To give itself more time to finalize regulatory rules, the IRS on October 24, 2012, released deadline changes to the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA), moving certain compliance dates from January 1, 2013, to January 1, 2014 and extending others.
The implementation schedules for both U.S. and non-U.S. withholding agents are now better aligned, benefitting worldwide financial institutions. While this provides some relief for due diligence requirements, other FATCA compliance deadlines have not been changed. There is still no time to lose in preparing to meet FATCA requirements efficiently and effectively.
Resources- Do you have the resources required for timely compliance?
Cost-effectiveness- Can you efficiently implement systems modifications to capture relevant data?
Maintenance- Does your plan cover both Day 1 and ongoing support?
Partnership- Do you have the proper tools and know-how to achieve and sustain compliance?
This underscores how critical it is to begin (or continue apace) developing a sound compliance plan for what is still an ambitious implementation schedule, even with the recent deadline extensions.
The significant regulatory change FATCA brings is intended to provide the IRS with an increased ability to detect U.S. tax evaders specifically, those among U.S. persons (individuals or entities) who maintain foreign accounts and investments either directly or indirectly through their ownership in foreign entities.
Along with the release of FATCA requirements, the U.S. Department of Treasury (Treasury) has taken an intergovernmental approach to removing barriers to improving international tax compliance and implementing FATCA. Several governments have signed intergovernmental agreements (IGAs) with the U.S. government, according to which they will share with the IRS specific tax information of U.S. account holders with bank accounts in their countries. Other governments are expected to follow suit. IGA reporting financial institutions must have new account procedures in place by January 1, 2014, the date with which certain new FATCA deadlines now align.
However, Treasury has also committed to heightened due diligence requirements and the implementation of information reporting for these governments in return for their cooperation in FATCA compliance, which represent a significant challenge for U.S. financial institutions (USFIs).
"To meet their FATCA compliance obligations, most firms realize the need for and are actively securing outside expertise in reviewing and analyzing their capabilities and personnel needs, and developing sound implementation plans for smooth, reliable withholding compliance."Cyrus Daftary, Partner Burt Staples & Maner, LLP.
USFIs should not wait to plan for due diligence, withholding, and reporting compliance. Both systems and personnel must be geared up to effectively and agilely address these additional FATCA requirements in the near term and as they may evolve.
Among other things USFIs will need to screen new individual and entity accounts for documentation for certain information FATCA requires, including: U.S. citizenship, residency, or country of incorporation; U.S. place of birth; U.S. residence address or U.S. mailing address; and U.S. telephone number. Being prepared by the new deadline January 1, 2014 to capture and securely store this and other data for use during withholding or reporting means USFIs should quickly:
FATCA mandates a punitive 30% withholding tax absent required documentation. Accordingly, USFIs will need to enhance their payment processors and withholding systems in order to initiate FATCA withholding. The effective date for withholding U.S. source FDAP income has not changed; it remains January 1, 2014. However, the withholding date for gross proceeds on the sale of U.S. securities has been changed, from January 1, 2015 to January 1, 2017. Withholding on foreign pass thru payments would still commence on January 1, 2017, at the earliest; however, withholding agents are still waiting for the IRS to provide actionable guidance on this topic.
While managing withholding is essential to FATCA compliance, it is also essentially the IRS s lever for obtaining FATCA compliance s ultimate goal: additional information reporting on U.S. persons. USFIs will be required to report on substantial U.S. owners of NFFEs and owner-documented FFIs as early as March 2014. This is in addition to existing Form 1099 reporting on payments to U.S. persons.
"Focus should be on identifying your firms gaps and having a clear understanding of what needs to be modified or built, some or all of which may require the assistance of third party service providers,"Glen Bover, Vice President of Broadridge Tax Services.
Theres no time to waste, even though certain FATCA deadlines have been extended but, take care not to sacrifice thoughtfulness for speed. Consider, for instance, the potential for business disruption that building strictly internal solutions may present. Ask yourself:
Mr. Bover went on to say, "A myriad of new firms are entering the FATCA solutions arena, so weeding through the field of start-up versus proven providers is an important step in the process. This new regime presents significant risk, so making the wrong choice could prove even more costly."
FATCA is coming. Will you be ready? Act now to leverage a partner and adopt sound compliance solutions that ensure agile, effective, timely responses to this far-reaching regulatory change. Also, for a more detailed discussion of FATCA requirements and deadlines please see our publication, "FATCA Compliance: Riding a Roller Coaster of Regulatory Change".
Key FATCA Compliance Dates
FATCA Effective Date for USFIs and FFIs to implement new account due January 1, 2014 diligence procedures
January 1, 2014 (was January 1, 2013)
Commence withholding on payments of U.S. source FDAP income paid to:
January 1, 2014 (unchanged)
July 1, 2014
January 1, 2015
January 1, 2016
Commence withholding on payments of gross proceeds of U.S. securities paid to certain recipients
January 1, 2017 (was January 1, 2015)
Earliest effective date for withholding on foreign pass thru payments(FFI only)
January 1, 2017
USFI reporting of substantial U.S. owners of passive NFFEs for CY 2013
March 15, 2014*
USFI reporting of specified U.S. persons who are owners of owner-documented FFIs for CY 2013
March 31, 2014*
USFI reporting of CY 2014 payments of Chapter 4 reportable amounts
March 15, 2015