contain a wash sale 
    rule that disallows losses if the taxpayer legs out within 30 days of 
    legging into an integrated transaction.
        If a qualifying debt instrument and a Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge are 
    integrated, the instruments are no longer subject to the rules that 
    govern each instrument separately, except as specifically provided in 
    the regulations or by publication in the Internal Revenue Bulletin. 
    Instead, the instruments are subject to the rules that would govern the 
    synthetic debt instrument. For example, the qualifying debt instrument 
    and Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge are not treated as part of a straddle under 
    section 1092, but the interest on the synthetic debt instrument may be 
    subject to the interest capitalization rules of section 263(g).
        The issue price of the synthetic debt instrument is the adjusted 
    issue price of the qualifying debt instrument. The issue date of the 
    synthetic debt instrument is the date the Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge is 
    acquired. The term of the synthetic debt instrument is the period from 
    the issue date of the synthetic debt instrument to the maturity date of 
    the qualifying debt instrument. If the synthetic debt instrument is a 
    borrowing, its stated redemption price at maturity is the sum of all 
    amounts paid or to be paid on the qualifying debt instrument and on the 
    Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge, reduced by all amounts received or to be received 
    on the hedge and any amounts that would be qualified stated interest on 
    the synthetic debt instrument. If the synthetic debt instrument is a 
    loan, its stated redemption price at maturity is the sum of all amounts 
    received or to be received on the qualifying debt instrument and the 
    Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge, reduced by all amounts paid or to be paid on the 
    hedge and any amounts that would be qualified stated interest on the 
    synthetic debt instrument.
        The rules for determining the stated redemption price at maturity 
    are designed to cover situations where payments on the hedge move 
    inversely to the payments on the qualifying debt instrument. For 
    example, if a holder of a qualifying debt instrument purchases an 
    option to hedge the debt instrument, the amount paid by the holder must 
    be taken into account as an adjustment to the instrument's stated 
    redemption price at maturity.
        Separate transaction treatment is required for certain limited 
    purposes. For example, the rules of sections 871(a), 881, 1441, and 
    1442 must be applied on a separate transaction basis. Similarly, any 
    information reporting rules for the qualifying debt instrument continue 
    to apply as if the qualifying debt instrument and the Sec. 1.1275-6 
    hedge were not part of an integrated transaction. The IRS and Treasury 
    request comments on whether the regulations should specifically provide 
    separate transaction treatment for other purposes. The IRS and Treasury 
    also request comments on whether rules similar to Sec. 1.6045-
    1(d)(6)(iii) of the proposed regulations (regarding broker reporting of 
    an integrated transaction under Sec. 1.988-5) should be adopted for an 
    integrated transaction under Sec. 1.1275-6.
        The IRS and Treasury intend to propose rules coordinating 
    Sec. 1.1275-6 with section 475. Comments are requested on this issue.
    
    Proposed Effective Date
    
        In general, the proposed regulations in this document are proposed 
    to be effective for debt instruments issued on or after the date that 
    is 60 days after the date final regulations are published in the 
    Federal Register.
    
    Special Analyses
    
        It has been determined that this notice of proposed rulemaking is 
    not a significant regulatory action as defined in EO 12866. Therefore, 
    a regulatory assessment is not required. It also has been determined 
    that section 553(b) of the Administrative Procedure Act (5 U.S.C. 
    chapter 5) and the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. chapter 6) do 
    not apply to these regulations, and, therefore, a Regulatory 
    Flexibility Analysis is not required. Pursuant to section 7805(f) of 
    the Internal Revenue Code, this notice of proposed rulemaking will be 
    submitted to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small Business 
    Administration for comment on its impact on small business.
    
    Comments and Public Hearing
    
        Before these proposed regulations are adopted as final regulations, 
    consideration will be given to any written comments (a signed original 
    and eight (8) copies) that are submitted timely to the IRS. All 
    comments will be available for public inspection and copying.
        A public hearing has been scheduled for Thursday, March 16, 1995, 
    at 10 a.m. in the Auditorium, Internal Revenue Building, 1111 
    Constitution Avenue NW, Washington, DC. Because of access restrictions, 
    visitors will not be admitted beyond the Internal Revenue Building 
    lobby more than 15 minutes before the hearing starts.
        The rules of 26 CFR 601.601(a)(3) apply to the hearing. Persons 
    that wish to present oral comments at the hearing must submit their 
    written comments and an outline of the topics to be discussed (signed 
    original and eight (8) copies) by Thursday, February 23, 1995.
        A period of 10 minutes will be allotted to each person for making 
    comments.
        An agenda showing the scheduling of the speakers will be prepared 
    after the deadline for receiving outlines has passed. Copies of the 
    agenda will be available free of charge at the hearing.
    
    Drafting Information
    
        Several persons from the Office of Chief Counsel and the Treasury 
    Department participated in developing these regulations.
    
    List of Subjects in 26 CFR Part 1
    
        Income taxes, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
    
    Proposed Amendments to the Regulations
    
        Accordingly, 26 CFR part 1 is proposed to be amended as follows:
    
    PART 1--INCOME TAXES
    
        Paragraph 1. The authority citation for part 1 is amended by adding 
    two entries in numerical order to read as follows:
    
        Authority: 26 U.S.C. 7805 * * *
        Section 1.483-4 also issued under 26 U.S.C. 483(f). * * *
        Section 1.1275-6 also issued under 26 U.S.C. 1275(d). * * *
    
        Par. 2. Section 1.483-4 is added to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 1.483-4  Contingent payments.
    
        (a) In general. If a contract for the sale or exchange of property 
    subject to section 483 (the overall contract) provides for one or more 
    contingent payments, interest under the contract is generally computed 
    and accounted for under rules similar to those that would be applicable 
    if the contract were a debt instrument subject to Sec. 1.1275-4(c). 
    Consequently, all noncontingent payments and quotable contingent 
    payments (within the meaning of Sec. 1.1275-4(b)(4)(i)) under the 
    overall contract are treated as if made under a separate contract, and 
    interest accruals on this separate contract are computed under rules 
    similar to those contained in Sec. 1.1275-4(c)(3). Each nonquotable 
    contingent payment (within the meaning of Sec. 1.1275-4(b)(4)(ii)), if 
    any, under the overall contract is characterized as principal and 
    interest under rules similar to those contained in Sec. 1.1275-4(c)(4). 
    However, any interest, or amount treated as interest, on a contract 
    subject to this section is taken into account by a taxpayer under the 
    taxpayer's regular method of accounting (e.g., an accrual method or the 
    cash receipts and disbursements method).
        (b) Examples. The following examples illustrate the provisions of 
    paragraph (a) of this section.
    
        Example 1. Deferred payment sale with contingent interest--(i) 
    Facts. On January 1, 1996, A sells depreciable personal property to 
    B. As consideration for the sale, B issues to A a debt instrument 
    with a maturity date of December 31, 2000. The debt instrument 
    provides for a principal payment of $200,000 on the maturity date, 
    and a payment of interest on December 31 of each year equal to a 
    percentage of the total gross income derived from the property in 
    that year. However, the total interest payable on the debt 
    instrument over its entire term is limited to a maximum of $50,000. 
    Assume that the short-term applicable Federal rate on January 1, 
    1996, is 4 percent, compounded annually, and the mid-term applicable 
    Federal rate on January 1, 1996, is 5 percent, compounded annually.
        (ii) Treatment of noncontingent payment as separate contract. 
    Each contingent payment of interest is a nonquotable contingent 
    payment (within the meaning of Sec. 1.1275-4(b)(4)(ii)). 
    Accordingly, under paragraph (a) of this section, for purposes of 
    applying section 483 to the debt instrument, the right to the 
    noncontingent payment of $200,000 at maturity is treated as a 
    separate contract. The amount of unstated interest on this separate 
    contract is equal to $43,295, which is the amount by which the 
    amount of this deferred payment under the contract ($200,000) 
    exceeds the present value of the deferred payment ($156,705), 
    calculated using the test rate of 5 percent, compounded annually 
    (the mid-term applicable Federal rate on the date of the sale). The 
    $200,000 payment at maturity is thus treated as consisting of a 
    payment of interest of $43,295 and a payment of principal of 
    $156,705. The interest is includible in A's gross income, and 
    deductible by B, under their respective methods of accounting.
        (iii) Treatment of contingent payments. Assume that the amount 
    of the contingent payment that is paid on December 31, 1996, is 
    $20,000. Under paragraph (a) of this section, the $20,000 payment is 
    treated as a payment of principal of $19,231 (the present value, as 
    of the date of sale, of the $20,000 payment, calculated using a test 
    rate equal to 4 percent, compounded annually) and a payment of 
    interest of $769. The $769 interest payment is includible in A's 
    gross income, and deductible by B, in their respective taxable years 
    in which December 31, 1996 occurs. The amount treated as principal 
    gives B additional basis in the property on December 31, 1996. The 
    remaining contingent payments on the debt instrument are accounted 
    for similarly, using a test rate of 4 percent, compounded annually, 
    for the payments made on December 31, 1997, and December 31, 1998, 
    and a test rate of 5 percent, compounded annually, for the payments 
    made on December 31, 1999, and December 31, 2000.
        Example 2. Contingent stock payout--(i) Facts. M Corporation and 
    N Corporation each owns one-half of the stock of O Corporation. On 
    January 1, 1996, pursuant to a reorganization qualifying under 
    section 368(a)(1)(B), M contracts to acquire the one-half interest 
    of O held by N for an initial distribution on that date of 30,000 
    shares of M voting stock, and a non- assignable right to receive up 
    to 10,000 additional shares of M's voting stock during the next 3 
    years, provided the net profits of O exceed certain amounts 
    specified in the contract. No interest is provided for in the 
    contract. No additional shares are received in 1996 or in 1997. In 
    1998, the annual earnings of O exceed the specified amount and on 
    December 31, 1998, an additional 3,000 M voting shares are 
    transferred to N. Assume that the fair market value of the 3,000 
    shares on December 31, 1998, is $300,000 and that the short-term 
    applicable Federal rate on January 1, 1996, is 4 percent, compounded 
    annually. Assume also that M and N are calendar year taxpayers.
        (ii) Allocation of interest. Assume that the right to receive 
    the additional shares is a nonquotable contingent payment (within 
    the meaning of Sec. 1.1275-4(b)(4)(ii)). Section 1274 does not apply 
    to the right to receive the additional shares because the right is 
    not a debt instrument for federal income tax purposes. As a result, 
    the transfer of the 3,000 M voting shares to N is a deferred payment 
    subject to section 483 and a portion of the shares is treated as 
    unstated interest under that section. The amount of interest 
    allocable to the shares is an amount equal to the excess of $300,000 
    (the fair market value of the shares on December 31, 1998) over 
    $266,699 (the present value of $300,000, determined by discounting 
    the payment at the test rate of 4 percent, compounded annually, from 
    December 31, 1998, to January 1, 1996). As a result, the amount of 
    interest allocable to the payment of the shares is $33,301 ($300,000 
    - $266,699). Both M and N take the interest into account in 1998.
    
        (c) Effective date. This section applies to sales and exchanges 
    that occur on or after the date that is 60 days after final regulations 
    are published in the Federal Register.
    
    
    Sec. 1.1001-1  [Amended]
    
        Par. 3. In Sec. 1.1001-1, the first sentence of paragraph (g) is 
    amended by adding the language ``(other than a debt instrument that 
    provides for one or more contingent payments)'' immediately following 
    the language ``If a debt instrument''.
    
    
    Sec. 1.1272-1  [Amended]
    
        Par. 4. Section Sec. 1.1272-1 is amended by:
        1. Removing the language ``(or schedules)'' in the first sentence 
    of paragraph (c)(1) and adding the language ``(or a reasonable number 
    of schedules)'' in its place.
        2. Removing the language ``See regulations under section 1275(d)'' 
    in the fourth sentence of paragraph (c)(1) and adding the language 
    ``See Sec. 1.1275-4'' in its place.
        Par. 5. Section 1.1274-2 is amended by revising paragraphs (f)(2) 
    and (g) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 1.1274-2  Issue price of debt instruments to which section 1274 
    applies.
    
    * * * * *
        (f) * * *
        (2) Stated interest at an objective rate. For purposes of paragraph 
    (c) of this section, the imputed principal amount of a variable rate 
    debt instrument (within the meaning of Sec. 1.1275-5(a)) that provides 
    for stated interest at a single objective rate is determined by 
    assuming that the debt instrument provides for a fixed rate that 
    reflects the yield that is reasonably expected for the instrument. This 
    paragraph (f)(2) is effective for debt instruments issued on or after 
    the date that is 60 days after final regulations are published in the 
    Federal Register.
        (g) Treatment of contingent payment debt instruments. For purposes 
    of paragraph (c) of this section, the stated principal amount of a debt 
    instrument that provides for one or more contingent payments is the sum 
    of the noncontingent principal payments and the projected amounts of 
    any quotable contingent principal payments (as determined under 
    Sec. 1.1275-4(b)(4)(i)). The imputed principal amount of the debt 
    instrument is the sum of the present value of each noncontingent 
    payment and the present value of the projected amount of each quotable 
    contingent payment. For additional rules relating to a debt instrument 
    that provides for one or more contingent payments, see Sec. 1.1275-4. 
    This paragraph (g) is effective for debt instruments issued on or after 
    the date that is 60 days after final regulations are published in the 
    Federal Register.
    * * * * *
        Par. 6. In Sec. 1.1275-3, paragraph (b)(1)(i) is revised to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 1.1275-3  OID information reporting requirements.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) * * * (1) * * *
        (i) Set forth on the face of the debt instrument the issue price, 
    the amount of OID, the issue date, the yield to maturity, and, in the 
    case of a debt instrument subject to the rules of Sec. 1.1275-4(b), the 
    projected payment schedule; or
    * * * * *
        Par. 7. Section 1.1275-4 is added to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 1.1275-4  Contingent payment debt instruments.
    
