David Glikshteyn works at the intersection of two practices that share more ground than their names suggest — tax controversy and private wealth. The Russian FNS field audit that examines a foreign-owned subsidiary's transfer pricing is often, at its root, the same question as the CFC analysis that a private client's wealth adviser needs answered: who controls the structure, where does the value sit, and how does the Russian tax authority see the arrangement? David works across both questions.
As an associate in the firm's tax and private wealth practices, he supports the defence of FNS field audits — handling information requests, preparing documentation, and analysing the FNS's audit methodology — and works on the structuring side, where the firm advises private clients on Russian personal foundation governance, CFC compliance, and the Russian tax implications of multi-jurisdictional wealth arrangements. His contributions to the Insights publication reflect this dual focus: he writes about corporate governance, shareholder disputes, and the practical implications of Russian corporate law for business owners and minority shareholders navigating complex ownership structures — the territory where tax planning meets corporate governance meets asset protection.