22.6.2022

C&S Authors Finland Chapter of WTS Global Financial Services Infoletter

The latest version of the WTS Global Financial Services Infoletter presents news from none countries with a focus on the international Financial Services industry covering a diverse range of FS tax topics, e.g. summary of recent FS tax news from Argentina, an evaluation of the interesting CJEU judgement dated 7 April 2022 (C-342/20) on Finnish WHT suffered by investment funds, a German administrative decree on the taxation of crypto assets, an Italian Tax Ruling and important expected changes in Dutch FS tax legislation.

Our tax experts Sari Laaksonen, Anette Laitinen and Mikko Alakare authored the Finland Chapter.

Read the WTS Global Newsletter.

This article was first published in WTS Global Newsletter.

 

The CJEU: The Finnish tax exemption criteria for investment funds is contrary to the free movement of capital

On 7 April 2022, the Court of Justice of the European Union issued its long-awaited judgment (C-342/20) on the Finnish tax exemption criteria. The ruling clarifies the Finnish tax treatment of foreign investment funds established in the form of a company (corporation).

The ruling concerns the tax treatment in Finland of a variable capital real estate investment company established under French law on the basis of the Section 20a of the Finnish Income Tax Act, which provides for the tax exemption criteria of investment funds in Finland. One of the tax exemption criteria of the said provision is that both domestic and foreign investment funds must be established in contractual form.

In its ruling, the CJEU holds that the comparability of a cross-border situation with an internal situation within a member state must be examined having regard to the aim pursued by the national provisions at issue as well as to the purpose and content of those provisions. The CJEU states that as regards the Finnish legislation’s objectives of avoiding double taxation of investment income and of treating indirect investment, pass-through funds, in the same way as direct investments for tax purposes, the fact that a collective investment undertaking has been formed in accordance with statute does not necessarily place it in a different situation to that of a collective investment undertaking formed in accordance with contract law. The CJEU notes that such objectives may also be achieved where a collective investment undertaking has been constituted under statute but benefits, in the member state in which it is established, from an exemption from income tax or from a system of tax transparency.

The CJEU also finds that even a differentiation based on objective criteria may de facto place cross-border situations at a disadvantage. That is, inter alia, the case where national legislation which applies without distinction to resident and non-resident operators reserves a tax advantage in situations in which an operator complies with conditions or obligations which are, by their nature or in fact, specific to the national market, in such a way that only operators present on the national market are capable of complying with those conditions or obligations, and non-resident operators which are comparable do not generally comply with those conditions or obligations.

The CJEU rules that, given the lack of harmonisation of the taxation of investment funds at Union level, the free movement of capital would be rendered ineffective if a non-resident collective investment undertaking, constituted according to the legal form authorised or required by the legislation of the member state in which it is established and which operates in accordance with that legislation, would be deprived of a tax advantage in another member state in which it invests solely on the ground that its legal form does not correspond to the legal form required for collective investment undertakings in that latter member state.

Now that the CJEU has given its preliminary ruling on the matter, the Finnish Supreme Administrative Court is expected to issue its final decision on the matter during the following months. We are aware that several cases have been pending in different judicial stages waiting for the CJEU to give the ruling in the matter C 342/20. We expect that the Finnish courts will issue several rulings on the taxation of foreign investment funds during 2022 after the Supreme Administrative Court has rendered its final decision on the matter.

Even though the named CJEU ruling concerns the legal form criteria, it may also be taken into account when assessing whether the other tax exemption conditions set out in Section 20a of the Finnish Income Tax Act since 1 January 2020 (which include e.g. a condition on the number of unitholders in a fund and sets a mandatory annual profit distribution requirement for special investment funds) may be considered as being contrary to the EU law.

Castrén & Snellman monitors the status of the Finnish investment fund taxation continuously and are happy to assist in case you would like to discuss the tax aspects in more detail. We recommend that foreign investment funds continue requesting for preliminary rulings, submit WHT reclaim applications and apply for tax-at source cards to confirm their tax status in Finland.

 

The Finnish Tax Administration revealed identification of malicious companies set up for tax evasion “as a service”

On 8 June 2022, the Finnish Tax Administration published a bulleting stating that the Finnish Tax Administration’s recent control action has revealed many operators that operate a malicious activity to enable investors evade Finnish taxes. The Tax Administration estimates that the tax evasion by such companies has resulted in a tax loss of 80 million euros in Finland in 2018 to 2021 every year because taxes have not been withheld at source.

According to the bulletin, deals have been uncovered where some 700 million units of corporate shares are suspected to have changed hands repeatedly between investors in back-andforth trades and the deals have clearly no other purpose than evasion of taxes at source.

The bulletin states that schemes for avoiding source taxes, and cum/ex transactions and cum/cum transactions have caused major tax losses in other European countries as well. The Tax Administration has been able to identify such transaction by their close cooperation with other countries and exchange of fiscal information between other countries. According to the Tax Administration, there are several pending audits at the Finnish Tax Administration and new cases may surface in the future.

The Tax Administration will next concentrate on controlling refunds of tax withheld at source.

Pursuant to the Finnish legislation, if the payer of dividends has withheld too much tax at source, the beneficiary is entitled to request for refund from the Tax Administration. In the bulletin, the Tax Administration states that they will be starting to watch the operations connected to refunds of tax at source. The aim is to control possible fraudulent activities related to tax refunds in more detail. The Tax Administration states that in the control activities, they can benefit from the OECD initiative TRACE (Treaty Relief and Compliance Enhancement). The TRACE model enables the Tax Administration to have better access to information regarding corporate stockholding under nominee registration, the custodial chains and the identities of dividend beneficiaries. The new reporting rules require that the authorised intermediary must pay the tax in situations where no tax at all has been withheld at source or where not enough tax has been withheld due to the authorised intermediary’s neglect.