Final phase of Louth housing scheme in the pipeline
Streets Chartered Accountants cover tax, employee matters, and more in new news roundup
Wilko secures new credit facility and makes big changes to leadership team
Businesses invited to have their say on new Strategic Plan for the Greater Nottingham Area
- Have the right number and types of new homes, which are built in the right places and meet the needs of the local population and diverse communities;
- Protect, enhance and increase the area’s natural resources, blue and green infrastructure, landscapes, heritage and biodiversity;
- Ensure new developments address the causes and effects of climate change, assisting each council’s ambition to become carbon neutral;
- Create vibrant and viable city and town centres, which are sustainable and are places where people want to live and work;
- Provide the right conditions for economic development which generates new jobs and economic growth, and to enable strong, safe and healthier communities.
Funding of up to £2k to help Harborough businesses grow
- Go Green – to help businesses to reduce their carbon footprints, increase energy efficiency and reduce fixed costs. (Examples last year included: funding for a new electric van for Green Shoots zero emission delivery service, and new air source heat pumps and chillers for Langton Brewery)
- Go Digital – to support digital technology solutions which improve business performance and encourage wider/online access to customers. (Examples last year included: funding to Environmental Energies Ltd for the purchase of a database to help them tendering for new contracts, and Magfiliana Ltd. for a new sublimation printer for the design and production of high-quality ties, pocket squares, and bow ties)
- Go Innovate – Support for new products or methods within your business to help improve efficiencies and create business growth. (Examples last year included: funding to Leicestershire Craft Centre for the purchase of a new glass kiln to allow them to produce their own glass art and develop craft courses)
Local investor snaps up Ilkeston warehouse unit
Barriers to small firms’ access to finance could hold back UK economic recovery, new report warns
- The Government should reverse direction from its announcement on Research and Development tax credits at the Autumn Statement that will seriously reduce spending on R&D by SMEs in the UK economy.
- The Government should introduce a VAT-based capital investment incentive, to drive up the amount of small business investment in a faster, simpler way, rather than the outgoing big business-friendly super-deduction.
- The British Business Bank should encourage the use of the Bank Referral Scheme, where lenders are required to share details of SMEs they reject for finance, so those businesses can be approached by alternative lenders, and should also expand the number of banks and approved alternative lenders in the scheme.
- The Financial Conduct Authority should reverse its decision to move fees and levies to a regressive flat-fee system, which discourages smaller finance providers from entering or remaining in the market, and ultimately limits the range of finance available to small businesses.
- The Start Up Loans scheme should be expanded from 11,000 to 15,000 loans per year, to encourage more people to give entrepreneurship a shot.
- The Business Banking Resolution Service needs to adequately address outstanding cases and clear its backlog, passing on compensation and delivering value for money. The deadline for historic cases also needs to be extended beyond February 2023.
- All future capital allowances should include second-hand capital purchases, to allow small businesses to offset the cost of upgrading their machinery without the requirement of the asset being new. A piece of equipment could be second-hand, but could still represent a significant upgrade to a small firm, helping them to boost their productivity.
- The Government should announce that the Seed Enterprise Investment Scheme will not be closed down in 2026, to provide greater certainty and longevity to users of the scheme’s investment plans. The investment limit for the scheme should be uprated in line with inflation each year.
Student accommodation scheme gets underway at The Island Quarter
2023 Business Predictions: Lesley Cree, owner of Lesley Cree Opticians
Revenue up at Mattioli Woods
Ian Mattioli MBE, Chief Executive, said: “The group delivered creditable revenue and profit before tax growth in the first six months of this financial year, despite the difficult economic and political complexities that persisted throughout the period.
“Our revenue model balances fee-based revenues for specialist advice and administration with revenues linked to the value of clients’ assets on an ad valorem basis, which has allowed the group to continue to grow and experience less sensitivity to movements from challenging investment markets.
“We continue to focus on securing good financial outcomes for our clients and putting them first in everything we do, whilst at the same time achieving both organic and acquisition based growth, and I am pleased to report further progress towards our medium-term goals. In the reporting period. The group has maintained profit margins through prudent cost management and in realising further operational efficiencies.
“Our pension and consultancy, employee benefits and private equity operating segments performed strongly during the period. Clients’ demand for advice and proactive communications by advisers with our clients in such uncertain times resulted in an increase in advisory time, with the value of new clients on-boarded in the first half over 10% higher than the equivalent period last year. The success of our new business initiatives and the strength of existing client referrals resulted in organic revenue growth of over 2%, despite a 2% fall in the value of total client assets.
“Our Maven private equity business made further strong progress during the period, enjoying healthy levels of new deal flow across all segments of the business, leading to increased transaction based revenues. Pleasingly joint-fundraising with the group became a feature of two recent Investor Partner deals generating significant fees through combining people talent and access to capital. Maven continues to enjoy a strong deal pipeline with a number of new tender opportunities during 2023 across the UK.
“Our investment and asset management business, like many others in the sector experienced some pressure on asset values, but our multi-asset funds continue to offer the highest level of diversification as we seek to manage volatility in these difficult investment markets.
“Our discretionary managed funds performed in line with their benchmarks and represented a combined value of £4.9 billion at the period end, including more than £1.0 billion managed by the group’s associate, Amati Global Investors. For the first half of the year, gross inflows into our discretionary managed funds were £314.1m (1H22: £384.8m), net inflows of £38.1m or 0.8% of opening AuM, with the balance of AuM influenced by market movements.
“During the period we continued to successfully integrate acquired businesses and our clients into the group. Of the nine acquisitions the group has made since July 2020, all are trading in-line or ahead of budget, and have delivered earnings to support full payment of any contingent consideration, building upon our track record of 34 successful acquisitions to date.
“Consolidation within the wealth management, pensions administration, asset management and financial planning sectors continues apace, and we continue to assess a strong pipeline of potential acquisition opportunities, with a disciplined approach, where all transactions are required to meet our strict investment criteria.
“Our trading outlook for the remainder of the financial year is in line with management’s expectations and the group remains well-positioned to deliver long-term sustainable shareholder returns.”