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Founders lobby Treasury for capital gains tax break on start-up reinvestment

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Founders lobby Treasury for capital gains tax break on start-up reinvestment

Some of Britain’s most prominent entrepreneurial voices are pressing the Treasury to introduce a targeted tax incentive designed to keep the proceeds of successful exits circulating within the domestic start-up ecosystem, rather than drifting into passive wealth management or overseas opportunities.

The proposal, which has been dubbed “repeat entrepreneur relief”, would allow founders who sell shares in their companies and reinvest the gains into a new venture within twelve months to defer capital gains tax indefinitely. The liability would only crystallise when the new shares were eventually sold without further reinvestment.

The idea has been put forward in various forms by the Founders Forum Group, Schroders and UK Private Capital as part of a recent Treasury consultation on the tax treatment of entrepreneurs. Each submission makes broadly the same case: that the UK’s tax framework does a reasonable job of supporting businesses as they grow, but does far too little to encourage founders to recycle their capital and experience once they have cashed out.

UK Private Capital, the trade body representing venture capital and private equity firms, argued there is a compelling rationale for aligning tax incentives with the post-exit phase, when founders hold significant capital, possess hard-won operational expertise and face decisions about where to base themselves and where to deploy their money next.

The Founders Forum Group, co-founded by Brent Hoberman and Jonnie Goodwin, drew a comparison with the American Qualified Small Business Stock scheme, under which founders pay no capital gains tax on gains of up to $10 million or ten times their original investment. The group described that exemption as a primary driver of the reinvestment culture that has long defined Silicon Valley, where exit proceeds are routinely funnelled straight back into the next generation of companies.

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A survey conducted by the Founders Forum Group found that nearly nine in ten founders said such a measure would make them more likely to reinvest in the UK, with more than seven in ten describing the effect as significant.

The lobbying comes at a sensitive moment for the government’s relationship with the entrepreneurial community. Since taking office, Chancellor Rachel Reeves has progressively increased the rate of business asset disposal relief, the levy formerly known as entrepreneurs’ relief, from its longstanding rate of ten per cent to fourteen per cent last year, then to eighteen per cent from this month. The standard capital gains tax rate remains at twenty-four per cent.

Many founders have argued that the increases make Britain a less attractive place to build and exit a business, though a number of tax analysts have countered that the previous relief was poorly targeted and did relatively little to encourage genuinely productive reinvestment.

The government has sought to balance these changes with fresh incentives at the earlier stages of the company lifecycle. In November, Reeves extended a package of measures making it easier for founders to offer equity to employees and raise capital, provisions that came into force last week.

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A Treasury spokesperson pointed to these steps as evidence that the government has the right economic plan in place, highlighting changes to the enterprise management incentive scheme and venture capital tax schemes that are expected to support around £100 million of additional investment annually.

Whether the Treasury is willing to go further and address the post-exit gap that the lobbying groups have identified remains to be seen, but the volume of submissions suggests the argument for repeat entrepreneur relief is gathering serious momentum.


Jamie Young

Jamie Young

Jamie is Senior Reporter at Business Matters, bringing over a decade of experience in UK SME business reporting.
Jamie holds a degree in Business Administration and regularly participates in industry conferences and workshops.

When not reporting on the latest business developments, Jamie is passionate about mentoring up-and-coming journalists and entrepreneurs to inspire the next generation of business leaders.

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Eisai’s new three-year plan seen as "conservative"

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Eisai’s new three-year plan seen as "conservative"

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Blaq’s $100m Mosman Park project ploughs ahead

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Blaq’s $100m Mosman Park project ploughs ahead

NSW developer Blaq Projects is progressing its $100 million 13-storey apartment plan in Mosman Park, having taken over the project from Peet last year.

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What UK SMEs Should Know About Workplace EV Charging

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electric car charger

A workplace EV charge point used to be a perk reserved for headquartered corporates. The picture in 2026 looks different. Small and medium-sized enterprises across the UK are installing chargers at their own premises.

Customer expectations, staff retention pressures, and the cost-to-install curve all read as reasons to act sooner. The decision now sits in front of most SME owners with a car park, a forecourt, or even a customer-facing kerb.

The right installer turns the decision from a multi-week project into a clean rollout. Essex-based providers like TBE Electrical handle the workplace EV charger installation alongside their wider commercial electrical services, which makes the project a single-contract job rather than a coordination headache. The framework below covers what UK SME owners should know before booking the install.

Why Is Workplace EV Charging Becoming a UK SME Decision?

Workplace EV charging has become an SME decision because three operational signals have aligned at once. Staff increasingly expect a charging option at work. Customer-facing premises read a visible charger as a credibility cue. And the OZEV-administered Workplace Charging Scheme reduces the per-socket cost meaningfully.