        (a) Applicability--(1) In general. Except as provided in paragraph 
    (a)(2) of this section, this section applies to any debt instrument 
    that provides for one or more contingent payments. In general, 
    paragraph (b) of this section applies to a contingent payment debt 
    instrument that is issued for money or publicly traded property and 
    paragraph (c) of this section applies to a contingent payment debt 
    instrument that is issued for nonpublicly traded property. Paragraph 
    (d) of this section provides special rules for tax-exempt obligations. 
    If a taxpayer holds (or issues) a contingent payment debt instrument 
    that the taxpayer hedges, see Sec. 1.1275-6 for the treatment of the 
    debt instrument and the hedge by the taxpayer.
        (2) Exceptions. This section does not apply to--(i) A debt 
    instrument that has an issue price determined under section 1273(b)(4);
        (ii) A variable rate debt instrument (as defined in Sec. 1.1275-5);
        (iii) A debt instrument subject to Sec. 1.1272-1(c) (a debt 
    instrument that provides for an alternative payment schedule (or 
    schedules) applicable upon the occurrence of a contingency (or 
    contingencies));
        (iv) A debt instrument subject to section 988 (except as provided 
    in section 988 and the regulations thereunder); or
        (v) A debt instrument to which section 1272(a)(6) applies (certain 
    interests in or mortgages held by a REMIC, and certain other debt 
    instruments with payments subject to acceleration).
        (3) Insolvency and default. A payment is not contingent merely 
    because of the possibility of impairment by insolvency, default, or 
    similar circumstances.
        (4) Convertible debt instruments. A debt instrument does not 
    provide for contingent payments merely because it provides for a right 
    to convert the debt instrument into the stock of the issuer, into the 
    stock or debt of a related party (within the meaning of section 267(b) 
    or 707(b)(1)), or into cash or other property in an amount equal to the 
    approximate value of such stock or debt.
        (5) Remote and incidental contingencies. A payment on a debt 
    instrument is not a contingent payment if, as of the issue date, the 
    contingency is either remote or incidental. A contingency is remote if 
    there is either a remote likelihood that the contingency will occur or 
    a remote likelihood that the contingency will not occur. A contingency 
    is incidental if the potential amount of the payment under any 
    reasonably expected market conditions is insignificant relative to the 
    total expected payments on the debt instrument.
        (b) Noncontingent bond method--(1) Applicability. The noncontingent 
    bond method described in paragraph (b) of this section applies to a 
    contingent payment debt instrument that has an issue price determined 
    under Sec. 1.1273-2 (e.g., a contingent payment debt instrument that is 
    issued for money or publicly traded property). The noncontingent bond 
    method also applies to a contingent payment debt instrument that has an 
    issue price determined under Sec. 1.1274-2(b)(3) (a contingent payment 
    debt instrument issued in a potentially abusive situation).
        (2) In general. Under the noncontingent bond method, interest on a 
    debt instrument must be taken into account whether or not the amount of 
    any payment is fixed or determinable in the taxable year. The amount of 
    interest that is taken into account for each accrual period is 
    determined by constructing a projected payment schedule for the debt 
    instrument and applying rules similar to those for accruing OID on a 
    noncontingent debt instrument. The projected payment schedule is 
    determined as of the issue date and is based on forward prices, if 
    readily available, or on the projected pattern of expected payments and 
    a projected yield. If the actual amount of a contingent payment is not 
    equal to the projected amount, appropriate adjustments are made to 
    reflect the difference.
        (3) Description of method. The following steps describe how to 
    compute the amount of income, deductions, gain, and loss under the 
    noncontingent bond method.
        (i) Step one: Determine a projected payment schedule. Determine the 
    projected payment schedule for the debt instrument as of the debt 
    instrument's issue date under the rules of paragraph (b)(4) of this 
    section.
        (ii) Step two: Determine the projected yield. Based on the issue 
    price of the debt instrument and the projected payment schedule, 
    determine the projected yield of the debt instrument in the manner 
    described in Sec. 1.1272-1(b)(1)(i).
        (iii) Step three: Determine the daily portions of interest. 
    Determine the daily portions of interest on the debt instrument for a 
    taxable year as follows. The amount of interest that accrues in each 
    accrual period is the product of the projected yield of the debt 
    instrument (properly adjusted for the length of the accrual period) and 
    the debt instrument's adjusted issue price at the beginning of the 
    accrual period. See paragraph (b)(7)(ii) of this section for rules for 
    determining the adjusted issue price of the debt instrument. The daily 
    portions of interest are determined by allocating to each day in the 
    accrual period the ratable portion of the interest that accrues in the 
    accrual period. Except as modified by paragraph (b)(3)(iv) of this 
    section, the daily portions of interest are includible in income by a 
    holder for each day in the holder's taxable year on which the holder 
    held the debt instrument, and are deductible by the issuer for each day 
    during the issuer's taxable year on which the issuer was primarily 
    liable on the debt instrument.
        (iv) Step four: Adjust the amount of income or deductions for 
    differences between projected and actual contingent payments. Make 
    appropriate adjustments to the amount of income or deductions 
    attributable to the debt instrument in a taxable year for any 
    differences between projected and actual contingent payments. See 
    paragraph (b)(6) of this section to determine the amount of an 
    adjustment and the treatment of the adjustment.
        (4) Method of determining projected payment schedule. This 
    paragraph (b)(4) provides rules for determining the projected payment 
    schedule for a debt instrument. The projected payment schedule includes 
    each noncontingent payment and the projected amount of each contingent 
    payment. The schedule is determined as of the issue date and remains 
    fixed throughout the term of the debt instrument (except under special 
    rules that apply to a payment that is fixed more than 6 months before 
    it is due under paragraph (b)(9)(ii) of this section). Under the rules 
    of section 6001, taxpayers must maintain adequate contemporaneous 
    records to support the projected payment schedule.
        (i) Quotable contingent payments--(A) In general. If a right to a 
    contingent payment is substantially similar to a property right for 
    which forward price quotes are readily available (a quotable contingent 
    payment), the projected amount of the contingent payment is equal to 
    the forward price of the property right. The forward price of a 
    property right is an amount one party would agree, as of the issue 
    date, to pay an unrelated party for the property right on the 
    settlement date (e.g., the date payments under the property right are 
    to be made). For purposes of paragraph (b)(4) of this section, a 
    property right includes a right, an obligation, or a combination of 
    rights or obligations.
        (B) Quotes readily available. For purposes of paragraph (b)(4)(i) 
    of this section, quotes are readily available for a property right if, 
    at any time during the 60-day period ending 30 days after the issue 
    date, one or more quotations for a price on the property right are 
    readily available from brokers, traders, or dealers.
        (C) Substantially similar. A right to a contingent payment is 
    substantially similar to a property right if, under reasonably expected 
    market conditions, the value and timing of the amount to be paid or 
    received pursuant to the property right (whether in the form of a cash 
    payment or the delivery of property) are expected to be substantially 
    the same as the value and timing of the contingent payment.
        (D) Special rule for contingent payments substantially similar to 
    options. A right to a contingent payment that is substantially similar 
    to an option or combination of options, and that is not otherwise a 
    quotable contingent payment, is treated as a quotable contingent 
    payment if spot price quotations for the option or options are readily 
    available. The projected amount of the contingent payment is the spot 
    price of the option or options on the issue date compounded at the 
    applicable Federal rate for the debt instrument (within the meaning of 
    Sec. 1.1274-4(b)) from the issue date to the date the payment is due.
        (E) Reasonable determination of projected amounts. The projected 
    amounts of quotable contingent payments may be determined based on 
    either the bid, ask, or midpoint price quotes of the substantially 
    similar property rights, provided the determination is reasonable and 
    is made on a consistent basis. If price quotations vary among different 
    quotation sources, any reasonable quotation may be used. If a right to 
    a contingent payment is substantially similar to more than one 
    combination of property rights for which forward price quotes are 
    readily available (or options for which spot prices are readily 
    available), any reasonable combination may be used.
        (ii) Quotes not readily available. If a debt instrument provides 
    for one or more contingent payments that are not described in paragraph 
    (b)(4)(i) of this section (nonquotable contingent payments), the 
    projected amount of each contingent payment on the debt instrument is 
    determined as follows. First, determine the projected amount of each 
    quotable contingent payment under paragraph (b)(4)(i) of this section. 
    Second, determine the projected yield of the debt instrument. The 
    projected yield is a reasonable rate for the debt instrument. A 
    reasonable rate is a rate that, as of the issue date, reflects general 
    market conditions, the credit quality of the issuer, and the terms and 
    conditions of the debt instrument (e.g., the existence of collateral 
    securing the debt instrument or the uncertainty inherent in the 
    contingent payments). A reasonable rate is never less than, and may 
    substantially exceed, the applicable Federal rate for the debt 
    instrument (within the meaning of Sec. 1.1274-4(b)), and may not be 
    less than the yield on the debt instrument based on the projected 
    payment schedule set without regard to the nonquotable contingent 
    payments. Third, select a projected amount for each nonquotable 
    contingent payment so that the projected payment schedule results in 
    the projected yield and reasonably reflects the relative expected 
    values of the nonquotable contingent payments.
        (iii) Debt instruments similar to variable rate debt instruments. 
    Notwithstanding paragraphs (b)(4)(i) and (ii) of this section, the 
    projected payment schedules for certain debt instruments similar to 
    variable rate debt instruments are determined as follows:
        (A) Single quotable contingent payment at maturity. If a debt 
    instrument would qualify as a variable rate debt instrument under 
    Sec. 1.1275-5 except that it provides for a single quotable contingent 
    payment at maturity, the projected payment schedule is determined as 
    follows. First, construct the equivalent fixed rate debt instrument for 
    the debt instrument under the principles of Sec. 1.1275-5(e), 
    disregarding the contingent payment at maturity. Second, determine the 
    projected amount of the contingent payment at maturity in accordance 
    with paragraph (b)(4)(i) of this section. Third, set the projected 
    payment schedule by combining the payment schedule for the equivalent 
    fixed rate debt instrument with the projected amount of the contingent 
    payment.
        (B) Principal not fully guaranteed. If a debt instrument would 
    qualify as a variable rate debt instrument under Sec. 1.1275-5 except 
    that it does not meet the principal payment requirement of Sec. 1.1275-
    5(a)(2), the projected payment schedule is determined by constructing 
    the equivalent fixed rate debt instrument for the debt instrument under 
    the principles of Sec. 1.1275-5(e).
        (iv) Issuer/holder consistency. The projected payment schedule used 
    by the issuer to compute interest accruals and adjustments determines 
    the interest accruals and adjustments of the holder. The issuer must 
    provide the projected payment schedule to the holder in a manner 
    consistent with the issuer disclosure rules of Sec. 1.1275-2(e). If the 
    issuer does not create a projected payment schedule for a debt 
    instrument or the payment schedule set by the issuer is unreasonable, 
    the holder of the debt instrument must set the projected payment 
    schedule under the rules of paragraph (b)(4) of this section. A holder 
    that sets its own projected payment schedule must explicitly disclose 
    this fact and the reason why the holder set its own schedule (e.g., why 
    the projected payment schedule prepared by the issuer is unreasonable). 
    Unless otherwise prescribed by the Commissioner, the disclosure must be 
    made on a statement attached to the holder's timely filed federal 
    income tax return for the taxable year that includes the acquisition 
    date of the debt instrument.
        (v) Issuer's determination respected. The issuer's determination of 
    the projected payment schedule will be respected unless the schedule is 
    unreasonable. A projected payment schedule will generally be considered 
    unreasonable if the schedule is set with a purpose to accelerate or 
    defer interest accruals on the debt instrument. In determining whether 
    a projected payment schedule is unreasonable, consideration will be 
    given to whether the interest on the debt instrument determined under 
    the projected payment schedule has a significant effect on the issuer's 
    or holder's U.S. tax liability.
        (vi) Examples. The following examples illustrate the provisions of 
    paragraph (b)(4) of this section. In each example, assume that the debt 
    instrument described is a debt instrument for federal income tax 
    purposes. No inference is intended, however, as to whether the debt 
    instrument constitutes a debt instrument for federal income tax 
    purposes.
    
        Example 1. Contingent payment substantially similar to an 
    option--(i) Facts. On January 1, 1996, W corporation issues for 
    $1,000,000 a debt instrument that matures on December 31, 2000. The 
    debt instrument has a stated principal amount of $1,000,000, payable 
    at maturity. The debt instrument also provides for a payment at 
    maturity equal to $10,000 times the increase, if any, in the value 
    of a nationally known composite index of stocks from January 1, 
    1996, to the maturity date.
        (ii) Projected payment schedule. Under paragraph (b)(4) of this 
    section, the projected payment schedule for the debt instrument 
    consists of the $1,000,000 payment at maturity plus the projected 
    amount of the contingent payment at maturity. The right to the 
    contingent payment is substantially similar to a long call option on 
    the index that is exercisable only on December 31, 2000. Thus, if 
    quotes for the forward price of the option are readily available, 
    the projected amount of the contingent payment is the forward price 
    of the option. If quotes for the forward price are not readily 
    available and quotes for the spot price of the option are readily 
    available, the projected amount of the contingent payment is the 
    option's spot price on the issue date compounded at the applicable 
    Federal rate for the debt instrument from the issue date to the 
    maturity date.
        Example 2. Contingent payment substantially similar to a forward 
    contract--(i) Facts. On January 1, 1996, X corporation issues for 
    $1,000,000 a debt instrument that matures on December 31, 2005. The 
    debt instrument provides for annual payments of interest at the rate 
    of 6 percent and for a payment at maturity equal to $1,000,000, plus 
    the excess, if any, of the price of 1,000 units of a commodity on 
    the maturity date over $350,000, or less the excess, if any, of 
    $350,000 over the price of 1,000 units of the commodity on the 
    maturity date.
        (ii) Projected payment schedule. Under paragraph (b)(4) of this 
    section, the projected payment schedule for the debt instrument 
    consists of ten annual payments of $60,000 and a projected amount 
    for the contingent payment at maturity. The right to the contingent 
    payment is substantially similar to a right to a payment of 
    $1,000,000 combined with a forward contract for the purchase of 
    1,000 units of the commodity for $350,000 on December 31, 2005. 
    Assume forward price quotes to purchase the commodity on December 
    31, 2005, are readily available on the issue date.
        (A) Assume that on the issue date the forward price to purchase 
    1,000 units of the commodity on December 31, 2005, is $350,000. The 
    projected amount of the contingent payment is $1,000,000, consisting 
    of the $1,000,000 base amount and no additional amount to be 
    received or paid under the forward contract. Although the amount to 
    be received or paid under the forward contract is projected to be 
    zero, the contingency is not incidental (within the meaning of 
    paragraph (a)(5) of this section) because the potential amount to be 
    received or paid based on the forward contract is not insignificant 
    relative to the total expected payments on the debt instrument under 
    any reasonably expected market conditions.
        (B) Assume, alternatively, that on the issue date the forward 
    price to purchase 1,000 units of the commodity on December 31, 2005, 
    is $370,000. The projected amount of the contingent payment is 
    $1,020,000, consisting of the $1,000,000 base amount plus the excess 
    $20,000 of the forward price of the commodity over the purchase 
    price of the commodity under the forward contract.
        (C) Assume, alternatively, that on the issue date the forward 
    price to purchase 1,000 units of the commodity on December 31, 2005, 
    is $330,000. The projected amount of the contingent payment is 
    $980,000, consisting of the $1,000,000 base amount minus the excess 
    $20,000 of the purchase price of the commodity under the forward 
    contract over the forward price of the commodity.
        Example 3. Contingent payment substantially similar to a 
    combination of rights--(i) Facts. Assume the same facts as in 
    Example 2 of this paragraph (b)(4)(vi), except that the debt 
    instrument also provides for a cap and a floor on the contingent 
    payment at maturity, so that the payment may not exceed $1,300,000 
    and may not be less than $700,000.
        (ii) Projected payment schedule. Under paragraph (b)(4) of this 
    section, the projected payment schedule for the debt instrument 
    consists of ten annual payments of $60,000 and a projected amount 
    for the contingent payment at maturity. The right to the contingent 
    payment is substantially similar to a right to a payment of 
    $1,000,000 combined with a forward contract for the purchase of 
    1,000 units of the commodity for $350,000 on December 31, 2005, and 
    two options on 1,000 units of the commodity that are exercisable 
    only on December 31, 2005: one a long put option with an exercise 
    price of $50,000, and the other a short call option with an exercise 
    price of $650,000. The projected amount of the contingent payment is 
    determined by combining the forward prices of these property rights.
        Example 4. Nonquotable contingent payments--(i) Facts. On 
    January 1, 1996, Y issues for $1,000,000 a debt instrument that 
    matures on December 31, 1999. The debt instrument has a stated 
    principal amount of $1,000,000, payable at maturity, and provides 
    for payments on December 31 of each year of $20,000 plus 5 percent 
    of Y's gross receipts, if any, for the year. Assume that a 
    reasonable rate for the debt instrument (within the meaning of 
    paragraph (b)(4)(ii) of this section) is 7.5 percent, compounded 
    annually.
        (ii) Projected yield. The debt instrument provides for 
    nonquotable contingent payments. Under paragraph (b)(4)(ii) of this 
    section, the projected yield is 7.5 percent, compounded annually.
        (iii) Projected payment schedule. Assume that Y anticipates that 
    it will have no gross receipts in 1996, but that it will have gross 
    receipts in later years, and those gross receipts will grow each 
    year for the next three years. Based on its business projections, Y 
    believes that it is not unreasonable to expect that its gross 
    receipts in 1998 and each year thereafter will grow by between 6 
    percent and 13 percent over the prior year. Thus, Y must take these 
    expectations into account in establishing a projected payment 
    schedule for the debt instrument that results in a yield of 7.5 
    percent, compounded annually. Accordingly, Y could reasonably set 
    the following projected payment schedule for the debt instrument:
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                  Noncontingent   Contingent
                        Date                         payment       payment  
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    12/31/1996..................................       $20,000            $0
    12/31/1997..................................        20,000        70,000
    12/31/1998..................................        20,000        75,600
    12/31/1999..................................     1,020,000        83,850
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Example 5. Debt instrument that provides for a variable rate of 
    interest and a single quotable contingent payment at maturity--(i) 
    Facts. On January 1, 1996, W corporation issues for $1,000,000 a 
    debt instrument that matures on December 31, 2000. The debt 
    instrument has a stated principal amount of $1,000,000, payable at 
    maturity. The debt instrument also provides for semiannual payments 
    of interest and a payment at maturity equal to $5,000 times the 
    increase, if any, in the value of a nationally known composite index 
    of stocks from January 1, 1996, to the maturity date. The rate of 
    interest on the debt instrument is the value of 6-month LIBOR on the 
    payment date. On the issue date, the value of 6-month LIBOR is 4 
    percent, compounded semiannually. Assume that the payment at 
    maturity based on the index is a quotable contingent payment.
        (ii) Projected payment schedule. Because the debt instrument 
    would qualify as a variable rate debt instrument under Sec. 1.1275-5 
    except that it provides for a single quotable contingent payment at 
    maturity, paragraph (b)(4)(iii) of this section applies to the debt 
    instrument. Under paragraph (b)(4)(iii)(A) of this section, the 
    projected payment schedule is determined by first constructing the 
    equivalent fixed rate debt instrument for the debt instrument. Under 
    Sec. 1.1275-5(e), the equivalent fixed rate debt instrument is a 5-
    year debt instrument that provides for semiannual payments of 
    interest at 4 percent, compounded semiannually. Next, the projected 
    amount of the contingent payment is determined in accordance with 
    paragraph (b)(4)(i) of this section. The right to the contingent 
    payment based on the stock index is substantially similar to a long 
    call option on the index that is exercisable only on December 31, 
    2000. Thus, the projected amount of the contingent payment is the 
    forward price of the option, assuming quotes for the forward price 
    of the option are readily available. Finally, the projected payment 
    schedule is determined, consisting of 10 semiannual payments of 
    interest at 4 percent and a payment at maturity equal to $1,000,000 
    plus the forward price of the option on the index.
    
