Irish Section 110 Special Purpose Vehicle (SPV)
An Irish Section 110 special purpose vehicle (SPV) or section 110 company, is an Irish tax resident company, which qualifies under Section 110 of the Irish Taxes Consolidation Act 1997 (TCA) for a special tax regime that enables the SPV to attain "tax neutrality": i.e. the SPV pays no Irish taxes, VAT, or duties.
Section 110 was created in 1997 to help International Financial Services Centre (IFSC) legal and accounting firms compete for the administration of global securitisation deals, and by 2017 was the largest structured finance vehicle in EU securitisation.[1][2] Section 110 SPVs have made the IFSC the third largest global Shadow Banking OFC.[3] While they pay no Irish tax, they contribute €100 million annually to the Irish economy in fees paid to IFSC legal and accounting firms.[4][5]
In June 2016, it was discovered that US distressed debt funds used Section 110 SPVs,[6] structured by IFSC service firms,[7] to avoid Irish taxes on €80 billion[8] of Irish domestic investments.[9][10][11][12] The cost to the Irish exchequer has been material.[13][8] Despite the scale of the avoidance, Irish Revenue attempted no investigation or prosecution.[14] The Irish Government's response to the scandal in 2016–2017 was unusual, closing some loopholes but leaving others open, including a five-year capital gains tax (CGT) exemption to aid alternative restructuring.[15][16][17] The affair is a source of dispute.[18][19][20][21][22][23]
The abuses were discovered because Section 110 SPVs file public accounts with the Irish CRO. In 2018, the Central Bank of Ireland upgraded the L–QIAIF, to give the same tax-free structure on Irish assets held via debt as the Section 110 SPV, but without having to file public accounts with the Irish CRO.
Academic research in 2016–2018, showed IFSC Section 110 SPVs are largely unregulated,[24][25] operating like brass plate companies with low supervision from the Revenue or the Central Bank of Ireland.[26] It showed Section 110 SPVs were used by sanctioned/prohibited Russian banks.[27][28][29] A June 2017 study published in Nature listed Ireland as one of the global Conduit OFCs which use SPVs to route funds to tax havens.[30] In March 2018, the Financial Stability Forum showed SPVs had made Ireland the 3rd largest Shadow Banking OFC.[31] In June 2018, tax academics showed Ireland was the world's largest tax haven.[32][33][34][35]
Creation
While Ireland had created securitisation SPVs from 1991 onwards for their emerging International Financial Services Centre (IFSC), Section 110 of the 1997 Taxes and Consolidation Act (TCA) introduced more advanced SPVs to enable the IFSC complete in the global securitisation market.
The new Section 110 SPV was fully tax neutral (also known as tax transparent), which meant that with appropriate financial structuring, no Irish taxes (including Irish income taxes, capital gains taxes, withholding taxes or even Irish VAT and Irish stamp duty) would apply inside the new Irish Section 110 SPV.
Full tax neutrality was available as standard in the offshore financial centres who already had zero domestic taxes (i.e. Bermuda, the Cayman). As tax havens however, their reputation, and a restricted network of global tax treaties, made then less acceptable to the banks who originate securitisation SPVs.[36]
Onshore competitors, like Luxembourg and the Netherlands, used a civil law legal system, also less favored by securitisation originators[37]
Irish companies had access to the EU's network of tax treaties in a preferred common law legal system. However, offering Irish companies as vehicles for tax neutral securitisations bought risks to the tax base of the Irish economy as Irish domestic assets and businesses could be repackaged into Section 110 "qualifying assets".
Explicit solutions (i.e. the SPV could not hold Irish assets) were ruled out as the Section 110 SPV could be challenged as a non-ordinary Irish company, losing tax treaty access. Instead, controls were introduced, that while less explicit, would collectively ensure Section 110 SPVs were confined to global securitisation:
- Section 110 SPVs were limited to entities licensed to operate within the IFSC (in 1997, the IFSC was an 11–hectare site in Dublin).
- Irish Revenue had to be notified on the creation of each individual Section 110 SPV (and could challenge any it found unacceptable).
- Existing Irish anti-avoidance tax rules would apply (e.g. withholding tax rules would prevent domestic profits leaving Ireland, untaxed).
While IFSC law firms lobbied for the removal of i. & iii. (above),[38][39][40][41] and exemptions from improvements in Irish company law,[42] these controls seemed to work. There is no record of any entity (Irish or foreign) using Section 110 SPVs to avoid Irish tax on Irish domestic investments or businesses until circa 2012 (§ Abuses).
Note, Irish banks use Section 110 SPVs to raise capital to finance their Irish mortgage books in the global capital markets (they all have IFSC offices). However, as the source Irish borrower pays loan interest to the Irish bank, who then incurs Irish taxes inside their Irish-taxed corporate bank structure, there is no loss of Irish taxes to the Irish exchequer.
In contrast, if Irish borrowers paid loan interest into a Section 110 SPV, no Irish taxes are ever paid, causing a permanent loss to the exchequer. Irish anti-avoidance rules (iii. above), would kick-in and apply Irish withholding taxes of 20% in such situations, but the Irish Revenue would controversially set these anti-avoidance rules aside in 2016 (§ Abuses).
