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M&A Lawyers Brazil 2026: CVM Merger Control, Tax Reform and Antitrust Risks for Deals

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 hours ago

Deal teams engaging M&A lawyers in Brazil during 2026 face a regulatory landscape that is shifting on three fronts simultaneously. The phased implementation of Constitutional Amendment 132/2023, Brazil’s sweeping tax reform, is redrawing the economics of share-versus-asset transactions and introducing new indirect-tax variables that must be modelled before signing. At the same time, the CVM (Comissão de Valores Mobiliários) has circulated draft amendments to its disclosure and tender-offer framework that compress notification windows for public-target acquisitions. CADE (Administrative Council for Economic Defense) has signalled a more interventionist posture, approving several high-profile transactions in 2025 only on the condition of structural or behavioural remedies.

This guide maps each of those changes onto a practical deal calendar, providing checklists, comparison tables and worked examples designed for general counsel, CFOs and lead transaction advisers structuring inbound or domestic M&A in Brazil.

Executive Summary, Immediate Action for Deal Teams

The convergence of tax reform, CVM rule-making and heightened CADE enforcement creates a narrow window in which deal structuring Brazil decisions made today will determine regulatory cost and timeline risk through closing and beyond. The following bullets distil the critical takeaways developed in the sections that follow.

  • Tax reform phasing begins in 2026. The new dual-VAT regime (CBS at the federal level and IBS at the sub-national level) enters a testing phase in 2026, with CBS rates effective from 2027 and full IBS migration completing by 2033. Asset deals will carry new indirect-tax implications that did not exist under the prior PIS/COFINS and ICMS framework.
  • Corporate income tax base changes are under discussion. Proposed adjustments to the IRPJ/CSLL deduction rules and the taxation of dividends could alter after-tax returns for both share and asset purchasers. Industry observers expect final legislative text during 2026.
  • CVM draft resolution tightens disclosure windows. Public-company acquirers should plan for compressed material-fact disclosure deadlines and revised mandatory tender-offer trigger points, requiring earlier board-level coordination.
  • CADE filing thresholds remain turnover-based. Both the acquiring group and the target must meet minimum gross-revenue thresholds in Brazil. CADE’s General Superintendence has been imposing remedies, including divestitures and hold-separate obligations, more frequently than in prior years.
  • Transfer pricing alignment with OECD standards under Law 14,596/2023 is now fully in force, requiring arm’s-length documentation for intercompany arrangements restructured post-close.
  • IOF (Tax on Financial Operations) remains applicable to foreign-exchange inflows funding acquisitions, with rates varying by instrument type.

If your deal is signing within the next 90 days:

  • Commission a dual share-vs-asset tax model incorporating the CBS testing-phase mechanics and any anticipated dividend-taxation changes.
  • Confirm whether the target’s public-company status triggers CVM disclosure obligations under both existing and draft rules, and calendar the earliest possible board-resolution date.
  • Run a preliminary CADE revenue-threshold analysis for both parties and, where a filing is likely, engage CADE’s General Superintendence informally before signing to map remedy expectations.

Brazil’s 2026 Tax Reform, M&A Implications and Timeline

Constitutional Amendment 132, promulgated in December 2023, initiated the most significant overhaul of Brazil’s indirect-tax system in decades. For M&A lawyers in Brazil, the practical consequences unfold in phases, and deal structuring Brazil decisions taken in 2026 must account for transitional rules that will apply differently to share purchases versus asset transfers. The reform replaces the federal PIS and COFINS contributions with a new Contribuição sobre Bens e Serviços (CBS) and merges the state ICMS and municipal ISS into the Imposto sobre Bens e Serviços (IBS), both operating as value-added taxes on a destination basis.

Key Dates and Implementation Phases

The legislation establishes a graduated transition to prevent revenue disruption. Deal teams should map each phase against anticipated signing and closing dates.

