

A.J. van Herwaarden LLM, MSc is verbonden aan de Rijksuniversiteit Groningen.
Meer over A.J. van HerwaardenIntra-group financial transactions and the arm's length principle: a comparative and normative analysis
Samenvatting
Intra-groep financiële transacties en het arm's-lengthbeginsel: een vergelijkende en normatieve analyse.
De centrale onderzoeksvraag van dit proefschrift luidt: Hoe passen de OESO, de EU en bepaalde landen het arm's-lengthgedachtegoed toe op thin capitalization, intra-groep leningen, intra-groep garanties en intra-groep cashpooling en hoe kan het arm's-lengthgedachtegoed het beste worden toegepast op deze intra-groep financiële transacties? De uitkomsten van het onderzoek zijn vanuit zowel wetenschappelijk als maatschappelijk oogpunt relevant.
Trefwoorden
arm's length beginsel transfer pricing intra-groep transacties dunne kapitalisatie oeso richtlijnen internationaal belastingrecht cash pooling concernfinanciering creditrating rentevoeten garantievergoedingen multinationale ondernemingen fiscaal recht vergelijkende rechtsvergelijking belastingrecht financiële transacties eu regelgeving impliciete steun benchmarking groepsstructuren financiële garanties jurisprudentie risicobeheer
Trefwoorden
Specificaties
Inhoudsopgave
U kunt van deze inhoudsopgave een PDF downloaden
List of abbreviations / 15
Part I – Introductory chapters / 19
1 Introduction / 21
1.1 Background / 21
1.2 An introduction to the studied intra-group financial transactions / 23
1.2.1 Introduction / 23
1.2.2 Thin capitalization / 23
1.2.3 Intra-group loans / 24
1.2.4 Intra-group financial guarantees / 25
1.2.5 Intra-group cash pooling / 26
1.3 State of the art / 27
1.4 The study’s objective, research question and relevance / 29
1.5 Research methodology / 30
1.6 Scope of the study: the application of arm’s length reasoning to thin capitalization, intra-group loans, guarantees and cash pooling / 33
1.7 Some critical reflections on the study / 35
1.7.1 The choice of countries and representativeness of the studied domestic source materials / 35
1.7.2 The risk of misinterpreting foreign languages / 36
1.7.3 The benchmark to determine what constitutes correct arm’s length reasoning / 36
1.8 Some remarks on terminology / 37
1.9 Overview of OECD guidance, EU source materials and country reports / 38
1.9.1 Introduction / 38
1.9.2 OECD / 40
1.9.3 European Union / 42
1.9.4 Australia / 43
1.9.5 Austria / 45
1.9.6 Belgium / 46
1.9.7 Canada / 47
1.9.8 Denmark / 48
1.9.9 Finland / 49
1.9.10 France / 49
1.9.11 Germany / 51
1.9.12 India / 52
1.9.13 Luxembourg / 53
1.9.14 The Netherlands / 53
1.9.15 New Zealand / 55
1.9.16 Norway / 56
1.9.17 Singapore / 57
1.9.18 South Africa / 57
1.9.19 Sweden / 58
1.9.20 Switzerland / 59
1.9.21 United Kingdom / 60
1.10 Overview of the book / 61
2 Topics generally relevant to the application of arm’s length reasoning to intra-group financial transactions / 63
2.1 Introduction / 63
2.2 High-level overview of the transfer pricing process / 64
2.3 Transfer pricing methods / 66
2.4 Types of transfer pricing adjustments / 67
2.5 The requirements of control over risk and financial capacity to assume risk / 73
2.6 Transfer pricing safe harbours / 76
2.7 Determining a borrower’s credit rating for transfer pricing purposes / 78
2.7.1 Introduction / 78
2.7.2 External rating approach / 79
2.7.3 Commercial rating tools approach / 82
2.7.4 Publicly available rating methodologies approach / 84
2.7.5 Internal rating approach / 85
2.7.6 The impact of (potential) implicit support on a borrower’s credit rating / 86
2.8 Relevance of bank offer letters and quotation letters for determining arm’s length terms / 90
2.9 The arm’s length amount of profit of a group finance company / 96
2.9.1 Introduction / 96
2.9.2 Arm’s length amount of profit of a low-substance group finance company (cash box) / 97
2.9.3 Arm’s length amount of profit of a non-cash box group finance company / 99
2.10 Interest-free intra-group loans and intra-group guarantees without charge / 110
2.10.1 Introduction / 110
2.10.2 General rule: an intra-group loan must be interest-bearing and an intra-group guarantee must be remunerated by a guarantee fee / 111
