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Peso retreats vs dollar on extended lockdown

INVESTORS prefer the dollar after the release of an upbeat US jobs report, says trader. — BW FILE PHOTO

THE peso weakened against the greenback on Monday on cautious sentiment after the extension of the enhanced community quarantine in Metro Manila and nearby provinces.

The local unit finished trading at P48.635 a dollar on Monday, shedding 10.5 centavos from its P48.53 close on Wednesday, data from the Bankers Association of the Philippines showed. Trading was suspended for the Holy Week holidays.

The peso opened the session at P48.55. Its weakest was at P48.64 while its intraday best was at P48.488 per dollar.

The peso’s weakness was caused by risk-off sentiment after the extension of the lockdown in Metro Manila and surrounding provinces Cavite, Laguna, Rizal, and Bulacan, said Michael L. Ricafort, chief economist of Rizal Commercial Banking Corp.

Presidential Spokesperson Herminio “Harry” L. Roque on Saturday announced the lockdown extension as healthcare facilities remained overwhelmed due to the rising infections.

COVID-19 infections increased by 8,355 to 803,398 on Monday, with active cases already at 143,726. The country already has the most active cases in the ASEAN followed by Indonesia with 116,709.

Meanwhile, a trader attributed the peso’s depreciation to investors’ preference for the dollar after the release of an upbeat US jobs report last Friday.

Data from the US Labor department showed nonfarm payrolls increased by 916,000 jobs in March, the biggest gain since August, Reuters reported. In total, the US economy added 1.6 million new jobs in the first quarter.

For Tuesday, Mr. Ricafort gave a forecast range of P48.58 to P48.68 while the trader expects the local unit to move within P48.50 to P48.70. — Luz Wendy T. Noble with Reuters

Shares rise on bargain hunting despite lockdown

PHILIPPINE shares closed in the green on Monday as investors went bargain hunting after posting days of losses, despite the extension of the enhanced community quarantine (ECQ) in Metro Manila and the provinces of Bulacan, Cavite, Laguna, and Rizal due to the surging number of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) infections.

The benchmark Philippine Stock Exchange index (PSEi) increased by 52.06 points or 0.8% to 6,495.15, while the broader all shares index rose by 23.17 points or 0.59% to close at 3,947.46.

“The local market snapped its two-day [loss] streak despite the government’s decision to extend ECQ in the Greater Manila Area amid bargain hunting,” AB Capital Securities, Inc. Junior Equity Analyst Lance U. Soledad said in a Viber message.

AAA Southeast Equities, Inc. Research Head Christopher John J. Mangun said investors “gave the market the benefit of the doubt.”

“Most were expecting some panic selling and were bearish going into the new trading week. Trading volumes declined further, a sign that most investors are on the sideline due to the cautious sentiment,” Mr. Mangun said via e-mail.

“The government’s intent to allow the private sector to purchase and administer vaccines with minimal limitations, as well as the release of P23 billion worth of financial assistance to those under tighter restrictions, may have improved the sentiment,” Mr. Mangun added.

President Rodrigo R. Duterte gave the private sector the go signal last week to import “at will” their own COVID-19 vaccines to fast-track the reopening of the economy. This will be done through a tripartite agreement, which includes the company, the government, and the vaccine manufacturer.

Financial aid will also be given to nearly 23 million beneficiaries living within the NCR Plus bubble, which will be financed through the Bayanihan to Recover as One Act.

Majority of the PSE’s sectoral indices posted gains on Monday, except for property, which lost 9.37 points or 0.29% to 3,202.55.

Meanwhile, holding firms improved by 98.91 points or 1.51% to 6,623.72; industrials gained 112.36 points or 1.3% to finish at 8,722.05; services went up by 11.66 points or 0.82% to 1,426.25; financials increased by 7.36 points or 0.53% to close at 1,381.19; mining and oil 8.03 points or 0.09% to 8,484.96.

