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Spain 2026: How to Achieve a Tax‑neutral Restructuring, Restructuring Plans, Pre‑insolvency Sales & M&A

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Achieving a tax neutral restructuring in Spain requires more than a sound commercial rationale, it demands precise alignment with the Fusiones, Escisiones, Aportaciones de activos y Canje de valores (FEAC) special regime codified in the Corporate Income Tax Act (Ley 27/2014), rigorous documentation, and an increasingly sophisticated approach to anti‑abuse scrutiny by the Central Economic‑Administrative Court (TEAC). With pre‑insolvency filings and distressed M&A activity rising sharply through 2024–2026, driven by the practical implementation of Spain’s modernised insolvency framework under Real Decreto Legislativo 1/2020, tax directors, CFOs and restructuring advisers face an urgent need for clear, stepwise guidance.

This article provides exactly that: a compliance decision flowchart, checklists for restructuring plans and pre‑insolvency sales, two worked numeric examples, and a red‑flag risk map drawn from TEAC rulings and practitioner experience.

Quick Compliance Decision: Is Your Operation Eligible for Tax Neutrality?

A restructuring can qualify for tax neutral treatment under Spain’s FEAC regime if, and only if, all five conditions below are satisfied. Use this flowchart as a rapid screening tool before committing resources to detailed structuring.

  1. Qualifying operation. The transaction must fall within one of the categories defined in the CIT Act: merger, demerger (total or partial), contribution of a branch of activity or of shares, or share exchange.
  2. Formal compliance with the FEAC regime. The operation must meet the specific requirements set out in the CIT Act, including transfer of all assets and liabilities (mergers), or of an autonomous branch of activity (partial demergers and contributions).
  3. Genuine business purpose. The primary motive of the operation must not be to obtain a tax advantage. There must be contemporaneous, documented commercial reasons, operational efficiency, market access, financial restructuring, supported by board minutes, independent valuations and business plans.
  4. Accounting and tax continuity. The receiving entity must record the transferred assets and liabilities at the same tax values carried by the transferring entity. Provisions, reserves and any deferred tax positions must carry across without restatement.
  5. Reporting and notification. The operation must be properly reported in the relevant Corporate Income Tax (CIT) returns, including specific annexes and informational declarations as required by the Spanish Tax Agency (AEAT).

If any of the five criteria above is not met, or cannot be convincingly evidenced, industry observers expect the AEAT to challenge the tax neutral treatment. The immediate next step is to assemble the documentation package described in Section 2 below and, where borderline, to consider requesting a binding tax ruling from the Dirección General de Tributos.

Background: Legal Regime and 2022–2026 Implementation Context

Understanding the current landscape for tax neutral restructuring in Spain requires tracing three interlocking legislative threads: the corporate tax neutrality framework, the insolvency reform, and the evolving anti‑abuse jurisprudence.

The FEAC special regime, originally transposing the EU Merger Directive, is now consolidated within the CIT Act (Ley 27/2014). It allows qualifying restructuring operations to defer immediate taxation on capital gains, provided the receiving entity assumes the transferor’s tax basis. This deferral, not an exemption, means that unrealised gains remain latent and will eventually crystallise when the receiving entity disposes of the assets.

On the insolvency side, the Consolidated Insolvency Text (Texto Refundido de la Ley Concursal), enacted by RDL 1/2020, was substantially reformed from 2022 onwards to incorporate the EU Directive on Restructuring and Insolvency. These reforms introduced a modern pre‑insolvency framework, restructuring plans that can be judicially approved and bind dissenting creditors, significantly increasing the volume and complexity of pre‑insolvency deal activity from 2024 through 2026.

The third thread is the TEAC’s increasingly rigorous scrutiny of business purpose. Administrative rulings from the TEAC have progressively tightened the evidentiary burden on taxpayers, removing tax neutrality where the primary motive is identified as obtaining a tax advantage, even where the operation technically satisfies the formal requirements.

Date Rule / Event Practical Effect
2014 (Ley 27/2014) Consolidated Corporate Income Tax framework (FEAC regime included) Establishes statutory FEAC tax neutrality mechanics for mergers, demergers, contributions and share exchanges.
5 May 2020 (RDL 1/2020) Consolidated Insolvency Text (Texto Refundido) Modernises insolvency framework, basis for restructuring plans and pre‑insolvency filings.
2022–2025 (reform / clarifications) Practical implementation & TEAC rulings tightened anti‑abuse Courts and TEAC remove tax neutrality where primary motive is tax advantage, increasing documentation burden.

