POLAR CAPITAL GLOBAL
HEALTHCARE TRUST PLC
(the
"Company")
Unaudited Results
Announcement for the Six Months to 31 March 2024
LEI: 549300YV7J2TWLE7PV84
|
16 May 2024
|
FINANCIAL
HIGHLIGHTS
Performance
|
For the six months
to
31 March
2024
|
For the year
to
30 September
2023
|
Net
asset value per Ordinary share (total return) (note
1)*
|
16.55%
|
4.21%
|
Benchmark index
MSCI ACWI/Healthcare Index (total
return in sterling with dividends reinvested)
|
9.56%
|
1.19%
|
Since restructuring on 20 June 2017
|
|
|
Net
asset value per Ordinary share (total return) since restructuring
(note 2)*
|
95.30%
|
67.56%
|
Benchmark index total return since
restructuring
|
81.88%
|
66.01%
|
Expenses (note 3)*
|
|
|
Ongoing charge
|
0.88%
|
0.87%
|
Ongoing charges including
performance fee
|
1.05%
|
0.87%
|
Financials
|
(Unaudited)
As at
31 March
2024
|
(Audited)
As at
30 September
2023
|
Change
|
Total net assets (Group and
Company)
|
£487,286,000
|
£419,182,000
|
16.2%
|
Net asset value per Ordinary
share
|
401.82p
|
345.66p
|
16.2%
|
Net asset value per ZDP
share
|
122.20p
|
120.41p
|
1.5%
|
Price per Ordinary share
|
375.00p
|
319.00p
|
17.6%
|
Discount per Ordinary
share
|
6.7%
|
7.7%
|
|
Price per ZDP share
|
120.00p
|
116.00p
|
3.4%
|
Net gearing
|
8.42%
|
9.37%
|
|
Ordinary shares in issue (excluding
those held in treasury)
|
121,270,000
|
121,270,000
|
-
|
Ordinary shares held in
treasury
|
2,879,256
|
2,879,256
|
-
|
ZDP shares in issue
|
32,128,437
|
32,128,437
|
-
|
Dividends paid and declared in the period:
|
Pay Date
|
Amount per Ordinary
share
|
Record Date
|
Ex-Dividend
Date
|
Declared
date
|
The Company has paid the following
dividend relating to the financial year ended 30 September
2023:
|
29 February 2024
|
1.20p
|
2 February 2024
|
1 February 2024
|
13 December 2023
|
Dividends for the current financial
year ending 30 September 2024, if declared, will be paid in August
2024 and February 2025.
All data sourced from Polar
Capital LLP/HSBC.
|
Note 1
|
NAV total return is calculated as
the change in NAV from the start of the period, assuming that
dividends paid to shareholders are reinvested on the payment date
in ordinary shares at their net asset
value.
|
Note 2
|
The Company's portfolio was
restructured on 20 June 2017. The total return NAV performance
since restructuring is calculated by reinvesting the dividends in
the assets of the Group and Company from the relevant payment
date.
|
Note 3
|
Ongoing charges represent the total
expenses of the Company, excluding finance costs, transaction
costs, tax and non-recurring expenses expressed as a percentage of
the average daily net asset value, in accordance with AIC guidance
issued in July 2022. Where a performance fee is paid or is payable,
a second ongoing charge is provided, calculated on the same basis
as the above but incorporating the amount of performance fee due or
paid. The ongoing charges figure as at 31 March 2024 is for the six
month period from 30 September 2023 and is annualised (excluding
the performance fee) for comparison with the full year's
calculation as at 30 September 2023.
*See Alternative Performance
Measures below.
|
For further information
please contact:
|
Tracey Lago FCG
Company Secretary
Polar Capital Global Healthcare
Trust Plc
|
Tel: 020 7227
2700
|
INTERIM MANAGEMENT
REPORT
CHAIR'S
STATEMENT
On behalf of the Board, I am
pleased to provide to you the Company's Half Year Report for the
six-months to 31 March 2024.
PERFORMANCE AND OUTLOOK
I am very pleased to be reporting
strong performance during the six months to 31 March 2024. The
Company's NAV returned 16.6%, outperforming its healthcare
benchmark (MSCI ACWI/Healthcare Index) by 7.0%. This strong result,
against a challenging market backdrop and geopolitical outlook, was
driven by strong stock selection across the entire market
capitalisation spectrum, positive stock selection across most
geographies and a combination of good subsector positioning and
subsector stock selection. The discount also narrowed, ending the
period under review at 6.7%, from 7.7% as at 30 September
2023.
The Board remains optimistic about
the outlook of the healthcare sector particularly as the Manager's
key investment themes, specifically utilisation, continue to gather
momentum with strong performance seen in subsectors such as
healthcare facilities, equipment and supplies. Together with the
Manager's views on the near-term opportunities provided by
innovation, emerging markets and increased utilisation of
Artificial Intelligence, we believe that the sector remains very
well placed to deliver attractive returns and growth opportunities
for our shareholders in the coming months and years
ahead.
Further details are provided in the
Investment Manager's report below.
THE BOARD
There have been no changes to the
membership of the Board in the six months to 31 March 2024. The
Directors' biographical details are available on the Company's
website and are provided in the Annual Report.
SUBSIDIARY UNDERTAKING
As noted in the Company's Annual
Report and Accounts for the year ended 30 September 2023, the
Company is parent to a wholly owned subsidiary, PCGH ZDP Plc, which
was created as part of the Company's restructure in 2017 for the
purpose of providing a loan to the parent in the form of structural
gearing. The subsidiary has a fixed life whereby the loan will be
repaid and the ZDP shares will be redeemed in June 2024 at which
time the entity will be liquidated. The Company remains in a strong
position to repay the outstanding loan amount to ZDP Shareholders
on the scheduled repayment date in June 2024 and has no current
intention of refinancing the loan.
Further information on the
redemption timeline and process will be communicated to
shareholders in due course.
PRINCIPAL RISKS AND UNCERTAINTIES
A detailed explanation of the
Company's principal risks and uncertainties, and how they are
managed through mitigation and controls, can be found on pages 36
to 38 of the Annual Report for the year ended 30 September 2023.
The principal risks and uncertainties are categorised into four
main areas: Portfolio Management, Operational Risk, Regulatory Risk
and Economic/Market Risk. The Directors consider that, overall, the
principal risks and uncertainties faced by the Company for the
remaining six months of the financial year have not changed from
those outlined within the Annual Report.
Further detail on the Company's
performance and portfolio can be found in the Investment Manager's
Report.
GOING CONCERN
As detailed in the notes to the
financial statements, the Board continually monitors the financial
position of the Group and Company and has undertaken an assessment
in determining the appropriateness of preparing the Financial
Statements on a going concern basis. Having carried out this
assessment, the Directors are satisfied that it is appropriate to
continue to adopt the going concern basis in preparing the
financial results of the Group and Company. In reaching this
conclusion, the Board also considered the Company's performance and
its assessment of any material uncertainties and events that might
cast significant doubt upon the Group and Company's ability to
continue as a going concern.
RELATED PARTY TRANSACTIONS
In accordance with DTR 4.2.8R,
there have been no new related party transactions during the
six-month period to 31 March 2024. There have been no changes in
any related party transaction described in the last Annual Report
that could have a material effect on the financial position or
performance of the Group or Company in the first six months of the
current financial year or to the date of this report.
STATEMENT OF DIRECTORS' RESPONSIBILITIES
The Directors of Polar Capital
Global Healthcare Trust plc confirm to the best of their knowledge
that:
· The
condensed set of financial statements has been prepared in
accordance with UK-adopted International Accounting Standard 34 and
gives a true and fair view of the assets, liabilities, financial
position and profit or loss of the Company as at 31 March 2024;
and
· The
Interim Management Report includes a fair review of the information
required by the Disclosure Guidance and Transparency Rules 4.2.7R
and 4.2.8R.
The half year financial report for
the six-month period to 31 March 2024 has not been audited or
reviewed by the Auditors. The half year financial report was
approved by the Board on 15 May 2024.
On behalf of the Board
Lisa Arnold
Chair
INVESTMENT MANAGER'S
REVIEW
Executive summary
Over the six-month period to the
end of March 2024, the Company
continued to perform well with the Company's NAV
materially outperforming its benchmark, returning 16.6% versus 9.6%
for the benchmark (MSCI ACWI/Healthcare Index (total return in
sterling with dividends reinvested), both figures in sterling
terms, driven by strong stock selection across the entire market
capitalisation range.
A strong start to the financial
year, both in absolute and relative terms, global equity markets
really sparked into life in late 2023, driven by a raft of positive
news regarding the US economy. After a period of very strong
economic growth, the pace started to slow which eased fears of
upward inflationary pressures and the need to tighten financial
conditions. With regards to the healthcare sector, the
mega-capitalisation (>$100bn) and large-capitalisation
($10bn-$100bn) stocks were the best performers while
small-capitalisation
(<$5bn) stocks continued to struggle. Encouragingly, one of the
key themes that was a focus in last year's half-yearly report,
namely increased levels of utilisation, became very apparent as
evidenced by the strong performances of the healthcare facilities,
healthcare equipment and healthcare supplies subsectors. In keeping
with that theme, healthcare insurance companies struggled with
rising medical costs due to increased procedure volumes putting
pressure on near-term margins and earnings.
