logo
"Britain Has Gone To Hell": UK Billionaire Puts $337 Million Home On Sale, Heads To Dubai

"Britain Has Gone To Hell": UK Billionaire Puts $337 Million Home On Sale, Heads To Dubai

Gulf Insider22-07-2025
The UK is experiencing a mass exodus of its super wealthy residents, with John Fredriksen being the latest high-profile departure. Mr Fredriksen, the Norway-born shipping tycoon and the UK's ninth richest billionaire, is selling his 300-year-old Georgian manor in London for a whopping $337 million, Forbes reported. The luxurious property, known as The Old Rectory, boasts 10 bedrooms, 30,000 sq ft of living space, a private ballroom, and a sprawling two-acre garden. This decision comes after Mr Fredriksen's public criticism of the UK's economic policies, stating that 'Britain has gone to hell' due to unfavourable tax changes.
Mr Fredriksen, who has an estimated wealth of 13.7 billion pounds, owns a vast oil tanker fleet and has interests in offshore drilling, fish farming, and gas. He recently announced his relocation to the United Arab Emirates, expressing his views on the Western world in an interview with Norwegian publication E24, stating that 'the entire Western world is on its way down'. He cited tax changes and the political climate as reasons for relocating to the UAE, where he intends to spend most of his time while continuing to oversee his global business operations.
Earlier this year, the billionaire also closed the London headquarters of Seatankers Management, one of his private shipping businesses. His twin daughters, Cecilie and Kathrine Fredriksen, are set to take the reins of the family business. Both have been involved in the family business, holding board positions in several of their father's companies.
Britain's Billionaire Exodus And Reasons Behind It
In recent years, the United Kingdom has witnessed a significant exodus of its billionaire and millionaire population, a trend that has raised alarms about the country's economic competitiveness and appeal as a global wealth hub. According to various reports, the UK is losing high-net-worth individuals (HNWIs) at an unprecedented rate, with tax policy changes, economic uncertainty, and other factors driving this migration. Other notable billionaires who have recently left the UK include Christian Angermayer and Nassef Sawiris, owner of Aston Villa.
In 2024 alone, an estimated 10,800 millionaires left the country, a 157% increase compared to the previous year, making the UK second only to China in terms of millionaire outflows globally. Projections for 2025 are even more concerning, with Henley & Partners estimating that 16,500 millionaires will depart, taking approximately 66 billion pounds in investable assets abroad. London, once a magnet for global wealth, has been particularly hard hit. Since 2014, the UK capital has lost 30,000 millionaires.
Several factors are driving this wealth migration, with tax policy changes at the forefront.
The most significant is the Labour government's overhaul of the non-domicile (non-dom) tax regime, a system dating back to 1799 that allowed wealthy individuals living in the UK but domiciled abroad to avoid UK taxes on foreign income and assets.
In April 2025, Chancellor Rachel Reeves abolished this regime, replacing it with a residency-based system and imposing inheritance tax on worldwide assets for foreigners who have lived in the UK for over 10 years. This policy, combined with increases in capital gains tax (from 10% to 18% for the basic rate and 20% to 24% for the higher rate) and a rise in National Insurance contributions, has been widely cited as a deterrent for wealthy residents.
Beyond taxation, Brexit has played a significant role, introducing economic uncertainty, a weaker pound, and visa requirements for UK nationals moving to the EU, which have reduced the UK's appeal as a wealth hub.
The dwindling prominence of the London Stock Exchange and the UK's slow recovery from the 2008 recession have also been noted as factors pushing millionaires to rival financial centres like Paris, Dubai, and Amsterdam.
Source NDTV
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Classera Signs Major Strategic Agreements in Damascus in Presence of Syrian President and Saudi Minister of Investment
Classera Signs Major Strategic Agreements in Damascus in Presence of Syrian President and Saudi Minister of Investment

Syyaha

time03-08-2025

  • Syyaha

Classera Signs Major Strategic Agreements in Damascus in Presence of Syrian President and Saudi Minister of Investment

