BlackRock Throgmorton
Trust plc
(Legal Entity Identifier:
5493003B7ETS1JEDPF59)
Information disclosed in
accordance with Article 5 Transparency Directive and DTR
4.1
Annual Results
Announcement for the year ended 30 November
2024
Performance
record
|
As at
30 November
2024 |
As at
30 November
2023 |
|
|
|
Net assets
(£’000)1 |
595,908 |
575,925 |
Net asset value per
ordinary share
(pence) |
682.82 |
600.72 |
Ordinary share price
(mid-market) (pence) |
593.00 |
579.00 |
Benchmark
Index2 |
16,794.26 |
14,713.60 |
Discount to cum income net
asset
value3 |
(13.2)% |
(3.6)% |
|
========= |
========= |
|
. |
. |
|
For the year
ended
30 November
2024 |
For the year
ended
30 November
2023 |
Performance (with dividends
reinvested) |
|
|
Net asset value per
share3 |
16.3% |
(2.3)% |
Ordinary share
price3 |
5.0% |
(0.8)% |
Benchmark
Index2 |
14.1% |
(6.0)% |
Average discount to cum
income net asset value for the
year3 |
(9.3)% |
(5.2)% |
|
========= |
========= |
|
. |
. |
|
Performance
for the ten years
to 30 November
2024 |
Performance
for the ten years
to 30 November
2023 |
Performance since 1 July 20144 (with dividends
reinvested) |
|
|
Net asset value per
share3 |
150.9% |
113.5% |
Ordinary share
price3 |
163.7% |
136.9% |
Benchmark
Index2 |
62.1% |
41.1% |
|
. |
. |
|
For the year
ended
30 November
2024 |
For the year
ended
30 November
2023 |
Change
% |
Revenue |
|
|
|
Net revenue profit on
ordinary activities after taxation
(£’000) |
17,046 |
16,510 |
+3.3 |
Revenue earnings per
ordinary share
(pence)5 |
18.54 |
16.56 |
+12.0 |
|
--------------- |
--------------- |
--------------- |
Dividends per ordinary share
(pence) |
|
|
|
Interim |
3.75 |
3.30 |
+13.6 |
Final |
14.25 |
11.45 |
+24.5 |
|
--------------- |
--------------- |
--------------- |
Total dividends
payable/paid |
18.00 |
14.75 |
+22.0 |
|
========= |
========= |
========= |
1 The change in net assets
reflects portfolio movements, share buybacks and dividends paid
during the year.
2 The Company’s Benchmark
Index is the Deutsche Numis Smaller Companies plus AIM (excluding
Investment Companies) Index. With effect from 22 March 2018, the Deutsche Numis Smaller
Companies plus AIM (excluding Investment Companies) Index replaced
the Deutsche Numis Smaller Companies excluding AIM (excluding
Investment Companies) Index as the Company’s Benchmark Index. From
1 December 2013 to 21 March 2018, the Company’s Benchmark Index was
the Deutsche Numis Smaller Companies excluding AIM (excluding
Investment Companies) Index. Prior to 1
December 2013, the Company’s Benchmark Index was the
Deutsche Numis Smaller Companies plus AIM (excluding Investment
Companies) Index. The performance of the Benchmark Indices during
these periods has been blended to reflect these
changes.
3 Alternative Performance
Measures, see Glossary contained within the annual report and
accounts.
4 Since 1 July 2014.
5 Further details are given in the Glossary contained within the
annual report and
accounts.
.
.
Strategic
Report
The Directors present the
Strategic Report of the Company for the year ended 30 November
2024.
Chairman’s
Statement
2024 in
brief
-
The year to 30 November 2024 (FY2024) was a very challenging
and unusual year. In
particular:
-
With little demand for UK
equities, UK small/mid-cap valuations started the year
weak
-
Wealth Manager
consolidation and exposure limits led to selling (of both the
Company and likely other UK small/mid cap funds) throughout the
year
-
Capital Gains Tax planning
drove further selling ahead of the tax year end in April 2024 and the UK Budget in October
2024
-
US elections and the UK
budget led some investors, in particular UK wealth managers, to
allocate away from the UK and further reduce their UK small/mid-cap
investments
-
The Company’s portfolio
has therefore been cautiously positioned by your portfolio
manager
-
A positive NAV total
return of +16.3%, an outperformance of 2.2% vs the Benchmark, is
therefore a pleasing result for a cautiously positioned portfolio
in challenging and unusual
year
-
Your portfolio manager,
Dan Whitestone, has outperformed the
benchmark in 9 of the last 10 years. Indeed, since March 2015 when Dan
Whitestone became portfolio manager, he has outperformed the
benchmark by 78.7% (generating a total NAV return up to
30 November 2024 of +130.5% vs a
benchmark return of
+51.8%)*
-
To keep the share price
performance as close as possible to the NAV performance and keep
the discount at a level compatible with the liquidity of the
portfolio, significant buy backs were undertaken during the year
representing 9.4% of our shares in FY2024 (FY2023: 5.3%; since
buybacks started in April 2022:
16.3%). A further 6.6% has been bought back since the year end (up
to the latest available date of 18 February
2025)
-
Despite these extensive
buy backs, the Company delivered a disappointing FY2024 share price
total return of +5.0%, underperforming the Benchmark by 9.1% and
some 11.3% below the NAV performance, as
the:
-
discount widened at year
end to -13.2% (30 November 2023:
-3.6%)
-
average FY2024 discount
was up at -9.3% (FY2023:
-5.25%)
-
Average FY2024 discount of
-9.3% vs a UK Smaller Companies sector average of
-11.1%
-
Longer-term NAV and Share
Price performance however remains
good:
-
Strong over 10 years; our
NAV has outperformed the Benchmark by 88.8% and the share price by
101.6%
-
Although weaker over 3 and
5 years as the impact of the Ukraine invasion on our asset class and our
underperformance versus our benchmark in 2022 works
through
-
Dividends increased by
+22%. Total dividends of 18.00p per share for FY2024 (FY2023:
14.75p)
-
The Board remains
confident in the Manager, the portfolio manager and his investment
philosophy and process, and the rest of the BlackRock Emerging
Companies investment team. The Board therefore believes that when
confidence in the UK returns and demand for UK small/mid-cap funds
and equities improves, BlackRock Throgmorton Trust plc is well
positioned to return to its position as a sector
leader
*(Dan Whitestone was co-manager of the portfolio
until February 2018 after which he
became sole portfolio
manager).
.
.
Overview
The year to November 2024 was a challenging one for UK
markets. The few green shoots of recovery seen in the early part of
the year wilted as what optimism there had been around the economic
plans of the new UK government faded. Growth expectations, consumer
confidence and business confidence have all since taken a nasty
hit. Given the extent to which your Company’s holdings are exposed
to the domestic economy and against this difficult backdrop, I am
pleased to report that the Company’s NAV generated a positive
return of 16.3%, outperforming its benchmark by
+2.2%.
One feature of the period
under review has been continued merger and acquisition (M&A)
activity in the UK. As our portfolio manager, Dan Whitestone, explains in his report which
follows, this can be beneficial if you own the companies that are
bid for and a detractor from relative performance if you don’t. As
it happens, M&A in the UK small and mid-cap space has been a
material headwind to our relative performance this year. He expects
more of this activity to continue in 2025 given the compelling
long-term value on offer in the UK market. This may act as either a
tailwind or headwind depending upon which companies are acquired
and whether or not we hold them in our portfolio. Overall, he
remains optimistic that he can find long-term opportunities across
the market and that he can use your Company’s ability to short
companies to provide some extra returns in the less compelling
areas of the market. In these tricky times we are pleased to have a
manager able to generate alpha from falling valuations as well as
rising ones.
As a Board we remain
confident in both the outlook for our portfolio and the
opportunities currently available in our asset class, and are
resolutely focused on achieving the Company’s objectives of
providing shareholders with long-term capital growth and an
attractive total return through investment in primarily UK smaller
and mid-capitalisation
companies.
Performance
Over the year to
30 November 2024, the Company’s Net
Asset Value (NAV) total return was +16.3% compared to a return of
+14.1% from the Company’s Benchmark Index, an outperformance of
+2.2%. The Company’s share price returned +5.0%, underperforming
the Benchmark Index by +9.1% as our discount widened during the
period. Since the period end and up to the close of business on
18 February 2025, the Company’s NAV
has fallen by 3.2%, and the Benchmark Index has fallen by 0.5% (all
figures with dividends
reinvested).
Over the short and medium
term the Company’s discount to NAV has widened, in large part as
result of the fact that UK equities now have been out of favour for
several years. Over the longer term the performance remains strong.
For the five and ten-year periods to 30
November 2024, the Company’s NAV returned +17.1% and
+150.9%, comparing favourably to the Benchmark Index returns of
+14.5% and +62.1%. The share price has returned double the
benchmark over the ten years to 30 November
2024.
Further information on the
Company’s performance, the factors that contributed to performance
during the period and the outlook for the second half of the
financial year are set out in the Investment Manager’s Report
below.
Performance
fee
The performance fee is
calculated over a two-year rolling period. For the annualised
rolling two-year performance period to 30
November 2024, the Company has outperformed the benchmark by
2.7% as at 30 November 2024 (gross of
fees). A performance fee of £2,982,000 relating to this performance
period has therefore crystallised as at the date of this report (of
which £1,389,000 had been accrued in the prior
year).
For the annualised rolling
two-year performance period to 30 November
2025, the Company has outperformed the benchmark by 0.6% as
at 30 November 2024. A performance
fee of £625,000 relating to this performance period has been
accrued at the date of this report; this does not become payable
until 30 November 2025 and is subject
to the ongoing performance of the
Company.
Further information on
management fees can be found in the annual report and accounts and
in Note 4 to the financial statements
below.
Revenue return and
dividends
The revenue return per
share for the period amounted to 18.54
pence per share, an increase of
12%.
The Directors are pleased
to declare a proposed final dividend of 14.25 pence per share for the year ended
30 November 2024 (2023: 11.45p).
This, together with the interim dividend of 3.75 pence per share paid on 27 August 2024, gives a total dividend for the
year of 18.00 pence per share,
increasing the total dividend distributed to shareholders compared
to the prior financial year by 22.0%. This dividend will be paid on
11 April 2025, subject to shareholder
approval at the forthcoming AGM, to shareholders who are on the
Company’s register on 28 February
2025.
Policy on share price
premium/discount
The Board believes that
the best way of addressing any long term discount to NAV over the
longer term is both to generate good performance and to drive
demand for the Company’s shares by widening the awareness of the
Company’s attractions. However, the Board also has a policy of
buying back shares in the Company when the discount is excessive,
something we consider in relation to market conditions, performance
and the ongoing attractiveness of the investment
proposition.
We were disappointed that
during the twelve months to 30 November
2024 the Company’s share rating ranged between a discount to
NAV of -3.6% and -13.7%, and ended the period at a discount of
-13.2% (30 November 2023: -3.6%).
This compares with the weighted average discount of the UK smaller
companies sector which ended the period at an average discount of
-11.1% and given that the Board aims to minimise share price
volatility and encourage the Company’s share price to trade within
a tight range, we have felt the need to take regular and targeted
action to support the
shares.
