Loblaw, CRA face off in court in dispute that could cost grocery giant $404M
TORONTO — Loblaw Companies Ltd. and the Canada Revenue Agency faced off in a Toronto court Wednesday in a $404-million dispute involving allegations that the grocery giant’s Barbadian banking subsidiary was misused for tax avoidance.
The Tax Court of Canada hearing focused on Barbados-based Glenhuron Bank Ltd. was largely procedural ahead of a trial due to start on April 23.
The dispute — which began in 2015 after subsidiary Loblaw Financial Holdings filed an appeal — could cost the grocery giant (TSX:L) as much as $404 million, including interest and penalties, according to its latest quarterly report.
The CRA alleges in court filings that Loblaw Financial Holdings took a series of steps to have Glenhuron “appear to be a foreign bank in Barbados in order to circumvent” the rules.