Category Archives: Uncategorised

A Spring Statement in the eye of the Brexit storm

14th March 2019

The Chancellor rose in a parliament preoccupied with the ongoing Brexit drama to deliver a Spring Statement on the state of the economy.

Mr Hammond made clear some while ago that he wanted his Spring Statement to be a short financial briefing and he stuck to a no-frills script.

There were no new tax measures and only minor spending changes. The Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) trimmed its projections for government borrowing, but Mr Hammond kept his powder dry for the forthcoming Spending Review.

While the Chancellor may have appeared to say little, his statement was followed by some announcements and the publication of a range of documents covering areas including:

• Making Tax Digital (MTD) – the government confirmed a light touch approach to penalties in the first year of MTD’s implementation. MTD will not be extended to any new taxes or businesses in 2020.

• Apprenticeship levy – the timing of the reduction in the co-investment rate for employers from 10% to 5%, and the increase to 25% in the amount that employers can transfer to their supply chains, will be brought forward. These changes will take effect from April 2019.

• Draft legislation for the new structures and buildings allowance for investments in non-residential structures and buildings announced in the 2018 Budget. The relief will be given as an annual 2% flat rate over 50 years for new commercial structures and buildings.

• Review of time limits for the recovery of lost tax involving an offshore matter, comparing them with other time limits. It will set out the rationale for the charge on disguised remuneration loans and will be laid by 30 March 2019.

• CGT private residence relief changes announced in the 2018 Budget to lettings relief and the final period exemption.

These documents are likely to result in legislation following the Autumn Budget.

Moving abroad? – Don’t forget to review your protection policies

19th June 2018

Are you thinking of moving abroad with your family? More and more people in the UK are leaving our home shores every year for a retirement in the sun or perhaps working abroad.

However, many do not consider how their life assurance or critical illness policies will be affected by such a move.  Ensuring you have a globally portable life/critical illness policy should arguably be top of the agenda of anyone planning to become an expat.

Consider the following situations:

Mr X lives in Hong Kong whilst letting out his UK property. He has outstanding mortgage of £200,000 on the property and he would like to assess whether his existing UK cover will be valid should a claim arise.

Mr Y is retired and lives in Portugal. He still holds UK assets and is concerned about a potential inheritance tax liability his children could face in future if Mr Y was to die whilst living in Portugal.

Mr and Mrs Z now both live in Dubai, with Mr Z being the main breadwinner whilst Mrs Z is looking after their new-born twins. He wants life and critical illness cover in the event he is unable to work, so that his income could continue to provide for the family. He discovered that British expats living in the Middle East have relatively few options when it comes to providers and policies. Besides, he is wary that beneficiaries of expats who die outside of the UK often find it difficult to make claims with insurers local to where the deceased lived.

Mr A is about to accept a job offer to work in Lebanon.  He discovered that his existing insurer is not covering war risks and he is concerned that his dependants will fall into severe financial distress if life assurance cover is not in force.

These four situations highlight the fact that expats should review the terms and conditions and exclusions of each available policy very carefully and ask as many questions as possible.  We suggest that the following issues are addressed:

–       Policy ‘portability’ and validity whilst an expat moves from country to country.  It may be that the contract will need adjusting for each international relocation.

–       Does the policyholder need to demonstrate intention to return to their home country in the foreseeable future, or is the policy truly international?

–       Are life assurance benefits paid irrespective of where the survivors are located?

–       What currency are life assurance premiums and benefits paid?

If you are considering life assurance or need to assess your existing life policies before you relocate, contact us for a free, no obligation consultation.  We will provide you with a FREE no obligation independent assessment of the options available to you.

Spring Statement 2018 – Summary

14th March 2018

The Chancellor Philip Hammond presented his first Spring Statement on Tuesday 13 March 2018.

The Chancellor promised a Spring Statement devoid of mini-Budget trappings, and that is precisely what he delivered. He announced no new spending or tax measures, despite the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) providing a marginally more upbeat forecast. Instead Mr Hammond used his despatch box time to review the economy and launch no fewer than 13 consultations.

