Seminar  Seminar

Tax Strategies for Corporate Acquisitions, Dispositions, Spin-Offs, Joint Ventures, Financings, Reorganizations & Restructurings 2013


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Why you should attend

This three-day program will focus on the tax issues presented by the entire spectrum of modern major corporate transactions, from relatively simple single-buyer acquisitions of a division or subsidiary to multi-party joint ventures, cross-border mergers, and complex acquisitions of public companies with domestic and foreign operations, including spin-offs and other dispositions of unwanted operations. Evolving techniques for structuring, financing, and refinancing corporate turnovers and other activities will be emphasized, with particular attention being paid to consolidated return issues, to financially troubled businesses, to the role of new financial products and the effects of the evolving economic substance and business purpose doctrine, and to selected current issues in mergers and acquisitions, including the effects of recent legislation on executive compensation.

10 Compelling Reasons to Attend PLI’s Tax Strategies

1. Learn practical strategies and solutions, not just a recitation of Code Sections and Regulations.
2. Keep up with the cutting edge by learning about the hottest topics in corporate tax:

  • recent developments in tax-free reorganizations and spin-offs
  • consolidated return planning and strategies
  • partnership strategies in M&A
  • financially troubled businesses and other loss companies
  • compensation strategies in M&A including effects of carried interest legislation, if enacted

3. Benefit from expanded sessions on:

  • selected current issues in M&A
  • exploring the limits of the evolving economic substance, business purpose and related doctrines

4. Attend new sessions on:

  • taxable transactions: current developments and planning, including under the recently issued Section 336(e) regulations
  • understanding and managing stock basis and earnings and profits

And a special double session on:

  • “topside” planning for private equity (and hedge) fund investments, and
  • advanced transactional planning in private equity M&A

5. Gain insights from an outstanding faculty of more than sixty experts drawn from Treasury, the IRS, private practice, corporations and academia.
6. Participate in a discussion of audience-selected transactions during our Corporate Transactions Open Discussion session.
7. Hear about the most “Interesting Transactions of the Past Year.”
8. Join colleagues, faculty and IRS and Treasury representatives at our special session on Hot Topics from the Perspective of the IRS Office of the Deputy Chief Counsel (Technical), the IRS Office of the Associate Chief Counsel (Corporate) and Treasury’s Office of Tax Legislative Counsel.
9. Attend the Tax Director Forum: What’s Keeping Them Up At Night?
10. (a) Receive the opportunity to purchase the over 25,000-page print version of The Corporate Tax Practice Series: Strategies for Acquisitions, Dispositions, Spin-Offs, Joint Ventures, Financings, Reorganizations & Restructurings, or the print version of the companion series, The Partnership Tax Practice Series: Planning for Domestic and Foreign Partnerships, LLCs, Joint Ventures & Other Strategic Alliances at 50% off the current retail price of either series.

(b) Receive a complimentary flash drive of PLI’s number one best seller, The Corporate Tax Practice Series: Strategies for Acquisitions, Dispositions, Spin-Offs, Joint Ventures, Financings, Reorganizations & Restructurings!

PLI Group Discounts

Groups of 4-14 from the same organization, all registering at the same time, for a PLI program scheduled for presentation at the same site, are entitled to receive a group discount. For further discount information, please contact membership@pli.edu or call (800) 260-4PLI.

PLI Can Arrange Group Viewing to Your Firm

Contact the Groupcasts Department via email at groupcasts@pli.edu for more details.

Cancellations

All cancellations received 3 business days prior to the program will be refunded 100%. If you do not cancel within the allotted time period, payment is due in full. You may substitute another individual to attend the program at any time.

Day One: 8:30 a.m. - 6:00 p.m.

Morning Session: 8:30 a.m. - 12:15 p.m.

8:30 Overview and Strategies in Representing Sellers

Stock sale/asset sale strategies; post-2003 Act structuring and assess and contrast effects of 2012/2013 and other legislation; nonliquidation format; deferral techniques; National Starch/Unilever; Tele-Communication/Liberty Media; MCA/Matsushita; Times Mirror/Matthew Bender/Reed Elsevier; effects of Section 351(g) and Section 351(e); combined sale/redemption; corporate inversion, recapitalization, and other techniques; Seagram/DuPont and its aftermath; Petrie Stores/Toys “R” Us and its aftermath; IMS/Gartner Group; leveraged and sponsored spin-offs; effects of recent IRS no rule policy; Tribune/ESOP; anatomy of an LBO; special securities, monetization techniques; contingent payments, convertibles, putables, exchangeables; installment treatment; open transaction treatment; other effects of recent legislation; IRS Business Plan topics

Louis S. Freeman

9:45 Networking Break

10:00 Selected Seller and Buyer Issues, Including the Tax Due Diligence Process; Negotiating and Drafting Tax Provisions in Acquisition Agreements; Financial Accounting Considerations; and State and Local Tax Issues

Key allocation issues; concerns due to effects of consolidated return regulations on seller and buyer; the tax due diligence process; negotiating and drafting provisions in acquisition agreements; indemnification issues; target’s tax elections; financial accounting concerns; reporting requirements; state and local tax considerations

Peter L. Faber, Richard L. Reinhold, Robert Willens

11:30 Tax Accounting Issues in Mergers and Acquisitions

Tax accounting issues arising from taxable and tax-free acquisitions and dispositions; treatment of M&A expenses; success-based fees; milestone payments; break-up fees; abandoned transactions; capitalized costs; recent regulations; and accounting method issues

Glenn R. Carrington, C. Ellen MacNeil

12:15 Lunch

Attendees will help themselves to a picnic lunch and then take their seats in the meeting room.

Afternoon Session: 12:45 p.m. - 6:00 p.m.

12:45 Dealing with Restricted Stock, Stock Options and Executive Compensation in Corporate M&A Transactions

Compensation issues in the current environment; treatment of outstanding equity-based awards, including restricted stock, stock options and restricted or deferred stock units in transactions; tax issues in assuming or eliminating deferred compensation in an acquisition; allocation of deduction between buyer and seller; Sections 280G and 4999 relating to “golden parachutes” and amelioration techniques in the “post gross-up” world; impact of Sections 409A and 457A

Jean M. McLoughlin, Regina Olshan

NEW SESSION

2:00 Taxable Transactions: Current Developments and Planning

Planning to achieve a taxable transaction; issues to consider and traps for the unwary; regulations under Sections 336(e), 1060 and 338; planning opportunities using Section 336 and Section 338 elections; recent private letter rulings; and assumption and payment of contingent liabilities

Mark J. Silverman, Karen Gilbreath Sowell

3:45 Networking Break

4:00 Structuring Leveraged Buyouts

Topics may include: stepped up asset basis vs. carryover basis for buyer and single vs. double taxation for seller in the context of a taxable asset purchase; stock purchase (with and without
Section 338(h)(10) election or Section 336(e) election), or merger; leveraged recapitalizations and other forms of partial or complete exit; multi-layer debt and equity financing structures; interest deductibility (including debt/equity characterization, Section 279, Section 163(e)(5), Section 163(l), Section 163(j), and OID); preferred stock and “OID” thereon; warrants and convertibles; reform proposals

Deborah L. Paul, Donald E. Rocap

5:00 Corporate Tax Strategies and Techniques Using Partnerships, LLCs and Other Strategic Alliances

Use of partnerships and other pass-through entities as the joint venture format or the acquiring entity; the rise of partnerships in the public space; mixing bowl partnerships; leveraged partnerships; treatment of Section 197 intangibles in a partnership context; imaginative uses of the “Check-the-Box” regulations; single-member LLCs; effects of possible carried interest legislation

Stuart Rosow, Blake D. Rubin

6:00 Adjourn

Day Two: 7:00 a.m. - 6:00 p.m.

Morning Session: 7:00 a.m. - 12:45 p.m.

7:00 Corporate Transactions Open Discussion

Participate in a discussion of audience-selected corporate transactions

Mark J. Silverman

SPECIAL DOUBLE SESSION
8:00 “Topside” Planning for Private Equity (and Hedge) Fund Investments

Addressing topside planning for private equity and hedge fund investments, including the myriad pass-through, cross-border and other issues involved, including UBTI, ECI, FIRPTA and sovereign investors (Section 892)

Advanced Transactional Planning in Private Equity M&A

Buying and exiting from pass-through investments (including TRAs); sponsored spins and spin-offs by portfolio companies held by PE Funds; Sections 338 and 336(e) elections with Rollover Equity; “Poor Man’s” 338 Elections; “Something for Nothing” structures (a/k/a “Out from Under”) structures; alternative roll up structures; management comp issues

David H. Schnabel, Eric B. Sloan, Lewis R. Steinberg

9:30 Current Issues in Tax-Free and Partially Tax-Free Acquisitive Reorganizations

Current issues in the reorganization area and illustrative case studies; multi-step reorganizations; reorganizations within a consolidated or affiliated group; all cash D reorganizations; developments in F reorganizations; overlap transactions; remnants of liquidation – reincorporation doctrine; issues involving COBE and COI regulations; “no net value” proposed regulations; proposed regulations regarding basis recovery and determination; effects of IRS no rule policy; IRS Business Plan topics

Peter C. Canellos, William S. Dixon, Matthew A. Rosen, William D. Alexander [Associate Chief Counsel (Corporate), Internal Revenue Service]

10:30 Networking Break

NEW SESSION
10:45 Understanding and Managing Stock Basis and Earnings and Profits

Review evolving law related to stock basis and E&P, including proposed regulations; discuss planning to optimize attributes in business transactions; highlight pitfalls to ensure attributes are protected

Marc A. Countryman, Jonathan R. Neuville, Karen Gilbreath Sowell, William D. Alexander [Associate Chief Counsel (Corporate), Internal Revenue Service]

11:45 Selected Current Issues in M&A

Stuart M. Finkelstein, Kevin M. Keyes, Isaac W. Zimbalist [Senior Technician Reviewer (Corporate, Branch 5), Internal Revenue Service]

12:45 Lunch

Attendees will help themselves to a picnic lunch and then take their seats in the meeting room.

Afternoon Session: 1:15 p.m. - 6:00 p.m.

