Tag: Treasury

  • PRESS RELEASE : Chancellor’s Mansion House Reforms to boost typical pension by over £1,000 a year [July 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Chancellor’s Mansion House Reforms to boost typical pension by over £1,000 a year [July 2023]

    The press release issued by HM Treasury on 10 July 2023.

    The Chancellor will launch his ‘Mansion House Reforms’ this evening (Monday 10 July) which could increase pensions by over a £1,000 a year in retirement for an average earner who saves over the course of a career.

    • Chancellor to outline reforms to boost pensions and increase investment in British businesses
    • the ‘Mansion House Reforms’ could unlock an additional £75 billion for high growth businesses, while reforms to defined contribution pension schemes will increase a typical earner’s pension pot by 12% over the course of a career
    • comprehensive reforms will increase pension pots by as much as £16,000

    The reforms will also unlock up to £75 billion of additional investment from defined contribution and local government pensions, supporting the Prime Minister’s priority of growing the economy, and delivering tangible benefits to pensions savers.

    The United Kingdom has the largest pension market in Europe, worth over £2.5 trillion. Over the past ten years Automatic Enrolment has helped an extra ten million people save for their futures, with £115 billion saved in 2021, but how this money is invested is limiting returns for savers. Comparable Australian schemes invest ten times more in private markets than UK schemes, reaping the rewards that UK savers are missing out on.

    To level the playing field, the Chancellor and the Lord Mayor have supported an agreement between nine of the UK’s largest Defined Contribution pension providers, committing them to the objective of allocating 5% of assets in their default funds to unlisted equities by 2030. These providers represent over £400 billion in assets and the majority of the UK’s Defined Contribution workplace pensions market.

    This could unlock up to £50 billion of investment in high growth companies by 2030 if all UK Defined Contribution pension schemes follow suit.

    More effective investments by defined contribution pension schemes will also increase savers’ pension pots by up to 12%, or as much as £16,000 for an average earner.

    Chancellor of the Exchequer Jeremy Hunt said:

    “British pensioners should benefit from British business success. By unlocking investment, we will boost retirement income by over £1,000 a year for typical earner over the course of their career.

    “This also means more investment in our most promising companies, driving growth in the UK.”

    Secretary of State for Work and Pensions Mel Stride said:

    “British workers should have the confidence that their pension savings are working as hard as they are.

    “Our reforms will benefit savers and society – unlocking investment into pioneering UK businesses, growing the economy, and helping the record number of people in this country saving into a pension to achieve the retirement they want.”

    The Chancellor’s Mansion House Reforms will also deliver better returns for savers through a new Value for Money Framework which will make clear that investment decisions made by pension firms should be based on overall long-term returns and not simply costs. Pension schemes which are not achieving the best possible outcome for their members will be wound up into larger, better performing schemes.

    Analysis shows that over a five-year period there can be as much as 46% difference between the best and worst performing pension schemes. This means that a saver with a pot of £10,000 could have notionally lost £5,000 over a 5-year period from being in a lowest performing scheme.

    The Mansion House Reforms will be guided by the Chancellor’s three golden rules: to secure the best possible outcome for pension savers; to always prioritise a strong and diversified gilt market as we seek to deliver an evolutionary, rather than revolutionary, change in our pensions market; and to strengthen the UK’s position as a leading financial centre to create wealth and fund public services.

    To ensure that the money unlocked by these reforms is invested quickly and effectively, the Chancellor has asked the British Business Bank to explore the case for government to play a greater role in establishing investment vehicles, drawing upon the BBB’s skills and expertise.

    This will complement the £250 million of support that government has made available through the Long-term Investment for Technology and Science (LIFTS) initiative to incentivise new industry-led investment vehicles.

    The government will also encourage the establishment of new Collective Defined Contribution funds which can invest more effectively by pooling assets as well as launch a call for evidence to explore how we can support pension trustees to improve their skills, overcome cultural barriers and realise the best outcomes for their pension schemes and subsequently their members.

    Defined Benefit pensions

    For the Local Government Pension Schemes a consultation will be launched on setting an ambition to double existing investments in private equity to 10%, which could unlock £25 billion by 2030. The consultation proposes a deadline of March 2025 for all Local Government Pension Scheme funds to transfer their assets into LGPS pools and setting a direction that each pool should exceed £50 billion of assets.

    To improve outcomes for savers in a highly fragmented market, with over 5,000 Defined Benefit Schemes, the government will set out its plans on introducing a permanent superfund regulatory regime to provide sponsoring employers and trustees with a new way of managing Defined Benefit liabilities.