Features
Qualifying company
For Irish Section 110 SPVs to be accepted under EU tax treaties (and be OECD-whitelisted), they must to be ordinary Irish resident companies, in Irish and EU Company Law.
In this regard, more advanced and/or aggressive Irish tax-neutral vehicles, which are fully tax-free and can be operated in greater secrecy from public views, such as the Qualifying investor alternative investment fund (QIAIF), or LQIAIFs and QIFs, were not deemed suitable for the global securitisation transaction marketplace.
As an ordinary Irish company, a Section 110 SPV usually takes one of 3 main forms:[43]
- private limited company (LTD);
- public limited company (PLC); and
- designated activity company (DAC) (essentially a private limited company (LTD), but who can also use listed debt (but not equity) securities).
A "qualifying company" under Section 110 of the 1997 TCA means a company which:[44]
- is resident in Ireland and files accounts (i.e. is a normal Irish Company)
- acquires "qualifying assets" (see list below)
- carries on in Ireland the business of the holding and/or management of "qualifying assets" (i.e. is not a "brass plate")
- apart from activities ancillary to that business carries on no other activities
- undertakes the first transaction for a value of not less than €10m
- notifies the Irish tax authorities that it is a company to which points (a) to (e) apply
Qualifying assets
The list of "qualifying assets" which can be held inside an Irish Section 110 SPV is large (it has been extended with subsequent Irish Finance Acts).
It goes well beyond the original classic securitisation categories and currently includes:
- Shares, bonds and other securities
- Futures, options, swaps, derivatives and similar instruments
- Invoices and all types of receivables
- Obligations evidencing debt (including loans and deposits)
- Leases and loan and lease portfolios
- Hire purchase contracts
- Acceptance credits and all other documents of title relating to the movement of goods
- Bills of exchange, commercial paper, promissory notes and all other kinds of negotiable or transferable instruments
- Certain types of carbon offsets
- Contracts for insurance and contracts for reinsurance
- Commodities (i.e. tangible assets dealt in on a recognised commodity exchange)
- Plant and machinery
Structural elements
There are three key elements relevant to structuring Irish Section 110 SPVs (as discussed in attached references):[45][46][43][47][48]
These structuring elements are also discussed in more detail in the briefing notes issues by the Revenue Commissioners on Section 110 SPVs.[49][50]
Orphan structure
In common with most securitisation vehicles, Irish Section 110 SPVs use an orphan structure in which the equity is held by an unconnected third party who has no effective rights or controls on the SPV. Irish registered charitable trusts were a common choice (some Irish law firms went so far as to create their own in-house registered charities[51][52]). However, a public scandal in 2016 regarding use of Irish Section 110 SPVs in domestic Irish tax avoidance[53] (see § Abuses) led to a ruling by the Irish Charity Regulator prohibiting Irish registered charities from owning equity in Section 110 SPVs.[54] Orphaning is a potentially strong tax avoidance tool as it allows equity to be restructured into tax-free debt (see § Participation notes), and the Revenue Commissioners reserve the right to challenge cases created for tax avoidance,[49] although they have never done so in practice.
Participation notes
The TCA 1997 legislation includes a headline tax rate of 25% on non-trading income so that the SPV is regarded as an Irish taxable entity. Thus, the Section 110 SPV is not presented overtly as a tax-free vehicle (i.e. unlike an Irish QIAIF), which would attract adverse attention from other tax authorities (under tax treaty rules), or regulators (e.g. EU or OECD).[55]
To get to a zero-tax position, the TCA 1997 allows "Profit Participation Notes" (PPNs). These are artificial internal loans to the SPV, whose rate of interest can be sufficiently variable to absorb all income/gains generated in the SPV. As an Irish trading company, the SPV can charge loan interest as an expense (deductible against Irish tax), rather than a deemed profit distribution (not deductible against Irish tax).
PPNs are often domiciled in a tax haven (a dutch sandwich may be needed to avoid Irish withholding tax transferring the PPN interest payments to the tax haven). PPNs are often sought to be classed as "Eurobonds" in the Irish tax legislation which gives them additional tax robustness, and also allows the PPN to be integrated with the Irish QIAIF regime, also tax-free, and held in a more stable corporate tax haven such as Luxembourg. Where the PPNs fail to achieve "Eurobond" classification, the PPNs can be owned by an Irish QIAIF, who will then issue qualifying "Eurobonds" from a sink ofc jurisdiction.[45]
While the various Irish Finance Acts strengthened the rules on PPNs (the 2016 Finance Act mentions a "market rate" of interest and that structures should be created on an "arms length" bases), the effective rules, and the list of exemptions and exempted parties, allow considerable freedom in structuring PPNs to sweep up all income generated by the "qualifying assets" in the SPV (via PPN interest payments).[56] Irish professional services firms, who lead the drafting of Irish tax legislation, can provide the corporate finance services needed to produce evidence satisfying the "market rate" and "arms length" tests.
As Ireland has no thin capitalisation rules,[57] the Section 110 SPV can be 100% financed by PPN debt, making the SPV a fully tax-free vehicle (i.e. no equity leakage).
