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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> First-tier Tribunal (Tax) >> Barclays Bank PLC v Revenue and Customs (Loan relationships - RCIs and warrants issued by subsidiary and parent companies in the context of the 2008 financial crisis) (Rev1) [2024] UKFTT 246 (TC) (21 March 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKFTT/TC/2024/TC09115.html Cite as: [2024] UKFTT 246 (TC), [2024] SFTD 986 |
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Appeal reference: TC/2017/06719 |
TAX CHAMBER
Judgment Date: 26 April 2024 |
B e f o r e :
MR JOHN WOODMAN
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BARCLAYS BANK PLC |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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THE COMMISSIONERS FOR HIS MAJESTY'S REVENUE AND CUSTOMS |
Respondents |
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For the Appellant:
Mr Kevin Prosser KC and Mr James Henderson of Counsel, instructed by Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer LLP
For the Respondents:
Mr David Milne KC, Ms Elizabeth Wilson KC, Mr Emile Simpson and Ms Elizabeth Atkinson of Counsel instructed by the General Counsel and Solicitor to HM Revenue and Customs
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Loan relationships - RCIs and warrants issued by subsidiary and parent companies in the context of the 2008 financial crisis attribution of funds received where stated consideration for the warrants was effectively nil causing the RCIs to be shown in accounts as issued at a discount was the attribution of funds GAAP compliant if so did the resulting debits fairly represent losses on the RCIs under the loan relationship rules.
Introduction
background and procedure
The matter appealed
Burden of proof
Evidence
Expert evidence
General approach
Findings of fact
The Transactions
Agreements with the Subscribers
(1) an RCI subscription agreement between BBPLC and Qatar Holding under which BBPLC agreed to issue, and Qatar Holding agreed to subscribe £1.5 billion for, RCIs with a par value of £1.5 billion;
(2) a warrant subscription agreement between BPLC and Qatar Holding under which Barclays agreed to issue, and Qatar Holding agreed to subscribe £0.76 for, 758,437,618 of warrants to subscribe for 758,437,618 ordinary shares in Barclays;
(3) an RCI subscription agreement between BBPLC and PCP 2 under which BBPLC agreed to issue, and PCP 2 agreed to subscribe £1.5 billion for, RCIs with a par value of £1.5 billion; and
(4) a warrant subscription agreement between Barclays and PCP 3 under which Barclays agreed to issue and PCP 3 agreed to subscribe £0.76 for, 758,437,618 of warrants to subscribe for 758,437,618 ordinary shares in Barclays (together with the warrants referred to in paragraph (b) above, "the Warrants").
(1) The RCIs carried an interest coupon of 14% payable annually in arrears to (but excluding) 15 June 2019 and from 15 June 2019 at a rate which was the aggregate of 13.4% plus LIBOR for three-month Sterling deposits;
(2) The RCIs had no fixed redemption date, but (subject to the satisfaction of certain solvency and regulatory capital conditions) BBPLC could elect to redeem all and not some only of the RCIs from 15 June 2019;
(3) Each relevant Subscriber's obligation to subscribe for the RCIs was conditional on the obtaining of certain approvals from the shareholders of Barclays including approval to increase its authorised share capital sufficiently to enable the Warrants to be exercisable in full and to facilitate the application of the Alternative Coupon Satisfaction Mechanism on the RCIs (the Requisite Shareholder Approvals). (The Alternative Coupon Satisfaction Mechanism was the ability of BBPLC to elect in certain circumstances to satisfy any payment on the RCIs through the issue of shares, which is (broadly) effected via an issue of BBPLC shares to Barclays and an issue of Barclays ordinary shares to the holders of the RCI.) Each relevant Subscriber agreed to subscribe for the RCIs on the date falling three business days after the date such approvals were obtained; and
(4) In consideration for each relevant Subscriber's agreement to subscribe for the RCIs, BBPLC undertook to pay commission of 2% of the aggregate principal amount of RCIs to each of the relevant Subscribers on 27 November 2008. (For the avoidance of doubt, no commission or other amounts were paid by BBPLC to the Subscribers in respect of the RCI Subscription Agreements or the Warrant Subscription Agreements on 31 October 2008.)
(1) Each relevant Subscriber's right to exercise the Warrants issued to it by Barclays was conditional on (amongst other things):
(a) obtaining the Requisite Shareholder Approvals; and
(b) BBPLC issuing the RCIs and receiving full payment in respect thereof in accordance with the relevant RCI Subscription Agreement.