Date Reform Element Practical M&A Consequence
Dec 2023 Constitutional Amendment 132/2023 promulgated Legal basis for reform confirmed; deal teams begin modelling structural alternatives
2024–2025 Complementary laws (Lei Complementar) enacted detailing CBS and IBS rates, credits and transitional rules Asset-deal tax modelling requires updated credit-recovery assumptions; share deals less directly affected
2026 CBS testing phase at a reduced rate; IBS testing phase begins; ICMS/ISS phase-out starts Dual-regime operation increases compliance cost, sellers should warrant tax positions under both old and new systems
2027 CBS fully operational; PIS/COFINS extinguished Asset transfers become subject to CBS on goods and services; credit-chain integrity becomes a diligence item
2029–2033 Gradual IBS rate increase and ICMS/ISS phase-out Long-horizon earn-outs and deferred consideration must model shifting effective tax rates on operating income

Transaction Taxes and Modelling for Cross-Border Buyers

Beyond the CBS/IBS transition, several transaction taxes in Brazil apply at or around closing and must be incorporated into pricing models. The table below summarises the primary levies that cross-border M&A Brazil participants should budget for.

Tax Type Who Bears It Typical Range Timing
IOF (Tax on Financial Operations), foreign-exchange inflow Buyer (on remittance into Brazil) 0.38 %–6.38 % depending on instrument At the time of the FX closing contract
ITBI (Real-Estate Transfer Tax), municipal Buyer (in asset deals involving real property) 2 %–3 % of property value (varies by municipality) At registration of the transfer
Capital-gains tax (IRPJ/CSLL or IRPF) Seller 15 %–22.5 % for individuals; 34 % effective rate for corporate sellers (IRPJ + CSLL) On closing / recognition of gain
CBS (from 2026 testing phase / 2027 full) Buyer or seller depending on structure Rate under testing phase to be confirmed by regulation; standard rate expected near 8.8 % (CBS alone) On supply of goods/services in asset deals

Industry observers expect the dual-regime period (2026–2032) to increase compliance costs by 15–25 % for asset-heavy transactions because sellers and buyers must manage credits under both the legacy and new systems simultaneously. Share deals, by contrast, transfer the entity as a going concern and generally do not trigger CBS or IBS at closing, although the target’s embedded tax positions still require diligence.

Transfer Pricing and Post-Close Integration Risks

Law 14,596/2023 brought Brazil’s transfer pricing regime into alignment with OECD arm’s-length standards, replacing the prior fixed-margin methods. For acquirers planning post-close integration of supply chains, the practical effect is that intercompany pricing, particularly for management fees, technology licences and intra-group commodity flows, must now satisfy comparability analyses that can be challenged by the Receita Federal. Deal teams should consider the following mitigants in deal structuring Brazil negotiations:

  • Escrow or holdback provisions sized to cover potential transfer-pricing adjustments for the two fiscal years following closing.
  • Price re-opener clauses linked to any Receita Federal assessment that increases the target’s tax liability attributable to pre-close intercompany transactions.
  • Indemnity carve-outs for transfer-pricing exposures identified during diligence but not yet assessed by the tax authorities.

CVM Merger Control and Draft Resolution, Disclosure and Tender-Offer Timelines

The CVM regulates disclosure obligations and mandatory tender-offer requirements for transactions involving publicly traded companies in Brazil. Under CVM Resolution 44/2021 (which consolidated earlier rules on material-fact disclosure) and CVM Resolution 85/2022 (governing tender offers), acquirers must navigate a structured timeline from the moment a transaction reaches a level of certainty that triggers disclosure. The CVM has circulated draft amendments that, if adopted, would tighten several of these windows, a development that M&A lawyers in Brazil are advising clients to prepare for now, even before the final text is published.

The current framework requires immediate disclosure of any material fact, defined broadly to include any decision, deliberation or fact that may influence the price of securities or an investor’s decision to trade. In practice, this means that once a binding offer or definitive agreement is reached for a public target, the acquirer and the target’s board must file a material-fact notice (fato relevante) with the CVM and B3 (the São Paulo stock exchange). The draft amendments are expected to narrow the window between the occurrence of the triggering event and the required disclosure, and to impose stricter conditions on the use of confidentiality exceptions that currently allow parties to delay disclosure where premature publication could prejudice the transaction.

Practical Sign-to-Tender Calendar

The table below illustrates a representative timeline for a share acquisition of a publicly listed target under both the current and anticipated revised CVM framework. Deal teams should use this as a baseline and adjust once the final resolution text is published.

