Italian Central Revenue permits majority stake contributions into newcos

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

Italian Central Revenue permits majority stake contributions into newcos

Sponsored by

sponsored-firms-hager.png
The decision comes as a relief to investors

Gian Luca Nieddu and Barbara Scampuddu of Hager & Partners discuss the recent decision which ruled that the contribution of a majority stake into a new company was not an abuse of the law.

The Italian Central Revenue recently examined the case of a company (Alpha) owned by a plurality of individuals, whereby only a few members were interested in taking care of the business dynamics (Ruling No. 170 issued on June 9 2020).

As this high ownership fragmentation appeared to affect the corporate effective management, Alpha controlling shareholders took the decision to incorporate a new holding company (Holding) to which their shares (cumulatively representing 57.28% of Alpha share capital, therefore the majority stake) would be contributed. In return, Alpha shareholders would receive a corresponding stake in the new company. As a result of this transaction, the Holding will possess a 57.28% share in Alpha, still representing the absolute majority of the voting rights exercisable in the Alpha shareholders’ meeting. 



Prior to enactment of this restructuring, Alpha shareholders decided to file an official request of clarification (ruling) to the Central Revenue, aimed at obtaining an opinion on whether this transaction could violate the Italian abuse of law provisions. Moreover, they asked clarifications on which should be the correct tax treatment, both for direct and indirect perspectives, of the whole operation.



The Central Revenue officially replied recognising that the envisaged restructuring would basically be aimed at improving the governance within the group without breaking any abuse of law provision. As a matter of fact, the entire transaction would not result in any unlawful tax advantage under both direct and indirect tax standpoints. 



With particular reference to direct taxation, Article 177, paragraph 2 of the Italian Tax Code would be applicable to the case, resulting in a ‘neutrality regime’ whereby no taxable capital gain would arise upon those Alpha shareholders making the contribution to the Holding.

In regard to indirect taxes, only €200 ($225) fixed registration tax would be due. Furthermore, this transaction would not be subject to the financial transactions tax (FTT) set forth by Article 1, paragraphs 491 to 500, Law No. 228 dated December 24 2012 and Ministerial Decree dated February 21 2013. In particular, the contribution of a controlling stake into another company is not subject to FTT provided that the following conditions set forth by Article 4, paragraph 1 letter (b) of Directive No. 2008/7/EC are met:

  1. The company receiving the contribution must obtain a stake attributing the majority of the voting rights exercisable in the shareholders meeting of the company the shares of which are transferred; and

  2. The contributing party (i.e. the controlling shareholders of Alpha) must receive in return, at least in part, a corresponding share of the company benefiting of the contribution.


Finally, the Central Revenue clarified that it is out of scope of the ruling any judgment concerning the valuation techniques adopted to determine the tax value of the contributed shares: in fact, the shares value (relevant for tax purposes) can only be assessed in the course of dedicated inspection activities by the competent local tax office.




Gian Luca Nieddu

T: +39 02 7780711 

E: gianluca.nieddu@hager-partners.it



Barbara Scampuddu

T: +39 02 7780711 

E: barbara.scampuddu@hager-partners.it 





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