
Affiliated Companies
Companies are affiliated when one company is a minority shareholder of another. The parent company generally owns less than a 50% interest in its affiliated company, and the parent keeps its operations separate from the affiliate. Examples of rules enforced by the SEC include: Rule 102 of Regulation M prohibits issuers, selling security holders, and their affiliated purchasers from bidding for, purchasing, or attempting to induce any person to bid for or purchase, any security which is the subject of a distribution until after an applicable restricted period has passed. Before disclosing nonpublic personal information about a consumer to a nonaffiliated third party, a broker-dealer must first give a consumer an opt-out notice and a reasonable opportunity to opt out of the disclosure. Companies may be affiliated with one another to get into a new market, to maintain separate brand identities, to raise capital without affecting the parent or other companies, and to save on taxes. In most cases, the parent company will own less than a 50% interest in its affiliated company.

What Are Affiliated Companies?
Companies are affiliated when one company is a minority shareholder of another. In most cases, the parent company will own less than a 50% interest in its affiliated company. Two companies may also be affiliated if they are controlled by a separate third party. In the business world, affiliated companies are often simply called affiliates.
The term is sometimes used to refer to companies that are related to each other in some way. For example, Bank of America has many different affiliated companies including Bank of America, U.S. Trust, Landsafe, Balboa, and Merrill Lynch.
Companies may be affiliated with one another to get into a new market, to maintain separate brand identities, to raise capital without affecting the parent or other companies, and to save on taxes. In most cases, affiliates are associates or associated companies, which describes an organization whose parent has a minority stake in it.




Understanding Affiliated Companies
There are several ways companies can become affiliated. A company may decide to buy out or take over another one, or it may decide to spin off a portion of its operations into a new affiliate altogether. In either case, the parent company generally keeps its operations separate from its affiliates. Since the parent company has a minority ownership, its liability is limited, and the two companies keep separate management teams.
Affiliates are a common way for parent businesses to enter foreign markets while keeping a minority interest in a business. This is especially important if the parent wants to shake off its majority stake in the affiliate.
There is no single bright-line test to determine if one company is affiliated with another. In fact, the criteria for affiliation changes from country to country, state to state, and even between regulatory bodies. For instance, companies considered affiliates by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) may not be considered affiliated by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).
Affiliates Versus Subsidiaries
An affiliate is different from a subsidiary, of which the parent owns more than 50%. In a subsidiary, the parent is a majority shareholder, which gives the parent company's management and shareholders voting rights. Subsidiary financials may also appear on the parent company's financial sheets.
But subsidiaries remain separate legal entities from their parents, meaning they are liable for their own taxes, liabilities, and governance. They are also responsible for following the laws and regulations where they are headquartered, especially if they operate in a different jurisdiction from the parent company.
An example of a subsidiary is the relationship between the Walt Disney Corporation and sports network ESPN. Disney owns an 80% interest in ESPN, making it a majority shareholder. ESPN is its subsidiary.
In e-commerce, an affiliate refers to a company that sells the products of another merchant on its website.
SEC Rules Surrounding Affiliates
Securities markets around the world have rules that concern affiliates of the businesses they regulate. Here again, these are complex rules that need to be analyzed by local experts on a case-by-case basis. Examples of rules enforced by the SEC include:
Tax Consequences of Affiliates
In nearly all jurisdictions, there are important tax consequences for affiliated companies. In general, tax credits and deductions are limited to one affiliate in a group, or a ceiling is imposed on the tax benefits that affiliates may reap under certain programs.
Determining whether companies in a group are affiliates, subsidiaries, or associates is done through a case-by-case analysis by local tax experts.
Related terms:
Accounting
Accounting is the process of recording, summarizing, analyzing, and reporting financial transactions of a business to oversight agencies, regulators, and the IRS. read more
Affiliate
The term affiliate is used to describe the relationship between two entities wherein one company owns less than a majority stake in the other's stock. read more
Associate Company
An associate company is a corporation whose parent company possesses only a minority stake in the ownership of the corporation. read more
Conglomerate
A conglomerate is a company that owns a controlling stake in smaller companies of separate or similar industries that conduct business separately. read more
Majority Shareholder
A majority shareholder is a person or entity that owns and controls more than 50% of a company's outstanding shares. If they are voting shares, this gives the majority shareholder control of the vote. read more
Minority Interest
A minority interest is ownership of less than 50% of a subsidiary's equity by an investor or a company other than the parent company. read more
Regulation M
Regulation M, also known as Subchapter M, is an Internal Revenue Service (IRS) regulation that allows regulated investment companies to pass taxes from capital gains, dividends, and interest distributions onto individual investors. read more
Shareholder
A shareholder is any person, company, or institution that owns at least one share in a company. read more
Subsidiary
A subsidiary is an independent company that is more than 50% owned by another firm. The owner is usually referred to as the parent company or holding company. read more
Tax-Free Spinoff
Tax-free spinoff refers to a corporate action in which a publicly traded company spins off one of its business units as an entirely new company. read more