The following discussions contain specific instructions for brokers
and middlemen who hold or redeem a debt instrument for the owner.
In general, you must file a Form 1099 for the debt instrument if
the interest or OID to be included in the owner's income for 2000
totals $10 or more. You also must file a Form 1099 if you were
required to deduct and withhold tax, even if the interest or OID is
less than $10. See Backup Withholding, later.
If you must file a Form 1099, furnish a copy to the owner of the
debt instrument by January 31, 2001. By February 28, 2001, (April 2,
2001, if you file electronically), file all your Forms 1099 with the
IRS accompanied by Form 1096.
For more information, including penalties for failure to file (or
furnish) required information returns or statements, see the
Instructions for Form 1099, 1098, 5498, and W-2G.
Short-Term Obligations
Redeemed at Maturity
If you redeem a short-term discount obligation for the owner at
maturity, you must report the discount as interest on Form
1099-INT. (If you sell the obligation for the owner before
maturity, you must file Form 1099-B to reflect the gross
proceeds to the seller. Do not report the accrued discount
to the date of sale on either Form 1099-INT or Form
1099-OID.)
When you redeem the obligation, use the purchase price shown on the
owner's copy of the purchase confirmation receipt or similar record,
or the price shown in your transaction records, to determine the
discount to be reported on Form 1099-INT.
If the owner's purchase price cannot be determined,
report the discount as if the owner had purchased the obligation at
its original issue price. A special rule is used to determine the
original issue price for information reporting on U.S. Treasury bills
listed in Section III-A. Under this rule, you prepare
Form 1099-INT by using the noncompetitive (weighted average of
accepted auction bids) discount price for the longest-maturity
Treasury bill maturing on that date. This noncompetitive discount
price is the issue price (expressed as a percent of principal) shown
in Section III-A.
A similar rule applies to the short-term discount obligations
issued by the organizations listed in Section III-B
through Section III-G.
Information that supplements Section III-A is
available on the Internet at www.publicdebt.treas.gov.
Example 1.
There are 13-week, 26-week, and 52-week T-bills maturing on the
same date as the T-bill being redeemed. The price actually paid by the
owner cannot be established by owner or middleman records. You prepare
Form 1099-INT using the noncompetitive discount price (expressed
as a percent of principal) in Section III-A for a
52-week bill maturing on the same date as the T-bill redeemed. The
interest you report is the discount (per $1,000 of principal) shown
for that obligation.
Long-Term Debt Instruments
If you hold a long-term OID debt instrument as a nominee for the
true owner, you generally must file Form 1099-OID.
You can rely on Section I of the OID list to determine
the following for information reporting purposes.
- Whether an instrument has OID.
- The OID to be reported on the Form 1099-OID.
In general, you must report OID on publicly offered, long-term
debt instruments listed in Section I. You also may report
OID on other long-term debt instruments.
Form 1099-OID.
Form 1099-OID for 2000 must show the following information.
- Box 1. The OID for the actual dates the owner
held the instruments during 2000. To determine the OID to report, see
Figuring OID, next.
- Box 2. The qualified stated interest paid or
credited during the calendar year. Interest reported here is not
reported on Form 1099-INT. The qualified stated interest on
Treasury inflation-indexed securities may be reported in box 3 of Form
1099-INT instead.
- Box 3. Any interest or principal forfeited
because of an early withdrawal that the owner can deduct from gross
income. Do not reduce the amounts in boxes 1 and 2 by the
forfeiture.
- Box 4. Any backup withholding for this
instrument.
- Box 5. The CUSIP number, if any. If there is no
CUSIP number, give a description of the instrument, including the
abbreviation for the stock exchange, the abbreviation used by the
stock exchange for the issuer, the coupon rate, and the year of
maturity (e.g., NYSE XYZ 12.50 2001). If the issuer of the instrument
is other than the payer, show the name of the issuer in this
box.
- Box 6. The OID on a U.S. Treasury obligation for
the part of the year the owner held the instrument.
Figuring OID.
You can determine the OID on a long-term debt instrument by using
either of the following.
- Section I of the OID list.
- The Income Tax Regulations.
Using Section I.
If the owner held the debt instrument for the entire calendar year,
report the OID shown in Section I for the calendar year.
