
1 

(1) These Regulations may be cited as the Manufactured Payments and Transfer of Securities (Tax Relief) Regulations 1995 and shall come into force on 2nd January 1996.
(2) These Regulations have effect in relation to—
(a) any manufactured payment made on or after 2nd January 1996, and
(b) any payment of interest deemed to be made on or after that date under an agreement to sell securities entered into on or after 1st May 1995.
2 
In these Regulations—
 “manufactured payment”has the meaning given by section 737D(2) of the Taxes Act;
 “the Taxes Act”means the Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988.
3 

(1) Any manufactured payment made to a person for the benefit of —
(a) a scheme referred to in section 592(2) or 643(2) of the Taxes Act, or
(b) any fund referred to in section 608(2)(a), 613(4), 614(2), (3) or (4) or 620(6) of that Act,
shall be treated as comprised in income of that person that is eligible for relief from tax by virtue of that section.
(2) Any manufactured payment made to an insurance company shall be treated, to the extent of so much of the payment as is referable to the company’s pension business, as comprised in income of that company that is eligible for relief from tax by virtue of section 438 of the Taxes Act.
4 

(1) Where, pursuant to section 730A(2) of the Taxes Act (treatment of price differential on sale and repurchase of securities), a payment of interest is deemed to be made to a person in circumstances where, if it were actually made, it would be received by that person for the benefit of—
(a) a scheme specified in section 592(2) or 643(2) of the Taxes Act, or
(b) any fund referred to in section 608(2)(a), 613(4), 614(2), (3) or (4) or 620(6) of that Act,
the amount of the payment shall be treated as comprised in income that is eligible for relief from tax by virtue of that section.
(2) Where, pursuant to section 730A(2) of the Taxes Act, a payment of interest is deemed to be made to an insurance company, it shall be treated, to the extent of so much of the deemed payment as is referable to the company’s pension business, as comprised in income that is eligible for relief from tax by virtue of section 438 of the Taxes Act.
Derek Conway
Simon Burns
Two of the Lords Commissioners of Her Majesty’s Treasury
28th November 1995