Transfer Pricing in the New Year: Three things every U.S. multinational should know
Welcome to 2010. This year promises to bring interesting developments on the U.S. legislative agenda, particularly with respect to international “tax reform.” Case in point, two bills – one each in the House and Senate – could have serious implications for companies with a U.S. taxable presence. Here are three issues which we believe will be significant in the next calendar year and strategies for addressing them proactively.
- Global increase in transfer pricing audits – In 2009 the IRS hired scores of additional agents, particularly international examiners and economists, with the intention of expanding audits of large and mid-size corporate taxpayers – particularly those in the middle-market. The U.S. was not alone. Around the world, tax authorities increased their numbers of cross-border examiners in 2009 and beyond. Of the countries with the most aggressive additions of audit related personnel, key U.S.-trading partners Brazil, Mexico and China have signaled an increase in transfer pricing audits in the coming year. Multinational enterprises must anticipate that IRS initial documentation requests will include a request for transfer pricing documentation and be prepared to respond to such requests within 30 days of the request. Other countries will have similar, if not, shorter response times. Moreover, failing to respond in many cases is tantamount to being non-responsive. The days of “just-in-time” transfer pricing documentation are over.
- Intellectual property and cost-sharing – On December 31, 2008, the U.S. Treasury released the new temporary cost-sharing regulations under Treas. Reg. §1.482-7T. The Temporary Treasury Regulations are hardly taxpayer-friendly and represent the increased scrutiny U.S. multinationals will face with respect to arrangements to share costs and the global structuring and alignment of intellectual property portfolios going-forward. In order to “grandfather” cost-sharing arrangements in place prior to the January 5, 2009 effective date, taxpayers had until July 6, 2009 to conform their existing cost-sharing arrangements to the requirements contained in the new temporary regulations with certain adaptations. The key for U.S. multinationals in 2010 is to remain vigilant with respect to existing cost-sharing arrangements and events that may trigger an arrangement – particularly important as M&A deal flow likely increases during the coming year in response to a (hopefully) reviving economy.
- Codification of Economic Substance – The proposed bill codifying the Economic Substance Doctrine is still alive in the House and will likely find its way into law sometime in 2010 – either in the form of the ultimately enacted healthcare bill or in another piece of legislation. U.S. taxpayers must critically examine the transaction structuring and planning which has provided tax benefits and be prepared to produce documentation and other evidence showing the non-tax business purpose justifying the underlying transaction and attendant structuring.
The stakes are rising for multinational enterprises as the world is getting smaller and tax authorities are sharing information at unprecedented levels. Thus, the best defense is a well-crafted offense that is integrated contemporaneously with acquisitions, divestitures and/or restructurings. The days of operational autonomy for multinational enterprises are over.
Tags: Congress, economic substance, enterprise risk management, financial reporting, financial statement, healthcare debate, Information Sharing, Intangible, Intangible asset, Intellectual Property, Intercompany, IP, IRS, LMSB, risk, risk management, substance, tax, Tax Audits, Tax legislation, Tax Reform, transfer pricing