2.10.3 Exception 1: additional relations between the lender/guarantor and the borrower / 114
2.10.4 Exception 2: different arm’s length reasons than additional relations between the lender/guarantor and the borrower / 119
2.11 Conclusion / 128
Part II – A comparative analysis of intra-group financial transactions / 133
3 Thin capitalization / 135
3.1 Introduction / 135
3.2 An overview of OECD guidance, EU guidance and domestic legal provisions approving the application of arm’s length reasoning in the context of thin capitalization / 141
3.2.1 Introduction / 141
3.2.2 OECD guidance on the application of arm’s length reasoning in the context of thin capitalization / 142
3.2.3 Domestic legal provisions and EU guidance which allow the application of arm’s length reasoning in the context of thin capitalization / 144
3.3 The characteristics of the borrower in an arm’s length debt test: the relevance of potential implicit support, the borrower’s subsidiaries and its risk attitude towards leverage / 148
3.3.1 Introduction / 148
3.3.2 The relevance of the characteristic of potential implicit support / 149
3.3.3 The relevance of the characteristic of the borrower having subsidiaries / 150
3.3.4 The relevance of the characteristic of the borrower’s risk attitude towards leverage / 151
3.4 The identity of the lender in an arm’s length debt test / 152
3.5 The arm’s length debt test: a ‘could interpretation’ and a ‘would interpretation’ of the arm’s length debt amount / 156
3.5.1 Introduction / 156
3.5.2 A could interpretation of the arm’s length debt amount / 156
3.5.3 A would interpretation of the arm’s length debt amount / 158
3.6 Approaches to determine the arm’s length debt amount / 161
3.6.1 Introduction / 161
3.6.2 Comparing the financial (debt) ratios or credit rating of a borrowing group company with the financial (debt) ratios or credit rating of comparable companies / 161
3.6.3 Accepting a specified, fixed credit rating as an arm’s length credit rating / 164
3.7 Moment(s) in time at which to apply the arm’s length debt test / 166
3.7.1 Introduction / 166
3.7.2 Applying the arm’s length debt test only at the moment an intra-group loan or external guaranteed loan is taken out / 166
3.7.3 Applying the arm’s length debt test both at the moment an intra-group loan or external guaranteed loan is taken out and at (specified) later moments / 167
3.7.4 Applying the arm’s length debt test each taxable year / 168
3.8 Satisfying the arm’s length escape under a domestic thin capitalization rule: a closer look at the requirements / 169
3.8.1 Introduction / 169
3.8.2 A stringent application of the arm’s length escape: all terms of the debt taken out by the borrower need to be at arm’s length / 170
3.8.3 A less stringent application of the arm’s length escape: not all terms of the debt (including the debt amount) taken out by the borrower need to be at arm’s length – the actual amount of debt is equal to or lower than the arm’s length debt amount / 174
3.8.4 A less stringent application of the arm’s length escape: not all terms of the debt (including the debt amount) taken out by the borrower need to be at arm’s length – the actual amount of debt exceeds the arm’s length debt amount / 175
3.9 Arm’s length pricing of a non-arm’s length debt amount / 176
3.9.1 Introduction / 176
3.9.2 Arm’s length pricing of a higher than arm’s length debt amount / 176
3.9.3 Arm’s length pricing of a lower than arm’s length debt amount / 179
3.10 Thin capitalization in the context of outbound loans and outbound guarantees / 180
3.11 Interest deduction at the level of the intra-group guarantor / 185
3.12 Conclusion / 187
4 Intra-group loans / 191
4.1 Introduction / 191
4.2 Transfer pricing approaches to determine an arm’s length interest rate / 193
4.2.1 Introduction / 193
4.2.2 Interest rate based on the intra-group borrower’s external debit interest rate / 195
4.2.2.1 Introduction / 195
4.2.2.2 Prototypical internal CUP: the interest rate which the intra-group borrower pays on an external loan / 196
