Portugal’s exchange of shares under the Merger Directive

International Tax Review is part of Legal Benchmarking Limited, 4 Bouverie Street, London, EC4Y 8AX

Copyright © Legal Benchmarking Limited and its affiliated companies 2025

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement

Portugal’s exchange of shares under the Merger Directive

Sponsored by

sponsored-firms-vieira.png
Stock Exchange - Large

Portugal's Merger Directive has remained ambiguous on whether a company ought to exist prior to an exchange of shares, leading to a rise in the number of questions regarding domestic and cross-border transactions.

The Merger Directive of October 19 2009 (Council Directive 2009/133/EC) implemented a tax deferral (neutrality) regime applicable to corporate re-organisations within the European Union. While the directive is aimed at cross-border re-organisations, most EU member states have extended its application to domestic transactions, which has led the European Court of Justice (ECJ) to clarify the need for member states to apply such regimes equally to cross-border and domestic transactions in a coherent way, pursuant to the object and purpose of the Merger Directive.

One of the re-organisations covered by the directive is the “exchange of shares”, which consists of a share-for-share deal where a shareholder contributes shares of a subsidiary (the “acquired company”) into an acquiring company in return for the shares of the later. In practice, the shareholder converts a direct stake into an indirect one, held through the acquiring company.

The fact that the Directive is silent on whether the acquiring company should exist prior to the re-organising transaction (or be set up in the context of the transaction in order to receive the shares of the acquired company), has been the basis for some EU tax authorities denying application of the tax neutrality regime, arguing that the acquiring company should in all cases be incorporated prior to the transaction. Such a position can lead to the immediate taxation of gains in the shares of the acquired company, but may also cause the expiry of tax losses, provisions, reserves and other relevant tax credits.

A Portuguese legal perspective to the exchange of shares

Portugal’s exchange of shares is specifically foreseen in the corporate income tax (CIT) code (which virtually reproduces the definition set out in the Merger Directive), and qualifies as a form of “in-kind contribution” and/or capital increase for corporate law purposes. While neither the Merger Directive or the CIT code clarify whether the acquiring company should be incorporated prior to the transaction, the answer may, in our opinion, result from a coherent interpretation of the object and purpose of the Merger Directive, and a combined interpretation of tax and corporate law provisions.

Notably, the Merger Directive clearly indicates that other transactions (where a branch of activity should be transferred) should qualify for tax neutrality, even if the newly incorporated companies are involved. In fact, the wording of the Merger Directive has been improved over time to clarify that the tax neutrality regime does not depend on the incorporation of the companies involved. In the case of converting a permanent establishment into a subsidiary, the European Commission clarified that the formation of a new company should not prevent the application of the Merger Directive.

The position of tax authorities and courts

In Portugal, this subject was addressed in a tax litigation procedure where tax authorities decided not to question whether the acquiring company should be incorporated in the course of an exchange of shares, challenging such a transaction, pursuant to the anti-avoidance provision (accepting the newly-incorporated acquiring company as eligible under the Merger Directive).

Portuguese case law confirms that the transactions defined in the CIT code should be interpreted in light of the purpose of the Merger Directive, even if they are not detailed in the CIT code. The fact that the incorporation of the company upon an exchange of shares is lawful under company law is an additional argument to support the eligibility of the transaction. We are confident that the Portuguese experience may contribute to an extension of this interpretation throughout the European Union.





Francisco Cabral Matos

Francisco Cabral Matos

 

Matilde Paulo Barroso

Matilde Paulo Barroso

This article was written by Francisco Cabral Matos and Matilde Paulo Barroso of Vieira de Almeida.



more across site & shared bottom lb ros

More from across our site

The directive will extend cooperation and information exchange around pillar two, according to the Council of the EU
Audit engagement partner Christopher Voogd has also been hit with a £32,500 charge over the firm’s work with Stirling Water Seafield Finance
China’s largest overhaul of its tax administration system in 24 years, featuring enhanced enforcement powers, is underway, says Abe Zhao of FenXun Partners
However, the US president increased tariffs on imported Chinese goods to 125%; in other news, UK tax firm MHA expects to raise £102m from its London listing
A mere three firms accounted for more than 90% of top-up taxes paid, according to research from Deloitte
Taxpayers with Brazilian operations should revisit their withholding positions in light of updated US guidance, writes Rafael Benevides, senior tax counsel at Meta
The MEGlobal Canada decision highlights taxpayers’ frustrations over split jurisdiction for TP assessments as well as a need for legislative reform, one expert tells ITR
New US trade and tax policies risk placing European businesses at a significant structural disadvantage, the group said
The new tariffs could force companies to reroute logistics, renegotiate crucial deals or even uproot their production facilities, one tax expert tells ITR
While nearly all large firms said they were already using GenAI, only 63% of small firms reported the same
Gift this article