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  • Millions left behind: The push to simplify unclaimed money claims | Tax Alert – October 2025

    Millions left behind: The push to simplify unclaimed money claims | Tax Alert – October 2025

    By Amy Sexton & Robyn Walker

     

    The prospect of a significant sum of money lying dormant and unclaimed will motivate many to search the Inland Revenue’s unclaimed money database, especially when media coverage draws attention to its existence. The recent Taxation (Annual Rates for 2025–26, Compliance Simplification, and Remedial Measures) Bill (the Bill) proposes changes aimed at simplifying the management of unclaimed money by Inland Revenue, with the intention of making it easier for rightful owners to make claims.

    What is ‘unclaimed money’

    Unclaimed money are funds held by an individual or organisation (such as bank, solicitor, utility company, life insurer, employer, other business) where the rightful owner cannot be located. After a specified period of time passes without contact, these funds are classified as “unclaimed” and transferred to an administrator. The required time period varies depending on the type of funds involved.

    While Inland Revenue is widely recognised for administering unclaimed money, not all categories of unclaimed funds fall under its responsibility, a raft of options are outlined on The Treasury website.

    What are the proposed changes?

    Additional information

    Currently the Unclaimed Money Act 1971 puts the following obligations on holders of unclaimed money:

    1. A holder must make reasonable efforts to locate the owner of money that is, or will soon become, unclaimed money and to communicate with the owner concerning the money.
    2. A holder of money that pays the money to the Commissioner as unclaimed money must provide to the Commissioner, with or before the payment and in a form acceptable to the Commissioner, the information relating to the owner and the money that is in the possession or control of the holder and is readily available to the holder, including—

    a. the source, and history of the accrual, of the amount

    b. the identity and whereabouts of the owner

    c. the source of the owner’s entitlement to payment of the money.

    Under the Bill. when transferring unclaimed money, holders will be required to provide Inland Revenue with more detailed information to assist in identifying the rightful owner. The new legislation will read as follows:

    1. A holder must make reasonable efforts to locate the owner of money that is, or will soon become, unclaimed money and to communicate with the owner concerning the money.
    2. A holder of money that pays the money to the Commissioner as unclaimed money must provide to the Commissioner, with or before the payment and in a form acceptable to the Commissioner, the information relating to the owner and the money that is in the possession or control of the holder and is readily available to the holder, including—

    a. the source, and history of the accrual, of the amount

    i. the full name, date of birth, and tax file number of the owner

    ii. the address and contact details of the owner

    b. the whereabouts of the owner

    c. the source of the owner’s entitlement to payment of the money

    d. where applicable, the number of the account where the money is held, the date the account was opened, and the date of the owner’s last interaction with the account.

    It is important to note that under both the current and proposed legislation, the information needs to be in the “possession or control” and “readily available” to the holder. With more data points being required upfront there will be a need for businesses dealing with unclaimed money to give thought to whether new systems and processes are required to efficiently extract information, particularly if it is spread across different information sources.

    20 year time bar

    In 2021 a 25 year time bar was introduced for unclaimed money administered  by Inland Revenue. The proposal is to reduce this time bar to 20 years (which is still a very long time!). If money remains unclaimed after the time bar, it will be removed from the unclaimed money list and transferred to the Crown. 

    Why make changes?

    Currently, claimants often face challenges in proving ownership of unclaimed money, leading to considerable correspondence with Inland Revenue. These proposed changes are intended to streamline the process for all parties involved. For context, in the 2023/24 year Inland Revenue received 23,000 claims for unclaimed money but approved only 4,300 claims, amounting to $36.5m, with over $0.5b remaining unclaimed.

    These proposed changes are scheduled to take effect from 1 April 2026.

    If you believe you may have a claim to unclaimed money and are unsure how to establish ownership, please contact your usual Deloitte advisor for assistance.

