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Britain’s Billionaire Exodus Accelerates as Non-Dom Reforms Bite

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Britain’s Billionaire Exodus Accelerates as Non-Dom Reforms Bite

For nearly four decades, The Sunday Times Rich List has been the closest thing Britain has to a national league table of money. This year’s edition reads less like a celebration of enterprise and more like a departures board.

Revolut chief executive Nik Storonsky and the publicity-shy quant trader Alex Gerko have broken into the top 10 for the first time. But the headline story, according to the list’s compiler Robert Watts, is not who has arrived, it is who has gone.

As many as one in six of the individuals and families who appeared on the 2024 ranking are missing from this year’s edition, with the compiler warning that the figures lay bare the scale of Britain’s wealth exodus.

Many foreign billionaires who have been living in the UK have… dropped out because they have moved away,” Mr Watts said.

The top of the table holds, but the cracks are widening

Sanjay and Dheeraj Hinduja, the British-Indian brothers behind the Mumbai-headquartered Hinduja Group, kept top spot with a combined fortune of £38bn. The rest of the podium was likewise unchanged, with the famously secretive property magnates David and Simon Reuben and Ukrainian-born industrialist Sir Leonard Blavatnik both still sitting on fortunes north of £25bn.

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The most dramatic faller was Sir James Dyson. The inventor’s eponymous engineering empire was hit hard by Donald Trump’s swingeing tariff regime, and his estimated net worth nearly halved over the year from £20bn to £12bn, enough to send him tumbling from fourth to 13th. It is not the first time Sir James has tangled with policy: he has been one of the most vocal critics of Rachel Reeves’s inheritance tax changes, branding them “spiteful” and warning of the consequences for British family businesses.

City money muscles into the top 10

If old money is having a wobble, the new money minted in the City of London is flexing. Mr Storonsky cracked the top 10 in the same year his fintech juggernaut was finally granted a UK banking licence and clinched a $75bn valuation in a November funding round.

A place behind him in eighth sat Mr Gerko, the cerebral force behind XTX Markets, the quantitative trading shop that has quietly become one of the City’s biggest tax payers. His estimated fortune sits north of £16bn.

Both men were born in Russia, and both have renounced their citizenship in protest at Vladimir Putin’s illegal invasion of Ukraine — a reminder that the City’s talent pool is global, and mobile.

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A tale of two exoduses

The list’s real story, however, is in the gaps.

For the first two decades of this century, Britain’s super-rich enjoyed a near-uninterrupted bull run. Rich List wealth grew by close to 600 per cent between 2000 and 2022, according to The Sunday Times. That run is now over. The number of sterling billionaires in the UK peaked at 177 in 2022; this year’s tally of 157 was barely up on 2025.

Under the survey’s rules, foreign-born residents who leave automatically fall out of the rankings, while British citizens who emigrate remain. Both groups are now visibly thinning. Mr Watts said he had seen a “sharp rise in the number of British nationals now resident in Dubai, Switzerland and Monaco”, warning the “twin exoduses” represented a worrying development for the British economy and the public finances.

His unease is echoed by international data. The Henley Private Wealth Migration Report has the United Kingdom haemorrhaging high-net-worth residents at a faster clip than any other major economy, with the UAE, Italy and Switzerland the biggest beneficiaries.

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“Will more of the wealthy now set up or grow their ventures overseas and in doing so create fewer jobs here?” Mr Watts asked. “How much tax – if any – will Rachel Reeves’ Treasury be able to extract from those affluent Brits who have now left the country?”

The Reeves effect

Critics increasingly point the finger at Whitehall. The Chancellor has been accused of accelerating departures with a string of measures aimed at ultra-high-net-worth residents and their assets.

In her first Budget in October 2024, Ms Reeves pressed ahead with the abolition of the non-domicile tax regime, slapped VAT on private school fees, raised capital gains tax and tightened several inheritance tax carve-outs. Her 2025 intervention added a so-called mansion tax on properties worth more than £2m and further narrowed the inheritance tax net.

Advisers say the cumulative effect has been a stampede. Research from consultancy Chamberlain Walker, cited by Business Matters, suggests around 1,800 non-doms left Britain in the months after April’s tax changes — 50 per cent more than the Treasury had pencilled in.