The Statutory Tests and Documentation for Tax Neutral Restructuring in Spain

Tax neutrality under the FEAC regime is not automatic, it requires methodical compliance with four procedural steps and robust contemporaneous documentation.

Step 1: Identify the Qualifying Operation

The CIT Act defines the eligible categories: merger (including simplified merger of a wholly‑owned subsidiary), total demerger, partial demerger, contribution of a branch of activity, contribution of shares, and share exchange. Each category has distinct requirements. A partial demerger, for instance, requires the transfer of an autonomous branch of activity, a set of assets and liabilities constituting an independent economic unit capable of operating by its own means. A contribution of shares must result in the contributing entity acquiring a majority of the voting rights in the receiving entity (or, if it already holds a majority, increasing its stake).

Step 2: The Business Purpose Test, Evidence and Documentation

Documenting the business purpose is the single most critical step for preserving tax neutrality in Spain. The FEAC regime presumes neutrality applies, but the AEAT may challenge it by demonstrating that the principal objective, or one of the principal objectives, of the transaction is obtaining a tax advantage. The burden then shifts to the taxpayer to rebut this presumption with contemporaneous evidence.

Essential evidence includes:

  • Board minutes. Minutes of the board of directors (or equivalent governing body) explicitly recording the commercial and operational reasons for the restructuring, for example, rationalisation of group structure, preparation for external financing, ring‑fencing of liabilities, or market entry.
  • Independent valuation report. A valuation of the assets and liabilities being transferred, prepared by an independent expert, supporting the exchange ratios or contribution values used in the operation.
  • Business plan or strategic memo. A document, ideally pre‑dating the restructuring decision, setting out the commercial objectives and projected benefits (cost savings, synergies, market access).
  • Correspondence and advisor notes. Internal and external correspondence demonstrating that the restructuring was driven by business, not tax, considerations.

Where the business purpose is not self‑evident, for example, in intragroup reorganisations with no immediate operational change, it is advisable to seek a binding ruling (consulta vinculante) from the Dirección General de Tributos. This provides legal certainty and significantly reduces the risk of a later challenge.

Step 3: Accounting and Tax Continuity

The receiving entity must record all transferred assets and liabilities at the same values they held in the transferring entity’s tax records. No step‑up in basis is permitted. Any tax provisions, reserves, or deferred tax positions associated with the transferred assets must also carry over. This continuity obligation is the mechanism through which the FEAC regime achieves deferral rather than exemption, the latent gain remains and will crystallise upon subsequent disposal.

Step 4: Notification and Reporting

The operation must be disclosed in the CIT returns of all entities involved (transferor, receiving entity, and shareholders where relevant). Specific informational annexes must be completed, detailing the assets transferred, the values used, and the identity of the parties. Failure to comply with the reporting requirements does not automatically void neutrality, but it raises the risk of an AEAT inquiry and can be treated as an indicator of a lack of transparency.

Which Taxes Can Be Triggered: Spain Restructuring Tax Map

The restructuring plan tax implications vary significantly by operation type, and advisers must assess each tax head individually. The table below maps the principal Spanish taxes against the four most common restructuring operations.

Tax Asset Sale Share Sale Merger / Demerger (FEAC) Contribution of Branch
Corporate Income Tax (CIT) Capital gain taxed at general rate (25%) Capital gain taxed; participation exemption may apply Deferred under FEAC, no immediate charge Deferred under FEAC, no immediate charge
VAT Applies unless transfer of economic unit (non‑supply rule) Exempt (share transfer) Non‑supply rule applies (economic unit) Non‑supply rule applies (economic unit)
Transfer Tax (ITP) May apply to real‑estate transfers Generally exempt; exceptions for property‑rich companies Exempt under FEAC Exempt under FEAC
Stamp Duty (AJD) Applies to notarised deeds for real estate Generally not applicable Exempt under FEAC Exempt under FEAC
Withholding Tax N/A (domestic); cross‑border may apply May apply on deemed dividends to non‑residents Deferred under FEAC Deferred under FEAC

VAT on Transfer of Businesses, the Economic Unit Test

Under Spanish VAT law, the transfer of a universalidad de bienes (an autonomous set of assets constituting an economic unit capable of independent operation) falls outside the scope of VAT entirely, it is classified as a non‑supply. This is critical for asset transfer tax in Spain: if the transferred assets do not constitute an economic unit, each individual asset transfer is subject to VAT at the standard rate (currently 21%), with no automatic right to reclaim for the buyer unless it is a registered VAT taxpayer with full deduction rights.

