[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 26, Volume 9]
[Revised as of April 1, 2002]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 26CFR1.851-2]

[Page 10-11]
 
                       TITLE 26--INTERNAL REVENUE
 
    CHAPTER I--INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY 
                               (CONTINUED)
 
PART 1--INCOME TAXES--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 1.851-2  Limitations.

    (a) Election to be a regulated investment company. Under the 
provisions of section 851(b)(1), a corporation, even though it satisfies 
the other requirements of part I, subchapter M, chapter 1 of the Code, 
for the taxable year, will not be considered a regulated investment 
company for such year, within the meaning of such part I, unless it 
elects to be a regulated investment company for such taxable year, or 
has made such an election for a previous taxable year which began after 
December 31, 1941. The election shall be made by the taxpayer by 
computing taxable income as a regulated investment company in its return 
for the first taxable year for which the election is applicable. No 
other method of making such election is permitted. An election once made 
is irrevocable for such taxable year and all succeeding taxable years.
    (b) Gross income requirement--(1) General rule. Section 851(b) (2) 
and (3) provides that (i) at least 90 percent of the corporation's gross 
income for the taxable year must be derived from dividends, interest, 
and gains from the sale or other disposition of stocks or securities, 
and (ii) less than 30 percent of its gross income must have been derived 
from the sale or other disposition of stock or securities held for less 
than three months. In determining the gross income requirements under 
section 851(b) (2) and (3), a loss from the sale or other disposition of 
stock or securities does not enter into the computation. A determination 
of the period for which stock or securities have been held shall be 
governed by the provisions of section 1223 insofar as applicable.
    (2) Special rules. (i) For purposes of section 851(b)(2), there 
shall be treated as dividends amounts which are included in gross income 
for the taxable year under section 951(a)(1)(A)(i) to the extent that 
(a) a distribution out of a foreign corporation's earnings and profits 
of the taxable year is not included in gross income by reason of section 
959 (a)(1), and (b) the earnings and profits are attributable to the 
amounts which were so included in gross income under section 
951(a)(1)(A)(i). For allocation of distributions to earnings and profits 
of foreign corporations, see Sec. 1.959-3. The provisions of this 
subparagraph shall apply with respect to taxable years of controlled 
foreign corporations beginning after December 31, 1975, and to taxable 
years of United States shareholders (within the meaning of section 
951(b) within which or with which such taxable years of such controlled 
foreign corporations end.
    (ii) For purposes of subdivision (i) of this subparagraph, if by 
reason of section 959(a)(1) a distribution of a foreign corporation's 
earnings and profits for a taxable year described in section 959(c)(2) 
is not included in a shareholder's gross income, then such distribution 
shall be allocated proportionately between amounts attributable to 
amounts included under each clause of section 951(a)(1)(A). Thus, for 
example, M is a United States shareholder in X Corporation, a controlled 
foreign corporation. M and X each use the calendar year as the taxable 
year. For 1977, M is required by section 951(a)(1)(a) to include $3,000 
in its gross income, $1,000 of which is included under clause (i) 
thereof. In 1977, M received a distribution described in section 
959(c)(2) of $2,700 out of X's earnings and profits for 1977, which is, 
by reason of section 959(a)(1), excluded from M's gross income. The 
amount of the distribution attributable to the amount included under 
section 951(a)(1)(A)(i) is $900, i.e., $2,700 multiplied by ($1,000/
$3,000).
    (c) Diversification of investments. (1) Subparagraph (A) of section 
851(b)(4)

[[Page 11]]

requires that at the close of each quarter of the taxable year at least 
50 percent of the value of the total assets of the taxpayer corporation 
be represented by one or more of the following:
    (i) Cash and cash items, including receivables;
    (ii) Government securities;
    (iii) Securities of other regulated investment companies; or
    (iv) Securities (other than those described in subdivisions (ii) and 
(iii) of this subparagraph) of any one or more issuers which meet the 
following limitations: (a) The entire amount of the securities of the 
issuer owned by the taxpayer corporation is not greater in value than 5 
percent of the value of the total assets of the taxpayer corporation, 
and (b) the entire amount of the securities of such issuer owned by the 
taxpayer corporation does not represent more than 10 percent of the 
outstanding voting securities of such issuer. For the modification of 
the percentage limitations applicable in the case of certain venture 
capital investment companies, see section 851(e) and Sec. 1.851-6.

Assuming that at least 50 percent of the value of the total assets of 
the corporation satisfies the requirements specified in this 
subparagraph, and that the limiting provisions of subparagraph (B) of 
section 851(b)(4) and subparagraph (2) of this paragraph are not 
violated, the corporation will satisfy the requirements of section 
851(b)(4), notwithstanding that the remaining assets do not satisfy the 
diversification requirements of subparagraph (A) of section 851(b)(4). 
For example, a corporation may own all the stock of another corporation, 
provided it otherwise meets the requirements of subparagraphs (A) and 
(B) of section 851(b)(4).
    (2) Subparagraph (B) of section 851(b)(4) prohibits the investment 
at the close of each quarter of the taxable year of more than 25 percent 
of the value of the total assets of the corporation (including the 50 
percent or more mentioned in subparagraph (A) of section 851(b)(4)) in 
the securities (other than Government securities or the securities of 
other regulated investment companies) of any one issuer, or of two or 
more issuers which the taxpayer company controls and which are engaged 
in the same or similar trades or businesses or related trades or 
businesses, including such issuers as are merely a part of a unit 
contributing to the completion and sale of a product or the rendering of 
a particular service. Two or more issuers are not considered as being in 
the same or similar trades or businesses merely because they are engaged 
in the broad field of manufacturing or of any other general 
classification of industry, but issuers shall be construed to be engaged 
in the same or similar trades or businesses if they are engaged in a 
distinct branch of business, trade, or manufacture in which they render 
the same kind of service or produce or deal in the same kind of product, 
and such service or products fulfill the same economic need. If two or 
more issuers produce more than one product or render more than one type 
of service, then the chief product or service of each shall be the basis 
for determining whether they are in the same trade or business.

[T.D. 6500, 25 FR 11910, Nov. 26, 1960, as amended by T.D. 6598, 27 FR 
4090, Apr. 28, 1962; T.D. 7555, 43 FR 32753, July 28, 1978]