Value turnover went down to P5.36 billion on Monday with 1.85 billion shares switching hands from the P6.5 billion with 2.04 billion issues traded on Wednesday.

Advancers outperformed decliners, 117 against 85, while 48 names closed unchanged.

Net foreign selling declined to P267.25 million on Monday from the P1.7 billion seen in the previous trading day.

“Investors will be watching CPI (consumer price index) and inflation data that will be released tomorrow for leads. Recall that last month’s [inflation data] print was 4.7%, a level not seen since January 2019,” Manuel Antonio G. Lisbona, president of PNB Securities, Inc., said in a text message.

“Higher inflation rates may prompt authorities [to] raise policy rates to address rising inflation and this action will negatively affect the market,” he added.

“We still expect the market to trade with a downward bias given lack of positive catalysts,” AB Capital Securities’ Mr. Soledad said.

Mr. Soledad expects the market to finish between 6,200 to 6,600. Meanwhile, Mr. Lisbona said the 6,430 to 6,440 area “seems to be holding as a support area for the short term.” — Keren Concepcion G. Valmonte

New lockdown displaces nearly 8,000 workers, Labor dep’t says

NEARLY 8,000 workers were displaced during the first week of the reimposed lockdown in Metro Manila and adjacent provinces, the Labor department said.

At a virtual briefing of the Department of Labor and Employment (DoLE) Monday, Assistant Secretary Dominique R. Tutay said the estimate was made in the first few days of the enhanced community quarantine (ECQ) declared by the Palace, which began on March 29.

“From that period hanggang (until) March 31, ang nadagdag (there were an additional) displaced workers of around 8,000 workers. The total accounts for workers who were retrenched or affected by permanent business closures, she said. Prior to the ECQ announcement, the department’s tally for displaced workers was around 111,000 as of March 23.

The DoLE official said this makes the total displacement at 118,210 workers as of March 31.

Ms. Tutay, who also heads DoLE’s Bureau of Local Employment, said she expects the total to grow because the ECQ has been extended for another week by the Palace.

“The way we track the displacement, we also compute from the flexible work arrangements (those) who still have jobs, how many of them graduated to temporary (business) closure or how many graduated to permanent closure. That is how we analyze data now,” she said.

On Saturday, the Palace said it will extend the ECQ in Metro Manila, Bulacan, Cavite, Laguna and Rizal by another week to April 11 due to the rapid rise in coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) cases.

The country has been observing various levels of quarantine since March 2020 and gradually reopened the economy in late 2020, until the daily case count hit record levels last month. — Gillian M. Cortez

Rehab, expansion of General Santos airport seen completed by Q2

THE DEPARTMENT of Transportation said the P1.39-billion airport rehabilitation and expansion project in General Santos City is expected to be completed in the second quarter.

The airport project, which is funded by the government from the General Appropriations Act, is due for completion in “Q2 2021,” the department said on its website.

The project, which started in 2017, covers the rehabilitation and expansion of the airport’s passenger terminal building, expansion of the apron, and the improvement of air navigation equipment and power supply system and other landside facilities.

The department said the project, once completed, should sustain nearby Koronadal City’s role as a regional administrative center and General Santos City’s role as an international gateway and an agri-industrial and eco-tourism hub.

In February, the department announced that it will be starting work on 75 more airport projects.

It said it had completed 121 airport projects as of February, while 114 were ongoing.

According to a document from the department, among the 75 airport projects for procurement are the construction of the administrative building at Clark International Airport, strip grade correction of the runway at Kalibo Airport, improvement of the passenger terminal building at Bacolod Airport, and construction of an apron and taxiway, among others, at Catbalogan Airport.

Among the completed airport projects are the upgrades to Laoag Airport, Vigan Airport, Tuguegarao Airport, Palanan Airport, Cauayan Airport, Mamburao Airport, Lubang Airport, and Romblon Airport.

