Italy: New direct lending opportunities in Italy

International Tax Review is part of Legal Benchmarking Limited, 1-2 Paris Garden, London, SE1 8ND

Copyright © Legal Benchmarking Limited and its affiliated companies 2025

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement

Italy: New direct lending opportunities in Italy

foglia.jpg

emma.jpg

Giuliano Foglia


Marco Emma

Italian companies are facing domestic banks' resistance to grant financing (the so-called credit crunch). The Italian government is therefore pursuing a long-term project aimed at supporting access to alternative forms of financing and opening up direct lending in Italy to new financial players. The last step in this respect has been taken with Law Decree no. 91 of June 24 2014, which set forth new tax incentives and regulatory measures for such purposes. First, the Decree introduces an exemption from withholding tax for interest paid by Italian borrowers on medium/long term loans to the following foreign lenders: (i) EU banks, (ii) insurance companies established and authorised under EU member states' legislation, (iii) unleveraged undertakings for collective investments set up in a 'white-list' EU or EEA member state. Although certain requirements to apply such exemption still seem uncertain, such measure is very welcome by Italian market. Before the Decree, in fact, interest paid on loans granted by foreign lenders were subject to Italian withholding tax (recently increased to 26% unless a tax treaty lower rate applies) which usually represents an additional cost for Italian borrowers due to the standard 'gross-up' clauses.

Consistently, also the scope of application of the 0.25% optional substitute tax applicable – in lieu of ordinary documentary taxes – to medium and long-term financings (see our June 2013 update) has now been extended. In particular, under the new rules it now applies to loans granted by (i) securitisation vehicles, (ii) insurance companies established and authorised under EU member states' legislation, (iii) undertakings for collective investments set up in a 'white-list' EU or EEA member state, whereas only Italian banks and Italian permanent establishments of foreign banks were previously admitted to such regime. In addition, such substitute tax now applies also to any transfer of financing agreements on the secondary market, to assignments of receivables and relevant security package, previously subject to taxation.

As for the corporate bonds, the first step was taken with the 2012 measures intended to boost access to bond-financing for non-listed companies, provided that bonds are listed for trading either on a regulated market or on a multilateral trading platform of an EU or EEA white-listed member state. Now the Decree admits non-listed companies to the same tax regime (and to the related withholding tax exemption for non-Italian white-list noteholders qualifiying as beneficial owners) also in relation to non-listed bonds, to the extent that such debt securities are held by one or more white-list 'qualified investors'. Such measure would permit Italian companies access to bond-financing without bearing significant listing expenses. However, certain procedural issues may arise. Moreover, the exemption now applies to bond interest paid to EU undertakings for collective investments and/or Italian securitisation vehicles provided that (i) more than 50% of their assets consist of such securities and (ii) their investors are 'qualified investors' only.

The measures enacted by the Decree are in force as from June 25 2014.

Giuliano Foglia (foglia@virtax.it) and Marco Emma (emma@virtax.it)

Tremonti Vitali Romagnoli Piccardi e Associati

Tel: +39 06 3218022 (Rome) +39 02 58313707 (Milan)

Website: www.virtax.it

more across site & shared bottom lb ros

More from across our site

Despite legislative gridlock, international investors should be wary of legal precedents set by recent court rulings, which could substantially alter the Spanish tax environment
The new outfit, Ashurst Perkins Coie, will bring together around 3,000 lawyers across 23 countries
As World Tax unveils its much-anticipated rankings for 2026, we highlight the two Brazilian firms that had a standout year of tier promotions
ITR understands that UK Chancellor Rachel Reeves will announce a consultation on the proposed financial reward scheme, which had left advisers fretting
The long-running dispute centres on Medtronic’s use of the comparable uncontrolled transaction TP method; in other news, Paul Hastings and FTI Consulting both made double tax hires
The boutique Australian firm’s TP award recognition proves that world-class advisory services aren’t limited to the ‘big four’, the firm’s founder tells ITR
Canadian and Indian dual VAT models have been a source of inspiration for the Brazilian model, but the latter has unique and innovative features, the OECD paper claimed
More sophisticated use of technology, heightened TP scrutiny and stricter filing requirements are making South African Revenue Service audits a formidable challenge
The hire of Doug Wick expands Baker McKenzie’s state and local tax practice and adds to the firm’s growing ex-IRS expertise
One year after Nuwaru joined the WTS network, leaders James Jobson and Matthew Missaghi reflect on the firm’s mission to offer mid-tier pricing but deliver top-tier results
Gift this article