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  • Red Light, green light – Transfer pricing issues for intercompany loans | Tax Alert – October 2025

    Red Light, green light – Transfer pricing issues for intercompany loans | Tax Alert – October 2025

    By Young Jin Kim & Bart de Gouw

     

    It is widely accepted that cross-border related-party debt can be used by multinational enterprises (MNEs) to shift profits out of a country. In the New Zealand context this led to the introduction of the Restricted Transfer Pricing (RTP) rules and the requirement to disclose inbound cross-border intercompany loans with a value of more than NZD10M to Inland Revenue in the BEPS Disclosure Form (this disclosure requirement has since been amended effective from the 2025 income year with taxpayers just required to hold a copy of the necessary information).

    In recent years, the International Revenue Strategy (IRS) team at Inland Revenue has observed considerable behavioural change by foreign-owned MNEs with the introduction of additional equity and/or reducing related-party debt financing. This behavioural change has been attributed to the introduction of the RTP rules and a greater focus on financing by the Inland Revenue (via targeted campaigns, risk reviews and audits).

    The past five years has seen a highly volatile interest rate environment, with historic lows in the Official Cash Rate in the 2020 and 2021 years, a rapid increase in 2022 and 2023, and a declining rate since the middle of 2024.  This level of volatility has meant that taxpayers should have been regularly reviewing intercompany financing arrangements to ensure that the behaviour of the parties to the loans, the terms and conditions of loans, and the interest rate have all remained arm’s length.  With the increases in the interest rates applying to the most recently filed 2023 and 2024 tax returns coupled with the Inland Revenue stepping up its audit activity more generally, we are expecting intercompany loans and financing to become a key area of focus for Inland Revenue.  This is starting to come to fruition with the number of risk reviews and audits focusing on intercompany financing increasing.

    Risk assessment – Are you a green light or red light?

    Now is an opportune time for taxpayers to reflect on their intercompany loans and key risk areas that could be challenged by Inland Revenue. To help with this, we have summarised 9 risk factors when it comes to intercompany loans.

    1. The loan is over NZD10m at any time during the income year. RTP rules will apply to the loan and an analysis of the rules will be necessary, which can lead to material denial of interest deductibility as the borrowers’ credit rating may be adjusted and certain loan terms and conditions disregarded.
    2. No documented loan terms. Loan agreements are important – this will be the starting point for any Inland Revenue review. In the absence of a valid agreement, Inland Revenue may seek to imply (unfavourable) terms and any pricing analysis conducted to support the interest rate will not have strong basis.
    3. Loan agreements that do not clearly state what the arrangement is and what the key purpose of the funds advanced is.
    4. The arrangement is non-commercial or contains ‘exotic’ features such as subordination, interest deferral of more than 12 months, or has a term of more than five years. Under the RTP rules, certain exotic terms cannot be priced into the interest rate.
    5. Using a fixed interest rate for a revolving credit facility loan (that can be drawn down and repaid by the borrower) or a floating interest rate for a fixed term loan (the reset of an interest rate on a fixed term loan is likely a trigger point requiring a retesting the application of the RTP rules).
    6. The loan has been extended, renegotiated, or renewed in the past year. This could make a big difference to the deductible level of interest as the interest rate environments change very quickly and these events also require retesting of the application of the RTP rules.
    7. Has the loan been reset at a higher interest rate?  Is this what a third-party borrower would do, i.e. is the behaviour of the parties demonstrably arm’s length?
    8. Does the borrower have a high debt percentage?  Greater than 40% is considered high risk for borrowers with a cross border related party borrowing of more than NZD10m.  Similarly, borrowing from related parties in low tax jurisdictions (<15% tax rate) is also a risk factor as set out in the RTP rules.
    9. Be mindful of interest gross up clauses – any additional interest paid under a gross-up clause also needs to be arm’s length.
    Update to Inland Revenue’s administrative guidance on small value loans

    Inland Revenue annually publishes an administrative guidance for small value loans (i.e., for cross-border associated party loans for up to NZD10M principal). This administrative guidance may be applied to cross-border associated party loans.