It is, of course, not
possible to have full control over the discount during a period in
which there is little demand for both investment trust shares and
smaller company shares in the UK and when the UK government, to
date, has yet to convince the markets that its policies will
generate the growth it seeks. Nonetheless, we remain convinced that
our share buy back activity has been beneficial in reducing the
volatility of our share rating and delivering NAV
accretion.
Your Board will continue
to deploy its powers to support the share price by buying back the
Company’s shares where it believes that it is in shareholders’ best
interests to do so.
Share buy back
activity
During the period under
review, the Company bought back a total of 8,600,297 ordinary
shares for a total consideration of £52,098,000. Since 30 November 2024 and up to the latest practicable
date of 18 February 2025, a further
5,850,000 shares have been bought back for a total consideration of
£34,228,000. As at 18 February 2025,
the Company’s shares were trading at a discount of 10.6% versus an
average discount for the rest of the peer group of 11.9%. All
shares were bought back at a discount to the prevailing NAV and
were therefore accretive to existing
shareholders.
Renewal of buy back
authority
At the Company’s annual
general meeting in March 2024, the
Directors were given authority to make market purchases of up to
14,276,699 Ordinary Shares, representing 14.99 per cent. of the
issued Ordinary Share capital (excluding treasury
shares).
The Board concluded that
this authority could be fully utilised before the Company’s next
annual general meeting and accordingly resolved to convene a
General Meeting of the Company to renew the expiring authority. A
Circular and Notice of Meeting was issued to shareholders on
31 January 2025 and the General
Meeting was held on 17 February at which the resolution to grant a
renewal of existing authority was duly
passed.
As it does each year, the
Board will also be seeking to renew the authority from shareholders
once again at the AGM to issue new shares (or to reissue shares
held in treasury) and to buy back shares. The Board believes this
action is in shareholders’ best interests. Further information can
be found in the Directors’ Report contained within the annual
report and accounts.
Cancellation of the share
premium
The share premium account
is a non-distributable reserve and the Company is therefore unable
to use it, amongst other things, for making distributions to
shareholders or the purchase by the Company and cancellation of its
own shares. As at 30 November 2024,
the Company had distributable reserves of approximately
£336,721,000; the amount standing to the credit of the Company’s
share premium account as of 18 February
2025 is
£242,122,000.
Accordingly, the Company
is seeking shareholder approval at the AGM to cancel the Company’s
share premium account. If approved by shareholders and subsequently
by the Court, this will result in an increase of the Company’s
distributable reserves and so a greater ability to pay dividends
and buy back shares.
Please refer to the
Directors’ Report contained within the annual report and accounts
for further detail.
Investment
Guidelines
Given the Company’s small
and mid-cap investment mandate, the Board has long had in place
internal guidelines preventing investment in FTSE 100 securities
but permitting the manager to continue to hold a portfolio company
that has moved into the FTSE 100, for a period of up to 12 months
after its promotion. Following a review by Winterflood
Securities and consultation with major shareholders, the Board has,
while retaining the restriction on investing in FTSE 100
securities, removed the 12-month divestment requirement for
portfolio companies promoted into the FTSE 100, as long as such
holdings do not exceed 5% of the Company’s gross
assets.
Corporate
governance
After nearly nine years on
the Board and nearly eight as Chairman, I will not be seeking
re-election at the Company’s AGM on 25 March
2025 and so will be stepping down from the Board with effect
from the close of the meeting. It has been a privilege to chair the
Company over nearly eight years and I would like to thank
shareholders, Board colleagues over the years and all at BlackRock
for their help and support during my tenure as
Chairman.
As a result of my
forthcoming retirement, the Board undertook a search process under
the leadership of the Company’s Senior Independent Director,
Louise Nash, to identify a new
Director and my successor. I am therefore delighted to welcome Mr
James Will to the Board with effect
from 1 January 2025; James will be
appointed Chairman following the AGM. He also serves as a member of
the Company’s Audit, Nomination and Management Engagement
Committees. James is an experienced Chair and
non-executive
director as well as a well-regarded former lawyer with an extensive
knowledge of the investment company sector. Further details of
James’s background can be found within the annual report and
accounts.
Mr Glen Suarez retired from the Board on
9 August 2024 after he advised the
Board that, due to the increasing demands of his other business
commitments, he was no longer able to give his role on the Board
the time it merited. I would like to thank Glen for his
contribution to the Board during his tenure. We wish him well for
the future.
The Company is compliant
with the recommendations of the FTSE Women Leaders Review (which
states that boards should be at least 40% female and have at least
one woman in the role of Chair or Senior Independent Director on
the board). However, following Glen’s retirement the Company no
longer meets the ethnic diversity recommendations of the Parker
Review. Since Glen’s departure occurred during the search for my
successor, the Board decided to complete the appointment of my
successor before starting a search for Glen’s replacement so the
new Chairman could run this process. As a result, the process to
ensure the Board meets the recommendations of the Parker Review
will start shortly.
Further information on the
Board’s policy on board diversity, director tenure and succession
planning can be found in the Directors’ Report contained within the
annual report and accounts. We have also disclosed data on the
breakdown of the Board by gender and ethnicity which can be found
within the annual report and accounts. The Board has also reported
to shareholders on our compliance with the UK Code of Corporate
Governance and other matters of good governance contained within
the annual report and
accounts.
As it does each year and
as required by the Corporate Governance Code, the Company, with the
assistance of an independent third-party evaluator, undertook a
comprehensive Board evaluation. The conclusion was positive in
terms of the effectiveness of the Board and the skills, expertise
and commitment of the individual Directors; the Board remains
confident that each Director is discharging their role and that the
Board and its committees are functioning
effectively.
Annual General
Meeting
The Company’s Annual
General Meeting (AGM) will be held in person on 25 March 2025 at 12.00
p.m. at the offices of BlackRock at 12 Throgmorton Avenue,
London, EC2N 2DL. Details of the
business of the meeting are set out in the Notice of Annual General
Meeting contained within the annual report and accounts. Prior to
the formal business of the meeting, our Investment Manager will
make a presentation to shareholders. This will be followed by a
question and answer session and then lunch and the opportunity to
speak with the directors and with our portfolio
manager.
Shareholders who are
unable to attend the meeting in person but who wish to follow the
proceedings, can do so via a live webinar. Details on how to
register will be available shortly on the Company’s website at
www.blackrock.com/uk/thrg or from the Company Secretary at
cosec@blackrock.com. While it is not possible to speak or vote via
this medium, I trust shareholders will once again find this
facility helpful.
All shareholders, in
particular those who are unable to attend, are encouraged to
exercise their right to vote. Details of how to do this are
included within the annual report and
accounts.
Further information on the
business of this year’s AGM can be found in the Notice of the AGM
contained within the annual report and
accounts.
Shareholder
communication
As we do each year, our
Senior Independent Director and I met with several of our largest
shareholders to answer any questions they had and seek feedback. As
a Board, we would also very much like to hear the views of all
shareholders so if you have questions or feedback, please write to
me or my successor, James Will, at
our registered offices (12 Throgmorton Avenue, London EC2N 2DL) or by email at:
cosec@blackrock.com. If you are happy with our activities, we’d
like to know; if you are not, we would also like to
know!
Can I once again encourage
all shareholders to sign up to the BlackRock Trust Matters
newsletter for news, views and insights on your company and the
investment trust market. See the inside cover of the annual report
for details on how to do
this.
Outlook
As you will read in our
portfolio manager’s report below, the economic environment is a
little dispiriting. However, using all the tools at his disposal to
manage the portfolio, he has reduced exposure to those areas of the
domestic market which he believes may suffer most as a result of
the Budget measures and added short positions to those sectors and
holdings which he believes will be disproportionately impacted. The
portfolio manager also notes that there are some reasons to be
positive. It may have its detractors, but the UK offers a huge
universe of high-quality undervalued companies with compelling
growth prospects, all of which he is able to invest in on your
behalf.
The Board remains
confident in the Manager, the portfolio manager and his investment
philosophy and process, and the rest of the BlackRock Emerging
Companies investment team. Moreover the Board believes that when
confidence in the UK returns and demand for UK small/mid-cap funds
and equities improves, BlackRock Throgmorton Trust plc is well
positioned to return to its position as a sector
leader.
The Board looks forward to
the future of the Company with
confidence.
CHRISTOPHER SAMUEL
Chairman
19
February
2025
Investment Manager’s
Report for the 12 months ended 30 November
2024
Market review and
investment performance
The Company delivered a
positive return of 16.3% net of fees over the 2024 financial year,
outperforming the benchmark by +2.2%. Performance in absolute and
relative terms was weighted towards the first half of the year. The
Company delivered a return (net of fees) of +19.2%, outperforming
the Benchmark Index by +2.4% in the first half of the year and in
the second half of the year returned -2.4% versus the Benchmark
return of -2.3%. This reflected the disappointing end to the year
in response to Labour’s drumbeat of negativity in the lead up to
the budget and then of course the budget itself. What a difference
a year can make; after a protracted period of subdued returns from
the UK small & mid cap market which started in 2022, it really
felt like things were turning up during the first half of this
year. We started the second half with real optimism, with low
inflation, strong employment, and economic growth, and improving
business and consumer confidence. What a backdrop for Labour to
build on with their “pro-growth” mandate! Unfortunately, defeat was
soon snatched from the jaws of victory and the year finished on a
very weak
note.
The Company’s
outperformance during the first half of the year can be attributed
to a number of strong stock specifics across a broad range of
companies such as IntegraFin, Gamma Communications and Morgan Sindall (see table below for the top 10
contributors and detractors to performance during the year). 2024
has been one of the most difficult years to navigate in the 10
years I have managed the Company’s portfolio. Outflows in the asset
class have continued, pressuring share prices and valuations of
thinly traded shares, where valuation alone was an insufficient
catalyst for a reversal of performance, despite in many cases far
more robust trading than their valuations would suggest. Meanwhile,
mergers and acquisitions (“M&A”) in UK small and medium sized
companies continues at pace as private equity and international
companies take advantage of weaker GBP and depressed valuations.
This is only good news if you own the shares (though then there is
a debate about whether one is selling out on the cheap and forgoing
future capital growth for a cash bid today), but for Throgmorton in
2024 the M&A activity cost around 300 basis points (“bps”) of
relative performance in the year (i.e. companies being acquired in
the benchmark that Throgmorton didn’t own), a material headwind to
relative performance. I expect 2025 to be another year of elevated
M&A activity, so only time will tell if that is a tailwind or
headwind to relative and absolute performance this
year.
Positive contributors to
performance in the second half of the year were well spread across
sectors. Our largest position, aggregates business
Breedon, delivered resilient results despite
adverse weather and subdued market conditions. Breedon continues to
be impacted by negative volumes but has continued to make headway
with pricing increases and cost efficiencies to grow profitability
while it waits for a volume recovery in the market. Morgan
Sindall’s “fit out” division, another large holding within
the portfolio, won several large contracts during the year,
resulting in upgrades. Morgan
Sindall is the number one player in the market and post the
recent demise (bankruptcy) of the number 2 player, this favourable
evolution of market structure should lead to improved returns and
further market share gains from here. Shares in tour operator
Jet2 rose after the company upgraded guidance
having seen record passengers during the first half of its
financial year. Demand increased for both package holidays and
flight only options as consumers prioritised overseas vacations
despite a more challenging economic backdrop. Industry capacity
remains constrained, whilst Jet2’s stronger balance sheet and fleet
additions leave them well placed to grow market share and support
pricing/mix in margin accretive holiday packages. In the technology
sector a notable contributor during the period included
Baltic Classifieds which experienced strong growth
in its market leading Real Estate, Autos and Jobs & Services
divisions. Within the financial sector Tatton Asset
Management and IntegraFin both saw
positive inflows and benefitted from overall strength in financial
markets.