Three structural reasons explain why the conversation is now everywhere. First, EV uptake among UK private drivers continues to climb, which means staff arrive in EVs more often. The UK government’s Office for Zero Emission Vehicles coordinates the policy framework SME owners now work through.

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Second, the workplace charger has become a recruitment signal in competitive sectors. Candidates increasingly read the car park before reading the offer letter.

Third, premises owners are starting to see chargers as infrastructure rather than tech. The install is now treated as part of the building’s electrical fit-out, not an optional add-on.

What Six Factors Shape the Workplace EV Charging Install?

Six factors usually drive the workplace EV charger decision for UK SMEs.

  1. Premises survey. A qualified electrician assesses the existing supply, board capacity, and the cable run from the consumer unit.
  2. Charger type. 7kW single-phase or 22kW three-phase chargers fit different premises and use-cases.
  3. Number of sockets. Two-to-four sockets cover most SME premises; high-traffic forecourts need more.
  4. Cable management. Tethered or untethered options affect both upfront cost and ongoing user experience.
  5. Authentication setup. RFID cards, app authentication, or open access each suit different operational models.
  6. OZEV grant eligibility. The Workplace Charging Scheme covers up to 40 sockets per applicant, but the eligibility criteria need a careful read.

A well-scoped install usually fits inside a one-to-two day window for most SME premises. The UK government’s low-emission vehicle grants collection covers the funding routes SME owners can stack alongside the install.

How Should an SME Owner Plan the Install?

Five practical steps shape a workplace EV charging rollout that does not derail the business.

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The first is the premises walk-around. A qualified electrician walks the site, checks supply capacity, and identifies the most cost-effective cable route.

The second is the use-case scoping. Staff-only, customer-only, or mixed access shapes the socket count and authentication choice. Coverage of UK car safety ratings reinforces how vehicle-side criteria shape the wider workplace fleet conversation.

The third is the grant application. The OZEV Workplace Charging Scheme application sits with the chosen installer, who needs the relevant authorisations.

The fourth is the install scheduling. Most SMEs find a quiet weekend or out-of-hours window works better than a midweek install, even when the install is short.

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The fifth is the post-install signposting. A new charger only earns its keep when staff, customers, and visitors know it is there. Coverage of whether Trustpilot reviews can be trusted reinforces how visibility and credibility cues compound for a small business across the channels customers actually check.

What Are the Common SME Workplace Charging Mistakes?

A workplace charging mistake is a planning gap that costs the SME budget, time, or operational comfort.

The first is the wrong-charger default. Installing 22kW three-phase chargers when 7kW single-phase covers the actual use-case usually overspends without producing meaningful benefit.

The second is the no-grant pattern. Missing the OZEV Workplace Charging Scheme leaves money on the table that a qualified installer can usually access.

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The third is the under-scoped socket count. Installing one socket and finding it permanently occupied within a fortnight is a common pattern. Two-to-four sockets fit most premises better.

The fourth is the unclear access model. Open-access chargers without authentication can attract non-staff usage that drives up the electricity bill. Authentication usually pays back inside the first quarter.

The fifth is the no-signposting habit. A charger that staff and customers cannot easily find produces low utilisation and weak return on the install.

The sixth is the underestimated electricity cost. Without a usage policy in place, the chargers can produce a noticeable rise in the monthly bill. A simple authentication setup and a written workplace charging policy usually keeps the cost in line with the use-case the SME planned for.

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The seventh is the no-maintenance pattern. A workplace charger needs occasional inspection, software updates, and cable checks. Booking a yearly check-in with the installer keeps the unit reliable for the long term and avoids the disruption of a sudden fault.

A Quick SME EV Charging Reality Check

  • Confirm the premises has sufficient supply capacity for the planned chargers
  • Match the charger type to the actual workplace use-case
  • Check OZEV Workplace Charging Scheme eligibility before the install
  • Plan authentication and access early
  • Brief staff and customers on the new charger inside the first week

The Honest Bottom Line for UK SME Owners

A workplace EV charger is no longer a strategic moonshot; it is an infrastructure decision SME owners can make this quarter and have running before the next one. The install is short, the grant routes are well-mapped, and the operational signals all point in the same direction.

The decision rewards SMEs who act ahead of the customer expectation rather than behind it. A visible charger reads to staff, customers, and visitors as a credible signal that the business is paying attention to the same shifts they are.

Frequently Asked Questions

How Long Does a Workplace EV Charger Install Take?

Most SME workplace installs sit inside a one-to-two day window. The exact timeline depends on the cable run, board capacity, and the number of sockets being installed.

Do UK SMEs Qualify for EV Charging Grants?

Yes, most UK SMEs qualify for the OZEV Workplace Charging Scheme. The eligibility criteria, voucher amounts, and per-socket caps are updated annually; the chosen installer typically handles the application alongside the install.

