Example 1: Corporation A received a dividend from Corporation B and a dividend from Corporation C. Corporation A owns 90 percent of Corporation B. Corporation A owns 20 percent of Corporation C. Corporation B owns 70 percent of Corporation C. The remaining shares of Corporation B and Corporation C are owned by unrelated persons.
By literal terms of the Act, the dividend received by Corporation A from its 90 percent owned Corporation B is excludible from entire net income.
Since the equity of Corporation A in Corporation C is 80 percent or more ownership, it may also exclude the dividends received from Corporation C from entire net income.
OWNERSHIP EQUITY OF CORPORATION A IN CORPORATION C: --
Example 2: Corporation D received a dividend from Corporation E and a dividend from Corporation F. Corporation D owns 90 percent of Corporation E. Corporation D owns 20 percent of Corporation F. Corporation E owns 60 percent of Corporation F. The remaining shares of Corporation E and Corporation F are owned by unrelated persons.
By literal terms of the Act, the dividend received by Corporation D from its 90 percent owned Corporation E is excludible from entire net income.
Since the equity of Corporation D in Corporation F is less than 80 percent ownership, it may only exclude 50 percent of the dividend received from Corporation F from entire net income.
OWNERSHIP EQUITY OF CORPORATION D IN CORPORATION F: --
N.J. Admin. Code § 18:7-5.5