Transfer Pricing Country Summary Brazil

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Page 1 of 8 Transfer Pricing Country Summary Brazil June 2018

Page 2 of 8 Legislation Existence of Transfer Pricing Laws/Guidelines Brazil has a specific transfer pricing regime governed by the Law 9,430/96, articles 18 to 24 and 28. They differ in several aspects from the OECD guidelines on transfer pricing. The Law 12,715/12 and the Normative Instruction n o. 1,312/12 issued by the Brazilian Federal Revenue provides specific rules on the application of transfer pricing methods and related rules. Recently, Brazil introduced a specific method for commodities (considered as the sixth method) on exports and imports, and a benchmarking methodology for finance transactions. Definition of Related Party The legislation has a broad definition of related parties involving concepts of direct and indirect control utilizing voting power, business control criteria, and domicile and residence in a tax haven or low-tax jurisdiction. The rules also include transactions with: (i) Related or non-related companies based in low-tax jurisdictions and privileged tax regimes; (ii) Joint ventures and similar arrangements; and (iii) Exclusive distributors and interposed parties. The following are considered to be related to the Brazilian party: 1. Its head offices when domiciled abroad; 2. Its branch or subsidiary domiciled abroad; 3. The individual or legal entity, residing or domiciled abroad, whose corporate participation in the capital characterizes it as a controlling or affiliated company; 4. The legal entity domiciled abroad which is characterized as a controlling or affiliated company; 5. The legal entity domiciled abroad when it and the company domiciled in Brazil are under corporate control or common administration or when at least 10% of the capital of each one belongs to the same individual or legal entity; 6. The individual or legal entity, resident or domiciled abroad, that jointly with the legal entity domiciled in Brazil, shared in the capital of a third legal entity, owning a combined participation that characterizes them as a controlling or affiliated company; 7. The individual or legal entity, resident or domiciled abroad, which is its associate under the legal form of a consortium or a condominium, as defined in Brazilian law, in any enterprise; 8. The individual resident abroad who is a relative, a spouse or companion of any of his directors or of his partner or controlling share-holder, by direct or indirect participation; 9. The individual or legal entity, resident or domiciled abroad, who enjoys exclusive rights, as its agent, distributor or concessionaire, for buying or selling goods, services or rights; and 10. The individual or legal entity, resident or domiciled abroad, for which the legal entity domiciled in Brazil, enjoys exclusive rights, as its agent, distributor or concessionaire, for buying or selling goods, services or rights.

Page 3 of 8 Transfer Pricing Scrutiny Transfer pricing may be reviewed as part of a comprehensive tax audit or through a specific transfer pricing audit. In recent years, tax authorities have considerably increased the number of audits, mainly in strategic sectors (e.g. pharmaceuticals, electronic, auto-parts, etc.). Transfer Pricing Penalties Although there are no specific penalties established by the transfer pricing legislation, should the taxpayer not provide the tax authorities with the proper information, it may be subject to the arbitration of prices by tax authorities based on available documents and information, applying on of the methods established in Law 9,430/96. In this case, should be arbitration result in any adjustments on the company s income tax basis and, as a consequence, in a tax deficiency, such amount is generally subject to interest penalties based on the Selic rate (varying from 10% to 15% per year) and fines (varying from 20% to 75%). Penalties in the current tax law: Untimely filing: R$ 1.500,00 (aprox. US$ 450) for each month or fraction of delay; Omitted, incomplete or inaccurate information: 3% of the amount not informed correctly; General penalty: may vary from 75% to 150% in case of evasion, fraud or collusion. Advance Pricing Agreement (APA) There is no formal regime for obtaining APAs but, by means of a consultation process governed by Law 9,430/96, it may be possible to request a change in the fixed profit margin. This procedure has not been adopted in practice since (i) it is very difficult for a company to prove the profit margin of a given sector and (ii) it is subject to Federal Revenue s discretionary powers (up to date, no change of margin has been granted by Tax Authorities). Safe Harbors Safe-harbors are mathematical calculations based on financial statements data with the aim of making the adoption of traditional methods on exports more flexible. According to the Brazilian transfer pricing legislation, if the average sales price of goods, services or rights to related parties abroad is not lower than 90% of the average sales price of these same goods, services or rights to Brazilian non-related entities, the taxpayer is dismissed from the duty to comply with the Brazilian transfer pricing rules on export transactions. Brazilian legislation includes other two types of safe-harbors for export transactions involving related parties, the first one for companies with export revenues equal to, or below 5% of the total turnover on a given calendar-year and the second one for companies that present a minimum profitability on export transactions equivalent to 10% of the corresponding export revenues, the revenues derived from export transactions to related parties does not exceed 20% of the total revenue derived from export

