Tax
GUEST ARTICLE: Where Enterprise Investment Schemes Go After UK Budget
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The recent UK autumn budget affected a number of areas, including that of the Enterprise Investment Scheme. This article examines the current state of play.
Enterprise Investment Schemes are structures that invest in
new, small UK firms and are seen as ways that relatively ordinary
investors can support venture capital-type business areas,
garnering significant tax breaks. The EIS model has been around
in the UK since the 1990s, surviving a mix of Conservative,
Labour and coalition governments. In the recent UK autumn budget
statement delivered by finance minister Philip Hammond, these
structures retained significant tax advantages.
Film-related investment schemes haven’t enjoyed great publicity
in certain respects; a number of movie-related schemes, offering
large tax breaks, have fallen afoul of the UK tax authorities.
Defenders of EIS structures, however, say they are legally robust
and should not be branded in the same way.
Enterprise Investment Schemes put money into a variety of
sectors, such as the media and technology fields. A firm
operating in this space is Goldfinch
Entertainment. Kirsty Bell, managing director and founder of
Goldfinch explains why the recent budget measures of the
government are positive for the EIS sector. The editors of this
news service are pleased to share these insights; they don’t
necessarily endorse all views of guest contributors and invite
readers to respond. Email tom.burroughes@wealthbriefing.com
Media-based Enterprise Investment Scheme companies had a nervous
wait for the Budget on 22 November – as indicated in a lot of the
pre-Budget public relations.
For months there had been concerns that part or all of the media
related investment would, in future, be excluded from the EIS. In
large part, this suggestion arose from criticism of media EIS
schemes that we here at Goldfinch Entertainment believe to be
entirely misconceived and unfair.
First, the good news, which is that media as an investable asset
class remains under the EIS umbrella. Better still, some media
companies will be eligible for the more generous EIS reliefs
unveiled by the Chancellor [Hammond].
Hammond doubled the annual investment limits for
“knowledge-intensive companies”, from the £5 million ($6.72
million) that all EIS companies can raise to £10 million.
Individual investors can invest up to £1 million a year in EIS
companies. From April 2018, they will be able to invest £2
million, of which at least £1 million must be with a
knowledge-intensive company.
The big question is to what extent will media businesses be
eligible for the increased allowances for knowledge-intensive
companies? It will depend on the detailed definitions, but we can
get some idea from the Budget.
There is a research and development test, under which a company’s
research and development costs must have accounted for at least
15 per cent of operating costs in one of the last three years or
ten percent in every one of the last three years. At least 20 per
cent of the employees in its research and development unit must
hold a master’s degree or higher qualification. The rules are not
the easiest to manage and specialist advice should be taken, and
careful management of the R&D created.
It is fair to say that overall the media industry’s R&D
spending is average, rather than anything more, with obvious
variations between research-intensive games companies, for
example, and makers of television programmes.
Of more interest, perhaps, is a second criterion, which is that
the company needs either to have created or be in the process of
creating, intellectual property. Here, for rather obvious
reasons, the media sector is, overall, likely to find it easier
to qualify. Film in particular is one of the oldest serial
creators of IP.
Again, the games industry - in which Britain is a world leader -
will probably find it relatively straightforward to demonstrate
having generated new IP. Companies write code to create an image,
They develop the tools that will bring a game to life. So many
games are entirely new that it would be hard to argue that they
have not created IP.
Determining IP may be a trickier proposition with many film and
television productions. The tools have already been created, in
large part, and a lot of the bigger-budget film and TV shows are
re-makes. In other words, the companies created IP years ago, and
are subsequently milking it for all it is worth. However,
companies we deal with often create formats which are IP and
highly valuable internationally to exploit.
It would be difficult to argue that the latest James Bond or
Batman film contains fresh new IP. On the contrary. It is
precisely because these brands are so powerful and
well-established that people will pay to watch the latest release
despite frequently having little idea of what the storyline is
about.
The broader worry is that the focus from the Treasury will be on
tax incentives on the R&D side – for tech companies, for
example – while the IP aspect will be eclipsed. That would be bad
news for media companies, but such a development may be made
likely because of the unfair criticism directed at media EIS
schemes in recent years.
They have quite wrongly been tarred with the same brush as
completely separate tax-efficient film-investment schemes, many
of which have been discredited. We know this in our own business
– we mention films and, for a lot of investors, the red flags
immediately go up. They had read in the papers about footballers
or other wealthy celebrities who lost money when one or other
film scheme was ruled out of court.
Not only is media EIS investment completely different, regardless
of who is behind it, but the correct approach in this area
differs from that of many, entirely reputable, firms in the
field. Our ethos at the start was to bring to the table a very
simple and transparent proposition, using the same basic business
principles that would be applied when considering opening a
restaurant, for example, or a new manufacturing business.
What is the market? What should the project cost? Will we get it
back?
The film industry as a whole rarely if ever takes this approach.
It is largely still star-driven with little consideration given
to target audience or marketing strategy for the end product with
multiple finance sources, many layers of fees and poor review of
costs and budgets. Many of the EIS media schemes are
passive investors in this old broken model which means they are
unable to dictate and guide the end product and thus recoupment
back to investors.
By contrast, we take a strong hand in how our projects are
moulded. We are executive producers. We have our own production
company and our own distribution company. We are anything but
passive.
No properly costed and planned film, or any other media projects,
needs to be a blockbuster success to earn decent returns for
investors. We not only know this but have proved this. We have
recently proven this with our first EIS exit.
We would have liked a little more from the Chancellor regarding
Including the Seed Enterprise Investment Scheme (SEIS), the
junior version of EIS, in his doubling of investment limits for
knowledge-intensive companies. Reexamining this would help to
bridge the financing gap between smaller and larger firms. In
some ways, it is surprising that he did not.
However, overall this is good news for EIS in general and the
media industry. The government consulted on what should and
should not qualify for tax-efficient investment. It did the
digging and asked the questions, and listened to the answers.
Its conclusion, correct in our view, is that EIS is working well
– albeit in need of some tweaks - and media companies should
remain within it. In short, the Budget is a big tick in the box
for EIS, a major thumbs-up from the government.
It is a clear and confident investment in the industries that are
the future of this country.