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partners whose names and contact
information can be found at the end of
the Alert.
The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (the "Tax Act"), which was signed into law by President Trump on December
22, 2017, contains the most sweeping federal tax law changes since 1986. Most provisions of the Tax
Act take effect for taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2018. This Client Alert is not intended
to be a comprehensive review of this massive legislation. The Alert focuses on certain provisions of
the Tax Act that may have the most significant impact on asset management firms, their owners, their
investment vehicles, and the investors in such funds. Certain changes made by the Tax Act are
permanent but many others are scheduled to expire after 2025 unless extended by further
Congressional legislation.
|. Carried Interest Survives in Modified Form
The Tax Act contains changes to the treatment of "carried interests", but such changes are not as
negative as the prior legislative changes that had been proposed but never adopted. The granting of a
"future profits only" interest in a partnership in connection with the performances of services to the
partnership continues to be eligible for tax-free treatment under the new law. For certain owners of
"Applicable Partnership Interests" (of the sort that would generally be issued by an investment
partnership to the general partner), the Act applies a three-year holding period requirement for capital
gains derived by the partnership (or from the disposition of the profits interest) to be eligible for the
long-term capital gains tax rate (instead of the generally applicable one-year holding threshold).
The change in carried interest taxation clearly impacts managers of hedge funds more than managers
of private equity funds or real estate funds, which typically have a longer than three-year holding period
for investments in their portfolio companies or real estate assets. The new tax treatment applies to
income realized in tax years beginning on or after January 1, 2018 and existing carried interests are not
grandfathered. Thus, it appears that any unrealized capital gains which have already been allocated to
a general partner on the books of the partnership would be subject to the new tax treatment at the time
the partnership realizes such gains in 2018 or subsequent years.
Note, however, that the Tax Act does not change the current federal income tax treatment of carried
interest allocations of "qualified dividends" to individuals, which are also taxed at long-term capital gains
rates. The capital gains from the carried interest that fail to satisfy the new three-year holding period
requirement are treated as "short-term capital gains" which are taxable at ordinary income rates.
The "Applicable Partnership Interest" held by the general partner or an affiliate should not include any
portion of the partnership interest that is attributable to capital contributed to the partnership by the
general partner. The exact manner on how such exception will apply will need to be addressed in future
IRS notices or regulations to be issued. Limited partners holding capital interests in private investment
funds are also not affected and therefore retain the one-year holding period requirement for long-term
capital gain treatment.
Note also that the term "Applicable Partnership Interest" does not include an interest held directly or
indirectly by a corporation and it currently appears that such exception includes holdings by both C
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Document Details
| Filename | HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_026779.jpg |
| File Size | 0.0 KB |
| OCR Confidence | 85.0% |
| Has Readable Text | Yes |
| Text Length | 3,539 characters |
| Indexed | 2026-02-04T16:59:52.641036 |