Detractors during the
period were a combination of negative stock specifics (i.e. shares
falling in response to negative trading developments), shares that
fell despite a lack of negative news, and also shares we did not
own in the benchmark that performed well, either through trading or
by being acquired. As mentioned at the start, we estimate M&A
has cost the Company in terms of relative performance in 2024. The
largest detractor was Next 15, a media company,
which delivered a material profit warning in the period as a 5-year
contract with a Middle Eastern client was cancelled after only 3
years, resulting in a significant hit to profits for the full year.
We had already been reducing the position and subsequently fully
exited by the end of the year given the large contribution of this
one client and the broader slowdown in spending that Next 15 is
experiencing from some of its technology clients. Shares in
Zotefoams drifted lower during the period despite
resilient trading. We ascribe the weakness to broader concerns
around European industrials (especially those with Chinese
exposure), in addition to weakness at its key customer, Nike, which
accounts for around a quarter of group revenues. Other notable
detractors included shares we didn’t own that performed well in the
period, such as gaming software provider Playtech
and media business Ascential (acquired by its peer
Informer for a +50%
premium).
Largest
contributors
Stock |
Fund
Weighting |
Benchmark
Weighting |
Effect on
Fund return |
|
|
|
|
INTEGRAFIN HOLDINGS
PLC |
2.29% |
0.52% |
0.71% |
GAMMA COMMUNICATIONS
PLC |
2.63% |
0.65% |
0.71% |
MORGAN SINDALL GROUP
PLC |
1.55% |
0.60% |
0.65% |
BALTIC CLASSIFIEDS GROUP
PLC |
1.76% |
0.61% |
0.56% |
SIGMAROC
PLC |
1.18% |
0.22% |
0.53% |
CLOSE BROTHERS GROUP
PLC |
0.00% |
0.34% |
0.52% |
BREEDON GROUP
PLC |
2.87% |
0.63% |
0.52% |
Short
Position |
-0.23% |
0.67% |
0.44% |
4IMPRINT GROUP
PLC |
2.07% |
0.75% |
0.43% |
TATTON ASSET MANAGEMENT
PLC |
2.22% |
0.18% |
0.42% |
Largest
detractors
Stock |
Fund
Weighting |
Benchmark
Weighting |
Effect on
Fund return |
|
|
|
|
YOUGOV
PLC |
1.10% |
0.43% |
-0.53% |
SIG
PLC |
1.14% |
0.15% |
-0.52% |
WATCHES OF SWITZERLAND
GROUP PLC |
0.57% |
0.41% |
-0.51% |
TT ELECTRONICS
PLC |
1.24% |
0.12% |
-0.49% |
CVS GROUP
PLC |
1.02% |
0.41% |
-0.46% |
INDIVIOR
PLC |
0.88% |
0.69% |
-0.46% |
NEXT 15 GROUP
PLC |
0.97% |
0.36% |
-0.44% |
PLAYTECH
PLC |
0.00% |
0.79% |
-0.44% |
AJ BELL
PLC |
0.21% |
0.74% |
-0.42% |
WH SMITH
PLC |
2.34% |
0.00% |
-0.39% |
Portfolio positioning and
outlook
It’s frustrating that only
a few months ago I was writing about “robust” UK macro data,
falling mortgage rates and a positive outlook for 2025. For as
Keynes said “when the facts change, I change my mind”.
Unfortunately, the UK Budget has had a chilling effect on UK
economic momentum; the CITI Economic surprise index, which peaked
at over +50 in the summer has fallen to -34, close to trough
levels, UK GDP data has been revised down to close to 0 in quarter
3 with little growth expected in quarter 4, retail sales slowed to
0.4% growth in quarter 4, and business confidence has fallen
sharply.
Though the absolute amount
of spending in the budget was not wildly different from our
expectations, the mix of policies is definitely worse. The changes
to National Insurance are a case in point, most expected the 1.2%
higher rate for employer contributions which had been well trailed.
The change to lower the threshold at which NI is paid was, however,
unexpected and will disproportionately affect those in part time
work and impose large costs on the businesses that employ them.
Companies are telling us that they will respond to these
inflationary impulses by reducing staff and seeking efficiency
savings, which suggests the outlook for UK employment is weaker.
For Industrials, to remain competitive, they will have to either
absorb or mitigate mechanical NI costs should they wish to remain
price competitive against global rivals, however, they should get a
significant boost from weaker sterling which continues to
depreciate against both the US Dollar and major European currencies
too.
Despite Bank of
England (“BoE”) cuts through
quarter 4, bond yields are higher, with the 30-year bond at its
highest level since 1998, and swap spreads, crucial for mortgage
pricing, following suit. The outlook for the housebuilding sector
and supply chain has darkened as funding rates appreciate. Labour
will need to move at an even faster rate with supply side reforms
if they want to stimulate a housing recovery. In recent days bond
yields have pushed even higher, eroding the Chancellor’s fiscal
headroom and raising speculation of another adjustment at the March
Budget and spending review. Just like when banks state that their
capital position is “very strong”, the sight of the Chancellor
telling journalists her fiscal rules are “non-negotiable” does
little to inspire confidence. The U.K.’s twin deficit combined with
a weakening growth outlook doesn’t inspire external investment,
which this country badly
needs.
We have tried to reflect
this evolving situation in the Company’s positioning, liquidity
permitting. We have reduced long exposure in UK domestics with rate
sensitivity where valuations don’t reflect this new reality. We
have also introduced and/or added to shorts in several areas,
particularly those companies with incremental cost pressure, or
where there was already evidence of their business model creaking
in 2024. We increased shorts in retailers who are heavily exposed
to sourcing in Dollars as well as in the technology sector where we
see budgetary pressures amongst small and medium enterprises who
will be disproportionately hit by this budget, as well as those
where the Government is a large customer. We are nervous about
adding too much in the short book as 1) share prices are down
significantly since the Budget and in many cases are on cross-cycle
trough valuation metrics, 2) 2024 witnessed significant M&A
activity and we think 2025 will be no different, and 3) not that we
are betting the house on the BoE but the weaker growth might
accelerate rate cuts despite the near term concerns of stickier
inflation.
We have not made
significant changes to our positioning in UK international earning
companies set to benefit from weaker sterling and limited UK
domestic cyclicality. We still favour domestic US exposure where we
see long term roadmaps for growth in infrastructure and data centre
capex, which should benefit holdings such as Hill &
Smith and Rotork to name but two. As for
general industrial, 2024 saw further moderation in activity levels
as destocking continued longer than many hoped. The stop-start
nature of these supply chain issues throughout the year has
impacted a range of geographies and sub-sectors differently, as
they are all at different points in the cycle. We got some of these
dynamics right and some wrong in 2024, but overall, within General
Industrials we have noticed an improvement in the book-to-bill
ratios, accelerating through the second half of 2024 and into the
financial year 2025. For many companies trading on depressed
cross-cycle multiples this is particularly encouraging, and as
discussed earlier, weak Sterling will help both their competitive
position as well as from a translational earnings
perspective.
A core holding like
Breedon offers exposure to both UK and US
infrastructure, where we have witnessed the permanent withdrawal of
capacity which has been reflected in strong pricing to offset
volume reductions. Consequently, profits have still demonstrated
impressive year on year growth despite the reduction in volumes,
and with a reengineered cost base, profits in the next cycle could
reach new highs as volumes recover. Indeed, we expect 2024 to mark
the trough for volumes, not just for Breedon but for many other
“growth cyclicals” despite the absence of an overall “V” shaped
recovery in 2025. In many cases we find these investments trading
on close to trough multiples on trough earnings and we have
continued to add to our exposure here believing the risk/reward to
be particularly compelling. We added to some select real estate
companies, which may sound counterintuitive in the face of
weakening macro and rising bond yields, but yet again we think
valuations are compelling. Great
Portland, for example, is now at an almost 50%
discount to Net Asset Value. We’ve also averaged down in U.K
housebuilder Bellway, now at circa 0.7x its
tangible book value, and still believe that 2024 will mark the
trough for housing volumes.
It’s frustrating but it’s
hard to get too constructive on the UK small and midcap universe
right now, given the domestic fiscal environment I have depicted.
But before we get too despondent and talk ourselves into a bearish
frenzy, it is important to put some of the UK macro data into
context: UK construction PMIs have come off the peak, but are still
the strongest in Europe; Mortgage
volumes fell 3.5% month on month in November but ended the year
+40% on 2023 (and the -3.5% compares with three consecutive months
of -10% following the Truss debacle); aggregate employment is still
strong; Asda’s disposable income tracker is still growing roughly
10% on an annualised basis in November; the savings rate is 10%,
significantly higher than the pre covid 20 year average of 7%;
Service sector PMIs remain hovering above 50, even as business
confidence has fallen. Lastly, and perhaps key, is that the BoE’s
own view on inflation is much more sanguine than financial markets,
leaving more scope to cut faster than currently
expected.
We think a deep recession
is unlikely, but our hopes for a V shaped recovery in 2025 have
been squashed. Our base case now is a return to the environment of
2023, subdued demand and anaemic growth. Downside risks from a
further fiscal mis-step or further punishment by the bond market
are clear. Normally by the time the bond market moves make the
mainstream press and the commentariat starts decrying the state of
the pound, its closer to the end than the start. Remember all the
calls for the £ to be at parity with the Dollar in 2022?
Ultimately, we have moved from a situation of economic strength and
financial markets looking supportive to one where economic data has
weakened and UK fiscal policy looks increasingly at the whim of
financial markets.
We will continue to invest
in companies with strong balance sheets, and growing cash flows and
seek idiosyncratic investment opportunities where we see a
compelling runway for growth and an asymmetric risk/reward
opportunity. Even though there may be more clouds on a short-term
horizon the valuations of what we consider to be the highest
quality UK domestic assets are back at trough levels and very
attractive on a medium-term view, and trading remains solid despite
the backdrop. We remain alive to the data and more importantly what
companies are telling us and will adjust our positioning
accordingly. In conclusion, we enter 2025 somewhat apprehensively
and that is reflected in a gross exposure that is now down to
around 110%, and a net exposure that is around
105%.