Reflecting on the period under
review, as well as strong stock selection across the entire
market-capitalisation range, there were positive contributions
across the majority of geographies with the exception of Japan.
With regards to subsectors, both allocation and stock selection
were positive, with biotechnology the standout contributor driven
entirely by strong stock selection.
With conviction in the industry's
key growth drivers increasing, especially with regards to
innovation and demand, we remain optimistic that the healthcare
sector will deliver attractive revenue and earnings growth and
generate outperformance in the coming months and years.
Performance - 30 September 2023 to 31 March
2024
The performance over the period was
strong but the sector was volatile, particularly towards the
smaller end of the market capitalisation spectrum. October 2023
witnessed the end of a very difficult period for markets and
particularly for small/mid-capitalisation healthcare stocks that
suffered as financial conditions started to tighten in July 2023.
After a period of economic growth surprising to the upside in the
US, leading economic indicators started to point towards slowing
growth and the potential for interest rate cuts. That backdrop
sparked a reversal in markets, with a significant rally in equities
including healthcare, and an especially robust response from
small/mid-capitalisation stocks - a rally that continued through to
the end of March 2024. Despite the move higher, small and
mid-capitalisation stocks underperformed their larger counterparts,
causing the allocation effect in regard to performance attribution
to be negative. However, strong stock-picking, particularly in the
small and mid-capitalisation stocks, more than offset this weak
allocation effect to generate outperformance over the
period.
Market capitalisation at
|
31 March
2024
|
30 September
2023
|
Mega Cap (>US$100bn)
|
37.3%
|
34.5%
|
Large (US$10bn -
US$100bn)
|
40.6%
|
46.0%
|
Medium(US$5bn- US$10bn)
|
23.8%
|
14.5%
|
Small (<US$5bn)
|
6.8%
|
14.3%
|
Other net liabilities
|
(8.5%)
|
(9.3%)
|
Source:
Polar Capital as
at 28 March 2024, average calculated over the reporting
period
From a geographical perspective,
Europe, North America and Asia Pacific (ex-Japan) were the largest
contributors, thanks to strong selection making up for the slightly
adverse allocation effects. Japan was the largest drag to
performance, driven primarily by poor stock-picking. Cash and
others contributed positively given the net leverage position in a
rising market. The level of gearing was relatively stable during
the period under review, averaging c8.2%. Net gearing started the
period under review at 9.4% and was 8.4% at the end of
March.
In terms of subsectors, the
positive attribution was due to both allocation and selection, with
the most favourable impact coming from biotechnology where
stock-picking was particularly strong. Also positive were life
sciences tools and services (with selection being the main driver),
managed care, healthcare facilities and healthcare supplies
(all three benefitting almost exclusively from good
allocation). The largest detractors were healthcare services, where
both allocation and stock selection were negative, pharmaceuticals,
for which the selection effect was negative albeit partially offset
by positive allocation, and healthcare technology where
stock-picking was below par.
Stocks that contributed positively
to the relative performance over the period included Zealand
Pharma, UnitedHealth Group, DexCom, UCB and Pfizer*.
Zealand Pharma, a Danish
biotechnology company, was strong throughout the period as
investors' enthusiasm and appreciation for companies developing
therapeutics to address obesity grew. The stock jumped in February
when partner Boehringer Ingelheim released positive phase two data
for key development drug survodutide for a disease called metabolic
dysfunction-associated steatohepatitis (a form of fatty liver
disease in which there is inflammation and destruction of liver
cells), thus increasing the drug's commercial potential and
derisking the program at the same time.
Consistent with our view that
healthcare utilisation would continue to stay elevated, we remained
underweight in UnitedHealth Group, the largest managed care
organisation (MCO) in the US, for the vast majority of the first
half of the financial year, though a position in the stock was
initiated in mid-March 2024. Utilisation is a negative for MCOs
because it drives higher medical loss ratios (MLRs), a measure of
the cost to provide medical care to insured members. This thesis
played out as the company, together with other MCOs, reported an
uptick in their MLR on the back of strong utilisation especially
for senior patients (which are part of so-called Medicare).
Additionally, the managed care space, a traditionally defensive
subsector that benefits from high interest rates, was generally out
of favour as investors' expectations for rate cuts rose given more
favourable macroeconomic conditions.
Medical device companies that
specialise in products for diabetes sold off sharply in August 2023
when Novo Nordisk published data showing its diabetes and obesity
GLP-1 drug had beneficial cardiovascular effects, with this
negative trend continuing in the first couple of months of the
financial year. DexCom, a maker of continuous glucose monitors
(CGMs), was caught in the downtrend but rebounded as a result of
excellent execution from the company which consistently beat
consensus estimates in their quarterly earnings, therefore allaying
some investors' fear that GLP-1 might meaningfully impact its
revenues. Furthermore, the company also benefitted from the
approval for Stelo, an over-the-counter CGM which expands DexCom's
addressable market, potentially beyond the diabetes market and into
the world of health conscious consumers.
A Belgium-based biopharmaceutical
company UCB has had a strong start to the calendar year, with
investors' enthusiasm for recently launched psoriasis drug Bimzelx
gathering momentum. There is also widening appreciation for the
company's other commercialised assets in the fields of epilepsy,
osteoporosis and generalised myasthenia gravis (a rare, chronic
condition that causes muscle weakness).
Pfizer* had a challenging period as
the demand for its Covid-19 therapeutics and vaccines continued to
dwindle, forcing the company to give 2024 earnings guidance almost
50% lower than the sell-side had pencilled in. Additionally, the
company also had setbacks in its pipeline development, the most
notable example being the discontinuation of the programme for its
twice-daily oral weight-loss pill, danuglipron, after results from
a mid-stage trial showed a high rate of side-effects and
discontinuations.
Stocks that impacted relative
performance negatively over the period were Novo Nordisk*, R1 RCM,
Insulet, Astellas Pharma and Merck & Co*.
Excitement about the market
potential for Novo Nordisk's drugs for diabetes and obesity gained
pace during the first six months of the financial year, as the
company posted convincing sales for the third and fourth quarters
of 2023 notwithstanding capacity restrictions but also gave robust
revenue guidance for 2024 and highlighted improvements in the
supply of its GLP-1 drugs. Despite not holding Novo Nordisk, the
Company is exposed to the diabetes and obesity therapeutics market
with its positions in Eli Lilly and Zealand Pharma.
R1 RCM's main line of business is
the provision of revenue cycle management solutions for healthcare
facilities and providers in the US. The company faced a series of
challenges including a large client contract termination and doubts
over the progress of its pipeline of new contracts causing the
stock to underperform.
As mentioned above, medical device
companies connected to diabetes suffered in the early part of the
period under review and Insulet, a maker of insulin pumps, was no
exception. However, after recovering partly towards the end of
2023, the stock suffered again, this time due to company-specific
issues: first confusing and modestly revised guidance for the US
business in 2024, obfuscating good progress on the margin front;
second, concerns that the company's new patient starts are
stalling.
Astellas Pharma, a Japanese
pharmaceutical company, was hurt by competitive dynamics for their
geographic atrophy (a degenerative disease of the eyes) asset but
also the market concern around the revenue trajectory for their
newly launched drug Veozah for hot flushes associated with
menopause.
The large relative underweight
position in Merck & Co hurt performance. The US pharmaceutical
company was rewarded for its strong execution and was also buoyed
by success for both pipeline projects and value-added
M&A.
Relative contributors (%): 30 September 2023 to 31 March
2024
Top 10
|
Average Stock
Weight
|
Active
Weight
|
Stock
Return
|
Stock
Return
vs BM
|
Total Attribution
Effect
|
Zealand Pharma A/S
|
5.33
|
5.33
|
119.81
|
110.25
|
4.53
|
UnitedHealth Group
|
0.42
|
-6.03
|
-5.19
|
-14.75
|
0.96
|
DexCom
|
2.68
|
2.10
|
43.64
|
34.09
|
0.69
|
UCB
|
1.09
|
0.94
|
45.57
|
36.01
|
0.69
|
Pfizer
|
0.00
|
-2.19
|
-19.16
|
-28.72
|
0.69
|
ICON
|
0.96
|
0.96
|
31.82
|
22.27
|
0.68
|
Cytokinetics
|
1.81
|
1.81
|
129.95
|
120.40
|
0.63
|
Cash and Others
|
-8.24
|
-8.24
|
0.00
|
0.00
|
0.59
|
Global Health/India
|
1.13
|
1.13
|
77.51
|
67.95
|
0.58
|
Shockwave Medical
|
1.82
|
1.82
|
58.03
|
48.48
|
0.51
|
Bottom 10
|
Average Stock
Weight
|
Active
Weight
|
Stock
Return
|
Stock
Return
vs BM
|
Total Attribution
Effect
|
Novo Nordisk
A/S
|
0.00
|
-4.68
|
35.00
|
25.44
|
-1.11
|
R1 RCM
|
0.70
|
0.70
|
-17.42
|
-26.97
|
-0.68
|
Insulet
|
1.47
|
1.30
|
3.84
|
-5.72
|
-0.64
|
Astellas
Pharma
|
1.62
|
1.34
|
-25.31
|
-34.86
|
-0.59
|
Merck &
Co
|
0.00
|
-3.80
|
23.84
|
14.29
|
-0.58
|
Legend Biotech
Corp
|
1.49
|
1.44
|
-19.31
|
-28.87
|
-0.55
|
Humana
|
2.55
|
1.82
|
-31.14
|
-40.70
|
-0.53
|
Takeda
Pharmaceutical
|
2.72
|
2.11
|
-13.66
|
-23.22
|
-0.53
|
Novartis
|
1.93
|
-0.78
|
-8.66
|
-18.22
|
-0.45
|
Indivior
|
0.46
|
0.46
|
-4.78
|
-14.33
|
-0.37
|
Source:
Polar Capital as
at 28 March 2024.
