PART XII SPECIAL CLASSES OF COMPANIES AND BUSINESSES
CHAPTER I INSURANCE COMPANIES, UNDERWRITERS AND CAPITAL REDEMPTION BUSINESS
Capital redemption business
458 Capital redemption business.
(1)
M1Where any person carries on capital redemption business in conjunction with business of any other class, the capital redemption business shall, for the purposes of the Corporation Tax Acts (including the provisions about corporation tax on chargeable gains) and the Income Tax Acts, be treated as a separate business from any other class of business carried on by that person F1and where section 76 applies by virtue of subsection (5A) of that section, it shall apply separately to capital redemption business.
(2)
In ascertaining whether and to what extent any person has incurred a loss on his capital redemption business for the purposes of section 380 or sections 393 and F2393A(1)—
(a)
any profits derived from investments held in connection with the capital redemption business (including franked investment income of F3. . . a company resident in the United Kingdom) shall be treated as part of the profits of that business, and
(b)
in determining whether any, and if so what, relief can be given under section 385(4) in the case of capital redemption business, the loss which may be carried forward under subsection (1) of that section shall be similarly computed.
F4(3)
In this section “capital redemption business” means any business in so far as it—
F5(a)
consists of the effecting on the basis of actuarial calculations, and the carrying out, of contracts of insurance under which, in return for one or more fixed payments, a sum or series of sums of a specified amount become payable at a future time or over a period; and
(b)
is not life assurance business.
(4)
This section shall not apply to any capital redemption business in so far as it consists of carrying out contracts of insurance effected before 1st January 1938.