4.2.2.3 Intra-group borrower’s external debit interest rate determined by means other than an external loan taken out by the intra-group borrower / 198
4.2.3 Interest rate based on the intra-group lender’s costs / 208
4.2.4 Interest rate based on the group’s external debit interest rate and/or credit rating / 214
4.2.5 Interest rate which exceeds the intra-group lender’s external credit interest rate and is lower than the intra-group borrower’s external debit interest rate / 222
4.2.6 Interest rate conforming to a safe harbour interest rate / 224
4.2.7 Other transfer pricing approaches / 226
4.2.8 Conclusion / 231
4.3 The impact of an intra-group loan’s structural terms on the arm’s length interest rate / 232
4.3.1 Introduction / 232
4.3.2 Term to maturity / 233
4.3.3 Type of interest rate / 235
4.3.4 Security/collateral / 238
4.3.5 Rank / 246
4.3.6 Currency / 249
4.3.7 Amount / 255
4.3.8 Principal repayment type / 255
4.3.9 Timing of interest payments / 256
4.3.10 Covenants / 256
4.3.11 Call and put options / 258
4.3.12 Conversion into shares / 259
4.3.13 Guarantee / 260
4.3.14 Conclusion / 261
4.4 The impact of (potential) implicit support on an arm’s length interest rate / 261
4.5 The consequences of an intra-group borrower not acting in an arm’s length manner after the conclusion of an intra-group loan / 267
4.5.1 Introduction / 267
4.5.2 An intra-group borrower does not act during the intra-group loan’s term to maturity, while doing so would be beneficial / 268
4.5.3 An intra-group borrower replaces an intra-group loan prior to maturity by another intra-group loan with worse terms / 270
4.6 Conclusion / 275
5 Intra-group financial guarantees / 279
5.1 Introduction / 279
5.2 Yield approach / 281
5.2.1 Introduction / 281
5.2.2 Full-yield-savings approach / 283
5.2.3 Part-of-the-yield-savings approach / 285
5.3 CUP method / 288
5.3.1 Introduction / 288
5.3.2 Bank guarantee fees / 288
5.3.3 Credit default swaps / 294
5.3.4 Financial guarantees provided by insurance companies / 297
5.4 Cost based approach / 297
5.5 Cost-benefit approach / 300
5.5.1 Introduction / 300
5.5.2 The guarantor’s minimum ask price / 301
5.5.3 The borrower’s maximum bid price / 302
5.5.4 Determining the arm’s length guarantee fee within the range between the guarantor’s minimum ask price and the borrower’s maximum bid price / 302
5.6 Put option approach / 304
5.7 Cost of capital approach / 305
5.8 Guarantee fee applied in previous case law approach / 306
5.9 Safe harbour guarantee fee approach / 308
5.10 Other approaches to determine an arm’s length guarantee fee / 308
5.11 Conclusion / 309
6 Intra-group cash pooling / 313
6.1 Introduction / 313
6.2 Arm’s length allocation of the netting benefit and the volume benefit / 318
6.2.1 Introduction / 318
6.2.2 Arm’s length allocation of the netting benefit / 319
6.2.3 Arm’s length allocation of the volume benefit / 323
6.3 Arm’s length credit and debit interest rates within a cash pool / 325
6.3.2 Arm’s length credit interest rate / 326
6.3.3 Arm’s length debit interest rate / 331
6.4 Arm’s length remuneration of the cash pool leader / 334
6.5 Arm’s length credit interest rate for structural deposits / 336
6.6 A pool participant having simultaneous deposits and borrowings within a cash pool / 343
6.7 Notional cash pooling / 344
6.8 Conclusion / 346
Part III – A conceptual analysis of arm’s length reasoning in general and of the preferable application of arm’s length reasoning to intra-group financial transactions / 349
7 A conceptual analysis of arm’s length reasoning in general / 351
7.1 Introduction / 351
7.2 Objectives of arm’s length reasoning / 354
7.3 Applying arm’s length reasoning to the terms of a controlled transaction / 357
7.4 Establishing the terms of the reference transaction, that is the transaction to which the examined transaction must be compared / 358
7.4.1 Introduction / 358
7.4.2 Arm’s length reasoning is hypothetical by its very nature / 358
7.4.3 The characteristics of the parties in the reference transaction: a diverging interest but otherwise the same characteristics as the parties in the examined transaction / 360
7.4.4 Determining the terms of the reference transaction: hypothesizing a bargain between the parties in the reference transaction / 363
