[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 26, Volume 6]
[Revised as of April 1, 2002]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 26CFR1.453-11]

[Page 121-128]
 
                       TITLE 26--INTERNAL REVENUE
 
    CHAPTER I--INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY 
                               (CONTINUED)
 
DEFERRED COMPENSATION, ETC.--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 1.453-11  Installment obligations received from a liquidating corporation.

    (a) In general--(1) Overview. Except as provided in section 
453(h)(1)(C) (relating to installment sales of depreciable property to 
certain closely related persons), a qualifying shareholder (as defined 
in paragraph (b) of this section)

[[Page 122]]

who receives a qualifying installment obligation (as defined in 
paragraph (c) of this section) in a liquidation that satisfies section 
453(h)(1)(A) treats the receipt of payments in respect of the 
obligation, rather than the receipt of the obligation itself, as a 
receipt of payment for the shareholder's stock. The shareholder reports 
the payments received on the installment method unless the shareholder 
elects otherwise in accordance with Sec. 15a.453-1(d) of this chapter.
    (2) Coordination with other provisions--(i) Deemed sale of stock for 
installment obligation. Except as specifically provided in section 
453(h)(1)(C), a qualifying shareholder treats a qualifying installment 
obligation, for all purposes of the Internal Revenue Code, as if the 
obligation is received by the shareholder from the person issuing the 
obligation in exchange for the shareholder's stock in the liquidating 
corporation. For example, if the stock of a corporation that is 
liquidating is traded on an established securities market, an 
installment obligation distributed to a shareholder of the corporation 
in exchange for the shareholder's stock does not qualify for installment 
reporting pursuant to section 453(k)(2).
    (ii) Special rules to account for the qualifying installment 
obligation--(A) Issue price. A qualifying installment obligation is 
treated by a qualifying shareholder as newly issued on the date of the 
distribution. The issue price of the qualifying installment obligation 
on that date is equal to the sum of the adjusted issue price of the 
obligation on the date of the distribution (as determined under 
Sec. 1.1275-1(b)) and the amount of any qualified stated interest (as 
defined in Sec. 1.1273-1(c)) that has accrued prior to the distribution 
but that is not payable until after the distribution. For purposes of 
the preceding sentence, if the qualifying installment obligation is 
subject to Sec. 1.446-2 (e.g., a debt instrument that has unstated 
interest under section 483), the adjusted issue price of the obligation 
is determined under Sec. 1.446-2(c) and (d).
    (B) Variable rate debt instrument. If the qualifying installment 
obligation is a variable rate debt instrument (as defined in 
Sec. 1.1275-5), the shareholder uses the equivalent fixed rate debt 
instrument (within the meaning of Sec. 1.1275-5(e)(3)(ii)) constructed 
for the qualifying installment obligation as of the date the obligation 
was issued to the liquidating corporation to determine the accruals of 
original issue discount, if any, and interest on the obligation.
    (3) Liquidating distributions treated as selling price. All amounts 
distributed or treated as distributed to a qualifying shareholder 
incident to the liquidation, including cash, the issue price of 
qualifying installment obligations as determined under paragraph 
(a)(2)(ii)(A) of this section, and the fair market value of other 
property (including obligations that are not qualifying installment 
obligations) are considered as having been received by the shareholder 
as the selling price (as defined in Sec. 15a.453-1(b)(2)(ii) of this 
chapter) for the shareholder's stock in the liquidating corporation. For 
the proper method of reporting liquidating distributions received in 
more than one taxable year of a shareholder, see paragraph (d) of this 
section. An election not to report on the installment method an 
installment obligation received in the liquidation applies to all 
distributions received in the liquidation.
    (4) Assumption of corporate liability by shareholders. For purposes 
of this section, if in the course of a liquidation a shareholder assumes 
secured or unsecured liabilities of the liquidating corporation, or 
receives property from the corporation subject to such liabilities 
(including any tax liabilities incurred by the corporation on the 
distribution), the amount of the liabilities is added to the 
shareholder's basis in the stock of the liquidating corporation. These 
additions to basis do not affect the shareholder's holding period for 
the stock. These liabilities do not reduce the amounts received in 
computing the selling price.
    (5) Examples. The provisions of this paragraph (a) are illustrated 
by the following examples. Except as otherwise provided, assume in each 
example that A, an individual who is a calendar-year taxpayer, owns all 
of the stock of T corporation. A's adjusted tax basis in that stock is 
$100,000. On February 1, 1998, T, an accrual method taxpayer, adopts a 
plan of complete liquidation