    A new call for evidence will also launch tomorrow on the possible role of the Pension Protection Fund and the part Defined Benefit schemes could play in productive investment whilst securing members’ interests and protecting the sound functioning and effectiveness of the gilt market.

    Capital Markets

    The UK has the largest stock market in Europe and one of the deepest in the world – the London Stock Exchange had the most Initial Public Offerings (IPOs) outside of the US in 2021.

    A comprehensive set of reforms will help attract the fastest growing companies in the world to grow and list in the UK. Prospectuses will be simplified, another milestone of Lord Hill’s UK Listing Review, replacing the EU’s outdated regime.

    Firm’s prospectuses for investors will be easier to produce, more accessible and understandable, saving companies time and money and attracting more firms to do business in the UK.

    Protectionist rules inherited from our time in the EU will be abolished. The Share Trading Obligation and Double Volume Cap have held back UK businesses and will be removed so firms can access the best and most liquid markets anywhere in the world.

    The government has also accepted all of Rachel Kent’s Research Review published today, paving the way for a new ‘Research Platform’ that will provide a one-stop-shop for firms looking for research experts. It also sets the path for potentially removing the unbundling rules – an inherited EU law that requires brokers to charge a separate fee for research.

    The Chancellor will set out plans to establish an entirely new kind of stock market that allows private companies to access capital markets without floating on a stock exchange. This ‘Intermittent Trading Venue’ would be a world first and will help firms grow and boost the UK economy. It will be complemented by a move to make shares fully digital rather than written on paper, saving businesses time and money.

    This builds on the Chancellor’s Edinburgh Reforms and Solvency II reforms which will unlock over £100 billion of productive investment from insurance firms across the UK over a decade.

    Seizing the opportunities of the future

    To ensure the continued success of the UK’s world-leading financial services sector, firms must be ready to innovate faster, with regulators willing to support them as they do.

    Following the Financial Services and Markets Act 2023 passing into law, the government has announced that it is commencing repeal of almost 100 pieces of unnecessary retained EU law for financial services, further simplifying the UK’s regulatory rulebook.

    The government launched an independent review into the future of payments – led by Joe Garner, former Chief Executive Officer of Nationwide Building Society – to help deliver the next generation of world class retail payments, including looking at mobile payments.

    The government also welcomes a report suggesting ways to move to fully digital shares, scrapping outdated paper-based shares. This will make markets more efficient and modernize how people own shares.

    Further information

    • The Mansion House Compact members are: Aviva; Scottish Widows; L&G; Aegon; Phoenix; Nest; Smart Pension; M&G; Mercer.
    • The package of reforms announced today could help increase pension pots for an average earner who starts saving at 18 by 12% over their career – over £1,000 more a year in retirement – all whilst supporting UK economy, businesses, and employment.
    • Analysis shows a difference in returns between schemes over a 5-year period of up to 46% in some cases. This means that a saver with a pot of £10,000 could have notionally lost £5,000 over a 5-year period from being in a lowest performing scheme.

    Reaction to the Chancellor’s Mansion House Reforms

    Jamie Dimon, Chairman & CEO, JPMorgan Chase said:

    “Great financial centers stay competitive by responding to the market and evolving through the kinds of important iterations that the Chancellor has announced. It’s also good to see the U.K. preparing for the industries of tomorrow considering the great promise of life sciences and A.I. as cornerstones of the economy in the years to come.”

    Sir Jon Symonds CBE, Chair, GSK said:

    “I welcome these important reforms which will further strengthen the UK capital markets and support economic growth.  The changes will help increase investment returns for pension savers through improved access to all asset classes including in high growth sectors, and ensure the UK’s most innovative companies are better supported by UK capital to stay in this country as they scale to maturity.”

    Brent Hoberman, Executive Chairman & Co-Founder, Founders Forum, Founders Factory said:

    “The planned pension reforms will enable for capital to be productively invested in funds and scaleup companies in the UK.  This should be welcome news to the UK industries of the future, their ability to attract more capital will create more national champions and generate growth, jobs and increased tax revenue.”

    “The reforms will enable the UK to build on the positive momentum in these key parts of the economy drive further synergies between it’s world class financial institutions and entrepreneurial base.”

    C. S. Venkatakrishnan, Group Chief Executive, Barclays said:

    “The UK has needed a bold, forward-looking policy agenda and industrial strategy to grow the economy. These Mansion House Reforms are an important step in the right direction in mobilising private capital to support growth and innovation.”