The highlights of the Spring Statement were:

  • No new tax or spending initiatives were announced.
  • Borrowing numbers turned out to be better than expected – which allowed the Chancellor to see ‘light at the end of the tunnel’. Public sector net debt (projected to be £1,783 billion at the end of 2017/18) is now predicted to fall as a percentage of the economy, although in absolute terms it will continue the march towards debt of £2 trillion.
  • The next revaluation of business property in England will be brought forward one year to 2021; but ‘at this stage’ the government will not introduce self-assessment. A summary of responses to an earlier consultation document on three-yearly revaluations was published alongside the Spring Statement.
  • A ‘position paper’ on corporate tax and the digital economy represented the latest government thinking on how to address the taxation of the internet economy’s elusive profits.
  • A consultation paper was issued on allowing entrepreneurs’ relief in circumstances where it would otherwise be lost because of a new share issue.
  • There was a call for evidence on the design of the VAT registration threshold and whether a revised structure could offer more incentives for small businesses to grow.
  • There was a consultation on the extension of tax relief for self-funded work-related training by employees and the self-employed.
  • There was a consultation on the extension from April 2019 of the existing security deposit regime to include Corporation Tax and Construction Industry Scheme deductions.

The raft of consultations will potentially mean that, after the content-light Spring Statement, the Autumn Budget will be a full-fat fiscal event.

Budget 2017

23rd November 2017

Mr Hammond has been hemmed in on one side by sobering economic and fiscal forecasts; on another by public services and national infrastructure showing the strain after seven years of austerity; and on a third by members of his own party, willing him to fail. So when it came to delivering his third Budget, how did the Chancellor play his unlucky hand?

Mr Hammond tried to strike a note of economic and fiscal optimism. As expected, the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR), the Chancellor’s independent economic and fiscal arbiter, lowered its estimate for public borrowing in 2017/18 by £8.4 billion, on the basis of stronger than expected tax revenues and lower public spending so far this year. The country’s debt burden is still expected to start falling next year, allowing Mr Hammond to argue that we have turned the corner on the public finances. He was also keen to highlight the upward trend in employment.

Using what little wriggle room he had, the Chancellor portrayed this as a Budget creating “a country fit for the future”. The reclassification of housing association debt from the public to the private sector has conveniently allowed Mr Hammond to shift his fiscal goal posts by around £5 billion a year. He also outlined plans to raise additional taxes from the corporate sector, including via indexation freezing, and through the “usual suspect” of clampdowns on tax evasion and avoidance. As a result, he was able to loosen his fiscal stance by £7 billion over the period to 2023 – a little more than expected ahead of his speech.

Some of this additional funding has gone to the National Health Service. Mr Hammond has allocated an extra £3.4 billion over the next three years, presumably hoping to avoid negative headlines over the winter months, and additional capital spending of £4.2 billion out to 2023. But the Chancellor is still intent on meeting his self-imposed fiscal goals, lowering government borrowing to 2% of national income by 2020-21 and eliminating the deficit altogether by the mid-2020s.

Now for the bad news……………
The OBR downgraded its outlook for UK GDP growth both in the short and medium term by more than expected. The short-term cuts to projected growth rates of 1.5% this year and 1.4% next, from 2.0% and 1.6% respectively in the March Budget – are a little below economists’ current consensus. They are also disappointing for a small, open economy that would normally benefit from a world economy that is expanding at its fastest sustained pace since the global financial crisis. But it is the long-term downgrades – to growth rates averaging an anaemic 1.3% in 2019 and 2020 and only modestly higher beyond – that are ultimately more damaging to the Chancellor’s aspirations.

And Mr Hammond’s Brexit-fighting “war chest” has shrunk. The worsening economic news, combined with the fiscal impact of Mr Hammond’s U-turn on raising taxes for the self-employed back in March and the £1 billion post-election sweetener for the Democratic Unionist Party, has cut his headroom relative to his own fiscal rules from £26 billion at the time of the previous Budget to £14.3 billion currently. He chose to position this as a positive choice, to help hard-working families and ready the economy for the future. However, it leaves him with a very small margin to play with, given total tax revenues and public spending commitments amounting to hundreds of billions of pounds each year.

