On February 6, 2020, Russell Nance, Steven Garden and Brennan Young presented an overview of the proposed regulations addressing the US federal tax consequences of replacing an interbank offered rate (IBOR) with a successor rate as part of Mayer Brown’s Global Financial Markets Initiative.

You can listen to the discussion by clicking on the “Listen

The Taxpayer First Act (the “Act” or “TFA”) imposes new limits on the disclosure of US taxpayer tax information obtained on or after December 28, 2019.  The Act is designed, among other things, to overhaul and modernize operations at the Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”).  One provision of the TFA has a direct impact on a recipient of taxpayer return information obtained directly from the IRS.  Although questions remain about the reach of the new rule, it is already finding its way into structured finance and secondary market transactions.

Section 6103 of the Internal Revenue Code (the “Code”) governs the confidentiality and disclosure of tax returns and the information contained in tax returns.  The TFA, effective as of December 28, 2019, amends Code Section 6103(c) to require taxpayers to consent to: (i) the particular purposes for which the recipient will use the taxpayer’s tax return information (the recipient may not use the information for any other purpose); and (ii) the sharing of any information from the tax return with other persons.  Prior to the TFA amendment, Code Section 6103(c) simply authorized the IRS to release a taxpayer’s tax return information to parties designated by the taxpayer to receive it.Continue Reading The Taxpayer First Act and the Impact on Secondary Market Participants