    Irene Graham OBE, CEO, ScaleUp Institute said:

    “The package of measures announced by the Chancellor today are very much welcomed by the ScaleUp Institute. They contain significant and innovative solutions which will help to enable easier and simpler access to capital markets and patient growth capital. These new initiatives, coupled with the reforms already underway, will support and fuel the global ambitions of our scaleups, and high-potential scaling businesses, across all sectors and all areas of the UK.”

    Miles Celic, Chief Executive Officer, TheCityUK, said:

    “The competitiveness and attractiveness of any successful international financial centre must, by definition, always be a work in progress. The Chancellor is right to be ambitious in building on the UK’s successes and recognising that we can’t afford to be complacent.

    “The Mansion House Reforms are ambitious, pragmatic and necessary. They will underpin the UK industry’s future success. Most importantly, their main beneficiaries will be the British people, who will gain from greater investments in growing businesses, revitalising communities and improving retirements.”

    Chris Hulatt, Co-Founder, Octopus Group said:

    “We welcome government’s efforts to make the UK a more attractive place to start a business, and support measures that provide additional opportunities for private companies to raise capital.

    “Finding new ways for the most skilled and talented entrepreneurs to access capital as they build businesses is fundamental to helping the UK maintain its place as the best place to start, build and scale a business.”

    Noel Quinn, Group Chief Executive, HSBC said:

    “I welcome the strong and comprehensive package of measures announced by the Chancellor in his Mansion House speech.  Unlocking equity to support companies in innovative high-growth sectors such as technology and life sciences is vital to the future growth of the UK economy.”

    Lord Mayor, Nicholas Lyons said:

    “These reforms and the Mansion House Compact mark a historic turning point that will accomplish the dual aim of securing a brighter future for retirees and channelling billions into our economy.  I’m proud to have convened key industry players to make this commitment to unlock £50bn in capital by the end of the decade which will improve returns for pension savers and support firms to grow, stay and list in the UK.”

    Tim Orton, Chief Investment Officer, Aegon UK said:

    “Aegon UK is proud to be a founder signatory of the Mansion House Compact which will help deliver better long-term outcomes for our customers. We are committed to ensuring our customers can access and share in the growth and success of innovative companies we invest in. We will use our scale and expertise to develop investment solutions seeking to improve the retirement outcomes of the millions of members of the defined contribution pension schemes we support.  The Compact will also create opportunities that help deliver our climate targets as we progress towards net zero.”

    Sir Nigel Wilson, Group CEO, Legal & General said:

    “As the UK’s largest manager of money for pension clients, L&G is pleased to support the ambition set by the Compact. Increasing investment in science, technology and infrastructure will support better returns for the tens of millions saving for their retirement, as well as stimulate much needed long-term growth for the UK economy.”

    Mark Fawcett, CEO, Nest Invest said:

    “For many years now, illiquid assets have been integral to diversified DC pension schemes around the world. It’s been a key driver behind Nest setting up our own private market mandates to ensure our members aren’t missing out. Nest will continue to increase our investment in unlisted equities, helping our 12 million members benefit from the strong returns these types of deals can typically offer.”

    Ruston Smith, Chair, Smart said:

    “Smart Pension is committed to securing better outcomes for long-term savers. Giving UK savers access to higher net returns by investing in unlisted equities, including innovative, high-growth UK companies as part of a well diversified portfolio, will deliver these outcomes over time. We are pleased to be a signatory of the Mansion House Compact and, as a successful British fintech, we are proud to be supporting the country’s technology sector, helping home-grown start-ups and scale-ups to flourish and thrive.”

    Scottish Widows, CEO, Chirantan Barua said:

    “The industry needs to modernise the investment options available to customers.  With the right consumer protections in place, the proposals announced today could make a huge difference to our customers and the wider UK economy. I’m proud that Scottish Widows is a founding signatory of the Mansion House Compact.”

    Phil Parkinson, Investments and Retirement Leader, Mercer said:

    “Mercer supports proposals that lead to improved pension scheme member outcomes. As a global investment solutions provider, we see first-hand the value that illiquid asset allocations can bring to investors’ portfolios from a risk and a return perspective and are in favour of initiatives designed to unlock this asset class for DC members.”

    Edward Braham, Chair, M&G said:

    “Patient capital put to work in companies or projects over multiple decades is essential to support economic growth and importantly, capture value for people’s pensions as they save for their retirement. M&G’s heritage is in investing in private markets, whether it is through infrastructure, real estate or innovative companies with purpose. We are democratising access to private markets through the Prudential With Profits Fund, and are supportive of DC pension reforms that encourage more investment of this kind that has potential to result in positive outcomes for savers.”

