General purpose financial statements – significant global entities must lodge with ATO if not lodged with ASIC: ATO will consult on procedures

On 3 December 2015 the Senate amended the Tax Laws Amendment (Combating Multinational Tax Avoidance) Bill 2015 to require corporate tax entities that are significant global entities to give the Commissioner a general purpose financial statement if they do not lodge one with the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC). The financial statement must be for the…

Large multinationals must pay “fair share of tax”, says Commissioner: no more ‘operate here and bill overseas’; 6 added to highest risk quadrant; MNE unable to give reports to auditors? (don’t game the system)

At a Senate Economics Legislation Committee hearing on 10 February 2016, the Commissioner delivered his opening remarks highlighting the ATO’s efforts to tackle tax avoidance by large corporates. Mr Jordan said the majority of large corporates, especially Australian owned companies, pay the right amount of tax; however, he said there was a minority of large corporates who try to avoid…

Tax Practitioners Board v Lamede Group Pty Ltd – company fined $77,000 and director fined $4,000 for advertising and providing tax agent services whilst not registered

The Federal Court has imposed over $80,000 in penalties on an individual and her company after they admitted to breaches of the Tax Agent Services Act 2009 by providing and advertising tax agent services whilst unregistered. Between July and December 2010, the individual provided tax agent services on 7 occasions, receiving around $1,000 for her work. From January 2011 to August 2013, the company provided…

Re Miley and FCT Devi and FCT – CGT: MNAV test – shares sold arm’s length but market value less because it was not a controlling interest

The AAT has ruled that, for the purposes of working out whether a taxpayer satisfied the $6m maximum net asset value (MNAV) test, the “market value” of shares that he sold was not the actual selling price of the shares, even though the shares were sold in an arm’s length dealing. Instead, the AAT accepted…