        (5) Qualified stated interest. No amounts payable on a debt 
    instrument to which paragraph (b) of this section applies constitute 
    qualified stated interest within the meaning of Sec. 1.1273-1(c).
        (6) Adjustments under the noncontingent bond method. This paragraph 
    (b)(6) provides rules for the treatment of positive and negative 
    adjustments under the noncontingent bond method.
        (i) Determination of positive and negative adjustments. If the 
    amount of a contingent payment is more than the projected amount of the 
    contingent payment, the difference is a positive adjustment on the date 
    of the payment. If the amount of a contingent payment is less than the 
    projected amount of the contingent payment, the difference is a 
    negative adjustment on the date of the projected payment.
        (ii) Treatment of net positive adjustment. The amount, if any, by 
    which total positive adjustments on a debt instrument in a taxable year 
    exceed the total negative adjustments on the debt instrument in the 
    taxable year is a net positive adjustment. A net positive adjustment is 
    treated as additional interest for the taxable year.
        (iii) Treatment of net negative adjustment. The amount, if any, by 
    which total negative adjustments on a debt instrument in a taxable year 
    exceed the total positive adjustments on the debt instrument in the 
    taxable year is a net negative adjustment. A taxpayer's net negative 
    adjustment on a debt instrument for a taxable year is treated as 
    follows:
        (A) Reduction of interest accruals. A net negative adjustment first 
    reduces interest for the taxable year that the taxpayer would otherwise 
    account for on the debt instrument under paragraph (b)(3)(iii) of this 
    section.
        (B) Ordinary income or loss. If the net negative adjustment exceeds 
    the interest for the taxable year that the taxpayer would otherwise 
    account for on the debt instrument under paragraph (b)(3)(iii) of this 
    section, the excess is treated as ordinary loss by a holder and 
    ordinary income by an issuer. However, the amount treated as ordinary 
    loss by a holder is limited to the amount by which the holder's total 
    interest inclusions on the debt instrument exceed the total amount of 
    the holder's net negative adjustments treated as ordinary loss on the 
    debt instrument in prior taxable years. The amount treated as ordinary 
    income by an issuer is limited to the amount by which the issuer's 
    total interest deductions on the debt instrument exceed the total 
    amount of the issuer's net negative adjustments treated as ordinary 
    income on the debt instrument in prior taxable years.
        (C) Carryforward. If the net negative adjustment exceeds the sum of 
    the amounts treated by the taxpayer as a reduction of interest and as 
    ordinary income or loss (as the case may be) on the debt instrument for 
    the taxable year, the excess is a negative adjustment carryforward for 
    the taxable year.
        (1) In general. Except as provided in paragraph (b)(6)(iii)(C)(2) 
    of this section, a negative adjustment carryforward on a debt 
    instrument for a taxable year is treated as a negative adjustment on 
    the debt instrument on the first day of the succeeding taxable year.
        (2) In year of sale, exchange, or retirement. Any negative 
    adjustment carryforward on a debt instrument for a taxable year in 
    which the debt instrument is sold, exchanged, or retired reduces the 
    amount realized by the holder on the sale, exchange, or retirement. Any 
    negative adjustment carryforward for a taxable year in which the debt 
    instrument is retired is taken into account by the issuer as income 
    from the discharge of indebtedness under section 61(a)(12).
        (iv) Cross references. If a holder has a basis in a debt instrument 
    that is different than the debt instrument's adjusted issue price, the 
    holder may have additional positive or negative adjustments under 
    paragraph (b)(9)(i) of this section. If the amount of a contingent 
    payment is fixed more than 6 months before the date it is due, the 
    amount and timing of the adjustment are determined under paragraph 
    (b)(9)(ii) of this section. If all the remaining contingent payments on 
    a debt instrument become fixed substantially contemporaneously, the 
    timing of the adjustment is determined under paragraph (b)(9)(v) of 
    this section.
        (v) Examples. The following examples illustrate the provisions of 
    paragraph (b)(6) of this section. In each example, assume that the debt 
    instrument described is a debt instrument for federal income tax 
    purposes. No inference is intended, however, as to whether the debt 
    instrument constitutes a debt instrument for federal income tax 
    purposes.
    
        Example 1. Net negative adjustment--(i) Facts. On June 13, 1996, 
    Z, a calendar year taxpayer, purchases a debt instrument at original 
    issue for $1,044. Assume that the debt instrument is subject to 
    paragraph (b) of this section. The projected payment schedule 
    provides for projected payments of $100 on December 31, 1996, and 
    $1,100 on December 31, 1997. Based on the projected payment 
    schedule, Z's total daily portions of interest would be $56 for 1996 
    and $100 for 1997.
        (ii) Adjustment in 1996. Assume that the payment actually made 
    on December 31, 1996, is $25, rather than the projected $100. Under 
    paragraph (b)(6)(i) of this section, Z has a negative adjustment of 
    $75 on December 31, 1996, attributable to the difference between the 
    amount of the actual payment and the amount of the projected 
    payment. Because Z has no positive adjustments for 1996, Z has a net 
    negative adjustment of $75 on the debt instrument for 1996. This net 
    negative adjustment reduces to zero the $56 total daily portions of 
    interest Z would otherwise include in income in 1996. Accordingly, Z 
    has no interest income on the debt instrument for 1996. Because Z 
    has no interest inclusions on the debt instrument for prior taxable 
    years, the remaining $19 of the net negative adjustment is a 
    negative adjustment carryforward for 1996 that results in a negative 
    adjustment of $19 on January 1, 1997.
        (iii) Adjustments in 1997. Assume that the payment actually made 
    on December 31, 1997, is $1,150, rather than the projected $1,100. 
    Under paragraph (b)(6)(i) of this section, Z has a positive 
    adjustment of $50 on December 31, 1997, attributable to the 
    difference between the amount of the actual payment and the amount 
    of the projected payment. Because Z also has a negative adjustment 
    of $19 on January 1, 1997, Z has a net positive adjustment of $31 on 
    the debt instrument for 1997 (the excess of the $50 positive 
    adjustment over the $19 negative adjustment). Therefore, Z has $131 
    of interest income on the debt instrument for 1997 (the net positive 
    adjustment plus the $100 total daily portions of interest that are 
    taken into account by Z in that year).
        Example 2. Net negative adjustment at maturity--(i) Facts. 
    Assume the same facts as in Example 1 of this paragraph (b)(6)(v), 
    except that the payment actually made on December 31, 1997, is 
    $1,010, rather than the projected $1,100.
        (ii) Adjustments in 1997. Under paragraph (b)(6)(i) of this 
    section, Z has a negative adjustment of $90 on December 31, 1997, 
    attributable to the difference between the amount of the actual 
    payment and the amount of the projected payment. In addition, Z has 
    a negative adjustment of $19 on January 1, 1997. Because Z has no 
    positive adjustments in 1997, Z has a net negative adjustment of 
    $109 for 1997. This net negative adjustment reduces to zero the $100 
    total daily portions of interest Z would otherwise include in income 
    for 1997. Therefore, Z has no interest income on the debt instrument 
    for 1997. Because Z has no interest inclusions on the debt 
    instrument for prior taxable years, the remaining $9 of the net 
    negative adjustment constitutes a negative adjustment carryforward 
    for 1997 that reduces the amount realized by Z on retirement of the 
    debt instrument.
    
        (7) Adjusted issue price, adjusted basis, and retirement--(i) In 
    general. Paragraph (b)(7) of this section provides rules under the 
    noncontingent bond method to determine the adjusted issue price of a 
    debt instrument, the holder's basis in a debt instrument, and the 
    amount of any contingent payment made on a scheduled retirement. 
    Paragraph (b)(7) of this section also provides rules for an unscheduled 
    retirement. In general, because any difference between the actual 
    amount of a contingent payment and the projected amount of the payment 
    is taken into account as an adjustment to income or deduction, the 
    projected payments are treated as the actual payments for purposes of 
    making adjustments to issue price and basis and determining the amount 
    of any contingent payment made on a scheduled retirement. Except as 
    provided in paragraph (b)(7)(iv) of this section, positive and negative 
    adjustments are not taken into account for purposes of paragraph (b)(7) 
    of this section.
        (ii) Definition of adjusted issue price. The adjusted issue price 
    of a debt instrument is equal to the debt instrument's issue price, 
    increased by the interest previously accrued on the debt instrument 
    under paragraph (b)(3)(iii) of this section (determined without regard 
    to any adjustments taken into account under paragraph (b)(3)(iv) of 
    this section), and decreased by the amount of any noncontingent payment 
    and the projected amount of any contingent payment previously made on 
    the debt instrument. See paragraph (b)(9)(ii) of this section for 
    special rules that apply when a contingent payment is fixed more than 6 
    months before it is due.
        (iii) Adjustments to basis. A holder's basis in a debt instrument 
    is increased by the interest previously accrued by the holder on the 
    debt instrument under paragraph (b)(3)(iii) of this section (determined 
    without regard to any adjustments taken into account under paragraph 
    (b)(3)(iv) of this section), and decreased by the amount of any 
    noncontingent payment and the projected amount of any contingent 
    payment previously made on the debt instrument to the holder. See 
    paragraphs (b)(9)(i) and (ii) of this section for special rules that 
    apply when basis is different than adjusted issue price or a contingent 
    payment is fixed more than 6 months before it is due.
        (iv) Amount realized on a scheduled retirement. For purposes of 
    determining the amount realized by a holder and the repurchase price 
    paid by the issuer on the scheduled retirement of a debt instrument, a 
    holder is treated as receiving, and the issuer is treated as paying, 
    the projected amount of any contingent payment due at maturity. The 
    amount realized on a scheduled retirement of a debt instrument and the 
    issuer's repurchase price on the retirement, however, may be reduced 
    under paragraph (b)(6)(iii)(C)(2) of this section (regarding the 
    treatment of negative adjustment carryforwards determined in the 
    taxable year of the retirement).
        (v) Unscheduled retirements. An unscheduled retirement of a debt 
    instrument (or the receipt of a pro-rata prepayment that is treated as 
    a retirement of a portion of a debt instrument under Sec. 1.1275-2(f)) 
    is treated as a sale or exchange of the debt instrument (or a pro rata 
    portion of the debt instrument) by the holder to the issuer for the 
    amount paid by the issuer to the holder.
        (vi) Examples. The following examples illustrate the provisions of 
    paragraph (b)(7) of this section. In each example, assume that the debt 
    instrument described is a debt instrument for federal income tax 
    purposes. No inference is intended, however, as to whether the debt 
    instrument constitutes a debt instrument for federal income tax 
    purposes.
    
        Example 1. Adjusted issue price, adjusted basis, and 
    retirement--(i) Facts. Assume the same facts as in Example 1 of 
    paragraph (b)(6)(v) of this section.
        (ii) Adjustment to issue price and basis. Based on the projected 
    payment schedule, Z's total daily portions of interest on the debt 
    instrument would be $56 for 1996. Therefore, the adjusted issue 
    price of the debt instrument and Z's adjusted basis in the debt 
    instrument are increased by this amount ($56), despite the fact 
    that, under paragraph (b)(6)(iii) of this section, Z has a net 
    negative adjustment for 1996 of $75 that reduces to zero the $56 
    total daily portions of interest otherwise accounted for by Z in 
    that year. In addition, the adjusted issue price of the debt 
    instrument and Z's adjusted basis in the debt instrument are 
    decreased on December 31, 1996, by the projected amount of the 
    payment on that date ($100). Thus, on January 1, 1997, Z's adjusted 
    basis in the debt instrument and the adjusted issue price of the 
    debt instrument are $1,000.
        (iii) Retirement. Based on the projected payment schedule, Z's 
    adjusted basis in the debt instrument immediately before the payment 
    at maturity is $1,100. Even though Z receives $1,150 at maturity, 
    for purposes of determining the amount realized by Z on retirement 
    of the debt instrument, Z is treated as receiving the projected 
    amount of the contingent payment on December 31, 1997. Therefore, Z 
    is treated as receiving $1,100 on December 31, 1997. Because Z's 
    adjusted basis in the debt instrument immediately before its 
    retirement is $1,100, Z recognizes no gain or loss on the 
    retirement. Z, however, does include $131 as interest income on the 
    debt instrument in 1997. See Example 1 of paragraph (b)(6)(v) of 
    this section.
        Example 2. Negative adjustment carryforward for year of sale--
    (i) Facts. Assume the same facts as in Example 1 of paragraph 
    (b)(6)(v) of this section, except that Z sells the debt instrument 
    on January 1, 1997, for $1,075.
        (ii) Gain on sale. On the date the debt instrument is sold, Z's 
    adjusted basis in the debt instrument is $1,000. Because Z has a 
    negative adjustment on the debt instrument on January 1, 1997, of 
    $19 under paragraph (b)(6)(iii)(C)(1) of this section, and has no 
    positive adjustments on the debt instrument in 1997, Z has a net 
    negative adjustment for 1997 of $19. Because Z has included no 
    interest on the debt instrument in income in 1997 or previous years, 
    the entire $19 net negative adjustment constitutes a negative 
    adjustment carryforward for the taxable year of the sale. Under 
    paragraph (b)(6)(iii)(C)(2) of this section, the $19 negative 
    adjustment carryforward reduces the amount realized by Z on the sale 
    of the debt instrument from $1,075 to $1,056. Thus, Z has a gain on 
    the sale of $56.
        Example 3. Negative adjustment carryforward for year of 
    retirement--(i) Facts. Assume the same facts as in Example 1 of 
    paragraph (b)(6)(v) of this section, except that the payment 
    actually made on December 31, 1997, is $1,010, rather than the 
    projected $1,100. Thus, Z will have a $9 negative adjustment 
    carryforward for 1997, the year of retirement. See Example 2 of 
    paragraph (b)(6)(v) of this section.
        (ii) Loss on retirement. Immediately before the payment at 
    maturity, Z's adjusted basis in the debt instrument is $1,100. Under 
    paragraph (b)(7)(iv) of this section, Z is treated as receiving the 
    projected amount of the contingent payment, or $1,100, as the 
    payment at maturity. Under paragraph (b)(6)(iii)(C)(2) of this 
    section, however, this amount is reduced by any negative adjustment 
    carryforward determined for the taxable year of retirement to 
    calculate the amount Z realizes on retirement of the debt 
    instrument. Thus, Z has a loss of $9 on the retirement of the debt 
    instrument, equal to the amount by which Z's adjusted basis in the 
    debt instrument ($1,100) exceeds the amount Z realizes on the 
    retirement of the debt instrument ($1,100 minus the $9 negative 
    adjustment carryforward).
    
        (8) Character on sale, exchange, or retirement--(i) Gain. Any gain 
    recognized by a holder on the sale, exchange, or retirement of a debt 
    instrument is interest income.
        (ii) Loss. Any loss recognized by a holder on the sale, exchange, 
    or retirement of the debt instrument is ordinary loss to the extent 
    that the holder's total interest inclusions on the debt instrument 
    exceed the total net negative adjustments on the debt instrument the 
    holder took into account as ordinary loss. Any additional loss is 
    treated as loss from the sale, exchange, or retirement of the debt 
    instrument.
        (iii) Special rule if there are no remaining contingent payments on 
    the debt instrument. Notwithstanding paragraphs (b)(8)(i) and (ii) of 
    this section, if, at the time of the sale, exchange, or retirement of 
    the debt instrument, there are no remaining contingent payments due on 
    the debt instrument, any gain or loss recognized by the holder on the 
    debt instrument is gain or loss from the sale, exchange, or retirement 
    of the debt instrument.
        (iv) Fixed but deferred payments. For purposes of paragraph (b)(8) 
    of this section, a contingent payment that is fixed within the 6-month 
    period ending on the due date of the payment is treated as a contingent 
    payment even after the payment is fixed. See paragraph (b)(9)(ii) of 
    this section, under which a contingent payment that is fixed more than 
    6 months before it is due is not treated as a contingent payment after 
    it is fixed.
        (v) Examples. The following examples illustrate the provisions of 
    paragraph (b)(8) of this section. In each example, assume that the debt 
    instrument described is a debt instrument for federal income tax 
    purposes. No inference is intended, however, as to whether the debt 
    instrument constitutes a debt instrument for federal income tax 
    purposes.
    