(2) The Warrants were exercisable at any time during the period beginning when both (i) Barclays obtained the Requisite Shareholder Approvals and (ii) BBPLC issued the RCIs and received full payment in respect of them, and ending on 31 October 2013.
Agreements with institutional investors
(1) Qatar Holding, Barclays and BBPLC entered into a concession letter under which Qatar Holding agreed to make available up to £250 million in aggregate principal amount of the RCIs for which Qatar Holding had otherwise agreed to subscribe; and
(2) PCP 2, PCP 1, Barclays and BBPLC entered into a concession letter under which PCP 2 agreed to make available up to £250 million in aggregate principal amount of RCIs for which PCP 2 had otherwise agreed to subscribe.
Closing
£million | |
Qatar Holding | 1,250 |
PCP 2 (funded by IPIC) | 1,250 |
Institutional investors | 500 |
Total Proceeds | 3,000 |
Accounting and valuation aspects
£ million | |
Dr Cash | 3,000 |
Cr RCIs | 2,200 |
Cr Equity (capital contribution from Barclays) | 800 |
£ million | |
Dr Investment in subsidiary (BBPLC) | 800 |
Cr Equity (Warrants) | 800 |
BBPLC's corporation tax return
Further findings
(1) Barclays was desperate, in the sense that it would go to extraordinary and unusual lengths to bring about CR2, although he accepted that this did not mean at any cost whatsoever. He also accepted that there was the necessary hurdle of 75% of shareholder approval at the required EGM which had to be surmounted. There was a strong view that taking government money would be very damaging to the bank and to the country in circumstances where, unlike other banks, a bailout was far from inevitable. In addition, key players at Barclays had justifiable concerns about their own futures - and bonuses - in the event of a bailout. There was also an element of personal ego so far as Mr Jenkins was concerned. This was important because while he could not himself sanction any particular deal with, for example, the Qataris, he was clearly highly influential at Barclays and was intent on doing whatever he thought should be done. He was also a risk-taker;
(2) Mr Jenkins himself said that no bank had any bargaining position of strength in October 2008 and the pool of investors was very very small. Moreover, while Barclays was given a six-month breathing space in order to raise the necessary capital, the fact was that Barclays had just done CR1 in June 2008 which had resulted in the Qataris subscribing for many more shares than they had anticipated because of a lack of interest in the "clawback" part of the deal by other shareholders. Moreover, the Qatari shareholders were now being challenged by the falling share price in October 2008. That explains the change in the Qataris' asked-for blended share price under CR1 and CR2 from 150p to 130p. They therefore had the motive and the bargaining power to demand a high price;
(3) effectively, whatever the Qataris demanded in terms of benefit to them (including ultimately £346m and a $3bn unsecured loan) they got;
(4) despite Barclays apparent protestations to the contrary, in the course of one meeting (23 October), those acting for PCP had been able to secure the issue of £3bn worth of Warrants with £1.5bn worth for the SPVs which had not been on the negotiating table up to that point. Despite pressure from Barclays, and an apparent agreement by the Qataris to make available some of the RCIs together with Warrants as a compensatory clawback to other shareholders, PCP held out against giving up the Warrants. In the end the bank agreed and the shareholder votes still went through;
(5) ASA2 under which Barclays agreed to pay Qatar 20 quarterly instalments of £14m was part of the mechanism to deliver to Qatar the blended price of 130p per share which it required before entering into the subscription. Any realistic appraisal of the events leading up to 31 October must conclude that the entering into the advisory services agreement was a real and absolute condition of Qatar entering into the subscription agreements for CR2;
(6) the Loan formed part of the price or consideration for the subscription which the Qataris sought and obtained;
(7) it was common ground that in practice there was no liquid market in which to trade the RCIs. That said, they proved popular with existing shareholders in CR2 who took up all of the £500m worth offered; this was no doubt at least in part because of the very attractive coupon;
(8) part of the reason why this was such an attractive deal was because of the five year Warrants and the prospect of large gains as a result of a significant increase in the share price over that period. That value was specifically recognised by Sheikh Mansour; and
(9) while the Warrants were in effect provided to the Subscribers free of charge, they were extremely valuable because of the fixed exercise price, at least if one took the view that Barclays share price would rise significantly above the current average closing price in the 5 years from issue.
Terms of the RCIs and Warrants
(1) the issue price of the RCI's was 100%; and
(2) the RCIs were defined as £3bn 14 per cent Step up Callable Perpetual Reserve Capital Instruments of the Issuer. That same definition was included in the terms of the RCIs themselves and the Warrants.