1:15 Current Issues in Divisive Strategies - Spin-Offs and Synthetic Spin-Offs

Tax-free spin-offs, split-offs and split-ups under Section 355; practitioner analysis and IRS critique of issues in innovative divisive transactions; developing IRS/Treasury views on no-ruling policy (i.e., north/south issues in the new Civil War); changes in administrative practice; evolving techniques for leveraged distributions; unresolved interpretive issues under Sections 355(d) and (e); surrogates for Morris Trust transactions; cash-rich split-offs; and restructuring issues for spin-offs

Joseph M. Pari, Robert H. Wellen, Thomas F. Wessel, Gerald B. Fleming [Senior Technician Reviewer (Corporate, Branch 2), Internal Revenue Service]

2:15 Strategies and Issues for International Acquisitions and Dispositions

Taxable sales of U.S.-owned foreign corporations – U.S. seller’s treatment; taxable acquisitions of foreign corporations – U.S. purchaser’s treatment; taxable acquisitions of U.S. corporations – foreign purchaser’s treatment; international Section 338 elections – the effects on seller and buyer; Subpart F income issues; and planning under the new Section 901(m) rules

James P. Fuller

3:00 Networking Break

3:15 Cross-Border Mergers, Virtual Mergers, Post-Acquisition Integration and Other International Issues

Mergers with U.S. parent companies; mergers with foreign parent companies; dual-holding company and DINC structures; exchangeable share structures; use of hybrids; debt/equity developments; inversion transactions; regulations under Section 7874; regulations under Section 367(a)(5); transfers of tangibles and intangibles; issues under Section 367(b); maximizing use of foreign cash; Section 304 transactions; post-acquisition integration; effects of legislative changes and proposals; IRS Business Plan topics; foreign financial assets and payments to foreign persons; FATCA developments; enforcement of reporting and withholding obligations; miscellaneous current international issues

Kimberly S. Blanchard, Peter H. Blessing, Paul W. Oosterhuis

5:00 Tax Strategies for Financially Troubled Businesses and Other Loss Companies

Equity for debt exchanges and ownership changes under Section 382 and the regulations thereunder; COD/OID/AHYDO; recent Section 108 and 382-related guidance; restrictions on trading in equity and debt; strategies for acquirers with losses and acquisitions of loss companies; recent strategies in bankruptcies; debt for debt exchanges and modifications, and tax consequences thereof; tax issues with worthless stock deductions

Stuart J. Goldring, Linda Z. Swartz

6:00 Adjourn

Day Three: 7:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.

Morning Session: 7:30 a.m. - 12:30 p.m.

7:30 Interesting Transactions of the Past Year 

Linda E. Carlisle, Bruce E. Kayle, Michael L. Schultz

9:00 Financial Products and Transactions

A lively discussion about complex derivatives and financial transactions in the post-Dodd-Frank world, including swaps, credit default swaps, options, structured notes, and “prepaid forwards,” used in investing, hedging and speculative contexts. The panel will focus on the latest activities by the Courts, Treasury, the IRS and Congress, including proposed regulations and the Camp tax reform bill on derivatives

Erika W. Nijenhuis, David H. Shapiro, Helen M. Hubbard [Acting Associate Chief Counsel (Financial Institutions & Products), Internal Revenue Service]

10:00 Networking Break

10:15 Exploring the Limits of the Evolving Economic Substance, Business Purpose and Related Doctrines

Recent cases and Notices; when to apply which doctrine; application to some tax planning while other tax planning apparently requires neither substance nor business purpose; Section 7701(o), the economic substance codification; when does the doctrine apply under or outside of codification; scope of Congressional plan or purpose concept; “safe harbors”; disaggregation of transactions; the two-prong test (the objective component and the subjective component); how much substance is enough; relative benefits testing; expansion of anti-tax shelter positions into ordinary tax planning; practice and procedure; Circular 230; implications, effects, ethical and practice issues; corporate transaction planning, including examples; penalties; reasonable cause and good faith; ethical standards; criminalization of tax lawyers

Jack C. Cummings, Jr., Armando Gomez, Jeffrey H. Paravano, Bryan C. Skarlatos

11:30 Tax Director Forum: What’s Keeping Them Up at Night?

An in-depth inside look at the sleeping patterns of a panel of esteemed tax directors from large corporations. We will explore the topics that are currently keeping these tax directors up at night.

Stuart Chessman, Tal Kaissar, Kenneth E. Kempson, Scott Naajtes, Eric Solomon

12:30 Lunch

Attendees will help themselves to a picnic lunch and then take their seats in the meeting room.

Afternoon Session: 1:00 p.m. - 5:00 p.m.

1:00 Consolidated Return Planning and Strategies

Current issues in consolidated returns, including interesting recent IRS rulings and court decisions, recent regulatory guidance, implications of possible legislation (e.g., Section 356(a)(2)/Section 351(g)), IRS/Treasury Business Plan topics and effects of recent IRS no rule policies, and recurring issues in transactional planning; among the substantive topics addressed will be issues regarding affiliation and reverse acquisitions, intercompany transactions (including obligations between consolidated group members and gains on member stock), the unified loss rules, investment adjustments and related issues (including excess loss accounts, and E&P), taxable and tax-free intragroup reorganizations, consolidated net operating losses and other tax attributes, buyer and seller planning for acquisitions and dispositions (including allocation of income and deductions, same day/next day rule, and elections such as waiver of losses, Section 382 allocations, etc.), dealing with issues through agreements, and special considerations raised by member insolvency

Audrey Nacamuli Charling, Andrew J. Dubroff, Michael L. Schler, Mark A. Schneider, William D. Alexander [Associate Chief Counsel (Corporate), Internal Revenue Service], Marie C. Milnes-Vasquez [Branch Chief (Corporate, Branch 4), Internal Revenue Service]

3:30 Networking Break

3:45 Consolidated Return Planning and Strategies (Continued)

5:00 Adjourn

Chairperson(s)
Louis S. Freeman ~ Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP
Speaker(s)
William D. Alexander ~ Associate Chief Counsel (Corporate), Internal Revenue Service
Kimberly S. Blanchard ~ Weil, Gotshal & Manges LLP
Peter H. Blessing ~ KPMG LLP
Peter C. Canellos ~ Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz
Linda E. Carlisle ~ White & Case LLP
Audrey Nacamuli Charling ~ Senior Tax Counsel, General Electric Company
Stuart Chessman ~ Director, Taxes, Vivendi
Jasper L. Cummings, Jr. ~ Alston & Bird LLP
William S. Dixon ~ Managing Director, Mergers & Acquisitions, Citigroup Global Markets Inc.
Peter L. Faber ~ McDermott Will & Emery LLP
Stuart M. Finkelstein ~ Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP
Gerald B. Fleming ~ Senior Technician Reviewer (Corporate, Branch 2), Internal Revenue Service
James P. Fuller ~ Fenwick & West LLP
Stuart J. Goldring ~ Weil, Gotshal & Manges LLP
Armando Gomez ~ Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP
Helen M. Hubbard ~ Acting Associate Chief Counsel (Financial Institutions & Products), Internal Revenue Service, Room 3547
Tal Kaissar ~ Vice President & Director of Taxes, American International Group, Inc.
Bruce E. Kayle ~ Milbank, Tweed, Hadley & McCloy LLP
Kenneth E. Kempson ~ Senior Tax Counsel - Director of Tax Examination, General Electric Company
Kevin M. Keyes ~ Fried, Frank, Harris, Shriver & Jacobson LLP
Jean M. McLoughlin ~ Davis Polk & Wardwell LLP
Marie C. Milnes-Vasquez ~ Branch Chief (Corporate, Branch 4), Internal Revenue Service
Scott Naatjes ~ Vice President, Tax and Customs, General Tax Counsel, Cargill, Incorporated
Jonathan R. Neuville ~ Linklaters
Erika W. Nijenhuis ~ Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton LLP
Regina Olshan ~ Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP
Paul W. Oosterhuis ~ Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP
Jeffrey H. Paravano ~ Baker & Hostetler LLP
Joseph M. Pari ~ KPMG LLP
Deborah L. Paul ~ Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz
Richard L. Reinhold ~ Willkie Farr & Gallagher LLP
Donald E. Rocap ~ Kirkland & Ellis LLP
Matthew A. Rosen ~ Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP
Stuart L. Rosow ~ Proskauer
Blake D. Rubin ~ McDermott Will & Emery LLP
Michael L. Schler ~ Cravath, Swaine & Moore LLP
David H. Schnabel ~ Debevoise & Plimpton LLP
Mark A. Schneider ~ Deloitte Tax LLP
Michael L. Schultz ~ Bingham McCutchen LLP
Mark J. Silverman ~ Steptoe & Johnson LLP
Bryan C. Skarlatos ~ Kostelanetz & Fink LLP
Eric B. Sloan ~ Principal, Deloitte Tax LLP
Lewis R. Steinberg ~ Managing Director, Head of Strategic Advisory (Investment Banking Department), Credit Suisse Securities (USA) LLC
Linda Z. Swartz ~ Cadwalader, Wickersham & Taft LLP
Robert H. Wellen ~ Ivins, Phillips & Barker
Thomas F. Wessel ~ KPMG LLP
Robert Willens ~ President, Robert Willens, LLC
Isaac W. Zimbalist ~ Senior Technician Reviewer (Corporate Branch 5), Internal Revenue Service
Program Attorney(s)
Stacey L. Greenblatt ~ Practising Law Institute

New York City Seminar and Hotel Accommodations

Crowne Plaza Times Square Manhattan, 1605 Broadway (at 48th Street), New York, New York 10019. (212) 977-4000. Please contact the hotel reservations department directly at 1-888-233-9527. When calling, please mention PLI-Tax Strategies to receive the preferred rate. The cut-off date for the rate is September 9, 2013.

PLI programs qualify for credit in all states that require mandatory continuing legal education for attorneys. Please be sure to check with your state and the credit calculator to the right for details.


Please check the CLE Calculator above each product description for CLE information specific to your state.

Special Note: In New York, newly admitted attorneys may receive CLE credit only for attendance at "transitional" programs during their first two years of admission to the Bar. Non-traditional course formats such as on-demand web programs or recorded items, are not acceptable for CLE credit. Experienced attorneys may choose to attend and receive CLE credit for either a transitional course or for one geared to experienced attorneys.  All product types, including on-demand web programs and recorded items, are approved for experienced attorneys.

Please Note: The State Bar of Arizona does not approve or accredit CLE activities for the Mandatory Continuing Legal Education requirement. PLI programs may qualify for credit based on the requirements outlined in the MCLE Regulations and Ariz. R. Sup. Ct. Rule 45.

If you have already received credit for attending some or the entire program, please be aware that state administrators do not permit you to accrue additional credit for repeat viewing even if an additional credit certificate is subsequently issued.

Credit will be granted only to the individual on record as the purchaser unless alternative arrangements (prearranged groupcast) are made in advance.

This is a webcast of the live New York session.

Why you should attend

This three-day program will focus on the tax issues presented by the entire spectrum of modern major corporate transactions, from relatively simple single-buyer acquisitions of a division or subsidiary to multi-party joint ventures, cross-border mergers, and complex acquisitions of public companies with domestic and foreign operations, including spin-offs and other dispositions of unwanted operations. Evolving techniques for structuring, financing, and refinancing corporate turnovers and other activities will be emphasized, with particular attention being paid to consolidated return issues, to financially troubled businesses, to the role of new financial products and the effects of the evolving economic substance and business purpose doctrine, and to selected current issues in mergers and acquisitions, including the effects of recent legislation on executive compensation.