Page 4 of 8 transactions. A Brazilian company which qualifies for one of these safe-harbors is not subject to transfer pricing control on the relevant calendar-year (safe-harbors are not applicable to transactions with companies located in tax haven jurisdictions). However, these safe-harbors do not imply the definitive acceptance of the value of the revenue recognized based on the actual price, which may be challenged, if inappropriate, in an ex officio procedure, by the tax authorities and they do not apply for export of commodities subject to the Export Quotation Price (PECEX). Documentation and Disclosure Requirements Tax Return Disclosures Taxpayers must submit the Tax-Accounting Bookkeeping ( ECF ), which replaced the Corporate Income Tax Return of Legal Entities ( DIPJ ) in 2015, containing transfer pricing information on operations of the Brazilian legal entity. The ECF must be filed by the end of July of the subsequent year, and is an obligation imposed on legal entities established in Brazil. The ECF is part of the Brazilian SPED (Public System of Digital Bookkeeping), which is a platform for a massive integration, standardization and sharing of tax and accounting data of federal, state and municipal public treasuries and regulatory agencies. There is no threshold for the ECF. The taxpayer shall mention in the ECF all the operations that influence the composition of the calculation basis and the amount due from Corporate Income Tax (IRPJ) and Social Contribution on Net Income (CSLL). Thus, taxpayers must disclose in their corporate income tax return information regarding their inter-company transactions and, in the case transfer pricing rules are applicable, their proper information. The information required for the ECF should include a transactional approach with the following: the names and locations of the related trading partners; description of the goods, services and rights; the total amounts of the most traded products, services or rights; the methodology used to test each transaction; the arm s length price; the average annual transfer pricing; the necessary adjustments (if any). By the end of 2016, Brazil implemented the Country-by-Country Report ( CbCR ) in connection with BEPS Action 13. Although it does not seem that the CbCR will be used primarily by Brazilian tax authorities for transfer pricing scrutiny purposes, it may serve as an additional tool in tax audits. The CbCR in Brazil is required for entities that, as the ultimate parent company of a multinational group, are residents of Brazil for tax purposes, and that have total consolidated group revenue of the fiscal year prior to the year of the CbCR of an amount greater than R$ 2.26 billion if the controller is domiciled in Brazil or 750 million (or the equivalent in local currency) if the controller is domiciled abroad. The CbCR

Page 5 of 8 is to be filed along with the taxpayer s ECF for the related year and its submission to the tax authorities (Block W). The average number of employees in each entity must be reported. The CbCR and notifications will be embedded in the ECF, which uses the calendar year. The ECF must be filed by the end of July of the subsequent year. The CbCR in Brazil became effective as from 31 December 2016, and applies for fiscal years beginning on or after 1 January 2016. There are penalties for non-filing / filing late. The OECD's XML Schema standardized electronic format has been adopted for this. More precisely, its financial content should be: 1. Total revenue from related and unrelated parties; 2. Profit or loss before income tax; 3. Income tax paid; 4. Income tax due; 5. Share capital; 6. Retained earnings; 7. Number of employees; 8. Tangible assets. A Brazilian entity which is not the parent of a multinational group, will be obliged to deliver the CbCR of the group if: 1. The parent company of the group is not obliged to deliver the CbCR in its jurisdiction; 2. The jurisdiction of the parent company has a DTT with Brazil, but did not agree with Brazil about the final deadline for delivery of the CbCR; or 3. Systematic failure of the jurisdiction of the parent company that was notified by the Federal Revenue of Brazil to the Brazilian resident entity. Furthermore, Brazil has signed the Multilateral Competent Authority Agreement on the Exchange of CbCRs ( MCAA on CbCRs ), which allows for the exchange of CbCRs between tax authorities from signatory jurisdictions as part as an agreement on the scope of the automatic exchange of information and the procedure to comply with. Level of Documentation Documentation necessary to support corporate income tax return are: incoming invoices, accounting information, agreements, commercial invoices, export registers, import registers. There is no exemption for documentation obligation; any related party transaction must be documented. There is no limited transfer pricing documentation or threshold for documentation. There are no specific documentation requirements in addition to the disclosure of transactions in the ECF explained before but, when (and if) requested, a taxpayer must provide the tax authorities with

Page 6 of 8 information on the method applied, the documentation used to support the price and the respective calculation records. If a taxpayer does not provide the tax authorities with this information or provide insufficient or inappropriate information, it may be subject to the determination of prices by the tax authorities based on documents available, applying one of the methods prescribed by Law 9,430/96. Implementation of BEPS-related documentation requirements Normative Instruction n o. 1.681/16 introduced rules on the Country-by-Country (CbC) Reporting, in order to incorporate the minimum standards recommended by the Base Erosion and Profit Shifting (BEPS) project Action 13. The rules are applicable as from 1 January 2016. Record Keeping Documentation to support the transfer pricing methods must be kept for a period of 5 years after the end of the financial year for which the documentation was prepared as it is the period during which the tax authorities ordinarily are allowed to make assessments. Language for Documentation According to the tax legislation, all the accounting and fiscal documentation shall be presented in the Portuguese language (documents in other languages shall be translated). With respect to CbCR, taxpayers are allowed to choose one of the three following languages to fill the free text fields: Portuguese, Spanish or English. Small and Medium Sized Enterprises (SMEs) There is no specific transfer pricing rules and regulations for SMEs. Deadline to Prepare Documentation Documentation (ECF) must be available to tax authorities by the end of July of each year (when the income tax assessment from the previous year must be concluded and paid). Deadline to Submit Documentation The information regarding transfer pricing submitted to the tax authorities with the corporate income tax return shall be submitted up to the last business day of July, every year. Please note that transfer pricing documentation is required to be filed in the ECF as mentioned before, and detailed information on calculations and supporting documentation should be available to tax authorities, upon request, in case of tax inspection.

