[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 26, Volume 3]
[Revised as of April 1, 2002]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 26CFR1.245-1]

[Page 403-405]
 
                       TITLE 26--INTERNAL REVENUE
 
    CHAPTER I--INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY 
                               (CONTINUED)
 
COMPUTATION OF TAXABLE INCOME (Continued)--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 1.245-1  Dividends received from certain foreign corporations.

    (a) General rule. (1) A corporation is allowed a deduction under 
section 245(a) for dividends received from a foreign corporation (other 
than a foreign personal holding company as defined in section 552) which 
is subject to taxation under chapter 1 of the Code if, for an 
uninterrupted period of not less than 36 months ending with the close of 
the foreign corporation's taxable year in which the dividends are paid, 
(i) the foreign corporation is engaged in trade or business in the 
United States, and (ii) 50 percent or more of the foreign corporation's 
entire gross income is effectively connected with the conduct of a trade 
or business in the United States by that corporation. If the foreign 
corporation has been in existence less than 36 months as of the close of 
the taxable year in which the dividends are paid, then the applicable 
uninterrupted period to be taken into consideration in lieu of the 
uninterrupted period of 36 or more months is the entire period such 
corporation has been in existence as of the close of such taxable year. 
An uninterrupted period which satisfied the twofold requirement with 
respect to business activity and gross income may start at a date later 
than the date on which the foreign corporation first commenced an 
uninterrupted period of engaging in trade or business within the United 
States, but the applicable uninterrupted period is in any event the 
longest uninterrupted period which satisfies such twofold requirement. 
The deduction under section 245(a) is allowable to any corporation, 
whether foreign or domestic, receiving dividends from a distributing 
corporation which meets the requirements of that section.
    (2) Any taxable year of a foreign corporation which falls within the 
uninterrupted period described in section 245(a)(2) shall not be taken 
into account in applying section 245(a)(2) and this paragraph if the 100 
percent dividends received deduction would be allowable under paragraph 
(b) of this section, whether or not in fact allowed, with respect to any 
dividends payable, whether or not in fact paid, out of the earnings and 
profits of such foreign corporation for that taxable year. Thus, in such 
case the foreign corporation shall be treated as having no earnings and 
profits for that taxable year for purposes of determining the dividends 
received deduction allowable under section 245(a) and this paragraph. 
However, that taxable year may be taken into account for purposes of 
determining whether the foreign corporation meets the requirements of 
section 245(a) that, for the uninterrupted period specified therein, the 
foreign corporation is engaged in trade or business in the United States 
and meets the 50 percent gross income requirement.
    (b) Dividends from wholly owned foreign subsidiaries. (1) A domestic 
corporation is allowed a deduction under section 245(b) for any taxable 
year beginning after December 31, 1966, for

[[Page 404]]

dividends received from a foreign corporation (other than a foreign 
personal holding company as defined in section 552) which is subject to 
taxation under Chapter 1 of the Code if:
    (i) The domestic corporation owns either directly or indirectly all 
of the outstanding stock of the foreign corporation during the entire 
taxable year of the domestic corporation in which the dividends are 
received, and
    (ii) The dividends are paid out of earnings and profits of a taxable 
year of the foreign corporation during which (a) the domestic 
corporation receiving the dividends owns directly or indirectly 
throughout such year all of the outstanding stock of the foreign 
corporation, and (b) all of the gross income of the foreign corporation 
from all sources is effectively connected for that year with the conduct 
of a trade or business in the United States by that corporation.
    (2) The deduction allowed by section 245(b) does not apply if an 
election under section 1562, relating to the privilege of a controlled 
group of corporations to elect multiple surtax exemptions, is effective 
for either the taxable year of the domestic corporation in which the 
dividends are received or the taxable year of the foreign corporation 
out of the earnings and profits of which the dividends are paid.
    (c) Rules of application. (1) Except as provided in section 246, the 
deduction provided by section 245 for any taxable year is the sum of the 
amounts computed under paragraphs (1) and (2) of section 245(a) plus, in 
the case of a domestic corporation for any taxable year beginning after 
December 31, 1966, the sum of the amounts computed under section 
245(b)(2).
    (2) To the extent that a dividend received from a foreign 
corporation is treated as a dividend from a domestic corporation in 
accordance with section 243(d) and Sec. 1.243-3, it shall not be treated 
as a dividend received from a foreign corporation for purposes of this 
section.
    (3) For purposes of section 245 (a) and (b), the amount of a 
distribution shall be determined under subparagraph (B) (without 
reference to subparagraph (C)) of section 301(b)(1).
    (4) In determining from what year's earnings and profits a dividend 
is treated as having been distributed for purposes of this section, the 
principles of paragraph (a) of Sec. 1.316-2 shall apply. A dividend 
shall be considered to be distributed, first, out of the earnings and 
profits of the taxable year which includes the date the dividend is 
distributed, second, out of the earnings and profits accumulated for the 
immediately preceding taxable year, third, out of the earnings and 
profits accumulated for the second preceding taxable year, etc. A 
deficit in an earnings and profits account for any taxable year shall 
reduce the most recently accumulated earnings and profits for a prior 
year in such account. If there are no accumulated earnings and profits 
in an earnings and profits account because of a deficit incurred in a 
prior year, such deficit must be restored before earnings and profits 
can be accumulated in a subsequent accounting year. See also paragraph 
(c) of Sec. 1.243-3 and paragraph (a)(6) of Sec. 1.243-4.
    (5) For purposes of this section the gross income of a foreign 
corporation for any period before its first taxable year beginning after 
December 31, 1966, which is from sources within the United States shall 
be treated as gross income which is effectively connected for that 
period with the conduct of a trade or business in the United States by 
that corporation.
    (6) For the determination of the source of income and the income 
which is effectively connected with the conduct of a trade or business 
in the United States, see sections 861 through 864, and the regulations 
thereunder.
    (d) Illustrations. The application of this section may be 
illustrated by the following examples:

    Example 1. Corporation A (a foreign corporation filing its income 
tax returns on a calendar year basis) whose stock is 100 percent owned 
by Corporation B (a domestic corporation filing its income tax returns 
on a calendar year basis) for the first time engaged in trade or 
business within the United States on January 1, 1943, and qualifies 
under section 245 for the entire period beginning on that date and 
ending on December 31, 1954. Corporation A had accumulated earnings and 
profits of $50,000 immediately prior to January 1, 1943, and had 
earnings and profits of $10,000 for each taxable year during the 
uninterrupted period from January 1, 1943,

[[Page 405]]

through December 31, 1954. It derived for the period from January 1, 
1943, through December 31, 1953, 90 percent of its gross income from 
sources within the United States and in 1954 derived 95 percent of its 
gross income from sources within the United States. During the calendar 
years 1943, 1944, 1945, 1946, and 1947 Corporation A distributed in each 
year $15,000; during the calendar years 1948, 1949, 1950, 1951, 1952, 
and 1953 it distributed in each year $5,000; and during the year 1954, 
$50,000. An analysis of the accumulated earnings and profits under the 
above statement of facts discloses that at December 31, 1953, the 
accumulation amounted to $55,000, of which $25,000 was accumulated prior 
to the ``uninterrupted period'' and $30,000 was accumulated during the 
uninterrupted period. (See section 316(a) and paragraph (c) of this 
section.) For 1954 a deduction under section 245 of $31,025 ($8,075 on 
1954 earnings of the foreign corporation, plus $22,950 from the $30,000 
accumulation at December 31, 1953) for dividends received from a foreign 
corporation is allowable to Corporation B with respect to the $50,000 
received from Corporation A, computed as follows:
    (i) $8,075, which is $8,500 (85 percent-- the percent specified in 
section 243 for the calendar year 1954--of the $10,000 of earnings and 
profits of the taxable year) multiplied by 95 percent (the portion of 
the gross income of Corporation A derived during the taxable year 1954 
from sources within the United States), plus
    (ii) $22,950, which is $25,500 (85 percent-- the percent specified 
in section 243 for the calendar year 1954--of $30,000, the part of the 
earnings and profits accumulated after the beginning of the 
uninterrupted period) multiplied by 90 percent (the portion of the gross 
income of Corporation A derived from sources within the United States 
during that portion of the uninterrupted period ending at the beginning 
of the taxable year 1954).
    Example 2. If in Example (1), Corporation A for the taxable year 
1954 had incurred a deficit of $10,000 (shown to have been incurred 
before December 31) the amount of the earnings and profits accumulated 
after the beginning of the uninterrupted period would be $20,000. If 
Corporation A had distributed $50,000 on December 31, 1954, the 
deduction under section 245 for dividends received from a foreign 
corporation allowable to Corporation B for 1954 would be $15,300, 
computed by multiplying $17,000 (85 percent--the percent specified in 
section 243 for the calendar year 1954--of $20,000 earnings and profits 
accumulated after the beginning of the uninterrupted period) by 90 
percent (the portion of the gross income of Corporation A derived from 
United States sources during that portion of the uninterrupted period 
ending at the beginning of the taxable year 1954).
    Example 3. Corporation A (a foreign corporation filing its income 
tax returns on a calendar year basis) whose stock is 100 percent owned 
by corporation B (a domestic corporation filing its income tax returns 
on a calendar year basis) for the first time engaged in trade or 
business within the United States on January 1, 1960, and qualifies 
under section 245 for the entire period beginning on that date and 
ending on December 31, 1963. In 1963, A derived 75 percent of its gross 
income from sources within the United States. A's earnings and profits 
for 1963 (computed as of the close of the taxable year without 
diminution by reason of any distributions made during the taxable year) 
are $200,000. On December 31, 1963, corporation A distributes to 
corporation B 100 shares of corporation C stock which have an adjusted 
basis in A's hands of $40,000 and a fair market value of $100,000. For 
purposes of computing the deduction under section 245 for dividends 
received from a foreign corporation, the amount of the distribution is 
$40,000. B is allowed a deduction under section 245 of $25,500, i.e., 
$34,000 ($40,000 multiplied by 85 percent, the percent specified in 
section 243 for 1963), multiplied by 75 percent (the portion of the 
gross income of corporation A derived during 1963 from sources within 
the United States).

[T.D. 6500, 25 FR 11402, Nov. 26, 1960, as amended by T.D. 6752, 29 FR 
12701, Sept. 9, 1964, T.D. 6830; 30 FR 8046, June 23, 1965; T.D. 7293, 
38 FR 32793, Nov. 28, 1973]