Tax residence
To qualify as an Irish resident company the Section 110 SPV needs to meet minimum tests from the Irish Revenue to demonstrate that the SPV is (a) incorporated in Ireland and (b) "managed and controlled" from Ireland. The orphaning process will ensure the relevant trust that "owns" the SPV equity is Irish domiciled, thus satisfying the incorporation test. The "managed and controlled" test is vaguer (based on UK case law) but typically results in the SPV requiring two Irish resident directors, a registered Irish office, an Irish-based administrator, and that the key Board meetings are held in Ireland.
Approval process
There is no process for approving the creation of a Section 110 SPV. Luxembourg Leaks showed pre-approving vehicles, risks challenges under EU State aid rules, resulting in sanctions and fines. The entire economic benefit of the SPV sector to Ireland (of which Section 110 is a subset) is only circa €100m in annual fees paid to Irish professional services firms (SPVs pay no Irish taxes).[58][59]
Irish Revenue Commissioners reserve the right to challenge existing Irish Section 110 SPVs under the general Irish anti-avoidance legislation. However, as since the creation of Section 110 SPVs in 1997, no case has ever been brought by the Irish Revenue against an Irish Section 110 SPV. Up until 2017, no audit even has ever been undertaken by Irish Revenue into the activities of an Irish Section 110 SPV.[60]
The Section 110 SPV is therefore set up and a notice sent to the Irish Revenue declaring the intention of the Directors to file under Section 110 of the 1997 TCA. Before 2010, there was no obligation the Irish Revenue to acknowledge this notice was received,[61] however, this has recently been formalised to an 8–week notice period.[62] The IDSA is lobbying for a 24–hour "online" approval system (as per the QIAIFs).[63]
Evolution
By 2017, the Irish Section 110 SPV was the most popular securitisation SPV in the EU.[64] In addition, the Irish Section 110 SPV expanded its adoption and use far beyond the original securitisation market to make the IFSC the 3rd largest Shadow Banking OFC in the world.[65] While SPVs pay no Irish tax, the generate circa €100m annually for the Irish economy in fees paid to law firms.[4]
IFSC law firms successfully lobbied in the 2003 and 2005 Finance Acts for the withholding tax rules to be relaxed for Section 110 SPVs (and especially for Eurobond financing). They argued Irish Revenue could still challenge any Section 110 SPV deemed unfit (ii. § Creation), and that the withholding tax rules put the IFSC at a disadvantage versus Luxembourg.[38][39][40][41]
Successive Irish Finance Acts (2003, 2008, 2011 and 2016) extended the list of "qualifying assets" beyond the classic categories that make up the bulk of the global securitisation market. According to IDSA (Irish Debt Securities Association, the Section 110 SPV lobby group created by IFSC tax-law firm, Matheson in 2013), the only asset which Irish Section 110 SPVs cannot invest in is direct Irish or non-Irish property (Ireland has REITs for this).[66]
Section 110 SPV legislation has been refined around the treatment of PPNs so they are acceptable to the widest tax treaty network. The focus has been around tightening the language around "arm's length" or "market tested" rates of PPN interest. However the rules remain sufficiently broad, and the exclusions sufficiently general, to materially limit the effect of these changes. A particular aim is enabling the PPN's to be classed as "Eurobonds" so they can be legally domiciled in Luxembourg, which has become a key "backdoor" out of the Irish corporate tax regime into a full Sink OFC.[67][68]
To protect the PPNs from the Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP), and International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS), which target instruments like PPNs, the Irish Government allows Section 110 SPVs to file accounts under old Irish GAAP (GAAP 2004).[69] In addition the 2010 Transfer Pricing rules do not apply to Section 110 SPVs.[70][43]
Irish professional services have developed ways to link Irish Section 110 SPVs with Irish QIAIFs (or QIFs) to create an Orphaned Super–QIAIF.[71] This vehicle combines the secrecy of the Irish QIAIF structures (unlike SPVs, QIAIFs don't file Irish public accounts), with the tax neutrality and global acceptability of the Irish Section 110 SPV.[72][73] Using a QIAIF to "own" the Section 110 PPNs, which can be "back-to-backed" with newly issued "eurobonds" from the QIAIF, is an established "backdoor" out of the Irish tax system to Luxembourg, the main Sink OFC for Ireland.[67][74][75]
Abuses of Section 110 SPVs in the Irish domestic market (see below), led Finance Minister Michael Noonan to make changes in light of ".. use of aggressive tax practices by some Section 110 companies to avoid paying tax..."[76][77] The new rules are complex but prohibit Section 110 SPVs from holding direct Irish property [78] and tighten the Irish Revenue notification process to 8 weeks.[62][50] (§ Abuses)
The abuses highlighted that the Central Bank of Ireland provides little effective regulation on Section 110 SPVs, however, they were only uncovered because the Section 110 SPV must file public accounts with the Irish CRO. In late 2016 the Central Bank of Ireland began a consultation process to upgrade the little-used L–QIAIF regime.[79][80] In February 2018, the Central Bank of Ireland changed its AIF "Rulebook" to allow L–QIAIFs hold the same assets that Section 110 SPVs could own. However, the upgraded L–QIAIFs offered two specific improvements over the Section 110 SPV:[81][82]
- Tax secrecy. L–QIAIFs do not file public accounts (how Section 110 SPV tax abuses were uncovered), but send confidential reports to the Central Bank, who will not screen for tax avoidance;
- No need for Profit Participating Notes (PPN). A weakness of Section 110 SPVs is their reliance on artificial PPNs for the BEPS movement. L–QIAIFs do not need PPNs.