Near-term considerations: Recession risks
dissipating?
What a difference a year makes,
with the market now adopting a more optimistic stance on global
growth while heavily discounting fears of a full-blown recession.
That, coupled with expectations that interest rates will decline in
the next 12 months, has driven a greater appetite for risk among
equity investors. Thankfully, the healthcare sector is composed of
a broad and diversified universe of businesses with many different
end-markets and operating models across the market-capitalisation
spectrum. Within that, the sector is heavily populated with
high-growth, high terminal value companies that can flourish in a
risk-on environment. Further, there are pockets of healthcare, for
example dental and ophthalmology, that are sensitive to economic
cyclicality. Conversely, if the market pivots to a more defensive
stance, the more mature mega-capitalisation companies, with high
gross and operating margins, will become more attractive on a
relative basis.
Key
themes: Innovation, emerging markets and artificial
intelligence
In last year's half-year report, we
outlined three key investment themes which offered the potential
for significant returns. As a reminder, those themes were
utilisation, delivery disruption and consolidation and were
influential in driving the Company's positioning.
With regards to utilisation,
calendar 2023 witnessed a marked pickup in patient activity which
was a material positive for not only medical device and supplies
companies, but also for healthcare providers and facilities. In
contrast, rising levels of utilisation and consumption of products
and services was a challenge for the healthcare insurance companies
paying medical bills. A long-term, durable growth driver, the
delivery of healthcare continues to be disrupted as healthcare
systems globally look to generate efficiencies by treating patients
in lower-cost settings such as surgery day centres and Ambulatory
Surgery Centres. A trend that accelerated during the pandemic, this
direction of travel is expected to continue for many years to come.
Last but not least, the healthcare sector has seen an increase in
M&A activity, mostly in the area of biopharmaceuticals as well
as in the medical device arena.
The aforementioned themes will
continue to be very relevant in the medium and long term, but as we
highlighted in last year's annual report for the year ended 30
September 2023, it is the three additional themes of innovation,
emerging markets and artificial intelligence that are offering
exciting, near-term investment opportunities and are influencing
the Company's current positioning.
Innovation: Driving new product cycles
Innovation is the lifeblood of many
industries, none more so than healthcare and it appears to be
flourishing. Superior understanding of human biology and the
drivers of disease are allowing the biopharmaceutical industry to
produce novel, targeted strategies to address significant unmet
medical needs. Underpinning that view is the fact that in 2023 the
US FDA approved 55 New Molecular Entities, which represents the
second-best approval rate in 30 years. More importantly, perhaps,
is the breadth of innovation that spans areas such as infectious
disease, neurological conditions, opioid abuse, cardiovascular
disorders and respiratory diseases. 2023 also saw important
breakthroughs for patients with rare diseases and
cancers.
While it is important to recognise
and applaud the terrific pace of innovation, it is also essential
to focus on the commercial landscape. Clearly not an exhaustive
list, but the images below highlight recent breakthroughs in areas
where there is not only a high unmet need but also large,
addressable markets. Obesity, atrial fibrillation (an irregular,
often abnormally high, heart rate) and Alzheimer's disease are all
huge markets but the medical breakthroughs in respiratory diseases
are also significant. This is not just for a disease like Chronic
Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD, or smoker's cough) but also
for Respiratory Syncytial Virus (often referred to as simply RSV)
which can impact both the elderly and new-born babies. At the time
of writing, the Company has positions in stocks with direct
exposure to obesity (via Eli Lilly and Zealand Pharma), Alzheimer's
disease (via Eli Lilly), COPD (via Sanofi) and RSV (via Sanofi and
Swedish Orphan Biovitrum).
Exciting new product cycles drive revenue and earnings
momentum
http://www.rns-pdf.londonstockexchange.com/rns/6159O_3-2024-5-15.pdf
The field of robotic surgery has
also been the beneficiary of material innovation in recent history.
The new generation of surgical robots are more integrated and are
designed to enable better outcomes, be more efficient and
streamline surgeons' workflow. With materially higher computing
power and additional features such as haptic feedback, the updated
machines could drive greater penetration for many years to come.
The Company's exposure to robotic surgery is via US-based medical
equipment company, Intuitive Surgical.
Emerging markets: Is China on a path to
recovery?
Emerging markets are a major focus
both in terms of direct investment opportunities but also end
markets. For example, the ongoing bull market in India has
been a positive for the Company through direct investments in the
healthcare provider subsector. China, by contrast, has been more
challenging with sentiment towards the region diametrically
opposite to that being experienced in India, and it is that
pessimism that might offer up fresh, contrarian investment
opportunities, either through direct investments or via
multi-national companies that have material revenue
exposure.
China's macroeconomic environment
has been challenging and highly unpredictable for a while. The
lifting of the Covid-19 lockdowns was the catalyst for a strong
rebound in economic activity early in 2023, but growth quickly
stalled, adversely affecting a number of industries including the
life sciences tools and services subsector. Tentative signs of a
recovery, including measures of industrial output, manufacturing
activity and new home prices offer reasons to be optimistic, with
the caveat that visibility remains low and volatility may well
remain high.
Homing in on healthcare in China,
there is optimism that some of the challenges from 2023 are
starting to move into the rearview mirror. As a reminder, an
anti-corruption campaign was initiated with the objective of
"resolutely punishing corruption" in the medical sector "with a
zero-tolerance attitude". With positive intentions, and obvious
long-term benefits for corporate governance, the initiative did
unfortunately lead to a slowdown in activity with doctors reluctant
to participate in academic conferences, embrace new technologies or
prescribe imported drugs. There was also a marked decline in
orthopaedic and ophthalmic surgeries as clinicians and surgeons
temporarily reduced activity. Thankfully, recent public commentary
from medical device companies is pointing to a recovery in patient
inflow.
As soon as the Chinese healthcare
system has successfully navigated its way through the
anti-corruption campaign, investors will once again be able to
focus on the strong, underlying fundamentals of the region.
Government policy is supportive for healthcare, encouraging
investment in research and development to satisfy the desire for
best-in-class medicines. Further, volume-based procurement (VBP),
which has weighed on the biopharmaceutical and medical device
industries for the past five years, appears to be stabilising. The
government is comfortable with the price adjustments VBP has put in
place and is easing up on its policies, seeking a greater balance
between cost control and innovation. With a more supportive
regulatory backdrop, coupled with a recovery in the economy,
companies with significant exposure to China could be interesting
as we look into the rest of the year, with life sciences tools and
services, healthcare equipment and biopharmaceuticals subsectors
the most likely beneficiaries.
Artificial intelligence and machine learning: Just the
beginning
A key question for the healthcare
industry to address is: "How can artificial intelligence (AI) and
machine learning (ML) be used to make healthcare more productive?".
One area of the industry that has embraced the technologies is
diagnostics where AI and ML are starting to have an impact on
accuracy and, more importantly, patient outcomes. Take colonoscopy
for example, a technique that remains the gold standard in
detecting and preventing colorectal cancer. The current procedure
has limitations, with some studies suggesting more than half of
post-colonoscopy colon cancer cases arise from lesions missed at
patients' previous colonoscopies. Researchers at the Mayo Clinic
are investigating how AI can be used to improve polyp detection. In
the case of colon cancer, the AI system works alongside the
physician in real time, scanning the colonoscopy video feed and
drawing small, red boxes around polyps that might otherwise be
overlooked.
Oncology is another field adopting
innovative AI solutions. AI software solutions are being introduced
in imaging centres to enable more accurate screening for the three
most prevalent cancers: breast, lung and prostate. With
mammographies, for example, AI technology is being used to
automatically identify unusual lesions and assigns a suspicion
level to each finding. In the case of lung cancer, the objective is
improved prognosis via a more efficient counting, measuring and
segmentation of lesions. Finally, in the case of prostate cancer,
faster and more accurate diagnoses of abnormalities could prove to
be invaluable.
