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‘Wal-Mart’ in Italiano? No Taxo!

So what’s Wal-Mart doing with an office in Florence, Italy, you ask? Going to see The David? Sipping a latte or nibbling a biscotti? Nope. It’s trying to evade Illinois State Tax, of course.

According to today’s Wall Street Journal, Wal-Mart has been claiming that all of its employees and operations in Illinois are based out of Italy, and you guessed it - wants to pay less taxes to the state. The company, which operates no Wal-Mart stores in Italy, is claiming to be a so-called “80/20 Company,” which conducts at least 80% of its business overseas and should be shielded from most state tax. Illinois, which has been cracking down on corporate tax loopholes in recent years, apparently took offense and charged Wal-Mart “$26.4 million in back taxes, interest and penalties.” Wal-Mart paid the fine, has sued for a refund, and the case remains in court.

A Wal-Mart spokesman offered a prepared statement and “declined to explain why Italy was chosen as the home of this particular foreign operation or whether Wal-Mart has other such arrangements.”

We’re sure Sam Walton is proud.

Why Wal-Mart Set Up Shop In Italy [Wall Street Journal]

More than 4,500 miles separate a small Wal-Mart Stores Inc. office in Florence, Italy, from the company’s dozens of Illinois retail outlets. But thanks to a convoluted tax arrangement, court records show, Wal-Mart’s Italian operation has helped the giant retailer cut its state tax bill in Illinois by millions of dollars a year.

Wal-Mart set its affairs so that its Italian outpost is the only operating unit of a real-estate subsidiary that controls billions of dollars of the retailer’s property in Illinois and other states. Because technically its only employees are based in Italy, the real-estate unit claims its operations are foreign, exempt from Illinois corporate income taxes.

Earlier this year, the Illinois Department of Revenue objected to the Italian tax maneuver, demanding $26.4 million in back taxes, interest and penalties. Wal-Mart paid the amount in dispute and then sued the state for a refund, according to a complaint filed in May in Illinois Circuit Court in Springfield, Ill.

A Wal-Mart spokesman declined to comment beyond a prepared statement: “We have a disagreement with the state of Illinois over our tax liability last year, and we’ve asked a judge to resolve that for us.” He declined to explain why Italy was chosen as the home of this particular foreign operation or whether Wal-Mart has other such arrangements.

The dispute with Wal-Mart is part of a wider effort by some states to crack down on what they believe is abusive use of so-called 80/20 companies. These companies are domestic subsidiaries that conduct at least 80% of their business overseas. States typically don’t tax income from outside the U.S., and many companies have used 80/20 subsidiaries to legitimately shield foreign operations from state taxation.

But authorities in several states have challenged a number of companies over the 80/20 units, claiming the structure was improperly used to shift income away from the purview of state taxing authorities.

The misuse of 80/20 companies is “shocking to the conscience,” said Brian Hamer, director of the Illinois Department of Revenue. “These kinds of manipulations clearly were never contemplated by the state legislatures,” added Mr. Hamer, who wouldn’t comment on any single company or legal case. “It ought to have been clear to businesses that this was highly questionable conduct.”

Illinois tax authorities are in a dispute with McDonald’s Corp. over nearly $11 million stemming from its use of an 80/20 subsidiary. Details are sketchy, but McDonald’s, based in Oak Brook, Ill., says in court papers that a Delaware financing unit that owns restaurants in St. Thomas, Virgin Islands, conducts 80% or more of its business activity outside the U.S., exempting its operations from being included in Illinois tax calculations.

Minnesota, BNSF Wrangle

Meanwhile, Minnesota tax authorities are taking issue with interest payments made by Burlington Northern Santa Fe Corp. to a pair of Delaware subsidiaries doing business in Canada. The railway company deducted the interest associated with the payments but didn’t pay taxes on most of the income received by the subsidiaries. The state’s revenue department says in an audit report that this was “done purely for tax avoidance purposes.” The Fort Worth, Texas, company paid a disputed $4 million in back taxes and interest and sued the state in May for a refund.

A McDonald’s spokeswoman said: “We believe the results of our business have been properly reported to the state of Illinois.” A Burlington Northern spokesman declined to comment.

At the prodding of the Illinois revenue department, that state’s legislature in 2004 passed a law essentially shutting down the abusive use of 80/20 units. The Minnesota state legislature enacted one change in 2005 and has considered several other bills since then to shut down alleged abuse of the structure.

States Crack Down

Wal-Mart’s Italian tax-planning maneuver is the latest disclosure of a strategy by the firm to cut state taxes. A page-one article in The Wall Street Journal in February focused on how the Bentonville, Ark., retailer cut taxes in some states by paying rent to a real-estate investment trust it owned, even though the money never left the firm.