    Mike Eakins, Chief Investment Officer, Phoenix Group said:

    “We are proud to sign the Compact, which is an important step to allow UK long-term savers to invest in a more diversified portfolio, giving them access to the potential returns of a broader range of assets, in line with their international counterparts. Currently, only 9% of UK pension funds are invested in alternative assets as compared to 23% in other major pensions markets. With the right regulatory environment, Phoenix Group could invest up to £40 billion in sustainable and/or productive assets to support economic growth, levelling up and the climate change agenda whilst also keeping policyholder protection at its core.”

  • PRESS RELEASE : Tax gap holds steady at 4.8%

    PRESS RELEASE : Tax gap holds steady at 4.8%

    The press release issued by HM Treasury on 22 June 2023.

    The estimated tax gap for the 2021 to 2022 tax year is at an all-time low of 4.8%.

    The amount of unpaid UK tax has remained at an all-time low of 4.8%, HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) revealed today (22 June).

    The annual Measuring Tax Gaps publication estimates the difference between the total amount of tax expected to be paid and the total amount of tax actually paid, which has remained the same as last year’s revised estimate of 4.8%.

    Jonathan Athow, HMRC’s Director General for Customer Strategy and Tax Design, said:

    The tax we collect funds the country’s public services and we want to ensure everyone pays the correct amount. These figures show most taxpayers and businesses pay what they should.

    This important research enables us to better help those making common mistakes or failing to take sufficient care, as well as tackling the minority deliberately hiding their income.

    The report, published annually, show a long-term reduction in the tax gap. Errors, a lack of sufficient care, evasion and criminal attacks all contribute to the tax gap, which has fallen from 7.5% in 2005 to 2006 to 4.8% in 2021 to 2022.

    In monetary terms, the most recent figures put the difference at £36 billion for the 2021 to 2022 tax year. This has increased from £31 billion in 2020 to 2021.

    The tax gap has remained at 4.8% because estimated tax liabilities rose from £643 billion in 2020 to 2021 to £739 billion in 2021 to 2022.

    Further findings for the 2021 to 2022 tax gap publication show:

    • at 56% (£20.2 billion), small businesses represent the largest proportion of the tax gap by group, followed by criminals, large businesses and mid-sized businesses at 11% each (£4.1 billion, £3.9 billion and £3.8 billion respectively)
    • wealthy individuals account for 5% (£1.7 billion) while all other individuals account for the remaining 6% (£2.1 billion) of the overall tax gap
    • Income Tax, National Insurance contributions and Capital Gains Tax makes up 35% (£12.7 billion) of the total tax gap when measured by type of tax
    • Corporation Tax (CT) is now estimated as the second largest component of the tax gap by tax type at 30% (£10.6 billion). New data has increased our understanding of the CT tax gap, resulting in revised estimates
    • the VAT gap continues a long-term downward trend falling from 14.0% (£11.9 billion) in 2005 to 2006 to 5.4% (£7.6 billion)
    • failure to take reasonable care (30%), error (15%), evasion (13%), legal interpretation (12%) criminal attacks (11%) and non-payment (9%) are among the main behavioural reasons for the tax gap

    HMRC publishes the tax gap because it believes transparency in its work is important. The report aims to enhance public trust in the tax system and in HMRC’s ability to support taxpayers in meeting their obligations and pay the tax they owe. It also helps inform the future work and priorities of HMRC and highlights the areas where it can make the greatest difference.

    HMRC is the only tax authority in the world that measures and publishes an annual tax gap in such a comprehensive way – covering a single tax year for all the taxes, levies and duties it administers.

    Every year, HMRC estimate the tax gap using the most up to date information available, however, figures may be revised as more data becomes available.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Re-appointment of Sir Michael Barber as adviser on skills policy delivery [June 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Re-appointment of Sir Michael Barber as adviser on skills policy delivery [June 2023]

    The press release issued by HM Treasury on 19 June 2023.

    Sir Michael Barber has been reappointed as adviser on skills policy delivery to the Chancellor of the Exchequer and the Secretary of State for Education.

    The government recognises that skills are crucial in driving long-term economic growth and is taking forward major reforms set out in the Skills for Jobs White Paper: delivering T Levels, boosting apprenticeships, approving Higher Technical Qualifications, rolling out skills bootcamps, and introducing the Lifelong Learning Entitlement from 2025.

    To help maximise the impact of these commitments, Sir Michael Barber was first appointed to advise the Chancellor of the Exchequer and the Secretary of State for Education on the implementation of current reforms in November 2022 for a term of six months.

