regulations on transfer pricing in...
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© Grant Thornton International. All rights reserved.
REGULATIONS ON TRANSFER
PRICING IN VIETNAM
VIETNAM SUPPLY CHAIN CONGRESS
17-19 October 2011
Ronald ParksTax Partner
© 2011 Grant Thornton International. All rights reserved.
Table of Contents
• Legal framework of transfer pricing regulations
• Related parties
• Business transactions between related parties
• Principle of arm’s length pricing
• Methods of determining market prices in related transactions
• Comparative analysis
• Compliance regulations on transfer pricing
• Risks and challenges
• Action plan/solution
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Legal Framework
• Circular 117/2005/TT-BTC dated 19 December 2005
• Circular 66/2010/TT-BTC dated on 22 April 2010 by the Ministry
of Finance provides guidance on determination of market prices in business transactions between related parties
• Official Letter 3304/TB-CT dated 15 September 2010 of HCM City Tax Department
• Official Letter 3708/BTC-TCDN dated 9 March 2011 of the Ministry of Finance
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Related parties
The enterprises shall be determined as related parties if:
• An enterprise holds at least 20% of owner equity of the other enterprise
• Both enterprises have at least 20% of owner equity held by a third party
• Both enterprises hold at least 20% of owner equity of a third party• The biggest shareholder who holds at least 10% of owner equity of a joint-stock company
• An enterprise guarantees a loan or makes a loan to another enterprise where the loan accounts for at least equal 20% of investment capital and more than 50% of the total account of mid-term and long-term liabilities of the enterprise
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• An enterprise appoints more than 50% of the total members of theexecutive board or the control board of the other enterprise, or
appoints a member of the other enterprise who has the right to make decisions on financial policies or operations of the enterprise
• Both enterprises together have more than 50% of members in the executive board or together have a member in the executive board
who has the right to make a decision on financial policies or
operations and is appointed by a third party
• Both enterprises are administered or controlled in terms of
personnel, finance and operations by members of a family
Related parties
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• Both business establishment have a relationship concerning the headquarters and PE or are PE of a foreign organization or individual
• An enterprise provides intangible assets and/or intellectual property of another enterprise for more than 50% of the production cost
• An enterprise provides more than 50% of the total value of raw materials or input products that are used for production or trade of
another enterprise
• An enterprise controls more than 50% of the output products sold by
another enterprise
• Two business establishments have agreed to conduct business co-operation on the basis of a contract
Related parties
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Declarations of related transactions
Related party transactions must be declared on Form GCN-01/QLT and submitted annually with the CIT finalization. Specifically, the Company is required to declare:
• All related parties identified;
• Any transaction with related parties;• The method of calculation of the market price;
• Contemporaneous documentation of such transactions; and• The form must be filed within 90 days from the end of the fiscal year.
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Form GCN01/QLT
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Part A. INFORMATION ON VALUE OF RELATED
TRANSATION AND METHOD OF
DETERMINING PRICE
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Part A. INFORMATION ON VALUE OF RELATED
TRANSATION AND METHOD OF
DETERMINING PRICE
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Part B: DECLARATION OF THE RELATIONSHIP
WITH EACH RELATED PARTY
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Business transactions between related parties
• Related transactions mean business transactions between related parties
• Business transactions include:
� Transactions of buying, selling and/or trading:
- Tangible goods: raw materials, finished products, products
- Intangible goods: brand, copyright, technology
� Providing services: management services, support services
� Financial transaction: loan, loan guarantee
• Prices in related transactions must be determined by the arm’s length
price
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The principle of arm’s length price
• The principle of arm’s length price is that all parties related to business transactions are based on an independent third party transaction, both parties wish to achieve the highest profit
• Enterprises have to determine prices in related transactions by comparing with prices in uncontrolled transactions which have equivalent conditions
• Transfer prices in related transactions must be equivalent with the price that enterprises will determine when they participate in equivalent transactions with an independent third party
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Methods of determining arm’s length price in
related transactions
There are five methods:
• Method of comparable uncontrolled price (“CUP”);
• Method of resale price (“RP”);
• Method of cost-plus (“CPL”);
• Method of comparable profit (“CP” or “TNMM”); and
• Method of profit-split (“PS”).