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What Charger Power Rating Do SMEs Usually Need?

For staff-only car parks, 7kW single-phase chargers usually cover the realistic dwell time. Customer-facing forecourts, fleet premises, or short-stop locations often benefit from 22kW three-phase chargers.

Do I Need a Specialist Electrician to Install a Workplace EV Charger?

Yes, EV charger installation requires a qualified electrician with relevant certifications. NAPIT-certified or NICEIC-registered installers cover the regulatory requirements UK premises owners need.

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STARTRADER Launches 39 New US Stocks and ETFs Across the Sectors Shaping the Future of Global Markets

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KRP2 Highlights Growing Concerns Over FINRA Arbitration Costs in 2026

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Wipro’s Rs 15,000 crore share buyback at 23% premium: Should you buy before record date?

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Wipro's Rs 15,000 crore share buyback at 23% premium: Should you buy before record date?
IT services major Wipro has fixed June 5 as the record date for its Rs 15,000 crore share buyback, with analysts suggesting investors to consider buying shares of the company to participate in the corporate action.

Wipro has set the buyback price at Rs 250 per share, implying a premium of 23% over the stock’s previous closing price of Rs 203.11 apiece on NSE. This would mark the IT major’s first buyback in nearly three years.

Also Read | Wipro fixes June 5 as record date for Rs 15,000 crore share buyback at Rs 250 apiece

Key things to know about Wipro’s share buyback

Wipro board in April approved the plan to buy back up to 60 crore shares, representing 5.7% of the total paid-up share capital, for an aggregate amount not exceeding Rs 15,000 crore. The buyback will be done via the tender route, and all shareholders who hold shares of the company in their demat accounts on the record date, including those who received the equity shares after cancelling their American Depository Receipts (ADR), will be eligible to take part in the corporate action.

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The IT firm’s promoters and promoter groups have indicated their intention to participate in the proposed buyback. Other details including the buyback window and entitlement ratio will be announced later.
Buyback of shares refers to a corporate action where a company repurchases its own shares from the existing shareholders. Usually, the company purchases the shares at a higher price than the current levels, encouraging investors to participate. Typically, a company decides to buy back its shares in order to increase share value, utilise surplus cash, prevent hostile takeovers or increase promoter holdings.

Should retail investors participate in Wipro’s share buyback?

Market regulator Sebi has mandated that 15% of a buyback’s total offer size must be reserved for small shareholders. From Wipro’s context, this means that around 9 crore shares worth Rs 2,250 crore at the buyback price will be reserved for small shareholders holding shares worth up to Rs 2 lakh on the record date.

The minimum acceptance ratio, often termed as the entitlement ratio, for retail investors is expected to be around 30.8% while the same for the general category is expected to be 5%, according to Motilal Oswal Wealth Management’s calculations based on the company’s shareholding pattern as on March 31, 2025.

Based on Wipro’s FY25 shareholding pattern, the brokerage said that the entitlement ratio for retail investors might get lower as retail participation can increase closer to the record date. However, given that the eligibility for the retail portion of Wipro’s buyback is just 800 shares, which is only about 16% of the 5,000 shares (lowest data point of shareholding as per last annual report), the firm expects the actual acceptance ratio to be high.

Also Read | Wipro share buyback: Should retail investors participate? Here’s what analysts say

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“Retail investors looking for short-term opportunities can buy the shares of Wipro. Based on the last two buybacks of Wipro and very low retail shareholding, we expect the acceptance ratio to remain high in the range of 50-60% which could give a potential return of 11-13% (pre-tax) with a time frame of 2-3 months,” the wealth management company added.

“Overall, we view Wipro’s buyback as a tactical opportunity rather than a guaranteed arbitrage. The risk-reward appears balanced, with limited downside and attractive upside in favourable participation scenarios. We recommend selective participation, as outcomes remain contingent on acceptance dynamics,” SAMCO Securities said.

Also Read | How Wipro’s Rs 15,000 crore share buyback offer can give double-digit returns

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

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Delivery Hero shares surge to 18-month high as Uber eyes takeover

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Delivery Hero shares surge to 18-month high as Uber eyes takeover

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The Rise of Authentic Lifestyle Communities in Europe’s Creator Economy

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£42,000 roaming bill nearly bankrupts family firm after TikTok use abroad

Europe’s social media landscape is undergoing a quiet revolution. After more than a decade of polished influencer culture, algorithmic homogenization, and engagement-maximising feeds, audiences are pushing back.

A widespread social media trust crisis, paired with growing algorithm fatigue, is reshaping how independent creators and everyday users define value online.

At the centre of this shift sits a new generation of platforms that prioritise honesty over hype, with Hacoo emerging as one of the most distinctive players reshaping the European creator economy.

The End of the Polished Feed

For years, the dominant social media model has rewarded perfection: highly curated visuals, glowing endorsements, and identical aesthetics replicated across millions of accounts.

