Facebook (FB, Tech30)
disclosed on Thursday that it could owe billions due to an IRS investigation
into the way it moved assets to an Irish subsidiary to avoid higher taxes.
The IRS tax penalty could
total $3 billion to $5 billion, plus interest, according to a Facebook filing
with the Securities and Exchange Commission. If so, Facebook says the penalty
could have a "material adverse impact" on its financial position.
The tax issue was first
disclosed publicly three weeks ago when the U.S. Justice Department filed a
lawsuit forcing Facebook to comply with the ongoing IRS investigation. No
figures were provided at the time for possible penalties.
The investigation dates back
to 2010 when Facebook shifted the rights for its worldwide business, excluding
the U.S. and Canada, to Facebook Ireland as part of a complex maneuver to
reduce its tax payments.
That transfer included
certain hard to quantify assets like its "user base, online platform and
marketing intangibles."
The IRS came to believe that
Ernst & Young, the accounting firm tasked with valuing the assets in this
transfer, may have "understated" the worth of these intangibles by
"billions of dollars," according to a copy of the legal filing
provided to CNNMoney.
"We do not agree with
the position of the IRS and will file a petition in the United States Tax Court
challenging the Notice," Facebook wrote in its filing this week.
Facebook, along with tech
peers like Apple (AAPL, Tech30) and Google (GOOGL, Tech30), has come under fire
in recent years for curbing assets in Ireland and other countries that serve as
tax havens thanks to their low corporate tax rate.
In March, Facebook caved to
the pressure somewhat and agreed to stop routing revenue earned in the U.K.
through Ireland.
The IRS has been working to
gather information on the 2010 Irish agreement for years, with limited
cooperation.
Nina Wu Stone, an
investigator with the IRS, noted in one of the filings that she issued six
summonses last month for Facebook to produce records related to the asset
transfer. Facebook failed to comply with those requests.
Earlier this week, the IRS
disclosed that Facebook ignored a seventh summons as well.
Credit:CNN
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