Source: https://www.cpehours.com/basics-beyond-tax-flash-april-2019/
Timestamp: 2019-04-26 15:47:59+00:00

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We are now knee deep in the middle of tax season. As of this writing, we are unsure how fast refunds are being issued and how far behind IRS is with correspondence. Many requests came in to discuss some key issues related to the Qualified Business Income Deduction. For those who did not attend the January 24, 2019 update of the final regulations you can purchase the one-hour webinar. We are covering some key issues of concern in the newsletter and remind you of some new requirements for the 2019 filing season.
IRS is granting a final extension of time until April 30, 2019 before they reject (for signature) any older Forms 4506-T and Forms 4506T-EZ without the current revision date of September 2018. No other changes will be made to how older forms are being processed prior to the final extension. Also, a reminder regarding line 5a on Form 4506-T and 4506T-EZ. Before a taxpayer signs the form, it’s imperative the taxpayer understand the information on line 5a and authorizes the designated third party handling their request. IRS does not support taxpayers signing transcript requests with blank line 5a’s so please educate clients and customers. Please refer to our Internal Revenue Manual 3.5.20.2.6.2, Reviewing Requests for Completeness Prior to Processing, and https://www.irs.gov/individuals/international-taxpayers/getting-started-using-ives for further information on line 5a regarding the rejection process.
Om February 28, one day before the due date, IRS issued a waiver of estimated tax penalty for any qualifying farmer or fisherman who files his or her 2018 federal income tax return and pays any tax due by Monday, April 15, 2019. The deadline is Wednesday, April 17, 2019, for taxpayers residing in Maine or Massachusetts.
The IRS is providing this relief because, due to certain rule changes, many farmers and fishermen may have difficulty accurately determining their tax liability by the March 1 deadline that usually applies to them. For tax year 2018, an individual who received at least two-thirds of his or her total gross income from farming or fishing during either 2017 or 2018 qualifies as a farmer or fisherman.
To be eligible for the waiver, qualifying taxpayers must attach Form 2210-F, available on IRS.gov, to the 2018 income tax return. This form can be submitted either electronically or on paper. The taxpayer’s name and identifying number, usually a Social Security number, must be entered at the top of the form. The waiver box—Part I, Box A—should be checked. The rest of the form should be left blank.
The Internal Revenue Service provided additional expanded penalty relief to taxpayers whose 2018 federal income tax withholding and estimated tax payments fell short of their total tax liability for the year. The IRS is lowering to 80 % the threshold required to qualify for this relief. Under the relief originally announced Jan. 16, the threshold was 85 %. The usual percentage threshold is 90 % to avoid a penalty.
This means that the IRS is now waiving the estimated tax penalty for any taxpayer who paid at least 80 % of their total tax liability during the year through federal income tax withholding, quarterly estimated tax payments or a combination of the two.
The revised waiver computation will be integrated into commercially-available tax software and reflected in the forthcoming revision of the instructions for Form 2210, Underpayment of Estimated Tax by Individuals, Estates, and Trusts.
Very simple, just let the client know they can be held responsible for unpaid tax. In this case each beneficiary received property includible in the estate and that included items easily convertible to cash. The court granting IRS’s summary judgment motion.
• 8 % for large corporate underpayments.
The rate of interest is determined on a quarterly basis. For taxpayers other than corporations, the overpayment and underpayment rate are the federal short-term rate plus 3 percentage points.
Generally, in the case of a corporation, the underpayment rate is the federal short-term rate plus 3 percentage points and the overpayment rate is the federal short-term rate plus 2 percentage points. The rate for large corporate underpayments is the federal short-term rate plus 5 percentage points. The rate on the portion of a corporate overpayment of tax exceeding $10,000 for a taxable period is the federal short-term rate plus 0.5 percent. The interest rate will take effect Feb. 1, 2019, based on daily compounding.
Issue 6: IRS May Charge PTIN Fees – Is This the Final in the Long Series of Court Cases?
The Court Appeals for the D.C. Circuit, vacating a decision by the D.C. district court, and has upheld IRS’s authority to charge fees for issuing and renewing Preparer Tax Identification Numbers (PTINs). The court held that IRS did provide a service to the tax professional community in issuing PTIN’s in the effort to protect a tax professional’s social security number or employer identification number from use in identity theft.
Notice 2019-20 provides penalty relief under § 6722 (failure to furnish correct payee statements) and 6698 (failure to file partnership return) of the Internal Revenue Code to certain partnerships that file and furnish Schedules K-1 to Form 1065, U.S. Return of Partnership Income that fail to report information about partners’ negative tax basis capital accounts for the partnership’s taxable year that began after December 31, 2017 but before January 1, 2019.
