Company Tag: Blick Rothenberg
Blick Rothenberg names new Head of Tax
Caroline Le Jeune has moved from leading the accountancy firm's Private Client team to running the tax show.
Investors are forming ‘clubs’ to skirt the new overseas buyer Stamp Duty surcharge
"Rather than invest in a single buy-to-let personally, some overseas investors are joining 'club' deals where they take a share of a collective purchase of six or more properties," says Blick Rothenberg.
Blick Rothenberg names new CEO
Tax firm Blick Rothenberg has appointed one of the youngest financial services CEOs in the country.
Government relaxes stamp duty refund rules after market freeze
Official SDLT guidance changed to allow refund claims on 3% surcharge beyond the standard three-year limit
Budget Preview: What might the Chancellor announce on the 29th October?
Accountancy & tax advisory firm Blick Rothenberg looks at what the Chancellor might, should and should not say in the Autumn Budget, which takes place at the end of this month
New CGT rules ‘could create a cashflow & compliance nightmare’ for property owners
HMRC proposes a 30-day payment window for Capital Gains Tax payments, and more admin
HMRC warns offshore tax dodgers to ‘put their cards on the table quickly’
'Much bigger fines' for tax evasion are coming into force on 1st October; warnings should be taken seriously, say advisors
Public register of overseas property ownership will be live in early 2021
"World first" register is being designed to tackle money laundering
Blick Rothenburg expands with Shelley Stock Hutter acquisition
Tax and accountancy firm makes its first acquisition
BoE raises interest rates for the for the first time in a decade: Property industry reactions
"No surprise" from the prime resi sector as the Monetary Policy Committee votes 7-2 to increase the base rate from 0.25% to 0.5%
New tax evasion rules are the “most severe punitive measure yet”
HMRC takes tougher stance against offshore tax evaders
Non-dom tax reforms resurface – but the 2019 deadline hasn’t changed
Re-introduction of non-domicile reforms means that taxpayers now have less time to sort out their affairs