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A New Way to Do the Splits: B.E.P.S. Guidance Falls Short of Enabling Global Formulary Apportionment

From the moment the B.E.P.S. Project began in 2013, multinational enterprises have been concerned that tax authorities would be emboldened to apportion income resulting from the joint commercialization of intangible assets.  Surprise.  A July 4 publication of the O.E.C.D. Revised Guidance on Profit Splits discussion draft does not place an over-broad profit apportionment tool in the hands of tax authorities.  Michael Peggs explains why the transactional profit split method may not be appropriate in many instances. 

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Transfer Pricing Positions of Consolidated Groups: After Guidant

Michael Peggs and Kenneth Lobo comment on the I.R.S. victory in the Guidant case where the I.R.S. applied the “one size fits all” approach to group-wide transactions. Their conclusion is that today’s I.R.S. victory may be tomorrow’s lost revenue where a taxpayer seeks competent authority relief for transfer pricing adjustments initiated abroad.

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Country-by-Country Reporting – Where Are We Going?

B.E.P.S. Action 13 addresses country-by-country reporting among tax authorities as a means of ferreting out mismatches between functions and profits. Now, CbC reporting is morphing in Europe to a public disclosure tool to bring N.G.O.’s into the process. Your tax savings through planning becomes a global problem for the N.G.O.’s to redress through public outcry. Michael Peggs and Kenneth Lobo tell all.

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A Proposed Treatment For H.T.V.I.

H.T.V.I. has been singled out as being one of the leading causes of base erosion and profit shifting (“B.E.P.S.”). Michael Peggs, co-head of the transfer pricing practice of Ruchelman P.L.L.C., makes a valiant attempt at explaining a method to value intangible property that is “hard to value” while being compliant with the B.E.P.S. Action Plan. He suggests a combination of common sense and reliable data.

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Tax Court Strikes Down I.R.S. Position on Stock-Based Compensation in Altera Case

Is the Altera case important because it struck down the I.R.S.’s stock-based compensation regulations related to cost sharing agreements? Or is it important because of the procedural analysis, which enabled the Tax Court to be in position to strike down a regulation? Beate Erwin, Stanley C. Ruchelman, and Michael Peggs explain why the case is important for both reasons. 

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Transfer Pricing Litigation from A to Z

A number of transfer pricing cases, many with potentially significant precedent value and tax provision consequences, are either at trial or proceeding to trial. Michael Peggs and Cheryl Magat comment on two of the major cases on the Tax Court Docket, Altera and Zimmer. Those who think arm’s length means “do what others do” will be surprised.

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Foreign Correspondence: Notes from Abroad

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HOLIDAY SHOPPING, CANADIAN RETAIL PRICES AND TRANSFER PRICING CONTROVERSY

By Michael Peggs

When people think of massive transfer pricing cases, the driver typically is the diversion of profits to a low-tax jurisdiction. But transfer pricing issues are now filtering down to the level of retail shoppers facing retail price disparity in adjacent jurisdictions. A typical case is the premium that Canadian purchasers generally pay over prices charged in the U.S. for comparable products.

Before the internet, it was customary for Canadians to receive flyers in the mail from U.S. grocery and department stores. The flyers offered bargains for the holidays. The internet now allows instant price comparisons and greater choice for Canadian consumers. Disregarding sub rosa impediments to competition that permeate many areas of the Canadian economy – think of cultural preferences – Canadians have complained loudly that retail prices are unfairly high when compared with exchange-adjusted U.S. prices. A typical example is print media where the premium for pricing the Canadian edition was not reduced over the period in which the Canadian dollar reached parity with its U.S. counterpart.

The Canadian government is now preparing to give the Competition Bureau new powers to persuade U.S. multinationals with Canadian retail operations to lower prices or to achieve retail price parity, as will be determined. One hopes that Industry Canada will intervene with the Canada Revenue Agency (“C.R.A.”) before drafting legislation, as an unintended consequence may be a new round of Canadian transfer pricing controversy.

I.R.S. vs. O.E.C.D. – How Are Tax Authorities Planning to Conduct Your Next Transfer Pricing Audit

This article addresses major developments in transfer pricing practice that will affect the way advice is given to clients and their ability to implement such advice. Over the past 15 months, the I.R.S. and the O.E.C.D. separately published transfer pricing audit and administrative initiatives that will significantly impact the way controlled transactions among related parties are reported. These initiatives are consistent with overall concerns raised in the Base Erosion and Profit Shifting (“B.E.P.S.”) Report of the O.E.C.D. Each stands independently of B.E.P.S. and will likely be unaffected by the ultimate actions plans implementing B.E.P.S. goals.

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