Title: Limitations on Losses At Risk Rules -
1Limitations on LossesAt Risk Rules -
465Passive Activity Losses - 469
2Our Objectives
- Understand tax shelters and rational for
- at-risk rules
- passive loss rules
- Achieve thorough understanding of the intricacies
of passive activity rules
3Tax Shelters
- Activity providing deductions/credits that
reduces tax liability from other sources of
income - Prior to 1986 - unreasonably influenced
financial planning - 1983 study
- 21 of returns w/ income gt 250,000
- paid taxes of less than 10 of income
4Tax Shelters
- Extensive shelter activity contributes to
public concerns that the tax system is unfair and
to the belief that tax is paid only by the naïve
and unsophisticated - Senate Finance Committee
5An Example
- J , a corporate executive, had income of
275,000 during 1983. He purchased a shopping
center in Jan. 1983 for 500,000, paying 25,000
down financed the balance over 25 years.
Rental income averaged 3,500 a month, while
payment on the 475,000 note was 6,000/month.
Maintenance, taxes and repairs averaged
1,500/month. - It appears that J is losing 4,000/month
(3,500 -6,000 - 1,500) during the first year
or 48,000/year. But considering his tax bracket
(50) and depreciation (12 for 1983) his net
cash flow is a positive 5,000.
6Net Cash Flow
- Net Cash Flow Before Tax Benefit
48,000 - Depreciation (12 x 500,000) -
60,000 - Principal Payment Adjustment
2,000 - Net Deductible Loss
106,000 - Times Marginal Tax Rate
x50 - Tax Benefit
53,000 - Negative Cash Flow before taxes
48,000 - Positive Net Cash Flow
5,000 -
- 2,000 of the note payments were applied to
principal (not deductible), all other monthly
expenses were deductible
7Form of Tax Shelters
- Formed as limited partnerships
- Flow-thru entity
- Popular tax shelters
- Equipment leasing
- Real estate
- Cattle breeding and feeding
- Farming
- Oil and gas
- Movie productions
8 - Existing At Risk Rules
-
- 1986 Acts Passive Activity Rules
-
- Death of the Tax Shelters
9At Risk Rules -- 469
- 1976 - 1st attempt to curb tax shelters
- Disallow losses in excess of amount at risk
(amount that could be lost) - Apply to individuals and closely held
corporations - Not at risk for
- Nonrecourse loans (secured only by the purchased
property vs. where borrower is personally liable) - Stop loss arrangements
- No loss guarantees
- Loans which lender has an interest (as in seller
financing)
10At Risk Amount
- Cash Invested
- Adjd basis of other property invested
- Recourse loans (personally liable)
- Loans with pledged collateral (up to FMV of
collateral) - Income
- - Losses
- - Withdrawals
- Amount at risk
11Disallowed losses
- Carryover until
- At risk or
- Dispose of the activity
12Real Estate Exception
- With qualified nonrecourse financing
- Commercial lender or govt. lender
- Qualified person
- Non-convertible debt
- (no seller or promoter lenders)
13Real Estate Exception
- At risk for qualified nonrecourse loans on real
property - A qualified loan
- Acquired from a person actively and regularly
engaged in the business of lending money or - Any federal, state, or local government
- Exception to the R.E. Exception
- Loans from related parties or
- Loans from a person who receives a fee due to
taxpayers investment in the property
14Recaptured Losses
- If at risk amount goes below zero
- Previous deducted losses are recaptured (create
gains) - The amount of at risk (below zero) is included in
income - Generally occurs when loan status changes from
recourse to nonrecourse
15Exercise
- Smith put up 10,000 cash, pledged 10,000 for
security of a partnership loan, and gave
equipment with an adjusted basis of 5,000 and
FMV of 8,000 for her interest in a limited
partnership. What is her amount at risk?
16Answer
- Her at risk amount is 25,000
17Exercise
- Now, what if Smith was allocated a 40,000
loss from the partnership? - How much can she use to offset income from
her other passive activities?
18Answer
- Only 25,000 (the amount at risk) of the
40,000 loss can be used to offset income from
other passive activities. - Since she is not at risk for the
remaining 15,000, it is carried over into a
future year until she becomes at risk or the
activity is disposed of.
19Exercise
- Assume Smith gave 10,000 cash and signed
a nonrecourse note for property that the limited
partnership was acquiring. - How much would she be at risk?