Three months after the Irish Central Bank updated its AIF "Rulebook", the Irish Revenue Commissioners issued new guidance in May 2018 on Section 110 SPV taxation which would further reduce their attractiveness as a mechanism to avoid Irish taxes on Irish assets.[49] In June 2018, the Central Bank of Ireland reported that €55 billion of U.S.-owned distressed Irish assets, equivalent to 25% of Irish GNI*, moved out of Section 110 SPVs and into L-QIAIFs.[83] The L–QIAIF, and the ICAV wrapper, is expected to take over as the main structure for avoiding Irish tax on Irish assets in a confidential manner.
Abuses
The abuses below were uncovered because Section 110 SPVs have to file public accounts with the Irish CRO. The Central Bank of Ireland has addressed this aspect of Section 110 SPVs by upgrading the little used L–QIAIF regime in February 2018 to give the same tax-free structure to hold Irish assets via debt instruments, but in a confidential structure (discussed further in Ireland as a tax haven).
Vulture fund tax avoidance
From the 1997 TCA to the Irish crisis in 2009, there is no known case of a Section 110 SPV being used to avoid Irish domestic taxes on Irish assets or businesses. They were confined to global finance as was intended.[84] Per earlier (§ Creation), while Irish banks used Section 110 SPVs to raise global capital for Irish loan books, they never used Section 110 SPVs to avoid Irish taxes on their Irish activities (the Irish borrower paid interest to the Irish bank, and not into a Section 110 SPV).
The Irish financial media noted in 2016 that US distressed debt funds (known by the pejorative term–vulture funds) were filing Irish company CRO accounts with large profits on their Irish investments (made from 2012 onwards), but no Irish tax payments.[85][6][11][86][87][88] They could also see that the equity of these companies was "owned" by Irish-registered charities (children's charities in cases),[89] some of which were operated by IFSC-based law firms.[90][91]
The CRO filings showed these vulture funds were using orphaned Section 110 SPVs, structured by IFSC–based law firms (e.g. Matheson, A&L Goodbody and Dillon Eustace and Mayson Hayes Curran),[7][92][5] who use Section 110 SPVs in securitisation work, to export untaxed income and capital gains earned on domestic Irish assets to offshore locations (via the PPN interest payments), such as the Cayman Islands.[12][21][93][94]
Funds using the Section 110 SPVs included the largest names in distressed investing, including:
- Oaktree Capital Management, known through their Mars Capital (and others) Section 110 SPVs, and advised by IFSC law firm, Matheson.[94][89][95][89][96][6]
- Cerberus Capital Management, known through their Promonotoria series of Section 110 SPVs, and advised by IFSC law firm, A&L Goodbody.[88][97][12][86][98][6]
- Apollo Global Management, known through their Tanager series of Section 110 SPVs, and advised by IFSC law firm, A&L Goodbody.[99][100]
- Lone Star Funds, known through their LSREF series of Section 110 SPVs, and advised by IFSC law firm, Dillon Eustace.[86][101][6]
- Carval Investors, known through a diverse series of Section 110 SPVs (including Stapleford, Vanguard), and advised by IFSC law firm, Matheson.[86][102][6]
- Goldman Sachs, known through the "Irish named" Section 110 SPVs (Belthany, Kenmane, Liffey etc.), advised by IFSC law firm, Matheson.[103][102][98][6]
Mezzanine capital lenders were also using Section 110 SPVs to avoid taxes but in addition, by restructuring the equity of their clients into Section 110 "qualifying loans", they helped their Irish borrowers reduce Irish domestic corporation tax. The State's Irish Strategic Investment Fund was a co-investor in these firms (e.g. BlueBay Capital, Cardinal Capital).[104][105][85]
It emerged that the regulator of Section 110 SPVs, the Central Bank of Ireland, was paying rent to a US vulture fund landlord, that had structured their investment to avoid all Irish taxes, and stamp duty, on the rent.[106]
The Irish media uncovered that the National Asset Management Agency, presented to distressed debt funds in London on how to use Section 110 SPVs (and QIAIFs) to avoid Irish taxes on their Irish investments.[107][108]
Public statements, Guideline Bulletins, and FOI Data, from the Irish Revenue, implied that Irish Revenue (a) knew these funds were using Section 110 SPVs[77] in the domestic Irish market, and (b) that Irish Revenue were prepared to issue rulings to amend their own anti-avoidance rules (esp. withholding tax rules[109] and CG50 land certificates[110]) to facilitate the tax avoidance.
This is a relatively new situation that has arisen and we are working to resolve it ... Up to recently, these loans would have normally been held by [Irish] banks and so that was no issue about deducting [Irish withholding tax] from interest. But this has changed, so we're looking at coming up with a broad solution. I would say that there is no need for panic as there is a long-established procedure in place in the legislation and the only issue is to establish whether the SPV a company is paying to is a Section 110 company.