In a significant step to strengthen Saudi-Syrian economic cooperation and accelerate reconstruction and digital transformation, Classera, the global leader in smart learning solutions, has signed a series of strategic agreements with the Government of the Syrian Arab Republic, represented by the Syrian Minister of Communications and Technology and the Syrian Minister of Health. The agreements were signed on the sidelines of the Saudi-Syrian Investment Forum, hosted in signing ceremony was attended by His Excellency Mr. Ahmed Al-Shar'a, President of the Syrian Arab Republic, His Excellency Eng. Khalid bin Abdulaziz Al-Falih, Saudi Minister of Investment, and Eng. Mohammed bin Suhail Al-Madani, Founder and CEO of Classera, along with senior officials and business leaders from both agreements align with Saudi Arabia's Vision 2030, which emphasizes enabling the private sector to lead development initiatives in partner nations and leverage its expertise in post-crisis reconstruction to Forbes, the forum announced investments totaling SAR 24 billion across 47 agreements, with participation from over 150 executives and representatives of leading Saudi companies, making it one of the most significant milestones in the history of bilateral economic agreements with Classera aim to transform education and training ecosystems in Syria, utilizing cutting-edge technologies across K-12 education, higher education, and vocational training, as well as the government and healthcare sectors. Key initiatives include:Deploying advanced e-learning platforms to ensure equitable access to education in remote national capabilities in digital and educational online digital academies to equip youth with digital skills and foster healthcare workforce readiness through unified digital platforms for training, licensing, and upskilling healthcare on this landmark collaboration, Eng. Mohammed bin Suhail Al-Madani, CEO of Classera, stated:'We are honored to bring our global expertise in digital learning and training to support Syria and its people. We firmly believe that investing in human capital through advanced technologies is the fastest path to restoring Syria to its rightful place.'The agreements will also introduce Classera's expertise from over 40 countries into the Syrian market, including AI-powered learning management systems, digital training solutions, educational analytics, and intelligent learning one of the world's leading EdTech companies and the largest in the Middle East, Classera operates in over 40 countries worldwide and has earned numerous international accolades, including:Microsoft Education Global Partner of the YearThe BETT Award for InnovationThe GESS Award for Educational Innovation In addition, Classera has attracted major investments from the Saudi Public Investment Fund (through its investment arm, Sanabil) and top Silicon Valley venture capital firms, reinforcing its position as a global pioneer in smart learning.

Western Pressure On India Over Russia
Western Pressure On India Over Russia

Gulf Insider

time31-07-2025

  • Gulf Insider

Western Pressure On India Over Russia

It's reshaping Indian policymakers' views of the West and breeding resentment of their governments among its society… India's former Permanent Representative to the UN Syed Akbaruddin recently published an informative opinion piece at NDTV titled 'Tariff Blitz: Is India Becoming Collateral Damage In Someone Else's War?'The gist is that the West, via Trump's threatened 100% sanctions on Russia's trading partners upon the expiry of his deadline to Putin for a ceasefire in Ukraine and the EU via its new sanctions barring the import of processed Russian oil products from third countries, is putting undue pressure on India. They can't defeat Russia on the battlefield by proxy, nor will they risk World War III by taking it on directly, so they're going after its foreign trade partners in the hopes of eventually bankrupting the Kremlin. This is counterproductive though since their threatened sanctions could torpedo bilateral ties, push India closer to China and Russia (thus possibly reviving the RIC core of BRICS and the SCO), and spike global oil prices, which hitherto remained manageable due to India's massive imports from Russia. Nevertheless, partial compliance is also possible due to the damage that Western sanctions could inflict on the Indian economy, so it can't be ruled out that India might curtail its aforesaid imports and no longer export processed Russian oil products to the EU. Full compliance is unlikely though since India would risk ruining its ties with Russia, with all that could entail as was touched upon here, while reducing its economic growth rate through higher energy prices and thus offsetting its envisaged Great Power rise. Even in the scenario of partial compliance, however, Western pressure on India over Russia already backfired. Their coercive threats and the very real consequences for no compliance whatsoever, presuming that exceptions can be made for partial compliance, are reshaping Indian policymakers' views of the West and breeding resentment of their governments among its society. The 'good 'ole days' of naively assuming that the West operated in good faith and was India's true friend will never return. This is for the better from the perspective of India's objective national interests since it's more useful to have finally realized the truth than to keep having illusions about the West's intentions and formulating policy based on that false perception. Conversely, this is for the worse from the perspective of the West's hegemonic interests since their policymakers can no longer take for granted that India will naively go along with whatever they request and blindly trust its intentions. This new dynamic might lead to rivalry. To be clear, India's envisaged Great Power rise doesn't pose a systemic challenge to the West like China's superpower trajectory does, nor is it 'disruptive' like the restoration of Russia's Great Power status has been. India consistently sought to facilitate the global systemic transition to multipolarity by serving as a bridge between East and West, which complements the West's objective interests, albeit while undermining its subjective hegemonic ones that are responsible for many of the Global South's troubles. Trying to subordinate India and then treating it as a rival when it doesn't submit could therefore further destabilize this already chaotic transition, thus possibly leading to unforeseeable consequences that accelerate the decline of Western hegemony more than if the West treated India as an equal. Pressuring India even more and then punishing it for lack of full compliance with their demands will only hasten this outcome. It's unlikely to succeed in getting India to submit to them so they should abandon this policy. Also read: Rupee Slides After Trump Threatens India Over Russia Trade