The RCI Prospectus
The Warrant Subscription Agreements
The Warrant Prospectus
Reason for the structure and internal Barclays analysis
Comment at the time
Accounting treatment
"JS: Sold a load of bonds. 500 million at 14 coupon. Quite an impressive performance when you couldn't sell them before at the same price [ ] The world's moved on. They see a different organisation
[ ] As this is an accounting geeky thing you'll say, "it's illogical John. It's all complete hogwash and bollocks" but it's reality for accountants [ ] we're disclosing the warrants at, say, an [ ] 800 value, RCIs at 220. Now you can argue over the warrant value but, [ ] they're turning round and saying "Well how did you value the RCIs at the issue date on 31 October?" I said, "Well simply you took the warrant value and deducted it from the total proceeds". Oh you can't do that. That's not the right way to look at it. The question should be what would you have issued the warrants, the RCI at, on a stand-alone basis for the disclosure? They say, "[ ] we need to get some support for what is the implied yield on the RCI when you issued it on 31 October" [ ] and my comment [ ] was "[ ] there's no way to be able to use a market indication because [ ] there were no trades really in reality." The reality is that we know we went to the market with an RCI that had a coupon on it of 14%. When we first went to the market we went with a muted or soft sounding. We went with that with a 14% coupon [ ]
[ ]
[ ] were we talking warrants at the time of those to the investors
RB: No
[ ]
JS: So we were talking without warrants [ ] we were talking to the market about doing an RCI at a coupon north of where the issue was being traded by the Government.
RB: And people were telling us that that would have to be around the 14%/15% coupon
[ ]
JS: what will be the fair value of a stand-alone RCI without any knowledge of [ ] [what's] going on in the equity and the other components of the instrument.
RB: I don't know, there was no bid.
[ ]
RB: The reality was that we couldn't issue RCI s at the time [ ] And what they were telling us was if you had all the other uncertainty around your capital plan resolved then the kind of [ ] coupon that we would expect for an issue that we would buy, or at least look at, would be 14% to 15%.
JS: Plus the fact you gave me some warrants as well, which have value too.
RB: No, because we never offered them any warrants
[ ]
JS: Well this is where [ ] you have to suspend reality. On the one hand we're looking at where we're at 31 October and were saying we had warrants issued a below par. The problem is we also now have evidence that once all the equity's in place investors bought the RCIs 14% coupon at par. The reality is our [strategic investors] did not buy RCIs at par[ ] they bought them 14% coupon plus warrants
JS: therefore if you take the warrant away what's the real value of the RCI?[..] You just take away the value of the warrant against it. That's what we've done.
[ ]
JS: PWC are saying, "Oh well terribly sorry, [ ] but you can't do that. You've got to look at the stand-alone value of the RCI" [ ] I said, "Listen. I know it's going to be north of 14%. That's a certainty. Therefore while they were issued with a 14 coupon they were not, probably, issued at par because fundamentally there was no bid"[...] It is bizarre the conversation we're having."
Financial Services Authority ("FSA") treatment of the RCIs
"On issue, the RCIs will qualify as Tier 1 Capital for the purposes of the Financial Regulator's capital adequacy regulations".
"The conditions that an item of capital of a firm must comply with under GENPRU 2.2.62R(2) are as follows: [ ] (2) it is fully paid and the proceeds of issue are immediately and fully available to the firm"
"A listed company must not circulate or publish a circular unless it has been approved by the FSA".
(1) the spreadsheet showing the value attributed to equity amortising down from £800 million to 0 after 10 years. The FSA asked why if the £800 million was a capital contribution it amortised; and if it was not permanently available it should not be treated as core Tier 1 capital;
(2) the FSA would expect the capital contribution from Barclays to be shown in its accounts as a reduction in its cash;
(3) the FSA's interpretation of IAS 32 was that the debt element should be valued first when apportioning the £3 billion and noted that a significant portion of the RCIs were sold to investors without warrants at the same coupon as those with warrants.
(1) the RCIs were issued at a discount and £2.2 billion proceeds were received for them;
(2) while the RCIs were issued by the Appellant and the Warrants by Barclays "for convenience" the Appellant received all the proceeds. It was management's firm intention for Barclays to contribute the £800m payable for the Warrants to the Appellant as increased investment;
(3) only £2.2 billion, the fair value of the debt component at the issue date, would be included in capital initially. The accounting valuation, and therefore the regulatory capital valuation, of the RCI would increase to par over the period to redemption, recognising that it was issued at a discount;
(4) no RCIs were issued by Barclays without warrants as at the issue date. A number of them were sold subsequently by the holders in the secondary market a number of weeks later in different market conditions;
(5) the FSA interpretation of IAS 32 would only apply if a compound instrument had been issued but that was not the case here.