That REIT strategy has been challenged by tax authorities in several sates; some have enacted laws to close the REIT structure since the Journal article.

However, the REIT tax structure saved money only in some states—those that tax income solely from operations within their borders. This taxation system, known as “separate reporting,” can make it simpler for companies to shift income out of state to tax-friendly jurisdictions such as Delaware or Nevada.

But “combined reporting” states such as Illinois are much tougher. They add together all profits of a company’s domestic operations, regardless of what state they are in, and then allocate a portion of those profits to their state. Theoretically, combined reporting makes it harder for companies to shift income to more advantageous locales.

Because Illinois rules apply only to domestic profits—not world-wide income—companies can get around the rules by figuring out ways to effectively shift income overseas.

Wal-Mart’s 80/20 structure worked like this: The company first transferred its Illinois stores to its in-house REITs, paid rent to the REITs and then deducted those payments from its taxes. The REITs, in turn, paid that money to their 99% owner, a Wal-Mart unit based in Delaware.

Ordinarily, Illinois’s combined-reporting rules wouldn’t permit a company to cut its taxes by shifting income to a Delaware unit. But in late 2001, Wal-Mart formed a Delaware subsidiary called WMGS Services LLC, records show. WMGS, with offices in Florence, was a wholly owned subsidiary of Wal-Mart Property Co., which also was 99% owner of Wal-Mart’s main REIT.

In its filing, Wal-Mart contends that Property Co.’s ownership of the Italian unit converted Property Co. into an 80/20 company. In other words, at least 80% of its employees and its property were overseas, exempting its income from taxes.

Though Property Co. is the 99% owner of the REIT—which owns dozens of stores in Illinois—Wal-Mart says Property Co. owns no real estate itself. And although Wal-Mart has more than 48,000 employees in Illinois, the firm contends Property Co. has no employees in the state, either.

The only employees of Property Co. were in Italy, the company says. Property Co. was set up to own the majority of the shares of Wal-Mart’s main REIT and has no employees anywhere, Wal-Mart has said in court records elsewhere. (In its court filing in Illinois, Wal-Mart says that WMGS’s employees and property were in Turin, Italy; an official with the company in Florence and a Wal-Mart spokesman in the U.S. say the company doesn’t have an office in Turin.)

WMGS employs 22 people at its office in central Florence, according to a company official who answered the door there on a recent weekday morning. The office is responsible for procuring merchandise from around Europe, he said. Wal-Mart has no stores in Italy.

Posted by Eric Bull on Wednesday, November 14, 2007

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COMMENTS

do yourself a favor and get an italian dictionary… your ignorance is not funny.

max in
Wednesday, November 14 at 06:13 PM

Typical of another WalMart tax evasion scheme. Add this to the huge list of WalMart scamming the American taxpayer. This is another reason why a RICO effort should be brought against WalMart. Bushco and the Clintons won’t do it. This will only become worse from the Bentonville ‘love of money’ slobs until the Federal system s out these Bentonville retail psychopaths.

Now the ‘war room’ propagandists must suggest ‘what is possibly wrong’ with this type of corporate behavior, after all it is merely the exploitation of a ‘loophole’.

Of course these Edelman internet pollution frauds from the WalMart home office have no problem paying the taxes themselves to make up for the losses incurred by the taxpayers of Illinois or any other state. And who needs righteousness or honesty or the decency of genuine patriotism to pay your fair share of taxes? WalMart can add taxpayer cheat to their resume and reputation long ago, this is nothing new from these slobs.

Scotto! WalMart- The multibillionaire Walton’s want to thank you the taxpayer suckers of Illinois for additionally subsidizing the slobs in Bentonville. WalMart patriotism means running out on America when it is time to pay for their fair share of state government operations.

SanDiegoView in WalMart- The patriotic American tax cheats
Wednesday, November 14 at 07:10 PM

san diego view there have been numerous other companies out there i am sure many of your favorite expensive stores that have cheated on their taxes and have done things far worse than walmart has ever done.amazing you are as .quiet as can be on that.i wonder why.typical brainwashed spoiled walmart hater you are.

matthew vantress in gresham oregon
Thursday, November 15 at 04:47 AM

The irony here is Wal-Mart hasn’t been able to buy their way into Italy.

MILAN (Thomson Financial) - Italy’s Esselunga supermarket chain chairman Bernardo Caprotti said he does not see Tesco or Wal-Mart Stores Inc as possible buyers of the company that he owns.

On Wal-Mart he said its business practices as a discounter are completely different to Esselunga’s policy of selling quality products.

There’s no explaining those Italians. Imagine them wanting “quality products”.

Ken V in Texas
Thursday, November 15 at 05:16 AM

Wal-mart would come to the table with fine imitation leather shoes from China with toxic lead buckles, packed in rat chemical fertalizer tissue paper and cardboard boxes.

