Federal
-
January 16, 2025
IRS Corrects Simplified Foreign Currency Rules
The Internal Revenue Service issued corrections Thursday to finalized regulations that aim to simplify aspects of how corporations determine taxable income or loss with respect to certain affiliates that conduct business in a foreign currency.
-
January 16, 2025
Treasury Updates Bonus Energy Tax Credit Safe Harbors
The U.S. Treasury Department provided updates Thursday to safe harbors that clean energy project developers can use to qualify for bonus tax credits for domestically sourcing steel and aluminum parts in response to new trade restrictions on solar products from China by President Joe Biden's administration.
-
January 15, 2025
Tax Court Rejects Brothers' Claims Of Gifted Jewelry
The U.S. Tax Court on Wednesday upheld $2.5 million in taxes, plus fraud penalties, against brothers who claimed an unreported bank account held nontaxable proceeds from the sale of their mother's gift of 1,600 pieces of jewelry from Israel and Iran.
-
January 15, 2025
Dems, GOP Willing To Work On Certain Tax Issues, Aides Say
Democrats are willing to work with Republicans on bipartisan issues, such as providing certain treaty-like benefits to Taiwanese residents, retirement issues, and tax administration issues, Democratic and GOP aides for the House Ways and Means and Senate Finance committees said Wednesday.
-
January 15, 2025
More IRS Partnership 'Soft Letters' Coming, Official Says
The Internal Revenue Service will keep using an educational compliance tool called soft letters to prod taxpayers to comply with a centralized partnership audit regime that has recently turned its focus to larger and more complicated entities, an agency official said Wednesday.
-
January 15, 2025
Former IRS Litigator Joins Jones Day In Boston
Jones Day announced it added an experienced IRS litigator to its Boston office who will work as of counsel in the firm's tax practice.
-
January 15, 2025
Legislators Say Transparency Act Defies First Amendment
The Corporate Transparency Act is an unnecessary intrusion into the First Amendment rights of Americans, U.S. Sen. Thom Tillis, R-N.C., and 13 House members told the Supreme Court in seeking to maintain an injunction issued in December.
-
January 15, 2025
IRS Establishes Clean Vehicle Credit Valuation Safe Harbors
The Internal Revenue Service provided two safe harbors Wednesday for calculating the value of the commercial clean vehicle tax credit using either modeled incremental costs or retail-price equivalents.
-
January 15, 2025
House Clears US-Taiwan Double Tax Relief Bill
The U.S. House of Representatives overwhelmingly approved legislation Wednesday that would provide Taiwanese businesses in the United States with tax-treaty-like benefits and authorize the White House to negotiate a tax agreement with Taiwan.
-
January 15, 2025
9th Circ. Won't Review Nixed Deductions For Disbarred Atty
The Ninth Circuit on Wednesday rejected a disbarred California attorney's requests to review its December decision to uphold a U.S. Tax Court ruling denying his bid to take business deductions for the cost of challenging his disbarment and a court's declaration that he is a "vexatious litigant."
-
January 15, 2025
IRS Pilots Aim To Broaden Fast-Track Settlement Program
The Internal Revenue Service announced Wednesday that it would test changes to its settlement procedures through pilot programs that aim to allow more businesses and self-employed people to keep their disputes with the agency out of court.
-
January 15, 2025
IRS Lists Facility Types Eligible For Clean Energy Credits
The Internal Revenue Service on Wednesday released the first annual table showing the types of facilities that have been deemed to not produce greenhouse gas emissions and are therefore eligible for the clean energy production and investment tax credits.
-
January 15, 2025
IRS Mulling Widened Early Application Of Offshore Profit Regs
The Internal Revenue Service is considering expanding the early application option for proposed regulations designed to help U.S. multinational corporations properly account for previously taxed earnings and profits, an agency official said Wednesday.
