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Time for Reeves to recognise reality: AstraZeneca has killed stamp duty on shares | Nils Pratley

about 22 hours ago
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It was one of those votes where the majority was always going to be huge.AstraZeneca’s proposal to list its shares directly on the New York Stock Exchange while retaining the quotes in London and Stockholm disadvantages nobody on the shareholder register.US investors get the chance to own AstraZeneca in full-fat form rather than via American depositary receipts (a wrapper provided by a handful of banks), a rejig that should widen the pool of potential investors and help the company with any future big deals in the US.Meanwhile, the pharma giant keeps its presence in the FTSE 100 index, upsetting no shareholders on the home front.“A global listing for global investors in a global company,” as Pascal Soriot, the chief executive, called it.

Sure enough, the proposal sailed through on Monday with 99% in favour.But one non-shareholding party will suffer from this setup.It is HM Treasury, which will be out of pocket to the tune of about £200m a year from lost stamp duty on transactions in London.Buyers of AstraZeneca shares in the UK, you see, will be getting a depositary interest in the company in future.It will carry the same voting and ownership rights as before but, critically, stamp duty does not apply to such instruments.

The arrangement drives a coach and horses through the UK’s stamp duty regime.It would only take a few other Footsie big beasts to copy the structure for the government’s £3bn-ish annual receipts from stamp duty on shares to collapse.What should Rachel Reeves, the chancellor, do? Step one should be to recognise that the tax is doomed in its current form.Stamp duty reserve tax, to give its full name, is the 0.5% levy on purchases of shares in UK companies, and virtually no other country sets the rate so high.

The US, China and Germany don’t impose any equivalent tax at all and only Ireland, at 1%, has a higher rate.Worse, it is only a subset of investors who pay it – UK retail investors and UK pension funds – because everybody else has practical workarounds already.As an advert for popular share ownership, or just the competitiveness of the London market, stamp duty has become a very obvious own goal, as argued here regularly.In step two, Reeves should make a virtue of the necessity of cutting the tax.The endless months of pre-budget speculation have brought the strong suggestion that the chancellor is considering capping annual cash Isa contributions in the hope of encouraging a few cash obsessives into shares.

If that is the stick then the carrot ought to be overdue reform of the costs of transacting in UK shares,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 promotionOutright abolition would be best,If that is deemed politically impossible in a tax-raising budget, at least chop the rate in half, which could encourage more trading,Suggested alternatives, such as granting a three-year stamp duty holiday to new listings on the London market, are too fiddly and too minor to make a difference,The timing is rotten for the chancellor, but the blunt truth is that the UK’s most valuable company has demonstrated the multiple flaws in the stamp duty regime for all the world to see.

Time to recognise reality before the receipts leak away anyway,
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Stephen Colbert on ex-prince Andrew: ‘Pervert formerly known as prince’

Late-night hosts spoke about Donald Trump’s trip to Asia and how he refuses to accept criticism while also reacting to ex-prince Andrew being stripped of his royal title.On the Late Show, Stephen Colbert spoke about Trump’s recent trip to parts of Asia, including South Korea where he negotiated tariffs with Xi Jinping, China’s president.Colbert played awkward footage of the two in front of cameras, adding that he was “not confident we’re gonna win this one”.The talks ended up with both sides agreeing to what amounted to a pre-tariff status quo yet Trump has been “telling everyone he won the negotiations big time” saying that he would rank the meeting as a 12 out of 10.Colbert joked that he “must have been insufferable as a teenager” telling friends he went to 14th base with girls which means “over the bra, under the hat”

4 days ago
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Womad festival returns and moves to new Wiltshire site

Womad festival, the global music festival co-founded by Peter Gabriel, is to return in 2026 at a new venue.The festival took a year off in 2025 in order to “return fully charged”, and left its home of Charlton Park, Wiltshire, where it had been held since 2007. Its new venue remains in Wiltshire, at nearby Neston Park in Corsham.“It immediately felt to us like a warm and welcoming home into which we could sink our roots,” Gabriel said.“In a world in which many bad actors seem to be achieving power by fanning the flames of hatred, racism and division, a meeting place for all the world’s cultures and dreams, built on mutual respect, seems all the more precious,” he added

4 days ago
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Seth Meyers on Trump’s South Korea visit: ‘Getting the royal treatment he so desperately craves’

Late-night hosts recapped Donald Trump’s lavish visit to South Korea, where he received a ceremonial golden crown.Trump continued his tour of Asia on Wednesday, where he’s been “getting the royal treatment he so desperately craves”, according to Seth Meyers. “He wishes he could get the same treatment back here at home. He made it clear, for example, that he’s super-jealous of China’s authoritarian government.”Speaking to South Korean leaders, Trump assured them that the country’s partnership with the US guaranteed that “you’ll have everything done very, very quickly … as fast as any other country, other than China”, because China “has a good system” where Xi Jinping can “approve things immediately” whereas he had to “wait two weeks”

5 days ago
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A third of people in England believe in ghosts, survey finds

It is the time of the year when the veil between the living and the dead is at its thinnest, and spirits walk the Earth once more.But it appears you are more likely to be visited by a ghost if you are under 35 years old, while spiritual creatures tend to avoid those who live in the East Midlands.New research from the National Folklore Survey has found that, across England, more than a third of people believe in ghosts and supernatural beings, but belief in the paranormal varies according to age and geography.Led by academics from Sheffield Hallam University, the University of Hertfordshire, and Chapman University in the US, the survey is the first of its kind since the last Survey of English Language and Folklore more than 60 years ago.Just over one in three people in England said they believed in ghosts or the spirits of the deceased, with younger people (aged 25-34) most likely to believe in the paranormal, which also includes magical beings, possession, spells, psychics, angels and demons

5 days ago
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Arts organisations still in ‘funding limbo’ after crash of Arts Council England online portal

Arts organisations and artists have said they are still in “funding limbo” with mounting bills and uncertain futures after this summer’s crash of Arts Council England’s grant processing platform.ACE’s online portal, Grantium, was used by artists to submit and manage funding applications. But when it crashed in July, it left thousands of applications for vital funding in doubt – a situation that persisted for several months until applications reopened in late September.Individual artists and leaders of arts institutions have said that, after the crash, they received less money than initially offered by ACE, which is also accused of revoking funding application extensions for organisations affected by the collapse of the portal.ACE claimed the outage was caused by the inability of Grantium to operate with high traffic at a time when the system was being updated

5 days ago
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Jimmy Kimmel on government shutdown: ‘There is no Republican plan for healthcare’

Late-night hosts recapped Donald Trump’s state visit to Japan as the government shutdown continued into its fourth week.On Jimmy Kimmel Live!, the comedian checked in on Trump’s visit to Japan this week. “You know, when Trump visits, you have to find something to do with him,” he said. “You can’t just take him for a stroll around town.“So instead, you take him for a stroll inside a palace, where he gets uncomfortably close to the band,” he said over footage of Trump wandering aimlessly through a ballroom with the Japan’s prime minister, Sanae Takaichi

6 days ago
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Crispy chicken and pancetta with a nutty apple salad: Thomasina Miers’ Sunday best recipes

3 days ago
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From fritters to pizza, there’s more to pumpkin season than soups and carving

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Benjamina Ebuehi’s recipe for ginger biscuit s’mores | The sweet spot

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How to turn pastry scraps into a quick and tasty caramelised onion tart – recipe | Waste not

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Australian supermarket chocolate ice-cream taste test: ‘My scorecard read simply: “I’m going to buy it”’

7 days ago
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Sweet dreams? Healthy ways to put pudding back on the menu | Kitchen aide

7 days ago