Category: Hungary

  • New Personal Income Tax Exemption for Mothers in Hungary

    New Personal Income Tax Exemption for Mothers in Hungary

    The personal income tax exemption for mothers with four or more children will come into effect as of January 2020. In connection with the seven-step family protection action plan starting on 1 July 2019, this is another significant benefit for mothers. The tax exemption does not affect the family tax advantage, which can still be claimed by both parents.

    Based on the new provisions, those women will be exempt from paying personal income tax until the end of their lives, who raise/raised four or more children, and those who will have at least four children after 1 January 2020.

    Currently about 40,000 mothers may be affected by the new regulation

    By Eszter Kamocsay-Berta, Managing Partner, KCG Partners Law Firm

  • New Personal Income Tax Exemption for Mothers in Hungary  (2)

    New Personal Income Tax Exemption for Mothers in Hungary (2)

    The personal income tax exemption for mothers with four or more children will come into effect as of January 2020. In connection with the seven-step family protection action plan starting on 1 July 2019, this is another significant benefit for mothers. The tax exemption does not affect the family tax advantage, which can still be claimed by both parents.

    Based on the new provisions, those women will be exempt from paying personal income tax until the end of their lives, who raise/raised four or more children, and those who will have at least four children after 1 January 2020.

    Currently about 40,000 mothers may be affected by the new regulation

    By Eszter Kamocsay-Berta, Managing Partner, KCG Partners Law Firm

  • Remunerations of Directors of Public Limited Liability Companies will be Public in Hungary

    The Member States of the European Union shall bring into force the laws, regulations and administrative provisions necessary to comply with the EU Directive 2017/828 which establishes requirements in relation to the exercise of certain shareholder rights attached to voting shares in general meetings of companies by 10 June 2019. The most sensitive part of the directive is that it makes the remunerations of the directors public.

    The Hungarian legislator have prepared the bill for transposing the regulations of the directive. The bill grants the right of the shareholders to hold a binding or advisory vote on the remuneration policy and also on the company’s remuneration report, which until now was only a mere recommendation by the European Commission. Furthermore, it contains rules for the remuneration policy of the directors of these companies and also for the assessment of the directors’ performance. 

    The bill – consistent with the directive – interprets broadly the definition of the directors (i.e. executive officers, members of the supervisory board). The most sensitive part of the new bill is the obligation of preparing remuneration report, which must be published in every year and it must remain publicly available for at least 10 years. The remuneration report should contain for instance the directors’ total remuneration split out by component, the relative proportion of fixed and variable remuneration with names, and also any remuneration from any undertaking belonging to the same group. It serves to increase corporate transparency, the accountability of directors and to enable shareholders, potential investors and stakeholders to obtain a full and reliable picture of the remuneration of each director.

    The bill, consistent with the amended directive, is without prejudice to the provisions laid down in any sector-specific legislative act regulating specific types of company or specific types of entity, such as credit institutions, investments firms, asset managers, insurance companies and pension funds.

     

    By Levente Csengery, Partner, KCG Partners Law Firm

  • HBK Partners Advises MKB Bank on IPO

    HBK Partners Advises MKB Bank on IPO

    HBK Partners has advised MKB Bank on a listing of its shares on the Budapest Stock Exchange.

    On June 17, 2019, MKB Bank, established in 1950, debuted in the Equites Standard category of the Budapest Stock Exchange. According to HBK, With MKB Bank shares with a total face value of HUF 100 billion, and a listing price of HUF 1,972 per share, MKB Bank instantly became the sixth most valuable company listed on the Budapest Stock Exchange, with a market capitalization value worth HUF 197 billion.

    HBK Partners supported MKB Bank in corporate law and capital market law aspects of the transaction, including preparation of the prospectus submitted to the Hungarian National Bank, as well as representing MKB Bank in its negotiations with KELER (the central depository and counter-party agency) and the Budapest Stock Exchange.

    The HBK Partners team was led by Partner Marton Kovacs, supported by Senior Attorney Gabor Puskas and Junior Associates Mate Vinglman, Aron Kanti and Balint Juhasz.

  • LKT Advises Indotek Group on NPL Portfolio Acquisition from National Deposit Insurance Fund

    LKT Advises Indotek Group on NPL Portfolio Acquisition from National Deposit Insurance Fund

    Lakatos Koves & Partners has advised Hungarian Real Estate Financing Zrt., a member of the Indotek Group, on its acquisition in a public state tender of a portfolio of claims against 11 credit institutions from the National Deposit Insurance Fund.

