Valuation Considerations Relating to Section 382 Limitations (2024)

Section 382 of the Internal Revenue Code generally requires a corporation to limit the amount of its income in future years that can be offset by historic losses, i.e., net operating loss (NOL) carryforwards and certain built-in losses, after a corporation has undergone an ownership change.

In this article, we provide an overview of the Section 382 limitation and valuation considerations concerning the calculation of the Section 382 limitation. Additionally, we discuss the sweeping changes to the utilization of NOLs under Section 172 subsequent to the enactment of the Coronavirus Aid, Relief & Economic Security Act (CARES Act) in 2020, as well as the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) in 2017.

Section 382 Basics

A loss corporation is a corporation that is entitled to use a tax attribute carryover (pre-change losses), such as an NOL, a net unrealized built-in loss (NUBIL), and after the TCJA, a carryover of disallowed business interest expense under Section 163(j) for tax years beginning after 2017 (see below). The following basic example shows the application of Sec. 382:

Alpha Corporation is a highly successful corporation wishing to acquire 100% of the stock of an unrelated company, Zeta Corporation.

  • Zeta Corporation is a private company with valuable IP, which was funded with several rounds of preferred financing.
  • Zeta Corporation has generated net operating losses during every tax year since its inception. Thus, it is a loss corporation.
  • After the acquisition, Section 382 will limit the amount of Zeta NOLs available to offset the group’s future taxable income. Also, the Zeta NOLs may be subject to additional Section 382 limitations caused by earlier ownership changes incurred during the rounds of financing.

The two primary components of Sec. 382 are ownership change and limitation. An ownership change occurs if, immediately after an owner shift or an equity structure shift, there is a greater than 50% change in the value of the stock owned by five percent shareholders during the testing period (generally three years). An ownership change is triggered by the purchase and sale, redemption, or new issuance of stock.

Stock may include any of the following:

  • Common stock
  • Convertible preferred stock
  • Certain convertible debt instruments
  • Certain voting preferred stock
  • Certain stock options or warrants

Section 382 Limitation

During each year after an ownership change, the new loss corporation may only deduct its pre-change losses against taxable income in an amount equal to the Sec. 382 limitation amount. The annual Sec. 382 limitation is comprised of the Base Limitation, which is driven by the value of the stock, plus or minus certain adjustments including:

  1. Built-in gains, which is driven by the value of the assets,
  2. Carryforwards of unused Sec. 382 limitations from previous years, and
  3. Proration for short taxable years.

The Sec. 382 base limitation amount is approximated using the following equation:

Fair Market Value of Old Loss Corporation Stock x Federal Long-term Tax Exempt Rate = Section 382 Base Limitation

The fair market value is subject to potential adjustments described in the regulations, and the federal long-term tax-exempt rate is published monthly in the Internal Revenue Bulletin.

To utilize its pre-change losses, a company will strive to calculate the largest Sec. 382 limitation amount possible. As mentioned previously, the base limitation amount is driven by the value of the stock.

Determining the value of the stock involves a consideration of the following:

  • All classes of loss company stock, including the pure preferred stock immediately prior to the change. Preferred stock with similar terms, rights, and preferences should be valued equally.
  • For publicly traded companies, the IRS has acknowledged that the stock value does not necessarily equal the trading value on an exchange, i.e., certain blocks of stock may have a higher value due to control rights.
  • For privately held companies, different classes of stock may have different rights and vary in value.

A full discussion of recognized and net unrealized built-in gains and losses is beyond the scope of this article. However, two things are essential to note.

First, recognition of pre-change built-in gains will increase the Section 382 limitation for that tax year. For example, assume Company A has $500 of pre-change NOLs subject to an annual Section 382 base limitation of $50 due to an ownership change in year one. In year three, Company A has taxable income of $100 that includes $25 of recognized built-in gain. In this case, Company A can utilize $75 of its NOL’s to offset its year three taxable income, equal to the base limitation of $50 plus the recognized built-in gain of $25.

