In today’s global environment—shaped by trade tensions, evolving regulations, and shifts in international tax policy—transfer pricing (TP) compliance has become a strategic priority for multinational companies. Mexico is no exception. In 2025, a combination of internal and external factors will pose concrete challenges that businesses must address in the documentation and valuation of related-party transactions.

Global Uncertainty

The Looming Threat of a New Tariff Cycle

The Financial Times, in The Economic Consequences of Donald Trump’s Second Coming, warns that a second Trump administration could reignite his aggressive tariff agenda—threatening key trade partners. Proposals such as a blanket 10% tariff on all imports and a 60% tariff on Chinese goods would ripple through global value chains, driving up production costs and undermining the competitiveness of Mexican exports, especially in the automotive and auto parts industries. Beyond external markets, this scenario directly impacts transfer pricing: as market conditions shift, comparable margins may become distorted, and the adjustments required to support intercompany pricing turn increasingly complex.

The Risk of Uncertainty in the Real Economy

As Investopedia highlights in its article How Tariff Uncertainty Corrodes the Economy, the real risk is not only the imposition of tariffs, but the persistent uncertainty surrounding if, when, and on which sectors they will fall. This volatility discourages business investment, disrupts strategic planning, and undermines the reliability of financial data used in functional, asset, and risk analyses for transfer pricing studies.

Navigating Uncertainty in Mexico

The international perspective is reinforced by recent reports in national media, highlighting concrete effects already taking place in Mexico:

Transfer Pricing Implications

For multinational companies in Mexico, the following considerations are key to mitigating risks and ensuring full compliance:

Conclusion

The economic and regulatory landscape of 2025 demands that companies respond with agility, technical precision, and strategically integrated transfer pricing practices. In Mexico, pressures arise not only from domestic changes but also from international trade decisions that shape the operations and oversight of multinational businesses. Transparency in documentation, ongoing monitoring of global developments, and rigorous technical reviews of economic studies are now essential to mitigate risks and strengthen a defensible tax position. More than a matter of formal compliance, transfer pricing studies must be recognized as a cornerstone of both tax and operational strategy in today’s evolving global environment.

Sources

Por: Alejandra Nava

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