        Example 1. Gain on sale--(i) Facts. On January 1, 1997, D, a 
    calendar year taxpayer, sells a debt instrument that is subject to 
    paragraph (b) of this section for $1,350. On that date, D has an 
    adjusted basis in the debt instrument of $1,200. In addition, D has 
    a negative adjustment carryforward of $50 for 1996 that results in a 
    negative adjustment of $50 on January 1, 1997, under paragraph 
    (b)(6)(iii)(C)(1) of this section. D has no positive adjustments on 
    the debt instrument on January 1, 1997.
        (ii) Character of gain. Under paragraph (b)(6) of this section, 
    the $50 negative adjustment on January 1, 1997, results in a 
    negative adjustment carryforward for 1997, the taxable year of the 
    sale of the debt instrument. Under paragraph (b)(6)(iii)(C)(2) of 
    this section, the negative adjustment carryforward reduces the 
    amount realized by D on the sale of the debt instrument from $1,350 
    to $1,300. As a result, D realizes a $100 gain on the sale of the 
    debt instrument, equal to the $1,300 amount realized minus D's 
    $1,200 adjusted basis in the debt instrument. Under paragraph 
    (b)(8)(i) of this section, the gain is interest income to D.
        Example 2. Ordinary loss on sale--(i) Facts. On January 1, 1996, 
    E, a calendar year taxpayer, purchases a debt instrument at original 
    issue for $1,000. The debt instrument is a capital asset in the 
    hands of E. The debt instrument provides for a payment of $1,000 at 
    maturity on December 31, 2001, and for quotable contingent payments 
    on December 31, 1997, 1999, and 2001. The projected payment schedule 
    provides for projected payments of $275 on December 31, 1997, $200 
    on December 31, 1999, and $1,127 on December 31, 2001. Thus, the 
    projected yield on the debt instrument is 10 percent, compounded 
    annually. Based on the projected payment schedule, the total daily 
    portions of interest would be $100 for 1996, $110 for 1997, and 
    $93.50 for 1998.
        (ii) Adjustment for 1997. Assume that the payment actually made 
    on December 31, 1997, is $150, rather than the projected $275. Under 
    paragraph (b)(6)(i) of this section, E has a negative adjustment of 
    $125 on December 31, 1997. Because E has no positive adjustments for 
    1997, E has a net negative adjustment of $125 on the debt instrument 
    for 1997. This net negative adjustment reduces to zero the $110 
    total daily portions of interest E would otherwise include in income 
    in 1997. Accordingly, E has no interest income on the debt 
    instrument for 1997. Because E had $100 of interest inclusions for 
    1996, the remaining $15 of the net negative adjustment is an 
    ordinary loss to E for 1997.
        (iii) Determination of amount and character of loss on sale. 
    Assume that E sells the debt instrument for $950 on December 31, 
    1998. On that date, E has an adjusted basis in the debt instrument 
    of $1,028.50 ($1,000 original basis, plus total daily portions of 
    $100 for 1996, $110 for 1997, and $93.50 for 1998, minus the $275 
    projected amount of the December 31, 1997 payment). As a result, E 
    realizes a $78.50 loss on the sale of the debt instrument (the 
    difference between the sales price and E's adjusted basis in the 
    debt instrument). The total amount of E's interest inclusions on the 
    debt instrument as of December 31, 1998 ($100 in 1996 and $93.50 in 
    1998) exceeds the total amount of net negative adjustments on the 
    debt instrument E treated as ordinary loss as of that date ($15 in 
    1997) by more than $78.50. Therefore, under paragraph (b)(8)(ii) of 
    this section, the $78.50 loss on the debt instrument is treated as 
    an ordinary loss by E.
        Example 3. Loss on sale of a debt instrument--(i) Facts. Assume 
    the same facts as in Example 2 of this paragraph (b)(8)(v), except 
    that the payment actually made on December 31, 1997, is $0, rather 
    than the projected $275.
        (ii) Adjustment for 1997. Under paragraph (b)(6)(i) of this 
    section, E has a negative adjustment of $275 on December 31, 1997. 
    Because E has no positive adjustments for 1997, E has a net negative 
    adjustment of $275 on the debt instrument for 1997. This net 
    negative adjustment reduces to zero the $110 total daily portions of 
    interest E would otherwise include in income in 1997. Accordingly, E 
    has no interest income on the debt instrument for 1997. Because E 
    had $100 of interest inclusions for 1996, $100 of the remaining $165 
    net negative adjustment is treated by E as an ordinary loss for 
    1997. The remaining $65 of the net negative adjustment is a negative 
    adjustment carryforward for 1997 that results in a negative 
    adjustment of $65 on January 1, 1998.
        (iii) Determination of amount and character of loss on sale. 
    Assume that E sells the debt instrument for $900 on January 1, 1998. 
    On that date, E has an adjusted basis in the debt instrument of $935 
    ($1,000 original basis, plus total daily portions of $100 for 1996 
    and $110 for 1997, minus the $275 projected amount of the December 
    31, 1997 payment). Because E has no other adjustments for 1998, and 
    E's interest inclusions on the debt instrument in prior taxable 
    years do not exceed the total net negative adjustments E treated as 
    ordinary loss in those years, the $65 negative adjustment on January 
    1, 1998, results in a negative adjustment carryforward of $65 for 
    1998. Under paragraph (b)(6)(iii)(C)(2) of this section, the $65 
    negative adjustment carryforward reduces the amount E realizes on 
    the sale of the debt instrument from $900 to $835. As a result, E 
    realizes a $100 loss on the sale of the debt instrument (the 
    difference between the amount realized and E's adjusted basis in the 
    debt instrument). Because E's total interest inclusions on the debt 
    instrument do not exceed the total net negative adjustments E 
    treated as ordinary loss on the debt instrument, E's loss on the 
    sale of the debt instrument is treated as a capital loss.
    
        (9) Operating rules. The rules of this paragraph (b)(9) 
    notwithstanding any other rule of this paragraph (b).
        (i) Basis different than adjusted issue price. This paragraph 
    (b)(9)(i) provides rules for a holder whose basis in a debt instrument 
    is different than the adjusted issue price of the debt instrument 
    (e.g., a subsequent holder that purchases the debt instrument for more 
    or less than the instrument's adjusted issue price).
        (A) General rule. A holder whose basis in a debt instrument is 
    different than the adjusted issue price of the debt instrument accrues 
    interest under paragraph (b)(3)(iii) of this section and makes 
    adjustments under paragraph (b)(3)(iv) of this section based on the 
    projected payment schedule determined as of the issue date of the debt 
    instrument. However, upon acquiring the debt instrument, the holder 
    must reasonably allocate any difference between the adjusted issue 
    price and the basis to daily portions of interest or projected payments 
    over the remaining term of the debt instrument. Allocations are taken 
    into account under paragraphs (b)(9)(i)(B) and (C) of this section.
        (B) Basis greater than adjusted issue price. If a holder's basis in 
    a debt instrument exceeds the debt instrument's adjusted issue price, 
    the amount allocated to a daily portion of interest or to a projected 
    payment is treated as a negative adjustment on the date the daily 
    portion accrues or the payment is made. The holder's adjusted basis in 
    the debt instrument is reduced by the amount the holder treats as a 
    negative adjustment under this paragraph (b)(9)(i)(B).
        (C) Basis less than adjusted issue price. If a holder's basis in a 
    debt instrument is less than the debt instrument's adjusted issue 
    price, the amount allocated to a daily portion of interest or to a 
    projected payment is treated as a positive adjustment on the date the 
    daily portion accrues or the payment is made. The holder's adjusted 
    basis in the debt instrument is increased by the amount the holder 
    treats as a positive adjustment under this paragraph (b)(9)(i)(C).
        (D) Premium and discount rules do not apply. The rules for accruing 
    premium and discount in sections 171, 1272(a)(7), 1276, and 1281 do not 
    apply. Other rules of those sections continue to apply to the extent 
    relevant.
        (E) Safe harbor for exchange listed debt instruments. If a 
    contingent payment debt instrument is exchange listed property (within 
    the meaning of Sec. 1.1273-2(f)(2)), it is reasonable for a holder of 
    the debt instrument to allocate any difference between the holder's 
    basis and the adjusted issue price of the debt instrument pro-rata to 
    daily portions of interest (as determined under paragraph (b)(3)(iii) 
    of this section) over the remaining term of the debt instrument.
        (F) Examples. The following examples illustrate the provisions of 
    paragraph (b)(9)(i) of this section. In each example, assume that the 
    debt instrument described is a debt instrument for federal income tax 
    purposes. No inference is intended, however, as to whether the debt 
    instrument constitutes a debt instrument for federal income tax 
    purposes. In addition, assume that each debt instrument is not exchange 
    listed property.
    
        Example 1. Basis greater than adjusted issue price--(i) Facts. 
    On July 1, 1997, Z purchases for $1,405 a debt instrument that 
    matures on December 31, 1998, and promises to pay on the maturity 
    date $1,000 plus the increase, if any, in the price of a specified 
    amount of a commodity from the issue date to the maturity date. The 
    debt instrument was originally issued on January 1, 1996, for an 
    issue price of $1,000. Z is a calendar year taxpayer. The projected 
    payment schedule for the debt instrument (determined as of the issue 
    date) provides for a single payment at maturity of $1,350. Thus, the 
    debt instrument has a projected yield of 10.25 percent, compounded 
    semiannually. At the time of the purchase, the debt instrument has 
    an adjusted issue price of $1,162, assuming semiannual accrual 
    periods ending on December 31 and June 30 of each year. The increase 
    in the value of the debt instrument over its adjusted issue price is 
    due to an increase in the expected amount of the contingent payment 
    and not to a decrease in market interest rates.
        (ii) Allocation of the difference between basis and adjusted 
    issue price. Z's basis in the debt instrument on July 1, 1997, is 
    $1,405. Under paragraph (b)(9)(i)(B) of this section, Z allocates 
    the $243 difference between basis ($1,405) and adjusted issue price 
    ($1,162) to the contingent payment at maturity. Z's allocation of 
    the difference between basis and adjusted issue price is reasonable 
    because the increase in the value of the debt instrument over its 
    adjusted issue price is due to an increase in the expected amount of 
    the contingent payment.
        (iii) Treatment of debt instrument for 1997. Based on the 
    projected payment schedule, $60 of interest accrues on the debt 
    instrument from July 1, 1997 to December 31, 1997 (the product of 
    the debt instrument's adjusted issue price on July 1, 1997 ($1,162) 
    and the projected yield properly adjusted for the length of the 
    accrual period (10.25 percent/2)). Z has no net negative or positive 
    adjustments for 1997. Thus, Z includes in income $60 of total daily 
    portions of interest for 1997. On December 31, 1997, Z's adjusted 
    basis in the debt instrument is $1,465 ($1,405 original basis, plus 
    total daily portions of $60 for 1997).
        (iv) Effect of allocation to contingent payment at maturity. 
    Assume that the payment actually made on December 31, 1998, is 
    $1,400, rather than the projected $1,350. Under paragraph (b)(6)(i) 
    of this section, Z has a positive adjustment of $50 on December 31, 
    1998. Under paragraph (b)(9)(i)(B) of this section, Z has a negative 
    adjustment of $243 on December 31, 1998. As a result, Z has a net 
    negative adjustment of $193 for 1998. This net negative adjustment 
    reduces to zero the $128 total daily portions of interest Z would 
    otherwise include in income in 1998. Accordingly, Z has no interest 
    income on the debt instrument for 1998. Because Z had $60 of 
    interest inclusions for 1997, $60 of the remaining $65 net negative 
    adjustment is treated by Z as an ordinary loss for 1998. The 
    remaining $5 of the net negative adjustment is a negative adjustment 
    carryforward for 1998 that reduces the amount realized by Z on the 
    retirement of the debt instrument from $1,350 to $1,345.
        (v) Loss at maturity. On December 31, 1998, Z's basis in the 
    debt instrument is $1,350 ($1,405 original basis, plus total daily 
    portions of $60 for 1997 and $128 for 1998, minus the negative 
    adjustment of $243). As a result, Z realizes a loss of $5 on the 
    retirement of the debt instrument (the difference between the amount 
    realized ($1,345) and Z's adjusted basis in the debt instrument 
    ($1,350)). Under paragraph (b)(8)(ii) of this section, the $5 loss 
    is treated as loss from the retirement of the debt instrument. 
    Consequently, Z realizes a total loss of $65 on the debt instrument 
    for 1998 (a $60 ordinary loss and a $5 loss on the retirement of the 
    debt instrument).
        Example 2. Basis less than adjusted issue price--(i) Facts. On 
    January 1, 1998, Y purchases for $910 a debt instrument that pays 7 
    percent interest semiannually on June 30 and December 31 of each 
    year, and that promises to pay on December 31, 2000, $1,000 plus or 
    minus $10 times the positive or negative difference, if any, between 
    a specified amount and the value of an index on December 31, 2000. 
    However, the payment on December 31, 2000, may not be less than 
    $650. The debt instrument was originally issued on January 1, 1996, 
    for an issue price of $1,000. Y is a calendar year taxpayer. The 
    projected payment schedule for the debt instrument provides for 
    semiannual payments of $35 and a contingent payment at maturity of 
    $1,175. On January 1, 1998, the debt instrument has an adjusted 
    issue price of $1,060, assuming semiannual accrual periods ending on 
    December 31 and June 30 of each year. Since the time the debt 
    instrument was issued, market rates of interest on similar debt 
    instruments have increased from approximately 10 percent to 
    approximately 13 percent. In addition, because of a decrease in the 
    relevant index, the expected value of the contingent payment has 
    declined by about 9 percent.
        (ii) Allocation of the difference between basis and adjusted 
    issue price. Y's basis in the debt instrument on January 1, 1998, is 
    $910. Under paragraph (b)(9)(i)(B) of this section, Y must allocate 
    the $150 difference between basis ($910) and adjusted issue price 
    ($1,060) to daily portions of interest or to projected payments. 
    These amounts will be positive adjustments taken into account at the 
    time the daily portions accrue or the payments are made.
        (A) Based on forward prices on January 1, 1998, Y determines 
    that approximately $105 of the difference between basis and adjusted 
    issue price is allocable to the contingent payment. Y allocates the 
    remaining $45 to daily portions of interest on a pro-rata basis. 
    This allocation is reasonable.
        (B) Assume alternatively that, based on yields of comparable 
    debt instruments and its purchase price for the debt instrument, Y 
    determines that approximately $49 of the difference between basis 
    and adjusted issue price is allocable to daily portions of interest 
    as follows: $13.32 to the daily portions of interest for the taxable 
    year ending December 31, 1998; $16.15 to the daily portions of 
    interest for the taxable year ending December 31, 1999; and $19.53 
    to the daily portions of interest for the taxable year ending 
    December 31, 2000. Y allocates the remaining $101 to the contingent 
    payment at maturity. This allocation is reasonable.
        Example 3. Secondary holder sells debt instrument--(i) Facts. 
    Assume the same facts as in Example 2 of this paragraph (b)(9)(i)(F) 
    and that Y allocates $49 to daily portions of interest and $101 to 
    the contingent payment at maturity, on the same basis as in 
    paragraph (ii)(B) of Example 2 of this paragraph (b)(9)(i)(F). In 
    1998, Y has a total of $104.68 of daily portions of interest, 
    receives two semiannual payments of $35, and has a positive 
    adjustment of $13.32 from the allocation. Thus, Y has $118 of 
    interest income on the debt instrument for 1998 ($104.68 of interest 
    and a $13.32 net positive adjustment). On December 31, 1998, Y has 
    an adjusted basis of $958 in the debt instrument ($910 original 
    basis, plus $104.68 total daily portions for 1998 and the $13.32 
    positive adjustment, minus $70 interest payments for 1998), and the 
    debt instrument has an adjusted issue price of $1,094.68 ($1,060 
    adjusted issue price on January 1, 1998, plus $104.68 total daily 
    portions for 1998, minus $70 interest payments for 1998).
        (ii) Sale of debt instrument. Assume that Y sells the debt 
    instrument for $950 on January 15, 1999. In 1999, Y has total daily 
    portions of interest on the debt instrument (using a semiannual 
    accrual period ending June 30) of $4.47 and positive adjustments 
    allocable to the total daily portions of interest in 1999 of $0.64. 
    Therefore, Y has $5.11 of interest income on the debt instrument for 
    1999. On January 15, 1999, Y has an adjusted basis in the debt 
    instrument of $963.11. As a result, Y realizes a $13.11 loss on the 
    sale of the debt instrument. Under paragraph (b)(8)(ii) of this 
    section, the loss is an ordinary loss.
    
