ExxonMobil (XOM) To Delay Tax Payments In Australia Till 2021

 | Mar 14, 2018 09:48PM ET

ExxonMobil Corporation (NYSE:XOM) recently attended an Australian Senate hearing for not paying taxes since 2013.

Per the hearing, which forms part of a broader investigation related to corporate tax avoidance in Australia, the oil giant has evaded tax payments despite reporting large income from operations in the country.

ExxonMobil stated that it is in a tax loss position mainly because of $21-billion capital investment in the country over the last 10 years. These investments mainly went into operations in the Bass Strait and the massive Gorgon gas project offshore Western Australia. However, the company has agreed to pay taxes after recovering funds from investments made in the country.

ExxonMobil expects to start paying A$600 million a year in corporate tax starting 2021, while the Gorgon project is unlikely to begin paying petroleum resource rent tax until the mid-2030s.

Currently, ExxonMobil is being scrutinized under an Australian tax audit connected to an inter-company or related party loan. Even if the Australian Taxation Office succeeds in the dispute, it will not have a significant impact on the company’s tax losses.

In 2017, Chevron Corp (NYSE:CVX) lost a case to the Australian government in a landmark case over a contested tax bill of A$340 million ($267 million) stemming from a related party loan at an unusually high interest. The loan reduced the oil giant's taxable income in Australia.

However, ExxonMobil stated that the facts in its loan under audit were very different from Chevron's, since the interest rates on its loan were set at about 3-5%.

The Senate is likely to issue a final report relating to the probe into corporate tax avoidance by the end of May. The probe that began in 2014 was a necessity, as close examination revealed a complex web of hundreds of foreign subsidiaries, which were avoiding tax.

The country's tax authorities are already fighting major miners BHP Billiton (LON:BLT) and Rio Tinto (LON:RIO) as well as oil and gas giants over booking income in countries like the Netherlands and Singapore, where tax rates are lower.

Price Performance

ExxonMobil’s shares have lost 11.3% in the last three months, compared with the Zacks Investment Research

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