DAN WHITESTONE
BLACKROCK INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT (UK)
LIMITED
19
February
2025
Portfolio of
investments
1
Breedon (2023: 1st)
Construction & Materials
Market value: £19,820,000
Share of net assets: 3.3% (2023: 3.3%)
Supplier of construction
materials
2
IntegraFin (2023: 15th)
Financial Services
Market value: £18,223,000¹
Share of net assets: 3.1% (2023: 1.8%)
UK savings platform for financial
advisors
3 Tatton Asset
Management* (2023: 11th)
Financial Services
Market value: £16,616,000
Share of net assets: 2.8% (2023: 2.2%)
Provision of discretionary fund management services to the IFA
market
4
Rotork (2023: 7th)
Electronic & Electrical Equipment
Market value: £16,449,000
Share of net assets: 2.8% (2023: 2.5%)
Manufacturer of industrial flow
equipment
5 Grafton
Group (2023: 4th)
Support Services
Market value: £16,358,000
Share of net assets: 2.7% (2023: 2.8%)
Builders merchants in the UK, Ireland and Netherlands
6 Hill & Smith
Holdings (2023: 12th)
Industrial Metals & Mining
Market value: £16,279,000
Share of net assets: 2.7% (2023: 2.2%)
Supplier of infrastructure products and galvanizing
services
7 Gamma
Communications* (2023: 2nd)
Mobile Telecommunications
Market value: £15,630,000
Share of net assets: 2.6% (2023: 3.0%)
Provider of communication services to UK
businesses
8
GPE (2023: 77th)
Real Estate Investment Trusts
Market value: £15,256,000¹
Share of net assets: 2.6% (2023: 0.5%)
Owner of commercial real estate in central London
9 Workspace
Group (2023: 16th)
Real Estate Investment Trusts
Market value: £14,854,000
Share of net assets: 2.5% (2023: 1.8%)
Supply of flexible workspace to businesses in London
10 Oxford
Instruments (2023: 3rd)
Electronic & Electrical Equipment
Market value: £14,422,000
Share of net assets: 2.4% (2023: 2.8%)
Designer and manufacturer
of tools and systems for industry and
research
*
Traded on the Alternative Investment Market (AIM) of the London
Stock Exchange.
1
Includes long derivative
positions.
Percentages shown are the
share of net assets.
The market value shown is
the gross exposure to the shares through equity investments and
long derivative positions. For equity investments, the market value
is the fair value of the shares. For long derivative positions, it
is the market value of the underlying shares to which the portfolio
is exposed via the contract.
Percentages in brackets
represent the portfolio holding as at 30
November 2023. Arrows indicate the change in relative
ranking of the position in the portfolio compared to its ranking as
at 30 November
2023.
# |
Company |
£’000^ |
% |
Description |
11 |
Ibstock
Construction &
Materials |
14,409 |
2.4 |
Manufacturer of clay
bricks and concrete
products |
12 |
FTSE 250 Index Future
Financial
Services |
14,2821 |
2.4 |
Index
future |
13 |
WH Smith
General
Retailers |
14,055 |
2.4 |
Retailer of books,
stationery, magazines, newspapers and
confectionery |
14 |
Jet2*
Travel &
Leisure |
13,763 |
2.3 |
Low cost tour operator and
airline |
15 |
Morgan Sindall
Construction &
Materials |
12,765 |
2.1 |
Supplier of office fit
out, construction and urban regeneration
services |
16 |
Boku*
Support
Services |
12,153 |
2.0 |
Digital payments
platform |
17 |
Baltic Classifieds Group
Software & Computer
Services |
10,995 |
1.8 |
Operator of online
classified businesses in the
Baltics |
18 |
GlobalData*
Industrial Support
Services |
10,802¹ |
1.8 |
Data analytics and
consulting |
19 |
Bellway
Household Goods and Home
Construction |
10,685 |
1.8 |
UK
housebuilder |
20 |
Dunelm Group
General
Retailers |
10,645 |
1.8 |
Retailer of homeware
products |
21 |
Chemring Group
Aerospace &
Defence |
9,569 |
1.6 |
Provider of technology
products and services to aerospace, defence and security
markets |
22 |
Victorian Plumbing*
Home Improvement
Retailers |
9,293¹ |
1.6 |
Online retailer of
bathroom products |
23 |
Alfa Financial Software
Software & Computer
Services |
8,996 |
1.5 |
Provider of software to
the finance industry |
24 |
FRP Advisory Group PLC*
Support
Services |
8,933 |
1.5 |
Provider of forensics,
corporate finance, debt and financial advisory
services |
25 |
Cairn Homes&
Household Goods and Home
Construction |
8,654¹ |
1.4 |
Builder of community
apartments and homes |
26 |
Trainline
Travel &
Leisure |
8,441¹ |
1.4 |
Provider of online rail
and train ticketing
services |
27 |
4imprint Group
Media |
8,425 |
1.4 |
Supplier of promotional
merchandise in the
US |
28 |
Xero&
Software & Computer
Services |
7,741¹ |
1.3 |
Software company
specialising in accounting for small
businesses |
29 |
IG Group Holdings
Financial
Services |
7,629 |
1.3 |
Online provider of spread
betting and CFD trading
services |
30 |
TP ICAP
Financial
Services |
7,385 |
1.2 |
Inter-dealer
broker |
31 |
Cranswick
Food
Producers |
6,964 |
1.2 |
Producer of premium, fresh
and added-value food
products |
32 |
Luceco
Electronic &
Electrical
Equipment |
6,685 |
1.1 |
Supplier &
manufacturer of high quality LED lighting
products |
33 |
Vesuvius
Industrial
Engineering |
6,565 |
1.1 |
British engineered
ceramics company |
34 |
Porvair
Electronic &
Electrical
Equipment |
6,522¹ |
1.1 |
Specialist filtration and
environmental
technology |
35 |
Balfour Beatty
Construction &
Materials |
6,417 |
1.1 |
Multinational
infrastructure group |
36 |
MJ Gleeson
Household Goods and Home
Construction |
6,392 |
1.1 |
UK
housebuilder |
37 |
Hunting
Oil Equipment and
Services |
6,234¹ |
1.0 |
Oil services
business |
38 |
Elementis
Chemicals |
6,233¹ |
1.0 |
Speciality chemicals
company |
39 |
Deliveroo
Software & Computer
Services |
6,163 |
1.0 |
Online food delivery
business |
40 |
Clarkson
Industrial
Transportation |
5,962 |
1.0 |
Provider of shipping
services |
41 |
Zegona Communications
Telecommunication
Services |
5,920 |
1.0 |
Provider of
telecommunications
services |
42 |
Derwent London
Real Estate Investment
Trusts |
5,855 |
1.0 |
British property
investment company |
43 |
Oxford Biomedica
Pharmaceuticals &
Biotechnology |
5,785¹ |
1.0 |
Gene cell
therapy |
44 |
Hammerson
Real Estate Investment
Trusts |
5,755 |
1.0 |
Property investment
company |
45 |
GB Group*
Software & Computer
Services |
5,628 |
0.9 |
Developer and supplier of
identity verification
solutions |
46 |
Morgan Advanced Materials
Electronic &
Electrical
Equipment |
5,491 |
0.9 |
Advanced materials
manufacturer |
47 |
Genuit
Construction &
Materials |
5,457 |
0.9 |
Manufacturer of plastic
piping systems |
48 |
AJ Bell
Financial
Services |
5,364 |
0.9 |
UK savings platform for
financial advisors & individual
investors |
49 |
Kier Group
Construction &
Materials |
5,339 |
0.9 |
UK construction, services
and property group |
50 |
Robert Walters
Support
Services |
5,199 |
0.9 |
Provider of specialist
recruitment services |
51 |
AB Dynamics*
Industrial
Engineering |
5,149 |
0.9 |
Developer and supplier of
specialist automotive testing
systems |
52 |
Glenveagh
Properties&
Household Goods and Home
Construction |
5,018¹ |
0.8 |
Builder of community
apartments and homes |
53 |
Sirius Real Estate
Real Estate Investment
&
Services |
4,924 |
0.8 |
Owner and operator of
business parks, offices and industrial complexes in
Germany |
54 |
Craneware*
Healthcare Equipment &
Services |
4,907 |
0.8 |
Provider of financial
business software for US
hospitals |
55 |
Zotefoams
Chemicals |
4,869¹ |
0.8 |
Manufacturer of polyolefin
foams used in sport, construction, marine, automation, medical
equipment and
aerospace |
56 |
Polar Capital Holdings*
Financial
Services |
4,831 |
0.8 |
Provider of investment
management services |
57 |
DiscoverIE
Electronic &
Electrical
Equipment |
4,710 |
0.8 |
International designer,
manufacturer and supplier of customised
electronics |
58 |
Ashmore Group
Financial
Services |
4,670¹ |
0.8 |
Emerging market focused
investment manager |
59 |
PayPoint
Industrial Support
Services |
4,565¹ |
0.8 |
Digital payments
business |
60 |
Young & Co’s Brewery*
Travel &
Leisure |
4,502 |
0.8 |
Owner and operator of pubs
mainly in the London
area |
61 |
Londonmetric Property#
Real Estate Investment
Trusts |
4,364¹ |
0.7 |
Investor in, and developer
of property |
62 |
Future
Media |
4,330 |
0.7 |
Multi-platform media
business covering technology, entertainment, creative arts, home
interest and
education |
63 |
SThree
Support
Services |
4,245 |
0.7 |
Provider of specialist
professional recruitment
services |
64 |
SIG
Industrial Support
Services |
4,214 |
0.7 |
Supplier of building,
roofing and insulation
products |
65 |
SigmaRoc*
Construction &
Materials |
4,208 |
0.7 |
Buy-and-build group
targeting construction materials assets in the UK and Northern
Europe |
66 |
TT Electronics
Electronic &
Electrical
Equipment |
3,916 |
0.7 |
Global manufacturer of
electronic
components |
67 |
Plus500 Ltd
Financial
Services |
3,883 |
0.6 |
Online trading platform
provider |
68 |
Restore*
Support
Services |
3,696 |
0.6 |
Records management
business |
69 |
SPS Commerce&
Software & Computer
Services |
3,661¹ |
0.6 |
Cloud-based supply chain
management software
provider |
70 |
Cerillion*
Software & Computer
Services |
3,505 |
0.6 |
Provider of billing,
charging and customer management
systems |
71 |
Lundin Mining&
Industrial Metals &
Mining |
3,303¹ |
0.6 |
Diversified base metals
miner |
72 |
Euronext&
Financial
Services |
3,225¹ |
0.5 |
European stock
exchange |
73 |
Medpace Holdings&
Pharmaceuticals &
Biotechnology |
3,131¹ |
0.5 |
Clinical research
organization (CRO) conducting global clinical research for the
development of drugs and medical
devices |
74 |
Alpha Group International
Financial
Services |
3,089 |
0.5 |
Foreign exchange risk
management and banking solutions
provider |
75 |
Senior PLC
Aerospace &
Defence |
3,008 |
0.5 |
Specialist engineering
business |
76 |
Bloomsbury Publishing
Media |
2,941 |
0.5 |
Independent publishing
house |
77 |
Marshalls
Construction &
Materials |
2,939¹ |
0.5 |
British construction
materials group |
78 |
Costain Group
Industrial Support
Services |
2,930 |
0.5 |
Construction and
engineering company |
79 |
Safestore
Real Estate Investment
Trusts |
2,876 |
0.5 |
Provider of self-storage
units |
80 |
Savills
Real Estate Investment
&
Services |
2,870 |
0.5 |
Provision of specialist
real estate services |
81 |
TI Fluid Systems
Automobiles &
Parts |
2,839 |
0.5 |
