Vantage EBI Earth – Further Information

As we move closer to the implementation of the EBI portfolio changes, I wanted to update you with more detail on why I am recommending the new Vantage Earth portfolios, as well as some operational developments with timings and cost.

Why switch to Vantage EBI Earth?

EBI has been working over the past 12 months to create a portfolio which allows you to:

  1. Maximise returns for your level of given risk and

  2. Combine Environmental, Social and Governance (“ESG”) screening criteria.

I have previously spoken about ESG so I will speak mainly here about the investment strategy.

Firstly, it is worth mentioning that the investment strategy is prioritised over ESG. This means the goal of Vantage EBI Earth is primarily to maximise your return for your given level of risk. The secondary objective is to cut carbon emissions to meet the conditions of the Paris Climate Agreement and to exclude certain sectors (such as weapons manufacturers) where the investment strategy allows.

The following goes into some light technical detail, but it is worth gaining an understanding how this approach is likely to be of benefit to you. The table below shows important characteristics of your current investment solution; Vital EBI UK Bias, compared with the newly constructed portfolio Vantage EBI Earth. The table only provides an illustration for Portfolio 100, the highest risk option.

There are three characteristics we regard as important when selecting appropriate investments for our clients:

  1. Risk/volatility

  2. Maximum historical loss

  3. Expected return

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When choosing the optimal investment solution for my clients, my primary objective is to ensure that the investment returns are maximised for any given level of risk. I also want to make sure my clients are comfortable with the highest historical loss associated with each portfolio, given previous market corrections.

Looking at the table, there are two points I would like to highlight:

  1. The columns relating to risk (Volatility/Risk and Maximum Historical Loss) are lower for Vantage EBI Earth compared to Vital UK Bias.

This means you are taking less risk with Vantage EBI Earth.

  1. The simulated historical return is higher for Vantage EBI Earth.

This means for each unit of risk you are taking your expected return should be higher.

Using a car journey analogy, it is expected you will arrive at your destination (say, retirement) quicker (higher return) and the ride is expected to be smoother (less volatility along the way).

Given the above, we have concluded that Vantage EBI Earth is likely to be a more robust suite of portfolios than Vital EBI UK Bias. For this reason, I am recommending you move your existing investments with EBI into the corresponding, risk-rated Vantage EBI Earth portfolio. As explained in my earlier e-mails, my wife and I will be moving our own investments and pensions into Vantage EBI Earth, as soon as the portfolios become available.

Timings

EBI originally aimed to bring the portfolio changes in early May but they have subsequently communicated to me that this has now slipped by several weeks. This is due to regulatory delays due to COVID-19 and is completely outside of EBI’s control.

Cost

As previously mentioned, EBI has negotiated institutional discounts for the new portfolios of between 0.06% to 0.11%. This means you are gaining access to the new range at a cheaper rate than would have been the case without EBI’s institutional buying power; I should point out that these portfolios are not available to the general public.  

In my previous e-mail I made a cost comparison which showed that the new portfolios were a little cheaper than the old. Unfortunately, EBI had not included in its figures its own annual fee of 0.12%, this has obviously increased total costs slightly, they have apologised for this omission. EBI have now corrected the cost comparison table and the updated figures can be seen below.

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Despite this very small increase in overall costs, I remain satisfied that the benefits of the new range of portfolios more than make up for this. Although this is my recommendation, you will be under no obligation to make these changes, if you do not wish to do so.

Please do not hesitate to contact me if you have any concerns or questions relating to the planned improvements. 

I will be writing to you again to seek your permission to implement the recommended changes, over the course of the next few weeks.

Yours sincerely,

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Graham Ponting CFP Chartered MCSI

Managing Partner

Introducing StayPrivate our Secure E-Mail Service

This is just a short note to introduce our new secure e-mail system called StayPrivate. StayPrivate ensures that important e-mails are kept secure, allowing us to communicate safely and privately with you.

You will continue to receive non-sensitive e-mails from us in the usual fashion. However, IF an e-mail contains personal or sensitive information, such as Statements/Valuations/Personal Financial data etc., we will send it via StayPrivate. The message will still arrive in your usual e-mail account, but to access its content you will need to click on the secure link and set your own four-digit PIN. This could be a PIN you already use elsewhere, thus avoiding the need to come up with yet another unique number.  

This will take you straight to your own secure area within StayPrivate, where you can read, download, and reply to communications. You will also find a convenient history of all previous secure e-mails you have sent or received.

There is no need to download any software or set any complicated passwords, but for extra convenience, you can download the StayPrivate app onto your mobile device – available free on from both Apple and Google app stores, if you wish.

