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Italian audit finds Gucci owner owes $1.6 bn in taxes

Bloomberg Updated on January 26, 2019

Pedestrians walk past a Gucci store, operated by Kering SA, at the Westfield Sydney shopping mall, in Sydney, Australia   -  Bloomberg

Probe followed reports in French magazine of false billing

Kering SA, the French owner of the Gucci luxury brand, owes about 1.4 billion euros ($1.6 billion) to Italy in back taxes, according to the conclusions of a government audit.

The probe scrutinized business activities by Kering’s Swiss subsidiary, Luxury Goods International, from 2011 through 2017, according to a company statement. Kering said it contests the findings of the Italian audit.

Italian authorities opened a probe into the Gucci owners taxes in 2017, focusing on a Swiss subsidiary of the Paris-based company. Citi analysts had estimated that Kering could face a settlement of 1.3 billion to 2 billion euros from the probe.

While the initial liability is in the expected range and should not shock, the company might face additional fines, John Guy, an analyst with Mainfirst Bank, said in a note. The company has been provisioning ahead for the liability and will be able to offset part of the claim, hence we expect a lower net number.

The auditors report will be reviewed by Italy’s revenue agency, which will then make a final conclusion, according to the statement. Kering said it doesn’t have the necessary information to make a specific accounting provision for the tax exposure, and has implemented strict monitoring of its tax risks.

French news site Mediapart had reported that the company billed for business carried out in other countries at a Swiss logistics centre, where it paid lower tax rates than it would have in Italy.

Published on January 26, 2019
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