Ongoing airport projects, aside from General Santos, include the upgrade of Vigan Airport, Basco Airport, Calayan Airport, Virac Airport, and Antique Airport.

In January last year, the Tourism department and the Transportation department signed a memorandum of agreement on infrastructure development to support so-called “tourism circuits,” clusters of destinations being promoted for the visitor trade. — Arjay L. Balinbin

Meat imports up 21% in first quarter after surge in pork shipments

MEAT IMPORTS in the first quarter rose 21% from a year earlier to 243,108.89 metric tons (MT), the Bureau of Animal Industry (BAI) said.

In a report, BAI said meat imports rose due to increased volumes for pork, beef, buffalo meat, and turkey. Lower import volumes were recorded for chicken, duck, and lamb.

Pork imports during the quarter totaled 110,419.40 MT, up 150.7% from a year earlier.

Chicken imports fell 28.4% to 81,482.55 MT.

Some 60.5% or 49,254.14 MT of chicken imports came in the form of mechanically deboned meat (MDM), a raw material used by the meat processing industry in canned goods and other products. Chicken MDM imports for the quarter fell 22.4%.

Beef imports rose 16.8% to 38,173.5 MT, while buffalo meat imports rose 28% to 12,407 MT, and turkey imports rose 4.3% to 398.05 MT.

Duck imports fell 77.2% to 8.82 MT, while lamb imports fell 28.7% to 219.58 MT.

The United States accounted for 52,893.27 MT worth of imports, followed by Canada with 37,425.26 MT; Spain 30,149.4 MT; and Brazil 25,089.26 MT.

Jesus C. Cham, president of the Meat Importers and Traders Association, said in a mobile phone message that the sharp increase in pork imports suggests a “serious shortage” in meat which is affecting even the byproducts segment. 

Mr. Cham added that imported meat arrivals for the first quarter include shipments that missed demand during the Christmas season due to delays caused by port congestion and container availability issues.

“Importers are replenishing their stock that was sold in the last Christmas season, waiting for stocks to fully arrive and for the dust to settle before reassessing their positions,” Mr. Cham said.

Mr. Cham said that despite higher volumes of pork imports, a reduction of pork tariffs is needed to bring retail prices under regulated price ceilings and to sustain continuous imports.

On March 26, President Rodrigo R. Duterte asked Congress to expand the minimum access volume (MAV) quota by 350,000 MT, in addition to the 54,210 MT MAV for pork imports. Imports within the MAV quota pay lower tariffs.

Pork imports within the MAV quota are charged a 30% tariff, while those beyond the quota pay 40%.

MAV applies to agricultural commodities that can be imported at lower tariffs under the World Trade Organization system.

The Department of Agriculture (DA) projected a pork deficit of 400,000 MT for the year due to the African Swine Fever outbreak that drastically reduced hog numbers.

Aside from increasing the MAV allocation, the DA also proposed to decrease the tariff on pork imports within the MAV quota to 5%-10%, and 15%-20% for those outside the MAV quota. — Revin Mikhael D. Ochave

Mobile internet speed dips in March — Ookla

THE PERFORMANCE of the Philippine mobile network declined in March, with an average download speed of 25.43 megabits per second (Mbps) from 26.24 Mbps recorded in February, according to the Speedtest Global Index, compiled by US internet testing and analysis company Ookla.

Fixed broadband posted an average download speed of 46.25 Mbps in March, up 20.25% from the previous month.

In March, DITO Telecommunity Corp. launched its mobile services in Metro Davao and Metro Cebu. The new telco is expected to drive improvements in mobile and fixed broadband internet services, especially in rural areas.

Ookla ranked the Philippines 110th out of 139 countries by mobile internet speed in November.

The latest ranking is up one spot with average mobile connectivity download speeds of 18.49 Mbps. The top-ranked United Arab Emirates posted a 170.30 Mbps average.

Singapore was 16th, followed by Thailand (44th), Vietnam (63rd), Malaysia (88th), and Cambodia (102nd).

