Thursday, May 20, 2010

The Wall Street ICEcapade: An Object Lesson On How Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan Chase et al. Use Complicated Corporate Structures to Avoid Paying Taxes, While the Average Guy's Taxes Go Up and Up

By Lucy Komisar

As I write this, the U.S. Senate is debating a major financial reform bill in which the credit default swap, a kind of derivative, plays a significant part. An amendment to that bill, proposed by Senators Carl Levin (D-MI) and Jeff Merkley (D-OR), would ban banks from proprietary trading. There are a lot of high-rolling bankers who do not want that amendment to pass, because it will mess up their plans to repatriate foreign profits into the United States, untaxed, by trading in derivatives on their own accounts. The clearinghouse ICE Trust U.S. forms a central part of these plans.

What is ICE Trust U.S., and who owns it? ICE US Holding Co., which was established in 2008 as the parent of ICE Trust U.S., is located in the Cayman Islands. Yet none of the owners of ICE US Holding Co. are based in the Caymans. International Exchange, Inc., which owns 50 percent of ICE US Holding, is headquartered in Atlanta, Georgia. Among the other owners of the Cayman’s company are Citigroup, Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan Chase, Merrill Lynch and Morgan Stanley, which are headquartered in New York. Bank of America, which now owns Merrill Lynch, is based in Charlotte, North Carolina. Deutsche Bank (Frankfurt), and UBS and Credit Suisse (Zurich) are also part owners.

Derivatives lie close to the heart of the debate over financial reform, yet no one appears to have examined the ICE exchange, whose ownership means it will be the world’s main credit default swap clearinghouse; nor has anyone asked how its ownership structure might enrich the banks who own ICE US Holding Co. at the expense of U.S. taxpayers. This is what I propose to do here.

ICE Trust U.S. was created in anticipation of tougher U.S. laws that will force the trading of derivatives into clearinghouses, in which prices are made public and the losses of one member are shared with others. The Obama Administration proposed this measure last year, explaining it as a form of self-insurance designed to reduce the odds of another financial company bailout by U.S. taxpayers. The Administration had good reason to focus on derivatives, which are securities based on the value of other securities. They account for $600 trillion in investment worldwide and include everything from futures and options to complex, one-of-a-kind contracts. ICE focuses on the $26-trillion market for credit default swaps, a form of insurance that protects investors against defaults in the bond market. ICE’s member banks account for about 90 percent of the credit default swap market, and are thus in position to steer business to ICE and help it capture a leading market share.

Given the nature of its business, there’s no obvious reason why ICE has to be owned by a company outside of the United States. Its fledgling rival, a clearinghouse operated by the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, is based in the United States and has no foreign parent. So why is ICE’s parent located in the Cayman Islands? Jonathan Short, chief counsel of Intercontinental Exchange Inc., declined to answer this question on the record, but some experts have offered a very plausible explanation.

To understand the experts’ explanation, we first need to know a little tax history. Before the 1960s, it had been a long-standing rule that U.S. company profits earned abroad are not taxed until they are repatriated. Even before repatriation, however, U.S. corporations could reap economic benefit from foreign subsidiaries’ earnings by making them available to the U.S. parent company as investments, loans or guarantees. The Kennedy Administration and Congress tried to put an end to this practice, having decided that such practices were in substance little different from the parent company’s receipt of a dividend. In 1962, Congress enacted Section 956 of the tax code, which said that not just profits but any company funds moved to the United States, including loans, would be taxed.

Clearinghouses such as ICE Trust U.S., which move large sums of money around the world, can run afoul of Section 956 because they collect security deposits, known as margin, from their clients, which tax authorities view as a form of loan. These “loans” can be taxable, depending upon who is doing the trading, where they are trading from and who owns the exchange. For example, some of the banks using the services of ICE Trust U.S. are its U.S. broker-dealer owners doing business through foreign subsidiaries. They include Bank of America/Merrill Lynch, Citi, Goldman Sachs, JP Morgan Chase, and Morgan Stanley. If they use ICE Trust U.S. to buy American credit default swap products, they must put money on the clearinghouse as collateral, or margin. If their foreign subsidiaries make the trades for clients, the margin isn’t subject to U.S. taxes. But if the banks’ foreign subsidiaries use ICE Trust U.S. to trade credit default swaps for themselves, called “proprietary trading”, the margin they put in ICE Trust U.S. falls under Section 956. Since those banks are part owners of ICE Trust U.S., this is deemed transferring money from the subsidiary to the parent in the United States, and it is taxable. This is why it might help to have a pass-through in the Cayman Islands. As a source close to ICE explained:
The only reason a Cayman entity was formed was to have a foreign entity in the chain of ownership. The problem that some of the clearing participants had with this and with our clearing offering was the application of that section of the Internal Revenue code to payments that would be made from their CDS foreign clearing operations through the clearinghouse for marketing purposes and the potential taxation of those payments under Section 956. They were concerned that, because they would have a profit-sharing interest in this U.S. clearinghouse, that it could fall within 956. So the decision was made, ‘Let’s interpose a foreign entity in the structure.’ That way it will fall clearly outside 956. There will be no risk that it could ever apply, and everyone was happy with the structuring.
David Howard, a lawyer and certified public accountant with the Silicon Valley law firm Hoge Fenton, explained further that ICE US Holding Company L.P., Cayman Islands, which owns ICE Trust U.S., is “a blocking company” used to prevent the foreign subsidiary from being deemed to loan margin to a “U.S. person” (namely, ICE Trust U.S.). “They are loaning the money to a Cayman Islands person”, he said. This means that banks can keep their profits abroad and untaxed, but still use them to trade on a U.S. exchange, making investments in U.S. credit default swaps while not paying tax on the collateral placed on the exchange. It’s precisely what Section 956 was designed to prevent.