US
election: Split Congress the most likely scenario therefore a
positive for healthcare investors
It would be remiss not to assess
the implications of the upcoming US elections but a contrarian view
that the outcome will not create over-sized volatility is
justified. The Senate, House of Representatives and White House
could all change hands in November 2024 with odds favouring a
Republican takeover of the Senate and a Democratic takeover of the
House of Representatives. Given the extreme polarisation of the
parties, divided control of the Federal government would create
political gridlock and render it very difficult to pass any
far-reaching legislation, including healthcare. The potential
outcomes are mixed, but with the key observation that hard-hitting,
draconian measures are unlikely making the investment landscape for
healthcare investors less uncertain.
Strategy and positioning
As a reminder, the objective of the
Company is to achieve long-term capital appreciation by investing
in a portfolio of global healthcare companies, to include, but not
limited to, pharmaceutical, biotechnology, medical device and
healthcare services companies. The aim is to identify companies
where there is a disconnect between valuations and intrinsic value.
The Company is a high-conviction (77.4% active share as of 31 March
2024), actively managed investment vehicle that gives investors
exposure to a concentrated portfolio from across the global
healthcare universe. Stock-picking remains critical to the process,
but there will be a continued focus on the key investment themes
mentioned earlier, some of which appear to be accelerating in the
near term while also having medium-term durability.
The Company's portfolio combines a
growth at a reasonable price (GARP) approach with the opportunity
to invest in earlier-stage, more disruptive companies. The Growth
portfolio dominates, with exposure to companies that sit further up
the market-capitalisation scale. This part of the portfolio
consists of holdings where we see a disconnect between the current
share price and intrinsic value. The positions also reflect, in
part but not exclusively, the investment themes where we have the
highest conviction. This part of the portfolio also drives the
lower volatility of the Company relative to other, more volatile
areas of healthcare. The innovation portfolio provides optionality
through investments in the most exciting small-capitalisation
stocks we can find.
http://www.rns-pdf.londonstockexchange.com/rns/6159O_2-2024-5-15.pdf
Period end positioning: Diverse but with high
conviction
From a subsector perspective, there
were some significant changes in positioning during the six-month
period, driven both by allocation and stock-specific
considerations. Starting from a large overweight, exposure to
healthcare facilities was reduced to take profits after the
subsector experienced a material rerating. On the other hand, we
increased our holdings in biotechnology companies: after a
difficult start to the financial year on funding concerns, the
subsector was trading at depressed multiples despite fundamentals
remaining solid, thus offering an attractive entry
point.
http://www.rns-pdf.londonstockexchange.com/rns/6159O_1-2024-5-15.pdf
Other significant moves in
positioning included an increase in exposure to healthcare supplies
and equipment, and a larger underweight in life sciences tools and
services. The change in the healthcare supplies and equipment was
primarily driven by individual stories; as mentioned earlier, some
medical device companies, especially in the areas of diabetes,
cardiology and orthopaedics, were negatively impacted by investors'
concerns that anti-obesity drugs could reduce the addressable
market for these businesses. Having a more sanguine view on these
concerns than the market, we took the opportunity to increase our
exposure to some medical device companies whose fundamentals remain
very attractive. Our stance on life sciences tools and services
shifted more negative as the subsector experienced a positive
rerating in early 2024 despite near-term pressures and earnings
downgrades. These downgrades were driven by issues such as customer
inventory drawdown, deteriorating biotechnology funding, a more
difficult capital equipment landscape and a weak economic
environment in China.
The largest underweight relative to
the benchmark continues to be in pharmaceuticals. As the first half
of the financial year progressed, investors' attitudes shifted more
positive on the global macroeconomic picture, with robust GDP
growth, high consumer confidence, stable employment and declining
inflation. Given the defensive characteristics of the subsector
coupled with its sub-par growth profile and mature operating
margins, we maintained our view that we can find more exciting
opportunities in other areas of the healthcare
universe.
Stocks in healthcare facilities
were the best performers in the first six months of the financial
year, with the industry experiencing very strong underlying
dynamics driven by higher volumes but also improving labour supply,
lower wage inflation and improved payers' rates. Although we remain
constructive on the fundamentals (delivery disruption and
utilisation are important drivers in the near term and they should
continue to be beneficial for facilities), many such companies
rerated sharply and we now think their valuations are increasingly
stretched.
An increase in utilisation also
supported the growth of healthcare distributors, equipment and
supplies. The latter two also saw better margins on the back of
lower cost inflation and a more resilient supply chain. The
equipment and supplies subsectors underperformed in the first month
of the financial year due to concerns around anti-obesity drugs
impacting the underlying markets, but posted a strong recovery as
most medical device companies reported solid growth in the last
quarter of 2023 and gave a positive outlook for 2024. Even though
the subsectors' market conditions are undoubtedly healthy, we
remain very selective in our stock-picking, preferring companies
with new product cycles, high levels of innovation or leadership
positions in their business segments but at prudent
valuations.
On the other side of the
utilisation equation, managed care was the worst performing
subsector. Higher medical volumes meant more of the premium revenue
had to be spent to provide care to insurance plan members, which
affected MCOs' earnings power. This trend was particularly acute in
the so-called Medicare Advantage segment, which focuses on US
seniors, a part of the population that has returned to the
healthcare system after the pandemic. However, the industry was
also impacted by other dynamics such as increased regulatory
scrutiny, uncertainty around Medicaid enrolment and the prospect of
interest rate cuts which reduces the income generated from the
companies' investment portfolios. We believe some of these trends
are temporary and discounted in the share prices, therefore we
maintain a small overweight in managed care.
Pharmaceuticals also posted
positive gains but there was a large dispersion in performance
within the subsector: companies developing or commercialising
assets that address obesity were the clear winners. Biotechnology
had more muted returns and lagged the overall healthcare market,
however we take a selectively constructive view on the subsector
which is seeing a rebound in funding and continues to demonstrate
high levels of innovation.
Finally, life sciences tools and
services had perhaps the most surprising performance. As mentioned
above, this industry had been dealing with many challenges which
forced numerous companies to reduce their 2023 outlook during the
third quarter earnings season and also to give subdued guidance for
2024. Regardless, investors were willing to look through the
near-term headwinds, expecting life sciences tools and services
businesses to experience solid growth in the second half of the
calendar year and in 2025. The subsector rerated sharply despite
the negative earnings revisions, outperforming the broader
healthcare index during the period under review.
Stock selection is a key driver
The table below displays the
Company's top 10 relative overweight and underweights at the end of
the reporting period, highlighting the highest conviction ideas in
the portfolio. While conviction is the appropriate term to use when
discussing positioning versus the benchmark, it is important to
stress that valuation inefficiencies can be relatively short-lived,
especially among well covered large-capitalisation stocks. With
opportunity cost also a key decision driver as we look to maximise
returns, the Company's top 10 relative overweight and underweight
positions are subject to change.
Top
10 overweight and Top 10 underweight positions relative to the
benchmark
|
Active (%)
|
|
Active (%)
|
Zealand Pharma A/S
|
5.65%
|
Novo Nordisk A/S
|
-5.18%
|
UCB
|
3.87%
|
Johnson & Johnson
|
-4.74%
|
Intuitive Surgical
|
2.99%
|
Merck & Co
|
-4.16%
|
BioMerieux
|
2.92%
|
Thermo Fisher Scientific
|
-2.79%
|
Swedish Orphan Biovitrum
|
2.92%
|
AstraZeneca
|
-2.60%
|
Becton Dickinson
|
2.66%
|
Abbott Laboratories
|
-2.45%
|
Bio-Rad Laboratories
|
2.50%
|
Roche
|
-2.34%
|
Sanofi
|
2.49%
|
Danaher
|
-2.18%
|
Insulet
|
2.48%
|
Pfizer
|
-1.95%
|
Penumbra
|
2.40%
|
Amgen
|
-1.89%
|
Source:
Polar Capital,
as at 28 March 2024. Totals may not sum due to
rounding
A number of the top 10 overweights
relative to the benchmark have been in the portfolio for some time,
while UCB, Sanofi, Insulet and Penumbra were added during the
period under review. UCB is a Belgian-based biopharmaceutical
company with exposure to end-markets including auto-immune
disorders, rare diseases, epilepsy and osteoporosis. An established
participant in the fields of epilepsy and osteoporosis, it is the
relatively new exposure to auto-immune disorders and rare diseases
that excites us. More specifically, UCB is looking to commercialise
assets in auto-immune diseases such as psoriasis (a skin condition
that causes flaky patches of skin), psoriatic arthritis (a type of
arthritis linked to psoriasis) and hidradenitis suppurativa (a
painful, long-term skin condition that causes abscesses and
scarring) and in rare diseases such as myasthenia gravis (a rare
condition that causes muscle weakness). French pharmaceutical
company Sanofi is not only attractively valued but also has a
relatively long and visible growth runway driven by therapeutics in
the areas of eczema, COPD and haemophilia. The company also has a
pipeline of R&D assets that, at the current valuation, appears
to be heavily discounted by the market.