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The casualties include some of the City’s biggest names: former Goldman Sachs International chief Richard Gnodde and steel magnate Lakshmi Mittal, both long-standing Rich List fixtures, have moved on. Only one billionaire is recorded as having moved the other way in the past year — the new US ambassador to the Court of St James’s, Warren Stephens.

What it means for SME Britain

For the small and medium-sized businesses that read this magazine, the implications run deeper than schadenfreude over a few moving vans full of Old Master paintings.

Wealthy entrepreneurs are typically the angel investors, family-office backers and growth-stage cheque writers that smaller firms rely on when banks turn cautious. If they decamp to Dubai or Lugano, that capital tends to follow them. The same goes for the philanthropic giving, board memberships and mentoring that often anchor a city’s business community.

The harder question for the Chancellor, and for the firms that depend on a healthy ecosystem of British-based capital, is whether the additional tax raised from those who stay can outweigh the receipts and investment lost from those who leave. On the evidence of this year’s Rich List, that calculation is starting to look uncomfortable.

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Meta Platforms: This Neocloud Pivot Could Be A Game Changer (NASDAQ:META)

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Meta: I'm Waiting For $500 Per Share To Buy More (NASDAQ:META)

This article was written by

I’m a Ukraine-based seasoned investor, who firsthand experienced what’s it like to live in an environment full of systemic geopolitical shocks when the war came to my home country. Despite this, I managed to build an all-weather portfolio that has been able to thrive in volatile markets. My goal is to help investors find event-driven geopolitical ideas that can generate strong returns during periods of economic and political uncertainty.

Analyst’s Disclosure: I/we have a beneficial long position in the shares of META, GOOG either through stock ownership, options, or other derivatives. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

Bohdan Kucheriavyi is not a financial/investment advisor, broker, or dealer. He’s solely sharing personal experience and opinion; therefore, all strategies, tips, suggestions, and recommendations shared are solely for informational purposes. There are risks associated with investing in securities. Investing in stocks, bonds, options, exchange-traded funds, mutual funds, and money market funds involves the risk of loss. Loss of principal is possible. Some high-risk investments may use leverage, which will accentuate gains & losses. Foreign investing involves special risks, including greater volatility and political, economic, and currency risks and differences in accounting methods. A security’s or a firm’s past investment performance is not a guarantee or predictor of future investment performance.

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Seeking Alpha’s Disclosure: Past performance is no guarantee of future results. No recommendation or advice is being given as to whether any investment is suitable for a particular investor. Any views or opinions expressed above may not reflect those of Seeking Alpha as a whole. Seeking Alpha is not a licensed securities dealer, broker or US investment adviser or investment bank. Our analysts are third party authors that include both professional investors and individual investors who may not be licensed or certified by any institute or regulatory body.

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Jobs Growth Picking Up A Bit

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Jobs Growth Picking Up A Bit

Jobs Growth Picking Up A Bit

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American Clean Resources receives $40M funding commitment

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American Clean Resources receives $40M funding commitment

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Senco Gold shares soar 6% as Q1 business update highlights 60% revenue growth

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Senco Gold shares soar 6% as Q1 business update highlights 60% revenue growth
Senco Gold shares surged as much as 6.3% in Monday’s trading session, hitting an intraday high of Rs 346.55 on the NSE, after the jewellery retailer reported a robust Q1 FY27 business update. Strong revenue growth, healthy same-store sales and continued retail expansion boosted investor sentiment, reinforcing the company’s growth momentum from FY26.

According to the company’s Q1 FY27 business update, total revenue grew 60% year-on-year, supported by strong consumer demand across key categories. Retail revenue rose 48% YoY, while same-store sales growth (SSSG) stood at an impressive 38%, reflecting sustained demand across existing stores.

Trailing twelve-month (TTM) sales also approached Rs 9,660 crore, underscoring the company’s continued growth trajectory.

Diamond jewellery remained a key growth driver during the quarter. The segment registered 40% YoY growth in value, while diamond volume jumped 56% sequentially, aided by higher volumes, an improved product mix, affordable collections priced below Rs 50,000 under the Everlite range, and new product launches.

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The company said domestic gold prices remained significantly higher on a year-on-year basis, although they softened sequentially amid evolving geopolitical developments. Gold prices also reflected the impact of the increase in customs duty to 15% from 6%.


