Disclaimer
This edited version will be removed from the Database after 30 September 2025. If you believe the issues detailed in this edited version warrant retention in an alternative form, email publicguidance@ato.gov.au

This edited version has been archived due to the length of time since original publication. It should not be regarded as indicative of the ATO's current views. The law may have changed since original publication, and views in the edited version may also be affected by subsequent precedents and new approaches to the application of the law.

You cannot rely on this record in your tax affairs. It is not binding and provides you with no protection (including from any underpaid tax, penalty or interest). In addition, this record is not an authority for the purposes of establishing a reasonably arguable position for you to apply to your own circumstances. For more information on the status of edited versions of private advice and reasons we publish them, see PS LA 2008/4.

Edited version of private ruling

Authorisation Number: 1011476839723

Ruling

Subject: GST and financial supply

Question 1

Is your supply of the hire purchase rights to the purchaser, in accordance with the sale agreement, an input taxed financial supply?

Answer

Yes, your supply of the hire purchase rights to the purchaser, in accordance with the sale agreement, is an input taxed financial supply.

Question 2

Are you or the purchaser responsible for adjustments under Divisions 19 or 21 of the A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999 (GST Act) in respect to hire purchase agreements terminated due to default after assignment of the receivables?

Answer

You are the entity responsible for adjustment under Divisions 19 or 21 of the GST Act in respect to hire purchase agreements terminated due to default after assignment of the receivables.

Relevant facts and circumstances

Your ruling is based on the following facts.

Until recently, you had conducted a financing business in Australia (Business). Following a decision to cease originating new finance business in Australia, you agreed recently to sell your right, title and interest to certain Assets relating to the Business to the purchaser under the Sale Agreement.

The Assets included your commercial hire purchase portfolio, comprising your right, title and interest in Receivables (being the outstanding amounts owing to you by Obligors under the relevant Hire Purchase Agreements) and related rights under the Hire Purchase Agreements (HP Rights).

The parties completed the sale on the basis that the supply of the HP Rights constituted an input taxed financial supply for the purposes of Subdivision 40-A of the GST Act.

Under clause 5.6(c) of the Sale Agreement, you and the purchaser agreed that you would make this application to confirm the above treatment. This private ruling is sought to achieve certainty of the treatment adopted by the parties on completion of the Sale Agreement.

Prior to the decision to cease originating new finance business in Australia, you conducted a comprehensive finance business, including offering and entering into a range of finance facilities with customers, such as loans, leases and commercial hire purchase agreements. This application relates only to the commercial hire purchase aspects of your Business under the Sale Agreement.

You believe that the commercial hire purchase agreements between you and your customers reflect the Australian Taxation Office conventional understanding of hire purchase under which a customer finances the acquisition of goods through instalment payments and has possession and use of the goods while paying for them until taking ownership on payment of the final instalment.

You disclosed the credit component of the charges in the Hire Purchase Agreements (HPA) with customers and, in respect of the credit charges, made a financial supply and, in respect of the goods the subject of the agreement, a taxable supply. The sale price for the goods constituted consideration for a taxable supply. You accounted for GST on the taxable supply of the goods in the period of entry into the HPA in accordance with the Commissioner's views in GSTR 2000/29, on the basis that the basic attribution rules should apply to the supply of goods under a HPA in the same way as for the supply of goods by way of sale.

Prior to the sale of the HP Rights to the purchaser, you had entered into securitisation arrangements with respect to a significant number of its HPAs. Under these arrangements, you assigned the Receivables relating to HPAs, ultimately to a trustee of a special purpose securitisation trust.

In accordance with the Commissioner's views in GSTR 2004/4, the assignments of the Receivables were treated as input taxed financial supplies, on the basis that they fell within the meaning of item 2 of regulation 40-5.09(3) of the A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Regulations 1999 (Cth) (GST Regulations). Specifically, the assignments constituted the supply of an interest in or under a debt, credit arrangement or right to credit.

The special purpose securitisation trust interest in the Receivables was extinguished prior to completion of the sale to the purchaser under the Sale Agreement (see below), such that you became the absolute owner of the previously assigned right, title and interest in the Receivables.

