Sunday, April 12, 2015

Commodity giants' Singapore trading hubs under fire in tax probes

Commodity giants' Singapore trading hubs under fire in tax probes

PUBLISHED ON APR 12, 2015 3:44 PM
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The Singapore trading hubs of the world's largest commodity companies are coming under scrutiny from the governments of some resource-producing countries who say they suspect they are using units in the Southeast Asian financial centre to avoid tax. -- PHOTO: ST FILE
SINGAPORE (Reuters) - The Singapore trading hubs of the world's largest commodity companies are coming under scrutiny from the governments of some resource-producing countries who say they suspect they are using units in the Southeast Asian financial centre to avoid tax.
Some of the world's largest oil, mining and soft commodity companies book billions of dollars of revenue in the tiny island state every year, where tax rates can be very low, which is perfectly legal unless they deliberately underprice group transactions so as to shift profit there from units in other countries.
The companies deny any improper transfer pricing and say they are in Singapore to be closer to Asian clients, to local expertise and trade routes, as the region accounts for a growing share of their business.
The world's two largest miners, BHP Billiton and Rio Tinto, between them booked close to US$50 billion (S$68.41 billion) in revenue in Singapore in 2013, according to documents from the country's corporate registry, and posted a combined net profit of more than US$2 billion.
They mostly conduct trading operations there, a high-volume, low-margin business that involves buying up commodities from their global operations and selling them on to clients. They also look after logistics and risk management.
The companies say their Singaporean operations were not set up to cut tax but to serve their clients better.
Australia and Indonesia's tax authorities say they are investigating whether arrangements like these simply shift profits away from where the commodities are extracted.
Most jurisdictions require such arrangements to have a commercial purpose beyond saving tax, and the group transactions should be conducted at arms-length pricing.
Australia and Indonesia both rely heavily on mining exports and count global miners among their biggest taxpayers.
Australia's tax office has said it is conducting audits of 15 marketing hubs in Singapore and Switzerland that it says it expects will raise an extra US$1 billion.
It has not identified the companies involved, although BHP and Rio told an Australian Senate hearing on Friday that their Singapore units were being audited.
"Quite clearly, we are in dispute with a number of taxpayers," Australian Taxation Office Commissioner Chris Jordan told a Senate hearing on Wednesday.
Indonesia's tax office head, Sigit Priadi Pramudito, told Reuters recently that the transfer pricing arrangements of commodity companies were a particular concern, but he did not identify specific companies.
"Say a company sells with a cheap price to Singapore, and then sells from Singapore to the world, where would the profit be? In Singapore, right? And where's the money? In Singapore, right? What does Indonesia get? Nothing," he said.
Resource-producing countries do typically raise taxes on resource extraction through royalties, said Harvey Koenig, tax partner at KPMG in Singapore. But he added "there are still various concerns from producer countries that a major part of the profits is not being retained in those countries," without commenting on any specific company or investigation.
TRADING PLACES
Singapore has long been a global hub for oil trading, complementing its big refining industry and operational centres for a number of oil majors, but in recent years, miners and other commodity firms have also moved to the Southeast Asian island.
In 2012, BHP shut its marketing office in the Netherlands and consolidated all its metal trading operations in Singapore. It says it employs around 400 people there.
It operates much of its marketing operations in Singapore through the branch of an entity set up in the Swiss town of Baar - BHP Billiton Marketing AG.
In the 2013-14 financial year, the branch had revenue of US$38.6 billion, a profit of US$1 billion and a tax rate of zero, according to accounts filed in Singapore. The accounts of the branch's Swiss parent are not publicly available.
BHP said it pays income tax in Australia on a "substantial portion of the revenue" that the hub earns.
"BHP Billiton is the largest taxpayer in Australia and takes its tax obligations very seriously," it said.
Rio told a Senate hearing in Australia on Friday that the work it undertakes in Singapore could not be sensibly undertaken elsewhere. "Singapore is seen as a neutral location between buyer and seller," Rio's Australia managing director Phil Edmands told the Senate panel.
The companies benefit from being located near a growing community of commodity traders, with the likes of Trafigura, Gunvor, Cargill and Vitol all basing trading hubs there.
Under Singapore's Global Trader Programme, companies can get a concessionary tax rate as low as 5 percent if they conduct a substantial enough volume of business, base high-ranking staff on the island and make use of the country's financial services sector.
Larger companies can privately negotiate an even lower rate.
Rio said it receives a 5 percent tax rate in Singapore, while BHP declined to say what incentives it receives.
Singapore's Ministry of Finance said there were many business reasons for commodity companies to operate in Singapore, including its "developed network of shipping and logistics players, financiers and legal practitioners", while "tax incentives are given to companies with substantive economic activities that will significantly add value to our economy".

