Finance
Livingstone Partners buys Dutch M&A firm Florin Finance
Global M&A and debt advisory firm Livingstone Partners has bolstered its presence in the Dutch market with the acquisition of local boutique Florin Finance.
US-headquartered Livingstone Partners is an M&A and debt advisory firm dedicated to the middle-market. The firm has over 120 staff working from 11 offices worldwide, including two in the US, seven in Europe, and two in Asia.
With the acquisition of Florin Finance, Livingstone Partners doubles its team in Amsterdam to around 20 staff. The local Dutch office was launched in three years ago.
“This move reinforces our position as the premier independent M&A firm for middle-market transactions in the Netherlands,” said Ralph Hagelgans, Managing Partner at Livingstone. “The arrival of the Florin Finance team also positions Livingstone Partners for further growth in the Benelux in the coming years, creating ample opportunities for both clients and professionals.”
Florin Finance was founded in 2013. The boutique has over the years closed dozens of transactions across sectors such as agriculture, professional services, industry, technology, telecom, and retail, among others. The firm has bagged several awards for its work, including being named a leading M&A consultancy in the Dutch market in 2023.
“Florin Finance is renowned for its high-quality, hands-on M&A services. Our shared culture of excellence in dealmaking will enable us to make a significant impact in the Benelux market,” said Niels Claeren, Partner at Livingstone Partners.
The deal will see nine staff transfer, with partners Remco Goes and Niels Roks now becoming partners at Livingstone Partners, lifting its partnership to six. Istvan Csejtei and Joris van de Kerkhof both joined from PwC last year, following in the footsteps of Niels Claeren and Mark Pel who previously made the same switch.
The Amsterdam team of Livingstone Partners works for entrepreneurs, private equity firms, and corporates, with a focus on six segments: business services, consumer goods, healthcare, industrial, and media, and technology.
Finance
Mega landlord warns some investors ‘will be wiped out’ in budget changes
Eddie Dilleen is one of Australia’s biggest residential landlords. He reckons he now has 200 properties in his portfolio.
But he just bought perhaps his favourite house yet. More than 25 years after his parents divorced and sold the family home for $97,000, he has purchased it back for a bit under $1 million.
“I just bought it sight unseen,” he told Yahoo Finance.
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Dilleen said he has spent the past decade periodically checking if the house had returned to market.
“You can set reminders and stuff like that, but when I was on my phone messing around, I would randomly check it literally every one or two weeks for the past 12 years.”
His parents first bought the home in the far western suburbs of Sydney in 1985 for $51,000. When he saw it listed, he felt “an overwhelming rush of excitement,” he said.
“This home holds some of my best memories… and some tough ones too. But today, it represents something completely different,” he wrote online, sharing a photo of himself next to the sold sign on Tuesday. “It’s proof that where you start doesn’t define where you finish.”
He ultimately bought it for 19 times what his parents paid for it 41 years ago.
“The affordable properties and suburbs, they usually grow at a higher percentage value. I’m all about percentages,” he told Yahoo Finance.
“Everyone talks about the best, blue chip locations, but I buy everywhere.”
Dilleen, who is in his mid 30s and also runs a buyers agency and writes books about real estate investing, estimates the properties he owns are now collectively worth about $150 million (he likes to buy blocks that contain multiple units) with about $60 million in debt against that.
According to ATO data, he is about one of 166 mega landlords who own 20 or more rental properties in their own name. Dilleen said he owns “about 30 or 40” in his own name, and others through trust and company structures.
Landlords overly reliant on negative gearing ‘will be wiped out’
With less than two weeks until the Labor government hand downs its promised “ambitious” budget, property investors are bracing for possible changes to the rules around tax deductions related to investments.
One of the most commonly used is negative gearing, which allows landlords to claim losses to reduce the amount of income tax they pay. But its days could be numbered with the federal government expected to cap, or possibly even scrap, the existing policy under certain circumstances. While no announcements have actually been made, most observers expect such a change to be grandfathered in for existing investors.
Finance
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Finance
First home buyer’s superannuation mistake exposes ‘widespread’ ATO problem
First home buyer Jessica Ricci was just trying to save a little extra money through her superannuation in a federal government scheme intended to help people like her. But an error from tax authorities has left her paying more tax than the top income bracket on some super contributions – ironically having the exact opposite of the intended effect of the policy.
As a result, she’s lost out on an extra $2,250 in savings that was supposed to go to her house deposit. While the ATO pushed back over who was at fault for the mix-up, her case has highlighted an increasingly problematic blindspot when it comes taxpayers getting the short end of the stick when dealing with tax authorities.
“I’m definitely feeling a little bit helpless,” she told Yahoo Finance. “There’s not a clear path to rectify this.”
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Jess was tipping extra money into her superannuation as part of the First Home Super Saver Scheme which has been running for years and allows eligible first home buyers to take advantage of the tax benefits of their retirement savings and then pull those extra contributions out to use for a house deposit.
As part of the scheme, individuals need to apply to the ATO, which in turn requests the related money from the person’s super fund.
Over four years, Jess contributed the maximum $50,000 amount, ensuring not to exceed the $15,000 yearly cap. She did so with the expectation of claiming the benefit at the time of her house purchase, as per the rules of the scheme.
When she went to make the claim, much of the information was auto-populated by the ATO website. And after receiving her funds, and the amount being less than expected, she soon discovered that her first contribution was wrongly classified as a concessional contribution, meaning $2,250 was, in the words of an ATO official, “retained by the ATO as withholding tax”.
She has spent months going back and forth with tax officials trying to get the money she believes should be owed to her.
“They’ve all taken the same stance, which is; ‘Well, yeah, we made a mistake, but you didn’t catch it. You said that what we provided you was fine, so it’s your fault’.
“I think it’s crazy to put the onus or the burden on the average person. I think most people would rightfully assume that pre-filled data provided by the ATO would be accurate,” she said.
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