Stephen Donnelly TD, called for a Dáil investigation and produced calculations[8] based on the €80 billion of published loan balances sold by the National Asset Management Agency (or "NAMA") to the US funds for circa €40 billion. Donnelly estimated that the loss of Irish taxes over the next decade from these assets being taken out of the Irish tax system (i.e. base erosion and profit shifting effects), could reach €20 billion (or €2 billion per annum).[111][13][97] The Irish Times calculated the total economic contribution of Section 110 SPVs since their creation, would be vastly exceeded by these tax losses.[112]
The affair escalated into a major public scandal during 2016,[14][113] and was covered as such in the international media,[9][10] and in several Irish RTÉ Prime Time Investigates programs.
The Irish Government claimed that the U.S. funds had discovered unknown but legitimate loopholes, which they moved to close in the 2016 Finance Act. The Government budgeted €50 million in total additional taxes from the closure of these loopholes,[114] however NAMA, a small investor in Section 110 SPVs, disclosed an immediate €158 million tax charge due to the Act.[115] The slowness of the Government's response in closing these "perceived" loopholes, and the extensive list of exemptions (including a 5-year CGT exemption), and excluded parties to the Act, remains a source of dispute.[18][19][20][116][117]
Irish Revenue attempted no prosecution for the acknowledged tax-avoidance. Funds could leave Section 110 SPVs in place and continue to earn tax-free gains, as long as they did not foreclose. If they foreclosed, they had a period in which to sell the assets, and hence the 5–year CGT exemption. They could also transfer their Section 110 assets into a more confidential QIAIF (and later, an LQIAIF), also using the 5–year CGT exemption to avoid incurring taxes while restructuring.[15][16][17]
The limited response of the Irish Government led some Irish commentators to wonder if the vulture funds had their support (i.e. there was no loophole just a "blind eye").[23][22][118][119][120]
In June 2018, the Central Bank of Ireland reported that €55 billion in Irish assets, owned by U.S. distressed debt funds, equivalent to 25% of Irish GNI*, moved out of Section 110 SPVs.[121] This figure exceeded Stephen Donnelly's 2016 estimate of €40 billion in Irish distressed asset values hiding in Section 110 SPVs (representing €80 billion in loan balances). The Central Bank of Ireland had begun a process to upgrade the tax-free L–QIAIF regime in November 2016 (just after Minister Noonan closed the "perceived" Section 110 loopholes).[122][80] In February 2018, the Central Bank relaunched the historically little-used L-QIAIF, with the same tax-free features as the Section 110 SPV, but with the distinction that L-QIAIFs do not have to file public CRO accounts.[81] The L–QIAIF is now the main vehicle for U.S. distressed debt funds shielding against Irish tax on their Irish assets.[82]
In March 2019, the UN Special Rapporter on housing, Leilani Farha, formally wrote to the Irish Government on behalf of the UN, regarding its concerns regarding "preferential tax laws" for foreign investment funds on Irish assets which were compromising the human rights of tenants in Ireland.[123] In April 2019, Irish technology entrepreneur Paddy Cosgrave launched a Facebook campaign to highlight abuses of Section 110 SPVs, as well as QIAIFs and L-QIAIFs, stating: "The L-QIAIF runs the risk of being a weapon of mass destruction".[124][35]
Unregulated shadow banking
Research by Trinity College Dublin Professor Jim Stewart and Cillian Doyle show Section 110 SPVs are effectively unregulated and attract little oversight by the Irish Revenue or Central Bank. Even post the 2016 Finance Act (§ Vulture fund tax avoidance), the data asked for could not be used to assess the provenance of an Irish Section 110 SPV, or its source of funds.
Their research in particular noted the following:[24]
- Irish professional firms market Section 110 SPVs as "unregulated", "tax-free vehicles", "not subject to [financial] services regulation".
- The PPN interest deduction as an expense is a unique concession in any tax legislation (not available in ordinary company taxation).
- There is no Section 110 SPV approval process, and notification information is so basic it could not be used to test suitability.
- Irish Revenue has conducted no investigations or audits into any Irish Section 110 SPVs (since creation in 1997).
- The Irish Revenue and Central Bank of Ireland barely meet to discuss Irish Section 110 SPVs (despite being joint regulators).
- The data the Central Bank of Ireland collect on SPVs is limited (and contained inaccuracies and mistakes vs. ECB statistics).
Further research by Stewart and Doyle shows Russian firms funneled €100bn into Irish Section 110 SPVs since 2007. Some of these Russian firms appeared unsuitable from a number of perspectives (i.e. criminal or sanctioned activities). Many SPVs resembled a brass plate type set up - a situation the Irish Government has stated that it is adverse to.[125]
Of particular note in this research was:[25]
- Some of these Russian firms are the subject of EU/US Sanctions and some had raised capital via Irish Section SPVs post-sanctions.
- Other Russian firms were tied to the Russian Banking/Shadow Banking sector (which is linked to prohibited / money laundering activities).[126][127]
- The Central Bank of Ireland collects no data on the source of financing to the Irish SPVs (critical for money laundering / criminal activities oversight).