Stamp and Transfer Taxes for Asset Transfers

Where VAT applies (because the economic unit test is not met), Transfer Tax (ITP) generally does not, the two are mutually exclusive for the same transaction. However, Stamp Duty (AJD) applies to the notarised public deed documenting the transfer of real estate, typically at rates between 0.5% and 1.5% depending on the autonomous community. Under the FEAC regime, both ITP and AJD are exempt for qualifying operations, making FEAC treatment doubly attractive for operations involving Spanish real estate.

Deferred Gains Under FEAC, A Mini Worked Example

Consider a Spanish company (Co A) contributing a factory with a tax book value of €2 million and a market value of €5 million to a newly formed subsidiary (Co B):

  • Without FEAC: Co A realises a €3 million capital gain, taxable at 25% = €750,000 immediate CIT liability. VAT may also apply if the factory alone does not constitute an economic unit. AJD applies on the deed.
  • With FEAC: Co B records the factory at €2 million (Co A’s tax basis). No CIT gain is recognised by Co A. No ITP or AJD. The €3 million latent gain defers until Co B eventually disposes of the factory. Immediate tax cost = €0.

Pre‑Insolvency Asset Sales: Tax Traps and Mitigations

Pre‑insolvency sale tax risks are among the most commercially significant issues in Spanish distressed transactions, and they affect sellers, buyers and lenders differently. The 2022–2026 uptick in pre‑insolvency filings under the reformed Consolidated Insolvency Text has made this a front‑of‑mind concern for deal teams.

Seller Checklist: Avoiding Tax Traps

  • Capital gains crystallisation. A pre‑insolvency sale of assets outside the FEAC regime triggers an immediate CIT liability on any gain. Where the seller is already in financial distress, this liability may compound the insolvency.
  • Hidden tax liabilities. Unfiled returns, disputed assessments, or prior‑year adjustments can surface during the sale process. A thorough tax compliance review (covering at least the last four open fiscal years) is essential before any sale.
  • VAT obligations. If assets are sold individually (not as an economic unit), VAT must be charged and remitted. The seller remains liable for VAT even if the buyer fails to pay the purchase price inclusive of VAT.
  • Step‑up traps. A seller may be tempted to revalue assets before sale to reduce the apparent gain, but any revaluation outside a legislatively authorised revaluation exercise is not tax‑effective and may trigger additional scrutiny.

Buyer Due Diligence: Tax Checks for Pre‑Insolvency Acquisitions

  • Successor liability. In asset purchases, the buyer may assume successor liability for certain tax debts of the seller (particularly employment‑related obligations and, in some circumstances, VAT). Comprehensive tax due diligence, including lookback on CIT, VAT, payroll taxes and social security, is non‑negotiable.
  • Tax indemnities and escrows. The purchase agreement should include robust tax indemnity clauses with survival periods of at least four years (the general statute of limitations for tax assessments in Spain) and escrow mechanisms to hold back a portion of the purchase price against identified or contingent tax liabilities.
  • VAT recovery risk. Where VAT is charged on the acquisition, the buyer must confirm that it has full VAT deduction rights. If the buyer’s activities include exempt supplies (e.g., certain financial services), the non‑deductible portion becomes a real cost.

Structuring Options: Share Purchase vs. Asset Purchase

The pre‑insolvency sale tax consequences differ materially depending on whether the deal is structured as a share purchase or an asset purchase:

Factor Share Purchase Asset Purchase
CIT for seller Capital gain on shares; participation exemption may shelter Capital gain on each asset at general rate
VAT Exempt (share transfer) Applies unless economic unit
Buyer basis step‑up No step‑up in underlying asset bases Step‑up to acquisition cost
Successor liability Full (buyer acquires the company with all liabilities) Limited (subject to specific statutory successor rules)
Tax losses Remain with the company (subject to anti‑abuse limits) Cannot transfer to buyer

Worked Example: Pre‑Insolvency Asset Sale

Scenario: a distressed Spanish manufacturer sells its production line (book value €1.5 million, market value €4 million) and its warehouse (book value €800,000, market value €2 million) to a third‑party buyer. The production line and warehouse together do not constitute an economic unit (no staff, contracts, or receivables transfer).