The Chancellor attempted to fight back on the OBR’s negative productivity message, with some productivity-boosting measures of his own. After all, the only way the UK can hope to escape its current economic challenges is by improving its productivity performance, enabling economic growth and tax revenues to rise faster than the OBR currently expects. Mr Hammond set out parts of the government’s industrial strategy, allocating tens of millions of pounds to skills training and transport infrastructure over the next few years, and hundreds of millions to increasing research and development tax credits. All other measures to create “an economy fit for the future” are, however, dwarfed in terms of funding by the £3 billion to be allocated over the next two years to preparing for EU exit – a concession from Mr Hammond to his pro-Brexit critics.

Housing market in focus
As expected, Mr Hammond also portrayed this as a Budget to tackle the UK’s “broken” housing market – and this is also where this Budget’s inevitable surprise came from. He repeated his goal of raising house building to 300,000 new homes per year, aided by the commissioning of new building on public land and funding for local authorities. This will go some way – albeit modestly – towards addressing “supply side” problems in the housing market. But the “demand side” measures announced today, particularly his ‘rabbit out of the hat’ of a stamp duty cut for most first-time buyers, risk adding more to house prices than to addressing issues with the housing stock. Indeed, that’s exactly what the OBR is predicting. It believes the stamp duty cut will increase house prices by 0.3%, mainly in 2018, with the biggest gainers therefore being people who already own property – not first-time buyers themselves.

From April 2019, UK tax will be charged on gains made by all categories of non-UK resident sellers on both direct and indirect disposals of UK real estate, extending existing more limited rules that apply only to residential property. This represents a fundamental change to the current rules governing the taxation of chargeable gains on UK real estate.

UK real estate taxation                                                                                            
The new rules are intended to create a single regime for disposals of interests in both residential and non-residential property. Currently, only the direct disposal of an interest in UK residential property by a non-UK resident individual, trust, personal representative or closely-held company falls within the charge to UK tax on chargeable gains. Direct disposals of residential properties by non-UK resident widely-held companies are not caught, nor are indirect disposals of residential property or any direct or indirect disposal of commercial property.

With effect from April 2019, gains arising on the disposal by a non-resident of any type of UK property will be subject to corporation tax or capital gains tax in respect of gains accruing after April 2019 (with a rebasing as at April 2019). This will also apply to indirect disposals – i.e., disposals of shares in “property-rich” companies (which, broadly speaking, are those where 75% or more of the company’s gross asset value at disposal is represented by UK real estate) by a person who holds, or who has held at some point during the 5 years prior to the disposal, a 25% or greater interest in the company. Although the new charge will apply only to gains arising on disposals after commencement, the 25% test will take into account ownership before that time and will also consider the interests of the non-resident’s related parties in determining whether the threshold is met. The new rules will catch both a direct disposal of the interest in the property-rich company as well as a disposal of an interest in a holding company or equivalent entity with a structure of entities beneath it which, taken together, meet the property richness test.

In order to help HMRC enforce the new rules, the Government intends to impose a reporting requirement in some circumstances (for example, in the context of an indirect disposal) on certain UK advisers who are aware of the conclusion of the land transaction.

Anti-forestalling measures will be introduced with effect from yesterday to prevent restructuring pre-April 2019 to make use of the UK’s Double Tax Treaty network in a way that would prevent the UK imposing tax. The anti-forestalling rule will remain in force as an anti-avoidance measure after the new charge is introduced, until such time as relevant treaties have been amended to prevent any risk of abuse.

In response to the March 2017 consultation on bringing non-resident corporate landlords into the charge to corporation tax in respect of rental income, many people highlighted the complexity of the Annual Tax on Enveloped Dwellings-related capital gains tax rules. In response, the Government intends to structure the new rules announced yesterday in such a way that, as far as possible, one regime applies for all disposals of interests in UK real estate by non-residents, and that the regime is robust and cohesive. As a result, the Government will be considering the case for harmonising the existing ATED-related gains rules within the wider regime for taxing non-residents’ gains on UK property and how to meet the objective of simplification in doing so.

This announcement was somewhat foreseeable, given the changes made over the past few years, to level the playing field in respect of the taxation of UK property between UK residents and non-UK residents. It was also the next logical step following the Government’s consultation on bringing non-UK resident corporate landlords within the scope of UK corporation tax (as opposed to UK income tax) in respect of rental income. The Government is due to announce the results of this consultation shortly, although it is clear that this change will also be made.

