Cover image of show Tax Bites: Insights on tax developments

Tax Bites: Insights on tax developments

Podcast by Herbert Smith Freehills Kramer

English

Business

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About Tax Bites: Insights on tax developments

We explore the latest tax developments.In this podcast series, our tax team delve into the latest developments that are likely to affect businesses functioning or actively trading.

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22 episodes

episode Tax Bites EP22: 2026 Federal Budget - CGT Discount Replaced, Negative Gearing Curtailed, and Discretionary Trusts Hit with Minimum Tax artwork

Tax Bites EP22: 2026 Federal Budget - CGT Discount Replaced, Negative Gearing Curtailed, and Discretionary Trusts Hit with Minimum Tax

Late on Budget night Toby Eggleston, Ryan Leslie and Nick Heggart discuss Treasurer Chalmers’ budget, focused on reshaping personal tax, especially capital gains and discretionary trusts, under “intergenerational equity.”  Corporate measures are smaller, including re-announced non-resident CGT changes with intended retrospectivity to 2006 and limited transitional relief for renewables to 30 June 2030, expanded VCLP/ESVCLP investment caps, and R&D offset tweaks forecast to reduce tax by $1.5b. Small business changes include making the instant asset write-off permanent, a refundable loss offset for startups from 1 July 2028, and a permanent loss carry-back for companies under $1b turnover.  Major personal reforms include phasing out the 50% CGT discount from 1 July 2027 (replaced by cost-base indexation and a 30% minimum CGT tax), taxing pre-CGT assets, limiting negative gearing for post-budget residential purchases (except new builds), and imposing a 30% minimum tax on discretionary trusts from 1 July 2028 with complex impacts, especially for “bucket companies,” plus proposed restructuring rollovers amid stamp duty issues. 00:10 Budget Night Kick-off 00:41 Corporate Tax Overview 01:53 Non-Resident CGT Reboot 03:14 Venture Capital and R&D 05:16 Small Business Reliefs 06:20 Loss Carry-back Returns 08:44 Big Shift to Personal Tax 08:47 CGT Discount Ends 10:52 Tech and Startup Fallout 15:01 Negative Gearing Overhaul 16:51 Discretionary Trusts Seismic 21:37 Late Night Wrap Up

12 May 2026 - 22 min
episode Tax Bites EP21: Exposure Draft Shock: Expanded Non Resident CGT on Land-Connected Assets and Treaty Override artwork

Tax Bites EP21: Exposure Draft Shock: Expanded Non Resident CGT on Land-Connected Assets and Treaty Override

Partners Toby Eggleston, Nick Heggart and Ryan Leslie discuss Treasury’s 10 April 2026 exposure draft legislation implementing and expanding the 2024 budget proposals on when non-residents pay Australian CGT. The draft materially broadens “taxable Australian real property” beyond general law real property (post the YTL and Newmont decisions) to include rights over land, contractual rights, and fixed or installed assets expected to be on land for most of their useful life (e.g., wind/solar assets, pipelines, mining equipment, tenant fixtures), plus water entitlements, with some elements proposed to apply retrospectively to 12 December 2006. It also includes a treaty-override via the International Tax Agreements Act, changes the principal asset test to a 365-day lookback, introduces a limited 50% CGT discount for certain renewable generation disposals to 1 July 2030, and tightens the non-resident CGT withholding/declaration and clearance certificate processes, all amid a 14-day consultation period. Want to go deeper? Read our briefing note here [https://www.hsfkramer.com/insights/2026-04/australias-non-resident-cgt-changes] 00:10 Welcome and agenda 00:32 Budget shock announcement 02:34 Overview of reforms 02:57 Expanded real property definition 06:25 Assets newly in scope 09:07 Uncertainty and edge cases 11:25 Retrospective start dates 14:39 Treaty override explained 23:26 Indirect interest test changes 27:54 Renewables CGT discount 31:14 Withholding and notifications 34:18 Consultation and wrap up

20 Apr 2026 - 35 min
episode Tax Bites EP20: Taxation of Earnouts and Contingent Consideration in M&A: TOFA, Look-Through Earnout Rules and Key Traps artwork

