Sunday, October 6, 2013

Invest in the UK - Top 10 considerations...A guide to succeed in the UK


Top 10 considerations A guide to succeed in the UK

1. Choose a trusted UK business advisor

Researching the UK and European market opportunities can be a minefield. In order to make sure you are getting the most appropriate advice, you need to talk to the right people. Ask yourself if they are a UK national or someone with experience of working in or with the UK? Do they understand the UK market? Are they able to advise on general business matters, as well as employment contracts, culture and tax.

So often these choices are predicated on an ad hoc basis, by talking to someone who knows someone who might help. Sometimes no help is requested, nor thought about. Yet key to a smooth entry into the UK, and ongoing success could well stem from having someone independent to help advise on a variety of aspects from a local perspective.

Doing business in the UK is a whole different challenge compared to doing business in your home country. The best way to succeed is to harness the local knowledge and experience necessary to guide you to success by avoiding pitfalls.

2. The right market place

Of course it is or else you wouldn't be doing it. However, it is important to decide if you are targeting just one market (the UK) or using it as a gateway to Europe and, possibly, the wider EMEA market. For example, a company from Brazil may choose to set up in Portugal, or one from Quebec may favour France. The language and business culture factors in these cases may seem perfectly logical, but offsetting those decisions could be the difficulties of setting up in those countries, combined with non-flexible employment legislation.

Points in favour of the UK are the universal business and science language of English and the ease of doing business with the UK ranked fourth in the world (World Bank Doing Business 2011; www.doingbusiness.org).

Once successfully established in the UK then it's time to look at forming branches or subsidiaries in other European Countries.

3. The right business model

Many companies decide to invest overseas when they have established an export trade and a customer base. So the first step could be to use a British agent and /or distributor if you are selling products or services, depending upon whether sales will be as the principal selling direct to the customer, or as agent for the parent company.

If you decide to start in the UK with a marketing facility, finding someone who can generate leads and, can test the UK market and even facilitate sales before you reach the UK would be useful.

Simple enough criteria, but you also need to consider the tax implications when making the decision. The tax treatment in the UK books could result in a full profit and loss recognition (by buying and selling at arms length) through to a cost plus basis.

4. Choose the best location when investing in the UK

The needs of your staff and your business model are the main drivers on this decision.

Your first hire may be key initially and a business could be built around that person, which can dictate the location. Using a managed office service, or a virtual office, could be useful until such time as the business becomes established.

When moving from a one person operation to a team environment then the travelling needs of the team as whole, and the location of your customers becomes important.

When it's time for the company to expand you will want to take advantage of the available skills and synergy within your industry sector. The UK has a range of clusters that can provide these in world-recognised locations. For example, hi-tech in the Thames Valley; financial services in the City of London; pharma in Cambridge; green energy in the south-west; and low carbon in north-east England.

5. The ideal business entity

For overseas companies the main choices are between a UK Subsidiary or a UK Branch.

A Subsidiary is a company in its own right and requires the establishment of a UK registered company. Most foreign companies set up a private limited company' that becomes a subsidiary of the foreign parent company. A company can be registered within a few days, if standard documentation is used. The subsidiary can be an immigration sponsor enabling it to obtain work permits meaning that key personnel can be sent from the home country to work in the UK on a regular basis. It will file its own accounts, although the content depends on the size of the group. Those accounts must be audited by a UK firm of accountants.

It is also possible to have a Limited company that is owned by an individual(s) not located within the UK, as an alternative to a subsidiary.

A Branch is an extension of its parent company, effectively an overseas company trading in the UK. Contracts are between the overseas company and its UK customers, employees, etc. Such contracts are subject to overseas law, and may be less popular in the UK. A condition of being registered as a Branch is that the Branch must file in the UK its immediate parent company's accounts, including full profit and loss account. This is often unpopular with privately owned overseas corporations that do not have to publish their accounts in their home country.