The Government has announced that the changes will be open to consultation, which will run to 16 February 2018. However, it is clear that many aspects of the reform have already been fixed (such as who is in scope, the commencement date and the core features of the provisions governing direct and indirect disposals) and that the Government is, in fact, only consulting to ensure that the legislation is sufficiently well targeted. The Government will publish draft legislation in late summer 2018.

So how did he do?
Budgets in the early years of an administration are normally when Chancellors get the “heavy lifting” done – raising taxes or shifting spending priorities in anticipation that this will pay dividends in time for elections up to five years into the future. However, these are not normal times.

Mr Hammond’s constraints meant that, despite his best efforts at vision and vigour, this Budget went with more of a whimper than a bang. A bold approach would have been to take housebuilding and infrastructure spending out of his budgetary rules altogether, arguing that they are too important to be left inside a self-imposed fiscal straitjacket.

Today could have been a golden opportunity to take a distinct, long-term view of the UK’s prospects, tackling the country’s productivity performance head on. An expanding economy would underpin confidence, spending and tax revenues, ultimately benefitting the public finances.

Instead, the two most notable measures in today’s Budget were the £3 billion allocated to Brexit preparations and the stamp duty cut for first-time buyers. The first was directed at Mr Hammond’s critics, many within his own party, who would like to see him replaced. The second was intended to provide a boost for young, aspiring house purchasers but may ultimately benefit their middle-aged peers.

Market implications
The Budget is likely to be received calmly within equity, currency and, perhaps most importantly for the Chancellor, debt markets. However, as already noted, it was delivered against a backdrop of a very disappointing UK economic outlook and with considerable uncertainty around the likely implications of Brexit. While Mr Hammond outlined a variety of measures that will affect the corporate sector, this anaemic growth environment is likely to have the greatest impact on companies operating in the UK over the coming years.

The Chancellor announced a raft of initiatives to improve productivity and to enhance the UK’s position in the technology and digital economy, the most material of these being the increase in the R&D expenditure credit to 12%. Time will tell as to the efficacy of these initiatives, but they will broadly be welcomed by the business sector.

Corporation tax rates were left unchanged, remaining competitive with our global peers. However, several initiatives, such as the freezing of the indexation allowance and the application of income tax to royalties relating to UK sales, will result in companies experiencing a tax increase.

The measures on the housing market were well-trailed overall, and were broadly in line with investors’ expectations. However the Chancellor is obviously losing patience with what he sees as the large housebuilders’ inefficient use of their land banks. His announcement of an “urgent review” into the “significant gap between the number of planning permissions granted and the number of homes built” reflects this impatience, with housebuilders’ shares weakening on the announcement. The supportive comments on the purpose-built private rented sector will be welcomed by institutions eager to participate further in this area.

Stability for pension and savings
Mr Hammond made few changes to the UK savings market. This will be welcomed by an industry that had called for stability in pensions and investments policy following some fairly significant changes over the past few years.

As a follow-up to the Treasury’s recent Patient Capital Review, the Chancellor announced a £20 billion action plan to unlock new investment in UK “scale-up” businesses. Alongside this will be a new fund through the British Business Bank, seeded with £2.5 billion of public money. The Chancellor also made reference to “facilitating pension fund access to long-term investments”. All these measures will be welcomed, and may allow the further closing of the financing gap at the smaller end of the private equity market.

The Chancellor’s statement did not move markets significantly, an outcome that he is likely to be happy with. It was also a statement delivered in the context of a global economy that, while growing at a healthy pace, may be seeing the liquidity tide of low interest rates and quantitative easing starting to ebb. The outcomes of events beyond our shores are therefore, once again, likely to have more influence on UK markets, in all their forms, than the Chancellor’s pronouncements from the dispatch box.

2017 Finance Act – Part 2 becomes law

22nd November 2017

Finance Bill 2017 to 2019 finally received Royal Assent the other day (16th November), and now becomes Finance (No. 2) Act 2017.