Consistent with your winding down of business in Australia you and the purchaser executed the Sale Agreement, under which:

Reasons for decision

The legislation

1. Under subsection 40-5(1) of the GST Act a financial supply is input taxed. Subsection 40-5(2) of the GST Act provides that a financial supply has the meaning given in the GST Regulations.

Subregulation 40-5.09(1) of the GST Regulations provides that the provision, acquisition, or disposal of an interest mentioned under subregulation 40-5.09(3) or 40-5.09(4) of the GST Regulations is a financial supply if:

Item 2 in the table in subregulation 40-5.09(3) of the GST Regulations (Item 2) lists an interest in or under a debt, credit arrangement or right to credit, including a letter of credit.

Supplies that are financial supplies

Goods and Services Tax Ruling GSTR 2004/4: assignment of payment streams including under a typical securitisation arrangement (GSTR 2004/4) explains the Commissioner's view on how the GST Act and the GST regulations apply to the supply of rights to a payment stream by means of an assignment.

Paragraphs 10 and 30 of GSTR 2004/4 state the following:

Paragraphs 80-82 of GSTR 2004/4 state the following:

Receivables

In this case you informed that, prior to the sale of the HP Rights to the purchaser, you had entered into securitisation arrangements with respect to a significant number of your HPAs. Under these arrangements, you assigned the Receivables relating to HPAs, ultimately to a trustee of a special purpose securitisation trust and that the Trusts' interest in the Receivables was extinguished prior to completion of the sale to the purchaser under the Sale Agreement, such that it became the absolute owner of the previously assigned right, title and interest in the Receivables. You then assigned your rights, title and interest to and under the Receivables Rights to the purchaser.

You also informed that this application relates only to the commercial hire purchase aspects of your Business under the Sale Agreement and that the assets included your commercial hire purchase portfolio, comprising your right, title and interest in Receivables (being the outstanding amounts owing to you by Obligors under the relevant HPAs) and related rights under the HP Rights.

Receivables is defined in the Sale Agreement to mean "the outstanding financial accommodation provided to, or at the request of, Obligors consisting of loans, Hire Purchase Agreements and Lease Arrangements in relation to the Assets specified in the Completion document, as those rights exist from time to time, and all right, title and interest to receive any payments from an Obligor, and any other rights, under the relevant Receivable Document and Receivable Security"

Obligors is defined in the Sale Agreement and means in respect of the Receivables, to mean any person obliged to make payment under, or is indebted under, the contract in respect of the receivables, whether under a principal or secondary obligation, and includes where the context requires, any other person obligated to make payments with respect to that receivables (including any guarantor or other provider of a Receivable Security).

Therefore, based on the information provided, it is accepted that the supply of the hire purchase rights from you to the purchaser is an assignment of the right to the payment stream, under existing hire purchase agreements. Such an assignment is a supply of an interest for the purposes of regulation 40-5.02 and therefore an input taxed financial supply.

Assignment of payment stream

2. Paragraphs 34-36 of GSTR 2004/4 relate to the assignment of a payment stream and to the assignment of underlying property. Those paragraphs have been reproduced below.

Assignment of payment stream and assignment of underlying property

Whether a transaction amounts to an assignment of an underlying property as opposed to an assignment of the right to the payment stream will depend on an analysis of the transaction. This is discussed in paragraph 42-47 of GSTR 2004/4. Particularly relevant are paragraphs 42 and 44:

In this situation, you informed that only the receivables were assigned to the purchaser. It follows that, although you assigned the relevant payment streams, you remain the supplier of the goods. Therefore, in accordance with GSTR 2004/4, the assignment does not amount to an assignment of underlying property but is rather an assignment of the right to the revenue stream.

Accordingly, you will be the entity entitled to a decreasing adjustment under Divisions 19 or 21 of the GST Act in respect of all HP agreements terminated due to default and that resulted in reduced consideration being payable.


Copyright notice

© Australian Taxation Office for the Commonwealth of Australia

You are free to copy, adapt, modify, transmit and distribute material on this website as you wish (but not in any way that suggests the ATO or the Commonwealth endorses you or any of your services or products).