Because OID is listed for each $1,000 of stated redemption price at
maturity, you must adjust the listed amount to reflect the
instrument's actual stated redemption price at maturity. For example,
if the instrument's stated redemption price at maturity is $500,
report one-half the listed OID.
If the owner held the debt instrument for less than the entire
calendar year, figure the OID to report as follows.
- Look up the daily OID for the first 2000 accrual period
during which the owner held the instrument.
- Multiply the daily OID by the number of days in 2000 the
owner held the instrument during that accrual period.
- Repeat steps (1) and (2) for any remaining 2000 accrual
periods during which the owner held the instrument.
- Add the results in steps (2) and (3) to determine the
owner's OID per $1,000 of stated redemption price at maturity.
- If necessary, adjust the OID to reflect the instrument's
stated redemption price at maturity.
Report the result in box 1 of Form 1099-OID.
If you use Section I-C to figure the OID on an
inflation-indexed debt instrument, you must attach the following
statement to the Form 1099-OID you send to the payee.
"If you (the owner) purchased or sold an inflation-indexed debt
instrument during the calendar year (other than a purchase at original
issue), the OID reported to you may be incorrect. To determine the
correct OID, see Publication 1212."
Using the Income Tax Regulations.
Instead of using Section I to figure OID, you can use
the regulations under sections 1272 through 1275 of the Internal
Revenue Code. For example, under the regulations, you can use monthly
accrual periods in figuring OID for a debt instrument issued after
April 3, 1994, that provides for monthly payments. (If you use
Section I-B, the OID is figured using 6-month
accrual periods.)
For a general explanation of the rules for figuring OID under the
regulations, see Figuring OID on Long-Term Debt Instruments
under Information for Owners of OID Debt Instruments,
later.
Certificates of Deposit
If you hold a bank certificate of deposit (CD) as a nominee, you
must determine whether the CD has OID and the OID includible in the
income of the owner. You must file an information return showing the
reportable interest and OID, if any, on the CD. These rules apply
whether or not you sold the CD to the owner. Report OID on a CD in the
same way as OID on other debt instruments. See Short-Term
Obligations Redeemed at Maturity and Long-Term Debt
Instruments, earlier.
Bearer Bonds and Coupons
You should report the interest paid on a coupon from a bearer bond
on a Form 1099-INT identifying the payees (unless the payee is a
foreign person) if both the following apply.
- The coupon is presented to you for collection before the
bond matures.
- You do not hold the bond as a nominee for the true
owner.
Because you cannot assume the presenter of the coupon also owns
the bond, you should not report OID on the bond on Form
1099-OID. The coupon may have been "stripped" (separated)
from the bond and separately purchased.
However, if a long-term bearer bond on the OID list in this
publication is presented to you for redemption upon call or maturity,
you should prepare a Form 1099-OID showing the OID for that
calendar year, as well as any coupon interest payments collected at
the time of redemption.
Backup Withholding
If you report OID on Form 1099-OID or interest on Form
1099-INT, you may be required to apply backup withholding to the
reportable payment at a 31% rate. The backup withholding tax is
deducted at the time a cash payment is made.
Backup withholding generally applies in the following situations.
- The payee does not give you a taxpayer identification number
(TIN).
- The IRS notifies you that the payee gave an incorrect
TIN.
- The IRS notifies you that the payee is subject to backup
withholding due to payee underreporting.
- For debt instruments acquired after 1983:
- The payee does not certify, under penalties of perjury, that
he or she is not subject to backup withholding under (3).
- The payee does not certify, under penalties of perjury, that
the TIN given is correct.
However, for short-term discount obligations (other than government
obligations), bearer bond coupons, and U.S. savings bonds, backup
withholding applies only if the payee does not give you a TIN.
Short-term obligations.
Backup withholding applies to OID on a short-term obligation only
when the OID is paid at maturity. However, backup withholding applies
to any interest payable before maturity when the interest is paid or
credited.
If the owner of a short-term obligation at maturity is not the
original owner and can establish the purchase price of the obligation,
the amount subject to backup withholding must be determined by
treating the purchase price as the issue price. However, you can
choose to disregard that price if it would require significant manual
intervention in the computer or recordkeeping system used for the
obligation. If the purchase price of a listed obligation is not
established or is disregarded, you must use the issue price shown in
Section III.
