‘Rotten to the core’: £300m of student housing linked to tax havens (2024)

Student accommodation buildings in Scottish cities collectively worth over £300m are directly owned by firms registered in offshore tax havens, an analysis by The Ferret has found.

The 27 properties – in Aberdeen, Edinburgh, Dundee, Glasgow and Stirling – are all ultimately owned by global firms and investors through holding companies set up offshore.

Among others, the ultimate owners of the student blocks include apartnershipinvolving the Singapore sovereign wealth fund, and Blackstone, a US investment company whose boss haslinks to Donald Trump.

Our findings have prompted concerns about the growing role of private firms registered in tax havens providing student accommodation.

TheNational Union of Students(NUS) Scotland said students were at the “mercy of predatory profiteering” and claimed 12 per cent have experienced homelessness due to “exponential increases in rent”. One Scottish Greens MSP claimed some accommodation providers were “only too happy to treat students as cash cows and make them pay rip-off rates”.

Read Day One of the series:

Revealed: Major Tory donors own tax haven properties across Scotland

How we uncovered Scotland’s Secret Owners

Raeshaw Estate: Louis Moore Bacon revealed as owner of Scottish estate

The owners of the properties told The Ferret they comply with UK tax rules.

The tax haven companies were identified by a Ferret analysis of a new register, which has forced property-owning companies based overseas to disclose their true owners for the first time.

The actual value and number of student halls owned by companies linked to tax havens may be higher than shown by our analysis, but it is not always possible to identify them in data from Registers of Scotland.

Properties owned by tax haven firms include nine accommodations in Glasgow, Edinburgh and Aberdeen managed byStudent Roost, a UK firm which has 21,000 student beds. They also includeBuchanan View halls, which is close to Glasgow Caledonian University, and the University of Strathclyde. Students there pay £235 a week for a one-bedroom apartment.

Buchanan View – valued at £38.9m – is purpose-built student accommodation (PBSA). The Scottish Government describesPBSAas “accommodation specifically designed, built or adapted for the purpose of housing students”, which may be located on – or off – campus, and owned or managed by a university, private or third sector provider, or some combination.

Read Day Two of the series:

Who owns Scottish land and property - and why does it matter?

Unmasked: The foreign states who bought up Scots property worth millions

According to title deeds purchased from Registers of Scotland, the nine Student Roost properties are all directly owned by companies registered in Luxembourg. Student Roost was bought by a partnership involvingthe Singapore sovereign wealth fund and Greystar Real Estate Partnerslast year. Greystar pointed out it has no links to Donald Trump, but declined to comment.

Luxembourg haslongbeen considered a tax haven and a 2021investigation by Le Monderevealed it hosts "55,000 offshore companies managing assets worth at least €6 trillion". However, Luxembourg rejects the moniker.

A Luxembourg subsidiary ofIQ Student Accommodation(IQSA) ownsParker Housein Dundee, for students at Abertay University, andElliot Housein Edinburgh. IQ is ultimately owned by the US investment company,Blackstone Group– the world's largest commercial landlord.

IQ, and by extension Blackstone, owns a number of other student residences in Glasgow and Edinburgh through subsidiary companies registered in the UK. However, the holding company which owns many of these subsidiaries –IQSA Holdco Ltd– is incorporated in the tax haven of Jersey. iQ owns and operates five properties in Scotland, providing accommodation for less than 1 per cent of students in Scottish Higher Education, many of whom are international.

‘Rotten to the core’: £300m of student housing linked to tax havens (1)

Student Roost Buchanan View student accommodation on Calgary Street, Glasgow

Blackstone has, in recent years, acquired hundreds of thousands of homes in the US, Europe, Asia and Latin America, often through subsidiaries, making it one of the largest and most powerful global players in the housing investment sector.

It is headed byCEO Stephen Schwarzman, a major donor of the US Republican party and former chair of the Trump Administration’s Strategic and Policy Forum. The New York headquarters of Blackstone Group are located in a skyscraper on Park Avenue.

Other tax haven firms owning student accommodation includeDowning Students (Glasgow) Ltdwhich is registered in Guernsey. Downing Students runs theWest Village Student Accommodationon Beith Street, Glasgow, close to Glasgow University, where rooms cost at least £175 per week.

Ellie Gomersall, NUS Scotlandpresident said The Ferret’s investigation “makes the case for a PBSA regulator” which would set annual caps on rent through a “formula that promotes an affordable, ethical and sustainable” PBSA sector.

She added: “This eye-opening investigation reveals what’s behind the student accommodation sector – a system rotten to the core. We’ve long argued that the provision of student accommodation in Scotland is broken. Is it any wonder that students in Scotland are being priced out of education when much of the student housing stock is owned and managed by companies registered in tax havens and global private equity corporations?”

