SCHEDULES

SCHEDULE 18 Interest rate and currency contracts: insurance and mutual trading companies

Life assurance business: I minus E

1

(1)

Subject to sub-paragraph (2) below, sub-paragraph (3) below applies where—

(a)

a qualifying contract was at any time in an accounting period of an insurance company held by the company for the purposes of any life assurance business carried on by it, and

(b)

the I minus E basis is applied for the period in respect of that business.

(2)

Where the qualifying contract was held partly for the purposes of the life assurance business and partly for other purposes—

(a)

the profit or loss on the contract for the period shall be apportioned on a just and reasonable basis, and

(b)

any reference in sub-paragraph (3) below to that profit or loss shall be construed as a reference to so much of it as is referable to the life assurance business.

(3)

Notwithstanding anything in section 159 of this Act—

(a)

no part of the profit or loss on the contract for the period shall be treated for the purposes of the Tax Acts as a profit or loss of a trade or part of a trade, and

(b)

accordingly, the whole of that profit or loss shall be treated for the purposes of this paragraph as a non-trading profit or loss;

and any reference in the following provisions of this paragraph to a non-trading profit or loss is a reference to a profit or loss which is treated as a non-trading one by virtue of paragraph (b) above.

(4)

Section 432A of the Taxes Act 1988 (insurance companies: apportionment of income and gains) shall have effect as if—

(a)

any reference to income arising from assets of an insurance company’s long term business fund or overseas life assurance fund included a reference to any non-trading profit or loss of an insurance company; and

(b)

any reference to income arising from or attributable to assets F1linked to a particular category of business included a reference to any non-trading profit or loss which derives from a qualifying contract which is so linked.

(5)

Section 438 of the Taxes Act 1988 (pension business: exemption from tax) shall have effect as if the reference in subsection (1) to income from investments and deposits of so much of an insurance company’s F2long term business fund as is referable to pension business included a reference to so much of any non-trading profit of such a company as is so referable.

(6)

So much of any non-trading loss of an insurance company as is referable to pension business F3, life reinsurance business or overseas life assurance business shall not be allowable as a deduction in computing for the purposes of this Chapter the profits or losses of the company; and subsection (5)(a) of section 173 of this Act applies for the purposes of this sub-paragraph as it applies for the purposes of that section.

(7)

Where, as regards an insurance company and an accounting period, one or more non-trading profits or losses of the company for the period are referable to basic life assurance and general annuity business, subsections (5), (6) and (9) of section 129 and sections 130 and 131 of the M1Finance Act 1993 (non-trading exchange gains and losses) shall apply for the purposes of this paragraph as if—

(a)

any reference to any amount or amounts a company is treated as receiving in the period by virtue of section 129 were a reference to the amount or amounts of any non-trading profit or profits which are referable to that class of business,

(b)

any reference to the amount or amounts of any loss or losses a company is treated as incurring in the period by virtue of that section were a reference to the amount or amounts of any non-trading loss or losses which are so referable, and

(c)

for subsections (3) to (14) of section 131 there were substituted the following subsection—

“(3)

The relievable amount shall be set off for the purposes of corporation tax against income of the accounting period which is referable to basic life assurance and general annuity business; and that income shall be treated as reduced accordingly.”