With cybercrime on the increase and the growing importance of online privacy and security, we are committed to ensuring the safety of your personal data. We believe that implementing StayPrivate is an important step in enabling us to keep your information safe.

If you have any queries, please do not hesitate to contact to us. I hope you will have a great experience with StayPrivate and that you will agree, this is a significant positive step.

As always, if you have any questions about the above or any other related financial matter, please do not hesitate to get in touch.

Yours sincerely,

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Graham Ponting CFP Chartered MCSI

Managing Partner

ESG Brief Update

I do hope you are keeping well and beginning to take advantage of the gradual easing of some of the lockdown restrictions, seeing family in the garden and maybe even popping out to the pub! I shall be visiting my local this evening armed with gloves, a hot water bottle and a woolly hat, I can’t wait!

As the heading suggests, this is just a very brief note with reference to my communications on the introduction of Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) screening within the EBI Portfolios.

EBI had hoped to be completing this by mid-April but it now looks as though the new portfolios will not be fully ready until 6th May but as I am keen to make the changes to my own investments first (just to ensure all goes smoothly), realistically it will be mid-May before we roll out the changes to our clients.

I will be in touch again in due course.

Have a lovely weekend in the meantime.

As always, if you have any questions about the above or any other related financial matter, please do not hesitate to get in touch.

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Graham Ponting CFP Chartered MCSI

Managing Partner

 

Lack of transparency over fund charges!

I was quite shocked and very disappointed to read the following article in the Money Section of the Sunday Times yesterday.

It appears that, even in 2021, some providers are still able to disguise the true cost of buying and holding funds on their investment platforms. This is particularly galling to me because the rules around cost disclosure for Financial Advisers are so very clear and rigorously enforced.  

The article below was written by David Blenchly:

Fund fees that are three times more than you think!

“Investors are asked to pay on average almost twice as much in fees as the “at a glance” costs shown on the websites of the largest investment platforms. In some cases, the full cost of buying and holding a fund is almost three times as much as the charge advertised on the fund overview page, according to research from SCM Direct, the wealth manager run by Alan and Gina Miller, who campaign for greater transparency in the investment industry.

Two decades on from research by the City regulator — the Financial Services Authority at the time — showing that up to 50 per cent of fees were hidden, little has been done to rectify the problem, Alan Miller said.

“In any other area this would almost certainly be deemed illegal or mis-selling,” he said. There is no regulation to stipulate exactly how and where full charges should be displayed.

SCM’s research looked at the breakdown of fees on Hargreaves Lansdown and Fidelity for the 20 largest funds within the UK All Companies sector.

It found that the average at-a-glance net charge shown on Hargreaves for funds in the sector was 0.78 per cent. Yet when platform costs, transaction costs and performance fees were factored in, the full charge was 1.5 per cent.

The average fees on the initial page of Fidelity’s site were 1.07 per cent. Yet the total charge was 1.49 per cent, including performance fees and platform costs.

For the JPM UK Equity Core fund, Hargreaves showed a net charge of 0.33 per cent. When all the charges were added up, the fund cost 1.09 per cent.

On Hargreaves, investors must click on the “costs” tab at the top of the fund page to learn of all the charges. A Hargreaves spokesperson said: “Our fact sheets clearly detail all the costs investors will pay for their investment including the platform fee, and after deducting the savings HL clients enjoy.”

For Fidelity you must click on the “charges & documents” tab for more, but not all, fee information.

“We do not show the service charge here as it can vary for different customers,” Fidelity said. Fidelity gives no breakdown of how much this might add up to.

It added: “We are careful to ensure customers know what they are paying for. The key stats page and the charges and documents page show the fund charges clearly. We highlight, ‘Please note that service charges will also apply.’ The cost of a fund and service charge is shown in the pre-sales illustration document.”

Summary

I am genuinely concerned that some investors eschew financial advice because they think it is too expensive and that they can do better on their own by investing via sites such as Hargreaves Lansdown, mentioned above. When we actually look at this equation properly, we see that access to high quality financial advice is actually very affordable by comparison.

As an example, a client with Clearwater will pay the following for our full, comprehensive Financial Planning service. The annual percentage figures assume an ISA portfolio of £500,000 invested on Transact and in Portfolio EBIP 60 (the most popular portfolio):

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As we can see from the article above, the real average cost of investing with Hargreaves Lansdown is 1.50% per annum and not the 0.78% per annum advertised. Thus, the true, additional cost of engaging the services of a Chartered Financial Planning firm amounts to just 0.092% per annum; I like to think we are worth it but you will be the better judge.

I completely agree with the Millers that this wilful lack of transparency by these platforms should be illegal or, at best, deemed mis-selling.