10 Compelling Reasons to Attend PLI’s Tax Strategies

1. Learn practical strategies and solutions, not just a recitation of Code Sections and Regulations.
2. Keep up with the cutting edge by learning about the hottest topics in corporate tax:

  • recent developments in tax-free reorganizations and spin-offs
  • consolidated return planning and strategies
  • partnership strategies in M&A
  • financially troubled businesses and other loss companies
  • compensation strategies in M&A including effects of carried interest legislation, if enacted

3. Benefit from expanded sessions on:

  • selected current issues in M&A
  • exploring the limits of the evolving economic substance, business purpose and related doctrines

4. Attend new sessions on:

  • taxable transactions: current developments and planning, including under the recently issued Section 336(e) regulations
  • understanding and managing stock basis and earnings and profits

And a special double session on:

  • “topside” planning for private equity (and hedge) fund investments, and
  • advanced transactional planning in private equity M&A

5. Gain insights from an outstanding faculty of more than sixty experts drawn from Treasury, the IRS, private practice, corporations and academia.
6. Participate in a discussion of audience-selected transactions during our Corporate Transactions Open Discussion session.
7. Hear about the most “Interesting Transactions of the Past Year.”
8. Join colleagues, faculty and IRS and Treasury representatives at our special session on Hot Topics from the Perspective of the IRS Office of the Deputy Chief Counsel (Technical), the IRS Office of the Associate Chief Counsel (Corporate) and Treasury’s Office of Tax Legislative Counsel.
9. Attend the Tax Director Forum: What’s Keeping Them Up At Night?
10. (a) Receive the opportunity to purchase the over 25,000-page print version of The Corporate Tax Practice Series: Strategies for Acquisitions, Dispositions, Spin-Offs, Joint Ventures, Financings, Reorganizations & Restructurings, or the print version of the companion series, The Partnership Tax Practice Series: Planning for Domestic and Foreign Partnerships, LLCs, Joint Ventures & Other Strategic Alliances at 50% off the current retail price of either series.

(b) Receive a complimentary flash drive of PLI’s number one best seller, The Corporate Tax Practice Series: Strategies for Acquisitions, Dispositions, Spin-Offs, Joint Ventures, Financings, Reorganizations & Restructurings!

PLI Group Discounts

Groups of 4-14 from the same organization, all registering at the same time, for a PLI program scheduled for presentation at the same site, are entitled to receive a group discount. For further discount information, please contact membership@pli.edu or call (800) 260-4PLI.

PLI Can Arrange Group Viewing to Your Firm

Contact the Groupcasts Department via email at groupcasts@pli.edu for more details.

Cancellations

All cancellations received 3 business days prior to the program will be refunded 100%. If you do not cancel within the allotted time period, payment is due in full. You may substitute another individual to attend the program at any time.

All times are E.D.T.

Day One: 8:30 a.m. - 6:00 p.m.  (E.D.T.)

Morning Session: 8:30 a.m. - 12:15 p.m.  (E.D.T.)

8:30 Overview and Strategies in Representing Sellers

Stock sale/asset sale strategies; post-2003 Act structuring and assess and contrast effects of 2012/2013 and other legislation; nonliquidation format; deferral techniques; National Starch/Unilever; Tele-Communication/Liberty Media; MCA/Matsushita; Times Mirror/Matthew Bender/Reed Elsevier; effects of Section 351(g) and Section 351(e); combined sale/redemption; corporate inversion, recapitalization, and other techniques; Seagram/DuPont and its aftermath; Petrie Stores/Toys “R” Us and its aftermath; IMS/Gartner Group; leveraged and sponsored spin-offs; effects of recent IRS no rule policy; Tribune/ESOP; anatomy of an LBO; special securities, monetization techniques; contingent payments, convertibles, putables, exchangeables; installment treatment; open transaction treatment; other effects of recent legislation; IRS Business Plan topics

Louis S. Freeman

9:45 Networking Break

10:00 Selected Seller and Buyer Issues, Including the Tax Due Diligence Process; Negotiating and Drafting Tax Provisions in Acquisition Agreements; Financial Accounting Considerations; and State and Local Tax Issues

Key allocation issues; concerns due to effects of consolidated return regulations on seller and buyer; the tax due diligence process; negotiating and drafting provisions in acquisition agreements; indemnification issues; target’s tax elections; financial accounting concerns; reporting requirements; state and local tax considerations

Peter L. Faber, Richard L. Reinhold, Robert Willens

11:30 Tax Accounting Issues in Mergers and Acquisitions

Tax accounting issues arising from taxable and tax-free acquisitions and dispositions; treatment of M&A expenses; success-based fees; milestone payments; break-up fees; abandoned transactions; capitalized costs; recent regulations; and accounting method issues

Glenn R. Carrington, C. Ellen MacNeil

12:15 Lunch

Attendees will help themselves to a picnic lunch and then take their seats in the meeting room.

Afternoon Session: 12:45 p.m. - 6:00 p.m.  (E.D.T.)

12:45 Dealing with Restricted Stock, Stock Options and Executive Compensation in Corporate M&A Transactions

Compensation issues in the current environment; treatment of outstanding equity-based awards, including restricted stock, stock options and restricted or deferred stock units in transactions; tax issues in assuming or eliminating deferred compensation in an acquisition; allocation of deduction between buyer and seller; Sections 280G and 4999 relating to “golden parachutes” and amelioration techniques in the “post gross-up” world; impact of Sections 409A and 457A

Jean M. McLoughlin, Regina Olshan, Robert J. Neis [Acting Deputy Benefits Tax Counsel, Department of the Treasury]

NEW SESSION

2:00 Taxable Transactions: Current Developments and Planning

Planning to achieve a taxable transaction; issues to consider and traps for the unwary; regulations under Sections 336(e), 1060 and 338; planning opportunities using Section 336 and Section 338 elections; recent private letter rulings; and assumption and payment of contingent liabilities

Mark J. Silverman, Karen Gilbreath Sowell, Mark Weiss [Attorney, Office of Associate Chief Counsel (Corporate, Branch 6), Internal Revenue Service]

3:45 Networking Break

4:00 Structuring Leveraged Buyouts

Topics may include: stepped up asset basis vs. carryover basis for buyer and single vs. double taxation for seller in the context of a taxable asset purchase; stock purchase (with and without
Section 338(h)(10) election or Section 336(e) election), or merger; leveraged recapitalizations and other forms of partial or complete exit; multi-layer debt and equity financing structures; interest deductibility (including debt/equity characterization, Section 279, Section 163(e)(5), Section 163(l), Section 163(j), and OID); preferred stock and “OID” thereon; warrants and convertibles; reform proposals

Deborah L. Paul, Donald E. Rocap

5:00 Corporate Tax Strategies and Techniques Using Partnerships, LLCs and Other Strategic Alliances

Use of partnerships and other pass-through entities as the joint venture format or the acquiring entity; the rise of partnerships in the public space; mixing bowl partnerships; leveraged partnerships; treatment of Section 197 intangibles in a partnership context; imaginative uses of the “Check-the-Box” regulations; single-member LLCs; effects of possible carried interest legislation

Stuart Rosow, Blake D. Rubin

6:00 Adjourn

Day Two: 7:00 a.m. - 6:00 p.m.  (E.D.T.)

Morning Session: 7:00 a.m. - 12:45 p.m.  (E.D.T.)

7:00 Corporate Transactions Open Discussion

Participate in a discussion of audience-selected corporate transactions

Mark J. Silverman

SPECIAL DOUBLE SESSION
8:00 “Topside” Planning for Private Equity (and Hedge) Fund Investments

Addressing topside planning for private equity and hedge fund investments, including the myriad pass-through, cross-border and other issues involved, including UBTI, ECI, FIRPTA and sovereign investors (Section 892)

Advanced Transactional Planning in Private Equity M&A

Buying and exiting from pass-through investments (including TRAs); sponsored spins and spin-offs by portfolio companies held by PE Funds; Sections 338 and 336(e) elections with Rollover Equity; “Poor Man’s” 338 Elections; “Something for Nothing” structures (a/k/a “Out from Under”) structures; alternative roll up structures; management comp issues

David H. Schnabel, Eric B. Sloan, Lewis R. Steinberg

9:30 Current Issues in Tax-Free and Partially Tax-Free Acquisitive Reorganizations

Current issues in the reorganization area and illustrative case studies; multi-step reorganizations; reorganizations within a consolidated or affiliated group; all cash D reorganizations; developments in F reorganizations; overlap transactions; remnants of liquidation – reincorporation doctrine; issues involving COBE and COI regulations; “no net value” proposed regulations; proposed regulations regarding basis recovery and determination; effects of IRS no rule policy; IRS Business Plan topics

Peter C. Canellos, William S. Dixon, Matthew A. Rosen, William D. Alexander [Associate Chief Counsel (Corporate), Internal Revenue Service]

10:30 Networking Break

NEW SESSION
10:45 Understanding and Managing Stock Basis and Earnings and Profits

Review evolving law related to stock basis and E&P, including proposed regulations; discuss planning to optimize attributes in business transactions; highlight pitfalls to ensure attributes are protected

Marc A. Countryman, Jonathan R. Neuville, Karen Gilbreath Sowell, William D. Alexander [Associate Chief Counsel (Corporate), Internal Revenue Service]

11:45 Selected Current Issues in M&A

Stuart M. Finkelstein, Kevin M. Keyes, Isaac W. Zimbalist [Senior Technician Reviewer (Corporate, Branch 5), Internal Revenue Service]

12:45 Lunch

Attendees will help themselves to a picnic lunch and then take their seats in the meeting room.

Afternoon Session: 1:15 p.m. - 6:00 p.m.  (E.D.T.)

1:15 Current Issues in Divisive Strategies - Spin-Offs and Synthetic Spin-Offs

Tax-free spin-offs, split-offs and split-ups under Section 355; practitioner analysis and IRS critique of issues in innovative divisive transactions; developing IRS/Treasury views on no-ruling policy (i.e., north/south issues in the new Civil War); changes in administrative practice; evolving techniques for leveraged distributions; unresolved interpretive issues under Sections 355(d) and (e); surrogates for Morris Trust transactions; cash-rich split-offs; and restructuring issues for spin-offs

Joseph M. Pari, Robert H. Wellen, Thomas F. Wessel, Gerald B. Fleming [Senior Technician Reviewer (Corporate, Branch 2), Internal Revenue Service]

2:15 Strategies and Issues for International Acquisitions and Dispositions

Taxable sales of U.S.-owned foreign corporations – U.S. seller’s treatment; taxable acquisitions of foreign corporations – U.S. purchaser’s treatment; taxable acquisitions of U.S. corporations – foreign purchaser’s treatment; international Section 338 elections – the effects on seller and buyer; Subpart F income issues; and planning under the new Section 901(m) rules

James P. Fuller

3:00 Networking Break

3:15 Cross-Border Mergers, Virtual Mergers, Post-Acquisition Integration and Other International Issues

Mergers with U.S. parent companies; mergers with foreign parent companies; dual-holding company and DINC structures; exchangeable share structures; use of hybrids; debt/equity developments; inversion transactions; regulations under Section 7874; regulations under Section 367(a)(5); transfers of tangibles and intangibles; issues under Section 367(b); maximizing use of foreign cash; Section 304 transactions; post-acquisition integration; effects of legislative changes and proposals; IRS Business Plan topics; foreign financial assets and payments to foreign persons; FATCA developments; enforcement of reporting and withholding obligations; miscellaneous current international issues

Kimberly S. Blanchard, Peter H. Blessing, Paul W. Oosterhuis, John J. Merrick [Special Counsel to the Associate Chief Counsel (International), Internal Revenue Service]

5:00 Tax Strategies for Financially Troubled Businesses and Other Loss Companies

Equity for debt exchanges and ownership changes under Section 382 and the regulations thereunder; COD/OID/AHYDO; recent Section 108 and 382-related guidance; restrictions on trading in equity and debt; strategies for acquirers with losses and acquisitions of loss companies; recent strategies in bankruptcies; debt for debt exchanges and modifications, and tax consequences thereof; tax issues with worthless stock deductions

Stuart J. Goldring, Linda Z. Swartz, Krishna P. Vallabhaneni (Invited) [Attorney-Advisor (Tax Legislation), Department of the Treasury]

6:00 Adjourn

Day Three: 7:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.  (E.D.T.)

