Coming to your inbox – the latest tax headlines

Dominic Thomas
April 2025  •  4 min read

Coming to your inbox – the latest tax headlines

This morning (Wednesday 23rd of April) HMRC provided a regular release of information concerning tax receipts. It makes interesting reading for those of us who work with tax for a living, but for most, well … not so much. In essence, it covers the tax collected up to the end of the 2024/25 tax year, though there is always some adjustment made. Let’s start with the headline figure.

HMRC collected £857billion in tax for 2024/25 up 3.4% on the previous year. The trend is ever upwards for the collection of tax, at least from those of us not evading it.

Graph 1

The data in the chart above shows:

  • annual receipts over the last 20 years have grown from £402.9 billion in 2005 to 2006, to £857.0 billion in 2024 to 2025
  • receipts as a proportion of GDP over the last 20 years have grown from 28.4% in 2005 to 2006, to 29.8% in 2024 to 2025
  • the slight fall in 2008 to 2010 was due to a period of economic slowdown
  • receipts fell to £584.0 billion in 2020 to 2021, due to the economic impact of the COVID-19 pandemic and the subsequent government policies to support business and individuals

Even in my small world, the sector media focuses on what stories resonate. The item that grabbed the most attention recently was about inheritance tax “up to its highest level ever!” Whilst true that £8.2bn was paid in inheritance tax, this made up less than 1% of all tax receipts. This tells us a lot about the direction of politics – a focus on the 1% rather than the majority.

This is the chart that media focus on – the rising tide of inheritance tax.

Graph 2

Of course, this is a truth and clearly £8.2billion is a lot of money and we are all aware of the reality that more inheritance tax is going to be collected due to pensions falling within the scope of the tax from April 2027. It’s a tax we feel perhaps more directly as a large chunk of an estate heads off to HMRC for doing, well… very little.

However, in the context of all taxes paid, we can see where most (57%) of tax is generated – income tax, national insurance and capital gains tax. All of which will rise due to reduced or frozen allowances (capital gains and tax bands).

Here’s the political bit that you could sense was coming… income tax, national insurance and capital gains taxes are generally not paid by the very very ultra rich. Income taxes are reduced when derived as dividends and NI is only paid on earned income. Borrowed money (borrowing against your portfolio) is not taxed (though interest is charged, it is less than tax rates) and as shares are not sold unless valuations collapse, capital gains are not triggered. Add in some tax incentives for particular investments and you may not have any tax to pay at all…

Or to put it another way…

Coming to your inbox – the latest tax headlines2025-04-27T19:26:18+01:00

Beating the market

Dominic Thomas
May 2023  •  12 min read

Beating the market

Hopefully as a client, you understand my views about investing over the long term. One of the many constant challenges to investing is the fear of missing out. This is particularly apparent when you see a chart or data revealing the outperformance of a particular Fund Manager (these are known as active fund managers). There is a tendency to imply that the Fund Manager is particularly skilled and should be looking after your life savings.

The problem is that invariably you learn this after the fact. After the outperformance has been achieved, investing at the beginning was no ‘sure thing’, but it all appears all so obvious in hindsight. The Fund Manager now sits towards the top of the tables and you probably ask yourself “why haven’t I got any of that?”.

Well, because it’s difficult to pick winning fund managers. It’s even harder to pick one that provides continued success, they invariably tend to revert to average. I get emails every day from Fund Management groups attempting to change my mind and use their funds, which have of course performed rather well lately, picking up awards along the way, (otherwise they would have nothing to say). I might argue that this is like awarding someone that has simply tossed a coin a few times – a bit unfair, but not miles off the truth. What I find amusing is their commentary about how they are positioning their fund for the new current conditions. In other words, all the choices that resulted in that great performance is changing, underpinned by a belief that they have unique insight into the future. So do they?

Standard and Poors (S&P) are one of the agencies that rate funds and assess performance data. So in the interest of proving my point of view (I am aware of bias). S&P assessed European Funds (including the UK). I quote:

  • Very few actively managed equity and fixed income funds managed to maintain consistent outperformance relative to their peers over the three or five-year periods ending in December 2022
  • Of the actively managed Europe Equity and U.S. Equity funds whose 12-month performance placed them in in the top quartile of their respective category as of December 2020, not a single fund maintained its top-quartile performance over the next two 12-month intervals
  • Over a five-year horizon, it was statistically nearly impossible to find consistent outperformance. Among the 1,102 actively managed funds whose performance over the 12-month period ending December 2018 placed them in the top quartile in one of our reported categories, just two funds remained in the top quartile in each of the five subsequent one-year periods ending December 2022
  • Over discrete five-year periods, a greater-than-expected proportion of funds in three of six equity categories and two of four fixed income categories maintained relative outperformance. If performance were purely random in terms of comparing funds to their peers, one would expect 50% of top-half funds to remain in the top half over a subsequent five-year period. Our scorecard reports that an unweighted average of 54% of top-half Emerging Markets Equity and High Yield Bond (EUR) funds remained in the top half for two consecutive five-year periods
  • Over the long term, poor performance has proven to be a reliable indicator of future fund closures. Across the 10 categories reported by our scorecard, an unweighted average of 37% of actively managed funds whose performance placed them in the bottom quartile in the five-year period ending December 2017, were subsequently merged or liquidated over the next five years, while the comparable figure for funds whose performance placed them in the top quartile of performance for their category over the five years ending December 2017 was just 20%

Source: SPIVA European Persistence Scorecard: Year-End 2022 (May 2023)

If you wish to see the S&P report, do click here!

In short, there is about as much skill as there is luck when it comes to picking the ‘right’ companies to invest in. Active funds cost a lot more than passive funds (a terrible way to describe patience).  One of the few things that we can control is the cost of investing, we can minimise it. At Solomon’s, the portfolios we use are weighted to global market sizes and are very low cost. In fact, the cost of the mix of funds is lower than 99% of all others. The portfolios are not available to anyone, cannot be accessed as a DIY solution and represent extremely good value.

The returns will reflect market realities and how much of your portfolio is held in global shares or bonds and cash. This ‘asset allocation’ is where the bulk of investor returns reside over the long term.

The most important ‘normal’ investment experience is that of underperformance. Over the long term the vast majority of funds underperformed. Active management takes more risk with your money by being selective and charges more; the results are poor; the winners are rarely investors and I might suggest a cursory glance at the remuneration of fund managers may provide some insight into who is.

Beating the market2023-12-01T12:12:32+00:00
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