It is also possible to trade as an LLC a partnership with Limited Liability - which requires a formal partnership agreement. An LLC is mainly used by firms of lawyers and accountants where the membership regularly changes. It may also be appropriate in certain circumstances, when its main use is to save the LLC paying Employers Social Security on the drawings (profit) attributable to the partners. Because the profits are subject to UK tax on the owner, LLP's are not normal for ownership from overseas.

6. UK Taxes an overview

Taxation matters are dealt with by Her Majesty's Revenue & Customs (HMRC). There are thousands of pages of tax legislation, but no general anti-avoidance rules. There is generally no system of prior clearance regarding the tax treatment of a particular event or procedure, although there are telephone help lines that can provide verbal advice. However, unless given in writing the advice may not actually be honoured by them! The normal procedure is that tax returns are submitted, and are then subject to checks.

There are a large number of different taxes in the UK, but this note concentrates on the three main ones that a UK business is exposed to.

Corporation Tax

Levied on the taxable profits of a business (for a Limited Company or Branch). Rates vary between 20% and 28% (marginal rates are higher). The lower rate would apply to a small company with taxable profits up to 300,000. The higher rate would apply to a company with taxable profits in excess of 1,500,000. These profit limits are reduced proportionally by the number of associated companies in a group, such that a larger group could easily be paying tax at 28% on a relatively low UK profit. Taxable profits are calculated after adding back disallowable costs such as depreciation and most entertaining, but after allowing for capital allowances on wasting asset purchases (such as machinery and computers). The total tax has to be paid nine months after the year end, with the tax return itself being due 12 months after the year end. Larger companies may have to pay the tax in advance by quarterly instalments.

Value Added Tax (VAT)

VAT is charged on sales (known as outputs) and currently stands at 20%. This is not the same as a sales tax.

When dealing with businesses, they would expect VAT to be added to prices. However, unlike a sales tax, the VAT incurred on purchases (input VAT) can generally be recovered by offsetting those amounts. The net amount is then paid over to HMRC, usually on a quarterly basis. Most businesses generally can recover the VAT from HMRC in full, although there are some exceptions such as banks and insurance companies.

For businesses a reverse charge must be made in the accounts and VAT returns in respect of goods and services being received from abroad. This takes into account recent changes that have been introduced as a result of carousel fraud, which involved cross-border transactions of high-value items and incomplete payments.

When dealing with the public, VAT has to be included in the price, unless your terms of trade (which could be on your website for on-line sales) state that VAT will be added.

Employers National Insurance (NI) [social security] This is effectively a payroll tax.

People in the UK have to pay various taxes mainly income tax on their earnings from employment and other sources of income. Current rates of income tax start at 20% (10% on savings) and go up to 50% (more on a marginal basis). Employees also have to pay NI at up to 11% (there are allowances to mitigate this effect and caps).

The rate of Employers NI is rising from April 2011 to 13.8%, and without limit. UK employers must calculate and pay the taxes and NI on a monthly basis; this is known as the PAYE scheme (Pay As You Earn).

Some employers prefer to use self-employed people, often operating through their own one-man band Limited companies, to save employers NI. This is open to challenge by HMRC, particularly where the self-employed person does not work for other companies and is therefore considered by HMRC to really be an employee. Penalties for tax evasion are outside this general note. This is a complex area!

7. Finding key staff

You may already have found the first hire to implement the set-up. If done through a personal network, the person may be good, although his recommendation is necessarily subjective. If using a recruitment company, then their advice and reference checking would be useful, but unless on a retained basis, their main aim may be to get the person hired and get their fee. You may even be sending someone over to start the business, perhaps a UK national.

But what to offer the UK hires? Start-ups generally are not expected to provide a range of benefits people accept that getting the business first takes priority over a tranche of benefits. But some well-established companies overseas are happy to provide similar benefits to their UK staff as they do for their own people. And some potential UK hires will not join unless certain benefits are included as part of the package like private health insurance.