Morning Session: 7:30 a.m. - 12:30 p.m.  (E.D.T.)

7:30 Interesting Transactions of the Past Year

Linda E. Carlisle, Bruce E. Kayle, Michael L. Schultz

9:00 Financial Products and Transactions

A lively discussion about complex derivatives and financial transactions in the post-Dodd-Frank world, including swaps, credit default swaps, options, structured notes, and “prepaid forwards,” used in investing, hedging and speculative contexts. The panel will focus on the latest activities by the Courts, Treasury, the IRS and Congress, including proposed regulations and the Camp tax reform bill on derivatives

Erika W. Nijenhuis, David H. Shapiro, Helen M. Hubbard [Acting Associate Chief Counsel (Financial Institutions & Products), Internal Revenue Service]

10:00 Networking Break

10:15 Exploring the Limits of the Evolving Economic Substance, Business Purpose and Related Doctrines

Recent cases and Notices; when to apply which doctrine; application to some tax planning while other tax planning apparently requires neither substance nor business purpose; Section 7701(o), the economic substance codification; when does the doctrine apply under or outside of codification; scope of Congressional plan or purpose concept; “safe harbors”; disaggregation of transactions; the two-prong test (the objective component and the subjective component); how much substance is enough; relative benefits testing; expansion of anti-tax shelter positions into ordinary tax planning; practice and procedure; Circular 230; implications, effects, ethical and practice issues; corporate transaction planning, including examples; penalties; reasonable cause and good faith; ethical standards; criminalization of tax lawyers

Jack C. Cummings, Jr., Armando Gomez, Jeffrey H. Paravano, Bryan C. Skarlatos

11:30 Hot Topics from the Perspective of the Office of the Deputy Chief Counsel (Technical), the Office of the Associate Chief Counsel (Corporate) and the Office of Tax Legislative Counsel

Erik H. Corwin [Deputy Chief Counsel (Technical), Internal Revenue Service], Lisa M. Zarlenga (Invited) [Tax Legislative Counsel, Department of the Treasury], Lewis R. Steinberg

12:30 Lunch

Attendees will help themselves to a picnic lunch and then take their seats in the meeting room.

Afternoon Session: 1:00 p.m. - 5:00 p.m.  (E.D.T.)

1:00 Tax Director Forum: What’s Keeping Them Up at Night?

An in-depth inside look at the sleeping patterns of a panel of esteemed tax directors from large corporations. We will explore the topics that are currently keeping these tax directors up at night.

Stuart Chessman, Tal Kaissar, Kenneth E. Kempson, Scott Naajtes, Eric Solomon

2:00 Consolidated Return Planning and Strategies

Current issues in consolidated returns, including interesting recent IRS rulings and court decisions, recent regulatory guidance, implications of possible legislation (e.g., Section 356(a)(2)/Section 351(g)), IRS/Treasury Business Plan topics and effects of recent IRS no rule policies, and recurring issues in transactional planning; among the substantive topics addressed will be issues regarding affiliation and reverse acquisitions, intercompany transactions (including obligations between consolidated group members and gains on member stock), the unified loss rules, investment adjustments and related issues (including excess loss accounts, and E&P), taxable and tax-free intragroup reorganizations, consolidated net operating losses and other tax attributes, buyer and seller planning for acquisitions and dispositions (including allocation of income and deductions, same day/next day rule, and elections such as waiver of losses, Section 382 allocations, etc.), dealing with issues through agreements, and special considerations raised by member insolvency

Audrey Nacamuli Charling, Andrew J. Dubroff, Michael L. Schler, Mark A. Schneider, William D. Alexander [Associate Chief Counsel (Corporate), Internal Revenue Service], Marie C. Milnes-Vasquez [Branch Chief (Corporate, Branch 4), Internal Revenue Service]

3:30 Networking Break

3:45 Consolidated Return Planning and Strategies (Continued)

5:00 Adjourn

Chairperson(s)
Louis S. Freeman ~ Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP
Speaker(s)
William D. Alexander ~ Associate Chief Counsel (Corporate), Internal Revenue Service
Kimberly S. Blanchard ~ Weil, Gotshal & Manges LLP
Peter H. Blessing ~ KPMG LLP
Peter C. Canellos ~ Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz
Linda E. Carlisle ~ White & Case LLP
Audrey Nacamuli Charling ~ Senior Tax Counsel, General Electric Company
Stuart Chessman ~ Director, Taxes, Vivendi
Jasper L. Cummings, Jr. ~ Alston & Bird LLP
William S. Dixon ~ Managing Director, Mergers & Acquisitions, Citigroup Global Markets Inc.
Peter L. Faber ~ McDermott Will & Emery LLP
Stuart M. Finkelstein ~ Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP
Gerald B. Fleming ~ Senior Technician Reviewer (Corporate, Branch 2), Internal Revenue Service
James P. Fuller ~ Fenwick & West LLP
Stuart J. Goldring ~ Weil, Gotshal & Manges LLP
Armando Gomez ~ Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP
Helen M. Hubbard ~ Acting Associate Chief Counsel (Financial Institutions & Products), Internal Revenue Service, Room 3547
Tal Kaissar ~ Vice President & Director of Taxes, American International Group, Inc.
Bruce E. Kayle ~ Milbank, Tweed, Hadley & McCloy LLP
Kenneth E. Kempson ~ Senior Tax Counsel - Director of Tax Examination, General Electric Company
Kevin M. Keyes ~ Fried, Frank, Harris, Shriver & Jacobson LLP
Jean M. McLoughlin ~ Davis Polk & Wardwell LLP
Marie C. Milnes-Vasquez ~ Branch Chief (Corporate, Branch 4), Internal Revenue Service
Scott Naatjes ~ Vice President, Tax and Customs, General Tax Counsel, Cargill, Incorporated
Jonathan R. Neuville ~ Linklaters
Erika W. Nijenhuis ~ Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton LLP
Regina Olshan ~ Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP
Paul W. Oosterhuis ~ Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP
Jeffrey H. Paravano ~ Baker & Hostetler LLP
Joseph M. Pari ~ KPMG LLP
Deborah L. Paul ~ Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz
Richard L. Reinhold ~ Willkie Farr & Gallagher LLP
Donald E. Rocap ~ Kirkland & Ellis LLP
Matthew A. Rosen ~ Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP
Stuart L. Rosow ~ Proskauer
Blake D. Rubin ~ McDermott Will & Emery LLP
Michael L. Schler ~ Cravath, Swaine & Moore LLP
David H. Schnabel ~ Debevoise & Plimpton LLP
Mark A. Schneider ~ Deloitte Tax LLP
Michael L. Schultz ~ Bingham McCutchen LLP
Mark J. Silverman ~ Steptoe & Johnson LLP
Bryan C. Skarlatos ~ Kostelanetz & Fink LLP
Eric B. Sloan ~ Principal, Deloitte Tax LLP
Lewis R. Steinberg ~ Managing Director, Head of Strategic Advisory (Investment Banking Department), Credit Suisse Securities (USA) LLC
Linda Z. Swartz ~ Cadwalader, Wickersham & Taft LLP
Robert H. Wellen ~ Ivins, Phillips & Barker
Thomas F. Wessel ~ KPMG LLP
Robert Willens ~ President, Robert Willens, LLC
Isaac W. Zimbalist ~ Senior Technician Reviewer (Corporate Branch 5), Internal Revenue Service
Program Attorney(s)
Stacey L. Greenblatt ~ Practising Law Institute
PLI makes every effort to accredit its Live Webcasts. Please check the CLE Calculator above for CLE information specific to your state.

PLI's Live Webcasts are approved for MCLE credit (unless otherwise noted in the product description) in the following states/territories:  Alabama, Alaska, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Idaho*, Illinois, Indiana1, Iowa*, Kansas*, Kentucky*, Louisiana, Maine*, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, North Carolina, North Dakota, New Hampshire*, New Jersey, New Mexico, Nevada, New York2, Ohio3, Oklahoma, Oregon*, Pennsylvania4, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Vermont, Virginia5, Virgin Islands, Washington, West Virginia, Wisconsin, and Wyoming*.

*PLI will apply for credit upon request.

Arizona: The State Bar of Arizona does not approve or accredit CLE activities for the Mandatory Continuing Legal Education requirement.

Arkansas and Oklahoma: Audio-only live webcasts are not approved for credit.

 

1Indiana: Considered a distance education course. There is a 6 credit limit per year.

2New York: Newly admitted attorneys may not take non-transitional course formats such as on-demand audio or video programs or live webcasts for CLE credit. Newly admitted attorneys not practicing law in the United States, however, may earn 12 transitional credits in non-traditional formats.

3Ohio: To confirm that the live webcast has been approved, please refer to the list of Ohio’s Approved Self Study Activities at http://www.sconet.state.oh.us. Online programs are considered self-study. Ohio attorneys have a 6 credit self-study limit per biennial compliance period. The Ohio CLE Board states that attorneys must have a 100% success rate in clicking on timestamps to receive ANY CLE credit for an online program.

4 Pennsylvania: A live webcast may be viewed individually or in a group setting. Credit may be granted to an attorney who views a live webcast individually. There is a 4.0 credit limit per year for this type of viewing. A live webcast viewed in a group setting receives live participatory credit if the program is open to the public and advertised at least 30 days prior to the program. Live webcasts viewed in a group setting that do not advertise at least 30 days prior the program will be considered "in-house", and therefore denied credit.

5Virginia: All distance learning courses are to be done in an educational setting, free from distractions.


Running time and CLE credit hours are not necessarily the same. Please be aware that many states do not permit credit for luncheon and keynote speakers.

Note that some states limit the number of credit hours attorneys may claim for online CLE activities, and state rules vary with regard to whether online CLE activities qualify for participatory or self-study credits. For more information, refer to your state CLE website or call Customer Service at (800) 260-4PLI (4754) or email: info@pli.edu.

If you have already received credit for attending some or the entire program, please be aware that state administrators do not permit you to accrue additional credit for repeat viewing even if an additional credit certificate is subsequently issued.

