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Wednesday 30 October 2024 1:16 pm  |  Updated:  Wednesday 30 October 2024 5:46 pm

Autumn Budget 2024: Reeves takes half measure on AIM tax hike

By: Elliot Gulliver-Needham

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AIM, the LSE’s junior market, had been sent into a tailspin by Budget rumours.
The FTSE 100 hit an all-time high this morning.

Stocks on London’s junior AIM market registered their biggest single day bump in four years today as the Government revealed it would only partly abolish a key inheritance tax break for shares on the exchange.

Shares on the market will retain a 50 per cent relief from inheritance tax, the Chancellor Rachel Reeves confirmed today, setting the effective tax rate at 20 per cent.

The move came from Chancellor Rachel Reeves today as part of a host of inheritance tax measures meant to raise as much as £2bn.

The FTSE AIM 100 index jumped 4.3 per cent in the minutes after as a result, setting it up for its biggest one-day rise since April 2020.

Rumours had swept the City that AIM’s business rate, which allows stocks to be inherited without being taxed if held for more than two years, would be scrapped to raise around £1.4bn.

Investment bank Peel Hunt calculated that if full scrapping of the tax break had been implemented, 15 per cent of the total cash in AIM could disappear overnight, causing a 20-30 per cent drop in the value of the junior market.

This would lead between £14bn to £20bn of investor value to evaporate, leading to a large number of AIM companies either delisting or moving to the main market.

“The government did not quite throw in the hand grenade for AIM entrepreneurs and investors that many expected,” said Abby Glennie, manager of the Abrdn UK Smaller Companies fund.

Read more

‘Pendulum swung too far’: AIM hit with 222 delistings ahead of nomad changes 

London Stock Exchange building exterior with financial charts overlay, highlighting impact of stamp duty on share listings.

However, Glennie warned that with tax benefits from AIM halved, “investors will need to be more positive on return prospects to allocate cash to AIM and this could swing allocations towards other areas”.

The move not to go all the way on abolishing the tax was a sign of “reassuring support, especially for smaller companies and the high street,” added Laurence Hulse, manager of the small companies-focused Onward Opportunities trust.

Chief of the London Stock Exchange Julia Hoggett wrote to City minister Tulip Siddiq last month warning that the “ongoing viability” of the junior market would be threatened if the inheritance tax break was eliminated.

Even the head of AIM said that while the market would survive the hit, it would cause a “significant slug of capital” to exit.

“It would be really unnecessary, it would be painful, and it would be unhelpful,” said Marcus Stuttard, head of AIM and UK primary markets at the London Stock Exchange Group.

Meanwhile, over 100 London-listed companies, including Fevertree and Yougov, wrote to the Chancellor warning that uncertainty around the tax relief was causing a significant dip in their ability to fundraise.

Some 92 companies have delisted from AIM in the past year, with the total number of companies on the junior exchange falling below 700 for the first time since 2001.

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Reeves aims to lure US workers through tax reform

Keanu Reeves seen casually dressed during a public appearance in a local pub, engaging with fans and enjoying a relaxed at...

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