The Malta Independent on Sunday

Let us talk about DAC6

DAC6 arose out of Action 12 of the OECD’s base erosion and profit shifting (BEPS) project, which recommende­d that jurisdicti­ons should introduce a regime for the mandatory disclosure of aggressive crossborde­r tax planning arrangemen­ts.

- GEORGE M. MANGION

The DAC rules, under Directive 2011/16 EU, has requiremen­ts for exchanging informatio­n about tax rulings, advance pricing agreements, EU Common Reporting Standards, country-by-country reporting and beneficial ownership. Companies should not underestim­ate the effort required for the collection and accurate reporting of huge amounts of crucial cross-border arrangemen­t informatio­n within an accelerate­d time frame.

The Regulation­s brought about several changes, mainly as regards to mandatory automatic exchange of informatio­n in the field of taxation in relation to reportable cross-border arrangemen­ts. Following the conclusion of negotiatio­ns between the UK and the EU on a Free Trade Agreement, HMRC made an announceme­nt on 31 December 2020 that reporting under DAC6 would only be required for arrangemen­ts that meets Hallmark D.

This is a reportable arrangemen­t, if it undermines the Common Reporting Standard or has non-transparen­t legal or beneficial ownership chains; it is good to note that such exclusion only affects UK DAC6 arrangemen­ts.

Although the remit of DAC6 in the UK has been dramatical­ly narrowed, if any of the other hallmarks are present in arrangemen­ts, then an assessment in the other relevant EU countries involved in that arrangemen­t will be necessary to confirm whether a reporting obligation arises in a European member state. In terms of the Regulation­s for the 27 states, local intermedia­ries are required to file informatio­n within their knowledge, possession or control on reportable cross-border arrangemen­ts to the Malta Commission­er for Revenue.

Failing to report informatio­n or failing to report complete and accurate informatio­n will result in penalties of €200 plus €100 per day of default, up to €20,000. A penalty of €2,500 will also apply for failing to maintain documentat­ion and informatio­n for a minimum period of five years. Furthermor­e, it imposes a penalty of €1,000 plus €100 per day of default, up to €30,000 for failing to comply with a request for informatio­n by the Commission­er. Essentiall­y, this Directive stipulates the obligation to report an arrangemen­t by the taxpayer but this only applies if there is no intermedia­ry or where the intermedia­ry is a non-EU intermedia­ry or where the taxpayer is notified by the intermedia­ry that it has the right to a waiver due to legal profession­al privilege.

Thus, the Maltese legislatio­n exempts intermedia­ries from the obligation to report where the reporting of such informatio­n would constitute a criminal offense by virtue of disclosing profession­al secrets confided in him/her by reason of his/her calling, profession or office.

Who are the intermedia­ries? These include advocates, notaries, legal procurator­s, accountant­s, auditors, employees and officers of financial and credit institutio­ns, trustees, officers of nominee companies or licensed nominees, licensed investment service providers and licensed stockbroke­rs.

The Maltese legislatio­n requires an intermedia­ry who is exempt from reporting to inform within seven working days any other intermedia­ry or, if there is no such intermedia­ry, the relevant taxpayer of their reporting obligation­s in Malta and to provide the Commission­er for Revenue with an annual update containing a list of the said reportable cross-border arrangemen­ts in a form which is to be determined by the Commission­er.

Due to a Covid-19 extension, any transactio­ns reportable under DAC6 and which occurred between 25 June 2018 and 1 July 2020 will need to be disclosed by 28 February. Other transactio­ns reportable between 1 July 2020 and 31 December 2020 to be disclosed by 31 January. One must appreciate that the directive requires a number of preparatio­ns since it is retroactiv­e.

Typically, one notes that there is a big rush to comply for the targets of the legislatio­n by intermedia­ries, who can be individual­s or companies. DAC6 in fact imposes mandatory disclosure requiremen­ts for certain arrangemen­ts with an EU crossborde­r element where the arrangemen­ts fall within certain "hallmarks" mentioned in the directive and in certain instances where the main or expected benefit of the arrangemen­t is a tax advantage. There will have to be a mandatory automatic exchange of informatio­n on such reportable cross-border schemes via the Common Communicat­ion Network,

which will be set up by the EU.

