Brazil: Brazil’s Senate approves Convention on Mutual Administrative Assistance in Tax Matters

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

Brazil: Brazil’s Senate approves Convention on Mutual Administrative Assistance in Tax Matters

Pereira
Gottberg

Alvaro Pereira

Ruben Gottberg

In November 2011, the Brazilian Government signed the Convention on Mutual Administrative Assistance in Tax Matters (CMAAT), which establishes rules for sharing tax information between the G20 countries. In general terms, the CMAAT provides for all possible forms of administrative cooperation between the parties in the assessment and collection of taxes, in particular with a view to combating tax avoidance and evasion, while considering high standards of confidentiality and protection of personal data. The CMAAT was approved by Brazil's Senate on April 14 2016. It should enter into force three months after the deposit of the ratification instrument.

Deductibility of goodwill amortisation in downstream mergers

The Brazilian Administrative Council of Tax Appeals (CARF) Superior Chamber has recently issued a decision recognising that a downstream merger is a triggering event leading to the deduction of goodwill amortisations for tax purposes.

By means of background, Brazilian legislation in force until December 2014 provided that the amortisation of goodwill, originally arising from the acquisition of shares and based on the future profitability of the target, would be tax deductible either (a) upon disposal of the shares, or (b) after the elimination of the corresponding investment through a merger involving the buyer and the target.

On January 26 2016, the CARF's Superior Chamber issued an important decision recognising that the Brazilian legislation expressly considered a downstream merger as a triggering event leading to the deduction of goodwill amortization for tax purposes.

In the case presented to court, the Brazilian tax authorities argued that the merger transaction lacked business purpose and that it was solely structured to obtain the purported tax benefit. The tax authorities' position was based on the assumption that there should be no real reason for a parent company to be merged into its subsidiary other than a tax-driven one (the tax authorities' focus was on downstream mergers in general, rather than on the taxpayer's actual transaction).

CARF's Superior Chamber denied the Special Appeal filed by the Brazilian Federal Attorney's Office considering that, under Brazilian legislation, downstream mergers are regarded as triggering events leading to the tax deduction of goodwill amortisation (that is, a downstream merger per se cannot jeopardise the tax deduction).

Although this is an important decision, bear in mind that the business purpose of the taxpayer's actual transaction was not assessed in this decision and that it could still be challenged in future cases involving downstream mergers. Further, note that the rules for determining the goodwill value subject to amortisation, which were applicable during the years subject to assessment under this decision, have changed as from January 2015.

Alvaro Pereira (alvaro.pereira@br.pwc.com) and Ruben Gottberg (ruben.gottberg@br.pwc.com)

PwC

Website: www.pwc.com.br

more across site & shared bottom lb ros

More from across our site

Luxembourg’s reform agenda continues at pace in 2025, with targeted measures for start-ups and alternative investment funds
Veteran Elizabeth Arrendale will lead the new advisory practice, which will support clients with M&A tax structuring, post-deal integration, and more
MAP cases keep increasing, and cases closed aren’t keeping pace with the number started, the OECD’s Sriram Govind also told an ITR summit
Nobody likes paperwork or paying money, but the assertion that legal accreditation doesn’t offer value to firms and clients alike is false
Ryan hopes the buyout will help it expand into Asia and the Middle East; in other news, three German finance ministers have called for a suspension of pillar two
SKAT, which was represented by Pinsent Masons, had accused Sanjay Shah and other defendants of fraudulent dividend tax refund claims
TP managers must be able to explain technical issues in simple terms, ITR’s European Transfer Pricing Forum heard
Prudential had challenged HMRC over VAT group relief; in other news, Donald Trump unveiled timber and wood tariffs, and the European Commission published a ViDA implementation strategy
Australia’s CbCR rules have ‘widespread support’ and do not put American companies at a competitive disadvantage, the FACT Coalition said
Baker McKenzie advised two of the member firms involved, while several advisers provided transaction counsel to US-based Grant Thornton Advisors
Gift this article