Item L of Schedule K-1 to Form 1065 requires reporting of a partner’s capital account. Generally, a partnership may report partner capital to a partner using tax basis, Generally Accepted Accounting Principles, § 704(b) book, or some other method. Item L now requires a partnership that does not report tax basis capital accounts to its partners to report, on line 20 of Schedule K-1 using code AH, the amount of such partner’s tax basis capital both at the beginning of the year and at the end of the year if either amount is negative (negative tax basis capital account information).
1. The partner Schedules K-1 are timely filed, including extensions, with the IRS and furnished to the partners and contain all other required information.
This penalty relief applies only for a partnership’s taxable year beginning after December 31, 2017, but before January 1, 2019. To receive a waiver of the penalty, a partnership is not required to furnish amended Schedules K-1 to its partners or to file an administrative adjustment request under § 6227, and partnerships should not delay issuing partner Schedules K-1 on account of this Notice. The timely furnishing, including extensions, of Schedules K-1 to partners is a requirement to be eligible for relief under this Notice.
A draft of New Form 8995, Qualified Business Income Deduction Simplified Computation for 2019 showing how the computation of the Qualified Business Income (BI) Deduction was calculated may be required in 2019 if the form is approved. If your client has QBI, qualified real estate investment trust (REIT) dividends, or qualified income from a publicly traded partnership (PTP) they will use Form 8995. For 2018 return the computation is done on a worksheet in the instructions – this form mirrors the worksheet. Up to 5 trades or business can be declared on the form and the form appears to be informational in nature capturing prior year data, capital gain and carry forward information.
The government shutdown has delayed the annual revision of the Special Enrollment Examination (SEE). The examination to be administered starting on May 1, 2019, has not yet been updated and currently reflects tax law for the calendar year 2017. A revised examination will be released on July 1, 2019 and will be based on tax law for the calendar year 2018.
As a reminder, in most cases, April 1, 2019, is the date by which persons who turned age 70½ during 2018 must begin receiving payments, required minimum distributions (RMDs), from Individual Retirement Accounts (IRAs) and workplace retirement plans. Now is a good time to look at your client base and identify those who may be impacted. At the same time review the law concerning this area a short summary is below.
The payments, called required minimum distributions (RMDs), are normally made by the end of the year. Those persons who reached age 70½ during 2018 are covered by a special rule, however, that allows first-year recipients of these payments to wait until as late as April 1, 2019, to get the first of their RMDs. The April 1 RMD deadline only applies to the required distribution for the first year. For all following years, including the year in which recipients were paid the first RMD by April 1, the RMD must be made by Dec. 31.
A taxpayer who turned 70½ in 2018 (born July 1, 1947, to June 30, 1948) and receives the first required distribution (for 2018) on April 1, 2019, for example, must still receive the second RMD by Dec. 31, 2019. To avoid having both amounts included in their income for the same year, the taxpayer can make their first withdrawal by Dec. 31 of the year they turn 70½ instead of waiting until April 1 of the following year.
The required distribution rules apply to owners of traditional, Simplified Employee Pension (SEP) and Savings Incentive Match Plans for Employees (SIMPLE) IRAs but not Roth IRAs while the original owner is alive. They also apply to participants in various workplace retirement plans, including 401(k), 403(b) and 457(b) plans.
An IRA trustee must either report the amount of the RMD to the IRA owner or offer to calculate it for the owner. Often, the trustee shows the RMD amount on Form 5498 in Box 12b. For a 2018 RMD, this amount is on the 2017 Form 5498 normally issued to the owner during January 2018.
Though the April 1 deadline is mandatory for all owners of traditional IRAs and most participants in workplace retirement plans, some people with workplace plans can wait longer to receive their RMD. Employees who are still working usually can, if their plan allows, wait until April 1 of the year after they retire to start receiving these distributions. Employees of public schools and certain tax-exempt organizations with 403(b) plan accruals before 1987 should check with their employer, plan administrator or provider to see how to treat these accruals.
On February 28, 2019, a Tax Extenders and Disaster Relief bill was introduced. It contains many energy tax credits and expired provision from 2017 (26 provisions) and 2018 (three provisions). As of this date – remember this is a moving target – the reception in Congress is unknown. Since this will provide some retroactive provisions, we will have some limited amended returns to deal with. We will keep you posted in upcoming newsletters.
Notice 2019-18 informs taxpayers that the Treasury Department and the IRS no longer intend to amend the required minimum distribution regulations under § 401(a)(9) of the Internal Revenue Code to address the practice of offering retirees and beneficiaries who are currently receiving annuity payments under a defined benefit plan a temporary option to elect a lump-sum payment in lieu of future annuity payments.