For the record, the Clearwater charges outlined in the table are fully inclusive, including an allowance for trading, as is required by the Financial Conduct Authority.

As always, if you have any questions about the above or any other related financial matter, please do not hesitate to get in touch.

Yours sincerely,

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Graham Ponting CFP Chartered MCSI

Managing Partner

Enhancements to our investment proposition – Further Information!

As promised in my e-mail on this subject last week, I am writing today to provide you with some more information on the decision by EBI to apply Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) screening to all their Portfolios and also, the move from the EBI Vital to EBI Vantage service.

I will provide some more information on the Vantage service first.

The EBI Vantage Service

I don’t intend to retype the contents of my earlier e-mail but in brief summary, the Vantage service provides for automatic rebalancing, automatic fund switches (when appropriate) and it reduces the amount of paperwork clients will need to sign. Hitherto, this service was available only at additional cost but as EBI has grown, it has been able to negotiate access to institutional fund classes which has led to cost reductions. The end result of this, is that Vantage is now cheaper than the Vital service which we are currently using.

The following table highlights the approximate cost savings for each Portfolio:

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OCF stands for ‘Ongoing Charges Figure’ and is expressed as an annual percentage. The figures shown represent the total annual cost of the Investment Portfolio(s) but do not include charges to Clearwater (which are not changing) or wrapper costs.

An average saving of 0.05% per annum might not sound a great deal but for a Portfolio valued at £500,000, this equates to £250.00 per year, which I am sure most people will be able to find a better use for.

Moving to Vantage essentially means you will be getting more for less, and let’s face it, that doesn’t happen very often!

Turning now to the inclusion of ESG screening in all of the above Portfolios:

ESG

As above, I will not go over the content from the previous e-mail again but I have provided some links to our website below where you can find more information.

ESG Investing - ESG Screening   

This is an easily accessible infographic which explains concisely what ESG means.

ESG Investing – Traditional vs ESG Portfolios

This infographic highlights the key differences between the old approach and the new.

ESG Investing – Asset Allocation

Using Portfolio 60 as an example, this infographic shows how assets will be allocated within the Portfolios.

Earth Portfolios Brochure – 2021

This is a more detailed look at the principles behind ESG screening.

Summary

In very brief summary, the changes proposed are entirely positive, they will definitely lead to lower charges and it is hoped, higher returns. I have no axe to grind at all here, we (but not you) will be involved in a quite a lot of work implementing these changes but we will be receiving no additional fees whatsoever, our sole motivation, as it always is, is wanting to do the right thing for our clients.

There is nothing for you to do at the moment; I will be writing to you again in around mid-April, when the new Portfolios will be fully available. There will be one form for Transact Investors to sign but no form is required if you are invested on the Standard Life Platform, we will just need confirmation via e-mail that you are happy for us to effect these changes on your behalf.

I am very excited about these enhancements to our investment proposition and I will be first to be making the change, but if you do have any questions or concerns, please do not hesitate to get in touch.

Yours sincerely

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Graham Ponting CFP Chartered MCSI

Managing Partner

 

Enhancements to our investment proposition!

This is just a brief note to update you on some exciting developments from our investment partners EBI. A further, more detailed e-mail will follow next week but don’t worry, it’s all positive news.

You may recall that I wrote to you a few weeks ago discussing the availability of the EBI Earth Portfolios, this is a separate suite of investments running alongside the standard Portfolios; the main difference being that the Earth Portfolios are constructed using ESG screening.

As a reminder, ESG stands for Environmental, Social and Governance. What does that mean? Well, you could say ESG is the food equivalent of ‘free range’ or ‘organic’ options – it is the same food but farmed in a more sustainable way. Where applied to your investments – it is the same investment portfolio but created with an awareness of how the companies included manage their impact on the environment. Examples of the areas ESG is looking to improve in include the following:

  • Environmental – Air & Water pollution, Biodiversity & Deforestation, Emissions, Energy Efficiency

  • Social – Gender & Diversity, Human Rights, Labour Standards

  • Governance – Executive Compensation, Bribery & Corruption, Board Composition

The key change is that, following extensive research, EBI have decided to apply ESG screening to ALL of their Portfolios, essentially rendering the non-Earth Portfolios surplus to requirements. Accordingly, we will shortly be asking for your permission to transition across to the new Portfolios. There will be no charge for these changes and as an enthusiastic supporter of the EBI process, I will be switching my own family’s investments, at the earliest opportunity.

These changes will not be happening until the beginning of April but I will be writing with some more information next week.

EBI have produced a wealth of material supporting their recommendations and this can be made available to you, on request.