Iran Plans To Abandon GPS & Replace
Iran Plans To Abandon GPS & Replace

Gulf Insider

time31-07-2025

  • Gulf Insider

Iran Plans To Abandon GPS & Replace

Recent reports in Mideast regional media say that Iran is actively exploring abandoning GPS technology and instead adopting China's main navigation satellite system, BeiDou. Such a drastic change can't be accomplished overnight, however, as the world's dominant system (GPS) has long been embedded in Iranian industries and technology. US-based and Western technology firms dominate such telecoms and mapping tech infrastructure, and the June 12-day conflict saw Iranian vessels in the Persian Gulf experience repeated disruptions of GPS signal – and it's believed the system was utilized by Israel and the US to track and target Iranian officials. Iranian officials were already worried about reliance on GPS even before the war, but the conflict has only heightened existing concerns – enough to race for alternatives. After all, the Global Positioning System (GPS) was literally an invention of the US Department of Defense in the 1970s and is currently run under the Space Force. 'At times, disruptions are created on this [GPS] system by internal systems, and this very issue has pushed us toward alternative options like BeiDou,' Ehsan Chitsaz, deputy communications minister, told state media earlier this month. He confirmed that the government is working on a plan switch transportation, agriculture and the internet from GPS to China's BeiDou, according to Al Jazeera . The same report emphasizes that 'Since 2013, whistleblowers and media investigations have revealed how various Western technologies and schemes have enabled illicit surveillance and data gathering on a global scale – something that has worried governments around the world.' It's also only a natural trajectory that Iran would become increasingly more trusting of tech based out of China, India, or Russia – as opposed to that of the United States and Israel's close Western allies. Russia, for its part, hopes its national or regional satellite navigation system GLONASS can spread, especially among allied populations. As for BeiDou, it's seen as going hand and hand as a major tech tool with President Xi's ambitious Belt & Road Initiative (BRI) which has been making inroads across Asia and Africa. Al Jazeera aptly concludes in its report that 'Iran's possible shift to BeiDou sends a clear message to other nations grappling with the delicate balance between technological convenience and strategic self-defence: The era of blind, naive dependence on US-controlled infrastructure is rapidly coming to an end.' 'Nations can no longer afford to have their military capabilities and vital digital sovereignty tied to the satellite grid of a superpower they cannot trust,' the report adds. Indeed the Edward Snowden NSA leaks of many years ago also confirmed that this trend has been a problem for decades, and more recently Israeli companies have also made huge leaps in developing hidden spyware embedded in what's presented as civilian products and software. Also read: UN Watchdog Chief Believes Inspectors Will Return To Iran This Year After Europe Meeting

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store