International

  • August 05, 2024

    Peru To Subject Foreign Platforms To Sales Tax

    Foreign digital service providers doing business in Peru will be subject to the country's sales tax starting in October, in line with Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development standards, according to a legislative decree.

  • August 05, 2024

    Russia Increasing Corporate Tax Rates In 2025

    Corporations in Russia will be assessed a 25% income tax rate starting in 2025, an increase from the current 20%, the country's tax agency said Monday.

  • August 02, 2024

    Ex-Loeb Tax Atty Latest Addition To Kilpatrick's NY Team

    A former Loeb & Loeb LLP attorney is bringing his experience in U.S. federal tax matters and real estate transactions to Kilpatrick Townsend & Stockton LLP, the firm announced Thursday.

  • August 02, 2024

    Aussie Panel Opposes Aligning Public Tax Reporting With EU

    The benefits of Australia's public country-by-country reporting bill would diminish if it were limited to jurisdictions covered by the European Union's regime, as businesses have requested, the Australian Senate's economics committee reported Friday.

  • August 02, 2024

    PwC Australia Names Independent Governance Board Chair

    PwC Australia has chosen the first independent nonexecutive chair of its governance board, along with an independent nonexecutive board member, as it takes steps to rebound in the wake of its scandal involving the leak of government tax documents.

  • August 02, 2024

    Treasury Faces Complicated Path For Amount B Pricing Rules

    The U.S. Treasury Department signaled it is considering how to enact the OECD's routine pricing plan known as Amount B, but U.S. tax attorneys expect a complicated compliance exercise if rulemakers establish the new transfer pricing approach.

  • August 02, 2024

    Coca-Cola Poised To Appeal $2.7B Tax Bill With 11th Circ.

    The U.S. Tax Court signed off Friday on Coca-Cola's $2.7 billion tax bill, setting the stage for the beverage giant to appeal the liabilities and related rulings in its long-running dispute over the IRS' reallocation of the company's foreign income.

  • August 02, 2024

    IRS Tells Tax Court AbbVie's $1.6B Break Fee Is A Capital Loss

    The Internal Revenue Service correctly reclassified AbbVie's $1.6 billion break fee to an Irish biotechnology company as a capital loss, the agency told the U.S. Tax Court, arguing that the failed merger is tantamount to disposing of property.

  • August 02, 2024

    Taxation With Representation: Sullivan, Dechert, Kirkland

    In this week's Taxation With Representation, BNP Parabis SA acquires an investment management subsidiary for €5.1 billion, Cleveland accounting firm CBIZ merges with competitor Marcum for $2.3 billion, and Arcosa Inc. inks a deal with a family-owned construction materials business for $1.2 billion.

  • August 02, 2024

    Liberty Global's $110M Tax Refund Kosher, 10th Circ. Told

    The IRS is trying to block Liberty Global's bid for a $110 million tax refund by improperly using a legal doctrine requiring transactions to have economic substance, the telecommunications giant told the Tenth Circuit, arguing it was allowed to make tax-driven choices in the transactions at issue.

  • August 02, 2024

    Top UK Court To Hear HMRC Car Park Tax Dispute With NHS

    HM Revenue and Customs has been granted permission by Britain's highest court to challenge a ruling that a National Health Service trust qualified for value-added tax exemption for hospital car parking, a decision that could affect appeals brought by NHS entities.

  • August 01, 2024

    Divided Tax Court Says Treaty Bars Collections Hearing

    A divided U.S. Tax Court ruled Thursday that it lacked authority to review an Internal Revenue Service decision preventing a woman from challenging a federal tax lien the agency issued on behalf of the Canadian government to secure her tax debt to that country.

  • August 01, 2024

    Coca-Cola, IRS Enter $2.7B Tax Bill In Transfer Pricing Dispute

    Coca-Cola and the IRS submitted tax liability calculations totaling $2.73 billion to the U.S. Tax Court, reflecting the latest step in the company's long-running transfer pricing dispute over the agency's reallocation of the company's foreign affiliate income.