Tax experts say ICE Trust U.S. and its owners benefit from the fact that the IRS and other regulators have very different ways of looking at the map. The Cayman’s offshore structure is legal: Both the New York Federal Reserve Bank and the New York Banking Department approved it. New York Fed spokesman David Girardin declined to comment. New York Banking Department spokeswoman Glorimar Perez-Gonzalez told me, “We satisfied ourselves that the holding company structure is not being used to evade U.S. taxes. We have no further comment on the matter.” The IRS declined comment as well. The parent ICE holding company duly reported the Cayman’s company to the Securities and Exchange Commission, as required by law, in March 2009. The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) declined to discuss the matter. A spokesman merely told me that the agency does not approve or disapprove of the use of offshore structures; it just requires that they disclose their existence.

This bifurcation of views and responsibilities is the problem, explains Adam Rosenzweig, associate professor of tax law and policy at the Washington University Law School in St. Louis. Rosenzweig, who specialized in Federal tax law relating to private equity, hedge funds, equity derivatives and cross-border capital markets before moving to academia, put it this way:
The SEC and Federal Reserve are treating ICE Trust U.S. as the place the action is going on. The tax law looks at ICE Trust U.S. and says all the action is happening at the holding company level in the Caymans. They are exploiting the benefit of being in the United States for regulatory purposes and being a foreign entity in the Caymans for tax purposes.
Some ICE Trust U.S. owner banks deny that they are currently using foreign subsidiaries to move money into the United States untaxed. Citigroup spokesperson Molly Meiners said, “The potential tax issue is not relevant to Citigroup. Citi deals with ICE Trust only through U.S. vehicles and pays all applicable taxes under U.S. code.” Scott Silvestri, speaking for Bank of America and Merrill Lynch, said, “The ICE structure is not being used to bring profits back to the United States untaxed.” J.P. Morgan’s Justin G. Perras said, “JPM receives no beneficial tax treatment from its relationship with ICE Trust. Any implication otherwise is patently false.” (The other U.S. owner banks, Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley, declined to comment.) However, the Cayman’s structure and the explanation of a source close to ICE are difficult to fathom unless some of the owner banks want to move money to the exchange from foreign subsidiaries and dodge U.S. tax on those repatriated profits.

It is worth noting that many of these banks’ subsidiaries are located in offshore locations where they pay no local taxes, so they would not benefit from treaties made to avoid double taxation; repatriated profits would be taxed in full. Goldman lists only 31 offshore subsidiaries in its SEC filing, though it acknowledges that it “aggregates” individual companies in its reporting. The subsidiaries include Amagansett Funding Ltd. in the Caymans and MLT investments in Mauritius. Morgan Stanley lists 321 offshore subsidiaries, including Morgan Stanley Berkshire Investments in Jersey and Morgan Stanley Morane Investments in Luxembourg. The other banks also have hundreds of offshore subsidiaries. Profits from these untaxed subsidiaries need to be invested, and the banks would prefer it to be done in ways that avoid taxation. Buying credit default swaps on ICE Trust U.S. allows the banks to do that.
Just how much money could skirt Section 956 via the Cayman’s structure? Peter Vinella, managing director of the consulting firm LECG, says there is no way to know the number or value of trades being done through the U.S. banks’ foreign subsidiaries because the figures aren’t reported. “It’s not transparent; there’s no U.S.-owned market”, said Vinella, who ran a global derivatives business as CEO of Wilmington Trust Conduit Services.

Read the rest here.

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