        (ii) Fixed but deferred contingent payments. This paragraph 
    (b)(9)(ii) provides rules for computing interest accruals and 
    adjustments under paragraph (b)(3) of this section when the amount of a 
    contingent payment becomes fixed more than 6 months before the payment 
    is due. For purposes of the preceding sentence, a payment is treated as 
    a fixed payment if all remaining contingencies with respect to the 
    payment are remote or incidental.
        (A) Determining adjustments. The amount of the adjustment 
    attributable to the payment is equal to the difference between the 
    present value of the amount that is fixed and the present value of the 
    projected amount of the contingent payment. The present value of each 
    amount is determined by discounting the amount from the date the 
    payment is due to the date the payment becomes fixed, using a discount 
    rate equal to the projected yield on the debt instrument. The 
    adjustment is treated as a positive or negative adjustment, as 
    appropriate, on the date the contingent payment becomes fixed. See 
    paragraph (b)(9)(v) of this section to determine the timing of the 
    adjustment if all remaining contingent payments on the debt instrument 
    become fixed substantially contemporaneously.
        (B) Payment schedule. For purposes of paragraph (b) of this 
    section, the contingent payment is no longer treated as a contingent 
    payment after the date the amount of the payment becomes fixed. On the 
    date the contingent payment becomes fixed, the projected payment 
    schedule for the debt instrument is modified prospectively to reflect 
    the fixed amount of the payment. Therefore, no adjustment is made under 
    paragraph (b)(3)(iv) of this section when the contingent payment is 
    actually made.
        (C) Accrual period. Notwithstanding the determination under 
    Sec. 1.1272-1(b)(1)(ii) of accrual periods for the debt instrument, an 
    accrual period ends on the day the contingent payment becomes fixed, 
    and a new accrual period begins on the day after the day the contingent 
    payment becomes fixed.
        (D) Basis and adjusted issue price. The amount of any positive 
    adjustment on a debt instrument determined under paragraph 
    (b)(9)(ii)(A) of this section increases the adjusted issue price of the 
    instrument and the holder's adjusted basis in the instrument. The 
    amount of any negative adjustment on a debt instrument determined under 
    paragraph (b)(9)(ii)(A) of this section decreases the adjusted issue 
    price of the instrument and the holder's adjusted basis in the 
    instrument.
        (E) Special rule for certain contingent interest payments. 
    Notwithstanding paragraphs (b)(9)(ii) (A), (B), (C), and (D) of this 
    section, this paragraph (b)(9)(ii)(E) applies to contingent stated 
    interest payments that are adjusted to compensate for contingencies 
    regarding the reasonableness of the debt instrument's stated rate of 
    interest. For example, this paragraph (b)(9)(ii)(E) applies to a debt 
    instrument that provides for an increase in the stated rate of interest 
    if the credit quality of the issuer or liquidity of the debt instrument 
    deteriorates. Contingent stated interest payments of this type are 
    recognized over the period to which they relate in a reasonable manner.
        (F) Example. The following example illustrates the provisions of 
    paragraph (b)(9)(ii) of this section. In this example, assume that the 
    debt instrument described is a debt instrument for federal income tax 
    purposes. No inference is intended, however, as to whether the debt 
    instrument constitutes a debt instrument for federal income tax 
    purposes.
    
        Example. Fixed but deferred payments--(i) Facts. On January 1, 
    1996, B, a calendar year taxpayer, purchases a debt instrument at 
    original issue for $1,000. The debt instrument matures on December 
    31, 2001, and provides for a payment of $1,000 at maturity. In 
    addition, on December 31, 1998, and December 31, 2001, the debt 
    instrument provides for payments equal to the excess of the average 
    daily value of an index for the 6-month period ending on September 
    30 of the preceding year over a specified amount. The two contingent 
    payments are substantially similar to options on the index. Assume 
    that the two contingent payments are quotable contingent payments, 
    and that, on the issue date, the forward price of the option that is 
    exercisable on December 31, 1998, is $250 and the forward price of 
    the option that is exercisable on December 31, 2001, is $440. Assume 
    that B uses annual accrual periods.
        (ii) Interest accrual for 1996. Under paragraph (b)(4) of this 
    section, the debt instrument's projected payment schedule consists 
    of a payment of $250 on December 31, 1998, and a payment of $1,440 
    on December 31, 2001. Thus, the debt instrument's projected yield is 
    10 percent, compounded annually. B includes a total of $100 of daily 
    portions of interest in income in 1996. B's adjusted basis in the 
    debt instrument and the debt instrument's adjusted issue price on 
    December 31, 1996, is $1,100.
        (iii) Interest accrual for 1997--(A) Adjustment. Based on the 
    projected payment schedule, B would include $110 of total daily 
    portions of interest in income in 1997. However, assume that on 
    September 30, 1997, the payment due on December 31, 1998, fixes at 
    $300, rather than the projected $250. Thus, on September 30, 1997, B 
    has an adjustment equal to the difference between the present value 
    of the $300 fixed amount and the present value of the $250 projected 
    amount of the contingent payment. The present values of the two 
    payments are determined by discounting each payment from the date 
    the payment is due (December 31, 1998) to the date the payment 
    becomes fixed (September 30, 1997), using a discount rate equal to 
    10 percent, compounded annually. The present value of the fixed 
    payment is $266.30 and the present value of the projected amount of 
    the contingent payment is $221.91. Thus, on September 30, 1997, B 
    has a positive adjustment of $44.39 ($266.30-$221.91).
        (B) Effect of adjustment. Under paragraph (b)(9)(ii)(C) of this 
    section, B's accrual period ends on September 30, 1997. The daily 
    portions of interest on the debt instrument for the period from 
    January 1, 1997 to September 30, 1997 total $81.49. The adjusted 
    issue price of the debt instrument and B's adjusted basis in the 
    debt instrument are thus increased over this period by $125.88 (the 
    sum of the daily portions of interest of $81.49 and the positive 
    adjustment of $44.39 made at the end of the period) to $1,225.88. 
    For purposes of all future accrual periods, including the new 
    accrual period from October 1, 1997, to December 31, 1997, the debt 
    instrument's projected payment schedule is modified to reflect a 
    fixed payment of $300 on December 31, 1998. Based on the new 
    adjusted issue price of the debt instrument and the new projected 
    payment schedule, the projected yield on the debt instrument does 
    not change.
        (C) Interest accrual for 1997. Based on the modified projected 
    payment schedule, $29.55 of interest accrues during the accrual 
    period that ends on December 31, 1997. Because B has no other 
    adjustments during 1997, the $44.39 positive adjustment on September 
    30, 1997, results in a net positive adjustment for 1997, which is 
    additional interest for that year. Thus, B includes $155.43 ($81.49 
    + $29.55 + $44.39) of interest in income in 1997. B's adjusted basis 
    in the debt instrument and the debt instrument's adjusted issue 
    price on December 31, 1997, is $1,255.43 ($1,225.88 from the end of 
    the prior accrual period plus $29.55 total daily portions for the 
    current accrual period).
        (iv) Interest accrual for 1998. In 1998, B has no adjustments 
    and, based on the modified projected payment schedule, includes 
    $125.54 total daily portions of interest in income (rather than $121 
    as under the original projected payment schedule). On December 31, 
    1998, B's adjusted basis in the debt instrument and the adjusted 
    issue price of the debt instrument are increased by the $125.54 
    total daily portions of interest included in income under the 
    modified projected payment schedule, and reduced by $300, the amount 
    of the fixed payment on December 31, 1998, that is reflected on the 
    modified projected payment schedule.
    
        (iii) Timing contingencies. This paragraph (b)(9)(iii) provides 
    rules for debt instruments that have both payments that are contingent 
    as to time and payments that are contingent as to amount.
        (A) Treatment of certain options. If a taxpayer has an option to 
    put or call the debt instrument, to exchange the debt instrument for 
    other property, or to extend the maturity date of the debt instrument, 
    the projected payment schedule is determined by using the principles of 
    Sec. 1.1272-1(c)(5). If an option to put, call, or exchange the debt 
    instrument is assumed to be exercised under the principles of 
    Sec. 1.1272-1(c)(5), it is generally reasonable to assume that the 
    option is exercised immediately before it expires. If the option is 
    exercised at an earlier time, the exercise is treated as a sale or 
    exchange of the debt instrument.
        (B) Other timing contingencies. [Reserved]
        (iv) Allocation of deductions. For purposes of Sec. 1.861-8, any 
    amount treated as an ordinary loss under paragraph (b)(6)(iii)(B) or 
    (b)(8)(ii) of this section is considered a deduction that is definitely 
    related to the class of gross income to which interest on the relevant 
    debt instrument belongs. Any other deduction or loss relating to the 
    debt instrument will be subject to the general rules of Sec. 1.861-8.
        (v) Special rule when all contingent payments become fixed. 
    Notwithstanding any other provision of this section, if all the 
    remaining contingent payments on a debt instrument become fixed 
    substantially contemporaneously, any positive or negative adjustment on 
    the instrument is spread over the remaining term of the instrument in a 
    reasonable manner. For purposes of the preceding sentence, a payment is 
    treated as a fixed payment if all remaining contingencies with respect 
    to the payment are remote or incidental.
        (c) Method for debt instruments not subject to the noncontingent 
    bond method--(1) Applicability. Paragraph (c) of this section applies 
    to a contingent payment debt instrument that has an issue price 
    determined under Sec. 1.1274-2 (other than a debt instrument issued in 
    a potentially abusive situation). For example, paragraph (c) of this 
    section generally applies to a contingent payment debt instrument that 
    is issued for nonpublicly traded property.
        (2) Separation into components. In the case of a debt instrument 
    subject to paragraph (c) of this section (the overall debt instrument), 
    the noncontingent payments and any quotable contingent payments (as 
    defined in paragraph (b)(4)(i) of this section) are subject to the 
    rules in paragraph (c)(3) of this section, and the nonquotable 
    contingent payments (as defined in paragraph (b)(4)(ii) of this 
    section) are accounted for separately under the rules in paragraph 
    (c)(4) of this section.
        (3) Treatment of noncontingent and quotable contingent payments. 
    The noncontingent payments and any quotable contingent payments are 
    treated as a separate debt instrument. The issue price of the separate 
    debt instrument is the issue price of the overall debt instrument, 
    determined under Sec. 1.1274-2. No interest payments on the separate 
    debt instrument are qualified stated interest payments (within the 
    meaning of Sec. 1.1273-1(c)) and the de minimis rules of section 
    1273(a)(3) and Sec. 1.1273-1(d) do not apply to the separate debt 
    instrument. If the separate debt instrument provides for a quotable 
    contingent payment, the rules of paragraph (b) of this section apply to 
    the instrument, notwithstanding paragraph (b)(1) of this section.
        (4) Treatment of nonquotable contingent payments--(i) In general. 
    Except as provided in paragraph (c)(4)(iii) of this section, the 
    portion of a nonquotable contingent payment treated as interest under 
    paragraph (c)(4)(ii)(B) of this section is includible in gross income 
    by the holder and deductible from gross income by the issuer in their 
    respective taxable years in which the amount of the payment becomes 
    fixed.
        (ii) Recharacterization of certain nonquotable contingent 
    payments--(A) Amount treated as principal. In general, a nonquotable 
    contingent payment is treated as a payment of principal in an amount 
    equal to the present value of the payment, determined by discounting 
    the payment at the test rate from the date that the amount of the 
    payment becomes fixed to the issue date. However, a nonquotable 
    contingent payment accompanied by a payment of adequate stated interest 
    is treated entirely as a payment of principal.
        (B) Amount treated as interest. If the total amount of a 
    nonquotable contingent payment exceeds the amount of the payment 
    treated as principal under paragraph (c)(4)(ii)(A) of this section, the 
    excess is treated as a payment of interest.
        (C) Test rate. The test rate used for purposes of paragraph 
    (c)(4)(ii)(A) of this section is the rate that would be the test rate 
    for the overall debt instrument under Sec. 1.1274-4 if the term of the 
    overall debt instrument began on the issue date of the overall debt 
    instrument and ended on the date the contingent payment is fixed.
        (iii) Certain delayed contingent payments--(A) Deemed issuance of 
    separate debt instrument. If a nonquotable contingent payment becomes 
    fixed more than 6 months before the payment is due, the issuer and 
    holder are treated as if the issuer had issued a separate debt 
    instrument on the date the amount of the payment becomes fixed, 
    maturing on the date that the payment is due. This separate debt 
    instrument is treated as a debt instrument to which section 1274 
    applies. The stated principal amount of this separate debt instrument 
    is the amount of the payment that becomes fixed. An amount equal to the 
    issue price of this debt instrument is characterized as interest or 
    principal under the rules of paragraph (c)(4)(ii) of this section and 
    accounted for under paragraph (c)(4)(i) of this section, as if this 
    amount had been paid by the issuer to the holder on the date that the 
    amount of the payment becomes fixed. To determine the issue price of 
    the separate debt instrument, all payments under the separate debt 
    instrument are discounted at the test rate from the maturity date of 
    the separate debt instrument to the date that the amount of the payment 
    becomes fixed. The amount of a contingent payment is treated as fixed 
    even if, once fixed, the payment is payable in the future together with 
    interest that is subject to further contingencies.
        (B) Test rate. In applying section 1274 to a separate debt 
    instrument described in paragraph (c)(4)(iii)(A) of this section, the 
    test rate for the separate debt instrument is the rate that would be 
    the test rate for the overall debt instrument under Sec. 1.1274-4 if 
    the term of the overall debt instrument began on the issue date of the 
    overall debt instrument and ended on the date the contingent payment is 
    due.
        (5) Gain on sale, exchange, or retirement. Any gain recognized by a 
    holder on the sale, exchange, or retirement of a debt instrument 
    subject to paragraph (c) of this section is interest income. The 
    preceding sentence does not apply, however, if, at the time of the 
    sale, exchange, or retirement, there are no remaining contingent 
    payments on the debt instrument. For purposes of the preceding 
    sentence, if a contingent payment becomes fixed more than 6 months 
    before it is due, it is no longer treated as a contingent payment after 
    the date it is fixed.
        (6) Examples. The following examples illustrate the provisions of 
    paragraph (c) of this section. In each example, assume that the 
    instrument described is a debt instrument for federal income tax 
    purposes. No inference is intended, however, as to whether the debt 
    instrument constitutes a debt instrument for federal income tax 
    purposes.
    