    Given the continued importance of the skills agenda and the need to maximise its impact,  the Chancellor and Secretary of State have decided to extend Sir Michael’s role for a second term until December 16  2023, to build on the work to date.

    Sir Michael Barber will not be renumerated for this position.

    Further information

    Sir Michael Barber  is a global expert on implementation of large-scale system change, education systems and education reform.

    He has served in a number of roles within Government, including as Chief Advisor to the Secretary of State for Education on Schools Standards (1997-2001), Head of the Prime Minister’s Delivery Unit (2001-2005), Chair of the Office for Students (2018-2021) and led a review of Number 10 Delivery Unit in 2021.

    Outside of Government, he has been a partner at McKinsey and head of their Global Education Practice, and Chief Education Advisor at Pearson. He is also founder and chairman of Delivery Associates, a global advisory firm focussed on working with governments and other social impact organisations.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Industry expert appointed to support review of Pro-Innovation Regulation of Advanced Manufacturing [June 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Industry expert appointed to support review of Pro-Innovation Regulation of Advanced Manufacturing [June 2023]

    The press release issued by HM Treasury on 19 June 2023.

    Steve Bagshaw has been appointed to support work investigating the pro-innovation regulation of advanced manufacturing, one of the Chancellor’s five key growth areas.

    Following announcement at the Autumn Statement, the Government Chief Scientific Adviser is reviewing existing rules and helping develop a pro-innovation regulatory approach that allows the UK to fulfil its ambition to become a science superpower.

    The aim of the review is to establish the UK as the best regulated economy in the world in key growth sectors, ensuring that industry and investors have the certainty they need to drive innovation, investment and growth by anticipating new developments in emerging technologies.

    In March, Sir Patrick Vallance published reviews on digital technologies and green industries and the government accepted both reports’ recommendations. Having taken up the role of Government Chief Scientific Adviser in April 2023, Professor Dame Angela McLean is continuing this work and published a review on life sciences in May and on the creative industries last week. Again, the government has been pleased to accept all recommendations in each report. Dame Angela will soon publish a report on the Chancellor’s one remaining key growth sector: advanced manufacturing.

    Steve Bagshaw has been appointed to support Professor Dame Angela on this final report, working directly with industry to identify barriers to innovation and regulatory reforms that can help make the UK’s advanced manufacturing industries the most exciting and enterprising in the world.

    Steve Bagshaw is Non-Executive Director at the CPI, former CEO of Fujifilm Diosynth Biotechnologies, and former manufacturing advisor to the Vaccines Taskforce. He is a member of the UKRI Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council. He chaired the UK’s Industrial Biotechnology Leadership Forum from 2013 to 2021 and was co-chair of the UK Bioeconomy Strategy Board between 2016 and 2021. Steve was awarded a CBE in January 2021 for his services to manufacturing and biotechnology.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Boris Johnson Appointed to Three Hundreds of Chiltern [June 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Boris Johnson Appointed to Three Hundreds of Chiltern [June 2023]

    The press release issued by HM Treasury on 12 June 2023.

    The Chancellor of the Exchequer has this day appointed Alexander Boris de Pfeffel Johnson to be Steward and Bailiff of the Three Hundreds of Chiltern.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Nigel Adams Appointed to Manor of Northstead [June 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Nigel Adams Appointed to Manor of Northstead [June 2023]

    The press release issued by HM Treasury on 12 June 2023.

    The Chancellor of the Exchequer has this day appointed Nigel Adams to be Steward and Bailiff of the Manor of Northstead.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Leeds finance boss, Liam Francis Wainwright, sentenced for £20 million fraud [June 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Leeds finance boss, Liam Francis Wainwright, sentenced for £20 million fraud [June 2023]

    The press release issued by HM Treasury on 9 June 2023.

    Yorkshire-based boss of finance company found guilty of fraud, false accounting and forgery after abusing millions of pounds of investors’ money to buy racehorses and fund other businesses.

    A Yorkshire-based finance boss has been found guilty of fraud and sentenced to 7 years imprisonment at Leeds Crown Court.

    An investigation by the Insolvency Service found Liam Francis Wainwright, 61, from Leeds, had falsified documents to mislead investors and spend their money on ventures including a racehorse syndicate and his own failed private businesses.

    These investors were victims of a classic Ponzi scheme, whereby the returns paid to them were funded by the capital injections from later investors.

    Wainwright, who had been a director of Rawdon Asset Finance Ltd, was disqualified for 11 years in November 2020 after investigators at the Insolvency Service found he had falsified around £12 million worth of entries in the company’s loan book in the two years before the company entered administration in 2019.