  • August 01, 2024

    EU Seeking Input On Electronic Country-By-Country Reporting

    The European Commission is looking for feedback on draft regulations creating a common template and electronic format for country-by-country reporting forms that large multinational corporations operating in the European Union will be required to use to disclose their corporate taxes, the EU's executive arm said Thursday.

  • August 01, 2024

    Airbnb's $1.3B Bill From IRS Overvalues IP, Tax Court Told

    Airbnb is challenging a $1.3 billion tax bill tied to income the IRS allocated from overseas, telling the U.S. Tax Court the agency overvalued intellectual property the home-rental giant licensed to its Irish affiliate before going public.

  • August 01, 2024

    Australia Seeking Feedback On Nonresident Trust Guidance

    The Australian Taxation Office is soliciting input on draft guidelines for compliance with the country's income tax obligations in cases where property of a nonresident trust is paid to or applied for the benefit of a resident beneficiary.

  • August 01, 2024

    3rd Circ. Affirms Nix Of Discovery Ask On GM In Brazil Case

    A Delaware federal court didn't abuse its discretion by declining to begin discovery on General Motors to aid ongoing litigation in Brazil for a group that is entitled to receive dozens of car dealerships' tax credits from the early 1990s, the Third Circuit found.

  • August 01, 2024

    15 Arrested In Albanian Ring Involving Money Laundering

    A "prominent money launderer" was among 15 members of what was called a high-profile Albanian organized crime group arrested by authorities under suspicion of crimes including contract killings and money laundering using cryptocurrency transactions, Europol said Thursday.

  • August 01, 2024

    Australia Slows Tax Pro Conduct Code Update After Blowback

    The Australian government is delaying the start of its newly passed changes to the country's code of conduct for tax agent services, which were supposed to enter into force this month, following pushback from industry groups, a minister said Thursday.

  • August 01, 2024

    Taxpayers Find Belgian Pillar 2 Request Sudden, Intrusive

    Belgian demands for detailed information that must be supplied within a short deadline are troubling taxpayers within the scope of the global minimum corporate tax, who said the country's quest for information is more challenging than that imposed by other governments.

  • August 01, 2024

    UK Capital Gains Tax Liabilities Decline, HMRC Says

    Capital gains tax liability in the U.K. declined in the 2022-2023 tax year, HM Revenue & Customs said in a news release Thursday.

  • July 31, 2024

    Treasury's New 'Killer B' Rules May Revive Controversies

    Recent U.S. Treasury Department regulations centered on contentious 2011 guidance aimed at so-called Killer B transactions have revived long-standing questions about how much authority rule writers have to target what they perceive as corporate tax avoidance in these maneuvers.

  • July 31, 2024

    'Tax Avoidance' Fuels Global Reporting Pushback, Pro Says

    A lobbying effort from multinational corporations to dissuade states from adopting mandatory worldwide combined reporting aims to keep billions of dollars in profits that were shifted into tax-friendly jurisdictions beyond the reach of tax administrators, a retired researcher from a progressive think tank said Wednesday.

  • July 31, 2024

    Cos. Insist Chevron Ruling Doesn't Change Deduction Claims

    A medical device company and a food services firm that are each challenging Internal Revenue Service denials of dividend deduction claims told the U.S. Tax Court that the recent U.S. Supreme Court decision overturning Chevron deference doesn't change the validity of their arguments.

  • July 31, 2024

    SEC Asked For Public Tax Reporting By Group With $2.3T

    The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission was asked Wednesday to begin a rulemaking procedure to require public country-by-country reporting of tax by nearly 90 investment funds, labor unions, activists and others with combined assets over $2.3 trillion.

Expert Analysis

  • IRS Announcement Will Aid Cos. In Buyback Tax Planning

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    Recent IRS transitional guidance regarding current requirements for reporting and payment of the stock repurchase excise tax will help corporate taxpayers make decisions about records retention and establishing reserves for future tax payments, say Xenia Garofalo and Kyle Colonna at Eversheds Sutherland.