Second, if you have assets with a pre-change built-in loss, any realization of those losses (including a portion of any deductions for depreciation or amortization related to assets with pre-change NUBIL) during the five-year recognition period following the ownership change is subject to the Section 382 limitation. Because the Section 382 limitation is an annual cap on the total pre-change losses that may be deducted in each successive year, the amount of any built-in loss that is realized during the recognition period decreases the amount of other pre-change losses (e.g., NOLs or disallowed interest expense carryforwards) that may be utilized. Therefore, to the extent possible, it is best to limit the amount of those losses that are realized during the recognition period, which may include holding onto those assets for at least five years.

Notice 2010-50

For Sec. 382 purposes, any change in proportionate ownership, which is attributable solely to fluctuations in relative FMVs of different classes of stock, will not be taken into account. Under Notice 2010-50, the IRS will not challenge the reasonable application of the following two methods as long as either is applied consistently:

  1. Full Value Methodology, in which the determination of the percentage of stock owned by any person is made based on the relative fair market value of the stock owned by such person to the total fair market value of the outstanding stock of the corporation, or
  2. Hold Constant Principal, in which the value of a share, relative to the value of all other stock of the corporation, is established on the date that a particular shareholder acquires share.

Section 163(j) Limitation

TCJA established the new Section 163(j) which limits the taxpayer’s annual deduction of business interest expense generally to the sum of:

  1. Business interest income, and
  2. 30% of the taxpayer’s Adjusted Taxable Income (ATI).

ATI generally equals taxable income, but excluding business interest income and deductions for depreciation, amortization, interest expense, and NOLs. To the extent that business interest expense was greater than the Section 163(j) limitation, the excess business interest expense is disallowed in that year. Still, it may be treated as paid or accrued in the succeeding tax year or carried forward indefinitely.

The CARES Act modified these rules for 2019 and 2020. For all taxpayers except partnerships, the ATI percentage increased from 30% to 50% for tax years 2019 and 2020. Furthermore, all taxpayers may (but are not required to) use their ATI from 2019 to determine the Sec. 163(j) limitation in 2020, which should be beneficial for most taxpayers whose earnings in 2020 were less than 2019.

For partnerships, the percentage of ATI remained at 30% for 2019 but is increased to 50% for 2020. Additionally, 50% of any excess business interest carried forward from 2019 may be deducted in 2020 without being subject to the Sec. 163(j) limitation.

Corporations without pre-change NOLs, who previously would not have been considered loss corporations for Section 382, will now find it necessary to review the impact of Section 382 on their disallowed business interest expense carryforward. Taxpayers subject to this limitation need to consider whether they have had an ownership change that could affect their ability to deduct the interest carryover in the future.

Changes to Section 172

The CARES Act delayed the effective date of this 80% limitation. As a result, NOL deductions are not subject to the 80% taxable income limitation until 2021, regardless of the year that the loss was generated. Then, beginning in 2021, there will be no taxable income limitation on deductions for NOLs generated before 2018. Still, NOLs generated in or after 2018 will not be able to offset more than 80% of taxable income.

These changes to Sec. 172 will impact the valuations of NOL benefits for both tax and financial reporting purposes going forward.

Valuations for Sec. 382 purposes can be complicated. We recommend engaging an independent valuation firm to provide the necessary valuations. For more information, contact your VRC representative.

Valuation Considerations Relating to Section 382 Limitations (2024)

FAQs

Valuation Considerations Relating to Section 382 Limitations? ›

The annual Sec. 382 limitation is comprised of the Base Limitation, which is driven by the value of the stock, plus or minus certain adjustments including: Built-in gains, which is driven by the value of the assets, Carryforwards of unused Sec.

What are the limitations of Section 382? ›

section 382, Limitation on net operating loss carryforwards and certain built-in losses following ownership change. IRC section 382 limits a loss corporation's ability to use net operating losses that arose before an ownership change and some built-in losses that existed at the time of the ownership change.

How is 382 NOL limitation calculated? ›

Section 382 says that the maximum allowable annual usage of a Target's NOLs equals the Equity Purchase Price * the Maximum of the Past 3 Months' “Adjusted Long-Term Rates.” For example, let's say the Target's Equity Value or Market Cap is $500 million. This Target also has $100 million in NOLs.

How do NOLs impact valuation? ›

Net operating losses (NOLs) and tax credits impact the ASC 740 provision for income tax. If a company's deductions exceed its income in a given year, it reports a net operating loss for federal income tax purposes. NOL and credit carryforwards create deferred tax assets subject to valuation allowances.

