Merged Firm To Move For Tax Benefit
December 22 2015 - 2:02AM
Dow Jones News
(FROM THE WALL STREET JOURNAL 12/22/15)
By Lisa Beilfuss and Marie Beaudette
Fertilizer maker CF Industries and Dutch rival OCI NV, which
agreed to merge in August, said they would move the tax residency
of the combined company to the Netherlands from the U.K., in a move
to satisfy inversion rules put in place by the U.S. Treasury.
The $8 billion tie-up is a so-called tax-inversion deal that
would create a global nitrogen-fertilizer giant with a
significantly lower tax bill.
When the deal was signed, Illinois-based CF said it would lower
its overall tax rate to 20% from 34% by moving its address to the
U.K. In the Netherlands the corporate tax rate is 25%.
Inversions have helped drive mergers-and-acquisitions activity
to record highs as companies have looked to foreign deal making for
tax savings. In November, the U.S. Treasury unveiled new rules that
beefed up existing laws governing inversion deals.
It limited the ability of U.S. firms to "country-shop" -- that
is, acquire a foreign target in one country but move to a different
one. U.S. firms who want an inversion deal must now take the
address of their foreign merger partner. That makes inversions
harder to do by whittling the pool of merger partners to those in
attractive jurisdictions.
The U.K. has been among the most popular inversion destinations
because American executives are comfortable with its language and
lifestyle and can benefit from its increasingly favorable tax
rules.
The Netherlands, meanwhile, has been criticized for a corporate
rule book that some say tilts too far in favor of management at the
expense of investors.
Drugmaker Mylan NV, which relocated to the Netherlands in
February through an inversion, used an unusual takeover defense to
repel a takeover bid from Teva Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd. last
summer, evoking grumbles from some investors.
Last month, CF said it was committed to the transaction and was
considering taking a Netherlands address.
The Treasury's new rules apply to deals in which the U.S.
company's shareholders end up with more than 60% of the combined
entity. Under the CF and OCI deal, CF shareholders would own more
than 70% of the merged company.
By being a tax resident of the Netherlands, where OCI is
incorporated, the new holding company would satisfy the
requirements of the U.S. Treasury's notice, CF said.
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
December 22, 2015 02:47 ET (07:47 GMT)
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