Good morning and welcome to your Morning Briefing for Wednesday 6 November 2024. To get this in your inbox every morning click here.
One Four Nine makes 10th acquisition
Financial advice and investment management firm One Four Nine Group has acquired Nottingham-based Castlegate Capital, marking a “crucial step” in its growth journey.
The deal is the 10th acquisition for One Four Nine Group and the first of 2024 following a significant period of focus to integrate all firms into the business fully.
The launch in late 2023 of One Four Nine Wealth was an important moment for the evolution of the business.
MM Meets… Unbiased founder and chief executive Karen Barrett
When I enquire of Karen Barrett what she likes doing outside work, her answer is somewhat surprising: “I love knocking down walls,” writes MM editor Tom Browne.
This, it turns out, is part of a wider interest in property renovation, but her response makes a change from ‘socialising with friends’ or ‘going to the cinema’. Then again, there’s a lot about Barrett that makes her stand out.
The founder and chief executive of Unbiased, the UK’s leading platform connecting people to financial advisers, oversees a business that works with more than 27,000 advisers and manages over £80bn in assets.
Why income protection matters for clients
Join digital content manager Kimberley Dondo as she speaks with Shelley Read, senior protection technical manager at Royal London, on everything income protection (IP).
Read answers key questions: What exactly is IP? Why is it critical for financial resilience? And how can advisers ensure clients are properly covered?
From navigating underwriting to understanding client needs, this episode covers practical guidance for advisers on IP and reducing the risk of unpaid claims.
Quote Of The Day
While over the long-term US elections have had a minimal impact on stock markets, investors will likely see a Trump presidency as a positive for the share prices of many of America’s companies.
– Lindsay James, investment strategist at Quilter Investors, comments on the news that Donald Trump has been elected as President of the US.
Stat Attack
Families are coming together following the government’s decision to add VAT on independent school fees from 1 January next year, new research from Premium Credit’s School Fee Plan has revealed.
54%
of relatives including grandparents, aunts and uncles and siblings who currently help pay for private school fees say they have offered to increase the amount they contribute.
36%
say they could afford to but have not been asked.
40%
who have grandchildren, nieces, nephews or siblings at private school but who do not currently contribute to fees say they would be willing to do so.
23%
of private school parents receive financial help from relatives.
58%
of them say they are helped by grandparents.
34%
said they are helped by aunts or uncles.
86%
of private school parents questioned say they will be able to continue paying fees after VAT is added.
11%
of parents say they are considering moving jobs for higher pay.
17%
are looking to take on more work or second jobs.
12%
Around one in eight say they will look to get their children into less expensive private schools
11%
have asked grandparents and other relatives to start helping.
14%
have asked grandparents and other relatives to increase the amount they already give.
Source: Premium Credit
In Other News
A two-decade long freeze on the inheritance tax (IHT) allowance could cost families almost £250,000 by the end of the end of the chancellor’s tax threshold freeze, analysis from AJ Bell shows.
The main IHT exemption, the ‘nil rate band’, has been frozen at £325,000 since 2009. Amounting to £650,000 for a married couple, assets under this threshold incur no IHT.
However, the limit last increased in 2009 and isn’t due to be lifted until April 2030, with Rachel Reeves extending the IHT threshold freeze at last week’s Budget.
Although a new exemption, the ‘residence nil rate band’ (RNRB), introduced from 2017 means a married couple can leave a combined total £1m tax free if they leave a property to their ‘direct descendants’, AJ Bell’s figures show that the overall IHT threshold would actually be higher had the main nil rate band simply been linked to inflation and the RNRB were never introduced.
The nil rate band indexed to inflation would stand at almost £555,000 by 2029/30, meaning a couple could pass on an additional £110,000 tax free. It means tax bills could be £44,000 higher per family as a result.
But if both the nil rate band and residence nil rate band were indexed to inflation the combined total would stand at nearly £1.6m, knocking up to £234,000 off IHT bills.
Tesla and US bank stocks jump and renewables slump (Financial Times)
Brazil set to double pace of interest rate hikes amid fiscal woes (Bloomberg)
UniCredit CEO pushes merger credentials as it outperforms Commerzbank (Reuters)
Did You See?
Advisers have expressed concerns over insurer service levels – with 28% believing they have worsened in the last two years.
The results were revealed in the Association of Mortgage Intermediaries’ latest protection report.
It found that the speed of underwriting is advisers biggest problem, with 58% raising this as an issue.
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