Life moves fast at Royal Dutch Shell these days.
Source: Sky Business News
Monthly Archives: June 2021
International treaty: Albania: tax treaties
Tax treaties and related documents between the UK and Albania.
Source: HMRC
Vodafone picks Samsung for 5G network
South Korean firm’s contract win called a market “breakthrough” by one analyst.
Source: BBC
Stobart Air-owner to raise £120m from airport stake sale to Carlyle
The struggling parent company of Stobart Air, which collapsed at the weekend, is in advanced talks to raise £120m from the sale of a stake in London Southend Airport.
Source: Sky Business News
COVID roadmap delay, online car auctions and the rise in restaurant meal kits
Ian King discusses the effect of a possible delay in easing coronavirus restrictions. Plus, hear from a company that’s raised almost £50m to fund the expansion of its used car online marketplace, while we also look at the rise of restaurant meal kits.
Source: Sky Business News
Small business calls for support extension to match reopening delay
Originally written by Timothy Adler on Small Business
Small business associations have called for support to be extended to match any delay in reopening due to current lockdown restrictions.
The final easing of lockdown restrictions is set to be postponed beyond June 21, according to reports. Most current rules will remain in place.
However, from July 1, businesses are due to contribute 10 per cent of staff wages in a staged withdrawal of furlough, which is set to finish at the end of September. And a moratorium on evictions and debt collection from commercial tenants is due to lift on June 30.
>See also: Swap Bounce Back debt for employee equity, say industry experts
The worry is that without more taxpayer support already vulnerable small businesses will close completely.
Organisations including the Federation of Small Businesses, UK Hospitality and British Chambers of Commerce said they were poised to demand help such as loan forbearance, more generous furlough terms, and an extension to an eviction ban and business rates holiday.
Most hospitaly venues are still losing money, are buried under a mountain of debt, and consider any delay to the lockdown easing timetable as a grave threat to the industry with hundreds of thousands of jobs at risk. The hospitality sector would lose about £3bn in sales from a one-month delay, UK Hospitality said.
>See also: Small business to spend £23bn this year alone keeping Covid safe
Kate Nicholls, chief executive of UK Hospitality, said that full business rates relief, which runs until the end of this month, should be extended by three months.
Craig Beaumont, of the Federation of Small Businesses, told the Times: “Changing the road map will be a huge blow to businesses in the night-time economy who have had five quarters of no revenue whatsoever. For everyone else, the chopping and changing makes it impossible to plan and mitigate against the difficulties of restricted trade.”
The BCC said the chancellor would need to delay the tapering of the furlough scheme and called for cash grants, adding that “measures need to be in place until the economy is able to reopen fully”.
Claire Walker, co-executive director of the BCC told the newspaper: “We would be calling for the government to provide further cash grants, at least equivalent to levels provided during the first lockdown, and to delay the tapering of government payments into the furlough scheme, planned for the start of July.”
Beaumont added that there was “lots government can do to help” and support measures must include an extension of fully subsidised workplace testing, a delay to the end of the rent moratorium, and emergency insolvency protections, leniency over state-backed loan repayments for those whose reopening is delayed, plus an extension of business rates relief for affected sectors.
He added that the ability to defer VAT is also due to end this month. “A third of those who deferred their VAT have yet to agree a repayment plan,” said Beaumont. “We will be pressing for more support.”
The reopening delay means that nightclubs will remain closed. A recent poll by the Night Time Industries Association showed 90 per cent of businesses saying another reopening delay would have a criticial impact on their chances of survival.
Further reading
What are the funding options for hospitality businesses?
Small business calls for support extension to match reopening delay
Source: SmallBusinessUK
Small business calls for support extension to match reopening delay
Originally written by Timothy Adler on Small Business
Small business associations have called for support to be extended to match any delay in reopening due to current lockdown restrictions.
The final easing of lockdown restrictions is set to be postponed beyond June 21, according to reports. Most current rules will remain in place.
However, from July 1, businesses are due to contribute 10 per cent of staff wages in a staged withdrawal of furlough, which is set to finish at the end of September. And a moratorium on evictions and debt collection from commercial tenants is due to lift on June 30.
>See also: Swap Bounce Back debt for employee equity, say industry experts
The worry is that without more taxpayer support already vulnerable small businesses will close completely.
Organisations including the Federation of Small Businesses, UK Hospitality and British Chambers of Commerce said they were poised to demand help such as loan forbearance, more generous furlough terms, and an extension to an eviction ban and business rates holiday.
Most hospitaly venues are still losing money, are buried under a mountain of debt, and consider any delay to the lockdown easing timetable as a grave threat to the industry with hundreds of thousands of jobs at risk. The hospitality sector would lose about £3bn in sales from a one-month delay, UK Hospitality said.
>See also: Small business to spend £23bn this year alone keeping Covid safe
Kate Nicholls, chief executive of UK Hospitality, said that full business rates relief, which runs until the end of this month, should be extended by three months.
Craig Beaumont, of the Federation of Small Businesses, told the Times: “Changing the road map will be a huge blow to businesses in the night-time economy who have had five quarters of no revenue whatsoever. For everyone else, the chopping and changing makes it impossible to plan and mitigate against the difficulties of restricted trade.”
The BCC said the chancellor would need to delay the tapering of the furlough scheme and called for cash grants, adding that “measures need to be in place until the economy is able to reopen fully”.
Claire Walker, co-executive director of the BCC told the newspaper: “We would be calling for the government to provide further cash grants, at least equivalent to levels provided during the first lockdown, and to delay the tapering of government payments into the furlough scheme, planned for the start of July.”
Beaumont added that there was “lots government can do to help” and support measures must include an extension of fully subsidised workplace testing, a delay to the end of the rent moratorium, and emergency insolvency protections, leniency over state-backed loan repayments for those whose reopening is delayed, plus an extension of business rates relief for affected sectors.
He added that the ability to defer VAT is also due to end this month. “A third of those who deferred their VAT have yet to agree a repayment plan,” said Beaumont. “We will be pressing for more support.”
The reopening delay means that nightclubs will remain closed. A recent poll by the Night Time Industries Association showed 90 per cent of businesses saying another reopening delay would have a criticial impact on their chances of survival.
Further reading
What are the funding options for hospitality businesses?
Small business calls for support extension to match reopening delay
Source: SmallBusinessUK
Law firms offer fertility benefits to UK staff for the first time
Two global law firms have extended their UK staff benefits to cover fertility benefits for the first time, including egg freezing and in vitro fertilisation (IVF)
Source: Sky Business News
Carlos Ghosn: US father and son admit role in Nissan chief's escape
Michael and Peter Taylor are accused of helping ex-Nissan boos Carlos Ghosn escape Japan in 2019.
Source: BBC
Serco in new boost to profits from coronavirus services
Outsourcer says profits will outperform amid high continuing demand for coronavirus services.
Source: BBC