President Rodrigo R. Duterte in July last year threatened to shut down telecommunications companies Globe Telecom, Inc. and Smart Communications, Inc. if they fail to improve services by the end of the year.

Also on Monday, Globe Telecom announced the completion of its network upgrade works in Dipaculao, Maria Aurora and San Luis, Aurora; and in Donsol, Castilla, Gubat, Matnog, Pilar and Sorsogon City in Sorsogon Province.

It said 4G LTE is now fully available in those areas.

Joel R. Agustin, Globe senior vice-president for Program Delivery, Network Technical Group, said: “For the customers to experience the advantages and benefits of having clearer voice calls, low probability of dropped calls and to send and receive text messages on time, we are asking them to upgrade their old 3G SIM cards now to 5G-ready 4G LTE SIMs.” — Arjay L. Balinbin

March Customs collections beat target on strong performance by provincial ports

TAX COLLECTIONS by the Bureau of Customs (BoC) in March totaled P54.5 billion, beating the bureau’s target due to stronger-than-expected collections by ports in the provinces.

March collections beat the target by 14.2%. They also exceeded year-earlier levels by 22.1%. The 2020 lockdown began in mid-March that year.

“The BoC’s positive revenue collection performance is attributed to the improved valuation and intensified collection efforts of all the ports,” it said in a statement.

The agency said 13 out of 17 collection districts exceeded their targets for the month including the Ninoy Aquino International Airport as well as ports of San Fernando, Batangas, Iloilo, Cebu, Tacloban, Surigao, Cagayan de Oro, Zamboanga, Davao, Subic, Clark, and Limay.

Tax collections hit P148 billion in the first quarter, beating the target by 10.5%. The margin over year-earlier levels was 1.9%.

“The Bureau maintains its border security measures against undervaluation, misdeclaration and other forms of technical smuggling and collect lawful revenues,” the BoC said. — Luz Wendy T. Noble

PHL seeking aerospace, electronics deals with France

THE GOVERNMENT is pursuing trade and investment deals in aerospace, electronics, and shipbuilding with France, the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) said.

The DTI held an online meeting with newly-appointed French Ambassador to the Philippines Michèle Boccoz on March 31, during which the parties also discussed trade and investment in clean energy, agribusiness, and healthcare.

Cooperation in these sectors will be discussed in the 9th Philippines-France Joint Economic Commission in the second quarter, the DTI said in a statement Monday.

Trade Secretary Ramon M. Lopez and Ms. Boccoz discussed the agency’s global investment campaign and the Corporate Recovery and Tax Incentives for Enterprises Act, which will reduce corporate income tax and rationalize incentives.

France is one of 17 target markets of the government’s “Make It Happen in the Philippines” international investment marketing campaign focused on the automotive, aerospace, electronics, copper and nickel, and business process outsourcing sectors.

The two sides also spoke about the recent signing of the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership, and the Philippine interest in joining a transpacific deal. France is part of neither agreement.

“Lopez encouraged France to take advantage of the opportunities in the country’s free trade agreement (FTA) network and noted that this could be further enhanced through an FTA with the European Union,” the DTI said.

President Rodrigo R. Duterte in February said that the country will continue to work on a free trade agreement with the European Union.

Trade Undersecretary Ceferino S. Rodolfo met virtually with French Ministry of Economy and Finance Head of Bilateral Trade Relations Denis Le Fers in December to talk about potential partnerships in nuclear energy and disaster management.

France was the Philippines’ 15th largest export market last year, with exports valued at $427 million, according to the Philippine Statistics Authority. — Jenina P. Ibañez

Gov’t collects P210.63 billion from marked fuel

THE GOVERNMENT has collected P210.63 billion from marked fuel since the marking program was launched in 2019, according to the Department of Finance (DoF).