The EBI Vantage Service

In addition to these portfolio changes, I believe now is a good time to move our clients from EBI’s ‘Vital’ service to their ‘Vantage’ service.

The main benefit to users of the Vantage service is the availability of ‘discounted share classes’, more formally known as ‘institutional share classes’. EBI have negotiated for the benefit of investors, discounts worth an aggregated 0.11% on equity assets and 0.06% on fixed interest assets. This reduces the cost of the underling portfolio for you.

The Vantage service also provides automatic rebalancing and all future fund switches will be handled by EBI. They aim to minimise the frequency of rebalancing and the amount of trades; therefore, reducing the cost of rebalancing overall. EBI have recently analysed data to show that the rebalancing solution, along with the discounts they have obtained from fund managers has more than covered the management fee since inception for most portfolios. Their most recent study illustrates how the returns of Vantage portfolios, when compared to the same portfolio rebalanced annually, not only covered the 0.12% management fee, but also on average, added a premium to the returns (in all portfolios excluding the bond portfolio).

Lastly the Vantage services has the added benefit of reducing the amount of paperwork you need to sign.

Keep an eye on your Inbox next week for more information.

As always, if you have any questions about the above or any other finance related matter, please do not hesitate to get in touch.

Yours sincerely

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Graham Ponting CFP Chartered MCSI

Managing Partner

 

The Budget!

Doubtless by now you have had an opportunity to digest the main provisions of the Budget last Wednesday.

I don’t normally send a list of the announced tax changes as these are widely available but if you would like a useful, easily digestible summary, please let me know as James Hay have provided me with a Budget Guide, which I will happily share with you.

I don’t think there were too many surprises announced last week, the Budget was mainly focussed on providing continuing support for businesses, at least while the social distancing restrictions remain in place. The true long-term damage to the employment market won’t become clear until the furlough scheme ends and businesses are once again responsible for the payment of their own workforces’ wages. How many companies have been kept artificially afloat through the Chancellor’s largesse, remains to be seen.

There were some tax rises through the back door, so to speak; some like to refer to these as ‘stealth taxes’ but on this occasion the Chancellor was not terribly stealthy at all, first leaking and then announcing boldly in the House of Commons that he was going to freeze a number of allowances. Inevitably this pulls more people into the tax net through a process known as fiscal drag. Following the Budget most people surveyed felt that this move was fair in that the country is facing an unprecedented debt mountain and at least it can be seen as progressive. It will also only have an impact on individuals as their pay rises, in terms of Income Tax and their pension fund value rises, in terms of the Lifetime Allowance. This move also enabled Rishi to stick with his pre-election pledge not to raise the main rates of Income Tax, even though the effect is essentially the same.

The Chancellor is on a narrow tightrope, he knows he must not let the debt get out of control and at the same time, he must not risk the expected economic recovery by taxing people too heavily so that they don’t feel able to spend when the economy finally reopens.

His increasing of Corporation Tax from 19% to 25% seems like a sensible move; our Corporation Tax rate of 19% was, by some margin, the lowest in the developed world and all he needed to do was reduce that margin. If we are still the cheapest place to setup shop then businesses will not be inclined to flee these shores, which is always the fear with higher corporate taxes. In addition, the man in street will feel that this rise does not directly affect him, forgetting of course that higher taxes will mean less money for dividends (most people own shares in their pensions and ISAs), less money for wage rises and the possibility of passing on the tax increase in the form of higher prices. In the end, we do all pay!

Inflation is a concern but I don’t think an immediate one. The stimulus that has been provided by effectively printing money and the money that has been saved by many during the pandemic coupled with a contraction in manufacturing and therefore supply, could see inflation rise above the Bank of England’s target of 2.0% per annum. The blunt instrument that is usually employed to tackle inflation is interest rates but I can’t see that being on the cards in the short-term, mainly because increasing interest rates, rather like raising personal taxes, could risk snuffing out the recovery. As a result, I expect the Bank of England to allow a little bit of inflation in the short-term, a side benefit of which is that the money we owe as a country will reduce in real terms. In addition, any rise in inflation is likely to be temporary, so I don’t think it will be seen as particularly worrying, as long as it is indeed, short-term.         

In very brief summary, we might have dodged some painful tax rises this time around but that doesn’t mean they are not coming.

These are just my thoughts of course and I might be entirely wrong (it has been known); we’ll just have to wait and see.

As always, if you have any questions about this piece or any other finance related matter, please do not hesitate to get in touch.

Yours sincerely

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Graham Ponting CFP Chartered MCSI

Managing Partner

It’s That Time of the Year Again!