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Principles of applying the methods of
determining arm’s length price
• None of the five methods of determining arm’s length price are definitive
• The most appropriate method, is that which is suitable for the transaction conditions, information and data sources that are used for comparative analysis
• The enterprise itself selects the method that is most suitable for its conditions• Having applied the methods for determining the arm’s length price as prescribed, enterprises are still allowed to adjust prices for the products that are affected by unforeseen changes occurring in that year
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Comparative analysis
• The independent transaction selected for comparison must meet the following conditions:
� Have the nature and context equivalent to those of the related transaction, and
� Have no disparities that materially affect the price of products• Independent transactions of enterprises are priority transactions in selecting for comparison• Generally, four effective criteria are selected for the purpose of comparative analysis, as follows:
� Product features� Operative functions of the enterprise� The contractual terms when operating a transaction, and
� The economic conditions when the transaction is happening
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Regulations on Transfer Pricing
• Enumerate related transactions of the year and submit annually together with the settlement of CIT as prescribed Form in GCN-01/QLT (issued together with Circular 66/2010/TT-BTC attachments)
• Preparing and saving documents which relate to price determination in related transactions
• Documents should reflect the transaction’s information such as related parties, product features, contractual conditions and which method of determining the arm’s length principle has been applied.
• Documents have to be prepared in Vietnamese language and provided to tax authorities within 30 days from the requesting day
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Risks and challenges relating to transfer pricing
in Vietnam
• Enterprises may have to use adjusted or fixed prices in related transactions if:
�Non declaration or incomplete declaration on information of related transactions as prescribed
� Failure in providing documents relating to the price’s determination in the requested related transaction on time
• Enterprises can be penalized if the tax authorities make a decision on price adjustment
• The penalty can be up to three times the adjusted tax rate and for late payment interest is 18.25% per year.
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• The definition of related parties is very broad according to Circular 66
• There is no regulation on applying the Advance Price Agreement (“APA”), which has been commonly applied throughout the rest of the world – though guidance is anticipated in the future
• There is no official link between TP and customs valuation
• Limitation on approved information and data sources
• Complying with the request for preparing and updating documents relating to the determination of transfer price takes longer and costs more
• The self-assessment mechanism and strict penalties of the Tax Administration Law
Risks and challenges relating to transfer pricing
in Vietnam
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• Garment manufacturing case study:
– Client imports material from a related party to be on-sold, material was pre-cut for various different garments
– Little or no processing takes place in Vietnam
– Concerns regarding Customs valuation and transfer prices
used
Keeping it brief – making sure supply is covered
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• Ad hoc distribution system
• Identifying core products
• Redundancy
• Global vs. regional organization
• Lack of integrated supply chain strategy-no centralization
• Respecting corporate structures-documentation
Keeping it brief – making sure supply is covered
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• MDF manufacturing case study:
– Client owns a number of subsidiaries involved in the
manufacture of MDF, including wood product processors, chemical plants for resin and printing plants for veneer
printing
– MDF with different emissions specifications carry different
market values. Emissions are largely a result of the chemical
composition of the resins used
– Chemical subsidiary experiments with different resin
compositions, but does not charge for a return on the R&D activities undertaken
Cleantech – when is MDF not MDF?
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• Supply chain strategy - evolving
• Communication between divisions and offices
• Systems integration
• Documentation challenges
• Customs impact
• Undisclosed related parties
Cleantech – when is MDF not MDF?
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• Local vs. international sourcing
• Location of intellectual property
• Documentation advantages
• VAT concerns – an integrated approach
• Customs implications
• Temporary imports and related issues
Cleantech – when is MDF not MDF?
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• Metal component manufacturing case study:
– Multinational produces various metal components for use in
industrial and domestic machinery under licence from parent entity
– Royalties are declared at a fixed percentage of turnover under contract
– Based on benchmarking study, royalty rate is deemed appropriate
– In practice, the company calculates the turnover figure for the
royalty by excluding several revenue streams, under the new ‘turnover’ royalty rate is not arm’s length
Keeping your cool – transfer pricing issues for
air conditioning components
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• Undisclosed related parties - exposures
• Lack of methodology-too many hats
• Unrecognized intellectual property - impact
• Lack of documentation for royalties – reducing risk
• Customs implication for imports and exports
• Redundancy of multiple factories in South East Asia
Keeping your cool – transfer pricing issues for
air conditioning components
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Action plan and solutions
• Establish an appropriate and feasible transfer pricing plan relating to
the transfer pricing of the enterprise
• Check and analyze all related transactions of the enterprise
• Prepare documents relating to the determination of transfer price as prescribed
• Support from experienced consultants
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THANK YOU!
QUESTIONS?
GRANT THORNTON (VIETNAM) LTD. TAX SERVICE DIVISION
28 floor, SAIGON TRADE CENTER37 Ton Duc Thang Street, District 1
Ho Chi Minh City
Email: [email protected]
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