The IRS estimates the midpoint for the potential refunds for 2015 to be $879 — that is, half of the refunds are more than $879 and half are less. In cases where a federal income tax return was not filed, the law provides most taxpayers with a three-year window of opportunity to claim a tax refund. If they do not file a tax return within three years, the money becomes the property of the U.S. Treasury.
Taxpayer information and sensitive data files must be destroyed by properly shredding, burning, mulching, pulping, or pulverizing beyond recognition and reconstruction. Destroy paper using cross cut shredders which produce particles that are 1 mm x 5mm (0.04 in. x 0.2 in.) in size (or smaller) or pulverize/ disintegrate paper materials using disintegrator devices equipped with a 3/32 in. (2.4 mm) security screen.
Safeguarding taxpayers and IRS e-file from identity-theft refund fraud requires that providers be diligent in detecting and preventing identity-theft fraud patterns and schemes. Early detection of these patterns and schemes is critical to stopping them and their adverse impacts, and to protecting taxpayers and IRS e-file. Providers who transmit more than 2,000 individual income tax returns per year are required to perform analysis to identity potential identity-theft fraud patterns and schemes, and to provide the results relative to any indicators of such fraud to the IRS on a weekly basis, in accordance with requirements that will be distributed to providers. We await additional guidance.
The following text appears in the 2018 Instructions for Form 1065. However, this text is no longer valid.
Question: Must taxpayers show the full taxpayer identification numbers (TINs) of the partnership representative and designated individual on the Form 1065, U.S. Return of Partnership Income, and Form 1066, U.S. Real Estate Mortgage Investment Conduit (REMIC) Income Tax Return, filed with the IRS?
Answer: On Form 1065 and Form 1066, under Designation of Partnership Representative, taxpayers may enter all 0s (example: 00-0000000 or 000-00-0000) for the TIN of the partnership representative and designated individual (if applicable). A preparer tax identification number (PTIN) or centralized authorization file (CAF) number may not be used as a TIN to designate a partnership representative or designated individual.
This update supplements these forms’ instructions. Filers should rely on this update for the changes described, which will be incorporated into the next revision of the forms’ instructions.
The Internal Revenue Service warned the public about a new twist on the IRS impersonation phone scam whereby criminals fake calls from the Taxpayer Advocate Service (TAS), an independent organization within the IRS. Similar to other IRS impersonation scams, thieves make unsolicited phone calls to their intended victims fraudulently claiming to be from the IRS. In this most recent scam variation, callers “spoof” the telephone number of the IRS Taxpayer Advocate Service office in Houston or Brooklyn. Calls may be ‘robo-calls’ that request a call back. Once the taxpayer returns the call, the con artist requests personal information, including Social Security number or individual taxpayer identification number (ITIN).
This memorandum provides interim guidance for Collection employees regarding posting payments received when a taxpayer submits offers under DATL and DATC criteria and the processability determination has not taken place on either offer. This guidance will be incorporated into the next revision of IRM 5.8.2, Centralized Offer in Compromise Initial Processing and Processability and IRM 5.8.10, Offer in Compromise – Special Case Processing.
Background: IRM 5.8.10.14,Taxpayer Files both Doubt as to Liability and Doubt as to Collectibility Offers, discusses what actions should be taken when a taxpayer requests consideration under both DATL and DATC. IRM 5.8.10.14 (2) also discusses processing payments submitted with a DATC offer that is deemed not processable based on the submission of a Form 656-L, Doubt as to Liability offer.
When DATL and DATC offers are received and neither offer has been deemed processable, processability of the DATL offer will be determined first as the DATL offer will take precedence. Follow IRM 5.8.10.14, Taxpayer Files both Doubt as to Liability and Doubt as to Collectibility Offers.
If funds were submitted with the Form 656 or Form 656-L, the DATL unit or COIC Process Examiner will make a processability determination of the DATL offer within 24 hours. If the DATL offer is processable, the DATC offer will be deemed not processable and any payments received should be posted to the taxpayer’s account in accordance with guidance provided on the Form 656-L. If the DATL offer is not processable, return the DATL offer and determine processability of the DATC offer following current IRM procedures.
(1) If a taxpayer files Form 656-L, Doubt as to Liability (DATL), and Form 656, Doubt as to Collectibility (DATC), consideration of both offers will not occur concurrently. In instances in which both offers are received and neither offer has been deemed processable, processability of the DATL offer will be determined first.
(2) When a DATL and DATC offer are submitted and neither offer has been deemed processable, refer to IRM 5.8.2.4(2) discussion on determining processability and application of payments.
(3) If a DATL or DATC offer is submitted while another offer under a different basis is being investigated, the new offer will be returned as not processable. Any payments should be posted to the taxpayer’s account in accordance with the guidance provided on the Form 656 and/or Form 656-L.
