Bob has spent 20 years of his professional career in Russia, Central Europe, the Far East and other regions of the world as a tax advisor for international companies and private clients. His specialisms include advising on cross border tax structuring for IPOs, M&A, corporate divestitures and spin-offs, private equity finance, property acquisitions and disposals, transfer pricing, profit repatriation and other tax services.
Bob has particular expertise advising on capital raising and financing vehicles in jurisdictions such as Hong Kong, Singapore, Cyprus and the UK. He also has a working knowledge of taxation in Russia and several other eastern european states. Having spent a number of years in this region, Bob can communicate in Russian, Ukrainian, Serbian, Croatian in addition to other local languages and will be utilising his skills and network to work with entrepreneurs of dynamic growth companies across Russia and eastern europe with a view to facilitating listings on the London, Hong Kong and Singapore stock exchanges.
As well as being a keen diver and windsurfer, Bob has been a longstanding supporter of the England cricket team and Serbian tennis player, Novak Djokovic. Bob aspires for his son, still only 10 years of age, to take up professional cricket or tennis....as long as he can make a living somewhere sunny and warm!
Contact
b.savic@uhy-uk.com
Phone 020 7216 4600
Fax 020 7767 2600
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Expertise
International business services
Personal and family finances
Property
Taxation

Up to £15 million will be clawed back from academy schools before the end of the current academic year due to government budgeting errors, according to our data.
A quarter of all taxpayers may be paying the wrong amount of tax due to incorrect PAYE codes according to our analysis.
The cost of listing on AIM has risen at its fastest rate in more than five years according to our findings.
A sudden surge in M&A activity on AIM is being driven by private equity backed deals to take companies private, our research reveals.
From 6 April 2012 HMRC will be able to ask employers to pay a financial security where it thinks there is serious risk that the business won’t pay over their PAYE tax deductions or National Insurance contributions (NICs) on time.