Job offers or offer letters are typically based on the parent company's usual employment contract, including such terms as employment at will and providing 10 days vacation. However, be aware to seek advice on what would be normal in the UK (those two examples are actually illegal). Where insurances are offered care should be taken to ensure that they will actually be in place for when the hire starts. A similar US scheme, for instance, giving two times salary life cover to all employees may not extend to the UK, meaning that the UK hire is not covered (and his employer is at risk) until such time as underwriting takes place.

Companies are able to set salary and benefit packages themselves, but must comply with the statutory minimum wage legislation. It is compulsory for all companies with five or more employees to provide, or to provide access to, a formal pension plan.

8. The British culture

The UK is a nation of cultural and ethnic diversity consisting of four countries each with a clear identity: England, Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland. Combine this with a thoroughly multicultural society and the UK blends its rich cultural heritage with a modern and innovative outlook. Knowledge and an appreciation of the basic cultural, ethical and business values of the UK is crucial to any organisation wanting to conduct business in such a varied yet traditional country.

Decision Making

The British may appear more cautious than Americans and less willing to embrace new ideas and practices. There is a tendency to cling to tradition with no preconceived notion that new is necessarily better. Decision making is structured and often slower than in the States, with major decisions generally made at board level. There is also more of a leaning towards qualitative assessment rather than pure facts and figures in the decision process. Although moving towards US practice, the UK is still far less predisposed to defer to lawyers and less inclined to litigation.

Worldliness

Britons generally know much more about the US than Americans know about the UK - the geography, the cities, the history, sports teams and politics. Britain is a small country and its citizens are well travelled by comparison to the average American. This is partly due to compulsory 4-5 weeks paid vacation in the UK as compared to 2 weeks in the States. Less commendable however are British language skills compared to European counterparts, although there is a wide range of languages available throughout the country. For instance, there are more than 300 different languages spoken by native born people in London. Business meetings will almost certainly be conducted in English regardless of the nationality of those involved.

Healthcare

The National Health Service (NHS) is the publicly funded healthcare system in England. The NHS provides healthcare to anyone normally resident in the UK with most services free at the point of use for the patient, though there are charges associated with eye tests, dental care and prescriptions for instance. The NHS is largely funded from general taxation (including a proportion from National Insurance contributions). Emergency services, including for overseas visitors, is generally free of charge.

9. Terms of business (terms of sale)

You will instruct UK lawyers to prepare the UK Terms of Business setting out your terms and conditions, which are usually subject to UK law. They should be as clear and succinct as possible, preferably able to be printed on the back of one sheet of A4 paper.

Should an overseas parent seek to impose their country's law on a UK customer, it may risk not obtaining the work due to a reluctance to potentially having to pursue a claim outside the UK. This also applies to UK branches operating in the UK, where the contract is between the foreign parent (of the UK Branch) and a UK customer.

However, the main point so often overlooked by companies setting up in the UK is Terms of Payment specifically for the UK market. UK companies are used to paying at 30 days from date of invoice, or on presentation of invoice.

If giving generous payment terms is part of the sales strategy, then that's your decision. Otherwise seek advice as to what might be acceptable. You may be pleasantly surprised, and it could benefit your cash flow.

The method of payment is generally expected to be electronically nowadays: cheques are becoming less common. Settling invoices and paying employees can be done by BACS, CHAPS or direct transfer directly into their bank account.

10. Choose a UK accountant to help your business

Your UK business will need accountancy services the form that takes will depend upon the size and structure of your business entity.

We have particular expertise in this specialised field of helping overseas companies expand into the UK with over 20 years' experience in providing entering foreign companies with a personal, flexible and professional service tailored to their particular needs.

You gain a cost-effective CFO type resource for the effective handling of your UK accounting, administration and human resource aspects of your organisation. Our UK accounting personnel are experienced at CFO/FD level of UK subsidiaries of multi-nationals offering a pro-active and reliable support in handling your UK business matters.

We are a family run firm whose aim is to offer our clients a completely integrated package of support where we take responsibility for the setting up and running of the financial, legal, HR and fiscal aspects of a business. Relieved of these worries, you are free to concentrate on your core aims of securing orders and generating profits.





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