Note: A taxpayer may submit an additional Form 656 requesting consideration under effective tax administration (ETA) while a Form 656 DATC offer is under consideration. If the IRS determines there is no grounds for compromise under DATC criteria, then the IRS may determine there are grounds for compromise under ETA criteria. The additional Form 656 should be considered an amended offer and any ETA issues presented should be considered. If an amended Form 656 is received by other than the employee who is investigating the offer, it must be provided immediately to the assigned offer examiner in COIC or faxed to the offer specialist.
(4) If a taxpayer wishes consideration of a DATL offer while an offer under DATC is being considered, the taxpayer must submit a withdrawal of the DATC offer prior to processing the DATL offer. The withdrawal of the DATC offer must be submitted within 10 workdays of the DATL offer submission or the DATL offer will be considered not processable.
Rev. Rul. 2019-09 suspends Rev. Rul. 57-464 and Rev. Rul. 57-492, pending the completion of a study by the Department of the Treasury (Treasury Department) and the Internal Revenue Service (Service) regarding the active trade or business requirement under § 355(a)(1)(C) and (b) of the Internal Revenue Code.
§ 355(a)(1) provides that, if certain requirements are met, a corporation may distribute stock and securities of a controlled corporation to its shareholders and security holders without recognition of gain or loss or income to the recipient shareholders or security holders. Among those requirements, both the distributing corporation and the controlled corporation must be engaged in an active trade or business (ATB) immediately after the distribution. Each trade or business must have been actively conducted throughout the five-year period ending on the date of the distribution. § 1.355-3(b)(2)(ii) describes a “trade or business” as “a specific group of activities [that] are being carried on by the corporation for the purpose of earning income or profit, and the activities included in such group include every operation that forms a part of, or a step in, the process of earning income or profit.” In particular, “[s]uch group of activities ordinarily must include the collection of income and the payment of expenses.
In Rev. Rul. 57-464, the Service considered the § 355 qualification of a corporation’s separation of a manufacturing business from a group of real estate assets consisting of an old factory building used for storage and four other buildings: a duplex apartment building rented to employees of the corporation, a small office building rented to a single tenant, and two houses, one of which was occupied by a sister-in-law of the president of the corporation. The use of the old factory building for storage “was not in itself the active operation of a business as defined in the regulations.” The rental activities “produced only a nominal rental” and “negligible” net income, and the properties “were acquired either as an investment or as a convenience to employees of the manufacturing business.” The Service held that the separation did not satisfy the ATB requirement.
The Treasury Department and the Service are conducting a study to determine, for purposes of § 355, “whether a business can qualify as an ATB if entrepreneurial activities, as opposed to investment or other non-business activities, take place with the purpose of earning income in the future, but no income has yet been collected.” The ATB analysis underlying the holdings in Rev. Rul. 57-464 and Rev. Rul. 57-492 focuses, in significant part, on the lack of income generated by the activities under consideration. Consequently, these rulings could be interpreted as requiring income generation for a business to qualify as an ATB.
Accordingly, Rev. Rul. 57-464 and Rev. Rul. 57-492 are suspended pending completion of the study.
As part of its ongoing security review, the Internal Revenue Service announced starting May 13 only individuals with tax identification numbers may request an Employer Identification Number (EIN) as the “responsible party” on the application. An EIN is a nine-digit tax identification number assigned to sole proprietors, corporations, partnerships, estates, trusts, employee retirement plans and other entities for tax filing and reporting purposes.
The IRS announced that General Motors, LLC has sold more than 200,000 vehicles eligible for the plug-in electric drive motor vehicle credit during the fourth quarter of 2018. This triggers a phase out of the tax credit available for purchasers of new General Motors plug-in electric vehicles beginning Apr. 1, 2019.
Qualifying vehicles by the manufacturer are eligible for a $7,500 credit if acquired before April 1, 2019. Beginning Apr. 1, 2019, the credit will be $3,750 for General Motors’ eligible vehicles. On October 1, 2019, the credit will be reduced to $1,875 for the next two quarters. After March 31, 2020, no credit will be available.
The plug-in electric drive motor vehicle credit was enacted in the Energy Improvement and Extension Act of 2008 and subsequently modified in later law. It provides a credit for eligible passenger vehicles and light trucks. By law, five quarters after reaching the sales threshold, the credit ends for the manufacturer. General Motors vehicles are eligible for some portion of a credit until Apr. 1, 2020.
Notice 2019-22 details the phase-out.
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References: § 6722
 § 704
 § 6227
 § 401
 § 355

§ 355
 § 1
 § 355
 § 355