        Example 1. Nonquotable contingent interest payments--(i) Facts. 
    A owns Blackacre, unencumbered depreciable real estate. On January 
    1, 1996, A sells Blackacre to B. As consideration for the sale, B 
    makes a downpayment of $1,000,000 and issues to A a debt instrument 
    that matures on December 31, 2000. The debt instrument provides for 
    a payment of principal at maturity of $5,000,000 and a contingent 
    payment of interest on December 31 of each year equal to a fixed 
    percentage of the gross rents B receives from Blackacre in that 
    year. Assume that the contingent interest payments are nonquotable 
    contingent payments and that the debt instrument is not issued in a 
    potentially abusive situation. Assume also that on January 1, 1996, 
    the short-term applicable Federal rate is 5 percent, compounded 
    annually, and the mid-term applicable Federal rate is 6 percent, 
    compounded annually.
        (ii) Determination of issue price. Under Sec. 1.1274-2(g), the 
    stated principal amount of the debt instrument is $5,000,000. The 
    imputed principal amount of the debt instrument is $3,736,291, which 
    is the present value, as of the issue date, of the $5,000,000 
    noncontingent payment due at maturity, calculated using a discount 
    rate equal to the mid-term applicable Federal rate. Therefore, under 
    Sec. 1.1274-2(c), the issue price of the debt instrument is 
    $3,736,291. Under Sec. 1.1012-1(g), B's basis in Blackacre on 
    January 1, 1996, is $4,736,291 ($1,000,000 down payment plus the 
    $3,736,291 issue price of the debt instrument).
        (iii) Noncontingent payment treated as separate debt instrument. 
    Under paragraph (c)(3) of this section, the right to the 
    noncontingent payment of principal at maturity is treated as a 
    separate debt instrument. The issue price of this separate debt 
    instrument is $3,736,291 (the issue price of the overall debt 
    instrument). The separate debt instrument has a stated redemption 
    price at maturity of $5,000,000 and, therefore, OID of $1,263,709.
        (iv) Treatment of contingent payments. Assume that the amount of 
    contingent interest that is fixed and payable on December 31, 1996, 
    is $200,000. Under paragraph (c)(4)(ii)(A) of this section, this 
    payment is treated as consisting of a payment of principal of 
    $190,476, which is the present value of the payment, determined by 
    discounting the payment at the test rate of 5 percent, compounded 
    annually, from the date the payment becomes fixed to the issue date. 
    Under paragraph (c)(4)(ii)(B) of this section, the remainder of the 
    $200,000 payment, $9,524, is treated as interest. The additional 
    amount treated as principal gives B additional basis in Blackacre on 
    December 31, 1996. The portion of the payment treated as interest is 
    includible in gross income by A and deductible by B in their 
    respective taxable years in which December 31, 1996 occurs. The 
    remaining contingent payments on the debt instrument are accounted 
    for similarly, using a test rate of 5 percent, compounded annually, 
    for the contingent payments due on December 31, 1997, and December 
    31, 1998, and a test rate of 6 percent, compounded annually, for the 
    contingent payments due on December 31, 1999, and December 31, 2000.
        Example 2. Fixed but deferred payment--(i) Facts. The facts are 
    the same as in Example 1 of this paragraph (c)(6), except that the 
    contingent payment of interest that is fixed on December 31, 1996, 
    is not payable until December 31, 2000, the maturity date.
        (ii) Determination of issue price. The determination of the 
    issue price of the debt instrument, and B's initial basis in 
    Blackacre, is made in a manner the same as that described in 
    paragraph (ii) of Example 1 of this paragraph (c)(6). Accordingly, 
    the issue price of the debt instrument is $3,736,291.
        (iii) Treatment of noncontingent payment. The right to the 
    noncontingent payment of principal is treated as a separate debt 
    instrument in a manner the same as that described in paragraph (iii) 
    of Example 1 of this paragraph (c)(6).
        (iv) Treatment of contingent payments. Assume that the amount of 
    the payment that becomes fixed on December 31, 1996, is $200,000. 
    Because this amount is not payable until December 31, 2000 (the 
    maturity date), under paragraph (c)(4)(iii) of this section, a 
    separate debt instrument to which section 1274 applies is treated as 
    issued by B on December 31, 1996 (the date the payment is fixed). 
    The maturity date of this separate debt instrument is December 31, 
    2000 (the date on which the payment is due). The stated principal 
    amount of this separate debt instrument is $200,000, the amount of 
    the payment that becomes fixed. The imputed principal amount of the 
    separate debt instrument is $158,419, which is the present value, as 
    of December 31, 1996, of the $200,000 payment, computed using a 
    discount rate equal to the test rate of the overall debt instrument 
    (6 percent, compounded annually). An amount equal to the issue price 
    of the separate debt instrument is treated as an amount paid on 
    December 31, 1996, and characterized as interest and principal under 
    the rules of paragraph (c)(4)(ii) of this section. The amount of the 
    deemed payment characterized as principal is equal to $150,875, 
    which is the present value, as of January 1, 1996 (the issue date of 
    the overall debt instrument) of the deemed payment, computed using a 
    discount rate of 5 percent, compounded annually. The amount of the 
    deemed payment characterized as interest is $7,544 
    ($158,419-$150,875) which is includible in gross income by A and 
    deductible by B in their respective taxable years in which December 
    31, 1996 occurs. The contingent payments made on December 31, 1997, 
    December 31, 1998, December 31, 1999, and December 31, 2000, are 
    treated in a manner the same as that described in paragraph (iv) of 
    Example 1 of this paragraph (c)(6).
    
        (d) Rules for tax-exempt obligations--(1) Applicability. This 
    paragraph (d) provides rules for tax-exempt obligations (as defined in 
    section 1275(a)(3)) subject to this section.
        (2) Noncontingent bond method generally applicable--(i) In general. 
    Except as modified by this paragraph (d), the rules of paragraph (b) of 
    this section apply to tax-exempt obligations.
        (ii) Daily portions. The daily portions of interest determined 
    under paragraph (b)(3)(iii) of this section are not included in gross 
    income by the holder.
        (iii) Modification to projected payment schedule. The yield on a 
    tax-exempt obligation may not exceed the greater of the yield on the 
    obligation determined without regard to the contingent payments, and 
    the tax-exempt applicable Federal rate, as determined for purposes of 
    section 1288(b)(1), that applies to the obligation. If the projected 
    yield determined under paragraph (b)(2)(ii) of this section exceeds the 
    yield determined under the preceding sentence, appropriate adjustments 
    must be made to the projected payment schedule to create a projected 
    yield that meets this requirement.
        (iv) Positive adjustments. Positive adjustments on a tax-exempt 
    obligation are taken into account under this paragraph (d)(2)(iv) 
    rather than under paragraph (b)(6) of this section. A positive 
    adjustment on a tax-exempt obligation is treated as taxable gain to the 
    holder from the sale or exchange of the obligation in the taxable year 
    of the adjustment.
        (v) Negative adjustments. Negative adjustments on a tax-exempt 
    obligation are taken into account under this paragraph (d)(2)(v) rather 
    than under paragraph (b)(6) of this section.
        (A) Reduction of interest accruals. Total negative adjustments for 
    a taxable year first reduce the tax-exempt interest the holder would 
    otherwise account for on the tax-exempt obligation for the taxable year 
    under paragraph (b)(3)(iii) of this section.
        (B) Reduction of other tax-exempt interest for taxable year. If the 
    total negative adjustments on the tax-exempt obligation for a taxable 
    year exceed the tax-exempt interest for the taxable year that the 
    holder would otherwise account for on the tax-exempt obligation under 
    paragraph (b)(3)(iii) of this section, the excess is treated as a 
    reduction of the holder's other tax-exempt interest income for the 
    taxable year. However, the amount treated as a reduction is limited to 
    the amount by which the total tax-exempt interest the holder accounted 
    for on the tax-exempt obligation in prior taxable years exceeds the 
    amount of the holder's total negative adjustments on the tax-exempt 
    obligation that reduced other tax-exempt interest under this paragraph 
    (d)(2)(v)(B) in prior taxable years.
        (C) Carryforward of negative adjustment. If the total negative 
    adjustments on the tax-exempt obligation for a taxable year exceed the 
    sum of the amounts treated as a reduction of tax-exempt interest under 
    paragraphs (d)(2)(v)(A) and (B) of this section, the excess is a 
    negative adjustment carryforward for the taxable year.
        (1) In general. Except as provided in paragraph (d)(2)(v)(C)(2) of 
    this section, a negative adjustment carryforward on a tax-exempt 
    obligation for a taxable year is treated as a negative adjustment on 
    the tax-exempt obligation on the first day of the succeeding taxable 
    year.
        (2) In year of sale, exchange, or retirement. Any negative 
    adjustment carryforward on a tax-exempt obligation for a taxable year 
    in which the debt instrument is sold, exchanged, or retired reduces the 
    amount realized by the holder on the sale, exchange, or retirement.
        (vi) Gains. Notwithstanding paragraph (b)(8) of this section, any 
    gain recognized on the sale, exchange, or retirement of a tax-exempt 
    obligation is gain from the sale or exchange of the obligation.
        (vii) Losses--(A) Reduction of tax-exempt interest income. 
    Notwithstanding paragraph (b)(8) of this section, any loss recognized 
    on the sale, exchange, or retirement of a tax-exempt obligation is 
    treated as a reduction of the holder's tax-exempt interest income for 
    the taxable year of the sale, exchange, or retirement. However, the 
    amount treated as a reduction of tax- exempt interest income by the 
    holder is limited to the amount by which the holder's total tax-exempt 
    interest on the obligation exceeds the holder's total negative 
    adjustments on the obligation that were treated as reductions of tax-
    exempt interest income under paragraph (d)(2)(v)(B) of this section. If 
    the amount that would reduce tax-exempt interest income measured under 
    the preceding sentence exceeds the holder's total tax-exempt interest 
    income for the taxable year, the excess is carried forward to reduce 
    the holder's tax-exempt interest income in subsequent taxable years.
        (B) Treatment of excess losses. If the loss recognized by a holder 
    on the sale, exchange, or retirement of a tax-exempt obligation exceeds 
    the amount measured under paragraph (d)(2)(vii)(A) of this section, the 
    excess is treated as loss from the sale or exchange of the tax-exempt 
    obligation.
        (e) Timing of income and deductions from notional principal 
    contracts. For the rules governing the timing of income and deductions 
    with respect to notional principal contracts characterized as including 
    a loan, see Sec. 1.446-3.
        (f) Effective date. This section is effective for debt instruments 
    issued on or after the date that is 60 days after final regulations are 
    published in the Federal Register.
        Par. 8. Section 1.1275-5 is amended by:
        1. Revising paragraph (a)(1).
        2. Adding the word ``only'' immediately following the parenthetical 
    in the introductory language of paragraph (a)(3)(i).
        3. Removing the language ``less than 1 year'' in the first sentence 
    of paragraph (a)(3)(ii) and adding the language ``1 year or less'' in 
    its place.
        4. Adding paragraph (a)(5).
        5. Revising paragraph (c)(1).
        6. Revising the text of paragraph (d) preceding the examples, 
    revising Examples 4 through 6, and adding Example 10.
        7. Revising paragraph (e)(2).
        8. Revising the text of paragraph (e)(3)(v) preceding the examples 
    and revising Example 3.
        The revisions and additions read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 1.1275-5  Variable rate debt instruments.
    
        (a) Applicability--(1) In general. This section provides rules for 
    variable rate debt instruments. A variable rate debt instrument is a 
    debt instrument that meets the conditions described in paragraphs (a) 
    (2), (3), (4), and (5) of this section. If a debt instrument that 
    provides for a variable rate of interest does not qualify as a variable 
    rate debt instrument, the debt instrument is a contingent payment debt 
    instrument. See Sec. 1.1275-4 for the treatment of a contingent payment 
    debt instrument. If a taxpayer holds (or issues) a variable rate debt 
    instrument that the taxpayer hedges, see Sec. 1.1275-6 for the 
    treatment of the debt instrument and the hedge by the taxpayer.
    * * * * *
        (5) No contingent principal payments. The debt instrument must not 
    provide for any principal payments that are contingent (within the 
    meaning of Sec. 1.1275-4(a)).
    * * * * *
        (c) Objective rate--(1) In general--(i) Debt instruments issued on 
    or after the date that is 60 days after final regulations are published 
    in the Federal Register--(A) In general. Except as provided in 
    paragraph (c)(1)(i)(B) of this section, for debt instruments issued on 
    or after the date that is 60 days after final regulations are published 
    in the Federal Register, an objective rate is a rate (other than a 
    qualified floating rate) that is determined using a single fixed 
    formula and that is based on objective financial or economic 
    information. For example, an objective rate generally includes a rate 
    that is based on one or more qualified floating rates or on the yield 
    of actively traded personal property (within the meaning of section 
    1092(d)(1)).
        (B) Exception. For purposes of paragraph (c)(1)(i)(A) of this 
    section, an objective rate does not include a rate based on information 
    that is within the control of the issuer (or a related party within the 
    meaning of section 267(b) or 707(b)(1)) or that is unique to the 
    circumstances of the issuer (or a related party within the meaning of 
    section 267(b) or 707(b)(1)), such as dividends, profits, or the value 
    of the issuer's stock. However, a rate does not fail to be an objective 
    rate merely because it is based on the credit quality of the issuer.
        (ii) Debt instruments issued after April 3, 1994, and before the 
    date that is 60 days after final regulations are published in the 
    Federal Register. For debt instruments issued after April 3, 1994, and 
    before the date that is 60 days after final regulations are published 
    in the Federal Register, an objective rate is a rate (other than a 
    qualified floating rate) that is determined using a single fixed 
    formula and that is based on--
        (A) One or more qualified floating rates;
        (B) One or more rates where each rate would be a qualified floating 
    rate for a debt instrument denominated in a currency other than the 
    currency in which the debt instrument is denominated;
        (C) The yield or changes in the price of one or more items of 
    personal property (other than stock or debt of the issuer or a related 
    party within the meaning of section 267(b) or 707(b)(1)), provided each 
    item of property is actively traded within the meaning of section 
    1092(d)(1) (determined without regard to section 1092(d)(3)); or
        (D) A combination of rates described in paragraphs (c)(1)(ii)(A), 
    (B), and (C) of this section.
    * * * * *
        (d) Examples. The following examples illustrate the rules of 
    paragraphs (b) and (c) of this section. For purposes of these examples, 
    assume that the debt instrument is not a tax-exempt obligation. In 
    addition, unless otherwise provided, assume that the rate is not 
    reasonably expected to result in a significant front-loading or back-
    loading of interest and that the rate is not based on objective 
    financial or economic information that is within the control of the 
    issuer (or a related party) or that is unique to the circumstances of 
    the issuer (or a related party).
    * * * * *
        Example 4. Rate based on changes in the value of a commodity 
    index. X issues a debt instrument that provides for annual interest 
    payments at the end of each year at a rate equal to the percentage 
    increase, if any, in the value of an index for the year immediately 
    preceding the payment. The index is based on the prices of several 
    actively traded commodities. Variations in the value of this 
    interest rate cannot reasonably be expected to measure 
    contemporaneous variations in the cost of newly borrowed funds. 
    Accordingly, the rate is not a qualified floating rate. However, 
    because the rate is based on objective financial information, the 
    rate is an objective rate.
        Example 5. Rate based on a percentage of S&P 500 Index. X issues 
    a debt instrument that provides for annual interest payments at the 
    end of each year based on a fixed percentage of the value of the S&P 
    500 Index. Variations in the value of this interest rate cannot 
    reasonably be expected to measure contemporaneous variations in the 
    cost of newly borrowed funds and, therefore, the rate is not a 
    qualified floating rate. Although the rate would be an objective 
    rate under paragraph (c)(1)(i) of this section, the rate is not an 
    objective rate because it is reasonably expected that the average 
    value of the rate during the first half of the instrument's term 
    will be significantly less than the average value of the rate during 
    the final half of the instrument's term.
        Example 6. Rate based on issuer's profits. Z issues a debt 
    instrument that provides for annual interest payments equal to 20 
    percent of Z's net profits earned during the year immediately 
    preceding the payment. Variations in the value of this interest rate 
    cannot reasonably be expected to measure contemporaneous variations 
    in the cost of newly borrowed funds. Accordingly, the rate is not a 
    qualified floating rate. In addition, because the stated rate is 
    based on objective financial information that is unique to the 
    issuer's circumstances, the rate is not an objective rate.
    * * * * *
        Example 10. Rate based on an inflation index. On January 1, 
    1996, X issues a debt instrument that provides for annual interest 
    payments at the end of each year at a rate equal to 400 basis points 
    (4 percent) plus the annual percentage change in a general inflation 
    index (e.g., the Consumer Price Index, U.S. City Average, All Items, 
    for all Urban Consumers, seasonally unadjusted). Variations in the 
    value of this interest rate cannot reasonably be expected to measure 
    contemporaneous variations in the cost of newly borrowed funds. 
    Accordingly, the rate is not a qualified floating rate. However, 
    because the rate is based on objective economic information, the 
    rate is an objective rate.
    
