Ecuador

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

Ecuador

ponce.jpg

 

Luis Ponce

Deloitte Ecuador

Av. Amazonas N35-17 y Juan Pablo Sanz

Quito EC-170102

Ecuador

Tel: +593 2 381 5114 Ext 2102

Email: luponce@deloitte.com

Website: www.deloitte.com

Luis Ponce has been a partner in Deloitte Ecuador's legal and tax consulting area since 2009

Luis has 15 years' experience advising major companies in the industrial and commercial sectors. His experience also includes corporate and personal tax consulting and legal advisory services in various fields. He advises clients across a wide range of industries.

Luis is a professor in tax practices in the SEK University, and is a member of the American Bar Association as well as Eurojuris Deutschland (association of attorneys in the European Union).

He is fluent in Spanish, English and German

deloitte-250.gif

more across site & shared bottom lb ros

More from across our site

ITR’s data has highlighted the US firm’s ambition to become America’s ‘premier’ tax player via a concerted partner recruitment strategy
Jaap Zwaan’s arrival continues a recent streak of A&M Tax investing in the region; in other news, the US and Japan struck a deal that significantly lowered tariff rates
In a world where international tax concepts rely on human activity, Leonard Wagenaar poses existential questions about the future of such ideas when AI is ever-present
France v Axa provides a practical illustration of how the burden of proof is applied in TP matters under French law, ITR also heard
In an exclusive interview with ITR, Ian Gary calls for a central public CbCR database and bemoans the US’s lack of involvement in international tax transparency
Reckitt Benckiser is to divest its Essential Home business, which includes more than 70 brands, to private equity firm Advent International
In the first of a new series of weekly opinion pieces, ITR Editor Tom Baker reflects on the OECD’s attempts to sanitise the US’s brazen pillar two negotiations
The threat of 50% tariffs on Brazilian goods coincides with new Brazilian legal powers to adopt retaliatory economic measures, local experts tell ITR
The country’s chancellor appears to have backtracked from previous pillar two scepticism; in other news, Donald Trump threatened Russia with 100% tariffs
In its latest G20 update, the OECD also revealed tense discussions with the US where the ‘significant threat’ of Section 899 was highlighted
Gift this article