As we approach the end of the 2020/21 tax-year, thoughts inevitably turn to end of year tax planning and any unused allowances (ISA, Pensions etc.) that may be available.

The ISA allowance for 2020/21 is £20,000 and if you have not made a subscription (or perhaps you have only made a part subscription), there is still time to use this allowance, if you have the funds available.

Since 6th April 2016, in addition to the subscription, it has been possible to top-up ISAs by any amounts withdrawn during the tax-year, including any charges deducted. This means that even if you have not made a subscription this year but have ISAs from previous years, your personal ISA Allowance may be more than £20,000 because of charges deducted during the year. If you made a subscription at the beginning of the tax-year, you may still have a residual allowance left because of these deductions which can be utilised by 5th April 2021.

If you have a Standard Life Wrap Account, the scope for top-up (in addition to any unused subscription) does not apply, unless you take physical withdrawals from your ISA. This is because Standard Life deduct ISA charges from the cash held in your Portfolio and not from the ISA itself.

If you have a Transact Wrap Account and you would like to know your personal ISA allowance for the remainder of the 2020/21 tax year, you can access this information on the Transact website. From your home page, select reports and from the drop-down menu, select ISA Subscriptions.

If you would like to use the balance of your allowance before 5th April, please ensure you advise us of your intentions before the end of March; we will be very pleased to assist.

Just for information, the ISA Allowance for 2021/21 is likely to remain £20,000 each, so £40,000 per couple.

Possible changes to Capital Gains Tax (CGT) in the Budget on March 3rd

There has been speculation that Rishi Sunak might try and align CGT rates with Income Tax rates in the upcoming Budget, the effect would be to significantly increase the tax payable on disposal of investment assets not held within ISAs and Pensions.

Currently, rates for CGT are 10% for Basic Rate Taxpayers and 20% for Higher Rate Taxpayers, where property assets are concerned (excluding the main residence) the rates are 18% and 28% respectively. There is an allowance each year (currently) of £12,300 before CGT becomes payable.

Income Tax rates of course, are 20%,40% and 45%, so potentially quite a step up!

Is there anything you might be able to do to lessen this blow? The truth is not very much but it might be sensible to at least consider using this year’s CGT allowance before the end of the Tax Year. If you do wish to look into this, please do let us know and we will try to assist.

If you have a General Investment Account (GIA) with us worth more than £250k, we will be contacting you individually over the course of the next 10 days or so.   

Despite the speculation, The Sunday Times this weekend seemed to suggest that such a change was unlikely.  

Most of our clients will not be affected in any event, as most assets are held within ISAs and Pensions, where CGT does not apply.

As always, if you have any questions about this piece or any other finance related matter, please do not hesitate to get in touch.

Yours sincerely

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Graham Ponting CFP Chartered MCSI

Managing Partner

Alternatives to a Wealth Tax?

My last missive on speculation about a possible wealth tax raised a few eyebrows, even though I think it is safe to say, it is unlikely to get the go ahead in the upcoming Budget. It did remind me however, of a piece written by Giles Coren, published in the Times, on 1st September 2012, when we were under the Conservative/Lib-Dem coalition government. It took me a while to find it, buried as it was in an old archive but find it, I did. Enjoy!

Soak the rich. Start with the mustard cords – Giles Coren

Nick Clegg’s useless tax wheeze will never work. You have to use stealth – and that means using your imagination.

If Nick Clegg wants to “hardwire fairness” into the Government’s austerity measures then he is going to have to do a lot better than implement a French-style wealth tax of 0.5 per cent on rich people’s assets because, as Denis Healey explained to Harold Wilson 350 years ago this week, rich people are too clever for that. That’s how they got rich in the first place. They’ll see a thing like that coming from a mile away and just hold all their expensive stuff behind their backs and go “tra-la-la” until the tax man walks past, or they’ll go, “Oh look, is that a cormorant?” and then stuff it all down their trousers when he looks up.

The only way to tax the rich is by stealth. Not with a “stealth tax” so unstealthy that even bone-thick Labour backbenchers can spot it without their NHS specs on, but one that is actually stealthy. Stealthy as a mink with a diamond-studded cane and a sex worker on his arm at a cocktail party on an oligarch’s yacht. A tax nobody could notice because it is just too, too clever.

If the coalition wants to save the economy without picking the pockets of the poor it need only tax the following items, then sit back and enjoy the inevitable upturn of the curve.

Red trousers

Slap a tenner on every pair of these and you’ll be half way out of the doldrums already. Just take a glance around Kensington and Chelsea on a Saturday afternoon if you don’t believe me. Nobody with a ten million quid town house in that part of the world appears to own any other type of weekend trouser. If red slacks did not exist I am sure they would be walking up and down the Fulham Road in their underpants. Tax those, Mr Clegg, and nobody will raise an eyebrow.

