Tag: Idle capacity
Argentina vs Scania Argentina SA, August 2024, Court of Appeal, Case No 41036/2023
The transaction in question involved intercompany sales between Scania Argentina S.A. and its foreign affiliates. To justify the pricing of these controlled transactions, Scania applied the Transactional Net Margin Method (TNMM), using Return on Total Costs (ROTC) as a profit-level indicator. They also made a comparability adjustment for costs relating to extraordinary idle capacity. However, the tax authorities rejected both the PLI chosen and the comparability adjustments made by Scania. They excluded two comparables from the benchmark study, applying a Return on Capital Employed (ROCE) PLI, and issued an assessment for additional taxes for FY 2003 on this basis. However, on appeal, the Tax Court overturned the decision, ruling that the transfer pricing analysis was reasonable and adequately justified. The court accepted the use of ROTC over ROCE due to the volatility of Argentina’s market in 2000. It also recognised the legitimacy of the adjustment for extraordinary idle capacity and found that the tax authorities had failed to substantiate their exclusion of the two comparables or justify their challenge under the arm’s length principle. An appeal was then filed with the Administrative Court of Appeal. Judgment The Administrative Court of Appeal upheld the decision of the Tax Court. The Court found that the tax authorities’ appeal did not establish any error in the factual or technical assessments made by the lower court. The expert evidence showed a verified 40% idle capacity and justified the comparability adjustments and choice of ROTC over ROCE. The tax authorities’ arguments were dismissed as general, unsubstantiated, and lacking in specific evidentiary rebuttal. Click here for English Translation Click here for other translation ...
Korea vs “Hygiene Corp” May 2024, Tax Tribunal, Case no 조심 2022 서 2312
“Hygiene Corp” is a manufacturer of hygiene products, diapers, sanitary napkins, toilet paper, which it sold to forty‐five overseas related parties at cost plus 8%, the same markup applied to four unrelated foreign purchasers. It also dispatched skilled employees abroad under an internal exchange programme and transferred patented know‐how free of charge to another related affiliate. Following an audit for FY 20152019 the tax authorities issued an assessment of additional taxable profits due to non-arm’s length pricing of sales to related parties and unpaid service fees and royalties from related parties. An appeal was filed where “Hygiene Corp” argued that its sales prices (manufacturing cost plus an 8% margin) mirrored prices charged to independent third parties and so already reflected an arm’s-length result. It emphasised having genuine internal comparables, growing share of non-related-party exports (over 20% by 2019), and meaningful economic rationale for low-margin pricing to utilize idle capacity amid a sharp decline in Korea’s birth rate after 2016. Citing OECD Guidelines and case law, it argued that the cost-plus method based on internal comparables should prevail over a net margin method reliant on entirely different companies, and that economic strategy and market-penetration considerations are valid under the arm’s-length principle. It also challenged the comparability and selection process for the twenty external companies used by the tax authorities, contending major functional, product and scale differences, and inconsistent treatment of administrative, R&D and early-retirement costs. The tax authoritoies countered that the claimant’s related-party transactions lacked “economic rationality” because they generated operating losses at the 8% markup level, and that true arm’s-length pricing would yield positive profitability. It held that internal comparables must still satisfy the five comparability factors, and found the claimant’s four independent customers to depend on the parent’s licensing policy and thus not genuinely independent. In selecting its own comparables, some 309 firms in paper and textile manufacturing were screened via a commercial database, quantitative and qualitative filters were applied, and a median net-margin was determined. It also reallocated common administrative and R&D expenses to exports, treated early-retirement charges and fixed-cost increases as ordinary costs, and upheld the addition of an 8% service margin on dispatched staff and on the labour-cost base of transferred intangible assets. Decision The review bord judgment accepted parts of both sides’ positions. It affirmed that internal comparables must meet stringent comparability criteria and that a transaction formed under group transfer-pricing policy cannot automatically serve as an arm’s-length benchmark, agreeing that the claimant’s export price alone did not prove comparability. It nonetheless observed that the authorities comparable‐company selection should be revisited, since its qualitative filters (for example, requiring comparables to have export ratios at or above 10%) may have inadvertently skewed results toward firms with higher profitability and different business models. Regarding service-fee and intangible-asset adjustments, the decision recognized that gratuitous transfers and internal service charging arrangements formed part of the group’s global policy and so could not be disregarded without clear evidence that these had been factored into royalty rates. The board ordered recalculation of the arm’s length price for product sales using a revised comparable set under the TNMM, while disallowing adjustments for services and gratuitous intangible transfers that reflected the group’s integrated licensing policy. The matter was remitted to the tax authorities to issue an adjusted assessment. Click here for English translation Click here for other translation ...
Indonesia vs PT VVF Indonesia, February 2024, Tax Court, Case No. PUT-003777.152023PPM.XVIllA Tahun 2024
PT VVF Indonesia manufactures oleochemical products from crude palm kernel oil and split fatty acids. In 2016, the company purchased raw materials from independent suppliers and sold its products to both related and independent customers. Its main related customer that year was VVF India, which used the Indonesian company’s products as inputs for downstream oleochemicals. The dispute concerns the pricing of those sales to VVF India. PT VVF Indonesia’s local file applied a net cost plus method, reporting an adjusted margin of 4.62 per cent. It claimed that this figure sat within the interquartile range after adjusting for idle capacity driven by low production and export levies on palm oil derivatives. PT VVF Indonesia argued that their losses were commercial, that their comparables and adjustments met regulatory and OECD standards, and that the audit had ignored their file and introduced seven new comparables without providing clear reasons. The tax authority tested profitability at company level and then allocated the correction to related sales, as the taxpayer had not segmented their accounts to distinguish between controlled and uncontrolled transactions. The tax authority replaced the taxpayer’s set with seven companies that it considered to be more suitable, and maintained that the comparability defects had been sufficiently addressed for a reliable analysis. An appeal was filed by PT VVF Indonesia with the tax court. Decision The Tax Court partly granted the appeal. It accepted the adjustments relating to idle capacity and other facts and conditions, and recalculated the 2016 result, arriving at a larger tax loss of Rp 7,571,338,778. It also confirmed that the income tax payable remained at zero under the Nil assessment. PUT-003777-15-2023-PP-M-XVI1IA ENG Click here for translation ...