    Inland Revenue has historically provided an interest rate margin (over a relevant base indicator) that it considers to be broadly indicative of an arm’s length rate, in the absence of a readily available market rate for a debt instrument with similar terms and risk characteristics.  The most recent change to the interest margin has also introduced (without explanation or consultation) a change in approach to make the interest rate margin backward looking only and in our view, reduces the practical application of this otherwise widely used administrative guidance.  The current interest rate margin in the guidance is 250 basis points over the relevant base rate and applies for the period 1 July 2024 to 30 June 2025. There is now no equivalent guidance for interest rates for the year to 30 June 2026.  We will continue to provide updates on any developments on the administrative guidance.

    Next steps

    If any of the above risk factors concern you please contact your usual Deloitte advisor or one of our award winning transfer pricing team to help navigate the issues.

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  • William Kentridge opera to have its New York premiere at Powerhouse Arts in Brooklyn – The Art Newspaper

    William Kentridge opera to have its New York premiere at Powerhouse Arts in Brooklyn – The Art Newspaper

    William Kentridge’s award-winning chamber opera Waiting for the Sibyl (2019) makes its New York premiere this week in Brooklyn (until 11 October). The debut comes as part of the inaugural Powerhouse: International arts festival at Powerhouse…

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  • APA Corporation Provides Third-Quarter 2025 Supplemental Information and Schedules Results Conference Call for Nov. 6 at 10 a.m. Central Time – APA Corporation

    1. APA Corporation Provides Third-Quarter 2025 Supplemental Information and Schedules Results Conference Call for Nov. 6 at 10 a.m. Central Time  APA Corporation
    2. APA Corp (APA) Reports Q2 2025: Improved Permian Efficiency and Steady Dividend Payouts  Yahoo Finance
    3. APA Corporation Provides Third-Quarter 2025 Supplemental  GlobeNewswire
    4. Are APA’s (APA) Rig Reductions a Sign of Efficiency or a Shift in Growth Priorities?  simplywall.st
    5. Analysts Cite Return-of-Capital and Egyptian Gas Growth as Catalysts for APA (APA)  Insider Monkey

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  • Disney raises admission prices for its theme parks during key holidays – Reuters

    1. Disney raises admission prices for its theme parks during key holidays  Reuters
    2. Disneyland and Disney World Increasing Prices for Tickets, Annual Passes, Lightning Lane, and More  Mickey Visit
    3. Disney increases ticket, annual pass prices. How to…

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  • Data: Pediatric hospital strain amid 2022-23 respiratory virus season not tied to decline in beds

    Data: Pediatric hospital strain amid 2022-23 respiratory virus season not tied to decline in beds

    A Yale University–led research team reports that high US pediatric hospital bed occupancy (bed strain) and large differences in between-hospital bed occupancy (load imbalance) were common during the 2022-23 respiratory virus season, but weren’t…

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  • Former Nexon CEO criticizes industry hype cycles

    Former Nexon CEO criticizes industry hype cycles

    Former Nexon CEO Owen Mahoney published a blog post on Tuesday analyzing the video game industry’s hype cycles—esports, cloud gaming, the metaverse, virtual reality, and the like. He warned readers against falling into these cycles, providing a…

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  • Google Search AI Mode Now Available in 35 More Languages and 40 More Countries

    Google Search AI Mode Now Available in 35 More Languages and 40 More Countries

    Bengali, Malay, Persian? Check, check, check. Google has rolled out its AI mode for search to 40 more countries and 35 more languages, putting it within reach of millions more worldwide.


    Don’t miss any of our unbiased tech content and lab-based…

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  • WHO pertussis case definition misses many infections, needs revision, study suggests

    WHO pertussis case definition misses many infections, needs revision, study suggests

    anjanettew / Flickr cc

    Researchers are calling for revision of the World Health Organization pertussis (whooping cough) case definition after finding that both it and a modified definition miss many lab-confirmed cases in…

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  • Explainer: What we know about the attack on Ecuador President Noboa's car – Reuters

    1. Explainer: What we know about the attack on Ecuador President Noboa’s car  Reuters
    2. Ecuadorean President Daniel Noboa unharmed after attack on his car  Al Jazeera
    3. Five arrested after alleged ‘assassination attempt’ on Ecuador President Noboa  

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