China risks social conflict if war on pollution lags, researchers warn



This photo taken on July 18, 2006 shows cyclists passing through thick pollution from a factory in Yutian, 100km east of Beijing in China's northwest Hebei province. (PETER PARKS/AFP/Getty Images)

China risks social conflict if war on pollution lags, researchers warn

Any failure to tackle China’s huge pollution problems in the coming years could stoke public discontent and create “social conflicts,” government researchers warned, underlining political concerns driving Beijing’s war on smog.
With pollution identified as a major source of unrest, China’s ruling Communist Party has promised to tackle a host of environmental problems brought about by more than three decades of breakneck economic growth, an environment ministry think tank said on Thursday.


The Institute of Environmental Planning, run by the Ministry of Environmental Protection, said China’s economy has now “basically said goodbye” to scarcity and the state was now having to meet rising public demand for a cleaner environment.
“There is a huge gap between how fast the environment is being improved and the how fast the public is demanding it to be improved, and environmental problems could easily become a tipping point that leads to social risks,” the institute said in a report published by the official China Environmental News.
China is trying to slash coal burning and has also threatened to close thousands of industrial enterprises if they fail to comply with stricter emissions and energy use standards.
According to official data, only eight of the 74 cities monitored by the Ministry of Environmental Protection last year met state air quality standards, and the government does not expect average pollution levels to make the grade until 2030.
But the institute said China’s war on pollution was likely to become easier as a result of structural changes in the economy, with traditional heavy industrial output now peaking, though there could be unforeseen environmental consequences stemming from the country’s attempts to diversify into new industries.
It forecast total energy consumption would rise to 4.3 billion tonnes of standard coal by the end of this year, up only slightly from 4.26 billion tonnes last year, and would rise to 4.5 billion tonnes by 2020.
The share of coal in overall energy use is also expected to fall nearly two percentage points to 63.3 percent at the end of this year and to about 56 percent by 2020, it said.

Most analysts now see Singapore central bank holding off on further easing in April

Most analysts now see Singapore central bank holding off on further easing in April

[SINGAPORE] Singapore's central bank is expected to maintain its stance of allowing the local dollar's appreciation in April, a Reuters poll showed on Wednesday, a marked change from expectations just a few weeks ago that it would ease policy again to ward off deflationary pressures.
Twelve out of 17 economists and currency analysts surveyed expect the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) to hold off from easing its exchange-rate based monetary policy at its semi-annual policy review expected around mid-April.
The remaining five expect the central bank to ease policy by lowering the mid-point of the Singapore dollar's policy band.
Rather than setting interest rates, the MAS manages monetary policy by letting the Singapore dollar rise or fall against the currencies of its main trading partners within a secret trading band based on its nominal effective exchange rate (NEER).
A similar poll early this month showed most market watchers expected the MAS to ease policy again in April after a surprise move on Jan 28 at an unscheduled meeting. But analysts in the latest survey noted core inflation has since inched up from a five-year low.
Core inflation, which excludes car-related and accommodation costs, rose 1.3 per cent in February from a year earlier, up from January's 1.0 per cent, the lowest since March 2010.
The MAS focuses more on core inflation than broader, headline consumer prices, which have fallen for four straight months largely due to sliding global oil prices as well as lower housing and car-related prices.
Among the 12 analysts expecting no policy easing, seven said they either expected or saw some chance of the MAS widening the policy band to accommodate currency market fluctuations.
"We believe the MAS is unlikely to further ease policy in April, as the revised inflation forecast still holds," analysts at HSBC said in a research note.
"Instead, we expect it to widen the band to +/-3 per cent to increase policy flexibility, given rising economic uncertainty and financial market volatility."
Currently, analysts estimate the band is 2 per cent of the mid-point on either side.
Some analysts also believe the central bank is likely to maintain the current policy to stabilise the Singapore dollar as global foreign exchange markets grow more volatile.
After January's easing, the Singapore dollar NEER hit the bottom of the policy band, analysts said. The city-state's unit has lost some 3 per cent against the US dollar, making it the third-worst performing Asian currency so far this year, Thomson Reuters data showed.
The central bank was spotted intervening to support the Singapore dollar, resulting in tighter domestic liquidity conditions, some analysts said. On Tuesday, the benchmark three-month interest rate rose above 1 per cent for the first time in more than six years.
Further easing may exacerbate weakness in the Singapore dollar and the central bank may have to intervene further, analysts said.
Still, some economists expect the central bank to ease policy by lowering the mid-point of the policy band, due to a subdued outlook for both inflation and economic growth.
"We are looking for two things. Number one, a move lower in the mid-point of the band...and two, also a change in slope to zero per cent. So a double move," said Vaninder Singh, an economist for RBS in Singapore.
Exports fell much more than expected last month as China's slowing economy hit the trade-dependent state.
More than 20 central banks around the world have taken advantage of cooling inflation to ease policy so far this year to boost sluggish growth and fend off deflation risks.
REUTERS