  • CIT: Seller realises €3.7 million total gain → 25% CIT = €925,000.
  • VAT: 21% on €6 million = €1.26 million (buyer recovers if fully taxable; seller must remit).
  • AJD: Applies on the warehouse deed, assume 1.5% on €2 million = €30,000.
  • Mitigation: If the deal is restructured to include transfer of employees, contracts and receivables associated with the production line (constituting an economic unit), VAT is eliminated. If the transfer qualifies under FEAC (e.g., structured as a contribution of a branch of activity to a new entity followed by a share sale), CIT and transfer taxes can also be deferred.

M&A in Insolvency Spain: How Buyers and Lenders Preserve Tax Neutrality

Distressed M&A in Spain offers two principal acquisition routes, purchase under a judicially approved restructuring plan, or acquisition during formal insolvency proceedings, and each has distinct tax neutral restructuring implications.

Under a restructuring plan approved by the court, the plan itself can authorise the transfer of assets or business units to a buyer, often on terms that bind dissenting creditors. From a tax perspective, the key advantage is that the plan may incorporate restructuring operations (mergers, demergers, contributions) that qualify for FEAC treatment, thereby preserving tax neutrality for the transferee. The likely practical effect is that buyers who negotiate to acquire through a plan can often structure the acquisition to defer CIT and eliminate transfer taxes.

Acquisition during formal insolvency proceedings (the fase de liquidación) tends to be less tax‑efficient. Assets are typically sold individually or in lots, often by court‑appointed administrators, and the scope for structuring within the FEAC regime is limited. Buyers acquire assets at market value with a clean tax basis, but the seller (the insolvent estate) bears a CIT charge on any gain, and VAT may apply to each individual asset sale.

Key Deal Clauses for Tax Neutrality in Distressed M&A

  • Seller representations on tax compliance. The buyer should require representations that all tax returns have been filed, all assessed taxes have been paid or provided for, and there are no ongoing audits or disputes that could result in additional liabilities.
  • Tax survival clause. Tax indemnities should survive closing for a minimum of four years, aligned with the general Spanish statute of limitations for tax assessments.
  • Net tax liability escrow. A portion of the purchase price (typically 10–20%) should be held in escrow to cover identified contingent tax liabilities, with release conditions tied to the expiry of relevant limitation periods.
  • Tax loss carryforward provisions. Where the buyer acquires shares, the target’s tax losses remain available but are subject to anti‑abuse limitations. The purchase agreement should include representations on the quantum and availability of losses, and the buyer should independently verify these with the AEAT.
  • FEAC election confirmation. Where the acquisition is structured as a qualifying FEAC operation, the agreement should expressly confirm that both parties will elect for and comply with the FEAC regime, including joint reporting obligations.

Anti‑Abuse, TEAC Rulings and Red Flags That Remove Tax Neutrality

The TEAC and Spanish courts have removed FEAC tax neutrality in a growing number of cases where the principal purpose of the restructuring is identified as obtaining a tax advantage. Practitioners should note that the anti‑abuse analysis is substance‑based: formal compliance with the FEAC requirements is necessary but not sufficient. Administrative rulings have established that where the dominant motive is tax‑driven, neutrality can be denied retroactively, resulting in a full tax assessment plus interest and potentially penalties.