Expert evidence
(1) The RCIs and RSAs should have been accounted for separately;
(2) The RSAs were loan commitments, but the parties' accounting experts disagree as to the date on which they became loan commitments. Mr Spooner's evidence is that they were loan commitments when they were entered into on 31 October 2008 whereas Mr Kusi-Yeboah says that the RSAs only became binding contracts when shareholder approval was obtained on 24 November 2008. However, BBPLC was not required to recognise the RSAs on 31 October 2008 or any other date thereafter;
(3) BBPLC was required to recognise the RCIs on balance sheet on 27 November 2008 and the RCIs should initially be recognised at fair value. However, the parties' accounting experts disagree about what that value is and when it should be assessed. Mr Spooner says that they should be assessed on the basis of their value as at commitment date i.e. 31 October 2008; whereas Mr Kusi-Yeboah says that a commitment date fair value policy is not compliant with IFRS and that an issue date fair value policy is required;
(4) the transaction price of £3 billion is an "entry price" as it is the price that was set when the agreement between the parties was entered into;
(5) the market for the RCIs was inactive on 31 October 2008 and 24 November 2008.
Secondary findings
(1) the RSAs and Warrant Subscription Agreements were entered into on the same day by related parties and in contemplation of each other;
(2) the Warrants had a value significantly in excess of £1.52 and that was recognised by the parties;
(3) the issue of both the RCIs and the Warrants was conditional on the same Requisite Shareholder Approvals;
(4) the exercise of the Warrants was dependent on the RCIs being issued and fully paid;
(5) the mandatory transfer provisions enabling Barclays to transfer the Warrants to a nominated person whereupon the exercise price would be market value such that the Warrants themselves would then have no value;
(6) the negotiations themselves showing that the RCIs and Warrants were seen as a package deal. The Subscribers declined the offer to subscribe for the RCIs with the higher coupon of 14% without the Warrants; and
(7) Barclays never offered the Warrants as an isolated deal.
(1) the starting point is the terms of the RCIs and the Warrants themselves. The RCIs are clearly written as debt instruments issued at par. The Warrants state a consideration of 76p paid by each of the Subscribers. There is no suggestion in the documents that the consideration for the Warrants was partly received through the payment for the RCIs;
(2) the institutional investors paid £500m for the RCIs issued to them at par value for £500m. The institutional investors did not receive any Warrants. We recognise that by the time the institutional investors subscribed, the perceived value of the RCIs would have changed given the commitment of the Subscribers (as explained to us by Mr Spooner and Mr Millar), but it remains the case that the institutions paid par value for notes issued at par value;
(3) the comment at the time was that the Barclays shareholders had taken a "thwack" as a result of the deal including giving away £800m of value. That sense was reflected in professional press comment and the drop in the Barclays share price on the announcement of CR2. Indeed, the issue of the Warrants cost Barclays nothing. It was the existing shareholders who were giving up value; their earnings per share would be reduced. This sense was reflected in the comment of Mr Justice Waksman, who, having heard from some of those involved, said that the Warrants had been given away. We recognise that, as Mr Prosser submitted, Mr Justice Waksman was not considering the economic substance of the deal in the way that we are and made the comment having summarised the terms of the RCIs, Warrants and MCNs. However, Mr Justice Waksman specifically made his comment in the context of saying at the same time that the Warrants were extremely valuable if one took the view that Barclays' share price would increase in the next 5 years. Nowhere in the long, forensic judgment is there any suggestion that anyone regarded the RCIs as having been issued other than at par and Mr Justice Waksman's comment that the Warrants had been given away is consistent with the view of external commentators at the time;
(4) what Qatar wanted it got. These were extraordinary times. The Warrants were a part of what Qatar demanded just as the Loan and fees were. All were elements of the value demanded by Qatar to enable Barclays to raise capital. There was no indication in any of the documents that Qatar was perceived to be paying part of its £1.5bn for the value of the Warrants. Quite the reverse the Warrants were held out to Qatar as having value such that the coupon on the RCIs could be reduced, but the Subscribers required the £3bn RCIs priced at a 14% coupon and the Warrants on top. As Ms Wilson submitted, to say that the Warrants had a value of £800 million and that the Subscribers paid £800 million for them would mean they were not getting a good deal and that the Warrants were not one of the sweeteners to get them to participate in the capital raising. Yet it is clear that the very real sense at the time was that the Subscribers had obtained very real value out of the deal, obtaining the Warrants without any compensating reduction in the RCI coupon. One could say that getting the Warrants was one of the conditions for them of subscribing for the RCIs;
(5) The idea that the Warrants should have value attributed to them from the RCI proceeds looking at the substance for Barclays and BBPLC had more basis when that was based on the Warrants enabling a lower coupon to be paid, as described in the reasons for structure paper. However, that fell away with the ultimate deal.