Mustard cords

Rich bastards looking for loopholes will no doubt be advised by their devious accountants to move completely over into these heretofore occasional alternatives to red legwear, and thus you may find yourself compelled to tax these as well, to stop the fiscal leakage. Consider also a levy on green quilted bodywarmers.

“Builder’s Tea”

Drunk only by squawking posh hags in the South of England. Actual builders, as everyone knows, drink Red Bull for breakfast.

Labradors, Gordon setters, golden retrievers, Weimaraners, pugs, Afghans . . .

Slap huge licence fees on these elitist hounds (your spin guys should be looking for the headline “Capitalist Dogs!”) but nothing at all on pit-bull crosses, Rottweilers or Dobermans, so that your core working-class voters can still afford something to kill their toddlers, savage their nans and crap on the middle-class pavements where they take them for their morning toilet.

Heroin

As the fallout from the death of the Rausing woman has shown us, the truly super-rich can honk their way through absolute kilos of the stuff. A “smack tax” would be a great way to batter the idle rich while passing it off as some sort of namby-pamby health tax.

Football tickets

Nobody poor has been able to afford one since the end of the last century anyway. Time to profit from or tax into extinction this ridiculous pastime of the unimaginably wealthy.

Electric cars

Also, hybrids, gas-powered vehicles, bicycles and horses. Everybody knows that environmentally sustainable travel is a luxury of the super-rich. Who have you ever seen getting out of a Prius apart from Gwyneth Paltrow or Bill Gates? Honest working people drive gas-guzzling rust buckets because they don’t have the spare cash to indulge in luxuries like saving the planet. So, tax heavily any non-petrol or petrol-efficient vehicle and slash the deficit with absolutely no knock-on hardships for the poor. This is about squeezing the rich and saving the nation — the Earth can go screw itself.

Windmills/wood-burners/solar panels etc.

Same principle as above. If you’re not relying on cheap fossil-generated energy from the National Grid then you are almost certainly super-rich scum and we’re going to soak you with petrol till your eyes pop out. A 50 per cent levy on all carbon-neutral energy sources will pull us up to a practically German level of economic strength, and teach those jewellery-rattling bankocrats a lesson or two.

Books

Come on, name a poor person who reads books. You can make this looks like a tax on educational elitism, entrenched values, old technology and Bunterish Tories with their own libraries who hate black people, but in fact you’re just taxing people who think they are too good for television.

Art galleries/museums

And all other places where they serve muesli crunch bars instead of ham rolls in the canteen.

Fresh food

Who apart from the wealthy can be bothered with farm shops, farmers’ markets and little independent grocers? Frozen supermarket ready meals and fast food are good enough for the poor, so let’s put a whopping impost on any foodstuff that is less than a week old and has travelled fewer than 300 miles — the surefire indicators that evil wealthy customers are the target. Working-class voters waddling down the fizzy pop aisle at Lidl with their faces in a Ginster’s pie won’t even notice.  

Thinness

Who is thin these days apart from the wealthy? With their fresh food and their moderate alcohol intake and their gym memberships ... they make me sick (which is great because vomiting keeps me thin). Everybody’s annual tax liability must be divided by the square root of their body mass index (BMI) to create a final payment inversely proportional to how fat they are. Proper huge Northern fatties will pay practically nothing, as is only fair, and bony-arsed gold-hoarders like the Ecclestone girls, the Duke of Westminster, Seb Coe and Selina Scott will be stripped clean. The obese (or “meek” as they used to be called) will truly inherit the Earth.

Flights to Italy

Only rich people go to Italy, to buy castles off each other and whang on about the sodding tomatoes. So, double the cost of flights there, cream off 90 per cent of the revenue towards the deficit and secure more votes by using the rest to subsidise flights to such places as Faliraki and Puerto Banús where poor people like to go to get horribly burnt and beat each other up.

The Guardian

A newspaper run, written and read only by rich people, who take this miserable blatt full of leftist cant and lachrymose inclusivity bilge to assuage the guilt they feel about their rich parents, public school education, high salaries and huge Victorian houses in Hackney. Add another pound to every copy and the soppy rich gits who buy it will never notice, and nor will the poor, who will, as ever, carry on buying something jolly with bare norks in it and the odd free holiday offer for 30p.

The Lib Dems

A party that is the eccentric luxury of super-rich voters and is run entirely by people who went to Westminster School. So, slap fifty quid a year on party membership, which will either raise pots of cash to halt the slump or result in the disintegration of the party and an end to the annual deluge of unworkable hippy-dippy taxation wheezes. So, the nation wins either way. 

