8 January 2015 Global Tax Alert News from Transfer Pricing EY Global Tax Alert Library Access both online and pdf versions of all EY Global Tax Alerts. Copy into your web browser: http://www.ey.com/gl/en/ Services/Tax/International- Tax/Tax-alert-library#date Singapore Tax Authority releases updated transfer pricing guidelines Executive summary On 6 January 2015, the Inland Revenue Authority of Singapore (IRAS) released revised transfer pricing guidelines (2015 Singapore TP guidelines). The 102- page document consolidates all previous circulars and guidance provided by the IRAS relating to transfer pricing. Notably, the 2015 Singapore TP guidelines include a requirement for taxpayers to prepare contemporaneous transfer pricing documentation. In 2006, the IRAS issued its first transfer pricing guidelines (2006 Singapore TP guidelines). These were supplemented by subsequent circulars and enacted in law as follows: Administrative guidance on Advance Pricing Arrangements (APAs) in 2008 Administrative guidance on transfer pricing consultations in 2008 Transfer pricing guidelines for related party loans and services in 2009 A new transfer pricing provision, Section 34D was incorporated into the Singapore Income Tax Act in 2009 in respect of transactions not at arm s length The 2015 Singapore TP guidelines are split into the following key sections: Part I Transfer pricing principles and fundamentals Part II Transfer pricing administration Part III Other issues An overarching comment is that the 2015 Singapore TP guidelines are broadly in line with the 2010 Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development Transfer Pricing Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises and Tax Administrations (OECD guidelines) and recent OECD drafts that have been issued as a result of the Base Erosion and Profit Shifting (BEPS) initiative. This Alert summarizes these three key sections in comparison to the OECD guidelines and the 2006 Singapore TP guidelines.
2 Detailed discussion Part I Transfer pricing principles and fundamentals Part I of the 2015 Singapore TP guidelines provides guidance on the arm s length principle and transfer pricing documentation requirements in Singapore. Transfer pricing principles The guidance on the application of the arm s length principle is broadly consistent with the OECD guidelines, endorsing the arm s length principle. Specific guidance is provided which goes further than the 2006 Singapore TP guidelines, including a recommendation (neither mandatory nor prescriptive) to undertake a three-step approach to apply the arm s length principle: Step 1: Conduct a comparability analysis Step 2: Identify the most appropriate transfer pricing method and tested party Step 3: Determine the arm s length results Within this guidance, specific requirements are included with respect to external benchmarking searches and the application of results. Transfer pricing documentation The most striking aspect of the 2015 Singapore TP guidelines is that the IRAS requires contemporaneous transfer pricing documentation (TP documentation) to be maintained by the taxpayer. Specifically the IRAS has included dollar value thresholds for related party transactions, which will warrant the preparation of TP documentation when these thresholds are exceeded. These thresholds are as follows: 1 Category of related party transactions Purchase of goods from all related parties Sale of goods to all related parties Loans owed to all related parties Loans owed by all related parties All other categories of related party transactions. Examples: Service income Service payment Royalty income Royalty expense Rental income Rental expense For the purpose of determining if the threshold is met, aggregation should be done for each category of related party transactions. For example, all service income received from related parties is to be aggregated. Global Tax Alert Transfer pricing Threshold (S$) per financial year 1m per category of transactions Further, the IRAS has provided examples as to how these thresholds apply in practice. Outside these threshold levels, the IRAS expects taxpayers to evaluate and decide whether TP documentation is necessary for the purpose of complying with different TP documentation rules of other tax authorities. Documentation is also not required in the following four situations: Where the taxpayer transacts with a related party in Singapore and such local transactions (excluding related party loans) are subject to the same Singapore tax rates Where a related domestic loan is provided between the taxpayer and a related party in Singapore and the lender is not in the business of borrowing and lending Where the taxpayer applies the safe harbor of 5% cost mark-up for routine services Where the related party transactions are covered by an agreement under an APA with the IRAS (an annual compliance report is still required in the case of an APA)
