Summer Budget 2015 – Landlords Reactions

Summer Budget 2015 – Landlords Reactions

14:00 PM, 8th July 2015, About 10 years ago 9619

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Budget 2015 - Landlords Reactions

The concern is;

Budget proposals to “restrict finance cost relief to individual landlords”Summer Budget 2015 - Landlords Reactions

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NW Landlord

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20:04 PM, 29th February 2016, About 9 years ago

Hi Douglas

I totally agree with you to say I'm angry with that tool down in London is an understatement. I to have grafted to build my portfolio and spend a fortune keeping them up to a top notch standard and I am not going to let him take my business down so his cronies can get a bigger share what he's doing is criminal in my eyes would people still work if they had to pay all of there wages in tax and where made bankrupt for the shortfall I think not

Gareth Wilson

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20:37 PM, 29th February 2016, About 9 years ago

"Under cover of storm clouds, Osborne plans stealth tax subterfuge

While preserving tax rates of his core audience chancellor will ensure people pay extra without knowing he is to blame"

http://www.theguardian.com/politics/2016/feb/28/osborne-stealth-tax-subterfuge-storm-clouds

Appalled Landlord

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21:15 PM, 29th February 2016, About 9 years ago

Reply to the comment left by "Mark Shine" at "29/02/2016 - 18:29":

Hi Mark

At the end of the first article you linked to, Jaye Cook says he has re-mortgaged some of his 5 properties and invested hundreds of thousands in shares in companies which buy properties to let:
http://www.propertyreporter.co.uk/landlords/rate-rise-could-force-landlords-into-debt-by-2020.html

nterest on that part of the re-mortgaging which took the overall loan up to the original purchase price of a property will be subject to Clause 24 so he will get 20% relief on it.

But he will get no relief on the interest on the rest of the re-mortgaging as it was used to buy shares in companies, not to buy property

He will pay tax on his dividends from the property companies at the new increased rates.

This is not a strategy that I would adopt.

Chris Byways

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21:16 PM, 29th February 2016, About 9 years ago

Yet again, GOs mates pay only 1.9% tax.....

FTSE 100 companies paid tax equal to 23% of their profits last year, almost a quarter less than in 2010, according to figures from accountants UHY Hacker Young.

The figures from UHY Hacker Young show that after property and real estate firms, which had an effective rate of just 1.9% because as real estate investment trusts they do not face corporation tax, ..........

http://www.theguardian.com/politics/2016/feb/29/tax-paid-by-ftse-100-firms-falls-by-nearly-a-quarter-since-2010

Gareth Wilson

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8:38 AM, 1st March 2016, About 9 years ago

"Not one of the raft of buy to let rule changes being introduced by Chancellor George Osborne - ostensibly to help first time buyers have a ‘more level playing field’ - will actually directly help first timers, according to Savills.

“None of the measures aimed at buy-to-let investors will directly help the prospective first-time buyer overcome the underlying deposit hurdle. Neither will Government schemes eliminate this issue for the bulk of younger households. Therefore, the underlying demand for private rented accommodation is likely to continue to rise” explains Lucian Cooks, Savills’ director of residential research."

https://www.lettingagenttoday.co.uk/breaking-news/2016/2/current-buy-to-let-changes-wont-directly-help-first-time-buyers-savills-warns

S.E. Landlord

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8:50 AM, 1st March 2016, About 9 years ago

Reply to the comment left by "Appalled Landlord" at "29/02/2016 - 21:15":

So in some circumstances tax relief is being given on borrowings for investing in shares - up to the original purchase price of the buy to let property.

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10:32 AM, 1st March 2016, About 9 years ago

Reply to the comment left by "David Price" at "29/02/2016 - 15:03":

50 flats in one building? Impressive. Must be a tower block? Thought about putting you name at the top of it a la Donald trump style? ?

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10:38 AM, 1st March 2016, About 9 years ago

Reply to the comment left by "Kevin Thomson" at "29/02/2016 - 14:52":

Hi Kevin. ..this has recently already been discussed on the stamp duty thread. Exemptions only seem to be from moving from main residence to another. Moving from rented to new residence is not listed as an exemption probably to cover the scenario you describe which effectively would allow the building of a buy to let property sdt surcharge free buy stealth.

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10:50 AM, 1st March 2016, About 9 years ago

Reply to the comment left by "NW Landlord" at "29/02/2016 - 17:27":

I am not so sure NW. I think it will be the tenant that suffers as agents will just pass on their reduced landlord fees to tenants. I think fees that tenants pay have shot up over the years.

NW Landlord

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10:53 AM, 1st March 2016, About 9 years ago

I don't think some agents will get the chance I reckon a lot of landlords will just manage there own cutting out the 10% + management fee as cost cutting is going to become more important moving forward as the swear word beings to bite

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