Saturday, April 11, 2015

GSK to set up new global HQ for Asia in Singapore

GSK to set up new global HQ for Asia in Singapore

BRITISH drugmaker GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) on Wednesday said it will set up in Singapore a new global headquarters for Asia, as it ramps up its commitment in the region.
GSK has signed an agreement with Boustead Development Partnership joint-venture entity to develop and lease a new building which will house the new HQ.
It is located at the one-north development in the Rochester Park area and the drugmaker will move some 600 employees based in Gateway West to the new office in the second half of 2017.
Construction is expected to be completed by the end of next year.
The new eight-storey building spanning 15,000 square metres will have capacity for up to 1,000 employees across GSK's pharmaceuticals, vaccines and consumer healthcare businesses.
Andrew Witty, GSK's CEO, said: "If you look at GSK over the last 7 or 8 years, the importance of Asia has gone up significantly and what's critical is that we have an Asian business run by Asian leaders making decisions in Asia, rather than having an Asian business waiting for instructions from London.
"So what we really want to try and achieve is a greater accountability in the region, a greater autonomy in the region, so that people who know the region the best, are able to make as many decisions as possible."
The announcement comes as the drugmaker battles declining sales, tough pricing environment and rising cost pressures.

Kraft, Mondelz wheat price manipulation hurt traders: US lawsuit

Kraft, Mondelz wheat price manipulation hurt traders: US lawsuit

[NEW YORK] Kraft Foods Group and Mondelz International are being sued in a proposed class action on behalf of wheat futures and options traders for allegedly manipulating the grain's price.
The lawsuit was filed on Thursday by futures trader Richard Dennis in the federal court in Chicago, eight days after the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission sued both companies.
In that case, the CFTC alleged that the former Kraft Foods in late 2011 bought US$90 million of wheat futures despite never intending to take possession of the grain.
The regulator said it did this to depress prices in the cash wheat market, where sellers might believe the companies needed less wheat, and inflate futures prices. Kraft's strategy led to more than US$5.4 million of illegal gains, the CFTC said.
In Thursday's complaint, Mr Dennis raised similar claims, and accused Kraft and Mondelz of manipulating prices of cash wheat and wheat futures contracts on the Chicago Board of Trade from 2003 to January 2014, boosting revenue and trading profit. "While these illicit profits benefited defendants' bottom line, they caused harm to class members who transacted in CBOT wheat futures contracts at artificial prices," Mr Dennis said.
Kraft had no immediate comment. Mondelz spokeswoman Valérie Moens declined to comment. Both companies have indicated that Mondelz would bear most costs of the CFTC case, and that the outcome would not be material to either's results.
A lawyer for Mr Dennis did not immediately respond to requests for additional comment.
The companies are defendants in both lawsuits because the alleged suspicious trades occurred before Kraft Foods in 2012 split in two.
Mondelz now houses snack foods such as Oreos, Wheat Thins and Ritz crackers, while Kraft sells its namesake cheese products, Oscar Mayer deli meats and Maxwell House coffee.
Last month, Kraft agreed to sell itself to HJ Heinz Co, which is owned by Brazilian firm 3G Capital and Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway.
The case is Dennis v. Kraft Foods Group Inc et al, U.S. District Court, Northern District of Illinois, No. 15-03155.
REUTERS

