The Borneo Post

Most foreign firms owning London property are registered in tax havens – Report

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LONDON: The vast majority of overseas companies that own property in London, including many used by individual­s to help disguise their ownership, are registered in tax havens, according to a report by Transparen­cy Internatio­nal UK and Thomson Reuters.

Just over 90 per cent of the 23,653 overseas companies owning 44,022 land titles in London were registered in places such as the British Virgin islands, Jersey, the Isle of Man and Panama, according to data analysed from the Land Registry.

London’s mix of top- end apartments, luxury penthouses and gleaming skyscraper­s have long attracted foreign investors and major corporatio­ns who use the city as global hub which sits between Asia and America.

But the release of the ‘ Panama Papers’ earlier this year shone a light on firms and individual­s who use complex structures to base themselves abroad, putting the issue of tax avoidance at the top of the global agenda.

Just over half of the land and property analysed in February was owned by anonymous companies in three areas: Kensing ton/ Chel sea and Camden, which have some of the priciest homes and Westminste­r, Britain’s political hub.

The anti- corruption group Transparen­cy Internatio­nal has long campaigned for greater openness and its UK Head of Advocacy Rachel Davies said Britons needed to have access to more informatio­n.

“It’s clear that a transparen­t system, based on conclusive and publicly available data, is necessary to unmask the corrupt individual­s using Britain to hide their criminalit­y,” she said.

Thomson Reuters, the parent company of Reuters News, worked with Transparen­cy Internat ional , usi ng its datasets with publicly available informatio­n.

“The real surprise was how little informatio­n was available, and how difficult it is to find out who exactly owns some of London’s prime land and property,” managing director at Thomson Reuters’ Risk and Supply Chain Phil Cotter said. — Reuters

 ??  ?? A bus carries commuters as it travels over Waterloo Bridge in London. The vast majority of overseas companies that own property in London, including many used by individual­s to help disguise their ownership, are registered in tax havens, according to a...
A bus carries commuters as it travels over Waterloo Bridge in London. The vast majority of overseas companies that own property in London, including many used by individual­s to help disguise their ownership, are registered in tax havens, according to a...

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