A common tip regarding
corporate reorganizations is to transfer the corporate control of a Brazilian company
through an international stock sales agreement executed abroad between two foreign
companies.
For example: the U.S.
Google may sell its stocks in the Brazilian Google to the Irish Google, in
order to pay less overall taxes.
It works pretty well when
the goal is only to change the control.
The problem is when this
mechanism is used for tax planning purposes.
Check below the case of one
of our clients (the specific data were modified).
Operation summary:
The companies 2 and 3 (both
located abroad) incorporated the company 4.
The company 2 will sell its
shares in the company “A” to the company 4. This operation will be completely executed
abroad.
The company “A” has a great
surplus reserve.
There will be no capital
increase in the company “A”. There will be no profits distribution regarding company
“A”’s reserves.
There will be no remittance
of any amount from Brazil to foreign locations.
Here in Brazil we will
issue a quotaholders resolution communicating the exit and entry of
quotaholders and we will transfer the company 2’s capital registry to the
company 4 before the Brazilian Central Bank. The quotas/stock’s nominal value
shall apply in this transfer, without any indication of the profits’ reserve.
Whereas that the approval
will be executed between companies of the same economic group, that will be not
capital remittance to foreign localities and that the whole economic operation
will be executed abroad, I ask:
Will there be taxation on
this operation?
(oh, this question…)
It is evident that I won’t
give the answer as a Christmas gift. But it would be interesting to muse about
this a little bit.
i) If the companies located
abroad were not related, would the company 2 give to another company a
Brazilian company “stuffed” with profits without charging for it?
ii) All the companies that
have foreigners shareholders are obliged to register periodic reports before
the Brazilian Central Bank. Wouldn’t it look strange, towards the Brazilian
Central Bank, that the company was sold by the nominal value of its quotas and
that the accumulated profits remained in Brazil as a gift for the future owner?
iii) May international stock
sales agreement be consider valid in Brazil before being registered here? If
yes, to what extent?
iv) If the profit
remittance to foreign locations does not have a specific taxation, what would
be the advantage of an operation like that?
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