On Monday, the DoF said that the Bureau of Customs generated P182.926 billion worth of duties and taxes between September 2019 and March 25, 2021 from marked fuel, which is injected with a dye to indicate that duties have been paid.

The Bureau of Internal Revenue collected P27.7 billion in excise taxes between December 2019 and March 18, 2021.

To date, the two agencies have processed a total of 21.59 billion liters of fuel as of March 26, or around 56% or 12.05 billion liters of the fuel in circulation.

Fuel marked in Luzon accounted for 73.84% or 15.94 billion liters. Volumes in the Visayas and Mindanao were 5.19% or 1.12 million liters, and 20.97% or 4.53 million liters, respectively.

Diesel accounted for 60.67% or 13.1 billion liters, followed by gasoline with 38.79% or 8.38 billion liters, and kerosene which took up 0.54% or 116.1 million liters.

The DoF said Petron Corp. accounted for 22.32% or 4.82 billion liters of marked fuel, Pilipinas Shell Petroleum Corp. 19.91% or 4.30 billion liters, and Unioil Petroleum Philippines, Inc. 10.42% or 2.25 billion liters.

The fuel marking program is authorized by the Tax Reform for Acceleration and Inclusion Act as a measure to prevent the smuggling of petroleum products.

The DoF said that fuel is marked after taxes are paid on refined and imported gasoline, diesel, and kerosene, to signify that the product is tax compliant. Absence of the dye is deemed prima facie evidence of smuggling.

Since September, the government has been collecting fuel marking fees of P0.06884 per liter from oil firms. This will go on until the fifth year of the program’s implementation, the DoF said. — Angelica Y. Yang

Agri dep’t backs farm road spending in third stimulus bill

THE DEPARTMENT of Agriculture said Monday that it supports proposed spending on Farm-to-Market Roads (FMR), which are a component of the bill that could become the third economic stimulus package.

At a House hearing, Agriculture Secretary William D. Dar said it supports funding to boost its own FMR programs in the north of Luzon under the proposed Bayanihan to Arise as One Act, the P420-billion stimulus package designed to revive and assist employees and businesses severely affected by the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic. The third Bayanihan stimulus bill is also known as Bayanihan III.

The government’s FMR development program helps farmers transport their goods more directly and at lower cost.

“I will agree with the idea… na dun sa Bayanihan III maglagay tayo na magba-budget ng FMR (in the Bayanihan III we will allocate funds for FMR),” he said.

The proposal was put forward by Nueva Vizcaya Representative Luisa Lloren Cuaresma, who also aired concerns about her home region’s agricultural logistics.

Agricultural officials and regional directors from Region I (Ilocos), Region II (Cagayan Valley), and Cordillera Administrative Region provided updates on the state of agriculture in those parts of the country, at the hearing of the House Special Committee on the North Luzon Growth Quadrangle.

Mr. Dar said: “North Luzon holds a critical role in the country’s continuing quest for food sufficiency and security, as well as in efforts to boost agricultural exports.”

The Bayanihan III legislation currently allocates for agriculture only a P70-billion budget for capacity-building among agricultural producers. — Gillian M. Cortez

Recovery in IP filing activity targeted in 2021

THE intellectual property (IP) office is hoping for recovery in the number of filings for IP protections this year after a decline due to the stricter parts of the lockdown in 2020.

“Our filings went down last year. We attribute that because of the long ECQ (enhanced community quarantine),” Intellectual Property Office of the Philippines (IPOPHL) Director General Rowel S. Barba said in an online briefing Monday.

Total IP filings last year dropped by 12%, Mr. Barba said.

Applications for trademarks in 2020 dropped 10% to 35,274, while applications for patents fell 9% to 3,648 after inventors delayed filing applications during the stricter phases of the lockdown and as economic uncertainty dampened investment in intangible assets.

Utility model filings declined 45% to 1,235, while industrial design filings fell 23% to 1,259. Copyright deposits fell 44% to 940.

