Campbell Dallas appoints new specialist tax partner

Mark Pryce
Mark Pryce

Campbell Dallas has added a tax partner to the firm’s Glasgow office.

The firm said Mark Pryce, a specialist in the field of corporate and international tax, brings an extensive experience of tax forecasting, developing solutions for reporting and automating tax systems, tax audits, operational tax management, management of tax affairs in overseas jurisdictions and handling complex tax authority enquiries.

He has advised public and private sector organisations in a wide range of industry sectors, including education, oil and gas, manufacturing, housing, economic development, technology and engineering.



He joins Campbell Dallas from Weir Group, where he was a senior tax manager leading a team responsible for international tax reporting, forecasting, provisioning and compliance roles across all Weir Group businesses.

Mark is a Chartered accountant and a mentor on the icas global virtual career mentoring programme.

Peter Gallanagh, head of general practice at Campbell Dallas, said: “We are very pleased that Mark is joining our fast-growing tax practice. He brings a wealth of experience in the field of corporate tax compliance and reporting, an area in which clients are increasingly seeking expert advice on how to manage their corporate tax issues”.

Chris Horne, managing partner said, “Mark is joining us at an exciting time in the development of our business and is an excellent example of our intention to recruit top quality professionals with deep knowledge of the issues that can seriously affect the performance and profitability of client businesses.”

The appointment comes as the firm said it advised on more than £100 million of deals during the past year.

Transactions it worked on included Blyth Utilities being sold to Energy Assets Group, GS-Hydro buying First Hose and GT4 Group acquiring TPL Labels.

The firm said its pipeline of deals for 2016 is its busiest ever with work lined up for business owners, banks and private equity funds.

Corporate finance partner Graham Canning suggested brighter business conditions, including continuing low interest rates and large corporates with money to spend, mean the coming year may see growing numbers of company owners deciding to sell up.

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