        (e) ***
        (2) Variable rate debt instrument that provides for annual payments 
    of interest at a single variable rate. If a variable rate debt 
    instrument provides for stated interest at a single qualified floating 
    rate or objective rate that is unconditionally payable in cash or in 
    property (other than debt instruments of the issuer), or that will be 
    constructively received under section 451, at least annually--
        (i) All stated interest with respect to the debt instrument is 
    qualified stated interest;
        (ii) The amount of qualified stated interest and the amount of OID, 
    if any, that accrues during an accrual period is determined under the 
    rules applicable to fixed rate debt instruments by assuming that the 
    variable rate is a fixed rate equal to--
        (A) In the case of a qualified floating rate or qualified inverse 
    floating rate, the value, as of the issue date, of the qualified 
    floating rate or qualified inverse floating rate; or
        (B) In the case of an objective rate (other than a qualified 
    inverse floating rate), a fixed rate that reflects the yield that is 
    reasonably expected for the debt instrument; and
        (iii) Qualified stated interest allocable to an accrual period is 
    increased (or decreased) if the interest actually paid during an 
    accrual period exceeds (or is less than) the interest assumed to be 
    paid during the accrual period under paragraph (e)(2)(ii) of this 
    section.
        (3) ***
        (v) Examples. The following examples illustrate the rules in 
    paragraphs (e) (2) and (3) of this section.
    * * * * *
        Example 3. Adjustment to qualified stated interest for actual 
    payment of interest--(i) Facts. On January 1, 1995, Z purchases at 
    original issue, for $90,000, a variable rate debt instrument that 
    matures on January 1, 1997, and has a stated principal amount of 
    $100,000, payable at maturity. The debt instrument provides for 
    annual payments of interest on January 1 of each year, beginning on 
    January 1, 1996. The amount of interest payable is the value of 
    annual LIBOR on the payment date. The value of annual LIBOR on 
    January 1, 1995, and January 1, 1996, is 5 percent, compounded 
    annually. The value of annual LIBOR on January 1, 1997, is 7 
    percent, compounded annually.
        (ii) Accrual of OID and qualified stated interest. Under 
    paragraph (e)(2) of this section, the variable rate debt instrument 
    is treated as a 2-year debt instrument that has an issue price of 
    $90,000, a stated principal amount of $100,000, and interest 
    payments of $5,000 at the end of each year. The debt instrument has 
    $10,000 of OID and the annual interest payments of $5,000 are 
    qualified stated interest payments. Under Sec. 1.1272-1, the debt 
    instrument has a yield of 10.82 percent, compounded annually. The 
    amount of OID allocable to the first annual accrual period (assuming 
    Z uses annual accrual periods) is $4,743.25 
    (($90,000 x .1082)-$5,000), and the amount of OID allocable to the 
    second annual accrual period is $5,256.75 ($100,000-$94,743.25). 
    Under paragraph (e)(2)(iii) of this section, the $2,000 difference 
    between the $7,000 interest payment actually made at maturity and 
    the $5,000 interest payment assumed to be made at maturity under the 
    equivalent fixed rate debt instrument is treated as additional 
    qualified stated interest for the period.
    * * * * *
        Par. 9. Section 1.1275-6 is added to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 1.1275-6  Integration of qualifying debt instruments.
    
        (a) In general. This section generally provides for the integration 
    of a qualifying debt instrument with a hedge or combination of hedges 
    if the combined cash flows of the components are substantially 
    equivalent to the cash flows on a fixed or variable rate debt 
    instrument. The integrated transaction is generally subject to the 
    rules of this section rather than the rules each component of the 
    transaction would be subject to on a separate basis. The purpose of 
    this section is to permit a more appropriate determination of the 
    character and timing of income, deductions, gains, or losses than would 
    be permitted by a separate accounting for the components. The rules of 
    this section must be interpreted consistently with this purpose. The 
    rules of this section affect only the taxpayer who holds (or issues) 
    the qualifying debt instrument and enters into the hedge.
        (b) Definitions--(1) Qualifying debt instrument--(i) In general. A 
    qualifying debt instrument is a debt instrument subject to either 
    Sec. 1.1275-4 (relating to contingent payment debt instruments) or 
    Sec. 1.1275-5 (relating to variable rate debt instruments), or is an 
    integrated transaction as defined in paragraph (c) of this section. 
    However, a tax-exempt obligation, as defined in section 1275(a)(3), is 
    not a qualifying debt instrument.
        (ii) Special rule if all payments on a debt instrument are 
    proportionally hedged. If a debt instrument is a qualifying debt 
    instrument and all principal and interest payments under the instrument 
    are hedged in the same proportion, then, for purposes of this section, 
    the portion of the instrument that is hedged is treated as a qualifying 
    debt instrument.
        (2) Section 1.1275-6 hedge--(i) In general. A Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge 
    is any financial instrument (as defined in paragraph (b)(3) of this 
    section) such that the combined cash flows of the financial instrument 
    and the qualifying debt instrument permit the calculation of a yield to 
    maturity (under the principles of section 1272), or the right to the 
    combined cash flows would qualify as a variable rate debt instrument 
    under Sec. 1.1275-5 that pays interest at a qualified floating rate or 
    rates (except for the requirement that the interest payments be stated 
    as interest). A financial instrument that hedges currency risk, 
    however, is not a Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge.
        (ii) Limitation. A taxpayer cannot treat a debt instrument it 
    issues as a Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge of a debt instrument it holds and a 
    taxpayer cannot treat a debt instrument it holds as a Sec. 1.1275-6 
    hedge of a debt instrument it issues.
        (3) Financial instrument. For purposes of this section, a financial 
    instrument is a spot, forward, or futures contract, an option, a 
    notional principal contract, a debt instrument, or a similar 
    instrument, or combination or series of financial instruments. Stock, 
    however, is not a financial instrument for purposes of this section.
        (4) Synthetic debt instrument. The synthetic debt instrument is the 
    hypothetical debt instrument with the same cash flows as the combined 
    cash flows of the qualifying debt instrument and the Sec. 1.1275-6 
    hedge.
        (c) Integrated transaction--(1) Integration by taxpayer. Except as 
    otherwise provided in this section, a qualifying debt instrument and a 
    Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge are an integrated transaction if all of the 
    following requirements are satisfied--
        (i) The taxpayer satisfies the identification requirements of 
    paragraph (f) of this section on or before the date the taxpayer enters 
    into the Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge.
        (ii) None of the parties to the Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge are related 
    within the meaning of section 267(b) or 707(b)(1) (other than parties 
    that have made a separate-entity election under Sec. 1.1221-2(d)).
        (iii) Both the qualifying debt instrument and the Sec. 1.1275-6 
    hedge are entered into by the same individual, partnership, trust, 
    estate, or corporation (regardless of whether the corporation is a 
    member of an affiliated group of corporations that files a consolidated 
    return).
        (iv) With respect to a foreign person engaged in a U.S. trade or 
    business that issues or acquires a qualifying debt instrument or enters 
    into a Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge through the trade or business, all items of 
    income and expense associated with the qualifying debt instrument and 
    the Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge (other than interest expense that is subject to 
    Sec. 1.882-5) would have been effectively connected with the U.S. trade 
    or business throughout the term of the synthetic debt instrument had 
    this section not applied.
        (v) The qualifying debt instrument, any other debt instrument that 
    is part of the same issue as the qualifying debt instrument, or the 
    Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge cannot have been part of an integrated transaction 
    entered into by the taxpayer that has been terminated under the legging 
    out rules of paragraph (d)(2) of this section.
        (vi) The Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge is entered into on or after the date 
    the qualifying debt instrument is issued or acquired.
        (2) Integration by Commissioner. The Commissioner may treat a 
    qualifying debt instrument and a financial instrument (whether entered 
    into by the taxpayer or by a related party) as an integrated 
    transaction if the combined cash flows on the qualifying debt 
    instrument and financial instrument are substantially the same as the 
    combined cash flows required for the financial instrument to be a 
    Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge. The circumstances under which the Commissioner may 
    require integration include, but are not limited to, the following:
        (i) A taxpayer fails to identify a qualifying debt instrument and 
    the Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge under paragraph (f) of this section.
        (ii) A taxpayer issues or acquires a qualifying debt instrument and 
    a related party (within the meaning of section 267(b) or 707(b)(1)) 
    enters into the Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge.
        (iii) A taxpayer issues or acquires a qualifying debt instrument 
    and enters into the Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge with a related party (within 
    the meaning of section 267(b) or 707(b)(1)).
        (iv) The taxpayer legs out of an integrated transaction and 
    subsequently enters into a new Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge with respect to the 
    same qualifying debt instrument or other debt instrument that is part 
    of the same issue.
        (d) Special rules for legging into and legging out of an integrated 
    transaction--(1) Legging into--(i) Definition. Legging into an 
    integrated transaction under this section means that a Sec. 1.1275-6 
    hedge is entered into after the date the qualifying debt instrument is 
    issued by the taxpayer or acquired by the taxpayer, and the 
    requirements of paragraph (c)(1) of this section are satisfied on the 
    date the Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge is entered into (the leg-in date).
        (ii) Treatment. If a taxpayer legs into an integrated transaction, 
    the taxpayer treats the qualifying debt instrument under the applicable 
    rules for accruing interest and OID up to the leg-in date, except that 
    the day before the leg-in date is treated as the end of an accrual 
    period. As of the leg-in date, the qualifying debt instrument is 
    subject to the rules of paragraph (g) of this section.
        (iii) Anti-abuse rule. If a taxpayer legs into an integrated 
    transaction with a principal purpose of deferring or accelerating 
    income or deductions on the qualifying debt instrument, the 
    Commissioner may--
        (A) Treat the qualifying debt instrument as sold for its fair 
    market value on the leg-in date; or
        (B) Refuse to allow the taxpayer to integrate the qualifying debt 
    instrument and the Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge.
        (2) Legging out--(i) Definition--(A) Legging out if the taxpayer 
    has integrated. If a taxpayer has integrated a qualifying debt 
    instrument and a Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge under paragraph (c)(1) of this 
    section, legging out means that, prior to the maturity of the synthetic 
    debt instrument, the taxpayer disposes of or otherwise terminates all 
    or a part of the qualifying debt instrument or Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge, the 
    Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge ceases to meet the requirements for a Sec. 1.1275-6 
    hedge, or the taxpayer fails to meet any requirement of paragraph 
    (c)(1) of this section. If the taxpayer fails to meet the requirements 
    of paragraph (c)(1) of this section but meets the requirements of 
    paragraph (c)(2) of this section, the Commissioner may treat the 
    taxpayer as not legging out. A taxpayer that disposes of or terminates 
    both the qualifying debt instrument and the Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge on the 
    same day is considered to have disposed of or otherwise terminated the 
    synthetic debt instrument rather than to have legged out.
        (B) Legging out if the Commissioner has integrated. If the 
    Commissioner has integrated a qualifying debt instrument and a 
    financial instrument under paragraph (c)(2) of this section, legging 
    out means that, prior to the maturity of the synthetic debt instrument, 
    the requirements for Commissioner integration under paragraph (c)(2) of 
    this section are not met or the taxpayer fails to meet the requirements 
    for taxpayer integration under paragraph (c)(1) of this section and the 
    Commissioner agrees to allow the taxpayer to be treated as legging out. 
    A taxpayer that disposes of or terminates both the qualifying debt 
    instrument and the financial instrument on the same day is considered 
    to have disposed of or otherwise terminated the synthetic debt 
    instrument rather than to have legged out.
        (ii) Operating rules. If a taxpayer legs out (or is treated as 
    legging out) of an integrated transaction, the following rules apply--
        (A) The transaction is treated as an integrated transaction during 
    the time the requirements of paragraph (c)(1) or (2) of this section, 
    as appropriate, are satisfied.
        (B) If the Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge is disposed of or otherwise 
    terminated, the synthetic debt instrument is treated as sold or 
    otherwise terminated for its fair market value on the leg-out date and, 
    except as provided in paragraph (d)(2)(ii)(D) of this section, any 
    income, deduction, gain, or loss is realized and recognized on the leg-
    out date. Appropriate adjustments are made as of the leg-out date to 
    reflect any difference between the fair market value of the qualifying 
    debt instrument and the adjusted issue price of the qualifying debt 
    instrument. For example, if a qualifying debt instrument is subject to 
    Sec. 1.1275-4, a holder must use the principles of Sec. 1.1275-
    4(b)(9)(i) to compute interest accruals on the instrument after the 
    leg-out date.
        (C) If the qualifying debt instrument is disposed of or otherwise 
    terminated, the synthetic debt instrument is treated as sold for its 
    fair market value on the leg-out date and the Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge is 
    treated as entered into at its fair market value immediately after the 
    taxpayer legs out.
        (D) If a taxpayer legs out of an integrated transaction by 
    disposing of or otherwise terminating a Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge within 30 
    days of legging into the integrated transaction, then any loss or 
    deduction determined under paragraph (d)(2)(ii)(B) of this section is 
    not allowed. Appropriate adjustments are made to the qualifying debt 
    instrument to take into account any disallowed loss.
        (e) Transactions part of a straddle. At the discretion of the 
    Commissioner, a transaction may not be integrated under paragraph 
    (c)(1) of this section if, prior to the time the integrated transaction 
    is identified, the qualifying debt instrument is part of a straddle as 
    defined in section 1092(c).
        (f) Identification requirements--(1) Identification by taxpayer. 
    For each integrated transaction, a taxpayer must enter and retain as 
    part of its books and records the following information--
        (i) The date the qualifying debt instrument was issued or acquired 
    by the taxpayer and the date the Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge was entered into 
    by the taxpayer;
        (ii) A description of the qualifying debt instrument and the 
    Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge; and
        (iii) A summary of the cash flows and accruals resulting from 
    treating the qualifying debt instrument and the Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge as 
    an integrated transaction (i.e., the cash flows and accruals on the 
    synthetic debt instrument).
        (2) Identification by trustee on behalf of beneficiary. A trustee 
    of a trust that enters into a synthetic debt instrument may satisfy the 
    identification requirements described in paragraph (f)(1) of this 
    section on behalf of a beneficiary of the trust.
        (g) Taxation of integrated transactions--(1) General rule. An 
    integrated transaction is generally treated as a single transaction by 
    the taxpayer during the period that the transaction qualifies as an 
    integrated transaction. Except as provided in paragraph (g)(12) of this 
    section, while a qualifying debt instrument and a Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge 
    are part of an integrated transaction, neither the qualifying debt 
    instrument nor the Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge is subject to the rules that 
    would apply on a separate basis to the debt instrument and the 
    Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge, including sections 263(g), 475, 1092, 1256, or 
    1258, or Secs. 1.446- 3, 1.446-4, or 1.1221-2. The rules that would 
    govern the treatment of the synthetic debt instrument generally govern 
    the treatment of the integrated transaction. For example, the 
    integrated transaction may be subject to section 263(g) or, if the 
    synthetic debt instrument would be part of a straddle, section 1092. 
    Generally, the synthetic debt instrument is subject to sections 163(e), 
    1271 through 1275, and 1286 with terms as follows.
        (2) Issue date. The issue date of the synthetic debt instrument is 
    the date the Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge is entered into by the taxpayer.
        (3) Term. The term of the synthetic debt instrument is the period 
    beginning on the issue date of the synthetic debt instrument and ending 
    on the maturity date of the qualifying debt instrument.
        (4) Issue price. The issue price of the synthetic debt instrument 
    is the adjusted issue price of the qualifying debt instrument on the 
    issue date of the synthetic debt instrument.
        (5) Adjusted issue price. In general, the adjusted issue price of 
    the synthetic debt instrument is determined under the principles of 
    Sec. 1.1275-1(c).
        (6) Qualified stated interest. Qualified stated interest payments 
    on the synthetic debt instrument are payments that would be treated as 
    qualified stated interest under the principles of Sec. 1.1273-1(c) if 
    the payments were stated as interest.
        (7) Stated redemption price at maturity--(i) Synthetic debt 
    instruments that are borrowings. If the synthetic debt instrument is a 
    borrowing, the instrument's stated redemption price at maturity is the 
    sum of all amounts paid or to be paid on the qualifying debt instrument 
    and the Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge, reduced by any amounts received or to be 
    received on the Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge and any amounts treated as 
    qualified stated interest on the synthetic debt instrument under 
    paragraph (g)(6) of this section.
        (ii) Synthetic debt instruments that are loans. If the synthetic 
    debt instrument is a loan, the instrument's stated redemption price at 
    maturity is the sum of all amounts received or to be received on the 
    qualifying debt instrument and the Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge, reduced by any 
    amounts paid or to be paid on the Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge and any amounts 
    treated as qualified stated interest on the synthetic debt instrument 
    under paragraph (g)(6) of this section.
        (8) Source of interest income and allocation of expense. The source 
    of interest income from the synthetic debt instrument is determined by 
    reference to the source of income of the qualifying debt instrument 
    under sections 861(a)(1) and 862(a)(1). For purposes of section 904, 
    the character of interest from the synthetic debt instrument is 
    determined by reference to the character of the interest income from 
    the qualifying debt instrument. Interest expense is allocated and 
    apportioned under regulations under section 861 or under Sec. 1.882-5.
        (9) Effectively connected income. Interest income of a foreign 
    person resulting from a synthetic debt instrument entered into by the 
    foreign person that satisfies the requirements of paragraph (c)(1)(iv) 
    of this section is treated as effectively connected with a U.S. trade 
    or business. Interest expense of a foreign person resulting from an 
    integrated transaction entered into by the foreign person that 
    satisfies the requirements of paragraph (c)(1)(iv) of this section is 
    allocated and apportioned under Sec. 1.882-5.
        (10) Not a short-term obligation. If the synthetic debt instrument 
    has a term of one year or less, the synthetic debt instrument is not 
    treated as a short-term obligation for purposes of section 
    1272(a)(2)(C).
        (11) Special rules for integration by the Commissioner. If the 
    Commissioner requires integration, appropriate adjustments are made to 
    the treatment of the synthetic debt instrument, and, if necessary, the 
    qualifying debt instrument and financial instrument. For example, the 
    Commissioner may treat a financial instrument that is not a 
    Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge as a Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge when applying the rules of 
    this section. The issue date of the synthetic debt instrument is the 
    date determined appropriate by the Commissioner to require integration.
        (12) Retention of separate transaction rules for certain purposes. 
    This paragraph (g)(12) provides for the retention of separate 
    transaction rules for certain purposes. In addition, the Commissioner 
    may require use of separate transaction rules for any aspect of an 
    integrated transaction by publication in the Internal Revenue Bulletin 
    (see Sec. 601.601(d)(2)(ii) of this chapter).
        (i) Foreign persons that enter into integrated transactions giving 
    rise to U.S. source income not effectively connected with a U.S. trade 
    or business. If a foreign person enters into an integrated transaction 
    that gives rise to U.S. source interest income (determined under the 
    source rules for the synthetic debt instrument) not effectively 
    connected with a U.S. trade or business of the foreign person, 
    paragraph (g) of this section does not apply for purposes of sections 
    871(a), 881, 1441, 1442, and 6049. These sections of the Internal 
    Revenue Code are applied to the qualifying debt instrument and the 
    Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge on a separate basis. For example, if a U.S. 
    corporation issues a qualifying debt instrument and enters into a 
    notional principal contract that is a Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge, the source 
    of interest on the qualifying debt instrument is determined under 
    section 861. In general, the interest constitutes U.S. source interest 
    that is subject to withholding tax to the extent provided in sections 
    871, 881, 1441, and 1442. The source of payments on the notional 
    principal contract is determined under Sec. 1.863-7 and, to the extent 
    paid to a non-U.S. person who is not engaged in a U.S. trade or 
    business, constitutes non-U.S. source income that is not subject to 
    U.S. withholding tax.
        (ii) Relationship between issuer and holder. Because the rules of 
    this section affect only the taxpayer holding or issuing the qualifying 
    debt instrument (i.e., either the issuer or a particular holder), any 
    provisions of the Internal Revenue Code or regulations that govern the 
    relationship between the issuer and holder of the qualifying debt 
    instrument are applied on a separate basis. For example, taxpayers must 
    comply with any reporting or disclosure requirements on any qualifying 
    debt instrument as if it were not part of an integrated transaction. 
    Thus, if required under Sec. 1.1275-4(b)(4), an issuer of a contingent 
    payment debt instrument subject to integrated treatment must provide 
    the projected payment schedule to holders.
        (h) Examples. The following examples illustrate the provisions of 
    this section. In each example, assume that the qualifying debt 
    instrument is a debt instrument for federal income tax purposes. No 
    inference is intended, however, as to whether the debt instrument 
    constitutes a debt instrument for federal income tax purposes.
    
