New Markets Tax Credit (Portfolio 585)

mount_steven

Steven Mount

Senior Partner

Squire Patton Boggs

At a glance

I. Introduction
II. Qualified Active Low-Income Community Business
III. Low-Income Community
IV. Qualified Low-Income Community Investment
V. Qualified Community Development Entity
VI. Qualified Equity Investment
VII. Allowance of Credit and Basis Reduction
VIII. Recapture
IX. NMTC Investor
X. Typical New Markets Tax Credit Structure and Issues
XI. Combining the Credit with Other Tax Benefits

Abstract

Bloomberg Tax Portfolio, New Markets Tax Credit, No. 585, describes the requirements and operation of the New Markets Tax Credit in §45D.

The New Markets Tax Credit was established by Congress in 2000 and is intended to encourage investment in low-income communities. The credit is available to both individual and corporate taxpayers and is equal to 39% of the capital invested in a qualified community development entity, a for profit or nonprofit entity that commits to the rules of the program, which in turn must loan to or invest substantially all of such capital in qualified businesses operating in low-income communities. The nonrefundable credit is claimed in seven installments on the date of the original investment and the six anniversaries thereof. If the capital is withdrawn prior to the end of the seven-year period beginning on the date of the investment, the entire credit is recaptured. The credit is limited by the amount of allocation authority available each year, which is awarded based on a competitive application process.

The tax rules governing eligibility for the New Markets Tax Credit are contained in §45D and the regulations thereunder, whereas the program is managed by the Community Development Financial Institutions Fund of the U.S. Treasury Department, which promulgates additional rules and requirements pertaining to the award and use of allocation authority.
The overall purpose of this Portfolio is to introduce and explain the operation of the tax rules governing the New Markets Tax Credit. To that end, the Portfolio discusses key definitional terms, applicable eligibility tests and other requirements, and particular topics, such as the possibility of recapture and issues with certain credit structures.

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