Manufacturer of thermal
management and fluid handling
systems |
82 |
Yellow Cake PLC*
Industrial Metals &
Mining |
2,808¹ |
0.5 |
Uranium investment
company |
83 |
Permanent TSB&
Banks |
2,788 |
0.5 |
Irish
bank |
84 |
Central Asia Metals*
Industrial Metals &
Mining |
2,772¹ |
0.5 |
Production of base metals
with operations in Kazakhstan and North
Macedonia |
85 |
Watches of Switzerland
Personal
Goods |
2,685 |
0.5 |
Retailer of luxury
watches |
86 |
Forterra
Construction &
Materials |
2,684 |
0.5 |
Manufacturer of building
products |
87 |
Moneysupermarket.com
Software & Computer
Services |
2,622 |
0.4 |
Provider of price
comparison website specialising in financial
services |
88 |
Judges Scientific*
Electronic &
Electrical
Equipment |
2,607 |
0.4 |
Designer and producer of
scientific
instruments |
89 |
Animalcare Group*
Pharmaceuticals &
Biotechnology |
2,555 |
0.4 |
Veterinary pharmaceuticals
business |
90 |
Accesso Technology*
Software & Computer
Services |
2,336¹ |
0.4 |
Provider of ticketing and
virtual queuing
solutions |
91 |
Videndum
Industrial
Engineering |
2,292¹ |
0.4 |
Provider of media hardware
products and software
solutions |
92 |
CVS Group*
General
Retailers |
2,275 |
0.4 |
Operator of veterinary
surgeries |
93 |
Inficon&
Electronic &
Electrical
Equipment |
2,266¹ |
0.4 |
Provider of innovative
instrumentation and critical sensor
technologies |
94 |
Indivior PLC
Pharmaceuticals &
Biotechnology |
2,214¹ |
0.4 |
Pharmaceuticals business
specialising in addiction and mental health
treatments |
95 |
Raspberry Pi Holdings PLC
Technology Hardware &
Equipment |
2,114 |
0.4 |
Single-board computer
manufacturer |
96 |
Rosebank*
Financial
Services |
2,100 |
0.4 |
Industrial company with a
“Buy, improve, sell”
strategy |
97 |
OSB Group
Financial
Services |
2,024 |
0.3 |
Specialist lending
business |
98 |
Creo Medical Group PLC*
Medical Equipment and
Services |
1,977¹ |
0.3 |
Manufacturer of medical
devices |
99 |
Eckoh*
Software & Computer
Services |
1,836 |
0.3 |
Global provider of secure
payments products |
100 |
Gooch & Housego*
Electronic &
Electrical
Equipment |
1,768 |
0.3 |
Designer and manufacturer
of advanced photonic
systems |
101 |
Team17*
Leisure
Goods |
1,656 |
0.3 |
Video game developer and
publisher |
102 |
The Pebble Group*
Media |
1,597 |
0.3 |
Designer and manufacturer
of promotional goods |
103 |
Computacenter
Software & Computer
Services |
1,498 |
0.3 |
Computer
services |
104 |
Advanced Medical Solutions
Healthcare Equipment &
Services |
1,272¹ |
0.2 |
Developer and manufacturer
of advanced wound care
solutions |
105 |
XP Power
Electronic &
Electrical
Equipment |
1,167 |
0.2 |
Leading provider of power
solutions |
106 |
Maxcyte*
Pharmaceuticals &
Biotechnology |
337 |
0.1 |
Clinical-stage global
cell-based therapies and life sciences
company |
107 |
Cohort PLC*
Aerospace &
Defence |
129 |
– |
Defence and security
technology company |
|
|
--------------- |
----------- |
|
|
Long investment positions (excluding BlackRock’s Institutional Cash
Series plc – Sterling Liquid Environmentally Aware
Fund) |
667,154 |
112.0 |
|
|
|
========= |
======= |
|
|
Short investment
positions |
(20,120) |
(3.4) |
|
|
|
========= |
======= |
|
1
Includes long derivative
positions.
*
Traded on the Alternative Investment Market (AIM) of the London
Stock Exchange.
# Traded
on the FTSE 100 Index of the London Stock
Exchange.
&
Holdings listed on exchanges outside of the
UK.
^
The market value shown is the gross exposure to the shares through
equity investments and long derivative positions. For equity
investments, the market value is the fair value of the shares. For
long derivative positions, it is the market value of the underlying
shares to which the portfolio is exposed via the
contract.
Percentages shown are the
share of net assets.
At 30 November 2024, the Company held equity
interests in two companies comprising more than 3% of a company’s
share capital as follows: Tatton Asset Management and
Luceco.
Fair value and gross
market exposure of investments as at 30
November 2024
|
Fair
value1
£’000 |
Gross market
exposure2,3
£’000 |
Gross market exposure as a
%
of net
assets2 |
2024 |
2023 |
|
|
|
|
|
Long equity investment
positions (excluding BlackRock’s Institutional Cash Series plc –
Sterling Liquid Environmentally Aware
Fund) |
557,602 |
557,602 |
93.6 |
96.8 |
Long derivative
positions |
1,281 |
109,552 |
18.4 |
14.6 |
|
--------------- |
--------------- |
--------------- |
--------------- |
Subtotal of long investment
positions |
558,883 |
667,154 |
112.0 |
111.4 |
Short investment
positions |
532 |
(20,120) |
(3.4) |
(3.8) |
|
--------------- |
--------------- |
--------------- |
--------------- |
Subtotal of long and short investment
positions |
559,415 |
647,034 |
108.6 |
107.6 |
Cash and cash
equivalents |
43,889 |
(43,730) |
(7.3) |
(6.7) |
Other net current
liabilities |
(7,396) |
(7,396) |
(1.3) |
(0.9) |
|
--------------- |
--------------- |
--------------- |
--------------- |
Net
assets |
595,908 |
595,908 |
100.0 |
100.0 |
|
========= |
========= |
========= |
========= |
The Company was geared
through the use of long and short derivative positions. Gross and
net gearing as at 30 November 2024
were 115.4% and 108.6% respectively (2023: 115.2% and 107.6%
respectively). Gross and net gearing are Alternative Performance
Measures, see Glossary contained within the annual report and
accounts.
1 Fair
value is determined as
follows:
– Long
equity investment positions are valued at bid prices where
available, otherwise at latest market traded quoted
prices.
– The
exposure to securities held through long derivative positions
directly in the market would have amounted to £108,271,000 at the
time of purchase, and subsequent movement in market prices have
resulted in unrealised gains on the long derivative positions of
£1,281,000 resulting in the value of the total long derivative
market exposure to the underlying securities increasing to
£109,552,000 as at 30 November 2024.
If the long positions had been closed on 30
November 2024, this would have resulted in a gain of
£1,281,000 for the Company.
– The
notional exposure of selling the securities gained via the short
derivative positions would have been £(20,652,000) at the time of
entering into the contract, and subsequent movement in market
prices have resulted in unrealised gains on the short derivative
positions of £532,000 resulting in the value of the total short
derivative market exposure of these investments increasing to
£(20,120,000) at 30 November 2024. If
the short positions had been closed on 30
November 2024, this would have resulted in a gain of
£532,000 for the Company.
2 Gross
market exposure for equity investments is the same as fair value;
bid prices are used where available and, if unavailable, latest
market traded quoted prices are used. For both long and short
derivative positions, the gross market exposure is the market value
of the underlying shares to which the portfolio is exposed via the
contract.
3 The
gross market exposure column for cash and cash equivalents has been
adjusted to assume the Company traded direct holdings, rather than
exposure being gained through long and short derivative
positions.
Distribution of
investments as at 30 November
2024
Sector |
% of
long portfolio |
% of
short
portfolio |
% of
net portfolio |
|
|
|
|
Oil Equipment and
Services |
1.0 |
0.0 |
1.0 |
|
--------------- |
--------------- |
--------------- |
Oil &
Gas |
1.0 |
0.0 |
1.0 |
|
========= |
========= |
========= |
Chemicals |
1.7 |
0.0 |
1.7 |
Industrial Metals &
Mining |
3.9 |
0.0 |
3.9 |
|
--------------- |
--------------- |
--------------- |
Basic
Materials |
5.6 |
0.0 |
5.6 |
|
========= |
========= |
========= |
Aerospace &
Defence |
2.0 |
0.0 |
2.0 |
Construction &
Materials |
11.4 |
(0.3) |
11.1 |
Electronic &
Electrical Equipment |
10.2 |
(0.3) |
9.9 |
Industrial
Engineering |
2.2 |
0.0 |
2.2 |
Industrial Support
Services |
3.5 |
(0.2) |
3.3 |
Industrial
Transportation |
0.9 |
0.0 |
0.9 |
Support
Services |
7.8 |
0.0 |
7.8 |
|
--------------- |
--------------- |
--------------- |
Industrials |
38.0 |
(0.8) |
37.2 |
|
========= |
========= |
========= |
Food
Producers |
1.1 |
(0.2) |
0.9 |
Personal
Goods |
0.4 |
0.0 |
0.4 |
|
--------------- |
--------------- |
--------------- |
Consumer
Staples |
1.5 |
(0.2) |
1.3 |
|
========= |
========= |
========= |
Medical Equipment and
Services |
0.3 |
0.0 |
0.3 |
Healthcare Equipment &
Services |
1.0 |
0.0 |
1.0 |
Pharmaceuticals &
Biotechnology |
2.2 |
(0.3) |
1.9 |
|
--------------- |
--------------- |
--------------- |
Health
Care |
3.5 |
(0.3) |
3.2 |
|
========= |
========= |
========= |
Automobiles &
Parts |
0.4 |
0.0 |
0.4 |
General
Retailers |
4.2 |
(0.3) |
3.9 |
Home Improvement
Retailers |
1.4 |
0.0 |
1.4 |
Household Goods and Home
Construction |
4.8 |
0.0 |
4.8 |
Leisure
Goods |
0.3 |
0.0 |
0.3 |
Media |
2.7 |
(0.3) |
2.4 |
Travel &
Leisure |
4.1 |
0.0 |
4.1 |
|
--------------- |
--------------- |
--------------- |
Consumer
Discretionary |
17.9 |
(0.6) |
17.3 |
|
========= |
========= |
========= |
Banks |
0.4 |
0.0 |
0.4 |
Financial
Services |
14.4 |
0.0 |
14.4 |
|
--------------- |
--------------- |
--------------- |
Financials |
14.8 |
0.0 |
14.8 |
|
========= |
========= |
========= |
Real Estate Investment
& Services |
1.2 |
0.0 |
1.2 |
Real Estate Investment
Trusts |
7.6 |
(0.2) |
7.4 |
|
--------------- |
--------------- |
--------------- |
Real
Estate |
8.8 |
(0.2) |
8.6 |
|
========= |
========= |
========= |
Software & Computer
Services |
8.5 |
(0.7) |
7.8 |
Technology Hardware &
Equipment |
0.3 |
(0.4) |
(0.1) |
|
--------------- |
--------------- |
--------------- |
Technology |
8.8 |
(1.1) |
7.7 |
|
========= |
========= |
========= |
Mobile
Telecommunications |
2.4 |
0.0 |
2.4 |
Telecommunications
Services |
0.9 |
0.0 |
0.9 |
|
--------------- |
--------------- |
--------------- |
Telecommunications |
3.3 |
0.0 |
3.3 |
|
========= |
========= |
========= |
Total
Investments |
103.2 |
(3.2) |
100.0 |
|
========= |
========= |
========= |
The above percentages are
calculated on the net portfolio as at 30
November 2024. The net portfolio is calculated as long
equity and derivative positions, less short derivative positions as
at 30 November
2024.