What is the 382 limitation rate? ›

The section 382 limit on the use of NOLs equals the long-term tax-exempt rate multiplied by the value of the old loss corporation. rate that is applied to determine the limitation is the highest of the "adjusted federal long-term rates" for any of the three months ending with the month in which the change date occurs.

What is the 382 limitation valuation allowance? ›

Section 382 of the Internal Revenue Code generally requires a corporation to limit the amount of its income in future years that can be offset by historic losses, i.e., net operating loss (NOL) carryforwards and certain built-in losses, after a corporation has undergone an ownership change.

What attributes are subject to 382? ›

Business interest carryforwards are treated as tax attributes subject to limitation under Section 382, similar to NOLs. As a result, some corporations which previously didn't have to apply Section 382 as they had no NOLs or credits, are now needing to analyze any Section 382 impact.

Does Section 382 limitation built-in gain? ›

Section 382(h)(2)(A) defines RBIG as any gain recognized during the 5-year recognition period on the disposition of any asset to the extent the new loss corporation establishes that (i) it held the asset on the change date and (ii) such gain does not exceed the asset's built- in gain on the change date.

What is the 80% NOL rule? ›

What is the 80% NOL rule? The 80% NOL rule was introduced by the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) of 2017 and limits net operating loss carryforwards to 80% of each subsequent year's net income.

What is Section 382 of the asset sale? ›

Section 382 requires that the buyer meet the continuity of business enterprise requirement; continuing use of the target's historic business or a significant portion of the target's assets in an existing business for 2 years following the transaction.

What is valuation impact? ›

The term "Impact Valuation" is based on the idea that a company's financial results alone do not sufficiently reflect the benefits and costs of business to society. Therefore, the calculation must go beyond the pure business results, and should include the societal costs and benefits.

What is valuation allowance? ›

A valuation allowance is a mechanism that offsets a deferred tax asset (DTA) account. DTAs – whether resulting from deductible temporary differences, operating loss carryforwards, or tax credits – must be evaluated for realizability.

What is the NOI approach to valuation? ›

According to NOI approach, there is no relationship between the cost of capital and value of the firm i.e. the value of the firm is independent of the capital structure of the firm. Assumptions: The corporate income taxes do not exist. Debt Equity mix is irrelevant for computation of market value of firm.

How to calculate a 382 limitation? ›

Following an ownership change, the section 382 limitation for any post-change year is an amount equal to the value of the loss corporation multiplied by the long-term tax-exempt rate that applies with respect to the ownership change, and adjusted as required by section 382 and the regulations thereunder.

What is the 382 rule? ›

26 U.S. Code § 382 - Limitation on net operating loss carryforwards and certain built-in losses following ownership change. The amount of the taxable income of any new loss corporation for any post-change year which may be offset by pre-change losses shall not exceed the section 382 limitation for such year.

What triggers 382? ›

Section 382 imposes a limitation on a company to use its historical NOLs and certain other tax attributes in the event of an ownership change — defined as a 50-percent or greater change in ownership of five-percent shareholders over a rolling three-year period.

What is the 163 J and 382 limitation? ›

Sections 382 and 163(j)

Congress provided in section 163(j) that disallowed BIE carryovers are subject to the section 382 loss limitation rules following an “ownership change” (generally, a cumulative greater-than-50-percentage-point change in the stock ownership of a corporation over a three-year period).

What is the 382 limitation on R&D credits? ›

IRC Section 382 generally limits the use of NOLs and credits following an ownership change. This occurs when one or more 5% shareholders increase their ownership, in aggregate, by more than 50% over the lowest percentage of stock owned by these shareholders at any time during the testing period, generally three years.

What is Section 382 limitation tax advisor? ›

382, a loss corporation may be limited in its ability to use NOLs and certain tax credits, as well as deduct built-in losses. Generally, an ownership change occurs when the cumulative ownership of 5%-or-more shareholders of a loss corporation increases by more than 50 percentage points within a three-year period.

What is the difference between SRLY and 382 limitation? ›

As described above, the SRLY limitation is based on the member's (or subgroup's) actual contribution to consolidated taxable income. The section 382 limitation is based on the expected income generation of the member (or subgroup) determined with reference to its value on the change date.

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