    After a further criminal investigation, the Insolvency Service brought the director to court on counts of false accounting, fraud, forgery, and acting as a director while bankrupt.

    Julie Barnes, Chief Investigator for the Insolvency Service, said:

    Liam Wainwright’s greed and selfish actions had a devastating effect on the people who had put their trust in him and his business.

    His victims included elderly and vulnerable people. Many investors lost most or all of the money they had entrusted to him, and some lost their life savings.

    His sentencing today shows that the Insolvency Service will seek the toughest penalties for those who break the law, to help ensure that the UK is a safe place for investors and for businesses.

    The court heard that Wainwright had enjoyed a lavish lifestyle as a result of his offending, and that his actions had had a devastating impact on individuals and families who had invested money into the business.

    Wainwright told investors and shareholders that Rawdon Asset Finance was lending money to businesses with security on property, land or plant and equipment, but was in fact using the cash to pay returns to other creditors, buy into a racehorse syndicate and to fund other companies, including a Lincolnshire-based property development and a redevelopment company in West Yorkshire, both linked to himself.

    By the time the company went into liquidation, Rawdon Asset Finance’s creditors were owed more than £20 million. Liquidators have so far recovered £750,630.

    Wainwright admitted that he began to falsify accounts from around 2017, to hide the company’s true financial position from his co-directors and investors. He also admitted he had earlier forged a mortgagor’s signature on a legal charge to mislead investors and had – between April 2010 and April 2011 – breached the terms of a previous bankruptcy by acting as a director of the company the court’s permission.

    The court also heard that Wainwright had lied about the company’s accounts and the destination of funds in order to elicit £100,000 from one investor only weeks before the business collapsed, in the full knowledge that investors would not get their money back.

    Wainwright pleaded guilty on 20 February 2023 at Kirklees Magistrates’ Court, and was sentenced at Leeds Crown Court by His Honour Judge Bayliss on 9 June 2023.

    The Judge passed concurrent sentences for all charges, except for the sentence for fraud against the final investor, which was added consecutively to reflect an escalation in Wainwright’s culpability.

    Background information

    • Liam Francis Wainwright is from Leeds and his date of birth is April 1962.
    • Rawdon Asset Finance Limited (RAF). Company number 06902099
    • The prosecution was brought by the Insolvency Service on behalf of the Secretary of State for Business and Trade.

    The following sentences were imposed, with reductions reflecting credit for the plea:

    1. False accounting – 6 years 6 months, reduced to 4 years 4 months.
    2. Forgery – 2 years after trial, reduced to 16 months, concurrent.
    3. Breach of Director Disqualification – 12 months after trial, reduced to 8 months, concurrent.
    4. Failing to Surrender offence under Bail Act – 28 days, concurrent.
    5. Fraud – 4 years after trial, reduced to 2 years 8 months, consecutive.

    Liam Wainwright remains disqualified as a director.

  • PRESS RELEASE : New oil and gas tax changes set to protect energy security and British jobs [June 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : New oil and gas tax changes set to protect energy security and British jobs [June 2023]

    The press release issued by HM Treasury on 9 June 2023.

    The Energy Profits Levy, which puts a marginal tax rate of 75% on North Sea oil and gas production, will remain in place for the next five years while oil and gas prices remain higher than historic norms – but this will fall back to 40% when prices consistently return to normal levels for a sustained period.

    • The Energy Profits Levy will remain in place until March 2028, and the Government will introduce a new Energy Security Investment Mechanism to protect domestic energy supply and help safeguard some of the tens of thousands of jobs reliant on the sector.
    • This forms part of the Government’s strategy to support households with energy bills whilst providing certainty to investors to secure the long-term future of domestic energy production.
    • The Energy Profits Levy has raised around £2.8 billion to date, helping the Government pay just under half the typical household energy bill last winter.

    Put in place to tax extraordinary profits made by industry following record high prices of oil and gas driven by Putin’s invasion of Ukraine, the levy has raised around £2.8 billion to date and is expected to raise almost £26 billion by March 2028 – helping to fund the measures to help with the cost of living, such as the Energy Price Guarantee.

    While the levy included an investment allowance to encourage firms to continue to invest in oil and gas extraction in the UK, industry has warned that companies are cutting back on investment. This puts the long-term future of the UK’s domestic supply at risk, meaning we would be forced to import more from abroad at a time when reliable and affordable energy is a focus for families and businesses.