Why you should attend

This three-day program will focus on the tax issues presented by the entire spectrum of modern major corporate transactions, from relatively simple single-buyer acquisitions of a division or subsidiary to multi-party joint ventures, cross-border mergers, and complex acquisitions of public companies with domestic and foreign operations, including spin-offs and other dispositions of unwanted operations. Evolving techniques for structuring, financing, and refinancing corporate turnovers and other activities will be emphasized, with particular attention being paid to consolidated return issues, to financially troubled businesses, to the role of new financial products and the effects of the evolving economic substance and business purpose doctrine, and to selected current issues in mergers and acquisitions, including the effects of recent legislation on executive compensation.

10 Compelling Reasons to Attend PLI’s Tax Strategies

1. Learn practical strategies and solutions, not just a recitation of Code Sections and Regulations.
2. Keep up with the cutting edge by learning about the hottest topics in corporate tax:

  • recent developments in tax-free reorganizations and spin-offs
  • consolidated return planning and strategies
  • partnership strategies in M&A
  • financially troubled businesses and other loss companies
  • compensation strategies in M&A including effects of carried interest legislation, if enacted

3. Benefit from expanded sessions on:

  • selected current issues in M&A
  • exploring the limits of the evolving economic substance, business purpose and related doctrines

4. Attend new sessions on:

  • taxable transactions: current developments and planning, including under the recently issued Section 336(e) regulations
  • understanding and managing stock basis and earnings and profits

And a special double session on:

  • “topside” planning for private equity (and hedge) fund investments, and
  • advanced transactional planning in private equity M&A

5. Gain insights from an outstanding faculty of more than sixty experts drawn from Treasury, the IRS, private practice, corporations and academia.
6. Participate in a discussion of audience-selected transactions during our Corporate Transactions Open Discussion session.
7. Hear about the most “Interesting Transactions of the Past Year.”
8. Join colleagues, faculty and IRS and Treasury representatives at our special session on Hot Topics from the Perspective of the IRS Office of the Deputy Chief Counsel (Technical), the IRS Office of the Associate Chief Counsel (Corporate) and Treasury’s Office of Tax Legislative Counsel.
9. Attend the Tax Director Forum: What’s Keeping Them Up At Night?
10. (a) Receive the opportunity to purchase the over 25,000-page print version of The Corporate Tax Practice Series: Strategies for Acquisitions, Dispositions, Spin-Offs, Joint Ventures, Financings, Reorganizations & Restructurings, or the print version of the companion series, The Partnership Tax Practice Series: Planning for Domestic and Foreign Partnerships, LLCs, Joint Ventures & Other Strategic Alliances at 50% off the current retail price of either series.

(b) Receive a complimentary flash drive of PLI’s number one best seller, The Corporate Tax Practice Series: Strategies for Acquisitions, Dispositions, Spin-Offs, Joint Ventures, Financings, Reorganizations & Restructurings!

PLI Group Discounts

Groups of 4-14 from the same organization, all registering at the same time, for a PLI program scheduled for presentation at the same site, are entitled to receive a group discount. For further discount information, please contact membership@pli.edu or call (800) 260-4PLI.

PLI Can Arrange Group Viewing to Your Firm

Contact the Groupcasts Department via email at groupcasts@pli.edu for more details.

Cancellations

All cancellations received 3 business days prior to the program will be refunded 100%. If you do not cancel within the allotted time period, payment is due in full. You may substitute another individual to attend the program at any time.

Day One: 8:30 a.m. - 6:00 p.m.

Morning Session: 8:30 a.m. - 12:15 p.m.

8:30 Overview and Strategies in Representing Sellers

Stock sale/asset sale strategies; post-2003 Act structuring and assess and contrast effects of 2012/2013 and other legislation; nonliquidation format; deferral techniques; National Starch/Unilever; Tele-Communication/Liberty Media; MCA/Matsushita; Times Mirror/Matthew Bender/Reed Elsevier; effects of Section 351(g) and Section 351(e); combined sale/redemption; corporate inversion, recapitalization, and other techniques; Seagram/DuPont and its aftermath; Petrie Stores/Toys “R” Us and its aftermath; IMS/Gartner Group; leveraged and sponsored spin-offs; effects of recent IRS no rule policy; Tribune/ESOP; anatomy of an LBO; special securities, monetization techniques; contingent payments, convertibles, putables, exchangeables; installment treatment; open transaction treatment; other effects of recent legislation; IRS Business Plan topics

Louis S. Freeman

9:45 Networking Break

10:00 Selected Seller and Buyer Issues, Including the Tax Due Diligence Process; Negotiating and Drafting Tax Provisions in Acquisition Agreements; Financial Accounting Considerations; and State and Local Tax Issues

Key allocation issues; concerns due to effects of consolidated return regulations on seller and buyer; the tax due diligence process; negotiating and drafting provisions in acquisition agreements; indemnification issues; target’s tax elections; financial accounting concerns; reporting requirements; state and local tax considerations

William G. Cavanagh, Peter L. Faber, James M. Lynch

11:30 Tax Accounting Issues in Mergers and Acquisitions

Tax accounting issues arising from taxable and tax-free acquisitions and dispositions; treatment of M&A expenses; success-based fees; milestone payments; break-up fees; abandoned transactions; capitalized costs; recent regulations; and accounting method issues

Jody J. Brewster, John B. Palmer, III

12:15 Lunch

Attendees will help themselves to a picnic lunch and then take their seats in the meeting room.

Afternoon Session: 12:45 p.m. - 6:00 p.m.

12:45 Dealing with Restricted Stock, Stock Options and Executive Compensation in Corporate M&A Transactions

Compensation issues in the current environment; treatment of outstanding equity-based awards, including restricted stock, stock options and restricted or deferred stock units in transactions; tax issues in assuming or eliminating deferred compensation in an acquisition; allocation of deduction between buyer and seller; Sections 280G and 4999 relating to “golden parachutes” and amelioration techniques in the “post gross-up” world; impact of Sections 409A and 457A

Erica Schohn, Lawrence I. Witdorchic, Robert J. Neis [Acting Deputy Benefits Tax Counsel, Department of the Treasury]

NEW SESSION

2:00 Taxable Transactions: Current Developments and Planning

Planning to achieve a taxable transaction; issues to consider and traps for the unwary; regulations under Sections 336(e), 1060 and 338; planning opportunities using Section 336 and Section 338 elections; recent private letter rulings; and assumption and payment of contingent liabilities 

Mark J. Silverman, Karen Gilbreath Sowell, Mark Weiss [Attorney, Office of Associate Chief Counsel (Corporate, Branch 6), Internal Revenue Service]

3:45 Networking Break

4:00 Structuring Leveraged Buyouts

Topics may include: stepped up asset basis vs. carryover basis for buyer and single vs. double taxation for seller in the context of a taxable asset purchase; stock purchase (with and without
Section 338(h)(10) election or Section 336(e) election), or merger; leveraged recapitalizations and other forms of partial or complete exit; multi-layer debt and equity financing structures; interest deductibility (including debt/equity characterization, Section 279, Section 163(e)(5), Section 163(l), Section 163(j), and OID); preferred stock and “OID” thereon; warrants and convertibles; reform proposals

Jack S. Levin

5:00 Corporate Tax Strategies and Techniques Using Partnerships, LLCs and Other Strategic Alliances

Use of partnerships and other pass-through entities as the joint venture format or the acquiring entity; the rise of partnerships in the public space; mixing bowl partnerships; leveraged partnerships; treatment of Section 197 intangibles in a partnership context; imaginative uses of the “Check-the-Box” regulations; single-member LLCs; effects of possible carried interest legislation

Robert J. Crnkovich, Todd D. Golub, Stephen D. Rose

6:00 Adjourn

Day Two: 7:00 a.m. - 6:00 p.m.

Morning Session: 7:00 a.m. - 12:45 p.m.

7:00 Corporate Transactions Open Discussion

Participate in a discussion of audience-selected corporate transactions

Mark J. Silverman

8:00 Current Issues in Tax-Free and Partially Tax-Free Acquisitive Reorganizations

Current issues in the reorganization area and illustrative case studies; multi-step reorganizations; reorganizations within a consolidated or affiliated group; all cash D reorganizations; developments in F reorganizations; overlap transactions; remnants of liquidation – reincorporation doctrine; issues involving COBE and COI regulations; “no net value” proposed regulations; proposed regulations regarding basis recovery and determination; effects of IRS no rule policy; IRS Business Plan topics

Kathleen L. Ferrell, Eric Solomon, Bernita L. Thigpen, William D. Alexander [Associate Chief Counsel (Corporate), Internal Revenue Service]

NEW SESSION
9:00 Understanding and Managing Stock Basis and Earnings and Profits

Review evolving law related to stock basis and E&P, including proposed regulations; discuss planning to optimize attributes in business transactions; highlight pitfalls to ensure attributes are protected

Marc A. Countryman, Karen Gilbreath Sowell, Gordon Warnke, William D. Alexander [Associate Chief Counsel (Corporate), Internal Revenue Service]

10:00 Networking Break

10:15 Selected Current Issues in M&A

James R. Barry, David M. Rievman, Isaac W. Zimbalist [Senior Technician Reviewer (Corporate, Branch 5), Internal Revenue Service]

SPECIAL DOUBLE SESSION
11:15 “Topside” Planning for Private Equity (and Hedge) Fund Investments

Addressing topside planning for private equity and hedge fund investments, including the myriad pass-through, cross-border and other issues involved, including UBTI, ECI, FIRPTA and sovereign investors (Section 892)

Advanced Transactional Planning in Private Equity M&A

Buying and exiting from pass-through investments (including TRAs); sponsored spins and spin-offs by portfolio companies held by PE Funds; Sections 338 and 336(e) elections with Rollover Equity; “Poor Man’s” 338 Elections; “Something for Nothing” structures (a/k/a “Out from Under”) structures; alternative roll up structures; management comp issues

David H. Schnabel, Eric B. Sloan, Lewis R. Steinberg

12:45 Lunch

Attendees will help themselves to a picnic lunch and then take their seats in the meeting room.

Afternoon Session: 1:15 p.m. - 6:00 p.m.

