From Volkswagen to Bunge, concession holders in Brazil
face hefty bill
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[April 27, 2018]
By Bruno Federowski and Leonardo Goy
BRASILIA (Reuters) - Companies from
Brazilian state oil company Petróleo Brasileiro SA to commodities giant
Louis Dreyfus Company and German car giant Volkswagen AG <VOWG_p.DE>
could face hefty bills after Brazil's Supreme Court this month allowed
local governments to charge property taxes to operators of public
concessions.
The ruling settled an 18-year old spat between Petrobras <PETR4.SA>, as
the state-controlled oil company is known, and the city of Santos, home
of Brazil's busiest container port.
Even though Petrobras does not own the terminal, and only operates it
under a concession, the court ruled that it was liable to pay tax on the
property.
Now Santos is demanding the oil giant and other terminal operators pay
an estimated 300 million reais ($85.5 million) in back taxes and foot an
annual tax bill that could total 13 million reais a year.
"This will have ramifications throughout Brazil," Santos mayor Paulo
Barbosa told Reuters in an interview. "Any port city - every city that
is home to any concessions - may now charge property taxes on them."
Property taxes in Brazil are set at the city level and usually hover
around 1.5 percent of property values.
Santos could become the first of many regional governments to seek
redress from operators of everything from ports and highways to airports
as a slower-than-expected economic recovery in Latin America's largest
economy has made authorities desperate for tax revenues.
Though the annual value of tax payments going forward may be small, at
an annual average of around 200,000 reais ($57,136) per terminal in
Santos, the city government wants to collect back taxes stretch back to
2000, when the suit was first filed.
The Supreme Court, by stating its ruling was generally applicable, has
opened the door for other cities to follow suit, though there is still
legal uncertainty over how far back unpaid taxes can be claimed.
Venilton Tadini, head of Brazil's association of infrastructure
operators, said he expects local governments, which have seen tax
collection slump due to the weak economy, to rush at the opportunity of
raising revenues.
The association for highway operators said in a statement that local
governments have already contacted "several" of its members to charge
property taxes on toll roads, roadways and even catwalks.
An unexpected tax bill could deal a blow to a wide range of companies,
including not only listed Brazilian firms such as toll-road operator CCR
SA <CCRO3.SA> and rail firm Rumo SA <RAIL3.SA>, but also foreign
behemoths such as commodities traders Bunge <BG.N> and Louis Dreyfus
Company <AKIRAU.UL> and car manufacturer Volkswagen, which operate port
terminals in Brazil.
[to top of second column] |
New Volkswagen vehicles are seen at a parking lot of the VW factory
in Sao Bernardo do Campo, Brazil January 5, 2017. REUTERS/Paulo
Whitaker
Representatives for the companies and the government declined to comment.
RENEGOTIATIONS
With margins on many of the contracts tight, the ruling could trigger
renegotiations to offset the new taxes by increasing federal payments to
concession operators or by allowing them to raise their tariffs more than
currently forecast.
This could pose a fresh obstacle to the federal government's efforts to curb a
mounting fiscal deficit, while also elevating the notoriously high logistical
costs for companies operating in Brazil.
"Either the federal government transfers money to local governments or prices
will have to change. Margins are far too tight," said José Di Bella Filho, the
head of the port terminals association.
Charging property taxes on public concessions could also threaten future
auctions of public services, the association said.
This would add fresh difficulties to government efforts to join forces with the
private sector to renew the nation's ageing infrastructure, a flagship
initiative of President Michel Temer, who is considering whether to seek
reelection in October.
Temer's administration undertook a string of infrastructure auctions after he
took office in 2016, following the impeachment of his predecessor Dilma Rousseff,
seeking to tap newfound demand for Brazilian assets.
A government source involved in concessions, who requested anonymity because of
the sensitivity of the subject, said the Supreme Court decision generated legal
uncertainty that could drive investors away from future auctions.
That could be a heavy blow to Brazil's economic prospects. In a February survey,
OECD singled out infrastructure investments as crucial to boosting Brazil's
economic growth.
"Almost all areas of infrastructure are characterised by quality shortcomings
and bottlenecks," the report said. "Brazilian companies suffer from high costs
of transport and logistics, which reduce the profitability of many otherwise
viable investment projects."
($1 = 3.51 reais)
(Reporting by Bruno Federowski and Leonardo Goy; Writing by Bruno Federowski;
editing by Daniel Flynn)
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