Deduction or Withholding for Tax - ISDA Provision: Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 21:22, 12 May 2023
2002 ISDA Master Agreement A Jolly Contrarian owner’s manual™
2(d) in all its glory
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Overview
Other than an “on or after the date on which” embellishment towards the end of the clause, exactly the same text in the 1992 ISDA and the 2002 ISDA.
Summary
Section 2(d) does the following:
- Net obligation: if a counterparty suffers withholding it generally doesn’t have to gross up – it just remits tax to the revenue and pays net.
- Refund obligation where tax subsequently levied: if a counterparty pays gross and subsequently is levied the tax, the recipient must refund an equivalent amount to the tax.
- Indemnifiable Tax: the one exception is “Indemnifiable Tax” - this is tax arises as a result of the payer’s own status vis-à-vis the withholding jurisdiction. In that case the payer has to gross up, courtesy of a magnificent quintuple negative.
Stamp Tax reimbursement obligations are covered at 4(e), not here.
News from the pedantry front
Happy news, readers: we have a report from the front lines in the battle between substance and form. The JC asked no lesser a tax ninja than Dan Neidle — quietly, the JC is a bit of a fan — the following question:
In the statement, “X may make a deduction or withholding from any payment for or on account of any tax” is there any difference between “deducting” and “withholding”?
They seem to be exact synonyms.
Likewise, “for” vs. “on account of”?
We are pleased to report Mr N opined[1] replied:
I don’t think there’s a difference. Arguably it’s done for clarity, because people normally say “withholding tax” but technically there’s no such thing — it’s a deduction of income tax.
Which is good enough for me. So all of that “shall be entitled to make a deduction or withholding from any payment which it makes pursuant to this agreement for or on account of any Tax” can be scattered to the four winds. Henceforth the JC is going with:
X may deduct Tax from any payment it makes under this Agreement.
Premium content
Here the free bit runs out. Subscribers click 👉 here. New readers sign up 👉 here and, for ½ a weekly 🍺 go full ninja about all these juicy topics 👇
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- The JC’s famous Nutshell™ summary of this clause
- A handy TL;DR about the ins and outs of tax withholding under the ISDA
- Exploration of the interaction between Payer Tax Representations and the Gross-Up clause
- What on earth that Secton 2(d)(ii) could be all about. Could it be that... the FT book on derivatives is right?
- The HIRE Act Amendment
See also
- Gross up, and a great opportunity to run around and desert you
- Withholding tax