“We are hopeful that we will be able to recover kung ano ‘yung nawalang filings (the filing level we lost from) 2019,” Mr. Barba said.

The government over the weekend extended the ECQ, the strictest lockdown setting, on Metro Manila and nearby provinces until April 11 to arrest the surge in coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) cases.

The agency is looking to add more micro-, small-, and medium-sized enterprises among those filing applications as it adds a thousand more slots to its incentive program for women-led small businesses.

So far, the program has given time-bound exclusive rights to trademarks to 3,000 beneficiaries.

Meanwhile, IPOPHL representatives said that the agency continues to address IP issues brought up by the United States Trade Representative (USTR).

Although the Philippines was removed from the USTR’s watch list of countries with weak IP rights protection, the US agency in 2019 maintained that Philippine government needs effective policies to curb the use of unlicensed software.

The government is studying a possible audit on the use of illegal software within its agencies, to be led by the Department of Information and Communications Technology.

“We don’t have the exact numbers but the use of pirated software especially in government has been dramatically dropping, facilitated by easier procurement,” Mr. Barba said. “Besides, software companies have been stricter with their licensing.” — Jenina P. Ibanez

Transfer pricing guide on cost-sharing arrangements and reimbursements

Without a doubt, globalization of businesses has been thriving. Multinational and domestic firms alike are often engaged in multiple transactions with and on behalf of each other in a bid to achieve cost efficiency due to readily available resources and administrative convenience or practical exigencies. These types of transactions are usually made without any intention to make profits.

Some of these common practices include allocation of common costs such as those related to IT and procurement, cross-charge of personnel, and other types of cost-sharing arrangements. This recoupment of costs and expenses is commonly known as “reimbursement” or “pass-through costs.”

The usual question about these transactions revolves around whether these cost-sharing arrangements and reimbursements must have an arm’s length mark-up. To come up with an answer, it is essential to discuss some of the global transfer pricing guidelines in treating cost-sharing or cost-pooling arrangements and inter-company reimbursements.

COST-SHARING OR COST-POOLING ARRANGEMENTS
Members of a corporate group occasionally enter into a cost-sharing or cost-pooling arrangement among themselves to share group costs or costs of routine support services. This arrangement arises from a common need for such support services. It also results in mutual benefit, a concept that is fundamental to cost-pooling.

A party to a cost-pooling arrangement must reasonably expect to benefit or must be one that actually benefits from the services with respect to cost-sharing and contributes at arm’s length to the costs of services. The contribution must be in proportion to the nature and extent of expected benefits that a party receives. No payment other than the costs allocated to each participant should be made.

NO MARK-UP FOR PAYMENTS CHARGED UNDER A COST-SHARING OR COST-POOLING ARRANGEMENT
In one BIR administrative order, a cost-sharing arrangement is defined as an agreement under which the parties agree to share the costs in proportion to their respective share of anticipated benefits. The allocation must be made on a “no-mark-up, reimbursement” basis.

On the other hand, some global transfer pricing guidelines state that as an administrative practice, payments may be charged without mark-up to a related party for its proportionate share of the cost of services in a cost-pooling arrangement on the condition that each participant’s share of the costs must be borne in the form of cash or other monetary contributions, that the services are not provided to any unrelated party, that the provision of services to the related parties is not the service provider’s principal activity which will depend on the specific facts and circumstances of each case, and that there is sufficient documentation showing that the parties intended to enter into a cost-pooling arrangement before the provision of the services (for example, a cost-pooling arrangement should be supported by a written agreement which, among other things, must be duly signed by all related parties involved in the arrangement).

The guidelines also require taxpayers to maintain transfer pricing documentation to support the arm’s length basis of the allocation of costs under a cost-pooling arrangement. Such documentation should include:

(a) Description of the types of services provided;

(b) Reasons for selecting a specific method of allocating costs;

(c) Contributions by each related party;

(d) Benefits that are anticipated; and

(e) Details of the calculations used.