[[Page 123]]

that satisfies section 453(h)(1)(A) and immediately sells all of its 
assets to unrelated B corporation in a single transaction. The examples 
are as follows:

    Example 1. (i) The stated purchase price for T's assets is 
$3,500,000. In consideration for the sale, B makes a down payment of 
$500,000 and issues a 10-year installment obligation with a stated 
principal amount of $3,000,000. The obligation provides for interest 
payments of $150,000 on January 31 of each year, with the total 
principal amount due at maturity.
    (ii) Assume that for purposes of section 1274, the test rate on 
February 1, 1998, is 8 percent, compounded semi-annually. Also assume 
that a semi-annual accrual period is used. Under Sec. 1.1274-2, the 
issue price of the obligation on February 1, 1998, is $2,368,450. 
Accordingly, the obligation has $631,550 of original issue discount 
($3,000,000-$2,368,450). Between February 1 and July 31, $19,738 of 
original issue discount and $75,000 of qualified stated interest accrue 
with respect to the obligation and are taken into account by T.
    (iii) On July 31, 1998, T distributes the installment obligation to 
A in exchange for A's stock. No other property is ever distributed to A. 
On January 31, 1999, A receives the first annual payment of $150,000 
from B.
    (iv) When the obligation is distributed to A on July 31, 1998, it is 
treated as if the obligation is received by A in an installment sale of 
shares directly to B on that date. Under Sec. 1.1275-1(b), the adjusted 
issue price of the obligation on that date is $2,388,188 (original issue 
price of $2,368,450 plus accrued original issue discount of $19,738). 
Accordingly, the issue price of the obligation under paragraph 
(a)(2)(ii)(A) of this section is $2,463,188, the sum of the adjusted 
issue price of the obligation on that date ($2,388,188) and the amount 
of accrued but unpaid qualified stated interest ($75,000).
    (v) The selling price and contract price of A's stock in T is 
$2,463,188, and the gross profit is $2,363,188 ($2,463,188 selling price 
less A's adjusted tax basis of $100,000). A's gross profit ratio is thus 
96 percent (gross profit of $2,363,188 divided by total contract price 
of $2,463,188).
    (vi) Under Secs. 1.446-2(e)(1) and 1.1275-2(a), $98,527 of the 
$150,000 payment is treated as a payment of the interest and original 
issue discount that accrued on the obligation from July 31, 1998, to 
January 31, 1999 ($75,000 of qualified stated interest and $23,527 of 
original issue discount). The balance of the payment ($51,473) is 
treated as a payment of principal. A's gain recognized in 1999 is 
$49,414 (96 percent of $51,473).
    Example 2. (i) T owns Blackacre, unimproved real property, with an 
adjusted tax basis of $700,000. Blackacre is subject to a mortgage 
(underlying mortgage) of $1,100,000. A is not personally liable on the 
underlying mortgage and the T shares held by A are not encumbered by the 
underlying mortgage. The other assets of T consist of $400,000 of cash 
and $600,000 of accounts receivable attributable to sales of inventory 
in the ordinary course of business. The unsecured liabilities of T total 
$900,000.
    (ii) On February 1, 1998, T adopts a plan of complete liquidation 
complying with section 453(h)(1)(A), and promptly sells Blackacre to B 
for a 4-year mortgage note (bearing adequate stated interest and 
otherwise meeting all of the requirements of section 453) in the face 
amount of $4 million. Under the agreement between T and B, T (or its 
successor) is to continue to make principal and interest payments on the 
underlying mortgage. Immediately thereafter, T completes its liquidation 
by distributing to A its remaining cash of $400,000 (after payment of 
T's tax liabilities), accounts receivable of $600,000, and the $4 
million B note. A assumes T's $900,000 of unsecured liabilities and 
receives the distributed property subject to the obligation to make 
payments on the $1,100,000 underlying mortgage. A receives no payments 
from B on the B note during 1998.
    (iii) Unless A elects otherwise, the transaction is reported by A on 
the installment method. The selling price is $5 million (cash of 
$400,000, accounts receivable of $600,000, and the B note of $4 
million). The total contract price also is $5 million. A's adjusted tax 
basis in the T shares, initially $100,000, is increased by the $900,000 
of unsecured T liabilities assumed by A and by the obligation (subject 
to which A takes the distributed property) to make payments on the 
$1,100,000 underlying mortgage on Blackacre, for an aggregate adjusted 
tax basis of $2,100,000. Accordingly, the gross profit is $2,900,000 
(selling price of $5 million less aggregate adjusted tax basis of 
$2,100,000). The gross profit ratio is 58 percent (gross profit of 
$2,900,000 divided by the total contract price of $5 million). The 1998 
payments to A are $1 million ($400,000 cash plus $600,000 receivables) 
and A recognizes gain in 1998 of $580,000 (58 percent of $1 million).
    (iv) In 1999, A receives payment from B on the B note of $1 million 
(exclusive of interest). A's gain recognized in 1999 is $580,000 (58 
percent of $1 million).

