01 Aug 2018

Tax and the City briefing for August 2018

Mike Lane and Zoe Andrews consider the decisions in Hastings (“offshore looping”); Minera Las Bambas (tax “payable” for indemnity purposes); DPAS (VAT exemption); and Wildbird (constituent parts of a loan relationship)

A legislative amendment is proposed to prevent “offshore looping” of the type seen in the Hastings case. The High Court determines in Minera Las Bambas that tax is not “payable" for tax indemnity purposes until the appeal against the tax assessment has been determined by the relevant court. The exemption from VAT for transactions concerning payments and transfers is so narrowly construed by the CJEU in DPAS that it is difficult to see how anyone other than a financial institution can fall within it. The FTT reminds us in Wildbird of the constituent parts of a loan relationship and shows that the content of the HMRC Manuals can be incorrect.

This article was first published in Tax Journal on-line on 1 August 2018.


tax-and-the-city-briefing-august-2018.pdf

 

This material is provided for general information only. It does not constitute legal or other professional advice.

Practices Tax, Tax Disputes
Contact Information
Mike Lane
Partner at Slaughter and May
Zoe Andrews
PSL Counsel & Head of Tax Knowledge at Slaughter and May