-
January 15, 2025
Booz Allen Must Pay For Harm Of Tax Info Leaks, Court Told
A proposed class action in Maryland federal court blames IRS contractor Booz Allen Hamilton over the thousands of tax returns that were stolen by an employee who took financial information about President-elect Donald Trump and others while on the job and leaked it to the media.
-
January 15, 2025
Applicable Federal Rates To Continue Rising In Feb.
Applicable federal rates for income tax purposes will increase across the board for the third straight month in February, the Internal Revenue Service said Wednesday.
-
January 15, 2025
Fried Frank Guides $177M Financing For NYC Office Building
GFP Real Estate, a commercial real estate owner and manager, has borrowed more than $177 million from merchant bank BDT & MSD to acquire and partially convert a Manhattan office building into residential units, in a financing deal advised by Fried Frank Harris Shriver & Jacobson LLP, according to official property records.
-
January 15, 2025
IRS Issues Corp. Bond Monthly Yield Curve For Jan.
The Internal Revenue Service on Wednesday published the corporate bond monthly yield curve for January for use in calculations for defined benefit plans, as well as corresponding segment rates and other related provisions.
-
January 14, 2025
KPMG, Biz Groups, NY Tax Bar Urge Reg Fixes To Corp. AMT
Energy company and life insurance groups have proposed industry-specific adjustments to the U.S. corporate alternative minimum tax regulations, while the New York State Bar Association and KPMG advocate for simpler accounting methods to assess compliance, according to comment letters to the U.S. Treasury Department.
-
January 14, 2025
House GOP Urges TCJA Permanency At First 2025 Tax Hearing
The 2017 tax law's expiring provisions, including the opportunity zone tax incentives, credit for advanced manufacturing and child tax credit expansion, must be made permanent as soon as possible, House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Jason Smith said Tuesday.
-
January 14, 2025
IRS Floats Counting Affiliate Pay In $1M Pay Deduction Cap
Compensation from affiliates of publicly traded companies would count toward the $1 million limit on tax deductions for performance-based pay of high-earning employees under rules proposed Tuesday by the U.S. Treasury Department and Internal Revenue Service.
-
January 14, 2025
Man Didn't Prove Travel, Vehicle Deductions, Tax Court Says
An Ohio man the IRS said incorrectly claimed nearly $14,000 in travel- and vehicle-related costs failed to substantiate them, the U.S. Tax Court said Tuesday, including failing to remember the names of trade shows he said he attended in the middle of the COVID-19 pandemic.
-
January 14, 2025
Easement Worth $1M, Not $18M, Gov't Tells 11th Circ.
The U.S. Tax Court was right to believe expert testimony that a claimed conservation easement donation of roughly $18 million was only worth $1 million, the government told the Eleventh Circuit, urging it to reject the donors' claims that the expert was unreliable.
-
January 14, 2025
IRS Appoints 18 Members To Advisory Council
The Internal Revenue Service appointed 18 new members to its advisory council to serve three-year terms starting this month, the agency said Tuesday.
-
January 14, 2025
IRS Releases Latest Surprise Healthcare Bill Calculation Rate
The Internal Revenue Service provided Tuesday a percentage increase for calculating certain out-of-network healthcare coverage for 2025 under legislation that barred surprise medical bills.
-
January 14, 2025
Trump Announces Plans To Create 'External Revenue Service'
President-elect Donald Trump said Tuesday that he planned to create an "External Revenue Service" that would collect tariffs and revenue from foreign countries.
Expert Analysis
-
States Should Loosen Law Firm Ownership Restrictions
Despite growing buzz, normalized nonlawyer ownership of law firms is a distant prospect, so the legal community should focus first on liberalizing state restrictions on attorney and firm purchases of practices, which would bolster succession planning and improve access to justice, says Michael Di Gennaro at The Law Practice Exchange.
