CFM55520 - Derivative contracts: issuers of convertible or share-linked securities: equity instruments - example
Example of the tax treatment of a standard convertible security by the issuer applying to periods of account beginning on or after 1 January 2005
On 1 January 2007 X Ltd issues a 3-year security paying 4 per cent interest. The terms are that it will redeem for cash at par 拢1million or, at the holder鈥檚 option, convert into 100,000 of X Ltd鈥檚 ordinary 拢10 shares. X Ltd鈥檚 issue costs are 拢20,000.
X Ltd bifurcates the security at issue, attributing initial fair values of, say, 拢950,000 to the loan and 拢50,000 to the equity instrument. It must also split issue costs in the same ratio, allocating 拢19,000 to the loan and 拢1,000 to the equity instrument. The initial fair value of the loan obligation is therefore 拢931,000, representing a discount of 拢69,000 on its face value 拢1million. The initial fair value of the equity instrument is 拢49,000. These total 拢980,000 (拢931,000 + 拢49,000) being X Ltd鈥檚 net proceeds of issue after its 拢20,000 issue costs.
Because X Ltd uses 鈥榮plit鈥� accounting this is followed for tax purposes (CTA09/S585). It is treated as a party to both a debtor loan relationship, and a separate equity instrument. The host loan relationship is taxed as a normal debtor loan relationship (CFM37680).
The implied discount of 拢69,000 is amortised to profit and loss account over the term of the convertible. This means that X Ltd can claim loan relationship debits for its 鈥榥otional finance cost鈥� - the value of the conversion right attached to the security - as well as for the actual interest coupons that it pays. This represents a change from the tax treatment applying in periods of account beginning before 1 January 2005.
Tax treatment of the equity instrument
The required accounting for an equity instrument is to credit its initial fair value (here 拢49,000) to 鈥榚quity鈥� in the balance sheet. It is not subsequently re-valued, so no accounting debits or credits arise. On conversion the carrying value of the security, here 拢1m, would be transferred from the loan account and credited to equity. The 拢49,000 carrying value of the equity instrument would remain in equity (although it may then be transferred to another part of equity).
The tax treatment is the same whether or not the holder exercises the option, as follows.
Holder exercises the conversion option
If on the option exercise date the value of X Ltd鈥檚 shares was 拢12 per ordinary 拢10 share, the holder would opt to convert. X Ltd would issue 100,000 of its ordinary shares, then worth 拢1.2million.
The initial 拢49,000 fair value of the conversion obligation was credited to equity in X Ltd鈥檚 accounts, and not subsequently re-measured. On conversion it remains in equity. An equity instrument is not a 鈥榙erivative contract鈥� for the purposes of CTA09/PART7, so no profits or losses arise under either an income or chargeable gains code.
Option expires unexercised
Had X Ltd鈥檚 share value in the above example been less than 拢10 per share, the holder would have chosen to redeem for cash at par 拢1million.
On redeeming for cash X Ltd will derecognise the carrying value of the loan, 拢1million (if there were any difference between the carrying value and the redemption value, this would be recognised as a profit or loss when the loan element is derecognised). The accounts carrying value of the equity instrument remains at 拢49,000 throughout, with no profit or loss recognised for accounting or tax purposes.