        Example 1. Issuer hedge--(i) Facts. On January 1, 1997, V, a 
    domestic corporation, issues a 5-year debt instrument for $1,000. 
    The debt instrument provides for annual payments of interest at a 
    rate equal to the value of 1-year LIBOR and a principal payment of 
    $1,000 at maturity. On the same day, V enters into a 5-year interest 
    rate swap agreement with an unrelated party. Under the swap, V pays 
    6 percent and receives 1-year LIBOR on a notional principal amount 
    of $1,000. The payments on the swap are fixed and made on the same 
    days as the payments on the debt instrument. Also on January 1, 
    1997, V identifies the debt instrument and the swap as an integrated 
    transaction in accordance with the requirements of paragraph (f) of 
    this section.
        (ii) Eligibility for integration. The debt instrument is a 
    qualifying debt instrument because it is a variable rate debt 
    instrument. The swap is a Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge because it is a 
    financial instrument and a yield to maturity on the combined cash 
    flows of the swap and the debt instrument can be calculated. V has 
    met the identification requirements, and the other requirements of 
    paragraph (c)(1) of this section are satisfied. Therefore, the 
    transaction is an integrated transaction under this section.
        (iii) Treatment of the synthetic debt instrument. The synthetic 
    debt instrument is a 5-year debt instrument that has an issue price 
    of $1,000 and provides for annual interest payments of $60 and a 
    principal payment of $1,000 at maturity. Under paragraph (g)(6) of 
    this section, the annual interest payments on the synthetic debt 
    instrument are treated as qualified stated interest payments. Under 
    paragraph (g)(7)(i) of this section, the synthetic debt instrument 
    has a stated redemption price at maturity of $1,000 (the sum of all 
    amounts to be paid on the qualifying debt instrument and the swap, 
    reduced by amounts to be received on the swap and the annual 
    interest payments on the synthetic debt instrument). Therefore, the 
    synthetic debt instrument has no OID.
        Example 2. Issuer hedge with an option--(i) Facts. On January 1, 
    1996, W corporation issues for $1,000 a debt instrument that matures 
    on December 31, 1998. The debt instrument has a stated principal 
    amount of $1,000 payable at maturity. The debt instrument also 
    provides for a payment at maturity equal to $10 times the increase, 
    if any, in the value of a nationally known composite index of stocks 
    from January 1, 1996, to the maturity date. On January 1, 1996, W 
    also purchases from an unrelated party an option that pays $10 times 
    the increase, if any, in the stock index from January 1, 1996, to 
    December 31, 1998. W pays $250 for the option. W identifies the debt 
    instrument and option as an integrated transaction in accordance 
    with the requirements of paragraph (f) of this section.
        (ii) Eligibility for integration. The debt instrument is a 
    qualifying debt instrument because it is a contingent payment debt 
    instrument. The option is a Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge because it is a 
    financial instrument and a yield to maturity on the combined cash 
    flows of the option and the debt instrument can be calculated. W has 
    met the identification requirements, and the other requirements of 
    paragraph (c)(1) of this section are satisfied. Therefore, the 
    transaction is an integrated transaction under this section.
        (iii) Treatment of the synthetic debt instrument. The synthetic 
    debt instrument is a 3-year debt instrument with an issue price of 
    $1,000 that provides for a payment immediately after issuance of 
    $250 and a payment of $1,000 at maturity. The synthetic debt 
    instrument has a stated redemption price at maturity of $1,250 and, 
    therefore, has OID of $250. The $250 payment reduces the adjusted 
    issue price of the synthetic debt instrument to $750 immediately 
    after it is issued. Therefore, the OID allocable to the first 
    accrual period is based on the $750 adjusted issue price. See 
    Sec. 1.1272-1(b).
        Example 3. Hedge with prepaid swap--(i) Facts. On January 1, 
    1996, H purchases for 1,000 a 5-year debt instrument 
    that provides for semiannual payments based on 6-month pound LIBOR 
    and a payment of the 1,000 principal at maturity. On the 
    same day, H enters into a swap with an unrelated third party under 
    which H receives 10 percent, in pounds, semiannually and pays 6-
    month pound LIBOR semiannually on a notional principal amount of 
    1,000. Payments on the swap are fixed and made on the 
    same date that H receives payments on the debt instrument. H also 
    makes a 162 prepayment on the swap. H identifies the 
    swap and the debt instrument as an integrated transaction under 
    paragraph (f) of this section.
        (ii) Eligibility for integration. The debt instrument is a 
    qualifying debt instrument because it is a variable rate debt 
    instrument. The swap is a Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge because it is a 
    financial instrument and a yield to maturity on the combined cash 
    flows of the swap and the debt instrument can be calculated. 
    Although the debt instrument is denominated in pounds, the swap 
    hedges only interest rate risk, not currency risk. See Sec. 1.988-
    5(a) for the treatment of a debt instrument and a swap if the swap 
    hedges currency risk.
        (iii) Treatment of the synthetic debt instrument. The synthetic 
    debt instrument is a 5-year debt instrument that has an issue price 
    of 1,000 and provides for semiannual interest payments 
    of 50 and a principal payment of 1,000 at 
    maturity. Under paragraph (g)(6) of this section, the semiannual 
    interest payments are treated as qualified stated interest payments. 
    Under paragraph (g)(7)(ii) of this section, the synthetic debt 
    instrument's stated redemption price at maturity is 838 
    (the sum of all amounts to be received on the qualifying debt 
    instrument and the Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge, reduced by all amounts to be 
    paid on the Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge and the semiannual interest payments 
    on the synthetic debt instrument). Because the issue price of the 
    synthetic debt instrument exceeds the instrument's stated redemption 
    price at maturity, the synthetic debt instrument does not have OID. 
    The synthetic debt instrument, however, does have 162 of 
    amortizable bond premium. The 162 prepayment on the 
    Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge made by H on January 1, 1996, increases the 
    adjusted issue price of the synthetic debt instrument to 
    1,162 immediately after it is issued.
        Example 4. Legging into an integrated transaction by a holder--
    (i) Facts. On January 1, 1996, X corporation purchases for 
    $1,000,000 a debt instrument that matures on December 31, 2005. The 
    debt instrument provides for annual payments of interest at the rate 
    of 6 percent and for a payment at maturity equal to $1,000,000, 
    increased by the excess, if any, of the price of 1,000 units of a 
    commodity on December 31, 2005, over $350,000, and decreased by the 
    excess, if any, of $350,000 over the price of 1,000 units of a 
    commodity on that date. Assume that on the issue date the forward 
    price of the commodity on December 31, 2005, is $370,000. The 
    projected amount of the payment at maturity, determined under 
    Sec. 1.1275-4(b)(4), therefore, is $1,020,000. On January 1, 1999, X 
    enters into a cash settled forward contract with an unrelated party 
    to sell 1,000 units of the commodity on December 31, 2005, for 
    $450,000. Also on January 1, 1999, X identifies the transaction as 
    an integrated transaction in accordance with the requirements of 
    paragraph (f) of this section.
        (ii) Eligibility for integration. X meets the requirements for 
    integration as of January 1, 1999. Therefore, X legged into an 
    integrated transaction on that date. Prior to that date, X treats 
    the debt instrument under the applicable rules of Sec. 1.1275-4.
        (iii) Treatment of the synthetic debt instrument. As of January 
    1, 1999, the debt instrument and the forward contract are treated as 
    an integrated transaction. The issue price of the synthetic debt 
    instrument is equal to the adjusted issue price of the qualifying 
    debt instrument on the leg-in date, $1,004,804 (assuming one year 
    accrual periods). The term of the synthetic debt instrument is from 
    January 1, 1999 to December 31, 2005. The synthetic debt instrument 
    provides for annual interest payments of $60,000 and a principal 
    payment at maturity of $1,100,000 ($1,000,000 + $450,000 - 
    $350,000). Under paragraph (g)(6) of this section, the annual 
    interest payments are treated as qualified stated interest payments. 
    Under paragraph (g)(7)(ii) of this section, the synthetic debt 
    instrument's stated redemption price at maturity is $1,100,000 (the 
    sum of all amounts to be received on the qualifying debt instrument 
    and the Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge, reduced by all amounts to be paid on 
    the Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge and the annual interest payments on the 
    synthetic debt instrument).
        Example 5. Abusive leg-in--(i) Facts. On January 1, 1996, Y 
    corporation purchases for $1,000,000 a debt instrument that matures 
    on December 31, 2000. The debt instrument provides for annual 
    payments of interest at the rate of 6 percent, a payment on December 
    31, 1998 of the increase, if any, in the price of a commodity from 
    January 1, 1996 to December 31, 1998, and a payment at maturity of 
    $1,000,000 and the increase, if any, in the price of the commodity 
    from December 31, 1998 to maturity. Because the debt instrument is a 
    contingent payment debt instrument subject to Sec. 1.1275-4, Y 
    accrues interest based on the projected payment schedule.
        (ii) Leg-in. By December 1998, the price of the commodity has 
    substantially increased and Y expects a positive adjustment on 
    December 31, 1998. On December 20, 1998, Y enters into an agreement 
    to exchange the two commodity based payments on the debt instrument 
    for two payments on the same dates of $100,000 each. Y identifies 
    the transaction as an integrated transaction in accordance with the 
    requirements of paragraph (f) of this section. Y disposes of the 
    hedge on January 15, 1999.
        (iii) Treatment. The legging into an integrated transaction has 
    the effect of deferring the positive adjustment from 1998 to 1999. 
    Because Y legged into the integrated transaction with a principal 
    purpose to defer the positive adjustment, the Commissioner may treat 
    the debt instrument as sold for its fair market value on the leg-in 
    date, December 20, 1998, or refuse to allow integration.
        Example 6. Integration of offsetting debt instruments--(i) 
    Facts. On January 1, 1996, Z issues two 10-year debt instruments. 
    The first, Issue 1, has an issue price of $1,000, pays interest 
    annually at 6 percent, and, at maturity, pays $1,000, increased by 
    $1 times the increase, if any, in the value of the S&P 100 Index 
    over the term of the instrument and reduced by $1 times the 
    decrease, if any, in the value of the S&P 100 Index over the term of 
    the instrument. However, the amount paid at maturity may not be less 
    than $500 or more than $1,500. The second, Issue 2, has an issue 
    price of $1,000, pays interest annually at 8 percent, and, at 
    maturity, pays $1,000, reduced by $1 times the increase, if any, in 
    the value of the S&P 100 Index over the term of the instrument and 
    increased by $1 times the decrease, if any, in the value of the S&P 
    100 Index over the term of the instrument. The amount paid at 
    maturity may not be less than $500 or more than $1,500. As of 
    January 1, 1996, Z identifies Issue 1 as the qualifying debt 
    instrument, Issue 2 as a Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge, and otherwise meets 
    the identification requirements of paragraph (f) of this section.
        (ii) Eligibility for integration. Both Issue 1 and Issue 2 are 
    qualifying debt instruments. Z has met the identification 
    requirements by identifying Issue 1 as the qualifying debt 
    instrument and Issue 2 as the Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge. The other 
    requirements of paragraph (c)(1) of this section are satisfied. 
    Therefore, the transaction is an integrated transaction under this 
    section.
        (iii) Treatment of the synthetic debt instrument. The synthetic 
    debt instrument has an issue price of $1,000, provides for a payment 
    at maturity of $2,000, and, in addition, provides for annual 
    payments of $140, which are treated as qualified stated interest 
    payments under paragraph (g)(6) of this section. The synthetic debt 
    instrument has a stated redemption price at maturity of $1,000 
    (equal to $2,000 to be paid on the qualifying debt instrument and 
    Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge, reduced by the $1,000 received on the 
    Sec. 1.1275-6 hedge). As a result, the synthetic debt instrument has 
    no OID. The payment of $1,000 received by Z on the Sec. 1.1275-6 
    hedge on January 1, 1996, increases the synthetic debt instrument's 
    adjusted issue price to $2,000 immediately after it is issued.
    
        (i) [Reserved]
        (j) Effective date. This section is effective for qualifying 
    debt instruments issued on or after the date that is 60 days after 
    final regulations are published in the Federal Register.
    Margaret Milner Richardson,
    Commissioner of Internal Revenue.
    [FR Doc. 94-30728 Filed 12-15-94; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 4830-01-U
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
12/16/1994
Department:
Internal Revenue Service
Entry Type:
Uncategorized Document
Action:
Notice of proposed rulemaking and notice of public hearing.
Document Number:
94-30728
Dates:
Written comments must be received by Thursday, March 16, 1995. Requests to appear and outlines of topics to be discussed at the public hearing scheduled for Thursday, March 16, 1995, at 10 a.m. must be received by Thursday, February 23, 1995.
Pages:
0-0 (1 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Federal Register: December 16, 1994, FI-59-91
RINs:
1545-AQ86: Contingent and Variable Debt Instruments
RIN Links:
https://www.federalregister.gov/regulations/1545-AQ86/contingent-and-variable-debt-instruments
CFR: (23)
26 CFR 1.1275-6)
26 CFR 1.882-5)
26 CFR 1.988-5(a)
26 CFR 1.1274-4(b))
26 CFR 1.1274-2(b)(3)
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