-
After Chevron: Uniform Tax Law Interpretation Not Guaranteed
The loss of Chevron deference will significantly alter the relationship between the IRS, courts and Congress when it comes to tax law, potentially precipitating more transparent rulemaking, but also provoking greater uncertainty due to variability in judicial interpretation, say Michelle Levin and Carneil Wilson at Dentons.
-
Texas Ethics Opinion Flags Hazards Of Unauthorized Practice
The Texas Professional Ethics Committee's recently issued proposed opinion finding that in-house counsel providing legal services to the company's clients constitutes the unauthorized practice of law is a valuable clarification given that a UPL violation — a misdemeanor in most states — carries high stakes, say Hilary Gerzhoy and Julienne Pasichow at HWG.
-
How High Court Approached Time Limit On Reg Challenges
The U.S. Supreme Court's decision in Corner Post v. Federal Reserve Board effectively gives new entities their own personal statute of limitations to challenge rules and regulations, and Justice Brett Kavanaugh's concurrence may portend the court's view that those entities do not need to be directly regulated, say attorneys at Snell & Wilmer.
-
How To Clean Up Your Generative AI-Produced Legal Drafts
As law firms increasingly rely on generative artificial intelligence tools to produce legal text, attorneys should be on guard for the overuse of cohesive devices in initial drafts, and consider a few editing pointers to clean up AI’s repetitive and choppy outputs, says Ivy Grey at WordRake.
-
A Tale Of 2 Trump Cases: The Rule Of Law Is A Live Issue
The U.S. Supreme Court’s decision this week in Trump v. U.S., holding that former President Donald Trump has broad immunity from prosecution, undercuts the rule of law, while the former president’s New York hush money conviction vindicates it in eight key ways, says David Postel at Henein Hutchison.
-
Industry Self-Regulation Will Shine Post-Chevron
The U.S. Supreme Court's Loper decision will shape the contours of industry self-regulation in the years to come, providing opportunities for this often-misunderstood practice, says Eric Reicin at BBB National Programs.
-
3 Ways Agencies Will Keep Making Law After Chevron
The U.S. Supreme Court clearly thinks it has done something big in overturning the Chevron precedent that had given deference to agencies' statutory interpretations, but regulated parties have to consider how agencies retain significant power to shape the law and its meaning, say attorneys at K&L Gates.
-
Atty Well-Being Efforts Ignore Root Causes Of The Problem
The legal industry is engaged in a critical conversation about lawyers' mental health, but current attorney well-being programs primarily focus on helping lawyers cope with the stress of excessive workloads, instead of examining whether this work culture is even fundamentally compatible with lawyer well-being, says Jonathan Baum at Avenir Guild.
-
Tracking Implementation Of IRA Programs As Election Nears
As the Biden administration races to cement key regulations implementing the Inflation Reduction Act, a number of the law's programs and incentives are at risk of delay or repeal if Republicans retake control of Congress, the White House or both — so stakeholders should closely watch ongoing IRA implementation and guidance, say attorneys at Squire Patton.
-
Unpacking The Circuit Split Over A Federal Atty Fee Rule
Federal circuit courts that have addressed Rule 41(d) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure are split as to whether attorney fees are included as part of the costs of a previously dismissed action, so practitioners aiming to recover or avoid fees should tailor arguments to the appropriate court, says Joseph Myles and Lionel Lavenue at Finnegan.
-
Takeaways From Justices' Redemption Insurance Decision
The U.S. Supreme Court’s recent decision in Connelly v. U.S. examines how to determine the fair market value of shares in a closely held company for estate tax purposes, and clarifies how life insurance held by the company to enable redemption of a decedent’s shares affects that calculation, says Evelyn Haralampu at Burns & Levinson.
-
6 Tips For Maximizing After-Tax Returns In Private M&A Deals
With potential tax legislation likely to spur a surge in private business sales, sellers can make the most of after-tax proceeds with strategies that include price allocation and qualified investment options, say Isaac Grossman and Daniel Studin at Morrison Cohen.