Top 10 Tips for Services & Financial Transactions
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WEBINAR
Top 10 Tips for Services &
Financial Transactions |
Webinar Objective
Much has been said on this. The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) even published its guidance on this last year. Past events on these topics have always garnered robust discussion and extended Q&As segments.
SCTP is combining these two topics and in a compact 100-minute session, highlight the key top 10 tips on managing TP for these areas. Using practical scenarios, this webinar aims to hone in on what is critical and the important points to bear in mind when it comes to various types of financial transactions and managing intra-group service transactions.
What we'll cover
Webinar Facilitator
Adriana Calderon has extensive international experience with Big Four and mid-tier firms advising multinational
companies in the areas of corporate and international taxation across South America, the US, Australia and the Asia Pacific Region.
As a TP practitioner, Adriana has advised companies in the Asia Pacific Region across various industries and in a wide range of projects
associated with planning, compliance and dispute resolutions with tax authorities. She has also participated in specialised projects
involving pricing of financial transactions, business restructures and negotiation of APAs. Most recently, she has participated in TP
planning projects to implement BEPS’s Action Plan and country-by-country reporting.
*Asia Tax Awards 2017 by International Tax Review
Starting May 2026, in-scope multinational enterprise (MNE) groups must register for Singapore’s Multinational Enterprise Top-up Tax (MTT), Domestic Top-up Tax (DTT), and the GloBE Information Return (GIR) under the Multinational Enterprise (Minimum Tax) Act 2024.
For the year 2026, IRAS has updated its indicative margin, reaffirming its support for simplified, arm’s length transfer pricing practices.
Singapore taxpayers entering into financial arrangements with related parties must ensure compliance with the arm’s length principle. This includes transactions such as cash pooling, hedging, financial guarantees, captive insurance, and related party loans.