The Act introduces a series of provisions that were left out of the pre-election Finance Act as a result of the shortage of time available for debate.

The legislation now coming into force includes the sweeping changes to the taxation of UK resident non-domiciled individuals, such as:

  • Non domiciles resident in the UK for 15 of the past 20 tax years are deemed domiciled in the UK for all tax purposes;
  • Returning UK Domiciles (those who were born in the UK with UK domicile of origin, shed their UK domicile and subsequently return to the UK) are treated as deemed domiciled for all tax purposes while they are in the UK (subject to a one-year grace period for inheritance tax);
  • Two key items of transitional relief are introduced (other than for Returning Doms):
    • Rebasing, which allows individuals who became deemed domiciled in April this year to rebase certain foreign assets to their value as at 5 April 2017;
    • Cleansing, which permits the separation of mixed funds into their component items of capital, income and gains during this tax year and next.
  • Protected trusts (those established by a UK resident non domicile prior to acquiring deemed domicile) will protect UK deemed domiciled individuals from tax in respect of trust income and gains provided the trusts are not tainted, for example by additions. (Protected trust status is not available where the taxpayer is a Returning UK Domicile of origin.)
  • Interests in UK residential property held indirectly by non-domiciliaries, such as via non-UK trusts, companies and partnerships are brought within the scope of UK inheritance tax.

The delay to the introduction of the above rules has been controversial, particularly as they are backdated to 6 April 2017. It has also been unsettling for clients, who have been uncertain of their status, and that of their wealth, for tax purposes and therefore unable confidently to plan for the future. Practitioners have been equally wary, having been surprised by the dropping of the provisions at the last minute from this year’s first Finance Act, with many unwilling to advise clients on their options before the legislation was on the Statute books.

This lengthy period of uncertainty is now over, freeing clients to conclude their planning for the current tax year and make suitable arrangements for the future.

What to do?
Clients who now know that they became deemed domiciled in April of this year are likely to have prepared for the eventuality and they can now move ahead with those plans. Others will become deemed domiciled in April of next year or in subsequent tax years and they will be considering their options.

In all cases, it will be a question of assessing the effectiveness of current structures, in particular in light of the extension of tax exposure to worldwide income and gains and, for some, the drawing of UK residential property into the inheritance tax net.

There are numerous options and these include single premium offshore life assurance policies (also known as offshore bonds), which can continue to protect policyholders from tax on underlying investments, do not suffer from the risk of tainting, and can remain effective for clients with family, financial and other interests in multiple jurisdictions.

What next?
We can expect further changes in the form of Finance Bill 2017 to 2018, which will eventually become Finance Act 2018. The Bill, draft clauses for which were published on 13 September 2017, is expected to make further amendments to the taxation of offshore trusts, including a prohibition on the washing-out of trust gains via payments offshore, and an anti-conduit rule designed to tax onward trust distributions to UK taxpayers. In the meantime, we await HMRC guidance on the practical application of the April 2017 changes.

Non-domicile reforms re-introduced – effective from 6th April 2017

14th July 2017

The Government has finally confirmed that the non-domicile reforms, which were unexpectedly withdrawn from the Finance Bill 2017 prior to the General Election, will be re-introduced and have effect from 6 April 2017.  A second Finance Bill 2017 will be published after the summer recess and the previously withdrawn legislation will be included in largely unchanged form.

As a reminder, the headline changes to the non-domicile rules are:

  • Non-domiciled individuals who have been resident in the UK for 15 out of the previous 20 tax years as at 5 April 2017 will be ‘deemed domiciled’ for all personal taxation purposes.
  • Individuals born in the UK with a UK domicile of origin, who established a non-UK domicile of choice, will not be able to benefit from the non-domicile taxation regime if they are a UK resident and any overseas structures will not be afforded protection.
  • New rules will be introduced providing certain protections to the taxation of offshore trusts established by non-domiciled individuals.
  • Overseas structures owning UK residential property will come within the scope of UK inheritance tax.

In addition to the above, the 5 April 2017 rebasing and the opportunity to ‘cleanse’ mixed accounts will also take effect, as previously announced.