    (b) Qualifying shareholder. For purposes of this section, qualifying 
shareholder means a shareholder to which, with respect to the 
liquidating distribution, section 331 applies. For example, a creditor 
that receives a distribution from a liquidating corporation, in exchange 
for the creditor's claim, is not a qualifying shareholder

[[Page 124]]

as a result of that distribution regardless of whether the liquidation 
satisfies section 453(h)(1)(A).
    (c) Qualifying installment obligation--(1) In general. For purposes 
of this section, qualifying installment obligation means an installment 
obligation (other than an evidence of indebtedness described in 
Sec. 15a.453-1(e) of this chapter, relating to obligations that are 
payable on demand or are readily tradable) acquired in a sale or 
exchange of corporate assets by a liquidating corporation during the 12-
month period beginning on the date the plan of liquidation is adopted. 
See paragraph (c)(4) of this section for an exception for installment 
obligations acquired in respect of certain sales of inventory. Also see 
paragraph (c)(5) of this section for an exception for installment 
obligations attributable to sales of certain property that do not 
generally qualify for installment method treatment.
    (2) Corporate assets. Except as provided in section 453(h)(1)(C), in 
paragraph (c)(4) of this section (relating to certain sales of 
inventory), and in paragraph (c)(5) of this section (relating to certain 
tax avoidance transactions), the nature of the assets sold by, and the 
tax consequences to, the selling corporation do not affect whether an 
installment obligation is a qualifying installment obligation. Thus, for 
example, the fact that the fair market value of an asset is less than 
the adjusted basis of that asset in the hands of the corporation; or 
that the sale of an asset will subject the corporation to depreciation 
recapture (e.g., under section 1245 or section 1250); or that the assets 
of a trade or business sold by the corporation for an installment 
obligation include depreciable property, certain marketable securities, 
accounts receivable, installment obligations, or cash; or that the 
distribution of assets to the shareholder is or is not taxable to the 
corporation under sections 336 and 453B, does not affect whether 
installment obligations received in exchange for those assets are 
treated as qualifying installment obligations by the shareholder. 
However, an obligation received by the corporation in exchange for cash, 
in a transaction unrelated to a sale or exchange of noncash assets by 
the corporation, is not treated as a qualifying installment obligation.
    (3) Installment obligations distributed in liquidations described in 
section 453(h)(1)(E)--(i) In general. In the case of a liquidation to 
which section 453(h)(1)(E) (relating to certain liquidating subsidiary 
corporations) applies, a qualifying installment obligation acquired in 
respect of a sale or exchange by the liquidating subsidiary corporation 
will be treated as a qualifying installment obligation if distributed by 
a controlling corporate shareholder (within the meaning of section 
368(c)) to a qualifying shareholder. The preceding sentence is applied 
successively to each controlling corporate shareholder, if any, above 
the first controlling corporate shareholder.
    (ii) Examples. The provisions of this paragraph (c)(3) are 
illustrated by the following examples:

    Example 1. (i) A, an individual, owns all of the stock of T 
corporation, a C corporation. T has an operating division and three 
wholly-owned subsidiaries, X, Y, and Z. On February 1, 1998, T, Y, and Z 
all adopt plans of complete liquidation.
    (ii) On March 1, 1998, the following sales are made to unrelated 
purchasers: T sells the assets of its operating division to B for cash 
and an installment obligation. T sells the stock of X to C for an 
installment obligation. Y sells all of its assets to D for an 
installment obligation. Z sells all of its assets to E for cash. The B, 
C, and D installment obligations bear adequate stated interest and meet 
the requirements of section 453.
    (iii) In June 1998, Y and Z completely liquidate, distributing their 
respective assets (the D installment obligation and cash) to T. In July 
1998, T completely liquidates, distributing to A cash and the 
installment obligations respectively issued by B, C, and D. The 
liquidation of T is a liquidation to which section 453(h) applies and 
the liquidations of Y and Z into T are liquidations to which section 332 
applies.
    (iv) Because T is in control of Y (within the meaning of section 
368(c)), the D obligation acquired by Y is treated as acquired by T 
pursuant to section 453(h)(1)(E). A is a qualifying shareholder and the 
installment obligations issued by B, C, and D are qualifying installment 
obligations. Unless A elects otherwise, A reports the transaction on the 
installment method as if the cash and installment obligations had been 
received in an installment sale of the stock of T corporation. Under 
section 453B(d), no gain or loss is recognized by Y on the distribution 
of

[[Page 125]]

the D installment obligation to T. Under sections 453B(a) and 336, T 
recognizes gain or loss on the distribution of the B, C, and D 
installment obligations to A in exchange for A's stock.
    Example 2. (i) A, a cash-method individual taxpayer, owns all of the 
stock of P corporation, a C corporation. P owns 30 percent of the stock 
of Q corporation. The balance of the Q stock is owned by unrelated 
individuals. On February 1, 1998, P adopts a plan of complete 
liquidation and sells all of its property, other than its Q stock, to B, 
an unrelated purchaser for cash and an installment obligation bearing 
adequate stated interest. On March 1, 1998, Q adopts a plan of complete 
liquidation and sells all of its property to an unrelated purchaser, C, 
for cash and installment obligations. Q immediately distributes the cash 
and installment obligations to its shareholders in completion of its 
liquidation. Promptly thereafter, P liquidates, distributing to A cash, 
the B installment obligation, and a C installment obligation that P 
received in the liquidation of Q.
    (ii) In the hands of A, the B installment obligation is a qualifying 
installment obligation. In the hands of P, the C installment obligation 
was a qualifying installment obligation. However, in the hands of A, the 
C installment obligation is not treated as a qualifying installment 
obligation because P owned only 30 percent of the stock of Q. Because P 
did not own the requisite 80 percent stock interest in Q, P was not a 
controlling corporate shareholder of Q (within the meaning of section 
368(c)) immediately before the liquidation. Therefore, section 
453(h)(1)(E) does not apply. Thus, in the hands of A, the C obligation 
is considered to be a third-party note (not a purchaser's evidence of 
indebtedness) and is treated as a payment to A in the year of 
distribution. Accordingly, for 1998, A reports as payment the cash and 
the fair market value of the C obligation distributed to A in the 
liquidation of P.
    (iii) Because P held 30 percent of the stock of Q, section 453B(d) 
is inapplicable to P. Under sections 453B(a) and 336, accordingly, Q 
recognizes gain or loss on the distribution of the C obligation. P also 
recognizes gain or loss on the distribution of the B and C installment 
obligations to A in exchange for A's stock. See sections 453B and 336.

