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💸 Czech LIBOR Letdown: RR Donnelley Beats the “Loan” Analogy

August 21, 2025

Extended Background

In the Czech industrial sector, RR Donnelley’s local operations made frequent intercompany purchases from group entities. Authorities, amid a regional clampdown on profit shifting, began treating these payment terms as loans, applying LIBOR interest benchmarks—a trend growing across Central and Eastern Europe pre-OECD BEPS financial reforms.

Detailed Arguments

Taxpayer

  • Maintained these were standard procurement payables, not credit-risk transactions or disguised loans.

  • Cited routine commercial behavior, arguing comparability analyses showed third parties would not impute LIBOR-based interest here.

Tax Authority

  • Characterized payment delays as risk-free loans, imposing notional interest and penalties.

  • Relied on the argument that any “free” capital in the group should be priced as a financial transaction.

Court Reasoning

  • Both appellate and supreme courts agreed with RR Donnelley: lacking economic comparability and no real lending function, these payables could not just be recharacterized as loans.

Procedural Journey

  • Tax adjustment and penalty imposed, challenged by appeals, resolved with full exoneration by the Czech Supreme Administrative Court.

Implications Beyond the Case

  • Reinforces that intercompany terms must be benchmarked against real, arm’s-length business practice—not just assumed financial instruments.

  • MNEs should thoroughly document commercial rationale for payment terms, especially where working capital liquidity is at issue.

Original Case Link:

TP Cases English translation
Editorial Note:

Official judgments are always best linked to directly from court or sovereign government sites (PDFs or HTML), or through leading law firm/academic sources with appropriate commentary and official citations. Cases without direct links either are not fully published due to confidentiality or are referred to trusted legal commentaries.

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