The twilight of easy European tax deals?

European Commissioner Margrethe Vestager gestures during a news conference on Ireland's tax dealings with Apple at the European Commission in Brussels, Belgium, on August 30, 2016. Picture: Eric Vidal

European Commissioner Margrethe Vestager gestures during a news conference on Ireland's tax dealings with Apple at the European Commission in Brussels, Belgium, on August 30, 2016. Picture: Eric Vidal

Published Aug 31, 2016

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San Francisco - The days when big US technology companies could easily slice tax bills in Europe are coming to an end.

Read also: Tax blitz: Apple ordered to cough up billions

For decades, businesses like Apple that generate significant revenue abroad flocked to Ireland, the Netherlands and Luxembourg, where they counted on amenable fiscal regimes to reduce their tax, even if they had minimal operations on the ground.

On Tuesday, European Competition Commissioner Margrethe Vestager sent the strongest signal yet that she won’t abide these strategies when she demanded Apple pay $14.5 billion in back taxes.

“Every global company that is exposed to EU taxes in individual nations now has to look back and ask whether any of their agreements are subject to similar attacks,” said Thomas Cooke, a professor at Georgetown’s McDonough School of Business. “This is the first signal of a long play that’s going to take place over many, many months.”

Every time an iPhone or iPad is purchased in London, Paris or Milan, Apple books the profit at a subsidiary in the Irish city of Cork. The process is part of a decades-long arrangement with the Irish government that’s allowed the company to pay lower taxes on these European sales. The European Commission ruled that Ireland gave Apple illegally favourable tax treatment, letting it pay an effective tax rate on European profits of 1 percent in 2003 and down to 0.005 percent in 2014. Apple and Ireland vowed to appeal.

Apple’s Irish tax arrangement was considered “the most brazen” among multinational US technology companies, said Aisling Donohue, a partner at tax and business advisory firm MGPartners in Ireland. While other companies should be concerned, they aren’t likely to face as much scrutiny, she said.

Broader push

Still, Vestager’s move is part of a broader push to close loopholes that European regulators think give foreign companies an advantage. Google parent Alphabet Inc. has also been a beneficiary of Ireland’s tax regime, using the so-called “Double Irish” mechanism to save billions in tax on its international earnings. Ireland is phasing this out, although companies have until 2021 to adjust.

Amazon.com Inc. used a similar process to effectively send profit through Luxembourg. In Europe, the e-commerce giant told authorities that the intellectual property behind its web shopping platform was immensely valuable, justifying the billions in tax-free revenue it collected there since moving its technology assets to Luxembourg a decade ago. In the US it played down the value of those same assets to explain why it paid so little in taxes for licensing them. That prompted investigations on both sides of the Atlantic and Amazon changed its policy in 2015, largely eliminating the practice.

“You can’t bank on achieving the savings in post-tax profits that you might have once expected,” said Jolyon Maugham, a British trial lawyer specialising in tax cases at Devereux Chambers. “That makes the pursuit of such strategies rather more difficult to justify.”

Unsustainable

About six months ago, Netflix told an investor that the company will likely pay higher international tax rates than other large US. technology companies currently pay. Netflix, which recently began expanding aggressively abroad, said it views other US tech companies’ international tax strategies as unsustainable, according to a person familiar with the situation. The person didn’t want to be identified recounting a private discussion.

“Multinationals with aggressive tax planning strategies can expect to pay more tax,” Sarah Jane Mahmud, a Bloomberg Intelligence analyst, wrote in a recent research note. “EU reforms will require income to be taxed where generated through, among other things, new restrictions on use of controlled foreign companies.”

A Netflix spokeswoman didn’t respond to requests seeking comment Tuesday. Spokesmen at Alphabet and Amazon declined to comment.

US tax reform

Even if Apple has to pay billions and other tax strategies fizzle, Ireland’s 12.5 percent corporate rate means it’s still likely to trump the US as a preferred corporate tax domicile. The iPhone maker has been there since opening a factory in Cork in 1980.

“We received guidance from Irish tax authorities on how to comply correctly with Irish tax law - the same kind of guidance available to any company doing business there,” CEO Tim Cook said in a statement. “In Ireland and in every country where we operate, Apple follows the law and we pay all the taxes we owe.”

The timing of Europe’s decision, ahead of the US presidential election, means tax reform may become a more prominent issue. Republican nominee Donald Trump proposed taxing companies’ accumulated offshore profit at 10 percent, compared with the current top corporate rate of 35 percent. The tax Apple pays abroad is deductible from the 35 percent it must pay should it bring offshore profits home.

One major tech investor said low European taxes don’t help US investors because the resulting higher overseas profits are still out of reach for things like share buybacks, dividends and acquisitions of other US companies. If European tax rates rise, there would be more incentive to repatriate the money, especially if there’s US tax reform, said the investor, who asked not to be named discussing internal strategy ideas. The Apple ruling adds more pressure on the US to overhaul its tax system.

For now, that may be little solace for Apple and its US rivals. The revelation that a regulator can impose higher tax bills retroactively - even though they were legal according to national laws - will top companies’ list of concerns, according to Adam Halpern, a tax lawyer at Fenwick & West.

“You thought you understood what your risk profile was in terms of tax, and then a regional non-governmental agency comes in and tells you to pay more,” he said.

 

* With assistance from Jeremy Kahn, Spencer Soper and Sarah Frier

BLOOMBERG

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