Record rent increases boost King Charles’ income

    • King Charles received £26.2 million this year from his vast property empire, known as the Duchy of Lancaster.
    • King Charles received £26.2 million this year from his vast property empire, known as the Duchy of Lancaster. PHOTO: AFP
    Published Thu, Jul 20, 2023 · 03:28 PM

    RENTS in the United Kingdom are rising at a record pace, a trend that has helped the nation’s most famous landlord, King Charles, make a big payday.

    The king received £26.2 million (S$44.8 million) this year from his vast property empire, known as the Duchy of Lancaster. He inherited the estate when his mother, Queen Elizabeth, died last fall.

    The 18,211-hectare estate is roughly the size of Washington, DC, and generates millions of dollars a year in rental income, without paying corporation taxes like most businesses in Britain are obliged to. (King Charles voluntarily pays an undisclosed amount of tax on his private income).

    The duchy recently published its first records since Charles took the throne. They showed that he has weathered the financial woes faced by his nation, raking in a bigger private income than his mother ever did.

    Those profits came in part thanks to increased rents on tenants living on royal land. The duchy also saw increased earnings from commercial properties. The accounts give an early insight into how the king is running his financial empire.

    A duchy is a territory traditionally governed by a duke or duchess. The Duchy of Lancaster is a US$1 billion real estate portfolio tasked with making money for whoever holds the throne. The monarch uses these funds to support the extended royal family.

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    King Charles’ private income from the duchy was £26.2 million, about £2 million more than his mother last made. The king has fewer family members to support than his mother did.

    This money is separate from the annual £86-million taxpayer-funded Sovereign Grant, which pays for most official royal expenses.

    Records show that the duchy raised rents by 3 per cent over the last fiscal year, which is just below the pace of private rental increases that have contributed to a cost-of-living crisis.

    Private rents are increasing at their fastest rate on record across the United Kingdom, though the official figures only go back to 2016. The duchy’s rent hikes accounted for an extra £8.2 million for the royal coffers. It said that “refurbishment and restoration” had led to “improved rental values.”

    Of course, King Charles is not a typical landlord. He does not rely on rental income to pay his home mortgage or household bills.

    The king ascended to the throne at a time when millions of British residents cannot afford their living expenses. Standards of living are falling, as wages fail to keep pace with rising housing and food costs.

    King Charles appeared to be sharply aware of this when, after his mother’s passing, royal sources began telling the British media that he envisioned a “slimmed-down monarchy.”

    The latest duchy figures show no notable signs of cost-cutting in the king’s private estate. Operating costs increased 40 per cent as the duchy hired more staff and gave its chief executive officer a pay rise to £275,000.

    This is in keeping with the ambitious business-focused strategy King Charles had as prince, when he ran the Duchy of Cornwall, a separate real estate portfolio now handed to his son Prince William.

    The king brought two executives from the Duchy of Cornwall along with him after he inherited his mother’s estate. Several senior money managers who worked with King Charles during his time at the Duchy of Cornwall told The New York Times that he opposed outsourcing and preferred to keep the estate in the hands of a trusted group of insiders.

    Some of the changes to the Duchy of Lancaster have been planned for as long as a decade, said Paul Clarke, who served as its CEO for almost 13 years until 2013.

    Royal observers have noted for years that Charles was unlikely to shift his business-driven strategy as king.

    “Will the longest-standing royal heir in British history really want to downsize his inheritance, when he at last gains the crown?” the historian and royal commentator David McClure wrote in his book, The Queen’s True Worth.

    The duchies are the main sources of private income for the royal family. But they represent a small fraction of the family’s estimated US$28 billion fortune, which includes the monarch’s closely-guarded personal wealth, real estate assets under the Crown Estate, the Sovereign Grant from the government, and Buckingham and Kensington palaces.

    The royal family has long fought to keep its wealth a secret. Some historians have described the family as more secretive than the intelligence services.

    Clarke described his hiring process as a “cat-and-mouse” game, where he had to sign a non-disclosure agreement to even discuss the job and was not told who he might be working for.

    Newton Investment Management and Stanhope Capital manage most of the duchy’s financial investments, which are kept closely guarded. Two former partners told The New York Times that the duchy placed no restrictions on investments – just “give me a good return”, one said. King Charles, though, did discourage environmentally unfriendly moves such as investing directly in oil companies.

    Royals do not have to explain how they spend the private income they take from the duchies. When Charles was 4, for example, he began receiving £209,000 (in today’s value) from his estate. In a letter to civil servants, the Duchy of Cornwall only said the money was for his “maintenance and education”. NYTIMES

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