Event Typical Days from Signing Action Required
Execution of binding agreement or definitive offer Day 0 File fato relevante with CVM and B3; board resolution authorising disclosure
Regulatory pre-analysis (CVM review of disclosure completeness) Days 1–15 Respond to CVM queries; prepare tender-offer documentation if mandatory offer triggered
Mandatory tender-offer registration (if applicable) Days 15–30 File OPA (Oferta Pública de Aquisição) registration with CVM; appoint independent appraiser
CVM analysis of OPA registration Days 30–60 CVM may request amendments; parties negotiate auction terms with B3
Publication of OPA and acceptance period Days 60–90 Minimum acceptance period (currently 30 days; draft may adjust); market communications
Auction / settlement on B3 Days 90–120 B3 conducts auction; settlement in T+2; CADE clearance must be obtained before or in parallel

The likely practical effect of the draft amendments will be to compress the initial disclosure window (Days 0–15) and to reduce the scope of permissible confidentiality deferrals. Early indications suggest the CVM may also require acquirers to disclose preliminary indicative terms before a binding agreement is finalised, where market rumours or unusual trading patterns have been detected.

Practical Mitigation and Drafting

To manage the tighter CVM merger control timeline, deal teams should adopt the following practices:

  • Pre-draft the fato relevante in parallel with the definitive agreement, so that it can be filed within hours of signing rather than days.
  • Limit the circle of informed persons to reduce the risk of leaks that would accelerate mandatory disclosure.
  • Include CVM-compliant confidentiality undertakings in NDAs and term sheets, with automatic termination provisions triggered by any CVM inquiry.
  • Coordinate board calendars so that the target’s board can convene and approve the disclosure and any required independent appraisal engagement on the same day as signing.

CADE 2026: Antitrust Filing Triggers, Remedies and Timing

CADE merger control operates as a mandatory pre-closing notification regime. Under Law 12,529/2011, transactions that meet specified revenue thresholds must be notified to CADE before closing, and the parties may not consummate the deal until clearance is obtained, known as the standstill obligation. Failure to notify, or gun-jumping (premature integration), carries fines and potential nullification.

Filing Triggers and Timelines

CADE filing is required when both of the following turnover thresholds are met (as periodically updated by CADE ordinance):

Filing Trigger Typical Evidence Required CADE Calendar
At least one economic group involved in the transaction had gross revenue or turnover in Brazil ≥ R$ 750 million in the fiscal year preceding the transaction Audited financial statements; consolidated group revenue in Brazil Pre-notification recommended 30–45 days before target signing; formal filing after execution
At least one other economic group involved had gross revenue or turnover in Brazil ≥ R$ 75 million in the preceding fiscal year Target’s or seller’s audited financials; revenue attributable to Brazilian operations Phase I review: up to 30 days (extendable); Phase II (complex cases): up to 120 days, further extendable by 90 days

In practice, the General Superintendence clears approximately 85–90 % of notified transactions in Phase I (the fast-track procedure), typically within 20–30 calendar days. Transactions raising horizontal overlaps or vertical-integration concerns are pulled into Phase II, where CADE’s Administrative Tribunal conducts a more detailed review. Industry observers expect CADE to maintain, and potentially tighten, this pace through 2026.

Common Remedies and Negotiation Strategy

CADE has approved several significant transactions in recent years subject to conditions. The remedies most commonly imposed include:

  • Divestitures. Requiring the merged entity to sell specific business lines or assets to a CADE-approved purchaser within a defined period. This is the preferred structural remedy for horizontal overlaps.
  • Behavioural remedies. Imposing obligations such as non-discrimination in supply, mandatory licensing of intellectual property to competitors, or firewall arrangements between competing divisions.
  • Hold-separate orders. Requiring the target to continue operating independently until the remedy buyer is identified and the divestiture is completed.
  • Monitoring trustees. Appointing an independent trustee to oversee compliance with behavioural or structural commitments for a specified period (typically three to five years).

For cross-border M&A Brazil transactions, the negotiation strategy should include pre-notification engagement with CADE’s General Superintendence. Informal consultations, while not binding, allow acquirers to gauge the likely scope of remedy demands before committing to deal economics. Brazilian M&A lawyers increasingly advise clients to prepare a voluntary remedy proposal as part of the initial filing package, particularly in sectors where CADE has established precedents (healthcare, agribusiness, telecoms and financial services).