    LKT Partner Szabolcs Mestyan, who led the firm’s team along with Partner Ivan Solyom, described the deal, which involved the sale of claims by NDIF against credit institutions under liquidation stemming from the compensation paid by NDIF to customers of the credit institutions after their insolvency, as a “pioneering transaction,” that “was not only the first of its kind but also the largest NPL transaction in Hungary to date.”

    “The goal was to [ensure] that the buyer obtains the benefits awarded by law to NDIF in the liquidation proceedings,” Mestyan explained.

    Editor’s Note: After this article was published CEE Legal Matters learned that the Gardos Mosonyi Tomori law firm and Deloitte Legal Hungary advised the NDIF. on the deal The GMT team included Partner Erika Tomori and Senior Associate Gergely Kantor. The Deloitte team was led by Partner Peter Gondocz.

  • International Sport Associations with Hungarian Headquarters

    According to a recent amendment to the Hungarian Act on Sport in March 2019, an international sport association – recognized by the International Olympic Committee – will be classified and regulated as a subtype of sport associations in Hungary.

    The purpose of the amendment is to create the legal framework for existing and future international sport associations to operate with Hungarian headquarters if intended. The amendment defines the procedure of registration, the regulations of the deed of foundation and the applicable provisions for the arbitration procedures.

    International sport associations will ensure the proper operation of their sport branch in Hungary by issuing international regulations, organizing international competitions and representing international sport diplomatic interests.

    By Gabriella Galik, Partner, KCG Partners Law Firm

  • Szecsenyi and Partners and Kinstellar Advise on Wing Acquisition of Liget Center

    Szecsenyi and Partners and Kinstellar Advise on Wing Acquisition of Liget Center

    Szecsenyi and Partners has advised Wing holding Zrt. on the purchase of the Liget Center office building in Budapest from the M7 Central European Real Estate Fund I, managed by M7 Real Estate. Kinstellar advised the seller on the deal, which closed at the beginning of May, 2019.

    Wing holding is a property development and investment company in Hungary, and M7 Real Estate is a European investor and asset manager. 

    The Liget Center was built between 1948 and 1950. In 2002 the building was completely renovated. The property consists of a 7,000 square meter office building and a nearly 3,800 square meter auditorium. It is leased to, among others, Walt Disney, OmnicomMediaGroup, OMD, PHD Hungary, Tbwa Budapest Reklamugynokseg, Heineken, and Cafe Frei. 

    The Szecsenyi and Partners team consisted of Managing Partner Laszlo Szecsenyi and Attorneys-at-Law Kitti Toth and Balazs Vagvolgyi.

    The Kinstellar team consisted of Partner Anthony O’Connor, Managing Associate Monika Frank, and Associate Barnabas Sagi.

    Image Source: M7 Real Estate

  • Electronic Invoicing in Public Procurement in Hungary

    The Hungarian Public Procurement Act was modified as of 18 April 2019, in order to comply with the provisions of the Directive 2014/55/EU of the European Parliament and of the Council of on electronic invoicing in public procurement.

    According to the new provisions, in public procurement procedures contracting authorities are obliged to receive and process electronic invoices upon certain conditions. Those electronic invoices should be processed by the contracting authorities which comply with the European standard on electronic invoicing (i.e. EN 16931-1:2017) and with any of the syntaxes on the list published in the Official Journal of the European Union. In practical terms, this means that if a company submits a tender in a public procurement procedure, it may choose to use electronic invoicing and the contracting authorities must ensure the receipt and processing of invoices electronically. This modification can be seen as a new step in the promotion of electronic administrative procedures in Hungary.

    The amendment also affects previous contracts, meaning that even in cases where the contracting authority did not give its written consent, it should accept electronic invoices. In addition, the obligation of the contracting party to prepare annual statistical reports has ceased.

    By Levente Csengery, Partner, KCG Partners Law Firm

  • Hungary – A Fairer VAT System Is On The Way

    Hungary – A Fairer VAT System Is On The Way

    The European Court of Justice (ECJ) has declared in a recent case that when checking VAT transactions, the tax authority cannot ignore examining the full budgetary impact. Thus it is not acceptable for the authorities to deny the right of VAT deduction to a taxpayer without allowing the other taxpayer to accordingly reclaim the VAT that it paid. Furthermore, the court also found it unacceptable for the tax authority to base a fine only on the amount of the VAT deducted unlawfully without examining the tax shortfall actually caused. The ruling can be considered as another important step towards the creation of a fair VAT system.

    Unfairness and double standards in practice

    VAT – by its very nature – involves two parties at the same time: on the one hand, the issuer of the invoice, who has an obligation to pay VAT to the state, and on the other hand, the recipient of the invoice, who must pay the amount on the invoice and the VAT indicated on it to the issuer of the invoice, on the understanding that, as a general rule, it will be able to deduct the amount of the tax from the VAT payable by it. 