Analysis of the
portfolio
Market capitalisation as
at 30 November
2024
|
Long
positions1% of net
portfolio |
Short
positions% of net
portfolio |
|
|
|
£10bn –
£20bn |
1.2% |
0.0% |
£5bn –
£10bn |
2.0% |
0.0% |
£2.5bn –
£5bn |
10.2% |
-0.6% |
£2bn –
£2.5bn |
5.1% |
-0.3% |
£1.5bn –
£2bn |
22.8% |
-0.3% |
£1bn –
£1.5bn |
19.4% |
-1.1% |
£500m –
£1bn |
20.5% |
-0.8% |
£0m –
£500m |
21.9% |
-0.0% |
1 The
above investments may comprise exposures to long equity and long
derivative positions.
Source:
BlackRock.
Position size as at
30 November
2024
Market
value |
Long
positions1 |
Short
positions |
|
|
|
£15m –
£20m |
8 |
0 |
£10m –
£15m |
12 |
0 |
£5m –
£10m |
32 |
0 |
£2.5m –
£5m |
37 |
0 |
£0m –
£2.5m |
18 |
-11 |
1 The
above investments may comprise exposures to long equity and long
derivative positions.
Source:
BlackRock.
Portfolio holdings within
Key Benchmark
Indices
Gross
Basis1
FTSE
250 |
52.2% |
FTSE
AIM |
20.3% |
Other |
17.2% |
FTSE Small
Cap |
9.7% |
FTSE
100 |
0.6% |
Net
Basis2
FTSE
250 |
55.0% |
FTSE
AIM |
21.6% |
Other |
12.5% |
FTSE Small
Cap |
10.3% |
FTSE
100 |
0.6% |
Portfolio holdings within
Benchmark Index (the Numis Smaller Companies plus AIM (excluding
Investment Companies)
Index)
Gross
Basis1
Within
Benchmark |
82.5%
(2023: 68.2%) |
Off-Benchmark |
17.5%
(2023: 31.8%) |
Net
Basis2
Within
Benchmark |
78.3%
(2023: 70.4%) |
Off-Benchmark |
21.7%
(2023: 29.6%) |
Source:
BlackRock.
1 Long
exposure plus short exposure as a percentage of the portfolio in
aggregate excluding investment in BlackRock’s Institutional Cash
Series plc – Sterling Liquid Environmentally Aware
Fund.
2 Long
exposure less short exposure as a percentage of the portfolio
excluding investment in BlackRock’s Institutional Cash Series plc –
Sterling Liquid Environmentally Aware
Fund.
Business
Review
Principal
activities
The Company is a public
company limited by shares which carries on business as an
investment trust and its principal activity is portfolio
investment.
Objective
The Company’s objective is
to provide shareholders with long-term capital growth and an
attractive total return through investment primarily in UK smaller
and mid-capitalisation companies traded on the London Stock
Exchange.
Strategy, business model,
investment policy and investment process
The Company invests in
accordance with the objective given above. The Board is
collectively responsible to shareholders for the long-term success
of the Company and is its governing body. There is a clear division
of responsibility between the Board and the Manager, BlackRock Fund
Managers Limited (BFM). Matters for the Board include setting the
Company’s strategy, including its investment objective and policy,
setting limits on gearing (both bank borrowings and the effect of
derivatives), capital structure, governance, and appointing and
monitoring of performance of service providers, including the
Manager.
The Company’s business
model follows that of an externally managed investment trust;
therefore the Company does not have any employees and outsources
its activities to third party service providers, including the
Manager who is the principal service
provider.
The management of the
investment portfolio and the administration of the Company have
been contractually delegated to BFM. The Manager, operating under
guidelines determined by the Board, has direct responsibility for
the decisions relating to the day-to-day running of the Company and
is accountable to the Board for the investment, financial and
operating performance of the
Company.
Other service providers
include the Depositary and the Fund Accountant, The Bank of New
York Mellon (International) Limited, and the Registrar,
Computershare Investor Services PLC. Details of the contractual
terms with third party service providers are set out in the
Directors’ Report.
Investment
Policy
The Company’s performance
is measured against the Numis Smaller Companies plus AIM (excluding
Investment Companies) Index (the Benchmark Index). The Investment
Manager, BlackRock Investment Management (UK) Limited (BIM (UK)), may invest in companies outside the
Benchmark Index without restriction, subject to the following
limits.
The Company may hold up to
15% of its gross assets, at the time of acquisition, in securities
of companies which are listed or traded on a stock exchange outside
the UK.
In addition to the normal
long only portfolio, the Company will likely hold a mixture of long
and short contracts for difference (CFDs) and/or comparable equity
derivatives that would result in a typical net market exposure of
between 100% and 115%. In extremis, the Company could deploy the
full 30% of permissible leverage into short CFDs and/or comparable
equity derivatives, thereby reducing its overall net market
exposure to 70%.
The Company may also
invest up to 2.5% of its net assets (measured at the time of
investment) in unquoted securities, including securities issued by
companies incorporated outside the United
Kingdom. However, the Company may invest more than 2.5%, but
no more than 3.75%, of its net assets (both measured at the time of
investment), in unquoted securities in circumstances where such
investment is in an existing investee company and, in the
Investment Manager’s opinion, a failure of the Company to make such
investment would have a material adverse effect on the value of the
Company’s investment in such investee
company.
In addition, the Company
is permitted to employ leverage up to 30% of net assets, which it
does primarily through the use of CFDs and/or comparable equity
derivatives, rather than bank borrowings, therefore enabling the
Company to have a maximum net market exposure of
130%.
In normal circumstances
the Company will likely hold a mixture of long and short CFDs
and/or comparable equity derivatives that would result in a typical
net market exposure of between 100% and
115%*.
Portfolio risk will be
mitigated by investment in a diversified portfolio of holdings. No
more than 5% of the Company’s gross assets, at the time of
acquisition, may be invested in any one single holding, excluding
holdings in cash or money market funds, where up to 10% of the
Company’s gross assets may be held. The Company may also invest in
collective investment vehicles. However, the Company will not
invest more than 10% of its gross assets, at the time of the
acquisition, in other listed closed-ended investment funds, unless
such companies have a stated investment policy not to invest more
than 15% of their gross assets in other listed closed-ended
investment funds, in which case the limit is 15% of gross
assets.
The Board’s policy is that
net gearing, borrowings less cash, should not exceed 20% of gross
assets. The Company expects to employ any leverage primarily
through its use of CFDs and/or comparable equity
derivatives.
No material change will be
made to the investment objective and policy without shareholder
approval.
*
The AIC measures gearing at gross level, rather than net market
exposure level (i.e. gearing is calculated as borrowings + long
CFDs and/or comparable equity derivatives + short CFDs and/or
comparable equity derivatives) and therefore the published gearing
figures will be higher than the typical net market exposure of
between 100% and 115%.
Investment
process
A unique feature of the
Company is that it has the ability to go both long and short up to
approximately 30% of the Company’s net
assets.
While the UK Smaller
Companies sector has generated positive returns over the long term,
there can be significant volatility. Such an environment provides
an attractive opportunity to add value via both long and short
positions which can exploit share price moves whether up or down.
As the maximum short portfolio exposure through derivatives is 30%
of net assets, the Company will at all times retain an exposure to
the market, as shown in the chart contained within the annual
report and accounts. In the course of their research the investment
management team comes across companies which they judge are likely
to underperform; the ability to take short positions therefore
enhances the opportunity to make money for shareholders. This is
not possible in a conventional or long only
portfolio.
Idea generation can come
from anywhere, though the primary focus is on meeting companies,
speaking to management teams, and seeking to gain an in-depth
understanding of the business and the industry in which they
operate. This is the greatest source of idea generation. Our
portfolio manager focuses on identifying strong management teams
with clarity of strategic vision, in growing markets with
attractive industry dynamics, where they have a leading market
position supported by a differentiated product offering, giving
them pricing power and strong margins. These characteristics are
then combined with strong financial structures. We seek to avoid
indebted companies, therefore we look for companies that have
strong balance sheets, and importantly those with high levels of
cash conversion, where cash can be reinvested back into the
business at a high rate of return. From here our manager constructs
a diversified portfolio of high quality, growth companies, while
also identifying stock specific shorting opportunities in companies
that do not meet the above criteria. These are often in industries
under significant pressure or companies with weak financial
structures (i.e. too much debt and not enough cash
flow).
When markets are expected
to rise in the medium term, the long/short strategy is used to
generate additional market exposure through ensuring that the long
exposure exceeds the short exposure in a range between 0% to 15% of
the net assets of the Company. Rising or ‘bull’ markets have
historically (in the UK) persisted for longer than falling or
‘bear’ markets. A typical net market exposure might therefore be
between 100% and 115%. This is lower than the ‘gross exposure’,
which is the combination of the long equity positions, plus the net
of long and short derivative positions expressed as a percentage of
net assets.
Performance
The Investment Manager’s
report above includes a review of the main developments during the
year, together with information on investment activity within the
Company’s
portfolio.
Results and
dividends
The results for the
Company are set out in the Statement of Comprehensive Income below.
The total profit for the year, after taxation, was £86,322,000
(2023: loss of £15,749,000) of which the net revenue profit
amounted to £17,046,000 (2023: £16,510,000) and the net capital
profit amounted to £69,276,000 (2023: loss of
£32,259,000).
Details of the dividends
declared in respect of the year are set out in the Chairman’s
Statement above.
Key performance
indicators
At each Board meeting, the
Directors consider a number of performance measures to assess the
Company’s success in achieving its objectives. The key performance
indicators (KPIs) used to measure the progress and performance of
the Company over time, and which are comparable to those reported
by other investment trusts, are set out in the table below. These
KPIs fall within the definition of ‘Alternative Performance
Measures’ (APMs) under guidance issued by the European Securities
and Markets Authority (ESMA), and additional information explaining
how these are calculated is set out in the Glossary contained
within the annual report and
accounts.
The Board monitors the
KPIs at each meeting. Additionally, it regularly reviews a number
of indices and ratios to understand the impact on the Company’s
relative performance of the various components such as asset
allocation and stock selection. This includes an assessment of the
Company’s performance and ongoing charges against its peer group of
investment trusts with similar investment
objectives.
|
Year ended
30 November
2024 |
Year ended
30 November
2023 |
|
|
|
Net asset value total
return1,2 |
16.3% |
(2.3)% |
Share price total
return1,2 |
5.0% |
(0.8)% |
Benchmark Index total
return3 |
14.1% |
(6.0)% |
Discount to cum income net
asset value2 |
13.2% |
3.6% |
Revenue return per
share |
18.54p |
16.56p |
Ongoing
charges2,4 |
0.56% |
0.54% |
Ongoing charges including
performance
fees2,5 |
0.82% |
0.87% |
1 This
measures the Company’s share price and NAV total return, which
assumes dividends paid by the Company have been
reinvested.
2
Alternative Performance Measures, see Glossary contained within the
annual report and accounts.
3 The
Company’s Benchmark Index is the Numis Smaller Companies plus AIM
(excluding Investment Companies)
Index.