Both US-based healthcare equipment
companies Insulet and Penumbra are relatively recent additions to
the Company's portfolio. Insulet develops and commercialises
tubeless, wearable pod-based insulin delivery systems to help
patients control and manage diabetes. Having made successful
inroads into the Type I diabetes market, there remains potential
upside for Insulet via greater Type I penetration or by penetrating
the much larger Type II diabetes market. As a point of difference,
Type I diabetes is a chronic condition where the pancreas makes
essentially no insulin whereas Type II is more lifestyle-related
where the pancreas makes less insulin plus the body becomes
resistant to it. Penumbra offers innovative solutions to remove
clots from blood vessels. We believe the significant selloff after
disappointing fourth quarter results and a "light" outlook is
overdone, plus we believe the market is underestimating the
operating leverage and the earnings power of the
business.
In the Innovation portfolio, new
positions were started in 4D Molecular Therapeutics, Medincell and
Xenon Pharmaceuticals. 4D Molecular Therapeutics has developed a
novel gene therapy delivery technology that it is hoped will help
the company commercialise assets in the fields of ophthalmology,
pulmonology and cardiology. Medincell is a French-based company
that has created a long-acting injectable technology designed to
enhance the performance of well-established molecules. The most
advanced therapies are for the treatment of schizophrenia and
post-operative pain, with earlier stage assets in the fields of
contraception and organ transplant. Xenon Pharmaceuticals is a
neuroscience-focussed biopharmaceutical company. The lead asset,
XEN1101, is in late-stage development for a number of indications
including focal onset seizures (the most common type of seizures
experienced by epileptics), primary generalised tonic-clonic
seizures (a disorder where the patient can lose consciousness) and
major depressive disorder.
Given their size, stocks held in
the Innovation portfolio have the potential to be more volatile
than their larger peers in the Growth portfolio. Companies further
down the market-capitalisation scale also tend to be less well
researched, increasing the chances of valuation inefficiencies. It
is that combination of volatility and valuation inefficiency that
we hope will yield interesting ideas that could offer significant
potential over the long term.
Outlook for healthcare: Ready to inflect to the
upside
After a challenging period of
relative performance versus the broader market in 2023, there
appears to be a disconnect between the healthcare sector's
fundamentals and investors' appetite to engage. The sector is
innovating, is delivering exciting new product cycles and has a
number of sector-specific tailwinds that are durable. On the
innovation side, ground-breaking therapeutics in the areas of
obesity, breast cancer, RSV and COPD could and should drive
positive revenue momentum for many years to come. In the same vein,
novel devices for the treatment of atrial fibrillation are in early
launch phases, the industry is on the cusp of a brand-new wave of
robotic surgeries and AI is being adopted with the aim of driving
greater efficiencies and generating superior outcomes for patients.
Further momentum for the sector could come from ongoing, elevated
levels of utilisation and a recovery in emerging markets, with
China's end-markets offering the greatest potential upside. With
relative valuations attractive for the growth on offer, and a
potentially benign political outlook in the US, all the ingredients
for a sustained healthcare bull market are falling into
place.
*
not held
James Douglas and Gareth
Powell
Co-Managers
15 May
2024
PORTFOLIO AS AT 31 MARCH
2024
(Figures in brackets denote the
comparative ranking as at 30 September 2023)
Ranking
|
Stock
|
Sector
|
Country
|
Market Value
£'000
|
% of total net
assets
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
|
|
31
March
2024
|
30
September
2023
|
31
March
2024
|
30
September
2023
|
1
|
(1)
|
Eli
Lilly
|
Pharmaceuticals
|
United
States
|
41,468
|
28,037
|
8.5%
|
6.7%
|
2
|
(-)
|
UnitedHealth Group
|
Managed Healthcare
|
United
States
|
30,936
|
-
|
6.4%
|
-
|
3
|
(6)
|
Zealand Pharma
|
Biotechnology
|
Denmark
|
27,518
|
19,655
|
5.6%
|
4.7%
|
4
|
(4)
|
Abbvie
|
Biotechnology
|
United
States
|
27,444
|
25,463
|
5.6%
|
6.1%
|
5
|
(7)
|
Intuitive Surgical
|
Healthcare Equipment
|
United
States
|
23,090
|
17,482
|
4.7%
|
4.2%
|
6
|
(-)
|
Novartis
|
Pharmaceuticals
|
Switzerland
|
21,844
|
-
|
4.5%
|
-
|
7
|
(-)
|
UCB
|
Pharmaceuticals
|
Belgium
|
19,821
|
-
|
4.1%
|
-
|
8
|
(-)
|
Sanofi
|
Pharmaceuticals
|
France
|
18,906
|
-
|
3.9%
|
-
|
9
|
(5)
|
Elevance Health
|
Managed
Healthcare
|
United
States
|
17,706
|
21,404
|
3.6%
|
5.1%
|
10
|
(11)
|
Becton Dickinson
|
Healthcare
Equipment
|
United
States
|
17,320
|
12,453
|
3.6%
|
3.0%
|
Top 10
investments
|
|
|
246,053
|
|
50.5%
|
|
11
|
(-)
|
CSL
|
Biotechnology
|
Australia
|
14,767
|
-
|
3.0%
|
-
|
12
|
(19)
|
Swedish Orphan
Biovitrum
|
Biotechnology
|
Sweden
|
14,507
|
10,400
|
3.0%
|
2.5%
|
13
|
(27)
|
BioMerieux
|
Healthcare
Equipment
|
France
|
14,495
|
8,777
|
3.0%
|
2.1%
|
14
|
(13)
|
Takeda
Pharmaceutical
|
Pharmaceuticals
|
Japan
|
13,484
|
12,312
|
2.8%
|
2.9%
|
15
|
(17)
|
DexCom
|
Healthcare
Equipment
|
United
States
|
13,199
|
10,560
|
2.7%
|
2.5%
|
16
|
(-)
|
Align
Technology
|
Healthcare
Supplies
|
United
States
|
12,965
|
-
|
2.6%
|
-
|
17
|
(-)
|
Insulet
|
Healthcare
Equipment
|
United
States
|
12,820
|
-
|
2.6%
|
-
|
18
|
(20)
|
Lonza
|
Life Sciences Tools
& Services
|
Switzerland
|
12,666
|
10,358
|
2.6%
|
2.5%
|
19
|
(29)
|
Bio-Rad
Laboratories
|
Life Sciences Tools
& Services
|
United
States
|
12,615
|
8,099
|
2.6%
|
1.9%
|
20
|
(-)
|
Penumbra
|
Healthcare
Equipment
|
United
States
|
11,697
|
-
|
2.4%
|
-
|
Top 20
investments
|
|
|
379,268
|
|
77.8%
|
|
21
|
(18)
|
Aptargroup
|
Metal, Glass &
Plastic Containers
|
United
States
|
11,440
|
10,480
|
2.4%
|
2.5%
|
22
|
(15)
|
Acadia
Healthcare
|
Healthcare
Facilities
|
United
States
|
11,099
|
10,787
|
2.3%
|
2.6%
|
23
|
(-)
|
Neurocrine
Biosciences
|
Biotechnology
|
United
States
|
10,783
|
-
|
2.2%
|
-
|
24
|
(21)
|
Coloplast
|
Healthcare
Supplies
|
Denmark
|
10,260
|
10,077
|
2.1%
|
2.4%
|
25
|
(28)
|
Cytokinetics
|
Biotechnology
|
United
States
|
10,247
|
8,172
|
2.1%
|
1.9%
|
26
|
(9)
|
Alcon
|
Healthcare
Supplies
|
Switzerland
|
10,244
|
14,397
|
2.1%
|
3.4%
|
27
|
(-)
|
ICON
|
Life Sciences Tools
& Services
|
Ireland
|
10,047
|
-
|
2.0%
|
-
|
28
|
(-)
|
ConvaTec
Group
|
Healthcare
Supplies
|
United
Kingdom
|
9,584
|
-
|
2.0%
|
-
|
29
|
(-)
|
Argenx
|
Biotechnology
|
Netherlands
|
8,671
|
-
|
1.8%
|
-
|
30
|
(-)
|
Galderma
Group
|
Pharmaceuticals
|
Switzerland
|
8,457
|
-
|
1.7%
|
-
|
Top 30
investments
|
|
|
480,100
|
|
98.5%
|
|
31
|
(8)
|
Humana
|
Managed
Healthcare
|
United
States
|
7,578
|
14,748
|
1.6%
|
3.5%
|
32
|
(30)
|
Hikma
Pharmaceuticals
|
Pharmaceuticals
|
United
Kingdom
|
7,374
|
8,026
|
1.5%
|
1.9%
|
33
|
(36)
|
Global
Health/India
|
Healthcare
Facilities
|
India
|
6,322
|
3,562
|
1.3%
|
0.8%
|
34
|
(41)
|
Amvis
|
Healthcare
Facilities
|
Japan
|
4,775
|
2,350
|
1.0%
|
0.6%
|
35
|
(34)
|
Medley
|
Healthcare
Technology
|
Japan
|
4,537
|
4,953
|
0.9%
|
1.2%
|
36
|
(33)
|
MoonLake
Immunotherapeutics
|
Biotechnology
|
Switzerland
|
4,278
|
5,022
|
0.9%
|
1.2%
|
37
|
(38)
|
Uniphar
|
Healthcare
Distributors
|
Ireland
|
4,207
|
3,196
|
0.9%
|
0.8%
|
38
|
(-)
|
Xenon
Pharmaceuticals
|
Biotechnology
|
Canada
|
3,350
|
-
|
0.7%
|
-
|
39
|
(-)
|
4D Molecular
Therapeutics
|
Biotechnology
|
United
States
|
2,645
|
-
|
0.5%
|
-
|
40
|
(37)
|
Intelligent
Ultrasound
|
Healthcare