20Answer
- Smith would only be at risk for her 10,000
investment, and so only 10,000 of the 40,000
loss could be used to offset income from other
passive activities. The remaining 30,000 is
carried over until she becomes at risk.
21Passive Activity Loss Limits
223 Category Classification
Passive
Portfolio
Active
- Wages
- Salary
- Bonuses
- Active T/B
- Income from
- intangible
- property
- from personal
- effort
- Interest
- Dividends
- Annuities
- Royalties
- non-
- business
- G/L from
- portfolio
- property
- Activity which
- does not
- materially
- participate
- All rental
- activities
- (subject to
- exceptions)
23General Impact
- Passive deductions only against passive income
- Excess Carried forward against passive income
- Suspended losses - used when entire activity
disposed of
24Exercise
- Kyle earned 75,000 from wages. He also
received 5,000 in dividends, and interest from
various portfolio investments, and his share of a
passive loss from a partnership interest was
30,000. How much of the 30,000 loss can he
deduct this year? - (Assuming it is not subject to the at
risk rules and he has enough basis in the
partnership)
25Solution
- The passive loss cant be deducted this year
- Suspended and carried forward to future years to
offset PIGs - No future passive income
- Then offset the loss against other types of
income - When he eventually disposes of the passive
activity
26Impact of Suspended Losses
- Upon fully taxable disposition
- Loss realized from the activity recognized
- Can be offset against any income
- Fully taxable
- Sale of property to unrelated 3rd party
- Gain on sale passive
- 1st offset by suspended losses from that activity
27Exercise
- Red sells a building with an adjusted basis of
1,000,000 for 1,800,000. He has a suspended
loss of 600,000 from the building. What results?
Sales Price 1,800,000 -
Adj. Basis - 1,000,000
Gain 800,000 - Suspended
losses -600,0000 Taxable gain
(passive) 200,000
28Loss Situations
- If the current and suspended losses of the
passive activity gt gain realized or if the sale
results in a loss, the amount of - Any loss from the activity in excess of passive
income - Is treated as non-passive loss
29Exercise
- D sells a building with adj. basis of
1,000,000 for 1,500,000. He also has current
and suspended losses of 600,000 associated with
the building and has no other passive activities.
Sales Price 1,500,000 - Adj. Basis
1,000,000 Gain
500,000 - Suspended loss 600,000 Deductible
loss 100,000
The 100,000 deductible loss is offset
against Ds active and portfolio income
30Carryovers of Suspended Losses
- Suspended losses must be allocated among
taxpayers passive activities - Suspended losses are carried over indefinitely
- Offset in future against any PAL from related
activity 469(d)(2)
Loss from Activity Sum of losses for
year from all activities having losses
Disallowed Loss
X
31Exercise
Activity X
(300,000) Activity Y
(200,000) Activity Z
250,000
Net Passive Loss
(250,000)
How are these losses allocated to each activity?
Allocated to
.
Activity
X (250,000 x 300,000/500,000)
150,000 Activity Y (250,000 x 200,000/500,000
) 100,000 Total suspended losses
(c/o) (250,000)
32Exercise
Assume the same fact as before except this is the
next year and Activity X produces 100,000
of income. How is Activity Xs suspended loss of
150,000 from the previous year used?
100,000 of income is offset against the income
from the activity. If Activity X is sold early
next year, then the remaining 50,000 suspended
loss is used in determining the taxable gain or
loss.
33Passive Credits - 469(d)(2)
- Use only against regular tax from passive income
- Passive credits may not be used if
- Have a net loss from passive activities for the
year - AMT applies that year
34Example
- T owes 500,000 of tax, disregarding net
passive income, and 800,000 of tax, considering
both net passive and other taxable income
(disregarding credits in both cases). The amount
of tax attributable to passive income is - Tax due (before cr.s) including net passive
income 800,000 - Less Tax due (before cr.s) w/o including net
income - 500,000 - Tax attributable to passive income
300,000 - T may claim a maximum of 300,000 of
passive activity credits the excess credits are
carried over
35Carry over of Passive Credits
- Carried over indefinitely
- But lost forever when activity is disposed of in
a taxable loss transaction - Must have sufficient tax on passive income upon
disposition to absorb credits
36Exercise
- X sells a passive activity for a gain of
100,000. The activity had suspended losses of
400,000 and suspended credits of 150,000. What
happens? - 100,000 gain is offset by 100,000 of suspended
losses - the remaining 300,000 of suspended
losses are deductible against active and
portfolio income. - The suspended credits -- lost forever -- the
sale did not generate any tax. True even if X
has positive taxable income or is subject to AMT
37Exercise
- What if X had realized a 1,000,000 gain on
the sale of the passive activity? What happens
to the suspended credits? - They are used to the extent of regular tax
attributable to the net passive income - Gain on sale
1,000,000 - Less Suspended losses (400,000)
- Taxable gain
600,000 - If the tax from the gain of 600,00 is
150,000 or more, the entire 150,000 of
suspended credits may be used. If tax from the
gain is less than 150,000, the excess of
suspended credit of the tax from the gain is lost
forever.