- Domicile of Irish Section 110 SPVs is cosmetic, with a handful of local Irish Corporate services Firms (CSP) "managing" thousands of Irish SPVs.
- Governance of Irish Section 110 SPVs is also cosmetic, with local Directors in these CSPs acting as Directors for hundreds of SPVs.[26]
Stewart and Doyle's academic papers on Irish Section 110 SPVs highlight the combination of an anonymous (via orphaning), and tax-free (via the Profit Participation Notes), OECD–whitelisted wrapper, in an effectively unregulated environment, has coincided with Ireland's position as the world's 4th largest Shadow Banking OFC.[27][28][128][29][129] Doyle identified certain Russian banks that were using these vehicles to create fictitious assets and hide losses on their balance sheet. Through an examination of one recently collapsed bank, MDM, the techniques used to create this scheme and the effects on the bank's balance sheet were explored.[130]
The ex. Deputy Governor of the Central Bank of Ireland said the risks of Section 110 SPV abuse are not appreciated by the Irish Government.[131][132] The IMF noted the same brass plate type regulation of Irish Section 110 SPVs.[26] This was picked up by Oxfam who has listed Ireland as a top corporate tax haven.[133][134][135] It has coincided with G20 economy, Brazil, blacklisting Ireland as a tax haven.[136][137]
A 2017 seminal academic paper published in Nature on global offshore financial centres (OFCs) ("Uncovering Offshore Financial Centers: Conduits and Sinks in the Global Corporate Ownership Network") lists Ireland as one of five key global Conduit OFCs (with the Netherlands, UK, Singapore and Switzerland). The five Conduit-OFCs are the links to 24 Sink OFCs, which comprise the key offshore centres (i.e. the Cayman Islands). The Conduit-OFCs are the hubs which provide the regulatory reputation and the legal and taxation wappers (i.e. Section 110 SPVs) for money to get into, and out of, the Sink OFCs.[30]
See also
External links
- Irish Debt Securities Association, the lobby group set up by the Dubin tax-law firms that create Section 110 SPVs
- Irish Revenue Qualifying companies (Section 110 Taxes Consolidation Act (TCA) 1997)
- Irish Central Bank Special Purpose Vehicles
- Professor James Charles Stewart Adjunct Professor, School Office - Business, Trinity College Dublin, leading academic research into Section 110 SPVs
References
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- Garcia-Bernardo, Javier; Fichtner, Jan; Takes, Frank W.; Heemskerk, Eelke M. (13 March 2017). "Uncovering Offshore Financial Centers: Conduits and Sinks in the Global Corporate Ownership Network". Scientific Reports. 7: 6246. arXiv:1703.03016. Bibcode:2017NatSR...7.6246G. doi:10.1038/s41598-017-06322-9.
- "Global Shadow Banking and Monitoring Report: 2017" (PDF). Financial Stability Forum. 5 March 2018. p. 30.
Jurisdictions with the largest financial systems relative to GDP (Exhibit 2-3) tend to have relatively larger OFI [or Shadown Banking] sectors: Luxembourg (at 92% of total financial assets), the Cayman Islands (85%), Ireland (76%) and the Netherlands (58%)
- Gabriel Zucman; Thomas Torslov; Ludvig Wier (June 2018). "The Missing Profits of Nations". National Bureau of Economic Research, Working Papers. p. 31.
Appendix Table 2: Tax Havens
- "Zucman:Corporations Push Profits Into Corporate Tax Havens as Countries Struggle in Pursuit, Gabrial Zucman Study Says". Wall Street Journal. 10 June 2018.
Such profit shifting leads to a total annual revenue loss of $200 billion globally
- "Ireland is the world's biggest corporate 'tax haven', say academics". Irish Times. 13 June 2018.
New Gabriel Zucman study claims State shelters more multinational profits than the entire Caribbean
- Aidan Regan (25 April 2019). "Ireland is a tax haven — and that's becoming controversial at home". Washington Post. Retrieved 25 April 2019.
- "An Introduction to Securitisation in Ireland Dillon Eustace Law". July 2002.
- "Securitisation to grow further in 2003". January 2003.
- "A&L Goodbody lobbies for Section 110 changes in 2003 Finance Act". Finance Dublin. January 2003.
- "Securitisation framework modernised and IFSC non IFSC distinction removed". March 2003.
- "KPMG calls for removal of Irish withholding tax controls on Section 110 SPVs". July 2002.
- "Matheson 2006 Finance Act extends quoted Eurobond withholding tax exemption for Section 110 SPVs". Finance Dublin. September 2006.
- "Securitisation industry lobby Government to amend Companies (Auditing & Accounting) Bill". Finance Magazine. January 2003.
- "Ireland as a domicile for Special Purpose Vehicles" (PDF). Dillon Eustace. 2016.
- "The Irish Section 110 Company" (PDF). Ernst and Young (Dublin). 2014.
- "Irish SPV Taxation" (PDF). Grant Thornton. 30 September 2015.
- "Irish Structures for investing in Distressed Assets" (PDF). Dillon Eustace Law Partners (Dublin). 2010.
- "Ireland as a Domicile for Structured Finance" (PDF). Arthur Cox Law. 2014. Archived from the original (PDF) on 16 March 2018. Retrieved 18 March 2018.
