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  • Victor Koss, Peter Parry and Luis Uriza of Booz Allen Hamilton look at tax management in oil and gas
  • Shiv Mahalingham, head of transfer pricing at Chiltern, looks at transfer pricing and private equity
  • Michael Friedman, Todd Miller and John Galambos at McMillan Binch Mendelsohn examine proposed tax reforms in Canada
  • Recent amendments to the Spanish indirect tax rules on acquisition of real estate companies will have adverse effects for companies involved in business sectors other than property. Javier Hernandez Galante of Ashurst explains.
  • Mayer Brown has announced three tax appointments. James Hill and Michael Cashman will be based in London and Astrid Pieron in Brussels. Hill, who starts on June 4, deals with M&A, corporate finance, group reorganisations, and venture capital investments. He joins from Morgan Lewis & Bockius.
  • Norton Rose has announced that Stephane Salou is to join its Paris office as a tax partner. Salou came from Orrick where he was a partner and head of corporate tax. At Norton Rose he will work with partner Laurence Toxe.
  • The results of International Tax Review's 2007 EMEA poll show that directors are willing to forego gains from tax arbitrage for the simplicity of harmonisation. But, as Claire Jones found out, reservations persist about whether the powers that be will handle implementation effectively.
  • The Gulf state of Qatar is planning to cut its corporate tax rate to 12%. It stands presently at 35%. This is partly a move to rationalise the tax system while, at the same time, providing a low tax destination for corporates.
  • Rob McLeod, a specialist tax practitioner, will rejoin Ernst & Young New Zealand on June 30 to become its national managing partner.
  • The Australian government has announced new laws to regulate the tax profession. Tax advisers will be regulated nationally and be obliged to comply with a new code of conduct.