The following red flags, drawn from TEAC decisions and practitioner guidance, are the most commonly cited grounds for denying tax neutrality:

  • No discernible commercial rationale. The restructuring produces no operational change, efficiency gain, or market benefit.
  • Circular transactions. Assets are transferred and subsequently returned to the original entity (or a related party) within a short period.
  • Post‑transaction inactivity. The receiving entity ceases business shortly after the restructuring.
  • Timing aligned with tax events. The restructuring coincides suspiciously with the realisation of a large gain, a change in tax rates, or the expiry of a loss carryforward period.
  • Absence of contemporaneous documentation. No board minutes, no business plan, no independent valuation, suggesting the purpose was never formally deliberated.
  • Disproportionate tax benefit relative to commercial objective. The tax saving dwarfs any demonstrable business benefit.
  • Restructuring solely to access loss carryforwards. An entity with losses is merged into a profitable entity without any operational integration.
  • No independent valuation. Exchange ratios or contribution values lack independent support.
  • Failure to report. The operation is not disclosed in CIT returns despite being material.
  • Successive restructurings with no cumulative commercial purpose. A chain of transactions, each individually neutral, but collectively designed to achieve a tax outcome not available in a single step.

Practical Checklists, Templates and Timelines for In‑House Teams

The following three checklists consolidate the requirements discussed above into actionable working documents. Each item should be completed, signed off, and retained as part of the permanent tax file for the restructuring.

Checklist A: Restructuring Plan, Tax Neutrality

  1. Confirm operation type falls within FEAC categories.
  2. Prepare and sign board minutes documenting commercial purpose.
  3. Obtain independent asset valuation.
  4. Prepare business plan or strategic memo supporting the restructuring rationale.
  5. Verify accounting continuity, receiving entity records assets at transferor’s tax values.
  6. Confirm all tax provisions and deferred tax positions carry over.
  7. Prepare CIT return annexes and informational declarations.
  8. Assess whether a binding tax ruling is advisable.
  9. Review anti‑abuse red flags and document how each is mitigated.
  10. File all notifications within statutory deadlines.

Checklist B: Pre‑Insolvency Sale, Tax‑Aware Structuring

  1. Conduct seller tax compliance review (last four fiscal years minimum).
  2. Determine whether assets being sold constitute an economic unit (VAT non‑supply test).
  3. Calculate CIT exposure on anticipated gains.
  4. Assess whether the sale can be restructured as a FEAC contribution plus share sale.
  5. Prepare pre‑insolvency sale tax impact memo for creditors and the court.
  6. Negotiate tax indemnity and escrow terms with the buyer.
  7. Confirm VAT treatment and registration status of buyer.
  8. Review successor liability exposure for the buyer.

Checklist C: Buyer / Lender, Escrow and Indemnity

  1. Complete tax due diligence covering CIT, VAT, payroll, social security and local taxes.
  2. Negotiate tax representations and warranties with survival period of at least four years.
  3. Structure escrow at 10–20% of purchase price for contingent tax liabilities.
  4. Include a FEAC election confirmation clause if applicable.
  5. Verify availability and quantum of any tax loss carryforwards.
  6. Obtain legal opinion on successor liability scope.
  7. Agree release conditions for escrow funds (linked to limitation periods and audit clearance).

Indicative Timeline for Structuring and Filing

Phase Timeframe Key Deliverable
Preliminary assessment Weeks 1–2 Operation type confirmed; initial tax impact memo
Documentation assembly Weeks 3–6 Board minutes, valuation, business plan completed
Binding ruling request (if needed) Weeks 4–8 Ruling request filed with Dirección General de Tributos
Execution and closing Weeks 7–12 Deeds signed, operations registered, assets transferred
CIT reporting Within filing period for the relevant fiscal year CIT returns with FEAC annexes filed

Worked Examples and Short Case Studies

Example A: SME Intragroup Reorganisation Using FEAC

Facts: A Spanish family‑owned group operates through two companies, Co Alfa (manufacturing) and Co Beta (distribution). The family decides to consolidate both under a new holding company (HoldCo) to facilitate external investment. Co Alfa has net assets with a tax book value of €3 million and a market value of €8 million. Co Beta has net assets with a tax book value of €1.5 million and a market value of €4 million.

Structure: The shareholders contribute 100% of the shares of Co Alfa and Co Beta to HoldCo in exchange for newly issued HoldCo shares. This is a share‑for‑share exchange, qualifying under the FEAC regime.

  • CIT outcome: The shareholders recognise no gain. HoldCo records the shares of Co Alfa and Co Beta at the shareholders’ original acquisition cost (not market value). Latent gain of €7.5 million (€5 million on Alfa + €2.5 million on Beta) defers until HoldCo sells the shares.
  • VAT: Not applicable (share exchange).
  • Transfer Tax / Stamp Duty: Exempt under FEAC.
  • Documentation: Board minutes recording the commercial purpose (facilitating external investment, governance improvement), independent valuation of both companies, CIT annexes for the exchange.
  • Key takeaway: Total immediate tax cost = €0, compared with up to €1,875,000 in CIT (25% × €7.5 million) if the shares had been sold and repurchased outside the FEAC regime.