38Taxpayers Subject to PAL Rules469(a)
- Individuals
- Estates
- Trusts
- Personal Service Corporations
- Closely Held C Corporations
- Applied at Owner Level of S Corporations and
Partnerships
39Personal Service Corporation
- Principal activity - personal services,
- Health, law, engineering architecture,
accounting, actuarial science, performing arts
and consulting - Personal services are substantially performed by
employee owners - More than 10 of stock value held by
employee-owner - Employee-owner --
- Employee and shareholder on any day of the year
- Do no have to occur on same day
40Closely Held C Corporation
- More than 50 of outstanding stock value owned by
or for not more than 5 or fewer individuals - May offset passive losses against active income
- Not against portfolio income
- Prevents using portfolio income to offset PAL in
closely held corporations
41Exercise
- R Corporation, (a manufacturing company
owned solely by Jon Jay) has 250,000 of passive
losses, 200,000 of active income, and 50,000 of
interest income. What results? - R may offset 200,000 of the 250,000
passive loss against the 200,000 active income.
It may not offset the remainder against the
50,000 of interest (portfolio) income. 50,000
of the PAL is suspended.
42Definition of Passive Activities
- Trade or business or
- Income producing property
- Does not materially participate
- All rental activities (exceptions)
43Important Issues
- What constitutes an activity?
- What is meant by material participation?
- When is an activity a rental activity?
44Activity Identification
- 1st Step
- What is a separate activity?
- Necessary to determine whether income or loss is
passive or active
45Example
- T owns a business with two separate divisions
- Division 1 has net income of 50,000
- Division 2 has a net loss of 30,000.
- T participates in 1 for 750 hours and in 2
for 50 hours - If he is allowed to treatment them as a single
activity, he can offset the 30,000 loss against
the 50,000 income - If not, he will not be considered to materially
participate in Division 2 and it will be a PAL
and can not be offset against active income
46Example
- T has a business with 2 divisions
- Has a loss of 100,000 in division 1
- Has a loss of 50,000 in division 2
- T sells division 1 at end of year
- If they are separate activities - he can deduct
the 100,000 loss - If they are not separate activities - he still
has a suspended loss on division 1 along with
the loss on division 2
47Reg. 1.469-4
- Activity appropriate economic unit for
measuring gain or loss - Using all relevant facts circumstances
- May use any reasonable method in applying facts
and circumstances
48Factors Used - Reg. 1.469-4
- Similarities and differences in types of business
- Extent of common control
- Extent of common ownership
- Geographical location
- Interdependencies
49Regulation Example Reg. 1.469-4(f)
- T owns a mens clothing store and a video game
parlor in Chicago. He also owns a mens clothing
store in and a video game parlor in Milwaukee. - All 4 may be grouped into a single activity
- Clothing stores may be one activity and video
store may be another activity - Chicago stores may be grouped as one activity and
the Milwaukee stores another - Each may be a separate activity
50Regulation Example Reg. 1.469-4(f)
- T is a partner in a business that sells snack
items to drugstores. He also is a partner in a
partnership that owns and operates a warehouse.