Following months of uncertainty after the original legislation was withdrawn, it is a relief to finally have certainty on the position. In addition, this confirmation finally provides comfort to those non-domiciled individuals and trustees of offshore trusts who took restructuring action before 6 April 2017.

Finally, those non-domiciled individuals who had paused to take any action in relation to the 5 April 2017 rebasing and ‘cleansing’ provisions can now progress their plans with certainty.

Spring Budget 2017 (Key Points)

9th March 2017

The Chancellor of the Exchequer, Philip Hammond, delivered his first Budget against a backdrop of a more-buoyant-than-expected UK economy post-Brexit and improved tax receipts. Set against these were concerns about funding the NHS and social care, and the impact on business from changes to business rates.

Here are some of the key tax and related announcements in the Budget:

• Self-employed workers will see their Class 4 national insurance contributions (NICs) increase by 1% to 10% in April 2018, with a further percentage point rise to 11% from April 2019. The government had previously announced that Class 2 NICs will be abolished from April 2018.

• The tax-free dividend allowance will be reduced from £5,000 to £2,000 from April 2018.

• The individual savings account (ISA) allowance will rise to £20,000 in April 2017 as previously announced.

• The new NS&I investment bond available for 12 months from April 2017 will pay 2.2% over a three-year term on deposits of up to £3,000.

• As already announced, the personal allowance will rise to £11,500 in April 2017 and to £12,500 by 2020 and the higher rate income threshold will rise to £45,000. Special rules will apply in Scotland.

• The Chancellor confirmed that corporation tax will be cut to a rate of 19% from April 2017 and that the rate will be further reduced to 17% in 2020.Businesses losing their Small Business Rate Relief will benefit from a cap on increases in their rates bill.

• The government has announced it will consult on proposals to redesign rent-a-room relief, to ensure it is better targeted to support longer-term lettings.

• Unincorporated businesses and landlords with a turnover below the VAT threshold will have an extra year, until April 2019, before they have to implement ‘Making Tax Digital’.

• The government will introduce a 25% charge on transfers to qualifying recognised overseas pension schemes or QROPS. There will exemptions from the charge for people with a genuine need to transfer their pensions overseas.

The Chancellor’s Budget speech contained many references to ‘fairness’. The decision to raise NICs for the self-employed was widely trailed but the cut in the dividend allowance came as a surprise.

Apart from the cut in the dividend allowance there was no ‘rabbit out of the hat’ that the previous chancellor (George Osborne) was renowned for. All in all, quite a boring budget.

DD-Day is less than 2 months away

24th February 2017

If you’re a non dom, then major changes are coming your way as from 6 April 2017. For non-UK domiciles who have been resident in the UK for at least 15 tax years – it is their ‘Deemed Domicile Day’. On that date, those people will be declared deemed domiciles for all 3 personal taxes, which are: Income Tax (IT), Capital Gains Tax (CGT) and Inheritance Tax (IHT).

The threshold for becoming a deemed domicile is going to be 15 out of the last 20 tax years for all three taxes (so a reduction in the current 17 year period for IHT only). You will become deemed UK domicile at the start of the sixteenth tax year of residence.

So what’s changing?
As from 6 April 2017:

  • Any non-UK domiciles who have been resident in the UK in at least 15 of the past 20 tax years will become deemed UK domiciled for income tax, CGT and IHT.
  • They will be taxable on their worldwide income and gains and pay IHT on their worldwide assets.
  • The Remittance Basis Charge (RBC) will, therefore, no longer be available after 15 tax years.
  • Foreign gains and foreign income arising within an excluded property trust set up by a non-UK domiciles before they became deemed domiciled will not be assessed on the settlor, until they receive benefits.
  • People who were born in the UK with a UK domicile, but have acquired a foreign domicile of choice since, will be treated as UK domiciled if they are currently UK resident or come back to live in the UK. Any excluded property trusts they have previously established will no longer be excluded property whilst they are in the UK.
  • Deemed domicile status can only be lost after six complete consecutive tax years of non-UK residence for income tax and CGT, or three years for IHT (people who are UK domicile would have to prove they had a foreign domicile of choice for that period).
  • For those who become deemed domicile on 6 April 2017 overseas assets will be rebased to their market value on 5 April 2017 if the taxpayer has previously paid the RBC, removing previous growth from the UK CGT calculation.
  • There will be a temporary window of two tax years (2017/18 and 2018/19) during which individuals can rearrange their mixed funds overseas to separate them into their constituent parts (for example: clean capital, income, gains).
  • IHT will be levied on UK residential property held indirectly by non-UK domiciles through an offshore entity (such as a foreign company, partnership or a trust).
  • If a non-UK domicile leaves the UK and becomes non-resident prior to 6 April 2017 – and does not return – they will not be subject to the new rules.