Technology
|
United
Kingdom
|
2,454
|
3,272
|
0.5%
|
0.8%
|
Top 40
investments
|
|
|
527,620
|
|
108.3%
|
|
41
|
(-)
|
Medincell
|
Pharmaceuticals
|
France
|
901
|
-
|
0.2%
|
-
|
Total
Equities
|
|
|
528,521
|
|
108.5%
|
|
Other Net
Liabilities
|
|
|
(41,235)
|
|
(8.5%)
|
|
Net Assets
|
|
|
487,286
|
|
100.0%
|
|
PORTFOLIO REVIEW AS AT 31
MARCH 2024
Geographical Exposure
at:
|
31 March
2024
|
30 September
2023
|
United
States
|
56.4%
|
65.1%
|
Switzerland
|
11.8%
|
7.1%
|
Denmark
|
7.7%
|
8.3%
|
France
|
7.1%
|
3.9%
|
Japan
|
4.7%
|
7.6%
|
Belgium
|
4.1%
|
-
|
United
Kingdom
|
4.0%
|
10.6%
|
Sweden
|
3.0%
|
2.8%
|
Australia
|
3.0%
|
-
|
Ireland
|
2.9%
|
0.8%
|
Netherlands
|
1.8%
|
-
|
India
|
1.3%
|
0.8%
|
Canada
|
0.7%
|
-
|
Germany
|
-
|
2.3%
|
Other net
liabilities
|
(8.5%)
|
(9.3%)
|
Total
|
100.0%
|
100.0%
|
Sector Exposure
at:
|
31 March
2024
|
30 September
2023
|
Pharmaceuticals
|
27.2%
|
30.8%
|
Biotechnology
|
25.4%
|
20.2%
|
Healthcare
Equipment
|
19.0%
|
15.4%
|
Managed
Healthcare
|
11.6%
|
11.1%
|
Healthcare
Supplies
|
8.8%
|
7.6%
|
Life Sciences Tools
& Services
|
7.2%
|
6.8%
|
Healthcare
Facilities
|
4.6%
|
9.7%
|
Metal, Glass &
Plastic Containers
|
2.4%
|
2.5%
|
Healthcare
Technology
|
1.4%
|
2.0%
|
Healthcare
Distributors
|
0.9%
|
0.8%
|
Healthcare
Services
|
-
|
2.4%
|
Other net
liabilities
|
(8.5%)
|
(9.3%)
|
Total
|
100.0%
|
100.0%
|
Market Capitalisation
breakdown at:
|
31 March
2024
|
30 September
2023
|
Mega Cap
(>US$100bn)
|
37.3%
|
34.5%
|
Large Cap (US$10bn
-US$100bn)
|
40.6%
|
46.0%
|
Medium Cap (US$5bn
- US$10bn)
|
23.8%
|
14.5%
|
Small Cap
(<US$5bn)
|
6.8%
|
14.3%
|
Other net
liabilities
|
(8.5%)
|
(9.3%)
|
|
100.0%
|
100.0%
|
STATEMENT OF
COMPREHENSIVE INCOME
For the half
year ended 31 March 2024
|
Group
|
Group
|
Group
|
|
(Unaudited)
Half year
ended
31 March
2024
|
(Unaudited)
Half year
ended
31
March 2023
|
(Audited)
Year
ended
30
September 2023
|
|
|
Revenue
|
Capital
|
Total
|
Revenue
|
Capital
|
Total
|
Revenue
|
Capital
|
Total
|
|
|
return
|
return
|
return
|
return
|
return
|
return
|
return
|
return
|
return
|
|
Notes
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Investment income
|
2
|
2,661
|
-
|
2,661
|
2,050
|
-
|
2,050
|
4,804
|
-
|
4,804
|
Other operating income
|
2
|
68
|
-
|
68
|
50
|
-
|
50
|
104
|
-
|
104
|
Gains on investments held at fair
value
|
|
-
|
70,461
|
70,461
|
-
|
10,416
|
10,416
|
-
|
19,574
|
19,574
|
Other currency
gains/(losses)
|
|
-
|
417
|
417
|
-
|
(1,102)
|
(1,102)
|
-
|
(1,130)
|
(1,130)
|
Total income
|
|
2,729
|
70,878
|
73,607
|
2,100
|
9,314
|
11,414
|
4,908
|
18,444
|
23,352
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Expenses
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Investment management
fee
|
|
(332)
|
(1,328)
|
(1,660)
|
(322)
|
(1,290)
|
(1,612)
|
(650)
|
(2,598)
|
(3,248)
|
Performance fee
|
|
-
|
(834)
|
(834)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Other administrative
expenses
|
|
(417)
|
(44)
|
(461)
|
(337)
|
(13)
|
(350)
|
(712)
|
(13)
|
(725)
|
Total expenses
|
|
(749)
|
(2,206)
|
(2,955)
|
(659)
|
(1,303)
|
(1,962)
|
(1,362)
|
(2,611)
|
(3,973)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Profit before finance costs and tax
|
|
1,980
|
68,672
|
70,652
|
1,441
|
8,011
|
9,452
|
3,546
|
15,833
|
19,379
|
Finance costs
|
|
(5)
|
(594)
|
(599)
|
(1)
|
(561)
|
(562)
|
(9)
|
(1,161)
|
(1,170)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Profit before tax
|
|
1,975
|
68,078
|
70,053
|
1,440
|
7,450
|
8,890
|
3,537
|
14,672
|
18,209
|
Tax
|
|
(351)
|
(143)
|
(494)
|
(242)
|
(195)
|
(437)
|
(598)
|
(715)
|
(1,313)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Net profit for the period and total comprehensive
income
|
|
1,624
|
67,935
|
69,559
|
1,198
|
7,255
|
8,453
|
2,939
|
13,957
|
16,896
|
Earnings per Ordinary share (pence)
|
3
|
1.34
|
56.02
|
57.36
|
0.99
|
5.98
|
6.97
|
2.42
|
11.51
|
13.93
|
The total column of this statement
represents Group's Statement of Comprehensive Income, prepared in
accordance with UK-adopted International Accounting
Standards.
The revenue return and capital
return columns are supplementary to this and are prepared under
guidance published by the Association of Investment
Companies.
The Group does not have any other
income or expense that is not included in the net profit for the
period/year. The net profit for the period/year disclosed above
represents the Group's total comprehensive
income.
There are no dilutive securities
and therefore the Earnings per Share and the Diluted Earnings per
Share are the
same.
All revenue and capital items in
the above statement derive from continuing operations. No
operations were acquired or discontinued in the
period/year.
The notes to follow form part of
these financial
statements.
.
BALANCE SHEETS
For the half
year ended 31 March 2024
|
Note
|
Group
|
Company
|
(Unaudited)
31 March
2024
£'000
|
(Unaudited)
31
March
2023
£'000
|
(Audited)
30
September
2023
£'000
|
(Unaudited)
31 March
2024
£'000
|
(Unaudited)
31
March
2023
£'000
|
(Audited)
30
September
2023
£'000
|
Non-current assets
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Investments held at fair
value
|
|
528,521
|
448,436
|
458,255
|
528,521
|
448,436
|
458,255
|
Investment in subsidiary
|
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
50
|
50
|
50
|
Current assets
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Cash and cash equivalents
|
|
6,035
|
2,141
|
4,680
|
5,985
|
2,091
|
4,630
|
Receivables
|
|
7,212
|
1,234
|
505
|
7,212
|
1,234
|
505
|
Overseas tax recoverable
|
|
859
|
670
|
678
|
859
|
670
|
678
|
|
|
14,106
|
4,045
|
5,863
|
14,056
|
3,995
|
5,813
|
Total assets
|
|
542,627
|
452,481
|
464,118
|
542,627
|
452,481
|
464,118
|
Current liabilities
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Bank overdraft
|
|
(6,826)
|
-
|
(2,014)
|
(6,826)
|
-
|
(2,014)
|
Payables
|
|
(8,871)
|
(2,219)
|
(3,981)
|
(8,871)
|
(2,219)
|
(3,981)
|
Zero dividend preference shares
|
|
(39,262)
|
-
|
(38,687)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Loan from subsidiary
|
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(39,262)
|
-
|
(38,687)
|
|
|
(54,959)
|
(2,219)
|
(44,682)
|
(54,959)
|
(2,219)
|
(44,682)
|
Non-current liabilities
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Zero dividend preference
shares
|
|
-
|
(38,118)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Loan from subsidiary
|
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(38,118)
|
-
|
Indian capital gains tax
provision
|
|
(382)
|
(192)
|
(254)
|
(382)
|
(192)
|
(254)
|
Total liabilities
|
|
(55,341)
|
(40,529)
|
(44,936)
|
(55,341)
|
(40,529)
|
(44,936)
|
Net
assets
|
|
487,286
|
411,952
|
419,182
|
487,286
|
411,952
|
419,182
|
Equity attributable to equity shareholders
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Called up share capital
|
|
31,037
|
31,037
|
31,037
|
31,037
|
31,037
|
31,037
|
Share premium reserve
|
|
80,685
|
80,685
|
80,685
|
80,685
|
80,685
|
80,685
|
Capital redemption
reserve
|
|
6,575
|
6,575
|
6,575
|
6,575
|
6,575
|
6,575
|
Special distributable
reserve
|
|
3,672
|
3,672
|
3,672
|
3,672
|
3,672
|
3,672
|
Capital reserves
|
|
362,683
|
288,046
|
294,748
|
362,683
|
288,046
|
294,748
|
Revenue reserve
|
|
2,634
|
1,937
|
2,465
|
2,634
|
1,937
|
2,465
|
Total equity
|
|
487,286
|
411,952
|
419,182
|
487,286
|
411,952
|
419,182
|
Net asset value per Ordinary share
(pence)
|
4
|
401.82
|
339.70
|
345.66
|
401.82
|
339.70
|
345.66
|
Net asset value per ZDP share
(pence)
|
4
|
122.20
|
118.64
|
120.41
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
The parent company has taken
advantage of section 408 of the Companies Act 2006 and has not
included its own income statement in the financial
statements.
