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Shein UK accused of moving ‘vast bulk of income’ to Singapore to cut British tax

3 days ago
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Shein’s UK arm has been accused of transferring the “vast bulk of income” to its Singaporean parent in order to cut its British tax bill.The company, which had been considering a £50bn float on the London Stock Exchange but is expected to list in Hong Kong, paid just £9.6m in corporation tax despite taking £2bn in sales last year.The payment is equivalent to 25% of the £38.2m in pre-tax profits it made in the UK in 2024, according to accounts filed at Companies House, in line with the UK corporation tax rate.

However, campaigners said the bill was low relative to Shein’s £2bn sales because about 84% or £1.72bn of the sales figure is transferred to its parent group’s Roadget Business Pte Ltd in Singapore as a “purchasing” cost.“Very little surplus is left in the UK to be subject to corporate income tax,” Paul Monaghan, the chief executive of the Fair Tax Foundation, said.Referring to tactics adopted by Amazon, Apple and Microsoft to transfer earnings to low-tax countries which met heavy criticism more than decade ago, Monaghan said: “This feels like a new wild west for tax.The fast-fashion industry now is reminiscent of the worst excesses of big tech’s anti-tax measures in previous decades.

“Questions need to be asked as to how much of the economic value that Shein Distribution UK Ltd generates from its UK sales are actually being booked as profit in the UK and are subject to corporate income tax, and how much is being booked as profit in the tax haven Singapore.“The UK accounts reveal substantial related party transactions with its immediate parent in Singapore, which transfer the vast bulk of income back to Singapore as a ‘purchasing cost’, leaving relatively little surplus in the UK to be taxed.“Singapore not only operates a lower headline corporate income tax rate than the UK, 25% versus 17%, but also offers special incentives to attract corporates to establish there and these can see profits taxed at rates as low as 5%, and we know from previous Shein disclosures that Roadget Business Pte Ltd avails themselves of these.”Accounts for the Singapore operation reveal it paid tax at an average rate of corporation tax of 9.4% in the three years from 2021 to the end of 2023, according to the Fair Tax Foundation.

A spokesperson for Shein said the allegations were “preposterously wrong and collapse under the most basic scrutiny”.“As is standard in international commerce, our UK business purchases products for resale from our principal at prices consistent with prevailing market conditions and arm’s length principles, just as any independent third party would,” the spokesperson said.“This approach ensures that our transactions are fair, reasonable, and in line with global practices.These are among the most fundamental and widely accepted practices in global commerce, something these campaigners should already understand.“That we operate in a low-margin, high-volume industry should be obvious to anyone who has done even minimal research on our sector.

“Shein complies with the relevant laws and regulations of each market we operate in.We pay all relevant taxes in UK, where applicable.”Sign up to Business TodayGet set for the working day – we'll point you to all the business news and analysis you need every morningafter newsletter promotionThe ultimate owner of Shein’s Singapore business is based in the Cayman Islands, a tax haven.The spokesperson for Shein said: “This is a standard, widely used corporate structure across industries.”The concerns about Shein’s low rate of corporation tax payments in the UK add to worries about its use of the de minimis rule, which allows overseas sellers to send goods valued at £135 or less direct to British shoppers without paying any customs duty.

Monaghan estimates that Shein would have paid as much as £200m of customs duty on importing its goods to the UK if it had not used the tax break.The chancellor, Rachel Reeves, is reviewing the rule amid mounting fears that China’s retailers and manufacturers are dumping goods in the UK after the US in May revoked its own de minimis exception for Chinese-made goods, under which parcels with a value of less than $800 (£600) shipped to individuals were exempt from import tax.This week, the US also scrapped the tax break for items from all countries later this month.The EU said in February it would phase out its exemption on customs duties for low-value parcels.It emerged this week that £3bn worth of these parcels from China made up 51% of all the small parcels shipped to the UK from around the world last year.

That was up from 35% in 2023-24, according to HM Revenue and Customs figures obtained by the BBC via a freedom of information request.
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Mirror publisher puts 600 jobs at risk amid AI and reader changes

The publisher of the Mirror, Express and Star newspapers has put 600 jobs at risk in its latest restructure to adapt to changing reader habits and the impact of artificial intelligence.Reach, which also owns scores of regional titles including the Manchester Evening News, the Birmingham Mail and the Liverpool Echo, said on Monday that it intends to make 321 editorial redundancies.The overall number of jobs at risk is separate to a restructure of its commercial and production operations, as well as roles affected by the creation of a central sports hub for coverage across its national and regional brands, which was announced in July.The company, which reported profits of almost £100m last year and whose chief executive, Jim Mullen, departed in March, said the restructure was part of a shift to producing more video and audio content, as well as a live news network.“Our new structure represents the biggest reorganisation we’ve ever undertaken, even more than in the early days of the digital revolution,” said the Reach chief content officer, David Higgerson

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Tucking into a box of Quality Street or Celebrations is a Christmas tradition.But as this year’s supply arrives in British supermarkets, it is becoming clear that the Grinch has already struck and made the tubs of the confectionery lighter.Someone has also taken a bite out of Toblerone, with 20g shaved off its chocolatey peaks, reducing a 360g bar to 340g.The latest round of shrinkflation means anyone prising the lid off the Quality Street box may be underwhelmed by the number of sweets – as 50g has been lost from the weight, taking it from 600g to 550g.Meanwhile, at 500g, there’s less to celebrate about tubs of Mars’s Celebrations, which weighed 550g in 2024

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Our charity could have lost thousands due to Thames Water delay

I work for a charity providing affordable sheltered housing for older people. In January 2024, we began refurbishing a building that was bequeathed to us.We paid Thames Water to connect a water supply in February 2024. It wasn’t until November that it informed us that it would need permission from Transport for London (TfL) to close part of the road.Since then, there has been no progress

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Londoners buying lowest share of property outside capital since 2013

Londoners are buying the lowest share of houses outside the capital in more than a decade as their moving plans are curtailed by a stalling local market and the shift back to office working.They were behind just 5.3% of house purchases elsewhere in the country in the first seven months of this year, the lowest proportion since 2013, research has found.The number of transactions – 31,620 up to the end of July – is about half the 63,600 in the same period in 2021 at the height of the Covid pandemic-driven “race for space”, according to an analysis of data from Countrywide estate agents.“The return to the office has played a role in curbing the appetite for long-distance moves, but it’s the lack of price growth in the capital that’s really clipped the wings of would-be leavers,” said Aneisha Beveridge, the head of research at the real estate company Hamptons, which carried out the analysis

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