Autumn Statement Summary

23rd November 2016

Unlike his predecessor (George Osborne) new Chancellor, Philip Hammond had no big finale to announce at the end of his autumn statement speech. Most of the focus was on infrastructure and tweaks around the edges in an effort to improve the UK’s poor productivity figures per head when compared to other developed nations.

Pensions

Combating Pension Scams

The Government will publish a consultation shortly on options to tackle pension scams, including banning cold calling in relation to pensions, giving firms greater powers to block suspicious transfers, and making it harder for scammers to abuse small self-administered scheme (SSAS) arrangements.

Salary Sacrifice

The tax and employer National Insurance advantages of salary sacrifice schemes will be removed from April 2017. There are a few exceptions to this rule:

Arrangements relating to

  • pensions
  • childcare
  • cycle to work
  • ultra low emission cars

The result of these changes mean employees swapping salary for benefits will pay the same tax as those who pay for them out of post-tax income.

Existing arrangements are protected until April 2018 with arrangements for cars, accommodation and school fees protected until April 2021.

Therefore, it will still be possible for employers to use the salary sacrifice facility to enhance the pension benefits of their employees. The employee would pay lower income tax and national insurance contributions (NICs) and the employer would pay lower NICs, or redirect their NICs savings into their employee’s pension.

However, for any employee with a threshold income of more than £110,000 in either 2016/17 or 2017/18, any employer contribution into a registered pension scheme such as a defined contribution money purchase scheme, or benefit accrual for a defined benefits scheme, would count towards the employee’s adjusted income. If their adjusted income was greater than £150,000 in either of those tax years, they would lose £1 of their annual allowance for each £2 of adjusted income above £150,000, down to a minimum annual allowance of £10,000 (for those whose adjusted income is £210,000 or more).

Money Purchase Annual Allowance (MPAA)

The MPAA will be reduced from £10,000 to £4,000 from April 2017, as the government does not consider that earners aged 55 and over should be able to enjoy double pension tax relief, such as relief on recycled pension savings, but does wish to offer scope for those who have needed to access their savings to subsequently rebuild them.

Foreign Pensions

The tax treatment of pension income and lump sums arising from a foreign pension scheme will be brought into line with the treatment of some payments from a UK registered pension scheme.

At the moment, foreign pension income in the hands of a UK resident for tax purposes is taxed on 90% of the amount that would apply if they had received income from a UK registered pension scheme.

The Government will also:

a) close, to new saving, specialist occupational pension schemes operated by UK employers in respect of employees who are employed abroad set up under section 615(3) of the Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988;
b) extend the taxing rights over recently emigrated non-UK residents’ foreign lump sum payments from funds that have had UK tax relief after 05/04/2006 from 5 to 10 years;
c) align the tax treatment of funds transferred between RPSs; and
d) update the eligibility criteria for foreign schemes to qualify as overseas pensions schemes for tax purposes.

Consequently, the recent trend to reduce the number of overseas pension schemes on the Government’s recognised overseas pension scheme (ROPS) list is likely to continue.

Authorised Investment Funds: dividend distributions to corporate investors

The Government will modernise the rules on the taxation of dividend distributions to corporate investors in a way which allows exempt investors, such as pension funds, to obtain credit for tax paid by authorised investment funds and will publish proposals in draft secondary legislation in early 2017.

Life Insurance/Capital Redemption policies

Chargeable Events

Following the part surrender and part assignment consultation, the Government will legislate in the Finance Bill 2017 to allow applications to be made to HM Revenue and Customs to have the charge recalculated on a just and reasonable basis. This will lead to fairer outcomes for policyholders. The changes will take effect from 6 April 2017.