Jim in
Thursday, November 15 at 06:21 AM

And the dictionary says...

“...do yourself a favor and get an italian dictionary…” ~max in

So I looked up Wal-Mart in my italian dictionary.  This is the definition I found-- “screwdo”!

ScrewedbyWal-Mart in Anytown, America
Thursday, November 15 at 09:31 AM

Screwed to the “Max"-I bet everyone can spell RICO correctly,REIT??

ddrb in
Thursday, November 15 at 11:03 AM

It is truely a Gosh Darn sorry state of affairs when
American corporations go to such lengths, both
figureatively and literally, to avoid paying state
taxes. I wonder which was more expensive, paying
the state taxes or setting up an office in Italy.

Realizing that no one like paying taxes, Wal-Mart
should accept it’s role as a good “corporate
citizen” by paying it’s fair share of state taxes,
just like the rest of us.

Just a further example of how Wal-Mart’s
reputation is being thrown onto the dung pile.

Rob in Surfside Beach, SC
Thursday, November 15 at 12:17 PM

If all Wal Mart non exsitent employees did not show for work 1 day would wal mart notice
Maybe they should all move to italy at wal mart expense since that is were the co-operating says they are employed

Dan in on
Thursday, November 15 at 12:30 PM

Rob in Surfside: May I make one minor comment ? “Just a further example of how WalMart’s reputation is being “.....BROUGHT TO LIGHT, EXPOSING THE ALREADY HEAPING DUNG PILE REPUTATION WALMART ACCUMULATED FOR THEMSELVES.,BY THEMSELVES, SO RICHLY EARNED, and SO JUSTLY DESERVED !

ddrb in
Thursday, November 15 at 12:59 PM

Dan in on : Dan, I wonder if there’s an invisible Italian cleaning crew,too? Remember those dead janitor policies? Wonder if Italian law outlaws those???

ddrb in
Thursday, November 15 at 01:02 PM

Jim in :Lest we not forget to complete the table with a bottle of the vino fino vintage exported to Italy from the Vineyards of Arkansas- Vino de Casa Sam’s Arkansas Reserve - yours,especially from the Redneck Riviera to the Italian Riviera-In Vino Veritas!!

ddrb in
Thursday, November 15 at 06:36 PM

In Vino Veritas!!

You better watch out, dd, there might be some of those beads in there too.

Ken V in Texas
Friday, November 16 at 05:44 AM

Ken V in Texas: Why do you think I called it “Reserve”? A very special year,indeed.

ddrb in
Friday, November 16 at 09:51 AM

“...do yourself a favor and get an italian dictionary…your ignorance is not funny.”

max in
Wednesday, November 14 at 06:13 PM

‘scotto’ in Italian actually means “jerk”.

Chairman Li Yuan Money in Bentonville's Coreleone family
Friday, November 16 at 03:32 PM

you morons are that dumb,stupid and naive to believe evberything you hear?

matthew vantress in gresham oregon
Saturday, November 17 at 06:07 AM

My Walmart worship meth days may be finally coming to a close. That is what they tell me anyway. I don’t have many teeth left and will need the Walmart clinic for the rest of my pathetic life. That is all they will offer me on the health care plan for Walmart propaganda internet frauds. The rest of you are stupid union fools making your mortgage payments and have company paid health care, you morons. Living wages are for idiots.

matthew vantress in rehab
Saturday, November 17 at 04:27 PM

Chairman Li Yuan in : Would that be Don Lee Scotto in familia Corleone Bentonvilla??

ddrb in
Saturday, November 17 at 05:49 PM

The Wall Street Journal article by Jessie Drucker asks the same question-Why was Italy chosen for this REIT? When I think of Illinois ,I think of Chicago-Al Capone, The Mayor Daley political machine, the fairly recent brouhaha re: WalMart moving into the inner-city, (and the strife it caused with the city council)....I also think of Evanston-home of major insurance and corporate entities.....mmm...and then try to reconcile the fact they haven’t been able to buy their way into Italy...yet?? Veddy interesting…

ddrb in
Sunday, November 18 at 02:04 PM

P.S.: Speaking of 80/20-Wonder If there are any REITS set up in China?? (No, I’m not talking about Human Rights..we know the score on that)-The article states that it was NOT disclosed if or where there may be other set-ups like the Italian Connection....wonder why not?

ddrb in
Sunday, November 18 at 04:35 PM

Wonder If there are any REITS set up in China??

The way I understand it in China the state owns all real estate under private property.

Ken V in Texas
Monday, November 19 at 12:50 PM

BTW: In addition to the above mentioned people that come to mind when I think of Illinois,I neglected to include Barack Obama.

ddrb in
Monday, November 19 at 11:22 PM

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