4
Ongoing charges represent the management fee and all other
operating expenses, excluding the performance fee, finance costs,
direct transaction costs, custody transaction charges, VAT
recovered, taxation, prior year expenses written back and certain
non-recurring items as a % of average daily net
assets.
5
Ongoing charges represent the management fee, performance fee and
all other operating expenses, excluding finance costs, direct
transaction costs, custody transaction charges, VAT recovered,
taxation, prior year expenses written back and certain
non-recurring items as a % of average daily net assets. Further
information on the management fees paid by the Company can be found
in Note 4 to the financial statements
below.
Share price
discount/premium
The Directors recognise
that it is in the long-term interests of shareholders that the
Company’s shares do not trade at an excessive discount or premium
to their prevailing NAV for any material length of time. In the
year under review the discount to NAV of the ordinary shares on a
cum income basis has ranged between a discount of 3.5% and 13.7%,
with the average being a discount of 9.3%. The shares ended the
year at a discount of 13.2% on a cum income basis. As at
18 February 2025 the discount was
10.6%.
Following the financial
year end, the Board convened a General Meeting of its shareholders
held on 17 February 2025. The purpose
of the meeting was to seek to renew the power taken at the last AGM
to buy back up to 14.99% of the Company’s
shares.
As it does each year, the
Board will also be seeking to renew the authority from shareholders
at the AGM to issue new shares (or to reissue shares held in
treasury) and to buy back shares. Further information on these
powers and the Board's policy in this respect can also be found in
the Chairman’s Statement
above.
Principal
risks
As required by the UK Code
of Corporate Governance, the Board has in place a robust, ongoing
process to identify, assess and monitor the principal and emerging
risks of the Company, including those that they consider would
threaten its business model, future performance, solvency or
liquidity. Emerging risks are considered by the Board as they come
into view and are incorporated into the Company’s risk register
where applicable. Additionally, the Manager considers emerging
risks in numerous forums and the Risk and Quantitative Analysis
team produces an annual risk survey. Any material risks of
relevance to the Company identified through the annual risk survey
will be communicated to the
Board.
A core element of this
process is the Company’s risk register, which identifies the risks
facing the Company and the likelihood and potential impact of each
risk, together with the controls established for mitigation. A
residual risk rating is calculated for each risk, which allows the
effect of any mitigating procedures to be reflected in the
register. The current risk register includes a range of risks
spread between investment performance risk, income/dividend risk,
legal & regulatory risk, counterparty risk, operational risk,
market risk, political risk and financial
risk.
The risk register, its
method of preparation and the operation of key controls in the
Manager’s and third party service providers’ systems of internal
control are reviewed on a regular basis by the Audit Committee. In
order to gain a more comprehensive understanding of the Manager’s
and other third party service providers’ risk management processes
and how these apply to the Company’s business, the Audit Committee
periodically receives presentations from BlackRock’s Internal Audit
and Risk & Quantitative Analysis teams. Where produced, the
Audit Committee also reviews summaries of the Service Organisation
Control (SOC1) reports from the Company’s service
providers.
The Board has undertaken a
robust assessment of both the principal and emerging risks facing
the Company, including those that would threaten its business
model, future performance, solvency or liquidity. For instance, the
risk that unforeseen or unprecedented events (including heightened
geo-political tensions, a global pandemic, hyperinflation,
stagflation, a liquidity event or significant changes in technology
and the evolution of artificial intelligence (AI)) may have a
significant negative impact on global markets (notably through
increased commodity and labour price volatility, driving inflation
and impacting global trade) and consequently a negative impact on
the Company’s NAV, performance and discount. The Board has taken
into consideration the risks posed to the Company by these events
and incorporated them into the Company’s risk
register.
Emerging risks are
considered by the Board as they come into view and are incorporated
into the existing review of the Company’s risk register.
Additionally, the Manager considers emerging risks in numerous
forums and the Risk and Quantitative Analysis team produces an
annual risk survey. Any material risks of relevance to the Company
identified through the annual risk survey will be communicated to
the Board.
Emerging risks that have
been considered by the Board over the year include the impact of
escalating geo-political
conflict, technological advances and issues around shareholder
voting against a backdrop of heightened activism across the UK
investment companies
sector.
The key emerging risks
identified are as follows:
Geo-political risk:
Escalating geo-political tensions (including, but not limited to
tensions in the Middle East and
the ongoing war in Ukraine, or
deteriorating relations between China and the US/other countries) have a
significant negative impact on global markets, with an increasing
use of tariffs and domestic regulations making global trade more
complex and driving economic
fragmentation.
Artificial Intelligence
(‘AI’): Advances in computing power means that AI has become a
powerful tool that will impact a huge range of areas and with a
wide range of applications that have the potential to dislocate
established business models and disrupt labour markets, creating
uncertainty in corporate valuations. The significant energy
required to power this technological revolution will create further
pressure on environmental resources and carbon
emissions.
Shareholder voting: There
has been an increase in activist activity across the UK closed end
funds sector, with general meetings being requisitioned on a number
of UK investment trusts to change the composition of the board, and
potentially the manager and investment policy. Some investors may
find it difficult to vote at general meetings, and against this
backdrop of heightened activity there is a risk that low voting
turnout at AGMs and GMs may result either in changes being made
that are not in all shareholders’ best interests or in the failure
to implement changes that are in the best interests of
shareholders.
The Board will continue to
assess these risks on an ongoing basis. In relation to the UK Code,
the Board is confident that the procedures that the Company has put
in place are sufficient to ensure that the necessary monitoring of
risks and controls has been carried out throughout the reporting
period.
The principal risks and
uncertainties faced by the Company during the financial year,
together with the potential effects, controls and mitigating
factors, are set out in the table
below.
Investment
performance
Principal
risk
The Board is responsible
for:
·
setting the investment policy to fulfil the Company’s objectives;
and
·
monitoring the performance of the Company’s Investment Manager and
the strategy
adopted.
An inappropriate policy or
strategy may lead to:
·
poor performance compared to the Company’s Benchmark Index, peer
group or shareholder
expectations;
·
reduced demand for the Company’s
shares;
·
a widening discount to
NAV;
·
a reduction or permanent loss of capital;
and
·
dissatisfied shareholders and reputational
damage.
Mitigation/Control
To manage these risks the
Board:
·
regularly reviews the Company’s investment mandate and long-term
strategy;
·
has set, and regularly reviews, the investment guidelines and has
put in place appropriate limits on levels of gearing and the use of
derivatives;
·
receives from the Investment Manager a regular explanation of stock
selection decisions, portfolio gearing and any changes in gearing
and the rationale for the composition of the investment
portfolio;
·
receives from the Investment Manager regular reporting on the
portfolio’s exposure through derivatives, including the extent to
which the portfolio is geared in this manner and the value of any
short
positions;
·
monitors the maintenance of an adequate spread of investments in
order to minimise the risks associated with particular sectors,
based on the diversification requirements inherent in the Company’s
investment
policy;
·
considers the risk of incapacitation of the portfolio manager or
his departure from the Manager;
and
·
monitors the share price discount or premium to
NAV.
Market
risk
Principal
risk
Market risk arises from
changes to the prices of the Company’s investments. It represents
the potential loss the Company might suffer through holding
investments and derivatives. Market risk includes the potential
impact of events which are outside the scope of the Company’s
control including heightened geo-political tensions as set out
above, which may have a significant negative impact on global
markets and consequently a negative impact on the Company’s NAV,
performance and discount. Companies operating within the sectors in
which the Company invests may be impacted by new legislation
governing climate change and environmental issues, which may have a
negative impact on their valuation and share
price.
Mitigation/Control
The Board carefully
considers the diversification of the portfolio, asset allocation,
stock selection, unquoted investments and levels of gearing on a
regular basis and has set investment restrictions and guidelines
which are monitored and reported on by the Investment Manager. The
Board monitors the implementation and results of the investment
process with the Investment Manager, and key market risk factors
are discussed.
The Board also recognises
the benefits of a closed-end fund structure in extremely volatile
markets. Unlike open-ended counterparts, closed-end funds are not
obliged to sell down portfolio holdings at low valuations to meet
liquidity requirements for redemptions. Although the Board has
taken shareholder authority to buy back shares to manage the
discount, it retains the discretion to decide whether to implement
buy backs and the timing and degree to which this is done. During
times of elevated volatility and market stress, this discretion and
the ability of a closed-end fund structure to remain invested for
the longer-term potentially enables the Investment Manager to
adhere to disciplined fundamental analysis from a bottom-up
perspective and be ready to respond to dislocations in the market
as opportunities present
themselves.
Income/dividend
risk
Principal
risk
The amount of dividends
and future dividend growth will depend on the performance of the
Company’s underlying portfolio holdings. Changes in the composition
of the portfolio and any change in the tax treatment of the
dividends or interest received by the Company may reduce the level
of dividends received by
shareholders.
Mitigation/Control
The Board monitors this
risk through the receipt of detailed income forecasts and considers
the level of income at each meeting. The Company also has a revenue
reserve and powers to pay dividends from capital which could
potentially be used to support the Company’s dividend if
required.
Financial
risk
Principal
risk
The Company’s investment
activities expose it to a variety of financial risks that include
market risk, foreign currency risk, counterparty risk and interest
rate risk. At 30 November 2024, the
Company had approximately 22.3% of its gross asset value invested
in AIM traded equity securities and 12.4% of its gross assets in
international markets, and, by the very nature of its investment
objective, largely invests in smaller companies. Liquidity in these
securities can from time to time become constrained, making these
investments difficult to realise at or near published
prices.
Mitigation/Control
The Company is not
materially exposed to foreign currency and interest rate risk. For
mitigation of market risk, see above. There are also risks linked
to the Company’s use of derivative transactions including long and
short investment positions. Details are disclosed in note 11 of the
annual report and accounts, together with a summary of the policies
for managing and controlling these risks in note 16 (contained
within the annual report and
accounts).
Operational
risk
Principal
risk
In common with most other
investment trust companies, the Company has no employees. The
Company therefore relies upon the services provided by BlackRock
(the Manager and AIFM) and The Bank of New York Mellon
(International) Limited (the Depositary and Fund Accountant) who
maintain the Company’s accounting
records.
Failure by any service
provider to carry out its obligations to the Company could have a
material adverse effect on the Company’s performance. Disruption to
the accounting, payment systems or custody records, as a result of
a cyber-attack or otherwise, could impact the monitoring and
reporting of the Company’s financial
position.
The security of the
Company’s assets, dealing procedures, accounting records and
maintenance of regulatory and legal requirements, depend on the
effective operation of these
systems.
Mitigation/Control
The Board reviews the
overall performance of the Manager, Investment Manager and all
other third party service providers and compliance with the
investment management agreement on a regular
basis.
The Fund Accountant’s and
the Manager’s internal control processes are regularly tested and
monitored throughout the year and are evidenced through their
Service Organisation Control (SOC 1) reports, which are subject to
review by an Independent Service Assurance Auditor. The SOC 1
reports provide assurance in respect of the effective operation of
internal controls.
The Company’s financial
instruments held in custody are subject to a strict liability
regime and in the event of a loss of such financial instruments
held in custody, the Depositary must return assets of an identical
type or the corresponding amount, unless able to demonstrate that
the loss was a result of an event beyond its reasonable
control.
The Board considers
succession arrangements for key employees of the Manager and the
Board also considers the business continuity arrangements of the
Company’s key service providers on an ongoing basis and reviews
these as part of its review of the Company’s risk
register.