Example B: Pre‑Insolvency Sale to a Third Party, Fixing the Structure

Facts: A distressed hospitality company owns two hotels (combined book value €4 million, market value €10 million) and employs 120 staff. A buyer is interested but proposes a straightforward asset purchase of the hotels only.

Initial tax cost (asset purchase without FEAC):

  • CIT: 25% × €6 million gain = €1.5 million.
  • VAT: 21% × €10 million = €2.1 million (recoverable by buyer if fully taxable).
  • AJD: approximately 1.5% × €10 million = €150,000.

Restructured approach: The seller contributes the two hotels, together with the 120 employees, operational contracts, licences and receivables, into a new subsidiary (NewCo) as a branch of activity, qualifying under FEAC. The buyer then acquires 100% of the shares of NewCo.

  • CIT on contribution: Deferred under FEAC (NewCo records hotels at €4 million). €0 immediate.
  • CIT on share sale: Seller realises gain on sale of NewCo shares. If participation exemption applies (100% holding, held for over one year, NewCo subject to CIT), the gain is exempt.
  • VAT: Contribution of branch of activity = non‑supply. Share sale = exempt. €0.
  • AJD: Exempt on the contribution under FEAC. No deed required for share sale. €0.
  • Key takeaway: Total immediate tax cost reduced from €1.65 million (CIT + AJD) to potentially €0. The buyer, however, receives no step‑up in the hotels’ tax basis, the latent gain now sits inside NewCo. This trade‑off must be reflected in the price negotiation.

Conclusion: 6 Immediate Actions for CFOs and Tax Directors Pursuing Tax Neutral Restructuring in Spain

The framework for achieving a tax neutral restructuring in Spain is powerful but demands disciplined execution. Based on the analysis above, the following six actions should be initiated within the first 90 days of any restructuring mandate:

  1. Classify the operation. Confirm whether the proposed restructuring falls within a FEAC‑eligible category. If it does not, assess whether the structure can be modified to qualify.
  2. Convene the board and document the business purpose. This is non‑negotiable. Minutes must be specific, detailed and contemporaneous.
  3. Commission an independent valuation. The valuation supports exchange ratios, evidences arm’s‑length terms, and provides a defence against anti‑abuse challenges.
  4. Assess whether a binding ruling is needed. For borderline cases, particularly intragroup reorganisations with limited operational change, a ruling from the Dirección General de Tributos provides the strongest legal protection.
  5. Negotiate tax indemnities early. In any deal involving a third‑party buyer or lender, tax indemnities, escrows and survival periods should be agreed before heads of terms are signed, not left to completion mechanics.
  6. File all CIT notifications on time. Late or incomplete reporting does not automatically void neutrality, but it creates unnecessary risk and signals a lack of rigour to the AEAT.

Tax neutral restructuring in Spain remains one of the most effective tools available to distressed and growing companies alike. The FEAC regime, properly applied, can eliminate or defer millions of euros in tax charges. But the post‑2022 enforcement environment, marked by TEAC’s substance‑over‑form approach, means that documentation, planning and professional guidance have never been more important.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Juan Font Servera at FONT MORA SAINZ DE BARANDA, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. BOE, Real Decreto Legislativo 1/2020 (Texto refundido de la Ley Concursal)
  2. BOE, Ley del Impuesto sobre Sociedades (Ley 27/2014)
  3. Baker McKenzie InsightPlus, TEAC Rulings on Tax Advantages in Restructurings
  4. PBS, Neutrality and Tax Prevention in Corporate Restructuring Transactions
  5. KPMG, Spain M&A Country Report
  6. PwC, Tax Summaries: Spain Corporate Deductions
  7. Merac Legal & Tax, FEAC Special Regime Explainer
  8. Uría Menéndez, Spain Country Q&A
  9. Gómez‑Acebo & Pombo, Guide to Spanish Pre‑Insolvency Restructurings
  10. BM.consulting, FEAC Tax Restructuring

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