1:15 Current Issues in Divisive Strategies - Spin-Offs and Synthetic Spin-Offs

Tax-free spin-offs, split-offs and split-ups under Section 355; practitioner analysis and IRS critique of issues in innovative divisive transactions; developing IRS/Treasury views on no-ruling policy (i.e., north/south issues in the new Civil War); changes in administrative practice; evolving techniques for leveraged distributions; unresolved interpretive issues under Sections 355(d) and (e); surrogates for Morris Trust transactions; cash-rich split-offs; and restructuring issues for spin-offs

Jeffrey T. Sheffield, Dean S. Shulman, Thomas F. Wessel, Gerald B. Fleming [Senior Technician Reviewer (Corporate, Branch 2), Internal Revenue Service]

2:15 Strategies and Issues for International Acquisitions and Dispositions

Taxable sales of U.S.-owned foreign corporations – U.S. seller’s treatment; taxable acquisitions of foreign corporations – U.S. purchaser’s treatment; taxable acquisitions of U.S. corporations – foreign purchaser’s treatment; international Section 338 elections – the effects on seller and buyer; Subpart F income issues; and planning under the new Section 901(m) rules

David L. Forst

3:00 Networking Break

3:15 Cross-Border Mergers, Virtual Mergers, Post-Acquisition Integration and Other International Issues

Mergers with U.S. parent companies; mergers with foreign parent companies; dual-holding company and DINC structures; exchangeable share structures; use of hybrids; debt/equity developments; inversion transactions; regulations under Section 7874; regulations under Section 367(a)(5); transfers of tangibles and intangibles; issues under Section 367(b); maximizing use of foreign cash; Section 304 transactions; post-acquisition integration; effects of legislative changes and proposals; IRS Business Plan topics; foreign financial assets and payments to foreign persons; FATCA developments; enforcement of reporting and withholding obligations; miscellaneous current international issues

Joan C. Arnold, Eric B. Sensenbrenner, Lowell D. Yoder, John J. Merrick [Special Counsel to the Associate Chief Counsel (International), Internal Revenue Service]

5:00 Tax Strategies for Financially Troubled Businesses and Other Loss Companies

Equity for debt exchanges and ownership changes under Section 382 and the regulations thereunder; COD/OID/AHYDO; recent Section 108 and 382-related guidance; restrictions on trading in equity and debt; strategies for acquirers with losses and acquisitions of loss companies; recent strategies in bankruptcies; debt for debt exchanges and modifications, and tax consequences thereof; tax issues with worthless stock deductions

Todd F. Maynes, Candace A. Ridgway, Krishna P. Vallabhaneni (Invited) [Attorney-Advisor (Tax Legislation), Department of the Treasury]

6:00 Adjourn

Day Three: 7:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.

Morning Session: 7:30 a.m. - 12:30 p.m.

7:30 Interesting Transactions of the Past Year

Suresh T. Advani, Linda E. Carlisle, R. David Wheat

9:00 Financial Products and Transactions

A lively discussion about complex derivatives and financial transactions in the post-Dodd-Frank world, including swaps, credit default swaps, options, structured notes, and “prepaid forwards,” used in investing, hedging and speculative contexts. The panel will focus on the latest activities by the Courts, Treasury, the IRS and Congress, including proposed regulations and the Camp tax reform bill on derivatives

William L. McRae, Steven M. Rosenthal, Helen M. Hubbard [Acting Associate Chief Counsel (Financial Institutions & Products), Internal Revenue Service]

10:00 Networking Break

10:15 Exploring the Limits of the Evolving Economic Substance, Business Purpose and Related Doctrines

Recent cases and Notices; when to apply which doctrine; application to some tax planning while other tax planning apparently requires neither substance nor business purpose; Section 7701(o), the economic substance codification; when does the doctrine apply under or outside of codification; scope of Congressional plan or purpose concept; “safe harbors”; disaggregation of transactions; the two-prong test (the objective component and the subjective component); how much substance is enough; relative benefits testing; expansion of anti-tax shelter positions into ordinary tax planning; practice and procedure; Circular 230; implications, effects, ethical and practice issues; corporate transaction planning, including examples; penalties; reasonable cause and good faith; ethical standards; criminalization of tax lawyers

Jack C. Cummings, Jr., Diana S. Doyle, Richard M. Lipton, W. Kirk Wallace

11:30 Hot Topics from the Perspective of the Office of the Deputy Chief Counsel (Technical), the Office of the Associate Chief Counsel (Corporate) and the Office of Tax Legislative Counsel

William D. Alexander [Associate Chief Counsel (Corporate), Internal Revenue Service], Lisa M. Zarlenga [Tax Legislative Counsel, Department of the Treasury], Gary B. Wilcox

12:30 Lunch

Attendees will help themselves to a picnic lunch and then take their seats in the meeting room.

Afternoon Session: 1:00 p.m. - 5:00 p.m.

1:00 Tax Director Forum: What’s Keeping Them Up at Night?

An in-depth inside look at the sleeping patterns of a panel of esteemed tax directors from large corporations. We will explore the topics that are currently keeping these tax directors up at night.

Rick Bodnum, Merwin Brandon III, Philip D. Gregorcy, David J. Mangefrida, Eric Solomon

2:00 Consolidated Return Planning and Strategies

Current issues in consolidated returns, including interesting recent IRS rulings and court decisions, recent regulatory guidance, implications of possible legislation (e.g., Section 356(a)(2)/Section 351(g)), IRS/Treasury Business Plan topics and effects of recent IRS no rule policies, and recurring issues in transactional planning; among the substantive topics addressed will be issues regarding affiliation and reverse acquisitions, intercompany transactions (including obligations between consolidated group members and gains on member stock), the unified loss rules, investment adjustments and related issues (including excess loss accounts, and E&P), taxable and tax-free intragroup reorganizations, consolidated net operating losses and other tax attributes, buyer and seller planning for acquisitions and dispositions (including allocation of income and deductions, same day/next day rule, and elections such as waiver of losses, Section 382 allocations, etc.), dealing with issues through agreements, and special considerations raised by member insolvency

Bryan P. Collins, Marc A. Countryman, Mark R. Hoffenberg, Michael L. Schler, Gordon E. Warnke, William D. Alexander [Associate Chief Counsel (Corporate), Internal Revenue Service], Lawrence M. Axelrod [Special Counsel to the Associate Chief Counsel (Corporate), Internal Revenue Service]

3:30 Networking Break

3:45 Consolidated Return Planning and Strategies (Continued)

5:00 Adjourn

Chairperson(s)
Louis S. Freeman ~ Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP
Speaker(s)
Suresh T. Advani ~ Sidley Austin LLP
William D. Alexander ~ Associate Chief Counsel (Corporate), Internal Revenue Service
Joan C. Arnold ~ Pepper Hamilton LLP
Lawrence M. Axelrod ~ Special Counsel to the Associate Chief Counsel (Corporate), Internal Revenue Service
James R. Barry ~ Mayer Brown LLP
Rick Bodnum ~ Managing Director, Corporate Tax, CME Group
Merwin M. Brandon III ~ Director, International & Domestic Tax Planning Analysis, Ball Corporation
Jody J. Brewster ~ Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP
Linda E. Carlisle ~ White & Case LLP
William G. Cavanagh ~ Chadbourne & Parke LLP
Bryan P. Collins ~ Deloitte Tax LLP
Jasper L. Cummings, Jr. ~ Alston & Bird LLP
Diana S. Doyle ~ Latham & Watkins LLP
Peter L. Faber ~ McDermott Will & Emery LLP
Kathleen L. Ferrell ~ Davis Polk & Wardwell LLP
Gerald B. Fleming ~ Senior Technician Reviewer (Corporate, Branch 2), Internal Revenue Service
David L. Forst ~ Fenwick & West LLP
Philip D. Gregorcy ~ Vice President - Corporate Tax, Mondelez International, Inc.
Mark R. Hoffenberg ~ KPMG LLP
Helen M. Hubbard ~ Acting Associate Chief Counsel (Financial Institutions & Products), Internal Revenue Service, Room 3547
Jack S. Levin ~ Kirkland & Ellis LLP
Richard M. Lipton ~ Baker & McKenzie LLP
James M. Lynch ~ Winston & Strawn LLP
David J. Mangefrida ~ Senior Vice President/Director of Tax, Calamos Investments
Todd F. Maynes ~ Kirkland & Ellis LLP
William L. McRae ~ Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton LLP
John J. Merrick ~ Special Counsel to the Associate Chief Counsel (International), Internal Revenue Service
Robert J. Neis ~ Deputy Benefits Tax Counsel, U.S. Department of the Treasury
John B. Palmer, III ~ Foley & Lardner LLP
Candace A. Ridgway ~ Jones Day
David M. Rievman ~ Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP
Stephen D. Rose ~ Munger, Tolles & Olson LLP
Steven M. Rosenthal ~ Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center
Michael L. Schler ~ Cravath, Swaine & Moore LLP
David H. Schnabel ~ Debevoise & Plimpton LLP
Erica Schohn ~ Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP
Eric B. Sensenbrenner ~ Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP
Jeffrey T. Sheffield ~ Kirkland & Ellis LLP
Dean S. Shulman ~ Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP
Mark J. Silverman ~ Steptoe & Johnson LLP
Eric B. Sloan ~ Principal, Deloitte Tax LLP
Lewis R. Steinberg ~ Managing Director, Head of Strategic Advisory (Investment Banking Department), Credit Suisse Securities (USA) LLC
Bernita L. Thigpen ~ KPMG LLP
Krishna P. Vallabhaneni(invited) ~ Attorney-Advisor (Tax Legislation); Office of Tax Policy, U.S. Department of the Treasury
W. Kirk Wallace ~ Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP
Gordon E. Warnke ~ Linklaters LLP
Mark Weiss ~ Attorney, Office of Chief Counsel (Branch 6), Internal Revenue Service
Thomas F. Wessel ~ KPMG LLP
R. David Wheat ~ Thompson & Knight LLP
Lawrence I. Witdorchic ~ Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison LLP
Lowell D. Yoder ~ McDermott Will & Emery LLP
Lisa M. Zarlenga(invited) ~ Tax Legislative Counsel, U.S. Department of the Treasury
Isaac W. Zimbalist ~ Senior Technician Reviewer (Corporate Branch 5), Internal Revenue Service
Program Attorney(s)
Stacey L. Greenblatt ~ Practising Law Institute

Chicago Seminar and Hotel Accommodations

Intercontinental Chicago Magnificent Mile, 505 North Michigan Avenue, Chicago, Illinois 60611. Please contact the hotel reservations department directly at (312) 944-4100. When calling, please mention PLI-Tax Strategies to receive the preferred rate. The cut-off date for the rate is October 28, 2013.

PLI programs qualify for credit in all states that require mandatory continuing legal education for attorneys. Please be sure to check with your state and the credit calculator to the right for details.


Please check the CLE Calculator above each product description for CLE information specific to your state.

Special Note: In New York, newly admitted attorneys may receive CLE credit only for attendance at "transitional" programs during their first two years of admission to the Bar. Non-traditional course formats such as on-demand web programs or recorded items, are not acceptable for CLE credit. Experienced attorneys may choose to attend and receive CLE credit for either a transitional course or for one geared to experienced attorneys.  All product types, including on-demand web programs and recorded items, are approved for experienced attorneys.

Please Note: The State Bar of Arizona does not approve or accredit CLE activities for the Mandatory Continuing Legal Education requirement. PLI programs may qualify for credit based on the requirements outlined in the MCLE Regulations and Ariz. R. Sup. Ct. Rule 45.

If you have already received credit for attending some or the entire program, please be aware that state administrators do not permit you to accrue additional credit for repeat viewing even if an additional credit certificate is subsequently issued.

Credit will be granted only to the individual on record as the purchaser unless alternative arrangements (prearranged groupcast) are made in advance.