Deal agreements should include a reverse break fee or long-stop date calibrated to the worst-case CADE Phase II timeline (up to 330 days in extreme cases), and material-adverse-change clauses that address the imposition of remedies that exceed an agreed materiality threshold.

Deal-Structuring Playbook for Buyers and Sellers in Cross-Border M&A Brazil

The interplay between tax reform, CVM merger control and CADE enforcement means that deal structuring Brazil decisions in 2026 require integrated analysis across all three dimensions. A structure that minimises transaction taxes may increase antitrust complexity, and vice versa. The following subsections outline the key considerations for cross-border acquirers.

Transfer Pricing and Treaty Considerations

Under the OECD-aligned transfer pricing regime now in force, acquirers must ensure that any post-close restructuring of the target’s intercompany arrangements satisfies arm’s-length standards from Day 1. Brazil has a limited network of double-taxation treaties, approximately 35 in force, and the absence of a treaty with the acquirer’s home jurisdiction can result in higher withholding tax rates on dividends (currently 0 % for Brazilian-sourced dividends paid to foreign shareholders, though proposed legislation may introduce dividend taxation), interest (15 % standard, 25 % for tax-haven recipients) and royalties (15 %–25 %).

Acquirers from jurisdictions without a treaty should evaluate whether a holding-company structure in a treaty-partner jurisdiction (such as the Netherlands, Spain or Luxembourg) provides meaningful withholding-tax savings. However, anti-treaty-shopping provisions and Brazilian substance requirements must be carefully analysed, the Receita Federal has become increasingly aggressive in challenging structures that lack genuine economic substance.

Practical Examples of Structuring to Reduce CADE and Tax Exposure

Example 1, US acquirer with potential CADE filing. A US-based industrial group (consolidated global revenue of US$ 5 billion; Brazilian revenue of R$ 1.2 billion) seeks to acquire a Brazilian competitor (Brazilian revenue of R$ 200 million). Both revenue thresholds are met, so CADE notification is mandatory. The acquirer’s M&A counsel in Brazil recommends structuring the acquisition through a newly incorporated Brazilian subsidiary (SPV) to ring-fence the combined entity’s market share in overlapping product categories and facilitate a targeted divestiture of one overlapping product line if required by CADE, reducing the scope of any structural remedy while preserving the core strategic assets.

Example 2, Asset purchase with divergent tax outcomes. A European buyer is choosing between acquiring the shares of a Brazilian manufacturing company (enterprise value R$ 500 million) and purchasing only its productive assets. The share purchase triggers no CBS/IBS at closing and preserves the target’s accumulated PIS/COFINS and ICMS credits (estimated at R$ 30 million). The asset purchase would trigger ITBI on real property (approximately R$ 6 million), potential CBS obligations during the testing phase and loss of the legacy credits. However, the asset deal provides a stepped-up tax basis, reducing future capital-gains exposure on a resale. The optimal structure depends on hold period and integration plans, a comparison that M&A lawyers in Brazil should model on a deal-specific basis.

Pre-Sign and Post-Sign Checklist with Worked Examples

The following checklist consolidates the action items developed throughout this guide. Deal teams should assign each item to the responsible workstream and calendar it relative to the anticipated signing date.

Checklist Item Responsible Party Timing Relative to Signing
Run dual share-vs-asset tax model incorporating CBS testing-phase mechanics Tax adviser / CFO 45–60 days pre-sign
Preliminary CADE revenue-threshold analysis for both parties Antitrust counsel 60–90 days pre-sign
Informal pre-notification engagement with CADE General Superintendence Antitrust counsel 45–60 days pre-sign
Pre-draft fato relevante and coordinate target board calendar (public targets) Securities counsel / M&A lead 15–30 days pre-sign
Transfer-pricing review of target’s intercompany arrangements Tax adviser During diligence (30–60 days pre-sign)
Size escrow or holdback for transfer-pricing and tax-reform transition risks M&A counsel / CFO Negotiate as part of SPA; finalise pre-sign
Prepare voluntary CADE remedy proposal (if horizontal overlap identified) Antitrust counsel / business team File with CADE notification (Day 0 post-sign)
File material-fact notice with CVM and B3 (public targets) Securities counsel Day 0 (simultaneously with signing)
Submit CADE notification and supporting documents Antitrust counsel Days 0–5 post-sign
Monitor CBS/IBS implementation regulations for post-close credit recovery Tax adviser Ongoing post-close through 2033