    However, the tax authority and the Hungarian courts have ignored this nature of VAT for many years during their inspections and have examined each party to the transactions individually without taking the whole picture into account. In respect of the transactions that the tax authority declared fictitious, it refused the right of VAT deduction to the recipient of the invoice but at the same time, it obliged the issuer of the invoice to pay the VAT indicated on the invoice as if the economic event had actually taken place. Thus, the tax authority did not allow the issuer of the invoice to subsequently cancel the invoice and to reclaim the VAT paid, thereby restoring “the original state”. As a result, the tax authority collected additional tax revenue, in an unfair manner. 

    Change in Supreme Court practice

    The above practice has been constantly challenged by taxpayers, and recently the Curia, Hungary’s Supreme Court, also arrived at a decision that takes into account the fact that VAT is a “zero-sum game”. For example, in a relatively recent judgment, the Curia declared that, if the legal conditions are fulfilled, the issuer of the invoice is entitled to cancel the invoice relating to a fictitious transaction, even after the transaction has been assessed by the court in a final verdict and to reclaim the VAT paid. Contrary to the previous position of the tax authority, the Curia said that the taxpayer’s right to cancel the invoice is not affected by the fact that the invoice was issued for a fictitious transaction.

    The ECJ decision in the EN.SA case

    The above Hungarian practice has been confirmed and developed further by a recent judgment of the European Court of Justice in what is known as the EN.SA case. EN.SA Srl., an Italian company that sells electricity, tried to artificially increase the revenues of the companies belonging to the group in order to obtain bank financing. They did this by selling the electricity in circles between companies belonging to the same group, in the same quantity and at the same price, thereby artificially boosting the revenue figures. The companies involved in the transactions paid the VAT as prescribed, and since they subsequently repurchased the same amount of electricity at the same price, the amount of the VAT deducted also equalled the amount of the VAT paid by them. Thus, the budget did not suffer a loss.

    According to the ECJ, in such a case, the authority of the Member State must allow the issuer of the invoice relating to a fictitious transaction to subsequently cancel the invoice and demand reimbursement of the VAT paid – once it has been established that the transaction was not actually executed. In the absence of this option, the neutrality of the VAT system is not guaranteed. In addition, the ECJ also pointed out that it may result in a disproportionate sanction if the fine is based on the amount of the tax that the taxpayer was not allowed to deduct on account of a fictitious transaction. The amount of the fine must be in line with the resulting loss of tax revenue. The claim of an unjustified VAT-deduction does not necessarily mean a loss of budget revenue. In such cases, it is disproportionate to take the amount of the unjustified VAT-deduction as the basis for setting the amount of the fine, the Court said.

    So where to now, Hungarian tax authority?

    The recent judgment of the Curia has already made it clear which direction to follow: if the authority denies the right of VAT deduction on account of a fictitious invoice to a taxpayer, it should also allow the other party to correct the invoice. On the basis of the ECJ decision, tax authorities should also change their fining practices. Currently, the tax authority imposes a fine of 50% based on the tax shortfall, which can only be reduced in exceptional cases, if mitigating circumstances exist. However, according to the decision of the ECJ, the fine should always be proportionate to the gravity of the misdemeanour, so the authority should always – and not only on an exceptional basis – assess whether the transaction was aimed at tax avoidance and whether the budget suffered any loss as a result.. 

    By Anilla Gondi, Trainee Lawyer, Jalsovszky

  • Sectoral Implementation of the European Data Protection Reform in Hungary

    On 1 April 2019 the Hungarian Parliament adopted a new act on the amendments necessary for the implementation of the European Union’s data protection reform (“Data Protection Reform Act”). The new act has a comprehensive nature, as it aims to finalise the implantation of the data protection reform in the affected (more than 80) sectoral laws.

    The Data Protection Reform Act’s objective is to ensure legal coherence necessary for the implantation of the GDPR in Hungary. Due to the fact that the Hungarian Information Act only regulates the general rules of data protection, particular data protection provisions are regulated by sectoral laws. Therefore, it has become necessary to review the provisions of such particular data protection rules, in particularly where there is any contradiction to the GDPR. 

    The Data Protection Reform Act amended amongst others the provisions of the Hungarian Labour Code on the data processing of the employees, the data protection aspects of the whistleblowing system and the provisions of the act on security services and activities (regulating the use of electronic surveillance and access control systems). 

    The Data Protection Reform Act may present new challenges for data controllers who must ensure that their data processing are in line with the requirements of the new regulations. Substantial parts of the provisions of the Data Protection Reform Act entered into force on 26 April 2019. 

    By Rita Parkanyi, Partner, KCG Partners Law Firm