CANBERRA, Australia — The Australian Taxation Office (ATO) continues to roll out detailed guidance and compliance reminders in March 2026, focusing on international tax reforms, upcoming superannuation changes and key lodgment deadlines for businesses and individuals. As the 2025-26 financial year progresses, the agency emphasizes preparation for major shifts like Payday Super starting July 1, 2026, while warning against scams and urging timely compliance to avoid penalties.
Australian Taxation Office
On March 12, 2026, the ATO updated its advice on how the Pillar Two global and domestic minimum tax rules apply and interact with Australia’s corporate tax system. The revisions clarify application timelines, calculations and reporting for multinational enterprises subject to the 15% global minimum tax under OECD Pillar Two. The updates, detailed on the ATO website, address transitional provisions and interactions with existing rules, helping large corporates prepare for implementation. KPMG highlighted the changes as critical for affected groups to align reporting and avoid unexpected liabilities.
The ATO’s legal database saw several new draft legislative instruments and practice statements in March. On March 18, draft rulings LCR 2026/D1 through D4 outlined aspects of Payday Super, including qualifying earnings, eligible contributions, super guarantee charge calculations and transitional rules. These drafts support the “once-in-a-generation” reform requiring super contributions closer to payday rather than quarterly, effective from July 1, 2026. The ATO finalized its first-year compliance approach in PCG 2026/1, signaling a practical, education-focused stance initially.
Practice statements PS LA 2026/D1 and D2, released March 12, address penalties for non-compliance with superannuation member account reporting and Single Touch Payroll obligations. These aim to guide administrators on penalty administration, promoting fairness while enforcing accuracy.
The end of the fringe benefits tax (FBT) year on March 31, 2026, looms as a key date. Employers who provided fringe benefits from April 1, 2025, to March 31, 2026, must prepare FBT returns, due May 21 for paper lodgers or June 25 for those using agents. The ATO has warned of common errors in work vehicle FBT reporting that could trigger scrutiny, part of its FY26 small business focus areas.
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Lodgment deadlines remain a priority. Under the registered agent program, March 21 requires lodging and paying February monthly business activity statements (BAS). By March 31, certain companies and super funds with income over $2 million (excluding large/medium taxpayers) must lodge returns and pay liabilities. Consolidated group heads face similar obligations if members exceed thresholds. Individuals and trusts with prior liabilities of $20,000+ also have deadlines in this period.
The ATO stresses vigilance against scams. In February 2026, it alerted the public to cryptocurrency email frauds impersonating the ATO or myGov, demanding immediate asset declarations or threatening action. Scammers use fake letterheads and attachments containing malware. The agency reiterated it never demands crypto details via unsolicited email, threatens arrest electronically or requests payments through unknown channels. Reports of similar impersonations involving myGov, Australian Post or ACCC persist into March.
Small businesses received encouragement to reset habits early in 2026. Assistant Commissioner Angela Allen urged accurate record-keeping, timely super payments and transparency to avoid compliance actions. The ATO’s focus includes contractor income reporting, especially in construction, using enhanced data matching.
Looking ahead, the ATO prepares for broader changes. Public country-by-country reporting deadlines approach for some entities, with reports due by June 30, 2026, for periods ending June 30, 2025. Revised PAYG withholding tables take effect July 1, 2026. The transfer balance cap for superannuation rises to $2.1 million from 2026-27.
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The agency provides resources like checklists for Payday Super preparation and warnings on avoidable FBT errors. Businesses closing in 2026 must cancel ABNs, lodge final returns and settle obligations to avoid issues.
As deadlines mount, the ATO promotes proactive engagement. Taxpayers can access myGov or the ATO app for updates, while professionals monitor the legal database for rulings. With compliance activity increasing via data analytics, accurate and timely actions remain essential to minimize risks.
The ATO’s March activities underscore its dual role: enforcing rules while supporting adaptation to reforms like Pillar Two and Payday Super. Australians navigating the system are advised to consult official sources and registered agents for personalized guidance.
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The next leg of our corporate series here. We’re really excited to have Lucid here with us today. Lucid is an auto tech company that IPOed in 2021 and is focused on the design, development, customer experience, sale and service of premium electric vehicles, primarily, at least currently targeting the luxury consumer market. Its flagship consumer vehicles include the Lucid Air Sedan, Lucid Gravity three-row SUV and currently actively developing its Midsized platform, which I think we’re going to talk a lot about. So really, really excited to have Lucid here with us today.
Today, we have Marc Winterhoff, Lucid’s Interim Chief Executive Officer; as well as Taoufiq Boussaid, Chief Financial Officer. So thank you both for being here. We appreciate it.
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Question-and-Answer Session
Unknown Analyst
So I guess maybe just to start, you just hosted your Investor Day. So I think timing is really good here. And you shared a number of updates. For investors who may have not been able to see the full presentation, can you maybe just walk us through what the most important takeaways you want sort of investors to focus on, on the back of your Investor Day that you hosted?
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Taoufiq Boussaid Chief Financial Officer
Yes. I think that there are a couple of key messages. The first one and probably in my mind, the most important one is that we are at a pivotal time, a pivotal time where we’re transitioning from a period of heavy investment because we needed to establish our manufacturing system. We have 2026 being the last year of this heavy investment cycle and then we’re moving to
Good afternoon. This is the Chorus Call conference operator. Welcome, and thank you for joining the DiaSorin Full Year 2025 Results Conference Call. [Operator Instructions]
At this time, I would like to turn the conference over to Mr. Carlo Rosa, CEO of DiaSorin. Please go ahead, sir.
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Carlo Rosa CEO, GM & Executive Director
Thank you, operator. Ladies and gentlemen, good afternoon, and welcome to the DiaSorin full year results.
Today, we have a busy agenda. I’m going to make some business remarks. Then our current CFO, Mr. Pedron is going to take us through the 2025 financials, our future CFO, Mr. Alberto is going to discuss about guidance 2026, and then collectively, we’re going to take questions.
So let me start from 2025 business comments. 2025, I think, marked a year of good achievement for our company with success for our strategy in the different technologies with Immuno delivering 7% growth, Molecular Diagnostics year-on-year flat and we’ll see later primarily related to the fact that the flu season this year is — has been very weak. And then LTG delivering to expectation flattish compared to previous year. And again, we will discuss later, primarily due to the fact that on the Life Science segment, as I think is very well known by everybody, 2025 has not been an exciting year.
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