    In response to this, the Government has today announced an Energy Security Investment Mechanism to give the oil and gas sector certainty to raise capital and invest in new and existing projects, securing affordable and reliable domestic energy supply and protecting some of the 215,000 British jobs the sector supports. It will mean that if prices fall to historically normal levels for a sustained period the tax rate for oil and gas companies will return to 40%, the rate before the Energy Profits Levy was introduced. Based on the independent Office for Budget Responsibility’s forecast the Energy Security Investment Mechanism won’t be triggered until before the tax’s planned end date in March 2028.

    In light of Putin’s weaponisation of energy, the UK government is taking concrete steps to accelerate home-grown sources of energy to reduce the UK’s reliance on foreign imports. In October 2022, the industry regulator the North Sea Transition Authority (NSTA) opened applications for oil and gas licences to explore and potentially develop 898 blocks and part-blocks in the North Sea which may lead to over 100 licences being awarded from later this year.

    Gareth Davies MP, Exchequer Secretary to the Treasury, said:

    “It is right that we recover excess profits resulting from Putin’s war and use the money to help people with their energy bills. Thanks to the revenue raised from windfall taxes on energy profits, we will have helped save the typical household £1,500 on their energy bill by July.

    “While we stepped into help, never again can our energy supplies be at the whim of petrostate despots like Putin. That’s why it’s so important that we secure investment in our own domestic supply, protecting the tens of thousands of British jobs that come with it.

    “It would be beyond irresponsible to turn off the North Sea taps overnight. Without oil and gas from British waters, we would be forced to import even more from overseas, putting our security of supply at risk.”

    This ‘windfall tax’ takes the total revenues from taxes on oil and gas companies to £50 billion over the next five years. These taxes will have helped the Government save the typical household over £1,500 to July. It also helped cut the energy bills of businesses from pubs to leisure centres, with just under £40 billion paid out across businesses and households to date.

    The tax rate for oil and gas companies will only return to 40% if both average oil and gas prices fall to, or below, $71.40 per barrel for oil and £0.54 per therm for gas, for two consecutive quarters. This level is based on 20-year historical averages. The Energy Security Investment Mechanism is not expected to impact receipts from the Energy Profits Levy, based on current market forecasts.

    Today the Government has also published the terms of reference for the oil and gas fiscal regime review that was announced at the Autumn Statement. The review will focus on how the tax regime can support the country’s energy security and our net-zero commitments, while ensuring the country retains a fair return in exchange for the use of its resources when responding to any future price shocks.

    Further information:

    • Offshore Energies UK estimate that 215,000 UK jobs are reliant on the upstream oil and gas sector and have warned that nine out of ten oil and gas companies operating in the North Sea are cutting back investment. If there was no investment in new fields, production could be a third lower than otherwise by 2035, putting the UK’s energy security, jobs, and economy at risk.
    • Projections by the North Sea Transition Authority suggest that stopping investment in new North Sea oil and gas fields would mean that by 2035 the proportion of UK oil and gas demand met by net imports could increase by around 10%, adding significantly to the trade deficit.
    • The Energy Security Investment Mechanism level is calculated from 20-year historic averages based on World Bank data for oil, and Independent Commodity Intelligence Services for gas. The last time monthly average prices were at or below this level was in March 2021 for gas and August 2021 for oil.
    • Based on the independent OBR’s forecast the Energy Security Investment Mechanism won’t be triggered until before the tax’s planned end date in March 2028.
  • PRESS RELEASE : HMRC issues £3.2 million in money laundering penalties [June 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : HMRC issues £3.2 million in money laundering penalties [June 2023]

    The press release issued by HM Treasury on 8 June 2023.

    HMRC has published details on hundreds of businesses who have been fined for breaching anti-money laundering rules.

    Hundreds of businesses fined a total of £3.2 million for breaching anti-money laundering rules have been named by HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC).

    The 240 supervised businesses named today were fined between 1 July and 31 December 2022 by HMRC for breaching Money Laundering Regulations aimed at preventing criminals from exploiting illicit cash.

    Certain types of business are required to register with HMRC which is a supervisory body for Money Laundering Regulations.

    Xpress Money Services Ltd, based in London, was hit with a large fine of £1.4 million for failing to carry out risk assessments, not having appropriate anti-money laundering controls, and failing to conduct proper due diligence checks.

    HMRC’s work with other enforcement agencies and government departments to tackle economic crime and crack down on breaches is working to drive non-compliant firms out of business. This means that the number of money service businesses has fallen by around a third from 1,508 in 2020 to 1,049 in 2023, and the number of money service business agents has reduced from 35,507 to 30,217 in the same period.

