Australia tightens rules on foreign investment

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

Australia tightens rules on foreign investment

Sponsored by

Sponsored_Firms_piper.png
nut-165083-1280.jpg

Jock McCormack of DLA Piper summarises tax-related developments from early June 2020, as Australia takes a more stringent approach towards compliance procedures involving foreign investments.

On Friday, June 5 2020, the Australian Treasurer announced significant changes to Australia’s foreign investment policy/framework mainly driven by concerns regarding emerging national security risks and related developments. 

These foreign investment reforms follow upon certain temporary measures announced on March 29 2020 and will be the subject of exposure draft legislation expected to be released for consultation in July with a view to commencement of the new law from January 1 2021. 



Briefly, these reforms enable the Treasurer, amongst other things, to impose conditions or block investments by foreign persons on national security grounds and also to strengthen compliance measures, information sharing and enforcement powers, as well as provide certain administrative enhancements. 



Most particularly, the Australian Taxation Office (ATO) will increasingly provide a key role in administering, monitoring and implementing the enhanced foreign investment rules/framework, including maintaining a foreign investment register, additional access and information sharing powers with overseas counterpart agencies through various compliance activities – however consistent with Australia’s privacy and confidentiality laws. 



Client professional privilege 



Given the ATO’s recent well-publicised concerns with and actions on alleged excessive client professional privilege claims (as evidenced by the 2019 case with Glencore International and recent pursuit of certain professional firms), we would expect the continuing rigorous pursuit of taxpayer documentation in the coming months. 



Taxpayer alert



The ATO also released on May 25 2020 Taxpayer Alert 2020/2 dealing with the mischaracterisation of certain arrangements connected with foreign investment into Australian entities. The Taxpayer Alert deals with, amongst other things, cross border debt finance and certain arrangements minimising interest or royalty withholding tax in the context of the Australian/US double tax treaty and threatens the use of Australia’s general anti avoidance provision (Part IV A), diverted profits tax and related integrity measures. 



Hybrid mismatch rules – amendments 



Separately, new legislation was introduced into the Australian parliament on May 13 2020 dealing with certain clarifications to the Australian hybrid mismatch rules, including most particularly the integrity rule. Broadly, the integrity rule will be strengthened to ensure that it can apply to financing arrangements that have been designed to directly circumvent the operation of the hybrid mismatch rules. 



The new legislation when enacted will broaden the operation of the integrity rule to ensure that it could still apply in certain circumstances where the following specific hybrid mismatches arise; 

  • The deducting hybrid mismatch (which arises where two jurisdictions permit a deduction in relation to the same payment), and 

  • The hybrid financial instrument (a mismatch which exploits the tax treatment of a financial instrument, e.g. redeemable preference share). 


In addition, the new legislation also clarifies that in working out what constitutes ‘foreign income tax’ for the purposes of the integrity rule, any foreign municipal taxes and state taxes will also be taken into account to determine whether a payment has been subject to foreign tax at a rate of 10% or less.




Jock McCormack

T: +61 2 9286 8253

E: jock.mccormack@dlapiper.com





more across site & shared bottom lb ros

More from across our site

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
Foreign remittance requirements put additional administrative burden on Indian law firms and strain their relationship with foreign associate firms, according to practitioners
Gift this article