Tax Bites EP20: Taxation of Earnouts and Contingent Consideration in M&A: TOFA, Look-Through Earnout Rules and Key Traps

Toby Eggleston and Naison Seery discuss Australian tax treatment of earnouts and contingent consideration in M&A, noting increased use to bridge valuation gaps and that outcomes depend on TOFA, deal terms, metrics and payment timing, with ATO views still being tested. They outline the ATO’s shifting historical positions on whether earnout rights are separate CGT assets, buyer cost base treatment, and potential CGT event D1 exposure. TOFA is a key starting point for large taxpayers and can apply to contingent rights as financial arrangements, with timing and character mismatch implications; a business sale exception may exclude earnouts contingent on economic performance (not solely turnover/receipts), with uncertainty illustrated by the Merchant case. Outside TOFA, CGT applies and the look-through earnout rules may allow proceeds/cost base to reflect actual payments if strict conditions are met, including active asset and a hard five-year payment window. 00:09 Welcome 00:25 Why Earnouts Matter 01:26 ATO Views Over Time 05:44 TOFA as the starting point 07:27 TOFA Mechanics and Timing 09:27 Business Sale Exception Tests 10:53 Structuring Contingencies 13:26 In or Out of TOFA 17:37 Outside TOFA and Look Through Earn out rights 18:46 Look Through Requirements 20:12 Five Year Rule Pitfalls 23:39 Wrap Up and Key Takeaways

30 Mar 2026 - 24 min
episode Tax Bites EP19: ATO focus on s128F, CGT rollovers, thin cap review and FIRB tax conditions artwork

Tax Bites EP19: ATO focus on s128F, CGT rollovers, thin cap review and FIRB tax conditions

Toby Eggleston, Ryan Leslie and Jay Prasad discuss recent Australian tax developments: the ATO’s targeted consultation and planned updated guidance on the s128F public offer interest withholding tax exemption; anticipated ATO guidance (now indicated for early 2026) on back-to-back CGT rollovers and potential Part IVA risk; the Treasurer’s request for a Board of Tax review of thin capitalisation reforms; and evolving FIRB tax conditions. 00:10 Welcome to Tax Bites & today’s agenda 00:32 ATO consultation: Section 128F public offer IWT exemption (what’s changing) 02:06 128F in practice: private credit complexity & evidence you’ll need 03:53 Key takeaway: get 128F advice early before lender discussions 04:30 Back-to-back CGT rollovers: why the ATO is preparing guidance 05:04 Top-hat restructures, Bailador example & Part IVA risk focus 07:38 AusNet fallout, policy debate & Board of Tax review on rollovers 09:41 Board of Tax review: Thin cap reforms - scope, pain points, what may change 13:42 FIRB tax conditions: new tailored approach & the ATO tax questionnaire 16:30 Wrap-up: what we’re watching for in tax in 2026

17 Feb 2026 - 17 min
episode Tax Bites EP18: Dissecting the Full Federal Court's Decision in Commissioner of Taxation and Hicks artwork

Tax Bites EP18: Dissecting the Full Federal Court's Decision in Commissioner of Taxation and Hicks

In this episode of the Herbert Smith Freehills Kramer Tax Podcast, Tax Bites, partner Toby Eggleston, Associate Dan Beratis, and Ryan Leslie delve into the Full Federal Court's decision in the Commissioner of Taxation v Hicks case.  They discuss the background, facts, and history of the case, which involved a fashion retail business named City Beach, its restructure, and the tax implications under Section 45B and Part IVA of the 1936 Act. The episode covers the court's reasoning, the taxpayer's and commissioner's arguments, and key takeaways from the case, including the interpretation of Section 45B, the role of purpose in tax legislation, and the application of anti-avoidance rules. Additionally, insights from the recent PepsiCo decision and the potential impacts on future tax cases are explored.  00:10 Introduction and welcome  00:29 Case background and facts  02:53 Restructure details  04:40 Commissioner's response  06:35 Full Federal Court's reasoning  07:51 Section 45B analysis  17:41 Part IVA analysis  24:10 Conclusion and final thoughts

29 Dec 2025 - 26 min
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