The Mail on Sunday

Tax breaks used for ‘low-risk’ TV

Small Business All the news and analysis for ambitious company owners

- By Alex Hawkes

TAX reliefs designed to encourage wealthy individual­s to invest in high-growth business ventures are being used to back TV shows in a ‘low-risk’ investment scheme.

Financiers are using the breaks under the Enterprise Investment Scheme – intended for high-risk trading companies – to provide production funding to TV programmes.

Great Point Media, a boutique investment adviser, recently raised £40 million for a TV show EIS fund. No investment­s are thought to have been made yet, but the scheme will aim to lend to programme makers who have already been commission­ed to make a show but have yet to receive any payment.

Great Point said it would be investing in TV shows that have income ‘contractua­lly agreed with a buyer equivalent to at least 75 per cent of the budgeted costs’. Because EIS reliefs allow investors to claim back 30 per cent of their investment as tax rebates, the scheme reduces risk for investors to virtually nothing.

Tax Efficient Review, an independen­t guide to investment­s like the Great Point scheme, said the structure was ‘a low-risk way in which to deploy surplus cash’.

The descriptio­n is in sharp contrast to the Government’s stated aim of EIS tax breaks, which it says are ‘designed to help smaller higher-risk trading companies to raise finance by offering a range of tax reliefs to investors’.

Great Point said that ‘investment is absolutely at risk as the prospect businesses are fully exposed to production risk and production failure’.

The company added: ‘There is no imperative under the EIS to take unnecessar­y risk.’

TESSA Cook, co-founder of food sharing app Olio and a former boss at payday lender Wonga, is among 30 finalists in the Chivas Venture, a global $1 million (£800,000) search to find the next generation of entreprene­urs likely to have a positive impact on the world.

The start-ups identified from thousands of businesses by the Skoll Centre for Social Entreprene­urship at the University of Oxford range from protein bars made from crickets and shoes made from rubbish, to walls of moss that clean city air, and human waste turned into affordable cooking fuel.

Olio connects people with excess food to neighbours who might want it.

Each finalist will travel to Los Angeles in July to compete for a share of $1 million. Meanwhile, Richard Reed, founder of drinks maker Innocent, said at an event hosted by the whisky brand Chivas Regal: ‘Given Brexit and Trump, we now need entreprene­urs more than ever before.’

 ??  ?? FRUITFUL: Tessa Cook, centre, had the idea for Olio
FRUITFUL: Tessa Cook, centre, had the idea for Olio
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