While the duty hike is expected to benefit revenues over Q1 and Q2, Senco noted that aggressive gold price discounting during the quarter and its 50% hedging position are likely to put pressure on Q1 margins, delaying the full benefit of the higher customs duty.
The old gold exchange programme continued to witness healthy customer participation, accounting for around 43% of total sales volume in Q1 FY27. During the quarter, the company also rolled out a “0% deduction” campaign to encourage exchange transactions.

Retail expansion gathers pace

Senco Gold expanded its footprint by opening eight new showrooms during the quarter, comprising three company-owned stores, four franchise outlets and one Sennes store. After accounting for one store closure, the company’s retail network stood at 208 showrooms.Management remains on track to open 12-15 additional stores over the next three quarters, with a greater focus on the franchise-led expansion model.

Management outlook

Looking ahead, the company expects Q2 FY27 to be seasonally softer. However, it remains optimistic that demand will improve with the monsoon season and festive buying, including advance gold bookings ahead of Q3 festivities.

Management said its priorities will remain inventory optimisation, expanding lightweight and 9K jewellery collections, and protecting margins.

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Technical view

From a technical perspective, the stock continues to exhibit a positive medium-term trend. It is currently trading above seven of its eight simple moving averages (SMAs), indicating underlying strength. Meanwhile, the 14-day Relative Strength Index (RSI) stands at 43.7, suggesting the stock is neither overbought nor oversold.

(Disclaimer: Recommendations, suggestions, views and opinions given by the experts are their own. These do not represent the views of Economic Times)

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Titan Q1 update: Business grows 41% as jewellery, watches sales gain pace

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Titan Q1 update: Business grows 41% as jewellery, watches sales gain pace
Titan Company said its consumer businesses grew about 41% year-on-year in the June quarter, helped by strong jewellery demand, store expansion and a sharp rise in its international business. The Tata Group company added 77 stores on a net basis during Q1FY27, taking its total retail network to 3,680 stores as of June 2026. The numbers are provisional and subject to limited review by the company’s statutory auditors, Titan said in its quarterly update filed with the exchanges.

Titan’s domestic business grew 37% during the quarter and had 3,517 stores at the end of June. Jewellery remained the main growth driver, with the segment reporting 39% year-on-year growth. The company said demand was helped by healthy festive buying and Akshaya Tritiya sales during the quarter.

Also Read: Trent Q1 Update: Standalone revenue rises 19%, driven by Zudio expansion

The jewellery business added 33 stores on a net basis, taking its total count to 1,227 stores. Within jewellery, Tanishq, Mia, Zoya and beYon together grew 39%, while CaratLane grew 42%. Titan said relatively stable gold prices helped buyer growth, which came in early double digits. Average ticket size grew in high double digits.

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The company said plain and studded jewellery categories each grew in the mid-thirties. Coins also continued to see strong double-digit growth, supported by investment-led demand.


Titan’s watches business grew 23% year-on-year and added 34 stores during the quarter, taking its total store count to 1,345. Analog watches led the segment, supported by premiumisation trends, and grew in the high twenties. However, the smartwatches business declined in the low teens.
EyeCare also grew 23%, with broad-based momentum across owned and international brands. Titan said growth in the segment was helped by calibrated marketing spends, multi-pair and multi-category consumer offers, and premiumisation. EyeCare added seven stores during the quarter, taking its total to 847 stores.Emerging businesses grew 19% in Q1FY27. Within this portfolio, fragrances grew in the mid-teens, women’s bags recorded strong double-digit growth, and Taneira posted low single-digit growth. The company added two stores in this segment, taking the total to 98.

Titan’s international business posted the sharpest growth at 128%, though on a smaller base. The segment had 163 stores as of June 2026. The international business includes Damas Jewellery, which was consolidated into Titan from January 2026.

The company said the jewellery business of Tanishq, Mia and CaratLane saw strong traction in North America and encouraging double-digit growth in the GCC. It added that despite geopolitical volatility, the core Damas business is seeing a gradual recovery across key parameters.