Personal Portfolio Bonds

Following the personal portfolio bond consultation, the Government will legislate in the Finance Bill 2017 to amend the list of assets that life insurance policyholders can invest in without triggering tax anti-avoidance rules. The changes will take effect on the Royal Assent of Finance Bill 2017.

Insurance Premium Tax

Insurance Premium Tax will increase from 10% to 12% from 1 June 2017.

Income tax

Personal allowance

The tax-free personal allowance is being increased from it’s current level of £11,000 to £11,500 in 2017-18.

For higher rate taxpayers, the Government will also increase the threshold above which higher earners start paying 40% tax. It will increase to £45,000 in 2017-18.

The Government is committed to raise the personal income tax allowance to £12,500 and the higher rate threshold to £50,000 by the end of this parliament.

Once the personal allowance reaches £12,500, it will increase in line with inflation.

ISA’s

The ISA subscription limit is being increased to £20,000 with effect from 6 April 2017.

NS&I Investment Bond

NS&I will offer a new 3 year Investment Bond with an indicative rate of 2.2% from spring 2017. Savings of between £100 and £3000 can be made by savers aged 16 or over.

Corporation tax

The Government intend to cut corporation tax to 17% by 2020.

Non-dom reforms

As previously announced, the deemed domicile test will be amended from 17 out of 20 years to 15 out of 20 years from April 2017. Also UK domiciles of origin will be considered UK domiciled at any time where they are resident in the UK.

UK property held indirectly by a non-domiciled individual through an offshore structure (for example a company or trust) will become liable to IHT from April 2017, as expected.

The Business Investment Relief scheme will also be simplified from April 2017 to encourage offshore money investing in UK businesses.

Tax Avoiders

A new penalty is being introduced for those helping someone else to use a tax avoidance scheme. The penalty is intended to ensure that those who help tax avoiders whose tax avoidance schemes are defeated by HMRC also face the consequences.

Tax avoiders will not be able to use the defence of taking reasonable care by relying on non-independent tax advice.

Never go shopping when you’re hungry

25th October 2016

Someone once told me “never go shopping when you’re hungry”, it turned out to be sound advice. I recall when I was about 20 years old, just received my pay packet, and headed straight to the supermarket to stock up my empty food cupboards. By the time I got to Wednesday I was throwing half the stuff i’d bought in the bin as it had gone out of date. I bought virtually everything I saw at the time that looked remotely appetising as I was so hungry.

There’s a lesson to be learned from this in today’s current low interest market. Generally investors are being pushed further and further up the risk scale in search for half decent yields, so those that have always sat in cash are now dabbling in structured capital at risk products (scarps) or bonds (be it corporate or government) and possibly a bit of equity content (via some absolute return funds), those that are comfortable investing into bonds are now venturing into higher yield bonds (previously considered junk bonds), those that were previously comfortable investing into equities are still investing in equities but paying a higher starting price. So we are all shopping when we’re hungry for better returns and to some extent ignoring the fact that we are accepting a higher level of risk in return.

Everyone knows the old saying “what goes up must come down”. The forces of gravity will always win in the end. Quantative easing by most central banks around the world have acted like steroids to their respective economies, and served to prolong the current market cycle, but in my opinion this will soon come to an end and reality will hit like a punch in the face from Mike Tyson.

Central banks are virtually out of options, as they can not go any lower with interest rates, they are even struggling to find government bonds to buy back. Inflation will spike higher than anticipated, some are even suggesting 5% in the next 12 months and I would not rule it out. Central banks will then be forced to raise interest rates which will then force consumers to tighten their belts. We then get into the forces of natural gravity coming into play and I believe the next recession could be the longest we have ever seen.

It’s not all doom and gloom, the UK could already be ahead of the curve when compared to other western economies, as Brexit will force us to seek trade deals around the world rather than being reliant on just the EU. Although we might feel the forces of gravity a little harder than the US as they are already on a path to raising interest rates gradually. We have a weak currency which means our exports are cheaper which could serve to lessen the hard landing.

Only time will tell if I am just thinking in “glass half empty mode” or being realistic, but one things for sure……………

in the near term it is all about ‘return of capital’ as oppose to ‘return on capital’.

Top