Both partnerships, are under common control and
are located in the same industrial park. The
predominate part of the warehouse business is
warehousing items for the snack business, and it
is the only warehousing business in which T is
involved. - T should treat the snack business and the
warehousing business as a single activity
51Regrouping Activities
- Once activities have been grouped
- Cannot be regrouped unless original grouping was
- clearly inappropriate or
- a material change in facts circumstances
- Must disclose any regrouping to IRS
- IRS has right to regroup if
- Groups fail to reflect appropriate economic units
- One of the primary purposes of grouping is to
avoid PAL limits
52Regulation Example Reg. 1.469-4(f)
- A, B, C, D, and E are physicians who operate
their own separate practices. Each owns
interests in PAL activities, so they devise a
plan to set up a PIG. They form PIG partnership
to acquire and operate X-ray equipment, and each
receives a limited partnership interest. They
select an unrelated 3rd party to operate the
X-ray business and none of the limited partners
participates in the activity. The services
provided by the partnership are provided to the
doctors who own the limited partnership interests
and fees are set to assure a profit for PIG.
Each doctor treats his medical practice and his
interest in the partnership as separate
activities and offsets losses from passive
investments against the passive income from the
partnership. IRS will regroup this into a single
activity for each doctor.
53Rental Activity Grouping
- May be grouped with a T/B activity only if one
activity is insubstantial in relation to the
other - May generally not treat activity involving rental
of real property and activity involving rental of
personal property as a single activity
54Exercise
- CPA firm owns a building in Tulsa, where they
conduct their CPA practice. They also rent space
on the street level of the building to several
retail business. 95 of their revenue is
generated by the CPA practice and 5 from the
rental activity. May they combine the two
activities if the rental generates a loss? - It is probably considered insubstantial
and could be grouped with the accounting practice.
55Material Participation
- Participate on a regular, continuous, and
substantial basis???? - Regulations -- 7 tests
- Tests based on
- current participation
- prior participation
- facts and circumstances
56Current Participation Tests
- More than 500 hours?
- More than 100 hours and not less than any other
individual? - Participation constitute substantially all of the
participation in the activity? - A significant participation activity
(participation gt 100 hours) and total
participation in all significant participation
activities gt 500 hours?
57Prior Participation Tests
- Materially participate in the activity for any 5
years (consecutive or not) during the last 10
years immediately preceding the current year - A personal service activity and materially
participated in any of the 3 preceding years
(consecutive or not)
58Facts and Circumstances
- Based on all the facts and circumstances, did
taxpayer materially participate in activity on a
regular, continuous, and substantial basis during
the year?
59PARTICIPATION
- Work by an individual in an activity that he/she
owns - Does not include work if
- type not customarily done by owners
- principal purpose is to avoid PAL rules
- done in capacity of investor
- Participation by spouse counts as owners
participation
60Participation?
- Tim and Jill divorced in late November of this of
this year. - Tim then married Sue on December 30.
- Sue was Tims secretary and all three worked on
Tims Xmas tree farm business, which had a
rather large loss this year. - All three have worked 170 hours each this year on
the tree farm. - This will only qualify as an active activity if
Tim can use both Jills and Sues work time to
get them up to the 500 hours needed. - Tim and Sue will file a joint return this year.
What do you think?
61Limited Partners
- Generally not considered to materially
participate - Unless he/she qualifies
- under
- Test 1 --- (500 hrs)
- Test 5 --- (5 of the last 10 years)
- Test 6 --- (Personal service any 3 years)
62Rental Activities
- General rule -- rental activities passive
- Any activity - payments are received principally
for use of tangible (real or personal) property
( 469(j)(8) - Reg. 1.469-1T(e)(3)(vi) ----
- 6 Exceptions (not automatically passive)
63Exercise
- T owns an office building that is a rental
activity for T and he spends 2000 hours this year
in its operation. The building is a rental
activity. - Is it automatically subject to passive activity
rules, even if he works at this on a full time
basis? - Yes, as long as it is not subject to one of the
exceptions of Reg. 469-1T(e)(3)(ii)
646 Rental Activity Exceptions
- Average period of customer use for the property -
7 days or less - Average period of customer use is 30 days or less
owner of property provides significant personal
services - Owner provides extraordinary personal services
- Rental is treated as incidental to a nonrental
activity - Property is customarily available during business
hours for nonexclusive use by customers - Property is provided for use in an activity
conducted by a partnership, S corp, or joint
venture which taxpayer owns an interest
65 2 -- Significant Personal Services
- Personal services - only services by individuals
- Significant - Facts Circumstances
- Frequency of services
- Type amount of labor required
- Value of services relative to rental charges
- Facts Circumstances
66Exercise
- T owns photocopying equipment and leases it to
customers. The average period of customer use is
25 days. T has skilled technicians employed to
maintain the equipment for no additional charge.
