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Oportunitas: 11 Years In — Paper Profits, Still No Taxpayer Return – A Shepway Vox Team Investigation

Oportunitas Ltd a company wholly owned by Folkestone & Hythe District Council has never made a true profit for the council taxpayer since its incorporation in 2014. In each year’s accounts from 2015 to 2025/26, the company shows an accounting profit – but once the council’s financing costs are included, Oportunitas ends up in deficit. This analysis draws on every annual report from 2015 through 2025/26, explaining terms simply and showing how rent income, costs, and especially interest and revaluations have played out. We also track the balance sheet: assets, loans from the council, equity paid in, and tax provisions, year by year.

From the start (first accounts to March 2015) through 2025, rent and service income grew steadily (on the Profit and Loss), but so too did council loans and depreciation-like charges. In later years the properties were revalued downward, wiping out much of the paper profit. By 2024/25, Oportunitas reported an accounting profit before tax of £109k. But interest on council loans was £313k – leaving a small profit after tax of £85k that year. In plain terms: the council lent millions at high interest, and that interest swallowed the company’s gains. No matter that rental turnover increased, the interest burden meant no net gain for the council.

Profit & Loss – Line by Line

Looking closely at each year’s Profit & Loss statements reveals the detail:

In short, every year the council’s interest cost exceeds any accounting profit, once you strip out book revaluations. Even when the company “made a profit” on paper, the council was always subsidising it behind the scenes.

Current Directors Of Oportunitas

Balance Sheet Movements

Each year Oportunitas’s balance sheet grew as it acquired homes. Key lines:

Council Investment Profile

2025/26 Mid-Year Outlook

The board’s latest update to the council (Q2 of 2025/26Agenda Item 9) shows little change. Rental income is on track with budget, and operating costs are similar. However, because so much margin was already eroded by interest, the projected profit for the year is small. In fact, as one report notes, no adjustment to the financing terms has yet been made in 2024/25 accounts, meaning the interest outlay remains high. (Specialist advice on whether to change the loan rate was still pending.) The mid-year figures imply the final year-end result will again be a tiny surplus after tax – certainly nowhere near compensating the council’s cost of capital.

Good, Bad, Ugly

Sources: Audited accounts and board reports for Oportunitas Ltd (FY2015–FY2025) from Folkestone & Hythe District Council. Charts by analysis of these official figures.

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The Shepway Vox Team

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