(1) the Warrants were seen as precious such that Barclays would not have given them away. We recognise that they had value but that in itself does not answer the question as to who was giving what value to whom;
(2) Legal form should not determine the economic substance which is what the accounting is required to reflect. We agree and have only viewed the legal form as the starting point;
(3) the internal Barclays structure paper showing that in order to raise the money via RCIs the notes had to be issued by BBPLC and the Warrants had to be issued by Barclays. We consider that is a potentially strong argument in favour of concluding that an overall deal of RCIs and Warrants issued for a combined value of £3bn was what was being considered and it was simply mechanics which split the £3bn in the way it was rather than issuing a combined instrument. However, that argument is weakened by the fact that the paper assumed that warrants would enable a lower coupon when in fact that did not occur;
(4) the auditors, PWC, approved accounts showing that the RCIs were issued for £2.2bn. However, we had no evidence from the auditors to explain on what basis that conclusion was reached. The evidence shows that PWC were asking for a standalone valuation of the RCIs rather than the approach of taking a value of £800m for the Warrants and deducting that from £3bn. How PWC were persuaded to change their view we do not know. We have expert evidence addressing the accounting and valuation, but much of that evidence is predicated on the substance being that £3bn was paid for the RCIs and the Warrants. It therefore adds little to our fact finding as to what the £3bn was paid for;
(5) The RCIs and Warrants were two parts of a package for which £3bn was paid. Therefore in reflecting economic substance that £3bn must be apportioned. However, this begs the question: the package could be one where those paying the £3bn paid £3bn for the RCIs and nothing for the Warrants, or £2.2bn for the RCIs and £800m for the Warrants. Mr Prosser submitted that the package was analogous to a customer going to a car showroom and turning down a car priced £50,000 until the showroom offered three years free servicing. Then part of the £50,000 should be attributed to the value of the servicing. However, we consider that there is a fundamental difference here. The value is not given by the equivalent of the showroom (Barclays and/or BBPLC) but by the shareholders of Barclays if the Warrants are given away for no more than the £1.52 paid in substance;
(6) The reference in the note of a call between two Barclays personnel stating: "The reality is our strategic investors did not buy RCIs at par They bought them 14% coupon plus warrants." (That reference to "strategic investors" is to the Subscribers.) However, it is a note of a call between two people neither of whom were before us to have that evidence properly explained or tested in cross examination. Jonathan Stone was Group Treasurer but not one of those negotiating the transactions or attending the Board meetings of BBPLC or Barclays. He sees £3bn received from the Subscribers who had received RCIs and Warrants and is considering how to account for the transactions. His view that the Subscribers did not buy the RCIs at par is one view that has not been tested in any meaningful way;
(7) Mr Prosser submits that another analogy should be drawn to the facts in the case of Marks & Spencer plc v HMRC [2019] UKUT 182. That concerned the promotional offer run by Marks & Spencer ("M&S") allowing a customer to choose three food dishes for £10 and obtain a bottle of wine for "free". He submits that thinking of the Warrants as being issued for "free" runs into the same issues. One of those would be to rely on the fact that institutions purchased RCIs without Warrants at par. In the Marks & Spencer case some customers bought the food and did not take up the wine offer. The Upper Tribunal decided that the economic and commercial reality was that M&S was offering a package of four items and the word "free" was used in a promotional sense. The £10 had to be allocated across all four items. However, we consider that Marks & Spencer has little bearing here. As Mr Milne and Ms Wilson submit, it concerned the VAT rules and in particular the specific EU meaning of "consideration" (at [100]). The conclusion that the £10 was allocated across all four items also avoided untaxed consumption of wine on which M&S had claimed input tax (at [107]). It is also an attempted comparison which ignores certain key elements in this case: Barclays were not offering a customer an ability to choose a package; it was faced with the need to raise Tier 1 capital and the only way in which it could do so without resorting to government funding was to agree to give the Warrants to the Subscribers even though it had hoped only to do so as a way of reducing the coupon on the RCIs. Again, the comparison to Marks & Spencer ignores the fact that the value in the Warrants was not value moving from Barclays it was a cost borne by the Barclays shareholders.