7.5 Adjusting the terms of the examined transaction if they differ from the terms of the reference transaction / 364
7.6 Conclusion / 366
8 Arm’s length reasoning and intra-group financial transactions: a preferable approach / 369
8.1 Introduction / 369
8.2 Why is it impossible to apply what constitutes a theoretically correct application of arm’s length reasoning in general to intra-group financial transactions? / 373
8.2.1 Introduction / 373
8.2.2 Determining the arm’s length debt amount: the impossibility of identifying the amount of debt which the RT borrower is willing to take out / 375
8.2.3 Determining the arm’s length interest rate and the arm’s length guarantee fee: the impossibility of determining whether a bargaining range exists / 378
8.2.3.1 Introduction / 378
8.2.3.2 Differences between the characteristics of the lender/guarantor in the reference transaction and the characteristics of an external lender/guarantor / 379
8.2.3.3 Consequence of the differences in characteristics: the impossibility to determine whether an arm’s length price for the examined intra-group financial transaction exists / 387
8.2.4 Conclusion / 389
8.3 The preferable (‘second best’) approach to determining arm’s length terms for an intra-group financial transaction: the group credit rating approach / 390
8.3.1 Introduction / 390
8.3.2 The group credit rating approach best fulfils the objectives of arm’s length reasoning / 394
8.3.2.1 Introduction / 394
8.3.3 The group credit rating approach fits best with the Ottawa taxation framework principles / 398
8.3.4 Other arguments in favor of the group credit rating approach / 400
8.3.5 Conclusion / 402
8.4 Applying the group credit rating approach / 403
8.4.1 Introduction / 403
8.4.2 Determining the arm’s length debt amount under the group credit rating approach / 403
8.4.3 Determining arm’s length terms for an intra-group loan under the group credit rating approach / 404
8.4.4 Determining the arm’s length guarantee fee under the group credit rating approach / 406
8.4.5 Cash pooling under the group credit rating approach / 406
8.5 Issues regarding the determination of arm’s length terms for intra-group loans which do not relate specifically to the group credit rating approach / 407
8.5.1 Introduction / 407
8.5.2 The arm’s length return to a lender which does not control the lending risk / 407
8.5.3 Acting in a non-arm’s length manner after the conclusion of an intra-group loan / 408
8.6 Conclusion / 409
Part IV – Summary, conclusion and recommendations / 415
9 Summary, conclusion and recommendations / 417
9.1 Introductory remarks / 417
9.2 The descriptive/comparative component of the study: how do the OECD, the EU and selected countries apply arm’s length reasoning to intra-group financial transactions? / 418
9.2.1 Thin capitalization / 418
9.2.2 Intra-group loans / 421
9.2.3 Intra-group financial guarantees / 424
9.2.4 Intra-group cash pooling / 426
9.3 The normative component of the study: how can arm’s length reasoning best be applied to intra-group financial transactions? / 428
9.3.1 A conceptual analysis of arm’s length reasoning in general / 428
9.3.2 Arm’s length reasoning and intra-group financial transactions: a preferable approach / 429
9.4 Conclusion / a succinct answer to the research question / 435
9.5 Recommendations / 437
9.5.1 Introduction / 437
9.5.2 Recommendations to the OECD, the EU and tax administrations, courts and lawmakers / 437
9.5.3 Recommendations for further research / 439
Wetenschappelijke samenvatting / 441
Scientific summary / 457
Bibliography / 471
Anderen die dit boek kochten, kochten ook
Rubrieken
- cadeauboeken
- computer en informatica
- economie
- filosofie
- flora en fauna
- geneeskunde
- geschiedenis
- gezondheid
- jeugd
- juridisch
- koken en eten
- kunst en cultuur
- literatuur en romans
- mens en maatschappij
- naslagwerken
- non-fictie informatief/professioneel
- paramedisch
- psychologie
- reizen
- religie
- schoolboeken
- spiritualiteit
- sport, hobby, lifestyle
- thrillers en spanning
- wetenschap en techniek
- woordenboeken en taal