Service calls occur 3 time per week on average
and require substantial labor. The value of
maintenance services exceed 50 of rental fees
charged for use of the equipment. - Do you think that this will be considered
significant personal services by the IRS?
67Solution
- According to Reg. 1.469-(e)(3)(viii),
Example 1 and 2, - This would be considered significant
but not extraordinary services.
68 3 -- Extraordinary Personal Services
- Customers use of property is merely incidental
to their receipt of services - Examples
- Patients use of hospital bed incidental to his
receipt of medical services - Use of a schools dormitory incidental to the
academic services received
69 4 -- Incidental to a Nonrental Activity
- Property held primarily for investment
- Principal purpose of holding property is the
expectation of a gain from appreciation and gross
rent income lt2 of the lesser of - The unadjusted basis or
- FMV of the property
- Property used in a trade or business
- Must have been used in business during the year
or at least 2 of the 5 preceding years - 2 test also applies
70Exercise
- T invest in vacant land for purpose of
realizing a profit on its appreciation. He
leases the land during the period it is held.
The lands adjusted basis is 250,000 and the FMV
is 260,000. The lease payments are 4,000 per
year. Would this be considered a rental
activity? - No, because the gross rent income is less
than 2 of 250,000.
71 4 -- Incidental to a Nonrental Activity
- Property held for sale to customers
- Lodging rented for convenience of employer
- Partner who rents property to a partnership that
is used in partnerships trade or business
72At-Risk and Passive Activity Limits
- Basis limits first
- At-risk rules second
- Passive loss rules applied after at-risk rules
- Note, basis is reduced even if deductions are not
currently usable because of PAL rules
73Summary of Loss Limit Hurdles
Basis
465
469
At Risk
PAL
74Exercise
- Ts adjusted basis and at-risk amount in a
passive activity is 100,000 at the beginning of
1997. Her loss from the activity in 1997 is
40,000. Jack has no passive income in 1997.
What is the tax result? - T cannot deduct the 40,000 loss (no PIG) Her
adjusted basis and at-risk about is 60,000 and
she has suspended PAL of 40,000
75Transaction Adj. Basis At-risk Amt Deduct
Suspended
100,000
100,000 0 0 Year
1997 (40,000 PAL) - 40,000 -40,000
0 (40,000)PAL
60,000 60,000
76Exercise - Continued
- Assume T has a loss of 90,000 in 1998. T
has no passive income. What tax result? - Now , the 90,000 exceeds the at-risk amount
amount (60,000) by 30,000. The 30,000 loss is
disallowed by the at-risk rules. T has no
passive income, so the remaining 60,000 is
suspender under PAL rules. So at year end she
has a 30,000 loss suspended under the at-risk
rules, 100,000 of suspended passive losses, and
an adjusted basis and at risk amount of 0
77Transaction Adj. Basis At-risk Amt Deduct
Suspended
100,000
100,000 0 0 Year
1997 (40,000 PAL) - 40,000 -40,000
0 (40,000)PAL
60,000 60,000
Year 1998 (90,000 PAL) -60,000
-60,000 0 (100,000) PAL
0 0
0 (30,000) AR
78Exercise - Continued
- Assume T realized 10,000 of passive
income in 1999. What tax results? - The 10,000 income increases her at-risk amount
to 10,000 so 10,000 (of the unused 30,000
loss) is reclassified as passive loss and the
10,000 income is offset by 10,000 of suspended
passive losses - 20,000 (30,000 - 10,000) of unused losses
under at-risk rules - 100,000 of (reclassified) suspended passive
losses (100,000 10,000 of reclassified
unused at-risk losses less 10,000 of passive
losses offset) - 0 at-risk amount and 0 adjusted basis
79Transaction Adj. Basis At-risk Amt Deduct
Suspended
100,000
100,000 0 0 Year
1997 (40,000 PAL) - 40,000 -40,000
0 (40,000)PAL
60,000 60,000
Year 1998 (90,000 PAL) -60,000
-60,000 0 (100,000) PAL
0 0
0 (30,000) AR
Year 1999 10,000 PIG 10,000
10,000 10,000 (100,000) PAL
-10,000 -10,000
(20,000) AR
0 0
80Exercise - Continued
- In 2000, T has no gain or loss. She
contributed 50,000 to the activity. What tax
result? - The 50,000 increases the at-risk amount, so the
20,000 of losses suspended under the at-risk
rules is reclassified as passive. - T gets no passive loss deduction in 2,000
- At year end,
- she has no suspended losses under the at-risk
rules, - 120,000 of suspended passive losses (100K
20K reclassified at-risk losses),and - 30,000 Adjusted basis and at-risk amount
(50,000 - 20,000 of reclassified losses)
81Year 2000 Contributed 50,000
50,000 0 (120,000)PAL 50,000
- 20,000 - 20,000
0 AR
30,000 30,000
82Real Estate Exceptions (2)
- Material
- Participation
- in Real Property
- Trade or
- Business
Rental Real Estate Activities
83Material Participation in Real Property Trade or
Business
- Not passive if
- gt 50 trade or business personal services in real
estate - gt 750 hours of services in real estate business
84Exercise
- T performed personal service activities
- 800 hrs as a CPA
- 500 hrs in real estate development business
- 400 hrs in real estate rental activities
- Are Ts losses subject to PAL rules?