In the 2015 Singapore TP guidelines, the IRAS has defined contemporaneous to mean documentation and information that taxpayers have relied upon to determine the transfer price prior to or at the time of undertaking the transactions. The IRAS has further clarified that it would also accept as contemporaneous TP documentation, any documentation prepared at any time no later than the time of completing and filing the tax return for the financial year in which the transaction takes place. The IRAS requires the date of creation of the document to be stated in the document. While the IRAS does not require taxpayers to submit TP documentation along with the tax returns, the 2015 Singapore TP guidelines state that taxpayers have 30 days to submit the documents upon the IRAS request. Taxpayers should update their TP documentation when there are material changes to the operating conditions that impact their functional analysis or transfer pricing analysis. In any case, the IRAS encourages taxpayers to update their TP documentation at least once every three years. Taxpayers should test their related party transactions annually against the arm s length results. In the event that documentation is not provided, or if taxpayers are unable to substantiate that their transfer prices are concluded at arm s length with their TP documentation, the following consequences could apply: Penalties may apply if taxpayers fail to provide TP documentation upon request by the IRAS. Such penalties will be invoked under prevailing laws concerning record keeping. An upward adjustment may be made in the event the IRAS establishes that taxpayers have understated their profits through improper transfer pricing. The IRAS may not support taxpayers in Mutual Agreement Procedure (MAP) discussions in the event taxpayers suffer double taxation arising from any transfer pricing audit by the IRAS or foreign tax authorities. The IRAS may not accept the application of an APA in the absence of proper TP documentation. The IRAS may not accept taxpayer/self-initiated transfer pricing adjustments in the absence of proper TP documentation. In terms of documentation content, the IRAS has introduced a two-tiered approach toward documentation: Group level documentation Entity level documentation This is in line with the master file and local file approach under the OECD Action Plan to tackle BEPS, specifically Action 13 on transfer pricing documentation and country-by-country reporting (CBCR). While the IRAS does request certain extraterritorial information in its group level information, at this time it does not require taxpayers to prepare and provide a CBCR reporting template as proposed by the OECD. Part II Transfer pricing administration Part II of the 2015 Singapore TP guidelines provides information and guidance on the IRAS transfer pricing consultation program and the avoidance and resolution of transfer pricing disputes. Under the subsection of the IRAS transfer pricing consultation program, clearer guidance in terms of the consultation process is provided compared to the 2006 Singapore TP guidelines. The template transfer pricing questionnaire found in the 2008 IRAS transfer pricing consultation has been removed although this may be a possible starting point for the IRAS officers looking to conduct a transfer pricing consultation or risk assessment. The 2015 Singapore TP guidelines provide additional detail on the process to apply for MAP and APA. However, similar to the 2006 Singapore TP guidelines, the 2015 Singapore TP guidelines do not discuss any processes in relation to simultaneous tax examinations or arbitration. Based on the guiding principles in the OECD guidelines, the 2015 Singapore TP guidelines provide detailed step-by-step processes for MAPs and APAs including sample documents for MAP and APA in the annex. Global Tax Alert Transfer pricing 3
Part III Other issues Part III of the 2015 Singapore TP guidelines discusses issues and provides guidance in relation to transfer pricing adjustments, related party services, loans, and attribution of profits to permanent establishments. Transfer pricing adjustments The IRAS has included a new section with respect to transfer pricing adjustments which provides clarity to taxpayers on managing their transfer pricing results. The IRAS is one of the few tax authorities to provide such practical guidance on adjustments. The 2015 Singapore TP guidelines provide examples and explanations on four types of transfer pricing adjustments, which are: Year-end adjustments these refer to adjustments made at year-end and before closure of accounts: If conditions 2 are met, the IRAS will tax upward adjustments and allow downward adjustments If these conditions are not met, upward adjustments will be taxable but downward adjustments will not be allowed The IRAS has provided an example to clarify how year-end adjustments can be applied in practice Compensating adjustments these refer to adjustments made in relation to an APA with the IRAS as the APA agreements