Page 7 of 8 Statute of Limitations Generally 5 years after the end of the financial year (exception is made e.g. for fraudulent transactions). Transfer Pricing Methods The methods included in Brazil s transfer pricing legislation are similar to the OECD Guidelines traditional methods with an important peculiarity, which is the application of statutory, fixed gross profit margins. The taxpayer may choose any of the methods described below, as long as it is applicable for the case in question. Also, the taxpayer may apply the transfer pricing method that results in the lowest taxable income. Import Transactions Comparable Uncontrolled Prices Method (PIC), defined as the weighted average price adopted (i.) by the exporter abroad, in identical or similar transactions with non-related parties; (ii.) by the importer in Brazil in identical or similar transactions with other non-related suppliers; or (iii.) in identical or similar transactions between other non-related suppliers and buyers; under similar payment conditions and terms; Production Cost Plus Profit Method (CPL), defined as the weighted average production cost of identical or similar goods or services in the exporter s jurisdiction plus (i.) underlying taxes and duties charged by such jurisdiction in export transactions; and (ii.) markup of 20% of the COGS (costs of goods sold); Resale Price less Profit Method (PRL), defined as the difference between the participation of the imported good, service or right in the final sale price and the corresponding profit margin. The profit margins are determined according to the economic sector of the company subject to transfer pricing control. According to this method, the transfer price is computed as follows: (i) it is calculated as the ratio between the weighted average cost of the imported goods, services, or rights and the weighted average total cost of the goods manufactured or resold, services or rights in Brazil; (ii) such ratio is applied to the weighted average sales price of goods manufactured or resold, services or rights in Brazil; (iii) to the result obtained as per item (iv) a fixed markup is deducted, and the remaining amount is equal to the parameter price. Export Transactions Export Sales Price Method (PVEX), defined as the weighted average sales price of exports made by the same company to other customers, or by another Brazilian exporter of equivalent or similar goods, services or rights during the same tax period and under similar payment conditions; Wholesale Price in the Country of Destination Less Profit Method (PVA), defined as the weighted average sales price for equivalent or similar goods in sales made in the wholesale market of the country of destination, under similar payment conditions, reduced by the taxes

Page 8 of 8 included in the price of the country of destination and by a profit margin of 15% of the wholesale price; Retail Price in the Country of Destination Less Profit Method (PVV), defined as the weighted average of the price of equivalent or similar goods in sales made in the retail market of the country of destination, under similar payment conditions, reduced by the taxes included in the price and by a profit margin of 30% of the retail price; Acquisition or Production Cost Plus Taxes and Profit Method (CAP), defined as weighted average production or acquisition cost of the goods, services or rights plus (i) underlying taxes charged in Brazil; and (ii) the markup of 15% of the COGS plus taxes. There are also two specific methods for transactions involving commodities quoted on stock or futures exchanges or internationally recognized magazines (PCI and PECEX), which are based on the commodities market value. Method for debt transactions In cross-border loans and debt instruments, the base interest rate for transfer pricing purposes are: 1. For loans/debt instruments denominated in U.S. Dollars with pre-fixed rates: the rate for Brazilian sovereign bonds issued in the international market in U.S. Dollars; 2. For loans/debt instruments denominated in Reais with pre-fixed rates: the rate for Brazilian sovereign bonds issued in the international market in Reais; and 3. For other loan/debt instruments: the six-month LIBOR rate. Brazilian borrowers are allowed to deduct a spread of up to 3.5% in addition to the base rate; Brazilian lenders must add a spread of at least 2.5% to the base rate in calculating taxable income. Comparables The methods PIC and PVEx use a third party comparable for products, services, or rights identical or similar, calculated in the Brazilian market or in other countries, in purchase and sale operations, under similar payment terms. The Commodities methods (PCI and PECEX) use commodities market value quoted on stock or future exchanges or internationally recognized magazines, according to certain criteria set forth in the rules. The method for financial transactions use the Brazilian sovereign bonds issued in US Dollars, Reais and six-month Libor as benchmarking, according to specific terms and conditions set forth in the rules, as mentioned above.