Why you should attend

This three-day program will focus on the tax issues presented by the entire spectrum of modern major corporate transactions, from relatively simple single-buyer acquisitions of a division or subsidiary to multi-party joint ventures, cross-border mergers, and complex acquisitions of public companies with domestic and foreign operations, including spin-offs and other dispositions of unwanted operations. Evolving techniques for structuring, financing, and refinancing corporate turnovers and other activities will be emphasized, with particular attention being paid to consolidated return issues, to financially troubled businesses, to the role of new financial products and the effects of the evolving economic substance and business purpose doctrine, and to selected current issues in mergers and acquisitions, including the effects of recent legislation on executive compensation.

10 Compelling Reasons to Attend PLI’s Tax Strategies

1. Learn practical strategies and solutions, not just a recitation of Code Sections and Regulations.
2. Keep up with the cutting edge by learning about the hottest topics in corporate tax:

  • recent developments in tax-free reorganizations and spin-offs
  • consolidated return planning and strategies
  • partnership strategies in M&A
  • financially troubled businesses and other loss companies
  • compensation strategies in M&A including effects of carried interest legislation, if enacted

3. Benefit from expanded sessions on:

  • selected current issues in M&A
  • exploring the limits of the evolving economic substance, business purpose and related doctrines

4. Attend new sessions on:

  • taxable transactions: current developments and planning, including under the recently issued Section 336(e) regulations
  • understanding and managing stock basis and earnings and profits

And a special double session on:

  • “topside” planning for private equity (and hedge) fund investments, and
  • advanced transactional planning in private equity M&A

5. Gain insights from an outstanding faculty of more than sixty experts drawn from Treasury, the IRS, private practice, corporations and academia.
6. Participate in a discussion of audience-selected transactions during our Corporate Transactions Open Discussion session.
7. Hear about the most “Interesting Transactions of the Past Year.”
8. Join colleagues, faculty and IRS and Treasury representatives at our special session on Hot Topics from the Perspective of the IRS Office of the Deputy Chief Counsel (Technical), the IRS Office of the Associate Chief Counsel (Corporate) and Treasury’s Office of Tax Legislative Counsel.
9. Attend the Tax Director Forum: What’s Keeping Them Up At Night?
10. (a) Receive the opportunity to purchase the over 25,000-page print version of The Corporate Tax Practice Series: Strategies for Acquisitions, Dispositions, Spin-Offs, Joint Ventures, Financings, Reorganizations & Restructurings, or the print version of the companion series, The Partnership Tax Practice Series: Planning for Domestic and Foreign Partnerships, LLCs, Joint Ventures & Other Strategic Alliances at 50% off the current retail price of either series.

(b) Receive a complimentary flash drive of PLI’s number one best seller, The Corporate Tax Practice Series: Strategies for Acquisitions, Dispositions, Spin-Offs, Joint Ventures, Financings, Reorganizations & Restructurings!

PLI Group Discounts

Groups of 4-14 from the same organization, all registering at the same time, for a PLI program scheduled for presentation at the same site, are entitled to receive a group discount. For further discount information, please contact membership@pli.edu or call (800) 260-4PLI.

PLI Can Arrange Group Viewing to Your Firm

Contact the Groupcasts Department via email at groupcasts@pli.edu for more details.

Cancellations

All cancellations received 3 business days prior to the program will be refunded 100%. If you do not cancel within the allotted time period, payment is due in full. You may substitute another individual to attend the program at any time.

Day One: 8:30 a.m. - 6:00 p.m.

Morning Session: 8:30 a.m. - 12:15 p.m.

8:30 Overview and Strategies in Representing Sellers

Stock sale/asset sale strategies; post-2003 Act structuring and assess and contrast effects of 2012/2013 and other legislation; nonliquidation format; deferral techniques; National Starch/Unilever; Tele-Communication/Liberty Media; MCA/Matsushita; Times Mirror/Matthew Bender/Reed Elsevier; effects of Section 351(g) and Section 351(e); combined sale/redemption; corporate inversion, recapitalization, and other techniques; Seagram/DuPont and its aftermath; Petrie Stores/Toys “R” Us and its aftermath; IMS/Gartner Group; leveraged and sponsored spin-offs; effects of recent IRS no rule policy; Tribune/ESOP; anatomy of an LBO; special securities, monetization techniques; contingent payments, convertibles, putables, exchangeables; installment treatment; open transaction treatment; other effects of recent legislation; IRS Business Plan topics

Louis S. Freeman

9:45 Networking Break

10:00 Selected Seller and Buyer Issues, Including the Tax Due Diligence Process; Negotiating and Drafting Tax Provisions in Acquisition Agreements; Financial Accounting Considerations; and State and Local Tax Issues

Key allocation issues; concerns due to effects of consolidated return regulations on seller and buyer; the tax due diligence process; negotiating and drafting provisions in acquisition agreements; indemnification issues; target’s tax elections; financial accounting concerns; reporting requirements; state and local tax considerations

Peter L. Faber, James M. Lynch, Raj Tanden

11:30 Tax Accounting Issues in Mergers and Acquisitions

Tax accounting issues arising from taxable and tax-free acquisitions and dispositions; treatment of M&A expenses; success-based fees; milestone payments; break-up fees; abandoned transactions; capitalized costs; recent regulations; and accounting method issues

Jody J. Brewster, C. Ellen MacNeil

12:15 Lunch

Attendees will help themselves to a picnic lunch and then take their seats in the meeting room.

Afternoon Session: 12:45 p.m. - 6:00 p.m.

12:45 Dealing with Restricted Stock, Stock Options and Executive Compensation in Corporate M&A Transactions

Compensation issues in the current environment; treatment of outstanding equity-based awards, including restricted stock, stock options and restricted or deferred stock units in transactions; tax issues in assuming or eliminating deferred compensation in an acquisition; allocation of deduction between buyer and seller; Sections 280G and 4999 relating to “golden parachutes” and amelioration techniques in the “post gross-up” world; impact of Sections 409A and 457A

Robert “Buff” H. Miller, Joseph M. Yaffe, Robert J. Neis [Acting Deputy Benefits Tax Counsel, Department of the Treasury]

NEW SESSION

2:00 Taxable Transactions: Current Developments and Planning

Planning to achieve a taxable transaction; issues to consider and traps for the unwary; regulations under Sections 336(e), 1060 and 338; planning opportunities using Section 336 and Section 338 elections; recent private letter rulings; and assumption and payment of contingent liabilities

Mark J. Silverman, Karen Gilbreath Sowell, Mark Weiss [Attorney, Office of Associate Chief Counsel (Corporate, Branch 6), Internal Revenue Service]

3:45 Networking Break

4:00 Structuring Leveraged Buyouts

Topics may include: stepped up asset basis vs. carryover basis for buyer and single vs. double taxation for seller in the context of a taxable asset purchase; stock purchase (with and without
Section 338(h)(10) election or Section 336(e) election), or merger; leveraged recapitalizations and other forms of partial or complete exit; multi-layer debt and equity financing structures; interest deductibility (including debt/equity characterization, Section 279, Section 163(e)(5), Section 163(l), Section 163(j), and OID); preferred stock and “OID” thereon; warrants and convertibles; reform proposals

Stephen L. Gordon, Jodi J. Schwartz

5:00 Corporate Tax Strategies and Techniques Using Partnerships, LLCs and Other Strategic Alliances

Use of partnerships and other pass-through entities as the joint venture format or the acquiring entity; the rise of partnerships in the public space; mixing bowl partnerships; leveraged partnerships; treatment of Section 197 intangibles in a partnership context; imaginative uses of the “Check-the-Box” regulations; single-member LLCs; effects of possible carried interest legislation

Stephen D. Rose, Andrea Macintosh Whiteway

6:00 Adjourn

Day Two: 7:00 a.m. - 6:00 p.m.

Morning Session: 7:00 a.m. - 12:45 p.m.

7:00 Corporate Transactions Open Discussion

Participate in a discussion of audience-selected corporate transactions

Mark J. Silverman

SPECIAL DOUBLE SESSION
8:00 “Topside” Planning for Private Equity (and Hedge) Fund Investments

Addressing topside planning for private equity and hedge fund investments, including the myriad pass-through, cross-border and other issues involved, including UBTI, ECI, FIRPTA and sovereign investors (Section 892)

Advanced Transactional Planning in Private Equity M&A

Buying and exiting from pass-through investments (including TRAs); sponsored spins and spin-offs by portfolio companies held by PE Funds; Sections 338 and 336(e) elections with Rollover Equity; “Poor Man’s” 338 Elections; “Something for Nothing” structures (a/k/a “Out from Under”) structures; alternative roll up structures; management comp issues

David H. Schnabel, Eric B. Sloan, Lewis R. Steinberg

9:30 Current Issues in Tax-Free and Partially Tax-Free Acquisitive Reorganizations

Current issues in the reorganization area and illustrative case studies; multi-step reorganizations; reorganizations within a consolidated or affiliated group; all cash D reorganizations; developments in F reorganizations; overlap transactions; remnants of liquidation – reincorporation doctrine; issues involving COBE and COI regulations; “no net value” proposed regulations; proposed regulations regarding basis recovery and determination; effects of IRS no rule policy; IRS Business Plan topics

John J. Clair, Rachel D. Kleinberg, Samuel C. Thompson, Jr., William D. Alexander [Associate Chief Counsel (Corporate), Internal Revenue Service]

10:30 Networking Break

NEW SESSION
10:45 Understanding and Managing Stock Basis and Earnings and Profits

Review evolving law related to stock basis and E&P, including proposed regulations; discuss planning to optimize attributes in business transactions; highlight pitfalls to ensure attributes are protected

Brian W. Reed, Karen Gilbreath Sowell, Gordon Warnke, William D. Alexander [Associate Chief Counsel (Corporate), Internal Revenue Service]

11:45 Selected Current Issues in M&A

Philip J. Levine, Gary B. Wilcox, Lisa A. Fuller [Branch Chief (Corporate, Branch 5), Internal Revenue Service]

12:45 Lunch

Attendees will help themselves to a picnic lunch and then take their seats in the meeting room.

Afternoon Session: 1:15 p.m. - 6:00 p.m.

