§ 44-14-39. Combined reporting study.
(a) For the purpose of this section:
(1) "Common ownership� means more than fifty percent (50%) of the voting control of each
member of the group is directly or indirectly owned by a common owner or owners, either
corporate or non-corporate, whether or not the owner or owners are members of the
combined group.
(2) "Member� means a banking institution included in a unitary business.
(3) "Unitary business� means the activities of a group of two (2) or more banking institutions
as defined in § 44-14-2(2) and corporations as defined in § 44-11-1(4) under common ownership that are sufficiently interdependent, integrated, or interrelated
through their activities so as to provide mutual benefit and produce a significant
sharing or exchange of value among them or a significant flow of value between the
separate parts. The term unitary business shall be construed to the broadest extent
permitted under the United States Constitution.
(4) "United States� means the fifty (50) states of the United States, the District of
Columbia, and the United States' territories and possessions.
(b) Combined reporting.
(1) As part of its tax return for the taxable year beginning after December 31, 2023,
but before January 1, 2026, each banking institution which is part of a unitary business
must file a report, in a manner prescribed by the tax administrator, for the combined
group containing the combined net income of the combined group. The use of a combined
report does not disregard the separate identities of the members of the combined group.
The report shall include, at a minimum, for each taxable year the following:
(i) The difference in tax owed as a result of filing a combined report compared to the
tax owed under the current filing requirements;
(ii) Volume of sales in the state and worldwide; and
(iii) Taxable income in the state and worldwide.
(2) The combined reporting requirement required pursuant to this section shall not include
any persons that engage in activities enumerated in § 44-13-4 or § 44-17-1, whether within or outside this state. Neither the income or loss nor the apportionment
factors of such a person shall be included, directly or indirectly, in the combined
report.
(3) Members of a combined group shall exclude as a member and disregard the income and
apportionment factors of any banking institution chartered or corporation incorporated
in a foreign jurisdiction (a "foreign banking institution or corporation�) if the
average of its property, payroll, and sales factors outside the United States is eighty
percent (80%) or more. If a foreign banking institution or corporation is includible
as a member in the combined group, to the extent that such foreign banking institution
or corporation's income is subject to the provisions of a federal income tax treaty,
such income is not includible in the combined group net income. Such member shall
also not include in the combined report any expenses or apportionment factors attributable
to income that is subject to the provisions of a federal income tax treaty. For purposes
of this chapter, "federal income tax treaty� means a comprehensive income tax treaty
between the United States and a foreign jurisdiction, other than a foreign jurisdiction
which the organization for economic cooperation and development has determined has
not committed to the internationally agreed tax standard, or has committed to the
international agreed tax standard but has not yet substantially implemented that standard,
as identified in the then-current organization for economic cooperation and development
progress report.
(c) Any banking institution which is required to file a report under this section which
fails to file a timely report or which files a false report shall be assessed a penalty
not to exceed ten thousand dollars ($10,000). The penalty may be waived for good cause
shown for failure to timely file.
(d) The tax administrator shall on or before March 15, 2027, based on the information
provided in income tax returns and the data submitted under this section, submit a
report to the chairs of the house finance committee and senate finance committee,
and the house fiscal advisor and the senate fiscal advisor analyzing the policy and
fiscal ramifications of changing the bank excise tax statute to a combined method
of reporting.