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Australia's Perpetual sinks on adverse tax ruling over KKR deal

Published by Global Banking & Finance Review

Posted on December 10, 2024

2 min read

· Last updated: January 27, 2026

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By Himanshi Akhand (Reuters) - Shares of Perpetual fell nearly 10% on Tuesday after Australian tax authorities' review of its deal to sell wealth management and corporate trust businesses to KKR & Co

Perpetual's Shares Plummet After Adverse Tax Ruling on KKR Deal

By Himanshi Akhand

(Reuters) - Shares of Perpetual fell nearly 10% on Tuesday after Australian tax authorities' review of its deal to sell wealth management and corporate trust businesses to KKR & Co revealed higher liabilities and lower shareholder returns.

The fund manager said that the Australian Taxation Office (ATO) refused to issue a binding ruling confirming that Part IVA of tax rules, which could be used to invalidate the tax benefit of a scheme, would not apply to the KKR deal.

Perpetual now estimates taxes and duties relating to the deal to be between A$493 million ($317.20 million) and A$529 million, compared with its initial assessment of between A$106 million and A$227 million.

This also means that estimated cash proceeds from the deal would reduce to A$5.74 to A$6.42 apiece, from the previously expected range of A$8.38 to A$9.82.

Shares of the fund manager fell as much as 9.7% to A$19.785 after the taxation update, marking their biggest intraday drop since late-July 2023 and becoming the top loser in the benchmark ASX 200 index.

Perpetual said it was "extremely disappointed" and that it disagrees with the tax office's views.

"Perpetual considers it has strong grounds to dispute this position ... Perpetual and KKR are engaging to consider the potential impact on the transaction," the company said in a statement.

Analysts at Citi said ATO's assessment would see significant tax leakage from the deal.

"It seems hard to see the independent expert now being able to recommend the deal as being in the best interest of shareholders while a shareholder vote would also be unlikely to proceed," Citi analysts said.

With the deal unlikely to proceed in the originally proposed form, Perpetual's options would now include those for the business to stay together with the hope for someone to buy the whole business including the asset management segment, Citi said.

($1 = 1.5542 Australian dollars)

(Reporting by Himanshi Akhand in Bengaluru; Editing by Sherry Jacob-Phillips)

Key Takeaways

  • Perpetual's shares fell nearly 10% after ATO's tax ruling.
  • ATO refused to confirm tax benefits for the KKR deal.
  • Estimated taxes increased significantly, reducing cash proceeds.
  • Citi analysts foresee significant tax leakage from the deal.
  • Perpetual may reconsider the transaction's structure.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the main topic?
The article discusses Perpetual's share drop due to an adverse tax ruling affecting its deal with KKR.
What was the ATO's decision?
The ATO refused to issue a ruling confirming tax benefits for the KKR deal, increasing liabilities.
How did the market react?
Perpetual's shares fell nearly 10%, marking the biggest intraday drop since July 2023.

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