Regarding the selection of an appropriate apportionment basis or allocation key, certain guidelines provide that this would depend on the nature and usage of the service. Generally, the most appropriate allocation key is one that most accurately reflects the share of benefits received or is expected to be received by the service recipients. This is largely a question of judgment.

Moreover, it is mandatory for taxpayers to demonstrate that due consideration and analysis have been undertaken in arriving at the choice of allocation key. The allocation key adopted by the taxpayer would be acceptable as long as it is reasonable, founded on sound accounting principles, and consistently applied year to year throughout the group unless there are very good reasons for not doing so. Lastly, the allocation key chosen must lead to a result that is consistent with what a comparable independent party would have been prepared to accept.

REIMBURSEMENT OR PASS-THROUGH COST
Sometimes, a group service provider may arrange and pay for, on behalf of its related parties, services acquired from other service providers (whether independent or related). A reimbursement transaction typically entails a back-to-back arrangement between the taxpayer and its related party for the procurement of goods and services from a third party on a cost-to-cost basis. The related party first procures the goods or services from the third party on behalf of the taxpayer and is subsequently reimbursed at cost by the taxpayer. Most often, the level of value addition or extent of service by the related party is insignificant.

Some global transfer pricing rules mention that the group service provider may pass on the costs of the acquired services to its related parties without a mark-up, provided that:

(a) The acquired services are for the benefit of the related parties;

(b) The acquired services have been charged at arm’s length;

(c) The group service provider is merely the paying agent and does not enhance the value of the acquired services or does not require any significant functions to be performed. However, where a recharge does not pertain to reimbursement of third-party costs (incurred by a taxpayer on behalf of the related party for administrative convenience), but where the taxpayer has, in fact, performed value addition or was responsible and accountable for the service provided by the third party or where intra-group service has been performed, then a mark-up can be insisted on; and

(d) The costs of the acquired services are the legal or contractual liabilities of the related parties. This condition can be met even if the group service provider is legally or contractually liable to pay for the acquired services. This is if it has a written agreement with its related parties for the latter to assume the liabilities related to the acquired services.

The above treatment is premised on the view that independent parties in comparable situations would agree not to earn a mark-up on the costs incurred.

The group service provider should nonetheless charge an appropriate arm’s length mark-up for its function in arranging and paying for the acquired services on behalf of its related parties especially when the group service provider adds significant function or provides value-added services. The mark-up should be based on the aggregate costs of its resources in performing the said function and reflect the nature of its own services and extent of value-add generated for the related parties in the group benefiting from such services.

For example, Related Party A may use its own resources to arrange, select, and liaise for the provision of corporate secretariat services by an independent firm for its Related Party B. The fees charged by the independent firm may qualify as strict pass-through costs. Hence, Related Party A may recoup the fees from Related Party B at cost and without mark-up. However, Related Party A’s own costs of arranging, selecting, and liaising should be charged to Related Party B using an appropriate arm’s length mark-up.

Please be reminded that the application of the above transfer pricing guidelines on cost-sharing or cost-pooling arrangements and reimbursements would largely depend on the specific facts and circumstances of each case and thus, requires a careful examination of each case.

While there is room for the taxpayer to justify its charges at cost and without an arm’s length mark-up depending on facts and circumstances of each case, the key responsibility of the taxpayer is to be able to maintain sufficient transfer pricing documentation and supporting documents. Otherwise, the justifications are nothing but a “lip” justification that may not withstand the scrutiny of tax authorities.

Let’s Talk Tax is a weekly newspaper column of P&A Grant Thornton that aims to keep the public informed of various developments in taxation. This article is not intended to be a substitute for competent professional advice.

 

Nikkolai F. Canceran is a partner from the Tax Advisory & Compliance division of P&A Grant Thornton, the Philippine member firm of Grant Thornton International Ltd.

pagrantthornton@ph.gt.com