The parent company's profit for the
half year was £69,559,000 (31 March 2023: profit of £8,453,000 and
30 September 2023: profit of £16,896,000).
The financial statements were
approved and authorised by the Board of Directors in 15 May 2024
by: Lisa Arnold, Chair
The notes to follow form part of
these financial statements.
STATEMENTS OF CHANGES IN EQUITY
For the half year ended 31 March 2024
|
|
Group and
Company
Half year ended 31 March 2024
(Unaudited)
|
Called up share
capital
£'000
|
Capital redemption
reserve
£'000
|
Share premium
reserve
£'000
|
Special distributable
reserve
£'000
|
Capital
reserves
£'000
|
Revenue
reserve
£'000
|
Total
Equity
£'000
|
Total equity at 1 October 2023
|
31,037
|
6,575
|
80,685
|
3,672
|
294,748
|
2,465
|
419,182
|
Total comprehensive income:
|
|
|
|
|
|
Profit for the half year ended 31
March 2024
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
67,935
|
1,624
|
69,559
|
Transactions with owners, recorded directly to
equity:
|
|
|
|
|
|
Equity dividends paid
|
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(1,455)
|
(1,455)
|
Total equity at 31 March 2024
|
31,037
|
6,575
|
80,685
|
3,672
|
362,683
|
2,634
|
487,286
|
|
|
Group and
Company
Half year ended 31 March 2023
(Unaudited)
|
Called up share
capital
£'000
|
Capital redemption
reserve
£'000
|
Share premium
reserve
£'000
|
Special distributable
reserve
£'000
|
Capital
reserves
£'000
|
Revenue
reserve
£'000
|
Total
Equity
£'000
|
Total equity at 1 October 2022
|
31,037
|
6,575
|
80,685
|
3,672
|
280,791
|
2,073
|
404,833
|
Total comprehensive income:
|
|
|
|
|
|
Profit for the half year ended 31
March 2023
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
7,255
|
1,198
|
8,453
|
Transactions with owners, recorded directly to
equity:
|
|
|
|
|
|
Equity dividends paid
|
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(1,334)
|
(1,334)
|
Total equity at 31 March 2023
|
31,037
|
6,575
|
80,685
|
3,672
|
288,046
|
1,937
|
411,952
|
|
|
Group and
Company
Year ended 30 September
2023 (Audited)
|
Called up share
capital
£'000
|
Capital redemption
reserve
£'000
|
Share premium
reserve
£'000
|
Special distributable
reserve
£'000
|
Capital
reserves
£'000
|
Revenue
reserve
£'000
|
Total
Equity
£'000
|
Total equity at 1 October 2022
|
31,037
|
6,575
|
80,685
|
3,672
|
280,791
|
2,073
|
404,833
|
Total comprehensive income:
|
|
|
|
|
|
Profit for the year ended 30
September 2023
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
13,957
|
2,939
|
16,896
|
Transactions with owners, recorded directly to
equity:
|
|
|
|
|
|
Equity dividends paid
|
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(2,547)
|
(2,547)
|
Total equity at 30 September 2023
|
31,037
|
6,575
|
80,685
|
3,672
|
294,748
|
2,465
|
419,182
|
CASH FLOW
STATEMENTS
For the half
year ended 31 March 2024
|
Group and
Company
|
|
(Unaudited)
Half year
ended
31 March
2024
£'000
|
(Unaudited)
Half year
ended
31 March
2023
£'000
|
(Audited)
Year ended
30 September
2023
£'000
|
Cash flows from operating activities
|
|
|
|
Profit before finance costs and
tax
|
70,652
|
9,452
|
19,379
|
Adjustment for non-cash
items:
|
|
|
|
Gains on investments held at fair
value through profit or loss
|
(70,461)
|
(10,416)
|
(19,574)
|
Adjusted loss/(profit) before
tax
|
191
|
(964)
|
(195)
|
Adjustments for:
|
|
|
|
Purchases of investments, including
transaction costs
|
(366,955)
|
(247,474)
|
(503,002)
|
Sales of investments, including
transaction costs
|
364,861
|
244,898
|
501,992
|
Increase in receivables
|
(134)
|
(189)
|
(272)
|
Increase/(decrease) in
payables
|
605
|
(88)
|
259
|
Indian capital gains tax
|
(15)
|
192
|
(461)
|
Overseas tax deducted at
source
|
(532)
|
(441)
|
(610)
|
Net
cash used in operating activities
|
(1,979)
|
(4,066)
|
(2,289)
|
Cash flows from financing activities
|
|
|
|
Interest paid
|
(23)
|
(5)
|
(44)
|
Equity dividends
paid
|
(1,455)
|
(1,334)
|
(2,547)
|
Net
cash used in financing activities
|
(1,478)
|
(1,339)
|
(2,591)
|
Net
decrease in cash and cash equivalents
|
(3,457)
|
(5,405)
|
(4,880)
|
Cash and cash equivalents at the beginning of the
period
|
2,666
|
7,546
|
7,546
|
Cash and cash equivalents at the end of the
period
|
(791)
|
2,141
|
2,666
|
NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
For the half year ended 31 March 2024
1.
General Information
The consolidated financial
statements comprise the unaudited results of the Company and its
wholly-owned subsidiary PCGH ZDP plc (together referred to as the
'Group') for the six month period to 31 March
2024.
The Group and Company unaudited
financial statements to 31 March 2024 have been prepared using the
accounting policies used in the Group and Company's financial
statements to 30 September 2023. These accounting policies are
based on UK-adopted International Accounting Standards ("UK-adopted
IAS").
The financial information in this
half year financial report does not constitute statutory accounts
as defined in section 434 of the Companies Act 2006.
The financial information for the
periods ended 31 March 2024 and 31 March 2023 have not been
audited. The figures and financial information for the year ended
30 September 2023 are an extract from the latest published accounts
and do not constitute statutory accounts for that year. Full
statutory accounts for the year ended 30 September 2023, prepared
under UK-adopted IAS, including the report of the auditors which
was unqualified, did not draw attention to any matters by way of
emphasis and did not contain a statement under section 498 of the
Companies Act 2006, have been delivered to the Registrar of
Companies.
The Group and Company's accounting
policies have not varied from those described in the financial
statements for the year ended 30 September
2023.
The Group and Company's financial
statements are presented in Pounds Sterling and all values are
rounded to the nearest thousand pounds (£'000), except where
otherwise
stated.
The Directors believe it is
appropriate to adopt the going concern basis in preparing the
financial statements. The Board continually monitors the financial
position of the Group and Company. The Directors have considered an
assessment of the Group and Company's ability to meets its
liabilities as they fall due. The assessment took account of the
Company's current financial positions, their cash flows and their
liquidity positions and the loan due for repayment to PCGH ZDP plc
in June 2024. Accordingly, the Directors are satisfied that it is
appropriate to continue to adopt the going concern basis in
preparing the financial results of the Group and
Company.
There were no new UK-adopted IAS or
amendments to UK-adopted IAS applicable to the current year which
had any significant impact on the Group and Company's Financial
Statements.
.
2.
DIVIDENDS and OTHER Income
|
(Unaudited)
For the
half
year ended
31 March
2024
£'000
|
(Unaudited)
For the
half
year
ended
31
March
2023
£'000
|
(Audited)
For
the
year
ended
30
September 2023
£'000
|
Investment
income
|
|
|
|
Revenue:
|
|
|
|
UK Dividend
income
|
143
|
378
|
591
|
Overseas Dividend
income
|
2,518
|
1,672
|
4,213
|
Total investment income
allocated to revenue
|
2,661
|
2,050
|
4,804
|
Other operating
income
|
|
|
|
Bank
interest
|
68
|
50
|
104
|
Total other operating
income
|
68
|
50
|
104
|
There were no
dividends allocated to capital as at 31 March 2024.