    (4) Installment obligations attributable to certain sales of 
inventory--(i) In general. An installment obligation acquired by a 
corporation in a liquidation that satisfies section 453(h)(1)(A) in 
respect of a broken lot of inventory is not a qualifying installment 
obligation. If an installment obligation is acquired in respect of a 
broken lot of inventory and other assets, only the portion of the 
installment obligation acquired in respect of the broken lot of 
inventory is not a qualifying installment obligation. The portion of the 
installment obligation attributable to other assets is a qualifying 
installment obligation. For purposes of this section, the term broken 
lot of inventory means inventory property that is sold or exchanged 
other than in bulk to one person in one transaction involving 
substantially all of the inventory property attributable to a trade or 
business of the corporation. See paragraph (c)(4)(ii) of this section 
for rules for determining what portion of an installment obligation is 
not a qualifying installment obligation and paragraph (c)(4)(iii) of 
this section for rules determining the application of payments on an 
installment obligation only a portion of which is a qualifying 
installment obligation.
    (ii) Rules for determining nonqualifying portion of an installment 
obligation. If a broken lot of inventory is sold to a purchaser together 
with other corporate assets for consideration consisting of an 
installment obligation and either cash, other property, the assumption 
of (or taking property subject to) corporate liabilities by the 
purchaser, or some combination thereof, the installment obligation is 
treated as having been acquired in respect of a broken lot of inventory 
only to the extent that the fair market value of the broken lot of 
inventory exceeds the sum of unsecured liabilities assumed by the 
purchaser, secured liabilities which encumber the broken lot of 
inventory and are assumed by the purchaser or to which the broken lot of 
inventory is subject, and the sum of the cash and fair market value of 
other property received. This rule applies solely for the purpose of 
determining the portion of the installment obligation (if any) that is 
attributable to the broken lot of inventory.
    (iii) Application of payments. If, by reason of the application of 
paragraph (c)(4)(ii) of this section, a portion of an installment 
obligation is not a qualifying installment obligation, then for purposes 
of determining the amount of gain to be reported by the shareholder 
under section 453, payments on the obligation (other than payments of 
qualified stated interest) shall be applied

[[Page 126]]

first to the portion of the obligation that is not a qualifying 
installment obligation.
    (iv) Example. The following example illustrates the provisions of 
this paragraph (c)(4). In this example, assume that all obligations bear 
adequate stated interest within the meaning of section 1274(c)(2) and 
that the fair market value of each nonqualifying installment obligation 
equals its face amount. The example is as follows:

    Example. (i) P corporation has three operating divisions, X, Y, and 
Z, each engaged in a separate trade or business, and a minor amount of 
investment assets. On July 1, 1998, P adopts a plan of complete 
liquidation that meets the criteria of section 453(h)(1)(A). The 
following sales are promptly made to purchasers unrelated to P: P sells 
all of the assets of the X division (including all of the inventory 
property) to B for $30,000 cash and installment obligations totalling 
$200,000. P sells substantially all of the inventory property of the Y 
division to C for a $100,000 installment obligation, and sells all of 
the other assets of the Y division (excluding cash but including 
installment receivables previously acquired in the ordinary course of 
the business of the Y division) to D for a $170,000 installment 
obligation. P sells \1/3\ of the inventory property of the Z division to 
E for $100,000 cash, \1/3\ of the inventory property of the Z division 
to F for a $100,000 installment obligation, and all of the other assets 
of the Z division (including the remaining \1/3\ of the inventory 
property worth $100,000) to G for $60,000 cash, a $240,000 installment 
obligation, and the assumption by G of the liabilities of the Z 
division. The liabilities assumed by G, which are unsecured liabilities 
and liabilities encumbering the inventory property acquired by G, 
aggregate $30,000. Thus, the total purchase price G pays is $330,000.
    (ii) P immediately completes its liquidation, distributing the cash 
and installment obligations, which otherwise meet the requirements of 
section 453, to A, an individual cash-method taxpayer who is its sole 
shareholder. In 1999, G makes a payment to A of $100,000 (exclusive of 
interest) on the $240,000 installment obligation.
    (iii) In the hands of A, the installment obligations issued by B, C, 
and D are qualifying installment obligations because they were timely 
acquired by P in a sale or exchange of its assets. In addition, the 
installment obligation issued by C is a qualifying installment 
obligation because it arose from a sale to one person in one transaction 
of substantially all of the inventory property of the trade or business 
engaged in by the Y division.
    (iv) The installment obligation issued by F is not a qualifying 
installment obligation because it is in respect of a broken lot of 
inventory. A portion of the installment obligation issued by G is a 
qualifying installment obligation and a portion is not a qualifying 
installment obligation, determined as follows: G purchased part of the 
inventory property (with a fair market value of $100,000) and all of the 
other assets of the Z division by paying cash ($60,000), issuing an 
installment obligation ($240,000), and assuming liabilities of the Z 
division ($30,000). The assumed liabilities ($30,000) and cash ($60,000) 
are attributed first to the inventory property. Therefore, only $10,000 
of the $240,000 installment obligation is attributed to inventory 
property. Accordingly, in the hands of A, the G installment obligation 
is a qualifying installment obligation to the extent of $230,000, but is 
not a qualifying installment obligation to the extent of the $10,000 
attributable to the inventory property.
    (v) In the 1998 liquidation of P, A receives a liquidating 
distribution as follows:

------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                   Qualifying   Cash and
                      Item                        installment    other
                                                  obligations   property
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cash............................................  ...........   $190,000
B note..........................................    $200,000   .........
C note..........................................    $100,000   .........
D note..........................................    $170,000   .........
F note..........................................  ...........   $100,000
G note \1\......................................    $230,000    $ 10,000
                                                 -----------------------
    Total.......................................    $700,000    $300,000
------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Face amount $240,000.

    (vi) Assume that A's adjusted tax basis in the stock of P is 
$100,000. Under the installment method, A's selling price and the 
contract price are both $1 million, the gross profit is $900,000 
(selling price of $1 million less adjusted tax basis of $100,000), and 
the gross profit ratio is 90 percent (gross profit of $900,000 divided 
by the contract price of $1 million). Accordingly, in 1998, A reports 
gain of $270,000 (90 percent of $300,000 payment in cash and other 
property). A's adjusted tax basis in each of the qualifying installment 
obligations is an amount equal to 10 percent of the obligation's 
respective face amount. A's adjusted tax basis in the F note, a 
nonqualifying installment obligation, is $100,000, i.e., the fair market 
value of the note when received by A. A's adjusted tax basis in the G 
note, a mixed obligation, is $33,000 (10 percent of the $230,000 
qualifying installment obligation portion of the note, plus the $10,000 
nonqualifying portion of the note).
    (vii) With respect to the $100,000 payment received from G in 1999, 
$10,000 is treated as the recovery of the adjusted tax basis of the 
nonqualifying portion of the G installment obligation and $9,000 (10 
percent of $90,000) is treated as the recovery of the adjusted tax

[[Page 127]]

basis of the portion of the note that is a qualifying installment 
obligation. The remaining $81,000 (90 percent of $90,000) is reported as 
gain from the sale of A's stock. See paragraph (c)(4)(iii) of this 
section.

