XVI - Section 1256 Contracts

Title XVI of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (Act) amended Section 1256 of the Internal Revenue Code (Code) to provide greater certainty with respect to the tax treatment of swaps, caps, floors, and similar agreements.  Title XVI is a clarifying amendment that addresses the effect of Title VII on the Code.  Among other things, Title VII of the Act mandates the formation of exchanges for certain types of derivative instruments. In response to the proposed legislation, concerns were raised that this aspect of the Act would materially alter the U.S. federal income tax treatment of investments in these types of derivative instruments, specifically causing them to be subject to the mark-to-market requirement and special gain characterization rules of Section 1256 of the Code.

Code Section 1256 provides for “mark-to-market” treatment for “Section 1256 contracts.” In general, a taxpayer holding a Section 1256 contract is treated for tax purposes as having sold that contract for fair market value at the end of the taxpayer’s taxable year, recognizing any gain or loss in the contract. The gain or loss recognized is subject to a special rule:  40% of any gain or loss is treated as “short term” capital gain or loss (i.e., the type of gain or loss recognized on capital assets held by the taxpayer for less than one year), and 60% of any gain or loss is treated as “long term” capital gain or loss.

A “Section 1256 contract” generally includes a contract that is traded on or subject to a qualified board or exchange. By requiring certain types of derivatives to be traded on exchanges, Title VII of the Act effectively would have subjected these transactions to the mark-to-market requirement and the special 40/60 capital gain characterization rule of Code Section 1256. In order to prevent this unintended result, Title XVI of the Act changes the scope of the term “Section 1256 contract.” Section 1256 of the Code, as amended by Title XVI of the Act, excludes “any interest rate swap, currency swap, basis swap, interest rate cap, interest rate floor, commodity swap, equity swap, equity index swap, credit default swap, or similar agreement” from the definition of Section 1256 contract, and therefore excludes these instruments from the mark-to-market requirement and the special 40/60 gain characterization rule.

The effect of this change is greater certainty with respect to the tax treatment of the swaps, caps, floors, and similar agreements enumerated in the exception to the definition of Section 1256 contract. 

If you have questions regarding anything you have read on Title XVI, please contact any of the attorneys listed below or your regular Sutherland contact.

Robert S. Chase II  202.383.0194  robb.chase@sutherland.com