Planning the distribution of losses to members of the group
The value of a company’s losses depends on how they are used. This value is maximised by offsetting the losses against those profits that would otherwise be taxed at the highest rate of tax. A company will pay tax at the main rate where its augmented profits (taxable total profits plus its franked investment income) exceed the upper limit, at the lower small profits rate where they are less than the lower limit and at a rate in excess of the main rate on those profits between the lower and upper limits. Accordingly, the aim is to offset the losses against:
- profits between the limits, then
- profits in excess of the upper limit, then
- profits below the lower limit.
Most, if not all, students are aware of this strategy – but many misinterpret what it means and think that it is disadvantageous for a company to have profits between the limits. In fact the opposite is true. Companies with profits between the limits pay a rate of tax in excess of the main rate only on the amount of profits between the limits and not on all of their profits. The overall effective rate of tax paid by such companies must, of course, be less than the main rate as the corporation tax liability is computed by charging tax at the main rate and then deducting marginal relief.
The implication of this is that it is beneficial to use losses to cause a company that would otherwise pay tax at the main rate to become a marginal company. This is illustrated in Example 1.
Example 1
LC Ltd has taxable total profits of £425,000 and no franked investment income. Its upper limit is £375,000 and its lower limit is £75,000. It will pay corporation tax on its profits of £89,250 (£425,000 x 21%) because its profits exceed the upper limit. When thinking about the company from the point of view of loss utilisation, it can be regarded as paying corporation tax at the following rates.