When I first read this, I remember thinking how it could so easily have been written by the great wordsmith himself, Alan Coren. I hope it brought a smile to your face on a drizzly February afternoon in Lockdown. I wonder if we’ll all be smiling after the real Budget on 3rd March?

As always, if you have any questions about this piece or any other finance related matter, please do not hesitate to get in touch.

Yours sincerely

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Graham Ponting CFP Chartered MCSI

Managing Partner

 

What might a Wealth Tax look like?

An alternative heading for this piece might be “If you have worked hard all of your life and been prudent, be afraid, be very afraid!”

The following is an article from yesterday’s Money Marketing by Gareth James, Head of Policy at A J Bell.

“Variants of the phrase ‘Extreme times call for extreme solutions’ reputedly date back to the era of Hippocrates.

The economic situation the nation finds itself in as a result of measures taken by the Government to fight Covid-19 has raised the prospect that tax solutions which would usually be considered extreme may be required to plug financial holes. 

The possibility of a wealth tax has not been seriously examined for almost 50 years but, in Spring 2020, the London School of Economics established a Wealth Tax Commission with that purpose in mind. 

The WTC published its final report on the prospect of a wealth tax on 9 December 2020, with the paper subject to a significant level of scrutiny ever since.

In this article we will take a look at what the WTC recommended, as well as clarifying a few items which have been reported as recommendations, but were not; we will touch on the issues with implementing a wealth tax; and we will consider the prospects that a wealth tax sees the light of day.

Key recommendations

The Commission’s starting point was that any wealth tax needed to meet four key principles, with each principle formed from research with the general public regarding the priorities around any such tax. The principles were to:

  • Raise substantial revenue - given the size of the hole in the public finances.

  • Be fair – with this defined as raising more tax from those with a greater ability to pay.

  • Be administratively efficient – so the cost of collecting should not be too high.

  • Be difficult to avoid and not encourage avoidance.

Before looking at the report’s recommendations it is worth confirming a few points which have been described as recommendations but were in fact not. For example, the WTC did not recommend a specific wealth threshold at which a tax should apply, or the rate of tax which should be used.

The revenue which could be raised using several options was modelled with most attention focused on, but not to the extent of a recommendation, the option of the wealth tax applying on net assets worth more than £500,000.

The tax would be assessed on individuals rather than households, with the rate of tax being 5 per cent - albeit with a standard payment period of five years, so allowing a tax rate of 1 per cent to be paid in each of those five years.

Arguably the key, and most controversial, recommendation of the WTC was that the value of an individual’s main residence (net of any mortgage), their private pensions, and the value of business assets should be considered when working out whether the threshold for liability was crossed.    

Based on that model it was estimated that £260bn in tax would be raised. To achieve the same level of revenue from increases to other taxes over five years it was estimated that basic rate income tax would need to increase by 9p, or all income taxes by 6p.

A threshold at £500,000 was estimated to affect 8m individuals, or 17 per cent of the UK’s adult population.

If the threshold was only payable on assets over £2m rather than £500,000, the tax take was estimated to fall to £80bn.

Whilst rates and specific dates of implementation were not recommended, a number of broader points were.

A one-off tax

First, that a wealth tax needs to be credibly one-off. A key reason for not recommending an annual tax is that it would drive economically inefficient avoidance behaviours from those who might have to pay it.

It therefore seems obvious that, if the one-off nature of a wealth tax is not credible, this would still drive those broader, negative economic impacts.  

Minimising avoidance was also a significant factor in the WTC’s separate recommendation that the wealth tax should not be pre-announced. 

The recommendation that the tax should be based on the value of all assets (including business wealth, private pensions and main residences net of mortgage) was to meet the principle of fairness.

Why should two individuals with wealth of £1m, one primarily linked to listed equities and the other linked to their business or residence, be treated significantly differently? 

An issue created by the inclusion of pensions and properties derives from their lack of liquidity – namely the ability to pay the tax.

Those who haven’t, or can’t, access their pensions are given scope to delay payment until they do so, or until they reach state pension age.

Payment is ultimately expected to be taken from tax-free cash. The report also recommends the introduction of a statutory deferral scheme for those with liquidity issues, perhaps those who are property rich, but cash poor.

The valuation of assets is to be based on open market value at the date of assessment. The report indicates that pensions would be simple to value, which is probably true in the case of defined contribution schemes.

However, I suspect the proposal to use the CETV to value defined benefit schemes will create a fair amount of debate given how much higher this is likely to be than the valuation for lifetime allowance purposes. 