    (5) Installment obligations attributable to sales of certain 
property--(i) In general. An installment obligation acquired by a 
liquidating corporation, to the extent attributable to the sale of 
property described in paragraph (c)(5)(ii) of this section, is not a 
qualifying obligation if the corporation is formed or availed of for a 
principal purpose of avoiding section 453(b)(2) (relating to dealer 
dispositions and certain other dispositions of personal property), 
section 453(i) (relating to sales of property subject to recapture), or 
section 453(k) (relating to dispositions under a revolving credit plan 
and sales of stock or securities traded on an established securities 
market) through the use of a party bearing a relationship, either 
directly or indirectly, described in section 267(b) to any shareholder 
of the corporation.
    (ii) Covered property. Property is described in this paragraph 
(c)(5)(ii) if, within 12 months before or after the adoption of the plan 
of liquidation, the property was owned by any shareholder and--
    (A) The shareholder regularly sold or otherwise disposed of personal 
property of the same type on the installment plan or the property is 
real property that the shareholder held for sale to customers in the 
ordinary course of a trade or business (provided the property is not 
described in section 453(l)(2) (relating to certain exceptions to the 
definition of dealer dispositions));
    (B) The sale of the property by the shareholder would result in 
recapture income (within the meaning of section 453(i)(2)), but only if 
the amount of the recapture income is equal to or greater than 50 
percent of the property's fair market value on the date of the sale by 
the corporation;
    (C) The property is stock or securities that are traded on an 
established securities market; or
    (D) The sale of the property by the shareholder would have been 
under a revolving credit plan.
    (iii) Safe harbor. Paragraph (c)(5)(i) of this section will not 
apply to the liquidation of a corporation if, on the date the plan of 
complete liquidation is adopted and thereafter, less than 15 percent of 
the fair market value of the corporation's assets is attributable to 
property described in paragraph (c)(5)(ii) of this section.
    (iv) Example. The provisions of this paragraph (c)(5) are 
illustrated by the following example:

    Example. Ten percent of the fair market value of the assets of T is 
attributable to stock and securities traded on an established securities 
market. T owns no other assets described in paragraph (c)(5)(ii) of this 
section. T, after adopting a plan of complete liquidation, sells all of 
its stock and securities holdings to C corporation in exchange for an 
installment obligation bearing adequate stated interest, sells all of 
its other assets to B corporation for cash, and distributes the cash and 
installment obligation to its sole shareholder, A, in a complete 
liquidation that satisfies section 453(h)(1)(A). Because the C 
installment obligation arose from a sale of publicly traded stock and 
securities, T cannot report the gain on the sale under the installment 
method pursuant to section 453(k)(2). In the hands of A, however, the C 
installment obligation is treated as having arisen out of a sale of the 
stock of T corporation. In addition, the general rule of paragraph 
(c)(5)(i) of this section does not apply, even if a principal purpose of 
the liquidation was the avoidance of section 453(k)(2), because the fair 
market value of the publicly traded stock and securities is less than 15 
percent of the total fair market value of T's assets. Accordingly, 
section 453(k)(2) does not apply to A, and A may use the installment 
method to report the gain recognized on the payments it receives in 
respect of the obligation.

    (d) Liquidating distributions received in more than one taxable 
year. If a qualifying shareholder receives liquidating distributions to 
which this section applies in more than one taxable year, the 
shareholder must reasonably estimate the gain attributable to 
distributions received in each taxable year. In allocating basis to 
calculate the gain for a taxable year, the shareholder must reasonably 
estimate the anticipated aggregate distributions. For this purpose, the 
shareholder must take into account distributions and other relevant 
events or information that the shareholder knows or reasonably could 
know up to the date on which the federal income tax return for that year 
is filed. If the gain for a taxable year is

[[Page 128]]

properly taken into account on the basis of a reasonable estimate and 
the exact amount is subsequently determined the difference, if any, must 
be taken into account for the taxable year in which the subsequent 
determination is made. However, the shareholder may file an amended 
return for the earlier year in lieu of taking the difference into 
account for the subsequent taxable year.
    (e) Effective date. This section is applicable to distributions of 
qualifying installment obligations made on or after January 28, 1998.

[T.D. 8762, 63 FR 4170, Jan. 28, 1998]