Section 167: Sale basis of valuation: election by connected persons
619.This section allows the seller and purchaser of stock that would otherwise be valued at arm’s length under section 166 to elect to use instead the price paid for the stock. It is based on section 100 of ICTA. The corresponding rule for income tax is in section 178 of ITTOIA.
620.The election cannot be made unless the arm’s length value of the stock is greater than its “acquisition value” in the hands of the seller.
621.The “acquisition value” of the stock for the company which ceases to trade is effectively book value, but the definition in subsection (5) is more complicated than this. In the case where the net realisable value of stock has fallen below cost in the period leading up to cessation, a new period is deemed to start just before the deemed sale. That allows the new, lower, net realisable value to be used. It may be possible to manipulate net realisable value by selling the stock at an undervalue after the accounting date. So paragraph (a) of the definition assumes that the sale is at an arm’s length value.
622.The election substitutes the price paid for the arm’s length value of the stock. But the price paid must be higher than the acquisition value. Otherwise, the election substitutes the acquisition value for the arm’s length value.
623.This section does not specify that the election is to be made to “the inspector”. But the general rules about claims and elections in Schedule 18 to FA 1998 require elections to be made in a return or, if that is not possible, to “an officer of Revenue and Customs” in accordance with Schedule 1A to TMA.