1:15 Current Issues in Divisive Strategies - Spin-Offs and Synthetic Spin-Offs

Tax-free spin-offs, split-offs and split-ups under Section 355; practitioner analysis and IRS critique of issues in innovative divisive transactions; developing IRS/Treasury views on no-ruling policy (i.e., north/south issues in the new Civil War); changes in administrative practice; evolving techniques for leveraged distributions; unresolved interpretive issues under Sections 355(d) and (e); surrogates for Morris Trust transactions; cash-rich split-offs; and restructuring issues for spin-offs

Eric Solomon, Stephen E. Wells, Thomas F. Wessel, Gerald B. Fleming [Senior Technician Reviewer (Corporate, Branch 2), Internal Revenue Service]

2:15 Strategies and Issues for International Acquisitions and Dispositions

Taxable sales of U.S.-owned foreign corporations – U.S. seller’s treatment; taxable acquisitions of foreign corporations – U.S. purchaser’s treatment; taxable acquisitions of U.S. corporations – foreign purchaser’s treatment; international Section 338 elections – the effects on seller and buyer; Subpart F income issues; and planning under the new Section 901(m) rules

James P. Fuller

3:00 Networking Break

3:15 Cross-Border Mergers, Virtual Mergers, Post-Acquisition Integration and Other International Issues

Mergers with U.S. parent companies; mergers with foreign parent companies; dual-holding company and DINC structures; exchangeable share structures; use of hybrids; debt/equity developments; inversion transactions; regulations under Section 7874; regulations under Section 367(a)(5); transfers of tangibles and intangibles; issues under Section 367(b); maximizing use of foreign cash; Section 304 transactions; post-acquisition integration; effects of legislative changes and proposals; IRS Business Plan topics; foreign financial assets and payments to foreign persons; FATCA developments; enforcement of reporting and withholding obligations; miscellaneous current international issues

Nicholas J. DeNovio, Michael A. DiFronzo, Hal Hicks, Steven A. Musher [Associate Chief Counsel (International), Internal Revenue Service]

5:00 Tax Strategies for Financially Troubled Businesses and Other Loss Companies

Equity for debt exchanges and ownership changes under Section 382 and the regulations thereunder; COD/OID/AHYDO; recent Section 108 and 382-related guidance; restrictions on trading in equity and debt; strategies for acquirers with losses and acquisitions of loss companies; recent strategies in bankruptcies; debt for debt exchanges and modifications, and tax consequences thereof; tax issues with worthless stock deductions

Milton B. Hyman, Lee A. Kelley, Victor L. Penico, Krishna P. Vallabhaneni (Invited) [Attorney-Advisor (Tax Legislation), Department of the Treasury]

6:00 Adjourn

Day Three: 7:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.

Morning Session: 7:30 a.m. - 12:30 p.m.

7:30 Interesting Transactions of the Past Year

Linda E. Carlisle, Thomas A. Humphreys, Philip B. Wright

9:00 Financial Products and Transactions

A lively discussion about complex derivatives and financial transactions in the post-Dodd-Frank world, including swaps, credit default swaps, options, structured notes, and “prepaid forwards,” used in investing, hedging and speculative contexts. The panel will focus on the latest activities by the Courts, Treasury, the IRS and Congress, including proposed regulations and the Camp tax reform bill on derivatives

Viva Hammer, Matthew A. Stevens, Helen M. Hubbard [Acting Associate Chief Counsel (Financial Institutions & Products), Internal Revenue Service]

10:00 Networking Break

10:15 Exploring the Limits of the Evolving Economic Substance, Business Purpose and Related Doctrines

Recent cases and Notices; when to apply which doctrine; application to some tax planning while other tax planning apparently requires neither substance nor business purpose; Section 7701(o), the economic substance codification; when does the doctrine apply under or outside of codification; scope of Congressional plan or purpose concept; “safe harbors”; disaggregation of transactions; the two-prong test (the objective component and the subjective component); how much substance is enough; relative benefits testing; expansion of anti-tax shelter positions into ordinary tax planning; practice and procedure; Circular 230; implications, effects, ethical and practice issues; corporate transaction planning, including examples; penalties; reasonable cause and good faith; ethical standards; criminalization of tax lawyers

Donald L. Korb, Richard M. Lipton, Diane S. Ryan, Gary B. Wilcox

11:30 Hot Topics from the Perspective of the Office of the Deputy Chief Counsel (Technical), the Office of the Associate Chief Counsel (Corporate) and the Office of Tax Legislative Counsel

Alison G. Burns [Deputy Associate Chief Counsel (Corporate), Internal Revenue Service], Krishna P. Vallabhaneni (Invited) [Attorney-Advisor (Tax Legislation), Department of the Treasury], Eric Solomon

12:30 Lunch

Attendees will help themselves to a picnic lunch and then take their seats in the meeting room.

Afternoon Session: 1:00 p.m. - 5:00 p.m.

1:00 Tax Director Forum: What’s Keeping Them Up at Night?

An in-depth inside look at the sleeping patterns of a panel of esteemed tax directors from large corporations. We will explore the topics that are currently keeping these tax directors up at night.

Arthur E. Galan, B. Benjamin Haas, Mark A. Jewett, Clarissa C. Potter, Eric Solomon

2:00 Consolidated Return Planning and Strategies

Current issues in consolidated returns, including interesting recent IRS rulings and court decisions, recent regulatory guidance, implications of possible legislation (e.g., Section 356(a)(2)/Section 351(g)), IRS/Treasury Business Plan topics and effects of recent IRS no rule policies, and recurring issues in transactional planning; among the substantive topics addressed will be issues regarding affiliation and reverse acquisitions, intercompany transactions (including obligations between consolidated group members and gains on member stock), the unified loss rules, investment adjustments and related issues (including excess loss accounts, and E&P), taxable and tax-free intragroup reorganizations, consolidated net operating losses and other tax attributes, buyer and seller planning for acquisitions and dispositions (including allocation of income and deductions, same day/next day rule, and elections such as waiver of losses, Section 382 allocations, etc.), dealing with issues through agreements, and special considerations raised by member insolvency

Don A. Leatherman, Patricia W. Pellervo, Michael L. Schler, Jeffrey L. Vogel, William D. Alexander [Associate Chief Counsel (Corporate), Internal Revenue Service], Lawrence M. Axelrod [Special Counsel to the Associate Chief Counsel (Corporate), Internal Revenue Service]

3:30 Networking Break

3:45 Consolidated Return Planning and Strategies (Continued)

5:00 Adjourn

Chairperson(s)
Louis S. Freeman ~ Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP
Speaker(s)
William D. Alexander ~ Associate Chief Counsel (Corporate), Internal Revenue Service
Lawrence M. Axelrod ~ Special Counsel to the Associate Chief Counsel (Corporate), Internal Revenue Service
Jody J. Brewster ~ Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP
Alison G. Burns ~ Deputy Associate Chief Counsel (Corporate), Internal Revenue Service
Linda E. Carlisle ~ White & Case LLP
John J. Clair ~ Latham & Watkins LLP
Nicholas J. DeNovio ~ Latham & Watkins LLP
Peter L. Faber ~ McDermott Will & Emery LLP
Gerald B. Fleming ~ Senior Technician Reviewer (Corporate, Branch 2), Internal Revenue Service
James P. Fuller ~ Fenwick & West LLP
Lisa A. Fuller ~ Branch Chief (Corporate, Branch 5), Internal Revenue Service
Arthur E. Galan ~ Managing Director, Oaktree Capital Management, L.P.
Stephen L. Gordon ~ Cravath, Swaine & Moore LLP
B. Benjamin Haas ~ Director, Federal Tax Research & Planning Group, Exelon Corporpation
Viva Hammer ~ Brandeis University
Hal Hicks ~ Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP
Helen M. Hubbard ~ Acting Associate Chief Counsel (Financial Institutions & Products), Internal Revenue Service, Room 3547
Thomas A. Humphreys ~ Morrison & Foerster LLP
Milton B. Hyman ~ Irell & Manella LLP
Mark A. Jewett ~ Tax Director, Amazon.com Inc.
Lee A. Kelley ~ Deputy Tax Legislative Counsel, U.S. Department of the Treasury
Rachel D. Kleinberg ~ Davis Polk & Wardwell LLP
Donald L. Korb ~ Sullivan & Cromwell LLP
Don A. Leatherman ~ W. Allen Separk Distinguished Professor of Law, University of Tennessee College of Law
Philip J. Levine ~ McDermott Will & Emery LLP
Richard M. Lipton ~ Baker & McKenzie LLP
James M. Lynch ~ Winston & Strawn LLP
Steven A. Musher ~ Associate Chief Counsel (International), Internal Revenue Service
Robert J. Neis ~ Deputy Benefits Tax Counsel, U.S. Department of the Treasury
Victor L. Penico ~ Deloitte Tax LLP
Clarissa C. Potter ~ Deputy Director of Taxes, Head of Global Tax Strategy, American Internation Group (AIG), Tax Department
Stephen D. Rose ~ Munger, Tolles & Olson LLP
Diane S. Ryan ~ Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP
Michael L. Schler ~ Cravath, Swaine & Moore LLP
David H. Schnabel ~ Debevoise & Plimpton LLP
Jodi J. Schwartz ~ Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz
Mark J. Silverman ~ Steptoe & Johnson LLP
Eric B. Sloan ~ Principal, Deloitte Tax LLP
Lewis R. Steinberg ~ Managing Director, Head of Strategic Advisory (Investment Banking Department), Credit Suisse Securities (USA) LLC
Raj Tanden ~ BuchalterNemer, A Professional Corporation
Samuel C. Thompson, Jr. ~ Arthur Weiss Distinguished Faculty Scholar, Director Center for the Study of M&A, Penn State Dickinson School of Law
Krishna P. Vallabhaneni(invited) ~ Attorney-Advisor (Tax Legislation); Office of Tax Policy, U.S. Department of the Treasury
Jeffrey L. Vogel ~ KPMG LLP
Gordon E. Warnke ~ Linklaters LLP
Mark Weiss ~ Attorney, Office of Chief Counsel (Branch 6), Internal Revenue Service
Stephen E. Wells ~ McDermott Will & Emery LLP
Thomas F. Wessel ~ KPMG LLP
Andrea Macintosh Whiteway ~ McDermott Will & Emery LLP
Philip B. Wright ~ Bryan Cave LLP
Joseph M. Yaffe ~ Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP
Program Attorney(s)
Stacey L. Greenblatt ~ Practising Law Institute

Los Angeles Seminar Location and Hotel Accommodations

InterContinental Los Angeles Century City, 2151 Avenue of the Stars, Los Angeles, California 90067. (310) 284-6500. Please contact the hotel directly for reservations. When calling, please mention Practising Law Institute to receive the preferred rate. The cut-off date for the rate is November 12, 2013.

PLI programs qualify for credit in all states that require mandatory continuing legal education for attorneys. Please be sure to check with your state and the credit calculator to the right for details.


Please check the CLE Calculator above each product description for CLE information specific to your state.

Special Note: In New York, newly admitted attorneys may receive CLE credit only for attendance at "transitional" programs during their first two years of admission to the Bar. Non-traditional course formats such as on-demand web programs or recorded items, are not acceptable for CLE credit. Experienced attorneys may choose to attend and receive CLE credit for either a transitional course or for one geared to experienced attorneys.  All product types, including on-demand web programs and recorded items, are approved for experienced attorneys.

Please Note: The State Bar of Arizona does not approve or accredit CLE activities for the Mandatory Continuing Legal Education requirement. PLI programs may qualify for credit based on the requirements outlined in the MCLE Regulations and Ariz. R. Sup. Ct. Rule 45.

If you have already received credit for attending some or the entire program, please be aware that state administrators do not permit you to accrue additional credit for repeat viewing even if an additional credit certificate is subsequently issued.

Credit will be granted only to the individual on record as the purchaser unless alternative arrangements (prearranged groupcast) are made in advance.

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