Section 661: Contract which becomes derivative contract
1830.This section provides for a chargeable gain or allowable loss to arise when a company ceases to be a party to a relevant contract that, not having been a derivative contract, became a derivative contract. It is based on paragraph 43A(1), (2), (4) and (5) of Schedule 26 to FA 2002.
1831.There are a number of ways in which a relevant contract that was not a derivative contract may become one. For example, if the terms of the contract change (without creating a new contract) in such a way that the accounting conditions in section 579 are now met, the contract may become a derivative contract. Or it may be that the contract no longer meets the “excluded property” rule in section 589 by virtue of which it was not a derivative contract. See for example the circumstances described in the paragraph “contracts which became derivative contracts on 16 March 2005” in Part 10 of Schedule 2.
1832.If this section applies, it operates similarly to section 660. Again, bringing into account the gain or loss latent in the relevant contract (which is also a chargeable asset) is deferred until the company ceases to be a party to the relevant contract.
1833.“Notional carrying value” has the same meaning as in section 622(4), that is, the carrying value the contract would have had in the books of the company had a period of account ended immediately before the deemed disposal. See the commentary on that section as regards the use of “period of account” rather than “accounting period” in that definition.
1834.See also the paragraph headed “disapplication of section 661” in Part 10 of Schedule 2 which applies if the relevant contract became a derivative contract before 30 December 2006.