Interest tax violation limited in new IRS rules

IRS headquarters in Washington, DC

Photographer: Samuel Corum / Bloomberg

The Revenue Service released rules restricting valuable tax breaks that hedge fund managers could claim following an error in Republican tax law 2017.

The rules, unveiled Thursday, prohibit money managers from using business organizations, known as S corporations, to take advantage of exemptions from the law’s rules for taxing interest.

The rules address what some tax policy experts see as a mistake in the 2017 tax review that will allow hedge fund managers to take advantage of a gap so they don’t pay higher taxes on their investments. The Treasury Department first issued a statement in early 2018 outlining plans to reverse the conduct interest rules.

Interest borne is the proportion of investment fund proceeds paid to hedge and private equity managers, venture capitalists, and some property investors who are eligible for lower tax rates.

Tax law extended hedge funds and private equity managers had to keep their investments – to three years from one year – to achieve the 20% long-term capital gain. Furthermore, they had to pay individual income tax rates, which are now at 37%.

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