The result is what industry analysts increasingly describe as algorithmic echo chambers, environments where authentic voices are drowned out by sponsored uniformity.

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Audiences, particularly Gen Z and younger Millennials across the UK, France, and Germany, are responding by actively seeking out platforms where real opinions, including critical ones, are allowed to surface.

This is the gap Hacoo is positioning itself to fill.

A Dual-Layer Community Built on Radical Transparency

Hacoo operates as an authentic lifestyle community where users openly share real-life experiences, recommendations, and honest feedback after trying things themselves. Its architecture distinguishes between two distinct participation tiers, creating a sustainable structure for both casual contribution and professional creator work.

The first layer consists of everyday users who share genuine lifestyle inspiration freely, without commercial incentive. The second layer is built around Affiliate Partners, independent creators who are empowered to monetise their authentic recommendations through transparent tools and a formal affiliate program.

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This dual-layer design avoids a common pitfall of modern platforms, where every voice is implicitly commercialised, eroding audience trust over time.

The guiding philosophy is what Hacoo calls “Unfiltered Reality”, an explicit rejection of over-edited, fake perfection. The community is encouraged to embrace honest, critical, and even imperfect feedback rather than the polished promotional content typical of legacy influencer ecosystems.

The Technology Behind Independent Income

What separates Hacoo’s discovery ecosystem from earlier creator platforms is the operational depth provided to its partners.

Independent creators on Hacoo are equipped with Smart Resource Matching, a system that pairs creators with relevant content opportunities based on demonstrated expertise and audience alignment, alongside exclusive tracking links that give creators crystal-clear backend insights into content reach and authentic engagement.

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Rather than treating affiliates as informal promoters, Hacoo treats them as professional partners with access to structured analytics, performance dashboards, and transparent attribution data.

This level of operational transparency is rapidly becoming a baseline expectation in Europe’s maturing creator economy.

The “Critical Feedback” Algorithm: Rewarding Authenticity

Perhaps the most counter-intuitive element of Hacoo’s model is its monetisation logic. The platform’s algorithm actively rewards creators who provide honest, critical feedback, even when they point out practical flaws or limitations.

The premise is straightforward: Hacoo’s affiliate model provides commissions to creators who drive genuine value through transparent recommendations, rather than incentivizing fake glowing praise.

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This inversion of the traditional influencer incentive structure is deliberate. By financially aligning creators with audience interests rather than purely promotional incentives, Hacoo strives to build a feed where critical feedback carries as much commercial weight as enthusiastic recommendations, a meaningful departure from the engagement-bait dynamics that have defined the previous era of social platforms.

Answering the Trust Question: Governance as a Strategic Moat

When audiences search for “Hacoo reviews” or ask “Is Hacoo legit”, they are rarely looking for corporate promises. They are testing whether the platform’s positioning holds up under scrutiny.

Hacoo’s response is to lean into governance rather than marketing slogans, offering what it describes as a safe discovery experience underpinned by strict, enforceable community standards.

The platform operates a “Zero Tolerance” policy approach against deceptive content, malicious redirects, and inauthentic engagement.

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Enforcement is structured through a Progressive Penalty System, a clearly defined ladder of consequences for policy violations that escalates from content removal and reach restriction, through temporary suspension, and culminating in permanent account deactivation and partnership termination for repeat or severe offenders.

This governance-first stance is designed to function as a strategic moat. In a market saturated with platforms that treat moderation as a cost centre, Hacoo positions content integrity as a core product feature, one that it heavily invests in mitigating risks around rather than merely reacting to them after damage is done.

A Different Model for Europe’s Next Creator Decade

The broader takeaway for European business observers is that the creator economy is bifurcating. On one side sit platforms optimised purely for scale and surface-level engagement metrics; on the other, platforms like Hacoo are betting that radical transparency, professional creator infrastructure, and disciplined governance will define the next decade of growth.

For independent partners seeking a structured environment to build durable audiences, and for users tired of curated perfection, Hacoo’s positioning represents a deliberate move beyond algorithmic echo chambers, toward a model that is more honest, more accountable, and more aligned with how European audiences actually want to discover lifestyle ideas, creators, and communities online.

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GDX: The Bull Case For Gold Miners

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GDX: The Bull Case For Gold Miners

GDX: The Bull Case For Gold Miners

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Stablecoins Are Private Money. That’s Why They’re a Risk to the Economy.

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Stablecoins Are Private Money. That’s Why They’re a Risk to the Economy.
Greg Ip

“Private money” sounds like an oxymoron. Surely the currency on which our economy runs is the epitome of a public good?

In fact, the U.S. has had private money before, in the 1800s. And private money is now making a comeback, in the form of stablecoins: cryptocurrencies intended to maintain a fixed value against the dollar.

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