Foreign Investment into Domestic Private Equity Funds: A Basic Individual Perspective

By Len Sprishen, J.D., LL.M., MSPC Certified Public Accountants and Advisors, P.C. – January 2, 2025
Foreign Investment into Domestic Private Equity Funds: A Basic Individual Perspective

Foreign direct investment into the United States continues to increase year over year, despite the nation’s enormous cumulative deficit. Overseas investors still choose to purchase American investments for many reasons, including the U.S.’s highly developed, liquid and efficient financial markets, as well as its strong institutions and robust corporate governance. Those investors may also have close linkages with the U.S. generally or are resident in a politically or financially unstable country and wish to deploy their capital more safely. One popular route for U.S. investment among high-net-worth foreign citizens has increasingly become domestic private equity funds. Thus, CPAs with an international practice are now frequently confronted with an understandably perplexed foreign citizen client who forwards to them a package of dense documentation from their U.S. investment adviser, and the client then naturally wants to know how making this investment could affect their U.S. tax exposure.

Initial Tax Implications

Reviewing private placement memoranda, fund operating agreements and subscription documents (which is best done in conjunction with the client s domestic counsel) is critical, but the tax issues in this context can be straightforward. Typically, U.S. private equity funds are organized as partnerships for tax purposes, which ensures that the foreign investors in the fund will not, assuming the fund is not engaged in a U.S. trade or business, be subject to federal income tax on their distributive share of capital gains from the sale of fund investments (unless, importantly, a  U.S. real property interest is sold, but that is another discussion, as is the varied approach taken by the states in these situations). The fund’s status as a partnership also often allows for the tax-free distribution of appreciated stock and securities to the investors, and a foreign investor s sale of their interest in the fund itself should not, in most cases, be subject to federal income tax.

Difficulties can arise, however, when the fund is generating income that is effectively connected with the conduct of a U.S. trade or business. Foreign persons must pay federal income tax on any effectively connected income ("ECI"). If that person invests in a partnership that is engaged in a U.S. trade or business (an ETB partnership; what constitutes the conduct of a U.S. trade or business in this context is a factual question, but investment in active domestic operating companies, for example, will often qualify), they will be treated as engaged in a U.S. trade or business themselves. Under Section 875 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the Code), a partnership s U.S. trade or business activities will be attributed to its foreign partners regardless of how many intermediate partnerships separate the foreign partner from the ETB partnership. An ETB partnership must withhold tax on any ECI of the partnership allocable to its foreign partners, and those partners are required to file U.S. federal income tax returns.

Use of a Blocker Corporation

A common method of avoiding the onerous consequences of ECI involves interposing a corporate blocker between the foreign individual investor and the ETB partnership. The blocker can be domestic or foreign, and the latter option is often particularly attractive because, assuming the blocker resides in a jurisdiction that has a tax treaty with the U.S., the blocker’s ECI will not be taxable unless attributable to a U.S. permanent establishment. The blocker, being a discrete taxpayer, will report and pay tax on the operating profits of the ETB partnership that would otherwise be reportable by the foreign investors, thereby avoiding the individual attribution of those activities under Code Section 875, as well as obviating the need for foreign investors to file federal income tax returns.

Blocker structures can be quite variable as they can be organized above or below the fund, or they may not even be offered by the fund, which might instead permit individual investors to invest in the fund through their own blocker in connection with investments in ETB partnerships. When analyzing the attendant U.S. tax consequences of investing in ETB partnerships through a blocker, it is especially important for CPAs to consider the initial funding of the blocker (debt or equity), any associated foreign currency issues, the nature of the distributions made by the blocker and whether the foreign investor will exit the investment by selling the blocker s shares. Therefore, great care should be taken to evaluate all fund investment documents and timely make any tax-favorable elections for foreign individual investors with the fund manager. In conjunction with this, CPAs should also review whether a tax treaty can benefit the investor at an individual level by reducing or eliminating withholding tax on certain types of income generated by investing in the fund. 


Leonard Sprishen

Len Sprishen, J.D. LL.M. is the director of Global Tax Advisory at MSPC Certified Public Accountants and Advisors, P.C., a Moore Global firm.

This article appeared in the Winter 2024/25 issue of New Jersey CPA magazine. Read the full issue.

 

 

Related events

January 16, 2025Paramus
January 17, 2025Red Bank & Live Webcast
January 17, 2025Webcast Replay
January 22, 2025Live Webcast
January 23, 2025Webcast Replay
January 23, 2025Live Webcast
January 23, 2025Live Webcast
January 31, 2025Webcast Replay
February 5, 2025Linwood
Atlantic/Cape May Chapter
Federal & State Tax Update
February 6, 2025Paramus
Bergen Chapter
Special Topics
February 6, 2025Haddonfield
Southwest Jersey Chapter
Technology Update
February 12, 2025Live Webcast
February 19, 2025Live Webcast
February 24, 2025Webcast Replay
February 25, 2025Live Webcast
March 4, 2025Webcast Replay
March 19, 2025Live Webcast
March 20, 2025Live Webcast
March 27, 2025Live Webcast
April 16, 2025Live Webcast
April 21, 2025Live Webcast
April 22, 2025Clark
April 25, 2025Roseland
April 25, 2025Live Webcast
April 29, 2025Webcast Replay
May 1, 2025Webcast Replay
May 6, 2025Live Webcast
May 7, 2025Northfield
Atlantic/Cape May Chapter
Estate Planning
May 8, 2025Haddonfield
Southwest Jersey Chapter
Nonprofit Update
May 9, 2025Live Webcast
May 16, 2025Webcast Replay
May 20, 2025E. Brunswick
Middlesex/Somerset Chapter
New Jersey Law and Ethics
May 21, 2025Live Webcast
June 3 - 6, 2025Atlantic City
June 25, 2025Live Webcast
July 23, 2025Live Webcast
August 5, 2025Live Webcast
August 13, 2025Live Webcast
August 18 - 20, 2025Atlantic City
August 26, 2025Live Webcast
September 17, 2025Live Webcast
October 22, 2025Live Webcast
October 29, 2025Live Webcast
November 4, 2025Live Webcast
November 13, 2025Live Webcast
November 19, 2025Live Webcast
November 19, 2025Live Webcast
December 3, 2025Live Webcast
December 11, 2025Live Webcast
December 17, 2025Live Webcast
January 6, 2026Live Webcast
February 4, 2026Live Webcast
March 8, 2026Live Webcast