Japan holds local elections in 'Abenomics' litmus test

Japan holds local elections in 'Abenomics' litmus test

[TOKYO] Japan on Sunday held nationwide local elections, partially seen as a referendum on Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's efforts to boost the country's economy with upper house elections due next year.
Voting began at 7:00 am (2200 GMT on Saturday) to elect 10 governors and five mayors as well as local assembly members, officials said.
Broadcasters' exit polls are expected to give a reasonable indication of the final outcome shortly after the ballot boxes are sealed at 8:00 pm.
This is the first set of two rounds of local elections, with the second race scheduled to be held on April 26.
Mr Abe's ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) regards the polls as a litmus test to evaluate his drive to resuscitate Japan's fortunes, dubbed "Abenomics".
The efforts include massive government spending, monetary easing and an overhaul of the highly regulated economy.
The scheme kicked off a sharp decline in the yen and a stock market rally, but efforts to drag the country out of years of deflation have been met with mixed success.
"The impact of Abenomics has finally emerged," LDP secretary-general Sadakazu Tanigaki told voters in the northern city of Sapporo, where the LDP faces a tight mayoral contest.
"The theme of these local elections is to capitalise on the impact across the nation," said Mr Tanigaki, the ruling party's number two after Mr Abe.
The main opposition Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ) also sees the local polls as a precursor to next year's upper house elections.
"It is very important for us to win seats... when we consider the next national election," DPJ president Katsuya Okada told reporters.
The election campaign has also focused on the country's energy sources and the future of nuclear power, particularly in gubernatorial races in Fukui and Shimane prefectures in central and western Japan respectively, both of which host nuclear power plants.
The once nuclear-dependent country is now sceptical of the technology, with voters' badly scarred by the disaster at Fukushima, where reactors went into meltdown after their cooling systems were swamped by a tsunami in 2011.
Japan's entire stable of nuclear power stations were gradually switched off following the disaster, while tens of thousands of people were evacuated because of rising levels of radiation, with many still unable to return to their homes.
The country's nuclear watchdog has given the green light to restarting reactors as pro-nuclear Mr Abe and much of the industry are keen to return to atomic generation, largely because a plunging yen has sent the cost of dollar-denominated fossil fuels soaring.
AFP

India's Modi visits French aviation hub Toulouse

India's Modi visits French aviation hub Toulouse

[TOULOUSE, France] April 11, 2015 (AFP) - Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Saturday paid a lightning visit to Toulouse, the hub of the French aerospace industry in the southwest of the country.
With stops at the production line of the Airbus A380 as well as the National Centre of Space Research (CNES), Modi confirmed India's interest in the European high-technology sector.
The visit came the day after Mr Modi announced that New Delhi had ordered 36 Rafale fighter jets from France in a multi-billion-euro agreement that has been years in the making.
The prime minister, on his maiden visit to France since his election last year, did not speak to reporters but gave ample time to photographers during his three-hour swing through Toulouse.
Accompanied by Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius, Airbus Group CEO Tom Enders and the boss of its civil aviation subsidiary Fabrice Bregier, Mr Modi posed in front of the cutting-edge H225M helicopter, which can transport special forces or carry out rescue missions.
Mr Fabius told reporters that India "offers very important prospects... The fact the prime minister is here and that relations are excellent is very positive." He added: "Economic diplomacy works: the Rafale order shows this." Mr Modi's Airbus hosts met with around 15 Indian suppliers and several dozen Toulouse-based Indian employees of the group.
Airbus released a statement saying it "commits to 'Make in India'", echoing comments that Mr Modi had made on his Facebook page before heading to France.
Mr Modi is seeking to attract investors wary over India's reputation for burdensome bureaucracy along with corruption and a stringent tax regime.
"I look forward to visit France to seek greater French involvement in our Make in India Programme, including in the defence manufacturing sector," the prime minister had written.
The Airbus statement said the group already "operates two engineering centres ... and a research and technology centre which together employ over 400 highly qualified people" in India.
It added that its purchases from India totalled some US$400 million (377 million euros) each year, supporting some 5,000 jobs in the country.
Vowing to "go further" in India, it said Airbus was "willing to set up final assembly lines and establish supply chains and related infrastructure for military transport aircraft and helicopters in the country".
At CNES, Mr Modi met its chief, Jean-Yves Le Gall, as well as Indians who are studying engineering in the region.
The prime minister later travelled to northern France, where at the Neuve-Chapelle Memorial near Lille he paid tribute to the 4,700 Indian soldiers killed during World War I, particularly at the Battle of Neuve-Chapelle in 1915.
Between 1914 and 1918, India had sent more than 140,000 troops to the Western Front - 90,000 in the infantry and cavalry along with around 50,000 non-combatant workers.
Mr Modi will wrap up his visit to France on Sunday before continuing on to Germany.
AFP

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