🛢️ Malaysia’s Margin Battle: Sandakan Edible Oils Defends the Safe Harbor
Extended Background
Malaysia’s export industries often rely on transfer pricing safe harbors through arms-length ranges (IQR). Sandakan Edible Oils, like many regional firms, set its reported profits within this range, even if not always at the median. Before BEPS/TP refinement, tax authorities were increasingly tempted to adjust results toward maximum revenue using the median alone.
Detailed Arguments
Taxpayer
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Cited both local and OECD rules affirming that any result within the IQR is compliant, not just the median.
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Supported its margins with full benchmarking and robust functional analysis.
Tax Authority
- Argued government revenue was best protected by always targeting the median, seeking higher assessed income.
Court Reasoning
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Clearly rejected the “median or bust” argument, stating the rules intend a range for a reason.
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Upheld that as long as margins are in-range, compliance is achieved.
Procedural Journey
- Assessment raised, litigated in court, with a full victory for the taxpayer, no upward adjustment applied.
Implications Beyond the Case
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Locked in the IQR as true safe harbor; authorities must accept any in-range result barring proof of manipulation.
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For MNEs: strong benchmarking can defend even non-median results.
Original Case Link:
Lee Hishammuddin Allen \& GledhillOfficial 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.