Canadian Mergers & Acquisitions (10th ed)

Acquirer Considerations

CANADIAN BIDCO A foreign acquirer will typically establish a Canadian company (Bidco) to effect a Canadian acquisition for the following reasons: > To permit the deduction of financing expenses against target income; > To allow the repatriation of funds from Canada to the foreign parent free of Canadian withholding tax; or > To accommodate a “bump” or “step-up” of the tax cost of the target’s non-depreciable capital assets under Canada’s tax bump rules where available. – In Canada there is no tax consolidation within a corporate group. For financing expenses to be deductible against the target’s earnings, Bidco should be the borrower and it should merge with the target on or after the acquisition. Further structuring will be required when the target has a holding company structure, with taxable income being earned in lower-tier entities. – A Canadian corporation that is not a public corporation may return paid-up capital to a non- resident shareholder free of the Canadian withholding tax that applies to dividend payments by passing a shareholder resolution. A public corporation may also be able to make tax-free return of capital payments in certain limited circumstances. There is no requirement that earnings be distributed before paid-up capital is returned. Typically, Bidco’s paid-up capital will exceed the target’s historical paid-up capital, allowing for greater returns of capital. Foreign tax considerations will be relevant in considering whether this provides overall tax savings. – In qualifying circumstances, a merger of Bidco and the target will permit the tax cost of the target’s qualifying non-depreciable capital property (such as shares of subsidiaries and land, but not buildings or resource properties) to be bumped or stepped up to fair market value at the time control is acquired. > This will allow greater flexibility in dealing with assets in post-acquisition planning (see Bump and Associated Planning below). FINANCING CONSIDERATIONS – There is generally no Canadian withholding tax on interest paid to non-resident lenders that deal at arm’s length with the borrower for tax purposes, provided that the interest is not participating interest or part of a back-to-back arrangement with a non-resident that does not deal at arm’s length with the Canadian borrower.

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Canadian Mergers & Acquisitions

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