No, more than 50 of his personal services were
devoted to real estate businesses and
his material participation in those real
estate exceeded 750 hours
85Rental Real Estate Activities
- Deduct up to 25,000 of losses
- Reduce by 50 of AGI above 100,000
- Must actively participate in real estate rental
activity - participates in bon fide management decisions
- Own 10 or more of the activity
86The 25,000 Deduction
- 1st net all active participation rental losses
and gains - Deduct up to 25,000
- Both deductions and credits (in deduction
equivalents) - Example
- 5,000 credits and 28 tax bracket deduction
equivalent of 17,875 (5,000/.28) - Any excess is treated as a passive loss
87Exercise
- T has 85,000 of AGI before any rental real
estate activities. He has 90,000 of losses from
Rental Real Estate Activity 1 and 30,000 of
income from Rental Real Estate Activity 2. He
also has passive income from another activity of
38,000. What is the tax result?
The net rental loss of 60,000 is offset against
the 38,000 of passive income. This leaves
22,000 to deduct against other income.
88Exercise
- T is an active participant in a real estate
rental activity that has 8,000 of income,
26,000 deductions, and 1,500 of credits. T is
in a 28 tax bracket. What tax results?
1st - offset PAL against income (8,000 -
26,000 Net passive loss of 18,000
--- Note that he has 7,000 left 2nd - Compute
credit equivalent of the 7,000 (7,000
x .28 1960) So -- he can use all of the 1,500
credit
89Disposition of Passive Interest
- General Rule - Use all suspended losses and
credits upon a taxable disposition - Exceptions and special rules for nontaxable and
certain other dispositions
90Disposition at Death
- Deduct suspended losses to the extent they exceed
the step up in basis (if any) - Suspended losses are lost to the extent of basis
increase - Report allowed losses on final return
91Exercise
- T dies with passive property having an adjusted
basis of 400,000, suspended losses of 100,000
and a FMV at death of 750,000. How much of the
100,000 suspended loss is deductible?
None -- The 100,000 suspended loss is lost
because it does not exceed the step-up in basis
(350,000)
92Exercise
- T dies with passive activity property having an
adjusted basis of 400,000, suspended losses of
100,000, and a fair market value of 470,000.
How much can be deducted?
Since the step-up is only 70,000 (470,000 -
400,000) --- 70,000 of loss is lost. 30,000
of deduction would be allowed the decedent on
his final return.
93Installment Sale of a Passive Activity
- Triggers recognition of suspended losses
- Losses allowed in each year gain is recognized
- In ratio of recognized gain to total realized gain
94Exercise -- Installment Sale
- T sold her entire interest in a passive
activity for 10,000. Her adjusted basis in the
property was 6,000. She received a down payment
of 2,000 and she had a suspended loss of 2,500.
What tax results?
- Gross profit ratio 40 (4,000/10,000)
- Recognized gain of 800 (40 x 2,000)
- Deduct 500 of suspended loss in first year
- (800/4,000 x 2,500)
95Passive Activity Changes to Activity
- Suspended losses allowed to extent of income from
now active business - Remaining suspended loss continues to be treated
as passive - Exception to the rule
- The working interest exception for oil and gas
wells
96Nontaxable Exchange of a Passive Activity
- Suspended loss remains with the taxpayer
- Generally, deductible when the acquired property
is sold - If activity of old and new property are the same
-- suspended losses can be used