    Nick Sharp, HMRC’s Deputy Director of Economic Crime, Fraud Investigation Service, said:

    Money laundering is not a victimless crime. We are here to help businesses protect themselves from criminal attacks and will continue to tackle the minority of businesses which do not comply with the Money Laundering Regulations.

    Serious and organised crime costs the UK billions of pounds every year and our anti-money laundering supervision is a vital tool in combatting that.

    In addition to the named businesses, another 179 companies received smaller fines totalling more than £200,000 for rule breaches.

    Money service businesses provide vital services to the community, offering currency exchange, money transmission and cheque cashing. However, they can be exploited by criminals to launder the proceeds of crime, so must have a robust risk assessment and policies, controls, and procedures to prevent this.

    HMRC supervises tens of thousands of businesses across the UK under Money Laundering Regulations, and helps these firms protect themselves from criminals who seek to launder cash or finance terrorism.

    Guidance for money service businesses on anti-money laundering rules is available on GOV.UK.

    Further information

    A full list of the named companies who have received fines or suspensions under these regulations is available on GOV.UK:

    Number of named businesses by UK nation and English region

    Devolved nation or English region Number of named businesses fined for breaches between 1 July 2022 to 31 December 2022
    Northern Ireland 12
    Wales 6
    Scotland 3
    England includes: 219:
    Greater London 86
    South East 28
    North West 26
    East of England 23
    West Midlands 17
    North East 15
    East Midlands 13
    South West 11

    Businesses which do not follow anti-money laundering regulations can be fined and lose their licence to operate in the UK.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Network of fake companies shut down following Bounce Back Loan fraud [June 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Network of fake companies shut down following Bounce Back Loan fraud [June 2023]

    The press release issued by HM Treasury on 6 June 2023.

    11 sham companies were part of a group that fraudulently claimed UK-taxpayer funds and transferred the money to Hong Kong.

    The Insolvency Service has successfully secured the winding-up of 11 companies for their part in a scheme which orchestrated systematic fraud against UK taxpayers during the covid-19 pandemic.

    Between them, the companies claimed £500,000 through the Bounce Back Loan scheme. The companies claimed to be registered at various offices in Berkshire, Lancashire, London and Shropshire, however the Insolvency Service investigation could not identify trading premises for any of the businesses, nor that they had ever traded.

    Nine of the companies were found to have claimed the maximum available £50,000 through the Bounce Back Loan scheme, with one company even claiming two loans. Investigators found a host of links between the various companies, including the use of common addresses, with funds being moved between them before ultimately being transferred to entities registered in Hong Kong.

    The companies were identified by investigators due to their links to five other companies that had previously been wound up by the Insolvency Service in 2021 and 2022. These had themselves been responsible for fraudulently claiming £250,000 between them in Bounce Back Loans and £350,000 in Small Business Grants.

    The Official Receiver was appointed liquidator of the 11 companies closed down by the court at the hearing on 22 May 2023. The Official Receiver is working to trace the funds and those responsible, with a view to recovering the money.

    Dave Hope, Chief Investigator at the Insolvency Service, said:

    We want to ensure the UK is a safe and fair place to trade, and if there is evidence sham companies are operating and involved in the systematic abuse of taxpayers’ money, we will take action to have them shut down.

    These rogue firms abused the government’s support for genuine businesses in their time of greatest need.

    Background

    • Laslett Industries Limited (company reg no 11690274)
    • JP Capital Management Ltd (formerly called Hampton Brookers Limited) (company reg no 11690206)
    • CMJA Limited (company reg no 11690056)
    • JK Distributions Limited (company reg no 11667454)
    • Kubrick Trade Ltd (company reg no 11386566)
    • Lowe Brokers Limited (company reg no 11474219)
    • Rubeum Auri Limited (company reg no 11886277)
    • Share Apartment Limited (company reg no 12248395)
    • Stella Management Limited (company reg no 11886188)
    • Globexel Ltd (company reg no 12063877)
    • JLS Enterprises Limited (company reg no 11830409)

    The grounds for winding up the 11 companies included, variously: being vehicles for the abuse of the BBL Scheme; being a vehicle for the abuse of an invoice financing agreement; lack of transparency; failure to cooperate with the investigation; failure to maintain, preserve and/or deliver up adequate accounting records; failure to file statutory accounts and confirmation statements; facilitating fraudulent activity.

    The companies were wound up by the High Court of Justice, Business and Property Courts Manchester on 22 May 2023

    The Official Receiver was appointed as liquidator of the 11 companies on 22 May 2023 following the winding up orders being made by District Judge Ranson