would have stipulated the arm s length remuneration. The IRAS will tax upward adjustments and allow downward adjustments based on the negotiated APA pricing outcome Self-initiated retrospective adjustments these refer to adjustments arising from taxpayers review of their past transfer pricing practices: The IRAS will tax upward adjustments and allow downward adjustments In the absence of contemporaneous TP documentation, upward adjustments will be taxable but downward adjustments will not be allowed Corresponding adjustments these refer to adjustments arising from tax authority s assessment which could lead to double taxation: The IRAS will tax upward adjustments and allow downward adjustments based on the negotiated MAP pricing outcome Such adjustments will only be possible where there is a tax treaty in place and taxpayers have applied for the MAP provided in that tax treaty and such an application is accepted by the IRAS and the foreign tax authority Related party loans and services Further to its 2009 circular, the IRAS has provided additional guidance with respect to related party loans and services: For related party loans, the 2015 Singapore TP guidelines provide a significant amount of guidance in comparison to the 2009 circular. This includes: Illustration on the application of the arm s length principle for a related party domestic loan Illustration on the application of the Comparable Uncontrolled Price (CUP) method Guidance on comparability adjustments A three-step method to determine an arm s length rate where CUPs are unavailable For related party services, a summary flowchart on the application of the arm s length principle for related party services is also provided. The new flowchart is simpler to read and includes the following changes: Includes as a first step, the benefits test which relates to proof of benefits received for services rendered (a transfer pricing concept in the OECD guidelines) Removes the pass-through cost determination upfront, and subsumes it under the three-step approach to determine arm s length pricing for services Notably the guidance relating to pass-through costs (arguably a more difficult test than in the OECD to assert no mark-up) and cost pooling (different from the OECD cost sharing concept) remain in the 2015 Singapore TP guidelines. 4 Global Tax Alert Transfer pricing
The safe harbor of 5% mark-up on total costs remains with no changes to the list of services captured under this safe harbor. More guidance may be required on how this will interact with the recent OECD draft on low value-adding services, 3 under which a mark-up of 2% to 5% is considered acceptable. Attribution of profits to a permanent establishment The 2015 Singapore TP guidelines state that no further attribution of profits to a permanent establishment (PE) is required when certain conditions are met as follows: The taxpayer receives an arm s length remuneration from its foreign related party that is commensurate with the functions performed, assets used and risks assumed by the taxpayer The remuneration paid by the foreign related party to the taxpayer is supported by adequate TP documentation to demonstrate compliance with the arm s length principle The foreign related party does not perform any functions, use any assets or assume any risks in Singapore, other than those arising from the activities carried out by the taxpayer Implications The 2015 Singapore TP guidelines will have immediate effect. Practically, the tax return filing deadline for the Financial Year (FY) 2013 has recently passed. Although not explicitly stated by the IRAS, the first year covered by the 2015 Singapore TP guidelines would logically be FY 2014. That said, for queries relating to previous FYs, the IRAS may still request taxpayers to provide TP documentation to support the pricing. Endnotes 1. The threshold levels should aggregate both cross-border and domestic related party transactions. 2. Taxpayers must have proper transfer pricing analyses and contemporaneous TP documentation in place to establish arm s length prices; year-end adjustments should be made symmetrically in the accounts of affected related parties to avoid double taxation or double non taxation; and adjustments must be made before the filing of tax returns. 3. OECD Public Discussion Draft - BEPS Action 10: Proposed modifications to Chapter VII of the Transfer Pricing Guidelines relating to low value-adding intra-group services, 2014. Global Tax Alert Transfer pricing 5
For additional information with respect to this Alert, please contact the following: Ernst & Young Solutions LLP, Singapore Luis Coronado +65 6309 8826 luis.coronado@sg.ey.com Henry Syrett +65 6309 8157 henry.syrett@sg.ey.com Stephen Bruce +65 6309 8898 stephen.bruce@sg.ey.com Stephen Lam +65 6309 8305 stephen.lam@sg.ey.com Senaka Senanayake +65 6309 8040 senaka-k.senanayake@sg.ey.com 6 Global Tax Alert Transfer pricing
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