  • Flawed Analysis Supports Common Law Tax Deficiency Ruling

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    The Colorado federal district court’s recent decision in Liberty Global, holding that the U.S. Department of Justice may assert a common law tax claim without the notice of tax deficiency required by the Internal Revenue Code, relies on a contorted reading of the statute and irrelevant case law, say Loren Opper and Christie Galinski at Miller Canfield.

  • Review Of Repatriation Tax Sets Justices On Slippery Slope

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    The U.S. Supreme Court’s recent decision to review the constitutionality of the repatriation tax in Moore v. U.S. has implications for many tax rules involving unrealized amounts and could leave the court on the brink of invalidating large swaths of the Internal Revenue Code, say attorneys at Eversheds Sutherland.

  • What To Make Of IRS' New Advance Pricing Guidance

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    Recent guidance on the IRS' goals for its advance pricing agreement system provides helpful insight into review and decision-making procedures for advance pricing agreement requests, but it also raises questions about the IRS' objectives, say Richard Slowinski and Stefanie Kavanagh at Alston & Bird.

  • Reserved Investor Fund Would Plug Gap In UK Finance Market

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    The reserved investor fund recently proposed by HM Treasury has the potential to be a welcome tax-efficient addition to the U.K.’s canon of products for real estate investments, with attractive features for companies and, in particular, large asset managers, say lawyers at Herbert Smith.

  • The Reciprocal Tax Bill Is A Warning Shot At Pillar 2

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    A bill recently introduced in the House of Representatives to reciprocally tax countries deemed to have imposed discriminatory taxes on U.S. citizens and businesses takes aim at countries implementing the global minimum tax treaty known as Pillar Two, with which the U.S. has not complied, says Alan Cole at the Tax Foundation.

  • What Tax-Exempt Orgs. Need From Energy Credit Guidance

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    Guidance clarifying the Inflation Reduction Act’s credit regime, expected from the U.S. Department of the Treasury this summer, should help tax-exempt organizations determine the benefits of clean energy projects and integrate alternative energy investments into their activities, say attorneys at Morgan Lewis.

  • How Foreign Info Return Penalty Case May Benefit Taxpayers

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    The U.S. Tax Court's recent decision that the Internal Revenue Service cannot penalize taxpayers for failing to file foreign corporation information returns may give similarly situated taxpayers an opportunity to also avoid penalties, provided they protect their rights before the decision is overturned or mooted by legislation, say attorneys at Arnold & Porter.

  • The Nuts And Bolts Of IRS Domestic Content Tax Credit

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    Recent IRS guidance provides specifics on how renewable energy projects can qualify for bonus tax credits by meeting U.S. domestic content rules, but also creates a qualification framework that will be complicated for project developers to navigate, say Scott Cockerham and Wolfram Pohl at Orrick.

  • Taxing The Digital Economy: The Good, The Bad And The Ugly

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    U.S. tech companies should watch for important developments in international taxation, including the resolution of Apple's decade-old state aid case, growing frustration with the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development's global tax plan and adoption of the digital services tax instead, says Joyce Beebe at Rice University's Baker Institute for Public Policy.

  • Big Tax Changes For Multinational Cos. In Budget Proposal

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    The Biden administration’s fiscal year 2024 budget proposes changes that would materially alter decades-old Internal Revenue Code provisions, requiring a shift in multinational corporations' tax planning strategies comparable to that required after enactment of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, say Xenia Garofalo and Kyle Colonna at Eversheds Sutherland.

  • Senate Credit Suisse Report Puts Attention On Banks, Trusts

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    The Senate Finance Committee's recent finding that Credit Suisse violated a plea agreement struck over its role in enabling offshore tax evasion has important ramifications for banks and trusts, including how they onboard, document and report on transactions relevant to U.S. reporting requirements, say Will Barry and Ian Herbert at Miller & Chevalier.

  • Seeking IRS Accountability For Faulty Microcaptive Notice

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    Like the taxpayers in Standard Insurances v. U.S. seeking to expand earlier wins in microcaptive insurance cases that limit IRS use of improperly obtained information, others should consider ways to hold the agency accountable and provide incentive for it to follow the law going forward, says Joshua Smeltzer at Gray Reed.

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