Close Menu
Fund Focus News
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Trending
    • Best Mutual Fund In India? THIS MF Scheme Turned Rs 25,000 Into Rs 1.1 Lakh in Just 3 Years | Check Details
    • JD Vance vs Marco Rubio: How the White House briefing room became a 2028 audition stage
    • NS&I failures pile on the agony for bereaved families chasing missing premium bonds | Savings
    • Siddaramaiah, DK Shivakumar reach Delhi amid buzz over Karnataka leadership change
    • Benjamin Netanyahu vows to ‘crush’ Hezbollah as Israel intensifies Lebanon offensive
    • Barbell Strategy For Fixed Income: Here’s What Debt Fund Managers Use To Navigate Yield Volatility — Explained
    • Financial watchdog’s clampdown on single-stock leveraged ETFs marketing sparks industry backlash
    • ‘Wound in Christian memory’: Pope Leo apologises for Church’s slavery legacy
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Fund Focus News
    • Home
    • Bonds
    • ETFs
    • Funds
    • Investments
    • Mutual Funds
    • Property Investments
    • SIP
    Fund Focus News
    Home»Funds»UK funds industry calls on Chancellor to rebuild public trust in markets
    Funds

    UK funds industry calls on Chancellor to rebuild public trust in markets

    October 31, 2025


    Rachel Reeves, Britain’s new Chancellor, faces a familiar dilemma: how to revive the country’s appetite for investment without emptying the Treasury’s pockets.

    The Association of Investment Companies (AIC), which represents more than 350 listed funds, believes it has the answer, or at least a shopping list. Ahead of November’s Budget, the group has urged the government to “foster an investment culture” through a series of modest but symbolic reforms.

    “Creating an investment culture won’t happen overnight,” says Richard Stone, the AIC’s chief executive. “It needs to be built on understanding and trust, with a real push to improve financial literacy.” For too long, he argues, financial education has languished between government departments, the bureaucratic equivalent of a lost parcel.

    The AIC’s prescription involves three measures: simplifying individual savings accounts (ISAs), phasing out stamp duty on share purchases, and giving venture capital trusts (VCTs) more room to invest. None, it insists, would cost the Treasury much.

    First, ISAs. Britain’s savings regime, Stone argues, has become needlessly baroque: a “pick ’n’ mix” of cash ISAs, stocks and shares ISAs, and other subtypes that baffle savers and deter investment. The AIC proposes replacing them with a single investment ISA, blending cash and equities under one roof.

    The idea is to make it easier for savers to shift from cash — still the default home for most ISA money — into productive assets. “Cash is essential for resilience,” Stone concedes, “but it’s not risk-free. Inflation quietly eats away at its value.”

    Under the AIC’s plan, ISA providers offering only cash would be capped at £10,000 in annual contributions per customer. Most savers — two-thirds of cash ISA holders contribute less than that — would be unaffected. But wealthier depositors would have a gentle nudge towards investing rather than hoarding.

    The second proposal targets stamp duty on share purchases, a relic of the City’s pre-digital age that still skims 0.5% off each trade in UK-listed shares. Stone argues the tax discourages investment in domestic firms and favours foreign markets, where no such levy exists. The AIC wants a phased abolition, starting with investment company shares — still taxed even though open-ended funds are not — and continuing with shares bought inside ISAs and pensions.

    This would not only end an odd form of double taxation (since investment companies pay stamp duty again when they buy UK shares), but also remove what Stone calls a “self-defeating bias” against British equities.

    Finally, the AIC wants to loosen the rules on VCTs, a rare example of a policy that has worked. These tax-advantaged funds channel money into small, fast-growing British businesses. The government extended the scheme to 2035 earlier this year, but its investment limits have not been updated in over a decade.

    The AIC proposes doubling the annual cap on investment from £5m to £10m for standard companies, and from £10m to £20m for “knowledge-intensive” firms in innovative sectors. Lifetime caps would also rise, and the rule barring investments in companies more than seven years old would be scrapped.

    Such reforms, the AIC argues, would cost “not a penny” but would allow VCTs to keep pace with the scale of modern businesses.

    Whether the Chancellor listens is another matter. The Treasury has long viewed tax reform for investors as politically delicate — too easy to caricature as a giveaway for the well-off. Yet if Britain is to reverse its chronic underinvestment, as both Labour and business groups agree it must, nurturing an investment culture may be less a luxury than a necessity.

    Get free weekly UK company analysis from The Armchair Trader here



    Source link

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram Email

    Related Posts

    Find GuideStone Funds funds and ETFs

    May 25, 2026

    Hedge funds ‘doubling down’ on AI are fleeing software stocks: Goldman

    May 24, 2026

    Want gold exposure? These gold funds delivered the best long term returns over five years

    May 23, 2026
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Top Posts

    The Shifting Landscape of Art Investment and the Rise of Accessibility: The London Art Exchange

    September 11, 2023

    Charlie Cobham: The Art Broker Extraordinaire Maximizing Returns for High Net Worth Clients

    February 12, 2024

    Financial watchdog’s clampdown on single-stock leveraged ETFs marketing sparks industry backlash

    May 25, 2026

    The Unyielding Resilience of the Art Market: A Historical and Contemporary Perspective

    November 19, 2023
    Don't Miss
    Mutual Funds

    Best Mutual Fund In India? THIS MF Scheme Turned Rs 25,000 Into Rs 1.1 Lakh in Just 3 Years | Check Details

    May 26, 2026

    Personal Finance Published: Tuesday, May 26, 2026, 10:11 [IST] Mutual fund investors, pay attention! A…

    JD Vance vs Marco Rubio: How the White House briefing room became a 2028 audition stage

    May 26, 2026

    NS&I failures pile on the agony for bereaved families chasing missing premium bonds | Savings

    May 25, 2026

    Siddaramaiah, DK Shivakumar reach Delhi amid buzz over Karnataka leadership change

    May 25, 2026
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • Vimeo
    EDITOR'S PICK

    Scottish construction firm secures Falkland Islands order

    October 18, 2024

    USDA tells states to undo distribution of SNAP Benefits in November

    November 10, 2025

    Volatile Bond Market Puts Traders on Defense Amid Fed-Cut Doubts

    October 13, 2024
    Our Picks

    Best Mutual Fund In India? THIS MF Scheme Turned Rs 25,000 Into Rs 1.1 Lakh in Just 3 Years | Check Details

    May 26, 2026

    JD Vance vs Marco Rubio: How the White House briefing room became a 2028 audition stage

    May 26, 2026

    NS&I failures pile on the agony for bereaved families chasing missing premium bonds | Savings

    May 25, 2026
    Most Popular

    🔥Juve target Chukwuemeka, Inter raise funds, Elmas bid in play 🤑

    August 20, 2025

    💵 Libra responds after Flamengo takes legal action and ‘freezes’ funds

    September 26, 2025

    ₹9000 monthly SIP can help you retire at 45 with ₹2 lakh monthly pension

    May 5, 2026
    © 2026 Fund Focus News
    • Get In Touch
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.