3.
EARNINGS per ORDINARY share
|
(Unaudited)
For the
half
year ended
31 March
2024
£'000
|
(Unaudited)
For the
half
year
ended
31
March
2023
£'000
|
(Audited)
For
the
year
ended
30
September
2023
£'000
|
Net profit for the
period:
|
|
|
|
Revenue
|
1,624
|
1,198
|
2,939
|
Capital
|
67,935
|
7,255
|
13,957
|
Total
|
69,559
|
8,453
|
16,896
|
Weighted average number of shares in
issue during the period
|
121,270,000
|
121,270,000
|
121,270,000
|
Revenue
|
1.34p
|
0.99p
|
2.42p
|
Capital
|
56.02p
|
5.98p
|
11.51p
|
Total
|
57.36p
|
6.97p
|
13.93p
|
As at 31 March 2024 there were no
potentially dilutive shares in issue (31 March 2023 and 30
September 2023: nil).
4.
Net asset value per share
|
(Unaudited)
For the half
year
ended
31 March
2024
|
(Unaudited)
For the
half year
ended
31
March
2023
|
(Audited)
For the
year
ended
30
September
2023
|
(i)
Ordinary shares
|
|
|
|
Net assets attributable to Ordinary
shareholders (£'000)
|
487,286
|
411,952
|
419,182
|
Ordinary shares in issue at end of
period
|
121,270,000
|
121,270,000
|
121,270,000
|
Net asset value per Ordinary share
(pence)
|
401.82
|
339.70
|
345.66
|
As at 31 March 2024 there were no
potentially dilutive shares in issue (31 March 2023 and 30
September 2023: nil).
(ii) ZDP shares
|
|
|
|
Calculated entitlement of ZDP
shareholders (£'000)
|
39,262
|
38,118
|
38,687
|
ZDP shares in issue at the
end of the year
|
32,128,437
|
32,128,437
|
32,128,437
|
Net asset value per ZDP share
(pence)
|
122.20
|
118.64
|
120.41
|
5. DIVIDENDS
Dividends for the current financial
year ending 30 September 2024, if declared, will be paid in August
2024 and February 2025.
6.
RELATED PARTY TRANSACTIONS
There have been no related party
transactions that have materially affected the financial position
or the performance of the Group and Company during the six month
period to 31 March
2024.
7.
POST BALANCE SHEET EVENTS
There are no significant events
that have occurred after the end of the reporting period to the
date of this report which require disclosure.
ALTERNATIVE PERFORMANCE MEASURES (APMS)
In assessing the performance of the
Company, the Investment Manager and the Directors use the following
APMs which are not defined in accounting standards or law but are
considered to be known industry metrics:
NAV Total Return (APM)
The NAV total return shows how the
net asset value has performed over a period of time taking into
account both capital returns and dividends paid to shareholders.
NAV total return is calculated as the change in NAV from the start
of the period, assuming that dividends paid to shareholders are
reinvested on the payment date in Ordinary shares at their net
asset value.
|
|
For the half year
ended
31 March
2024
|
Year
ended
30
September 2023
|
Opening NAV per share
|
a
|
345.66p
|
333.83p
|
|
|
|
|
Closing NAV per share
|
b
|
401.82p
|
345.66p
|
Dividend reinvestment
factor
|
c
|
1.002581
|
1.006471
|
Adjusted closing NAV per
share
|
d=b*c
|
402.86p
|
347.90p
|
NAV total return
|
(d/a)-1
|
16.55%
|
4.21%
|
NAV Total Return Since Restructuring (APM)
NAV total return since
restructuring is calculated as the change in NAV from the date of
reconstruction on 20 June 2017, assuming that dividends paid to
shareholders are reinvested on the payment date in Ordinary shares
at their net asset value.
|
|
For the half year
ended
31 March
2024
|
Year
ended
30
September 2023
|
NAV per share at
reconstruction
|
a
|
215.85p
|
215.85p
|
|
|
|
|
Closing NAV per share
|
b
|
401.82p
|
345.66p
|
Dividend reinvestment
factor
|
c
|
1.049114
|
1.046341
|
Adjusted closing NAV per
share
|
d=b*c
|
421.55p
|
361.68p
|
NAV total return since reconstruction
|
(d/a)-1
|
95.30%
|
67.56%
|
(Discount)/Premium (APM)
A description of the difference
between the share price and the net asset value per share usually
expressed as a percentage (%) of the net asset value per share. If
the share price is higher than the NAV per share the result is a
premium. If the share price is lower than the NAV per share, the
shares are trading at a discount.
|
|
31 March
2024
|
30
September 2023
|
Closing share price
|
a
|
375.00p
|
319.00p
|
Closing NAV per share
|
b
|
401.82p
|
345.66p
|
Discount per Ordinary share
|
(a/b)-1
|
(6.67%)
|
(7.71%)
|
Ongoing Charges (APM)
Ongoing charges are calculated in
accordance with AIC guidance by taking the Company's annual ongoing
charges, excluding performance fees and exceptional items, if any,
and expressing them as a percentage of the average daily net asset
value of the Company over the
year.
Ongoing charges include all regular
operating expenses of the Company. Transaction costs, interest
payments, tax and non-recurring expenses are excluded from the
calculation as are the costs incurred in relation to share issues
and share
buybacks.
Where a performance fee is paid or
is payable, a second ongoing charge is provided, calculated on the
same basis as the above but incorporating the amount of performance
fee due or
paid.
The ongoing charges figure as at 31
March 2024 is for the six month period from 30 September 2023 and
is annualised (excluding the performance fee) for comparison with
the full year's calculation as at 30 September 2023.
|
|
For the half year
ended
31 March
2024
|
Year
ended
30
September 2023
|
Investment Management
fee
|
|
£1,660,000
|
£3,248,000
|
Other Administrative
Expenses
|
|
£417,000
|
£725,000
|
|
a
|
£2,077,000
|
£3,973,000
|
|
|
|
|
Average daily net assets
value
|
b
|
£473,699,612
|
£459,212,414
|
|
|
|
|
Ongoing Charges excluding performance fee
|
(a/183*366) /
bx100
|
0.88%
|
0.87%
|
|
|
|
|
Performance fee
|
c
|
£834,000
|
-
|
Ongoing charges including performance fee
|
((a/183*366) +c)/
bx100
|
1.05%
|
0.87%
|
Net Gearing (APM)
Gearing is calculated in line with
AIC guidelines and represents net gearing, i.e. total assets less
cash and cash equivalents divided by net assets. The total assets
are calculated by adding back the structural gearing which is the
ZDP value. Cash and cash equivalents are cash and purchases and
sales for future settlement outstanding at the year
end.
|
|
31 March
2024
|
30
September 2023
|
Net assets
|
a
|
£487,286,000
|
£419,182,000
|
ZDP loan value
|
b
|
£39,262,000
|
£38,687,000
|
Total assets
|
c=(a+b)
|
£526,548,000
|
£457,869,000
|
|
|
|
|
Cash and cash equivalents (including amounts awaiting
settlement)
|
d
|
(£1,754,000)
|
(£586,000)
|
|
|
|
|
Net gearing
|
((c-d)/a)-1
|
8.42%
|
9.37%
|
FORWARD LOOKING STATEMENTS
Certain statements included in this
half-year financial report incorporating the interim management
report contain forward-looking information concerning the Company's
strategy, operations, financial performance or condition, outlook,
growth opportunities or circumstances in the countries, sectors or
markets in which the Company operates. By their nature,
forward-looking statements involve uncertainty because they depend
on future circumstances, and relate to events, not all of which are
within the Company's control or can be predicted by the Company.
Although the Company believes that the expectations reflected in
such forward-looking statements are reasonable, no assurance can be
given that such expectations will prove to have been correct.
Actual results could differ materially from those set out in the
forward-looking statements. For a detailed analysis of the factors
that may affect our business, financial performance or results of
operations, we urge you to look at the principal risks and
uncertainties included in the Strategic Report section on pages 36
to 38 of the Annual Report for the year ended 30 September 2023. No
part of these results constitutes, or shall be taken to constitute,
an invitation or inducement to invest in Polar Capital Global
Healthcare Trust plc or any other entity and must not be relied
upon in any way in connection with any investment decision. The
Company undertakes no obligation to update any forward-looking
statements.
HALF YEAR REPORT
The Company has opted not to post
half year reports to shareholders. Copies of this announcement will
be available from the Company Secretary at the Registered Office,
16 Palace Street, London, SW1E 5JD and from the Company's website
at www.polarcapitalglobalhealthcaretrust.co.uk
Neither the contents of the Company's website nor the contents
of any website accessible from the hyperlinks on the Company's
website (or any other website) is incorporated into or forms part
of this announcement.