- "Irish Securitisation Section 110 Vehicles". International Tax Review. 15 March 2015.
- "Section 110: entitlement to treatment" (PDF). Revenue Commissioners. May 2018.
- "Notification to be a 'qualifying company' Section 110" (PDF). Revenue Commissioners. February 2018.
- "Wealthy firms 'using charitable status to avoid paying taxes'". Irish Examiner. 13 July 2016.
- "Law firm defends use of charities to help hedge funds cut tax bills". Irish Times. 27 August 2015.
- "Revenue queries use of registered charities in "shadow banking"". Irish Times. 27 July 2016.
- "Irish Charities Regulator rejects Matheson Charities in Section 110 SPVs". Irish Times. 28 April 2017.
- "Revenue Guidance Notes Section 110". Chartered Accountants of Ireland. August 2016.
- "The meaning of changes to Section 110". PWC Ireland. September 2016.
- "Holding Companies in Ireland" (PDF). Dillon Eustace Law Partners (Dublin). 2016.
- "Lawyers and accountants share in €100m fees from SPVs in IFSC". Irish Times. 4 October 2016.
- "SPVs in Ireland" (PDF). Irish Debt Securities Association (IDSA). 2016.
- "Revenue probes 40 'tax-neutral' companies for suspected abuse". Irish Independent. 24 July 2016.
- "Exemption from Encashment Tax for "Qualifying Company" within the meaning of Section 110 of the Taxes Consolidation Act, 1997". Irish Revenue. 14 January 2010.
- "Section 110 companies - New notification requirements". Grant Thornton. March 2017.
- "Call for SPV shake-up to make Ireland world leader by the IDSA". Irish Independent. 5 October 2017.
- "Irish special purpose vehicle assets reach €763bn". Irish Times. 18 July 2017.
- "Irish shadow banking dwarfs more traditional sectors". Irish Independent. 17 March 2018.
- "Special Purpose Vehicles and the Securitisation Industry in Ireland Q&A" (PDF). Irish Debt Securities Association (IDSA). 2016.
- "Ireland:Selected Issues". International Monetary Fund. June 2018. p. 20.
Figure 3. Foreign Direct Investment - Over half of Irish outbound FDI is routed to Luxembourg
- "Changes to the Section 110 Regime". William Fry Law Firm. September 2016.
- "PwC calls for Section 110 to be exempted from 2005 Finance Bill". Finance Mangazine. 2005.
- "Irish Finance Companies Tax Issues" (PDF). A&L Goodbody. 2012.
- "Ireland as a location for Distressed Debt: Super QIF Example". Davy Stockbrokers. 2014.
- "Irish Qualifying Investor Funds and Section 110 Companies" (PDF). FS Taxation. October 2013.
- "Ireland's Super QIF" (PDF). Mason Hayes+Curran Law. 2012.
- "KPMG Ireland: QIAIFs" (PDF). KPMG. November 2015.
- "A Guide to Investing in QIAIFs" (PDF). Dillon Eustace. November 2015.
- "Loophole allowing Vulture Funds to pay almost no Irish profit tax shut". Irish Independent. 16 September 2016.
- "Government moves to amend Section 110 to close tax loophole used by vulture funds". RTÉ News. 6 September 2016.
- "Finance Bill 2016 Amendments to Securitisation Regime". Finance Magazine. January 2017.
- "CENTRAL BANK OF IRELAND: Enhancements to the L–QIAIF regime announced". Matheson (law firm). 29 November 2016.
- "Update on Changes to Loan Originating Qualifying Investor AIF Regime" (PDF). Author Cox Law Firm. December 2016.
- "Central Bank of Ireland publishes notice of intention to amend the requirements for Loan Origination Qualifying Investor AIF" (PDF). Dillon Eustace Law Firm. February 2018.
- "Irish Loan Originating Funds (L–QIAIFs): An Introduction" (PDF). William Fry Law Firm. February 2018.
- "Tax-free funds once favoured by 'vultures' fall €55bn: Regulator attributes decline to the decision of funds to exit their so–called 'section 110 status'". Irish Times. 28 June 2018.
- "German bank losses prompt IFSC raid". RTÉ News. 13 August 2008.
- "Loophole lets firms earning millions pay €250 tax, Dáil told". Irish Times. 6 July 2016.
- "Revealed: How vulture funds paid €20k in tax on assets of €20bn". The Sunday Business Post. 8 January 2017.
- "Dublin unit of US hedge fund with $8bn assets pays $125 tax". Irish Times. 15 August 2016.
- "Cerberus paid €1,900 tax on €77m Project Eagle profits". Irish Times. 29 November 2016.
- "Vulture funds using charities to avoid paying tax, says Donnelly". Irish Times. 14 July 2016.
- "Why would a Vulture Fund own a Children's Charity". Dáil Éireann. 24 November 2016.
- "Kinsella: Charity status for vulture funds - someone shout stop!". Sunday Business Post. 24 July 2016.
- "Mason Hayes and Curran:Silver Linings from Ireland's Financial Clouds" (PDF). Mason Hayes & Curran Law. May 2016.
- "How do vulture funds manage to pay practically no tax in Ireland?". Emma Clancy. 30 July 2016.