The following comparison table summarises filing obligations and timelines across the three main transaction types:

Entity / Transaction Type Reporting / Filing Obligation Typical Timing (Days)
Public target, share deal CVM disclosure + potential tender-offer; securities filing 0–30 days (disclosure) / tender-offer timelines per CVM rules
Private target, asset deal Tax filings (transfer of assets/registrations); lower CVM exposure 0–60 days (tax registrations and local filings)
Cross-border acquisition via holding company Possible reduced immediate local filings; CADE analysis if thresholds met CADE pre-filing recommended 30–90 days pre-close

Conclusion

Brazil’s 2026 regulatory environment demands that M&A lawyers in Brazil and the deal teams they support integrate tax-reform modelling, CVM disclosure planning and CADE merger-control strategy into a single, coordinated workstream from the earliest stages of deal structuring. The checklists, timelines and worked examples in this guide provide a starting framework, but every transaction requires jurisdiction-specific analysis. Find experienced M&A lawyers in Brazil through our directory to obtain tailored advice before your next signing.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Leonardo Theon de Moraes at TM Associados, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. CVM, Comissão de Valores Mobiliários
  2. CADE, Administrative Council for Economic Defense
  3. Receita Federal, Brazilian Federal Revenue
  4. Ministry of Economy, Brazil
  5. Chamber of Deputies, Brazilian Legislative Portal
  6. OECD, Transfer Pricing Guidelines
  7. Demarest Advogados
  8. Mattos Filho, Corporate/M&A Practice

FAQs

How will Brazil's 2026 tax reform affect M&A deal structures (share vs asset deals)?
The introduction of CBS and IBS under Constitutional Amendment 132/2023 adds new indirect-tax layers to asset deals, including potential CBS charges at closing and changes to credit-recovery mechanics. Share deals remain generally neutral at the transaction level but carry embedded tax-position risks. Deal teams should model both structures against the phased implementation timeline and obtain warranties covering positions under both legacy and new regimes.
Early indications suggest the draft amendments will compress the material-fact disclosure window and narrow the conditions under which parties may invoke confidentiality deferrals. Until the final text is published, acquirers of public targets should prepare disclosure documentation in parallel with transaction documents and coordinate board calendars to enable same-day filing.
CADE notification is mandatory when at least one party’s Brazilian group revenue exceeds R$ 750 million and at least one other party exceeds R$ 75 million. Typical remedies include divestitures, behavioural obligations, hold-separate orders and the appointment of monitoring trustees. Pre-notification engagement with CADE’s General Superintendence is strongly recommended.
Key levies include IOF on foreign-exchange inflows (0.38 %–6.38 %), ITBI on real-property transfers (2 %–3 %), capital-gains tax on the seller’s gain (15 %–34 % effective rate depending on seller type), and, from the CBS testing phase in 2026, potential CBS charges on asset transfers. Withholding taxes on repatriation of dividends, interest or royalties should also be modelled based on applicable treaty rates.
Run a dual share-vs-asset tax model; perform a CADE threshold analysis; pre-draft the CVM material-fact notice for public targets; review the target’s transfer-pricing arrangements under the OECD-aligned regime; and size escrow provisions for tax-reform transition and antitrust-remedy risks.
Law 14,596/2023 aligns Brazil with OECD arm’s-length principles, meaning intercompany pricing set before acquisition must be validated against comparability analyses. Acquirers should include transfer-pricing representations and indemnities in the SPA, and consider escrow provisions to cover potential Receita Federal adjustments for pre-close periods.
Engage CADE informally before signing to identify potential concerns; prepare a voluntary remedy proposal addressing horizontal overlaps; and structure the acquisition to facilitate targeted divestitures without disrupting the core strategic rationale. Including remedy-cap provisions and reverse break fees in deal documentation protects both parties if CADE demands exceed expectations.

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M&A Lawyers Brazil 2026: CVM Merger Control, Tax Reform and Antitrust Risks for Deals

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