Further to our previous newsfeeds on this, the
Cyprus Tax Department issued a circular for transactions falling below the
threshold for the preparation of a Local File.
The circular applies to all
taxpayers with related party transactions, known as “Controlled Transactions”,
which are exempted from the obligation to be documented in a Cyprus Local File.
It is reminded that as per section
33 of the Income Tax Law, a Local File must be prepared by taxpayers if their Controlled
Transactions exceed (or should have exceeded based on the Arm’s Length
Principle) the amount of €750,000 per annum in aggregate per category of
transactions (sale/purchase of goods, provision/receipt of services, financing
transactions, receipt/payment of IP licencing/royalties, etc.).
The new circular provides for
simplified documentation to be prepared for Controlled Transactions that do not
exceed the threshold.
In addition, the circular introduces
safe harbours for certain types of financing operations, as well as for low
value-adding services, always under the condition that the Local File threshold
is not exceeded.
For what concerns financing
transactions, the threshold is determined by the principal amount of the loan
including interest charged but not paid. There are ongoing discussions for a
possible increase in the threshold for such transactions.
The main provisions of the circular are presented below:
1. Simplified Transfer Pricing (TP) documentation requirements
The minimum documentation
requirements for eligible taxpayers, are as follows:
a. brief description of the functional analysis (functions
undertaken, assets used and risks assumed);
b. a description of the characterisation of the entity, based
on the results of the functional analysis;
c. the reasons for the chosen TP method being considered the
most appropriate one;
d. determination of the arm’s length price/remuneration based
on the benchmarking analysis undertaken (comparability search results), using
either external or internal comparables. The benchmarking approach may also
include any other appropriate method provided by the OECD TP Guidelines for Tax
Administrations and Multinational Enterprises (the “OECD TP Guidelines”) under
the specific circumstances.
2. Safe Harbours
Taxpayers engaged in Controlled Transactions which fall under the following subcategories are assumed to comply with the Arm’s Length Principle if those transactions are within the safe harbours. The circular introduces safe harbours for the following sub-categories of Controlled Transactions:
a. Financing transactions such
as loans or cash advances granted to related parties which are funded out of
financial means (such as bonds, loans from related parties, interest free loans
from the shareholders, cash advances and bank loans). The safe harbour applies
regardless of whether the taxpayer assumes the risks of the financing activity.
b. Loans or cash advances
receivable from related parties which have been funded out of own capital (e.g.
issued share capital and share premium, non-return capital contributions, and
retained earnings).
c. Funding received from related parties (through interest
bearing loans, bond issuance, or cash advances) to the extent that the funds
borrowed are used in the business.
d. Low value-adding services.
Use of a safe harbour is
permitted only if the total value of Controlled Transactions in the particular
sub-category, together with the value of the remaining Controlled Transactions
which belong to the same main category as with the sub-category, should not
exceed (or should have not exceeded based on the Arm’s Length Principle), the
threshold of €750.000 per annum.
The safe harbours are the
following:
|
Eligible Transactions |
Safe Harbour |
1 |
Loans or cash advances to related parties which are funded
out of financial means. |
Minimum return of 2.5% (after the deduction of allowable
expenses).
|
2 |
Loans or cash advances receivable from related parties
which are funded out of own capital. |
Minimum return should be equal to the yield rate (as at 31
December of the prior tax year) of the 10 year government bond of the country
in which the borrower operates, increased by 3.5%. Negative yield rates
should be ignored. |
3 |
Loans payable to related parties to the extent that the
funds obtained are used in the business. |
Cost of borrowing must not exceed the yield rate (as at 31
December of the prior tax year) of the ten-year government bond of the
Republic of Cyprus, increased by 1.5%. Negative yield rates should be
ignored.
|
4 |
Low value-adding services |
5% mark-up on the relevant costs. |
Remarks concerning the use of safe harbours:
The use of safe harbours will
be subject to the DAC6 provisions of the Administrative Cooperation in The
Field of Taxation Law and accompanying Regulations, under the automatic
hallmark E1 on the use of unilateral safe harbours. However, the use of a
mark-up on relevant costs for low value-adding services may be exempted from
DAC6 reporting if the taxpayer fully complies with the guidance on how to apply
the relevant methodology as set out in Chapter VII of the OECD TP Guidelines
and the information and documentation prepared strictly follow the contents set
out in those OECD Guidelines.
The use of safe harbours needs to be supported by some minimum documentation, such as:
a. brief description of the functional analysis (functions
undertaken, assets used and risks assumed);
b. a description of the characterisation of the entity, based
on the results of the functional analysis.
Additional information will be
required depending on the nature of the transaction. For the financing
transactions under 1,2 and 3 in the table above, such information must include
a list of the relevant loans and certain details relating to those loans, the
reasons why they meet the required criteria for using the safe harbour and
numerical analyses and reconciliations for the purposes of arriving at the
taxable income.
For what concerns low
value-adding services, these follow closely those in Chapter VII of the OECD TP
Guidelines with some slight variations. In general, services falling under the
definition of low value-adding services are those which:
Specific examples of services
that would or would not fall within the category of low value-adding services
are described in Section D of Chapter VII of the OECD TP Guidelines. Under the
simplified approach for low value-adding services, documentation and
information must be prepared which include justifications as to why the
services are eligible for the simplified methodology of a mark-up on relevant
costs and should also include certain analyses and calculations.
A taxpayer choosing to benefit
from a safe harbour, must declare that to the Tax Department electronically by
completing the relevant section in the income tax return/summary information
table.
3. Reporting and Other Considerations
The documentation required should
be kept by the taxpayers on file to support their compliance with the requirements
of the circular for their Controlled Transactions.
It should be made available,
by the taxpayer or a person authorised to act as representative of the
taxpayer, within 60 days from receipt of a request by the Tax Department.
Where the accounting profit
from Controlled Transactions is higher than that resulting from a TP Study or
the amount resulting from application of a safe harbour, the Tax Department
will not proceed with any downward adjustment of taxable profits.