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Tax - the DNA of deal making
M&A shapes the profile of a business for many years to come – how it makes money, its funding and operational cost structure, the calibre and morale of its management and people. And so it is with tax. Is the cost of goodwill deductible? What deductions are being obtained for funding or transaction costs? How do these differ between jurisdictions? And are these deductions of maximum effectiveness in reducing current tax liabilities?
The answers to these questions are determined by the structure of the transaction itself. It is as if the acquisition writes the DNA code for the pattern of the business and the weight of its tax burden for its later life.
And if your business’ DNA embodies a tax-efficient structure, it is typically hard for tax authorities to challenge this – funding costs, for example, are demonstrably incurred to pay for a commercial acquisition. Conversely, if the DNA dictates heavy tax liabilities in subsequent years, it is no use expecting to make good what has been lost by artificial tax planning – the risks and rewards of this will never be as appealing as tax planning for a commercial transaction.
But the future tax DNA of the business is not created in a vacuum, but in the storm of the frenetic and competing activities that characterise M&A. Leave aside price, timing, commercial warranties, competing bids – even in the narrow world of tax, there is no free hand in designing the structure.
On the vendor side
The tax a vendor suffers on a deal will be fundamentally driven by its structure. So the more tax vendors suffer, the higher the price they generally require. As well as looking to the future, purchasers need due diligence to ensure that they are not acquiring hidden tax liabilities in the business – from events or periods in the past or previous tax planning not yet settled, taxable presences in foreign jurisdictions not recognised, employees treated as self-employed contractors, shaky compliance on share schemes, and so on.
With such complexity, it is tempting to get the deal done and worry about tax later. But then the opportunity is missed – to exclude from the deal corporate entities with uncertain or hidden liabilities, while acquiring the businesses that are sought. Or to identify a tax saving for the vendor that gives one bidder an advantage over another. Or to build in a secure basis for deducting goodwill, funding and transaction costs.
Certainly it makes sense to try to identify the key elements of the likely deal structure in time to brief the commercial lawyers before professional time is wasted drafting unviable structures, or before commercial negotiators unwittingly concede important tax sensitive points.
Tax planning benefits
Chartered Tax Advisers have always believed in the benefits of early planning, but now HM Revenue & Customs (HMRC) appears to agree. It has been piloting the greater use of clearances for transactions where there is doubt over the tax treatment – including more use of pre-transaction clearances in some circumstances.
The philosophy is not to waste their – or the taxpayer’s – resources on endless enquiries after the event, but to review as much as possible when a deal is taking place. While it will not be possible or always desirable to get clearance for every transaction, it will certainly be worth considering this, and generally working with the grain of this new philosophy – which will only be possible if tax is thought about early on.
Cover Stories
- Cameras, action Nov 17 2008
- What lies beneath Nov 10 2008
- Q&A - due diligence Nov 10 2008
- American dream for UK biotech Nov 04 2008
- PLUS points Oct 28 2008
M & A Events
- Quoted Company Awards 2009 28th January
- The Canaccord Adams Media Magnate Awards 26th March
- Rosenblatt New Energy Awards 2009 27th February
- M&A Expanding Internationally 2008 27th November
- M&A Awards 2009 18th February
Regulars
- Amino Technologies to acquire Tilgin division Nov 20 2008
- Wincanton and Culina make chilled deal Nov 20 2008
- Devilfish makes Paramin Poker deal Nov 19 2008
- Arriva closes LNWR train maintenance deal Nov 19 2008
- UBM buys Xinhua PR Newswire Nov 18 2008
Special Offers
- 2008 AIM Guide: Jul 17 2007
- Growth Company Investor Magazine: Jul 17 2007
- Cash Shells 2007 - Research report Jul 17 2007
- Venture Capital Trusts Jul 04 2007
Business Diary
- M&A Expanding internationally 27th November
- Rosenblatt New Energy Awards 2009 25th February