NUS Scotland has been lobbying the Scottish Government to introduce a student housing strategy that “addresses the dramatic increase” in the number of privately-owned rooms offered by universities, Gomersall continued. She claimed that almost 30 per cent of rooms offered by universities in 2021-22 were in the private PBSA sector.

“This impacts affordability and the obligations providers have to students for example, the public sector equality duty will not apply as it does for university-owned accommodation,” she added. “That’s why we’ve been arguing for a bespoke system of rent controls for the PBSA sector that ensures affordable rents for students.”

The Scottish Greens’ MSP Ross Greer said: “It is long past time that we cracked down on the ownership of Scottish properties from tax havens. Across the country there are student accommodation providers who are only too happy to treat students as cash cows and make them pay rip-off rates.”

A spokesperson for Student Roost said: “All of the Student Roost property owning and operating companies are subject to and compliant with their UK tax obligations and all taxes have been duly paid and are not under dispute. This includes properties and operations located in England and Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland.”

A Blackstone spokesperson said: “We are proud of our investments in the UK, where we have been active for over 20 years and where, through our portfolio companies, we employ over 30,000 people, and pay significant taxes.”

The Scottish Government said it had no direct role in the provision of student residential accommodation, whether that is managed by universities, colleges or private sector organisations. The PBSA Review has looked at key issues such as accessibility, affordability and standards in purpose-built student accommodation, it added and its findings will be considered by ministers.

A Scottish Government spokesperson said: “We have called for greater tax transparency and stronger action from the UK Government on avoidance and evasion, but the Scottish Government is limited in what it can do within the current devolution settlement.

“Scottish ministers support measures to ensure individuals and businesses pay the correct amount of tax. We are determined to improve accessibility, affordability and standards across the rented sector and are carrying out, with stakeholders, a review of purpose-built student accommodation (PBSA), the recommendations from which are due soon.”

Scotland’s secret owners is a Ferret investigation exclusively produced in partnership with The Herald. The Ferret is a media-coop, which works with its members to produce investigations in the public interest. Sign up to our newsletter to find out more or become a member at theferret.scot/subscribe

‘Rotten to the core’: £300m of student housing linked to tax havens (2024)

FAQs

How much wealth is in tax havens? ›

Individuals have stashed $8.7 trillion in tax havens, estimates Gabriel Zucman (2017), an economist at the University of California at Berkeley. Economist and lawyer James S. Henry's (2016) more comprehensive estimates yield an astonishing total of up to $36 trillion.

Who owns the student roost? ›

Student Roost is owned by a joint venture partnership between Greystar, a global leader in the investment, development, and management of high-quality rental housing; and GIC, a global institutional investor.

Are tax havens illegal? ›

Are Tax Havens Legal? Tax havens themselves are generally legal, as they are sovereign jurisdictions with their own laws and regulations. However, the legality of how individuals and corporations use tax havens depends on the specific actions and the laws of both the home country and the tax haven.

What is the biggest tax haven in the world? ›

According to modern studies, the § Top 10 tax havens include corporate-focused havens like the Netherlands, Singapore, Ireland, and the U.K., while Luxembourg, Hong Kong, the Cayman Islands, Bermuda, the British Virgin Islands, and Switzerland feature as both major traditional tax havens and major corporate tax havens.

Who owns the Roost in Springfield Missouri? ›

The Roost Bar & Grill owners Mike Flavin and Gene Lafaro signed on for a 4,700-square-foot indoor restaurant space and a 2,700-square-foot patio, according to a news release. "We are so excited to bring The Roost Bar to the community of Republic and the Iron Grain District.

Who owns student VIP? ›

Student Services Australia Pty Ltd, ACN 100 372 156, ABN 19 100 372 156 (subsequently referred to as "SSA") is the owner of the Websites and Apps. By joining the StudentVIP you are entering into an agreement with SSA to be bound by these Terms and Conditions.

Who owns student cribs? ›

Charlie Vaughan-Lee founded Student Cribs in 2003. The team now consists of over fifty people encompassing Investment, Development, Portfolio Management, Marketing, Sales, Finance and Maintenance Professionals. The young, professional management team gives a personal service and is contactable 24-hours a day.

How much money does the US lose to tax havens? ›

The IRS estimates tax cheats cost the US at least $688 billion in 2021 alone. Trump's IRS Commissioner Charles Rettig told the Senate Finance Committee that the annual tax gap could be $1 trillion.

How much money is lost to tax loopholes? ›

Based on the projections for 2017-2019, the estimated average gross tax gap is projected to be $540 billion per year. The associated voluntary compliance rate is projected to be 85.1 percent.

Who owns the wealth in tax havens? ›

Their results indicate that ownership of offshore wealth is very concentrated at the top of the wealth distribution, with 80% belonging to the top 0.1% richest households.

How much net worth is wealth tax? ›

A wealth tax is usually defined as an annual tax levied on the net worth, or total assets net of all debts, of an individual or household above an exemption threshold.

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