Long-term obligations.
If no cash payments are made on a long-term obligation before
maturity, backup withholding applies only at maturity. The amount
subject to backup withholding is the OID includible in the owner's
gross income for the calendar year when the obligation matures. The
amount to be withheld is limited to the cash paid.
Long-term registered obligations with cash payments.
If a long-term registered obligation has cash payments before
maturity, backup withholding applies when a cash payment is made. The
amount subject to backup withholding is the total of the qualified
stated interest (defined later under Definitions) and OID
includible in the owner's gross income for the calendar year when the
payment is made. If more than one cash payment is made during the
year, the OID subject to withholding for the year must be allocated
among the expected cash payments in the ratio that each bears to the
total of the expected cash payments. For any payment, the required
withholding is limited to the cash paid.
Payee not the original owner.
If the payee is not the original owner of the obligation, the OID
subject to backup withholding is the OID includible in the gross
income of all owners during the calendar year (without regard to any
amount paid by the new owner at the time of transfer). The amount
subject to backup withholding at maturity of a listed obligation must
be determined using the issue price shown in Section I.
Long-term bearer obligations with cash payments.
If a long-term bearer obligation has cash payments before maturity,
backup withholding applies when the cash payments are made. For
payments before maturity, the amount subject to withholding is the
qualified stated interest (defined later under Definitions)
includible in the owner's gross income for the calendar year. For a
payment at maturity, the amount subject to withholding is only the
total of any qualified stated interest paid at maturity and the OID
includible in the owner's gross income for the calendar year when the
obligation matures. The required withholding at maturity is limited to
the cash paid.
Sales and redemptions.
If you report the gross proceeds from a sale, exchange, or
redemption of a debt instrument on Form 1099-B, you may be
required to withhold 31% of the amount reported. Backup withholding
applies in the following situations.
- The payee does not give you a TIN.
- The IRS notifies you that the payee gave an incorrect
TIN.
- For debt instruments held in an account opened after 1983,
the payee does not certify, under penalties of perjury, that the TIN
given is correct.
Payments outside the United States to U.S. person.
The requirement for backup withholding and information reporting
apply to payments of OID and interest made outside the United States
to a U.S. person if you are a U.S. person, a controlled foreign
corporation, or a foreign person at least 50% of whose income for the
preceding 3-year period is effectively connected with the conduct of a
U.S. trade or business.
Payments to foreign person.
The following discussions explain the rules for backup withholding
and information reporting on payments to foreign persons.
U.S.-source amount.
Backup withholding and information reporting are not required for
payments of U.S.-source OID, interest, or proceeds from sale or
redemption of an OID instrument if the payee has given you proof
(generally a Form W-8 or an acceptable substitute) that the
payee is a foreign person. A U.S. resident is not a foreign person.
For proof of the payee's foreign status, you can rely on Form
W-8 or on documentary evidence for payments made outside the
United States to an offshore account or, in case of broker proceeds, a
sale effected outside the United States. Form W-8 does not
relieve you from information reporting and backup withholding if you
actually know the payee is a U.S. person.
For information about the 30% withholding tax that may apply to
payments of U.S.-source OID or interest to foreign persons, see
Publication 515.
Foreign-source amount.
Backup withholding and information reporting are not required for
payments of foreign-source OID and interest made outside the United
States. However, if the payments are made inside the United States,
the requirements for backup withholding and information reporting will
apply unless the payee has given you a Form W-8 or acceptable
substitute as proof that the payee is a foreign person.
More information.
See sections 35a.9999-3,-3A,-4T, and -5 of
the regulations for more information about backup withholding and
information reporting on foreign-source amounts or payments to foreign
persons.
The above regulations have been removed and the regulations under
sections 3406, 6045, and 6049 of the Internal Revenue Code, relating
to backup withholding and information reporting, have been amended,
effective for payments made after 2000. See Treasury Decision 8734 (in
Cumulative Bulletin 1997-2), as modified by Treasury Decision
8804 (in Internal Revenue Bulletin 1999-12) and Treasury
Decision 8881 (in Internal Revenue Bulletin 2000-23).
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