News Corp’s Australian branch wins tax dispute with ATO

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

News Corp’s Australian branch wins tax dispute with ATO

newscorp.jpg

News Limited, the Australian branch of News Corp, has won a longstanding fight with the Australian Taxation Office (ATO) over more than A$2 billion ($2.06 billion) in deductions linked to currency exchange losses.

In its ruling yesterday, the Federal Court in Sydney said the ATO’s assessments with respect to tax deductions claimed by News Limited were excessive, and should be set aside.

The company claimed deductions of A$629.7 million in 2001 and A$1.42 billion in 2002.

News Limited said the deductions were linked to losses incurred as a result of devaluation of the Australian dollar when it made repayments to US subsidiary, News Publishers Investments Pty, following a global group restructuring which began in 1989.

Although no cash or bank deposits were exchanged, the court said the taxpayer incurred a loss from an exchange of liabilities due to exchange rate fluctuations, and this was sufficient to justify the deduction claims.

“The determinative matter is the breadth of the definition of ‘currency exchange loss’ in section 82V(1). All that it requires is a loss attributable to a fluctuation in a rate. It does not require an exchange of anything,” the ruling said.

The losses were shared among 18 News Corp companies, though the court has left it to the ATO to re-determine News Corp’s liability, since it is still unclear when the currency conversions took place and this could affect the final calculations of the correct amount owed.

The ATO now has the option to take the case to the Federal Court of Appeal or accept the judgment.

Full analysis of the case is now available.

more across site & shared bottom lb ros

More from across our site

As multinationals embed tax technology into their TP functions, a new breed of systems – built on multi-model databases – is quietly transforming intercompany pricing logic
The president described it as ‘one of the most important cases in the history of our country’; in other news, Portugal established a VAT group regime
Clients are facing increased TP audit scrutiny in Hungary. DLA Piper Hungary is therefore using AI and advanced analytics to augment its advice, the firm’s head of TP says
Simpson Thacher & Bartlett and MinterEllisonRuddWatts were among the firms that advised on the deal
AI will mean fewer entry-level roles in tax but also the emergence of new jobs, according to tax expert Isabella Barreto
As World Tax unveils its much-anticipated rankings for 2026, we focus on standout performances by PwC, KPMG and Deloitte across the Asia-Pacific region
The partnership model was looking antiquated even before the UK chancellor’s expected tax raid on LLPs was revealed. An additional tax burden may finally kill it off
The US’s GILTI regime will not be forced upon American multinationals in foreign jurisdictions, Bloomberg has reported; in other news, Ropes & Gray hired two tax partners from Linklaters
APAs should provide a pragmatic means to agree to an arm's-length outcome for an Australian entity and for the ATO, the tax authority said
Overall revenues and average profit per partner also increased in the UK, the ‘big four’ firm revealed
Gift this article