- "Oaktree, Mars Capital and Section 110" (PDF). UNITE HERE. February 2017.
- "'Aggressive' vulture funds swoop in on Irish property". Financial Times. 18 February 2017.
- "ANDY: CONSOLE WAS BAD, CORPORATE TAX AVOIDANCE IS FAR WORSE". Dublin Inquirer. 26 July 2016.
- "Project Eagle's potential loss bigger than £190m". Irish Independent. 25 September 2016.
- "VULTURE FUNDS GORGE ON IRELAND BECAUSE THE GOVERNMENT LETS THEM". Dublin Inquirer. 16 March 2016.
- "Apollo's vulture clipped by tax bill". Sunday Times. 17 January 2017.
- "Massive blow to vulture funds as arrears halted due to miscalculations". Irish Independent. 4 January 2018.
- "The vulture fund paying very little tax on its billion-euro Irish incomes". FORA. 13 March 2016.
- "Vulture funds ramp up number of debt chase cases tenfold". Irish Independent. 4 September 2017.
- "Wall Street is Europe's landlord and tenants are fighting back". New York Times. 10 December 2016.
- "State-backed funds using Section 110 to slash tax bill". Irish Times. 2 July 2017.
- "Cardinal Capital warns of damage by new S110 Rules". Irish Times. 11 September 2016.
- "Central Bank landlord a vulture fund paying no Irish tax, says SF". Irish Independent. 28 August 2016.
- "MASON HAYES AND CURRAN: London Banking Seminar - Frank Daly Chairman of NAMA". Mason Hayes and Curran Law Firm. 10 May 2016.
- "Revealed: Nama, the vultures and the Section 110 tax dodge". Sunday Business Post. 11 September 2016.
- "Revenue warns firms over sale of loans to vulture funds". Irish Times. 26 March 2016.
- "International and Irish CG50 Tax Update July 2016". Maples and Calder. 14 July 2016.
- "Speedy probe into vulture funds' tax urged". Sunday Business Post. 25 July 2016.
- "Lawyers and accountants share in €100m fees from SPVs in IFSC". Irish Times. 4 October 2016.
- "Vulture funds are feasting tax-free on carcass of our property crash". Irish Independent. 30 August 2016.
- "Michael Noonan to target vulture funds with €50m tax bill". Irish Times. 11 October 2016.
- "Nama paid €158m in tax after section 110 loophole closure". Irish Times. 1 February 2017.
- "Response to the 2016 Finance Bill" (PDF). Stephen Donnelly. November 2016.
- "Master of the High Court says vulture funds may be exploiting another tax loophole". Irish Legal News. July 2017.
- "Row as Noonan is accused of being a 'vulture-fund lover'". Irish Examiner. 18 May 2016.
- "Public Accounts Committee Noonan ill-advised on fund meeting". RTÉ News. 3 April 2017.
- "US vulture funds lobbied Government over proposed tax changes". Irish Times. 21 January 2017.
- "Tax-free funds once favoured by 'vultures' fall €55bn: Regulator attributes decline to the decision of funds to exit their so-called 'section 110 status'". Irish Times. 28 June 2018.
- "CENTRAL BANK OF IRELAND: Enhancements to the L-QIAIF regime announced". Matheson (law firm). 29 November 2016.
- Christina Finn (27 March 2019). "UN says Ireland applies 'preferential tax laws' to vultures funds and it 'cannot continue'". TheJournal.ie. Retrieved 29 March 2019.
A UN SPECIAL Rapporteur on housing has sent a letter to the Irish government noting that they have facilitated housing financing through “preferential tax laws and weak tenant protections among other measures”.
- Gavin Daly (21 April 2019). "Paddy Cosgrave, a weird press conference and €1,000 cash in brown envelopes". The Sunday Times. Retrieved 26 April 2019.
- "'We don't want brass plate firms that come for tax advantages'". Irish Independent. 24 November 2016.
- "Azerbaijan's biggest bank raised $900m via Irish SPVs before default". Irish Independent. 20 June 2017.
- "Russian bank collapse shines light into shadowy corners of Irish finance". Irish Independent. 25 February 2016.
- "More than €100bn in Russian Money funneled through Dublin". The Irish Times. 4 March 2018.
- "Ireland is world's fourth-largest shadow banking hub". The Irish Times. 10 May 2017.
- "Fictitious Assets, Hidden Losses and the Collapse of MDM Bank". www.counterpunch.org. Retrieved 17 November 2018.
- "Former Regulator says Irish politicians mindless of IFSC risks". The Irish Times. 5 March 2018.
- "Irish SPVs more a worry for other countries than State". The Irish Times. 13 January 2017.
- "Ireland could be potential tax haven under EU rules - Oxfam". RTÉ News. 28 November 2017.
- "MANTRAS AND MYTHS: A true picture of the corporate tax system in Ireland" (PDF). RTÉ News. February 2017.
- "'Strong evidence' Ireland is facilitating tax avoidance for major banks - Oxfam". Irish Independent. 27 March 2017.
- "Brazil Adds Ireland to Tax Haven List". PWC Ireland. September 2016.
- "Brazil's Tax Haven Verdict on Ireland". Flight Global. November 2016.