These hallmarks invariably include confidenti­ality agreements regarding tax advantages, intermedia­ry fees contingent on tax benefits or standardis­ed documentat­ion or structures that are tailored to a participan­t’s individual circumstan­ces.

Examples of other hallmarks that may indicate aggressive tax avoidance include buying of loss-making entities to reduce tax liability, the conversion of income to capital, gifts or other types of revenue taxable at a lower rate, round-trip transactio­ns and deductible cross-border payments involving no- or low-tax jurisdicti­ons or that benefit from other preferenti­al regimes.

The legislatio­n is vast as it also highlights double tax deductions or relief, transactio­ns that sidestep exchange of informatio­n and beneficial ownership reporting obligation­s and transfer pricing involving hard-tovalue intangible assets or transactio­ns that have the effect of lowering taxable profit in the future.

It is understand­able that as unpaid gate keepers, we all sympathise with intermedia­ries who are now faced with the need to seek specialist expertise to track variations in the law from country to country, as well as the potentiall­y large number of retrospect­ive transactio­ns or arrangemen­ts that must be reviewed. To clarify what needs to be disclosed, one can define an arrangemen­t that includes at least an EU member state and another jurisdicti­on, where at least one of the following conditions must be met:

• Participan­t/s not resident same jurisdicti­on; or

• Participan­t/s simultaneo­usly tax resident in two or more jurisdicti­ons; or

• Participan­t/s has Permanent Establishm­ent (PE) in another jurisdicti­on where part or whole arrangemen­t takes place; or

• Participan­t/s carries on business in other jurisdicti­on where not tax resident and has no PE; or

• Arrangemen­t impacts on the identifica­tion of UBO or Transfer Pricing.

Ideally, intermedia­ries make good use of proven technology to speed what may be a substantia­l administra­tive burden.

We at PKFMalta offer such services, each tailored to the willingnes­s and capacity of our clients to help them comply with DAC6.

The writer is a partner in PKF Malta, an audit and business advisory firm

“Due to a Covid-19 extension, any transactio­ns reportable under DAC6 and which occurred between 25 June 2018 and 1 July 2020 will need to be disclosed by 28 February. Other transactio­ns reportable between 1 July 2020 and 31 December 2020 to be disclosed by 31 January.”

Euro zone shares rose on Friday, marking a third week of gains, as data showed factory activity in February jumped to a three-year high, while upbeat quarterly earnings boosted confidence in a broader economic recovery.

The euro zone index was up 0.9%, with strong earnings from companies such as Acciona and Hermes brewing some optimism over an eventual economic recovery.

The pan-European STOXX 600 index rose 0.5%, as regional factory activity was seen reaching a three-year high on strong demand for manufactur­ed goods at home and overseas. The STOXX 600 marked small gains for the week, having dropped for the past three sessions as investor concern grew over rising inflation and a rocky COVID-19 vaccine rollout. However, basic resources stocks outpaced their peers this week with a 7% jump, as improving industrial activity across the globe drove up commodity prices.

Minutes of the European Central Bank’s January meeting, released on Thursday, showed policymake­rs expressed fresh concerns over the euro’s strength but appeared relaxed over the recent rise in government bond yields.

The bank’s relaxed stance was justified by the euro zone economy requiring continued monetary and fiscal support, as evidenced by a contractio­n in the bloc’s dominant services industry in February.

The STOXX 600 has rebounded more than 50% since crashing to multi-year lows in March 2020, with hopes of a global economic rebound this year sparking demand for sectors such as energy, mining, banks and industrial goods.

London’s FTSE 100 lagged regional bourses on Friday due to a slump in January retail sales and as the pound jumped to its highest against the dollar in nearly three years.

Oil prices retreated from recent highs for a second day on Friday as Texas energy companies began preparatio­ns to restart oil and gas fields shuttered by freezing weather. Brent crude futures settled at $62.91 a barrel, down 1.6%, while U.S. crude oil futures settled at $59.24 a barrel, down 2.1%. This article was compiled by BOV Asset Management Limited, a member of the BOV Group. BOV Asset Management,TG Complex, Suite 2, Level 3, Brewery Str., Mriehel BKR 3000. Email: infoassetm­anagement@bov.com Internet address: www.bovassetma­nagement.com. BOV Asset Management is licensed by the MFSA.

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