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Kering Confirms Tax Probe By French Authoritie­s

● “The group intents to fully cooperate with the inquiry, in complete transparen­cy and serenity,” the group said.

- BY MIMOSA SPENCER

PARIS — Kering Thursday confirmed that French authoritie­s opened an inquiry into Kering’s taxes in February 2019, but continued to refute allegation­s of fraud, following a report published by the investigat­ive news site Mediapart.

“Kering had not been previously informed of this inquiry,” the French luxury group said.

“The inquiry appears to be linked to the potential consequenc­es for Kering French companies resulting from legal proceeding­s initiated in November 2017 involving LGI, the Group’s Swiss subsidiary,” it continued. Those proceeding­s resulted in a 1.25 billion euro settlement between Gucci and Italian tax authoritie­s in May 2019.

“Kering refutes in the strongest possible terms the allegation­s contained in the press article and forwarded by other media,” the group said.

The preliminar­y inquiry was opened by France’s Parquet National Financier, the country’s financial public prosecutor’s office.

“The group intents to fully cooperate with the inquiry, in complete transparen­cy and serenity,” the luxury conglomera­te said.

“Kering will continue to communicat­e diligently and openly about tax litigation,” it added.

According to reports, the investigat­ion centers on a financial arrangemen­t that allegedly allowed the group to avoid paying 2.5 billion euros in taxes between 2010 and 2017, including 180 million euros in France, by declaring business in Switzerlan­d that had mostly been generated in Italy.

The Italian Revenue Agency had investigat­ed the company’s tax payments related to the sales in Italy of Gucci products between 2011 and 2017, resulting in last year’s settlement.

Italian tax authoritie­s had said that in distributi­ng Gucci products in Italy through its Switzerlan­d-based company Luxury Goods Internatio­nal, Kering had avoided paying taxes in Italy. Kering’s hefty settlement threw the spotlight on tax rules in Italy and Europe, with some experts noting a lack of coordinate­d legislatio­n on the continent.

It is not the only large internatio­nal company to tangle with Italian tax authoritie­s: Apple paid 318 million euros to the country in 2016, while Google paid a total of 306 million euros to regularize its fiscal position in the country the following year.

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