Publication
US/Ukraine minerals deal: Digging into the detail
The United States and Ukraine governments have announced the signature of an agreement of a minerals deal for Ukraine.
United Kingdom | Publication | May 2022
The Queen’s Speech on May 10, 2022 sets out the Government’s legislative programme for the 2022-2023 session, with the Prime Minister stating that: “Together, these measures make this Queen’s Speech one that will help us meet today’s challenges. They will ensure we can continue building back a better Britain after the pandemic, boosting our growth and recovery so that every part of our country can thrive”.
Real estate highlights include:
Some proposals in the Bill have already proved controversial, such as new powers for local authorities to instigate rental auctions of vacant commercial properties in town centres and on high streets. The British Property Federation has dismissed compulsory auctions as a "political gimmick".
Several draft Bills have already been introduced notably the Levelling Up and Regeneration Bill, of which more below.
The Building Safety Act 2022 (BSA) is here. Along with the myriad of statutory instruments and accompanying guidance, this new legislation will usher in the biggest swathe of regulatory changes to the UK built environment in almost 40 years.
The BSA is the Government’s main legislative response to the Grenfell tragedy. It will run alongside the Fire Safety Act 2021. It focuses on the entire lifecycle of a building, covering a number of issues, including:
Although the BSA received Royal Assent at the end of April 2022, the vast majority of its provisions will not come into force for 12-18 months as secondary legislation is developed. However a limited number of changes, including changes to limitation periods in the Defective Premises Act 1972 and section 38 of the Building Act 1984 (which affords a statutory right of action to anyone who suffers damage as a result of a breach of building regulations), take effect two months after Royal Assent, on June 28, 2022.
For further information and a list contacts, please see our briefing on the topic here.
The CIS can apply to landlord contributions to tenant’s works if they include some element of “Cat A” works which benefit the reversion. This can cause considerable complexity in new lettings as most retail and office tenants will not be registered as a CIS “subcontractor”, so the landlord may need to deduct 30% from the contribution and pay it to HMRC.
This is the subject of a recent Chartered Institute of Taxation (CIOT) submission to HMRC, updating a previous submission in 2017. The CIOT stresses to HMRC that these sorts of payments are not what the CIS was introduced to target; impose particular challenges on the retail and hospitality sectors at a time when the Government is trying to support them; and create difficulties for both landlords and tenants in relation to administration, compliance, and cashflow. The CIOT suggests that HMRC should consider a wider exclusion for contribution payments on the grant, variation or assignment of a lease whether for tenant’s or landlord’s works.
The CIS has long been a challenging area for landlord/tenant contributions and while the CIOT’s submission is welcome, we do not expect HMRC to move quickly on this issue. In the meantime, landlords and tenants must continue to consider whether the CIS is relevant to contribution payments.
Following the announcement in the Spring Statement that it is considering reforms to how it incentivises and supports business investment, the Government has published a policy paper inviting responses from a range of stakeholders on proposals to reform the capital allowances regime. In particular, the Government is seeking to understand the extent to which the regime plays a role in taxpayers’ investment decisions (including the impact of the super-deduction on decision making, which ends next year), and how the regime could be more competitive and easier to operate.
While the policy paper itself does not provide much in the way of further information beyond what was included in the Spring Statement and the Government’s ‘Tax Plan’, the paper reiterates both the Government’s recognition that the permanent capital allowances available in the UK are not as competitive as those of a number of its international peers, and their stated strategy of doing more to support business investment via capital allowances.
For a copy of the policy paper and details of the Government’s proposed reforms to the capital allowances regime, please see here. The deadline for providing responses is July 1, 2022.
For further information please contact Tax Partner Julia Lloyd.
The Levelling Up and Regeneration Bill (the Bill) had its first reading before the House of Commons on May 11, 2022.
One aspect of the Bill that has caused some controversy is the proposal to grant local authorities the power to instigate rental auctions for vacant high street premises and the power to compel the landlord to enter into lettings with the successful bidder.
The premises that are at risk of local authority intervention are those that are located in a high street or town centre and which the local authority considers to be suitable for “high street use”. This covers a broad range of uses including shops, offices, restaurants, public entertainment and even light industrial.
Two further conditions must be met before the local authority can intervene in the letting of high street premises:
If the two conditions have been satisfied, the local authority can serve an initial letting notice on the landlord. The initial letting notice is valid for up to 10 weeks. If the premises have not been let within eight weeks of the initial notice, the local authority can serve a final letting notice. The final letting notice is valid for 14 weeks.
During each notice period the landlord is generally not permitted to grant a tenancy or licence of the premises unless it first obtains the local authority’s consent.
The Bill does not go into any detail as to the process for the rental auction and leaves this to be determined under future regulations.
Once a successful bidder has been identified, the local authority will enter into a “tenancy contract” with them. Strikingly, the landlord is not a party to contract negotiations. The local authority must ‘have regard’ to any representations made by the landlord in deciding terms but that may be of little comfort to a landlord.
The Bill gives limited information about the terms of the tenancy and how these are to be negotiated, instead allowing for further regulations to set out the detail. The Secretary of State, in making such regulations, is to have regard to the commercial terms on which short-term tenancies are usually concluded.
The landlord has a limited right of appeal on specified grounds including that either the vacancy condition or the local benefit condition have not been met, or that the landlord intends to occupy the premises for business purposes.
The Bill is in its early stages but landlords are likely to have some significant questions. For example, could complex rental arrangements, such as turnover rent, stepped rent and rent free periods, be accommodated? Will there be minimum criteria that a prospective tenant must reach in order to be deemed the successful bidder, such as a minimum covenant strength? How would the proposals impact on estate management? How would the ‘vacancy condition’ apply in the context of storage leases or rates mitigation tenancies?
The general mood in the industry is that this legislation would lead to badly managed estates, difficult landlord/tenant relationships and possibly an inappropriate mix of occupiers who are not well suited to the local area. A key risk is that landlords may become increasingly unwilling to invest in the high street and unmotivated to make it an attractive environment for both retailers and customers.
For further information please contact real estate associate Peter Lewis.
Publication
The United States and Ukraine governments have announced the signature of an agreement of a minerals deal for Ukraine.
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