(Disclaimer: Recommendations, suggestions, views and opinions given by the experts are their own. These do not represent the views of Economic Times)

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Stanley College founder buys Peppermint Grove pad as school PE deal struck

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Stanley College founder buys Peppermint Grove pad as school PE deal struck

International education entrepreneur Alberto Tassone has paid $9 million for a Peppermint Grove home, as a private equity player emerged with a majority stake in the school he co-founded.

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Rivian Stock Soars on Target Price Hike. There’s Just One Problem.

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Rivian Stock Soars on Target Price Hike. There’s Just One Problem.

Rivian Stock Soars on Target Price Hike. There’s Just One Problem.

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BRP: Good Brands, Bad Tariff Hit

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BRP: Good Brands, Bad Tariff Hit

BRP: Good Brands, Bad Tariff Hit

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Electing Devon mayor could ‘unlock billions of pounds’ for county

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Business Live

The council’s leader is hopeful Andy Burnham will devolve more power to the county if he becomes PM

View of Plymouth in the sunshine

View of Plymouth in the sunshine(Image: Jay Stone)

Electing a Devon mayor could unlock billions of pounds of local investment over the next decade, the leader of the county council has said. Julian Brazil (Liberal Democrats) said modelling indicated a mayoralty in Devon could attract up to £3bn of funding for key services and economic development.

The council leader is hopeful Devon could become one of the first new Mayoral Combined Authorities created under a future government after Labour leader hopeful Andy Burnham pledged to devolve more power to the regions and nations if he becomes Prime Minister.

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If the Devon does elect a mayor, it would become one of the largest mayoral authorities in England – and Mr Brazil believes it would drive economic growth, improve public services and secure long-term investment.

“Devon is ready to deliver a mayoralty at pace and with ambition,” he said. “We have the scale, the partnerships and the determination to unlock major economic growth for both our urban centres and rural communities.

“This is about bringing investment home to Devon – creating well-paid jobs, delivering homes for young people and ensuring our whole county can thrive.”

Julian Brazil, leader of Devon County Council

Julian Brazil, leader of Devon County Council(Image: Alison Stephenson, Radio Exe)

Existing mayoral areas, such as the West of England Combined Authority – covering Bristol, Bath and North East Somerset and South Gloucestershire – benefit from additional funding and greater control over transport, planning and economic development, allowing decisions to be tailored to local needs.

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Mr Brazil’s comments come just a week after he wrote to Labour leadership hopeful Andy Burnham setting out how Devon could quickly deliver a mayoralty in line with the former Greater Manchester mayor’s ambition to accelerate devolution and support “good growth in every British postcode”.

Devon County Council and Torbay Council already work together through the Devon and Torbay Combined County Authority, which was established to secure additional funding and powers. Mr Brazil said the partnership provided “a strong platform” for further devolution.

Last year, all eleven council leaders in Devon signed a joint letter supporting devolution, demonstrating broad political backing for greater local powers.

“Devolution must not stop at the big cities,” Mr Brazil said. “Too often, rural and coastal communities are overlooked in national policy. A Devon mayoralty would ensure our voices are heard at the very centre of government.”

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Billions in potential investment

According to Mr Brazil, a Devon mayoralty could unlock the billions of pounds over a decade through devolved funding and locally generated revenues, with additional private-sector investment potentially worth billions more.

Potential sources of funding include central government devolution settlements; retention of business rates growth; major transport and infrastructure programmes; new revenue-raising powers; public-private partnerships; inward investment; and strategic development initiatives.

Supporters say the funding streams would help deliver regeneration projects, transport improvements and wider economic development across the county.

“A Devon mayoralty would accelerate the delivery of affordable and council housing, unlock and coordinate growth across council boundaries,” added Mr Brazil.

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“It could also support the creation of Mayoral Development Corporations while balancing the needs of growing cities such as Plymouth and Exeter with those of rural communities.”

Last week, Burnham pledged to create a ‘No 10 North’ if he becomes Prime Minister, claiming it would help power flow into regions including the West Country.

In his first major policy speech since launching his leadership bid, the new MP for Makerfield said he would deliver the “biggest change in our lifetime to the way the country is run” while remaining “consistent” to Labour’s 2024 manifesto.

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Migration changes lack local flavour

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Migration changes lack local flavour

Regional bodies are concerned they could miss out amid a shift in workforce migration agreements.

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