ATO releases final determinations on the treatment of gains made by non-resident private equity investors

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

ATO releases final determinations on the treatment of gains made by non-resident private equity investors

The Australian Taxation Office (ATO) has finalised two tax determinations relevant for the taxation of gains made by other non-resident investors.

Tax determination (TD) 2011/24 – Determining the source of income

TD 2011/24 confirms the ATO view that the source of profit derived by a non-resident from the sale of shares in an Australian corporate group, which is acquired in a leveraged buy-out by a private equity fund, is not dependent solely on where the purchase and sale contracts are executed.

In this determination, the Commissioner of Taxation outlines the following factors which will need to be addressed in order to conclude the source of income:

  • the location of activities undertaken by the fund, or on the fund’s behalf by an Australian advising entity owned or controlled by the private equity firm, in making any improvements to the Australian investee group;

  • the nature of any agreements between the entities (with a focus on local advisory companies that may source and negotiate domestic bank funding, provide management support activities, etcetera);

  • the extent and nature of any control or involvement in the management of the Australian investee group;

  • where the purchase contracts and sale contracts are executed;

  • the form and substance of the purchase payments;

  • accordingly, the significance of the activities undertaken in Australia, relative to the profit, will be examined and the source of income will then be determined. This suggests a weighting of relative factors, but without an indication of which factors are considered to be of greater or lesser importance.

TD 2011/25 – Look-through approach

TD 2011/25 confirms the Commissioner’s view that the business profits article can apply to the Australian sourced business profits of a foreign limited partnership (LP) where the LP is treated as fiscally transparent in a country with which Australian has entered into a double tax agreement (DTA) and the LP’s partners are residents of that DTA country.

In the Determination, the Commissioner acknowledges the principles of the OECD partnership report (which provide for a look through approach to the ultimate investor in partnerships for the purposes of treaty benefits) are recognised as inherent in Australia’s broader treaty network.

What this Determination means, for certain foreign taxpayers looking to invest in Australia, is that the practical requirement of using a vehicle in a jurisdiction that does not have a treaty with Australia (such as the Cayman Islands), does not necessarily prevent protection from double taxation under a relevant DTA.

The Determination does not address whether the look through principle applies to sovereign wealth funds investing in Australia through fiscally transparent LPs.


Ian Farmer (ian.farmer@au.pwc.com)

PwC

Tel: +61 2 8266 2802

Fax: +61 2 8286 2802

Website: www.pwc.com/au

more across site & shared bottom lb ros

More from across our site

Heads of tax need to push their teams forward as strategic business advisers to add value across the organisation, says Sandy Markwick
Scott Bessent reportedly felt undermined by Musk naming Gary Shapley as acting IRS commissioner; in other news, Baker Tilly will combine with a top 15 US firm
The promise of nine years’ tax certainty and a ‘rational and pragmatic’ government process makes APAs a no-brainer, Indian tax advisers tell ITR
Despite garnering significant revenues from multinationals, Italy’s digital services tax presents pressing double taxation issues, say Stefano Simontacchi and Francesco Saverio Scandone of BonelliErede
ITR’s research shows that in-house tax counsel in Asia also feel underserved by their advisers’ international networks
World Tax global head of research Jon Moore tells ITR how his team spots standout submissions, and gives early statistical insights into this year’s entries
Australia’s conservative opposition will repeal controversial tax agent reporting rules if elected in the country’s May general election
Shapley would be the fourth person to hold the job this year; in other news, UK tax advisory firm MHA raised fewer funds than expected from its London IPO
The US needs to be involved in pillar one for there to be more international acceptance of the project, Michael Masciangelo says
The UK regulator is investigating EY’s auditing of the national postal service as it relates to the high-profile Horizon scandal, which saw hundreds wrongfully convicted
Gift this article