One important point to note around pensions is that no value is to be given to State Pension rights. This is linked to their status as a state benefit, rather than a personal asset.

Interestingly, applying the same ‘state benefits’ principle in reverse means that debts associated with student loans are not deducted from the wealth assessment.

Issues around residence of individuals are recommended to be dealt with by pro-rating the tax liability based on place of residence over the previous seven years. So those who have emigrated from, or moved to, the UK in the last seven years would still potentially be liable, but with the tax reduced to reflect their period outside the UK. 

A final recommendation worth noting is that low value items, with the report suggesting a threshold of £3,000, should be excluded from any wealth assessment. Primarily this is because the cost of valuing the item would outweigh any tax liability which arises.

Before turning to the prospects for a wealth tax, let’s look at a quick example of the potential impact on an individual:

'Wealth tax' case study

Frank has a house worth £500,000, but with an outstanding mortgage of £150,000. In addition, Frank has a pension worth £200,000 and ISAs worth £50,000.

After deducting the value of Frank’s mortgage from his property, Frank’s net wealth is calculated as £600,000 meaning he has a liability of £5,000 on the excess of £100,000 over the £500,000 threshold.

He could choose to pay £1,000 a year over the next 5 years or, because all of the excess can be attributed to the value of his pension, he could defer payment until he accesses his pension or reaches state pension age.

Will we see a wealth tax?

It’s important to remember that this isn’t a paper prepared at the request of the Government, although both the Treasury and HMRC are thanked for their assistance in its preparation.

The WTC felt the evidence base around the idea of a wealth tax was deficient given the idea hasn’t been seriously considered for so long, so set out to fill that gap.

The fact the report backed the introduction of a one-off wealth tax will also naturally attract some attention from the government, as well as the wider financial commentariat.

The report itself opens with comments from Rishi Sunak given in response to a Parliamentary question in July 2020, of “No, I do not believe that now is the time, or ever would be the time, for a wealth tax”.

That would seem to pour cold water on the prospects of a wealth tax but, as already stated, these are extraordinary times.  The deficit is expected to reach 19 per cent of GDP in coming months; the highest figure ever in peacetime; twice the level at the peak of the 2008 financial crash, and twice the level when the Chancellor gave his thoughts on a wealth tax.

The government made a manifesto pledge not to raise income tax, National Insurance Contributions or VAT. Will the government risk breaking that pledge, or will it have to consider extraordinary new avenues?

Pensions tax relief is another option – perhaps removing higher and additional rate tax relief and potentially replacing it with a flat rate?

At face value this appears a simple change but, as more than one Chancellor and their supporting team at the Treasury has come to realise, it really is a horrendously complex change to make.

Significant numbers of ‘victims’ would be seen in defined benefit and workplace schemes on far lower salaries than might at first be thought.

Research has consistently shown support amongst the general public for a wealth/fortune tax. In the WTC’s report it was clearly shown to be a more popular option than an increase in income tax, CGT, IHT or council tax.  

An obvious question is whether this support is limited to the point where people become personally affected by a wealth tax. If set at the £500,000 level covered in the report, many people will be liable who might not have considered that to be a risk when expressing support for the idea.

If a tax were introduced there would also naturally be scepticism about its one-off nature. Whenever the topic of one-off taxes is mentioned the fact that income tax was originally intended to be a one-off tax to cover the cost of the Napoleonic Wars, but is now a core ongoing part of the tax system, is brought up.

This is a slightly simplistic analysis of the position, given there have since been short periods during which income taxes were abolished. And of course, a key reason why income taxes have remained popular is the increased efficiency of taxing income in the current labour market rather than taxing capital.

Reviews of several other taxes, more closely linked to the government, are underway or have recently been completed. The House of Commons Treasury committee has launched a ‘Tax after Coronavirus’ inquiry. The Office for Tax Simplification is in the process of completing a review of CGT and in July 2019 completed a review into IHT. 

The next Budget is due on 3 March 2021. The WTC’s report will lead to further speculation over a wealth tax but, given we are some way out of the Covid woods just yet, it feels as though in early March the focus will still most likely be on protecting the economy and health of the nation, rather than introducing new taxes.”

Some interesting points there, including a general view that the introduction of a Wealth Tax seems unlikely during the tenure of the current Conservative Government. I do wonder however, whether Sir Kier Starmer and his Shadow Chancellor, Anneliese Dodds, will be leafing through the report with piqued interest!   

As always, if you have any questions about this piece or any other finance related matter, please do not hesitate to get in touch.

Yours sincerely

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Graham Ponting CFP Chartered MCSI

Managing Partner