Consequent accounting
AGREED ISSUES
(1) the RCIs are loan relationships of BBPLC as defined by section 81,
(2) accordingly, by section 85A BBPLC is required to bring into account for the Relevant Period the credits and debits that, in accordance with generally accepted accounting practice (including IFRS), are recognised in determining its profit or loss from the RCIs for the Relevant Period,
(3) but this is subject to section 84(1)(a) which provides that the credits and debits to be brought into account are the sums which when taken together "fairly represent", for the Relevant Period, all profits, gains and losses (disregarding interest) arising to BBPLC from the RCIs.
(1) as BBPLC contends:
(a) its solus accounts (the Accounts) were compliant with IFRS in bringing the RCIs into account at their fair value as at 31 October 2008 (the Commitment Date) and also in assessing their fair value as at that date at £2.2 billion;
(b) the Accreted Debit "fairly represents" the losses (disregarding interest) of BBPLC in respect of the RCIs for the Relevant Period; and
(c) the Accounts do not recognise the credit to equity referred to in the Agreed Facts (the Credit to Equity) as a profit arising to BBPLC from the RCIs, and the Credit to Equity does not "fairly represent" a profit arising to BBPLC from the RCIs;
(2) or as HMRC contend:
(a) the Accounts did not comply with IFRS: if they had done so they would have brought the RCIs into account at their fair value as at 27 November 2008 when they were issued (the Issue Date) and assessed their fair value as at that date at least £3 billion, with the result that they would not have recognised any losses (disregarding interest) as arising to BBPLC from the RCIs for the Relevant Period;
(b) alternatively, even if the Accounts did comply with IFRS, they would also have done so if they had brought the RCIs into account as mentioned in (2)(a), and only the latter treatment would "fairly represent" the losses (disregarding interest) arising to BBPLC from the RCIs for the Relevant Period;
(c) in the further alternative, even if the only accounting treatment compliant with IFRS was the actual treatment in the Accounts, the Accreted Debit does not "fairly represent" the losses (disregarding interest) arising to BBPLC from the RCIs for the Relevant Period; and
(d) in the yet further alternative, even if the only accounting treatment compliant with IFRS was the actual treatment in the Accounts, and the Accreted Debit does "fairly represent" the losses (disregarding interest) arising to BBPLC from the RCIs for the Relevant Period, the Credit to Equity "fairly represents" a profit arising to BBPLC from the RCIs for the Relevant Period.
(3) The fair value of the RCIs as at the Commitment Date and the Issue Date is not agreed and is a matter for expert evidence.
The parties' cases
The Law
(1) For the purposes of corporation tax all profits and gains arising to a company from its loan relationships shall be chargeable to tax as income in accordance with this Chapter."
(1) The credits and debits to be brought into account in the case of any company in respect of its loan relationships shall be the sums which, when taken together, fairly represent, for the accounting period in question-
(a) all profits, gains and losses of the company, including those of a capital nature, which (disregarding interest and any charges or expenses) arise to the company from its loan relationships and related transactions".
(1) Subject to the provisions of this Chapter (including, in particular, section 84(1)), the amounts to be brought into account by a company for any period for the purposes of this Chapter are those that, in accordance with generally accepted accounting practice, are recognised in determining the company's profit or loss for the period."
(2) If a company does not draw up accounts in accordance with generally accepted accounting practice ("correct accounts")
(a) the provisions of this Chapter apply as if correct accounts had been drawn up, and
(b) the amounts referred to in this Chapter as being recognised for accounting purposes are those that would have been recognised if correct accounts had been drawn up.
(1) Any reference in this chapter to an amount being recognised in determining a company's profit or loss for a period is to an amount being recognised for accounting purposes-
(a) in the company's profit and loss account or income statement,
(b) in the company's statement of recognised gains and losses or statement of changes in equity, or
(c) in any other statement of items brought into account in computing the company's profits and losses for that period.
The true and fair or fair presentation "override" forms part of GAAP. It involves a departure from a particular accounting standard but not a departure from GAAP. By contrast, where applicable, the statutory "fairly represent" requirement in paragraph 15(1) does mandate a departure from GAAP.
Discussion
Conclusion
Right to apply for permission to appeal