The Board also receives
regular updates from BlackRock’s internal audit function and the
Company’s Audit Committee Chairman attends an annual briefing from
the head of BlackRock’s internal audit function once a year. This
is supplemented by a written report which describes the progress
made against the current internal audit plan, any issues identified
and the plan for the forthcoming
year.
Legal and regulatory
risk
Principal
risk
The Company has been
approved by HM Revenue & Customs as an investment trust,
subject to continuing to meet the relevant eligibility conditions,
and operates as an investment trust in accordance with Chapter 4 of
Part 24 of the Corporation Tax Act 2010. As such, the Company is
exempt from capital gains tax on the profits realised from the sale
of its
investments.
Any breach of the relevant
eligibility conditions could lead to the Company losing its
investment trust status and being subject to corporation tax on
capital gains realised within the Company’s portfolio. In such
event the investment returns of the Company may be adversely
affected. Any serious breach could result in the Company and/or the
Directors being fined or the subject of criminal proceedings or the
suspension of the Company’s shares which would in turn lead to a
breach of the Corporation Tax Act
2010.
Mitigation/Control
The Investment Manager
monitors investment movements, the level of forecast income and
expenditure and the amount of proposed dividends, if any, to ensure
that the provisions of Chapter 4 of Part 24 of the Corporation Tax
Act 2010 are not breached, and the results are reported to the
Board at each
meeting.
Following authorisation
under the Alternative Investment Fund Managers’ Directive as
retained and onshored in the UK (AIFMD), the Company and its
appointed Alternative Investment Fund Manager (AIFM) are subject to
the risks that the requirements of the AIFMD are not correctly
complied with. The Board and the AIFM also monitor changes in
government policy and legislation which may have an impact on the
Company.
Compliance with the
accounting standards applicable to quoted companies and those
applicable to investment trusts are also regularly monitored to
ensure compliance.
Risk of regulatory
change
Principal
risk
Amongst other relevant
laws and regulations, the Company is required to comply with the
provisions of the Companies Act 2006, the Alternative Investment
Fund Managers’ Directive (as retained and onshored in the UK), the
Market Abuse Regulation (also as retained and onshored in the UK),
the UK Listing Rules and the Disclosure Guidance and Transparency
Rules.
Mitigation/Control
The Company Secretary and
the Company’s professional advisers monitor developments in
relevant laws and regulations and provide regular reports to the
Board in respect of the Company’s
compliance.
The Market Abuse
Regulation came into force across the EU on 3 July 2016 and has been retained and onshored in
the UK following Brexit. The Board has taken steps to ensure that
individual Directors (and their Persons Closely Associated) are
aware of their obligations under the regulation and has updated
internal processes, where necessary, to ensure the risk of
non-compliance is effectively
mitigated.
Counterparty
Principal
risk
The potential loss that
the Company could incur if a counterparty is unable (or unwilling)
to perform on its commitments. The risk that a bank the Company has
deposits with will fail and the Company will not recover monies
deposited with such
bank.
The Company’s investment
policy also permits the use of both exchange-traded and
over-the-counter derivatives (including contracts for
difference).
Mitigation/Control
Due diligence is
undertaken before contracts are entered into and exposures are
diversified across a number of counterparties. The Board reviews
the controls put in place by the Investment Manager to monitor and
to minimise counterparty exposure, which include intra-day
monitoring of exposures to ensure that these are within set
limits.
The Depositary is liable
for restitution for the loss of financial instruments held in
custody, unless it is able to demonstrate that the loss was due to
an event beyond its reasonable
control.
The creditworthiness of
financial institutions is assessed by BlackRock’s Portfolio
Management Group (“PMG”) Fundamental Fixed Income Credit Research
Team prior to entering into any banking arrangements. The Company
has restricted the amount of cash which may be held with any one
financial institution, and cash balances are monitored daily and
any significant surplus cash is invested substantially in
BlackRock’s UCITS compliant Cash Fund to diversify
risk.
Viability
statement
The Directors have
assessed the prospects of the Company over a longer period than the
12 months referred to by the “Going Concern”
guidelines.
The Board conducted this
review for the period up to the AGM in 2030, being a five-year
period from the date that this Annual Report will be approved by
shareholders. This is generally the investment holding period
investors consider while investing in the smaller companies’
sector. The Board is cognisant of the uncertainty surrounding the
potential duration of the Russia/Ukraine conflict and the hostilities in the
Middle East, their impact on the
global economy, and the prospects for the Company’s portfolio
holdings. In making its assessment the Board has also considered
the following factors:
·
the Company’s principal risks as set out
above;
·
the impact of a significant fall in UK equity markets on the value
of the Company’s investment portfolio in the light of the
heightened volatility resulting from the ongoing Russia/Ukraine conflict, the hostilities in the
Middle East, and any potential
impact on the global economy, and the path of inflation and
interest rates in the
UK;
·
the ongoing relevance of the Company’s investment objective;
and
·
the level of demand for the Company’s
shares.
The Directors have also
considered the Company’s revenue and expense forecasts and the fact
that expenses and liabilities are relatively stable. The Company
also has a portfolio of investments which provides a level of cash
receipts in the form of dividends and which are considered to be
relatively realisable if
required.
The Directors reviewed the
assumptions and considerations underpinning the Company’s existing
going concern assertion (please see the disclosure in the
Directors’ Report contained within the annual report and accounts),
which are based on:
·
processes for monitoring
costs;
·
key financial
ratios;
·
evaluation of risk management and
controls;
·
compliance with the investment
objective;
·
the Company’s ability to meet its liabilities as they fall
due;
·
portfolio risk
profile;
·
share price discount to
NAV;
·
gearing;
·
counterparty exposure and liquidity
risk;
·
the operational resilience of the Company and its key service
providers and their ability to continue to provide a good level of
service for the foreseeable future;
and
·
the effectiveness of business continuity plans in place for the
Company and key service
providers.
The Company has a
relatively liquid portfolio and largely fixed overheads (excluding
any applicable performance fees) which comprise a very small
percentage of net assets 0.56% excluding performance fees, 0.82%
including performance fees in 2024. The effective performance fee
cap in the event that the NAV return exceeds the Benchmark Index
return over the performance period is circa 0.90% of the average
gross assets over the two years and the applicable percentage to be
applied to the outperformance of the NAV total return over the
Benchmark Index return is 15%. In addition, the maximum cap on
total management and performance fees is 1.25% of average gross
assets (measured over a rolling two-year
period). Therefore, the Board has concluded that the Company would
be able to meet its ongoing operating costs as they fall
due.
The Directors have also
considered the impact of potential changes in law, regulation and
taxation and the matter of foreign exchange risk. They have
determined that although there are a number of potential risks
associated with the legal, fiscal and regulatory landscape they do
not believe that this represents a material threat to the Company’s
strategy and business model, nor do they believe that the
Investment Manager will be materially impeded in achieving the
Company’s investment
objective.
Based on the results of
their analysis, the Directors have a reasonable expectation that
the Company will be able to continue in operation and meet its
liabilities as they fall due over the period of their
assessment.
Section 172 statement:
promoting the success of BlackRock Throgmorton Trust
plc
The Companies
(Miscellaneous Reporting) Regulations 2018 require directors to
explain more fully how they have discharged their duties under
Section 172(1) of the Companies Act 2006 in promoting the success
of their companies for the benefit of members as a whole. This
enhanced disclosure covers how the Board has engaged with and
understands the views of stake-holders and how stakeholders’ needs
have been taken into account, the outcome of this engagement and
the impact that it has had on the Board’s
decisions.
As the Company is an
externally managed investment company and does not have any
employees or customers, the Board considers the main stakeholders
in the Company to be the shareholders and the key service providers
(being the Manager and Investment Manager, the Custodian,
Depositary, Registrar and Broker). The reasons for this
determination, and the Board’s overarching approach to engagement,
are set out below:
Stakeholders
Shareholders
Continued shareholder
support and engagement are critical to the continued existence of
the Company and the successful delivery of its long-term strategy.
The Board is focused on fostering good working relationships with
shareholders and on understanding the views of shareholders in
order to incorporate them into the Board’s strategy and objectives
in delivering long-term
growth and
income.
In turn, portfolio
holdings are ultimately shareholders’ assets, and the Board
recognises the importance of good stewardship and communication
with investee companies in meeting the Company’s investment
objective and strategy.
Manager and Investment
Manager
The Board’s main working
relationship is with the Manager, who is responsible for the
Company’s portfolio management (including asset allocation, stock
and sector selection) and risk management, as well as ancillary
functions such as administration, secretarial, accounting and
marketing services. The Manager has sub-delegated portfolio
management to the Investment Manager. Successful management of
shareholders’ assets by the Investment Manager is critical for the
Company to successfully deliver its investment strategy and meet
its objective. The Company is also reliant on the Manager as AIFM
to provide support in meeting relevant regulatory obligations under
the AIFMD and other relevant
legislation.
Other key service
providers
In order for the Company
to function as an investment trust with a listing on the premium
segment of the official list of the FCA and trade on the London
Stock Exchange’s (LSE) main market for listed securities, the Board
relies on a diverse range of advisors for support in meeting
relevant obligations and safeguarding the Company’s assets. For
this reason, the Board considers the Company’s Custodian,
Depositary, Registrar and Broker to be stakeholders. The Board,
either directly or through the Manager, maintains regular contact
with its key external providers and receives regular reporting from
them through the Board and Committee meetings, as well as outside
of the regular meeting
cycle.
A summary of the key areas
of engagement undertaken by the Board with its key stakeholders in
the year under review and how Directors have acted upon this to
promote the long-term success of the Company are set out
below.
Investment mandate and
objective
Issue
The Board is committed to
promoting the role and success of the Company in delivering on its
investment mandate to shareholders over the long-term. The Board
also has responsibility to shareholders to ensure that the
Company’s portfolio of assets is invested in line with the stated
investment objective and in a way that ensures an appropriate
balance between spread of risk and portfolio
returns.
Engagement
The Board works closely
with the Investment Manager throughout the year in further
developing our investment strategy and underlying policies, not
simply for the purpose of achieving the Company’s investment
objective but in the interests of shareholders and future
investors.
The Board is kept advised
in respect of the Manager’s consideration of ESG factors as part of
the investment process; a summary of BlackRock’s approach to ESG
matters is set out in the annual report and
accounts.
Impact
Details regarding the
Company’s NAV and share price performance can be found in the
Chairman’s Statement and in the Strategic Report
above.
The portfolio activities
undertaken by the Manager can be found in the Investment Manager’s
Report above.
Management of the share
rating
Issue
The Board believes that
the best way of addressing the discount over the longer term is to
continue to generate good performance and to create demand for the
Company’s shares in the secondary market through broadening
awareness of the Company’s unique structure. The Board believes
that it is in shareholders’ interests that the share price does not
trade at an excessive premium or discount to NAV. Therefore, where
deemed to be in shareholders’ long-term interests, it may exercise
its powers to issue shares or buy back shares with the objective of
ensuring that an excessive premium or discount does not
arise.
Engagement
The Manager reports total
return performance statistics to the Board on a regular basis,
along with the portfolio yield and the impact of dividends paid on
brought forward distributable
reserves.
The Board reviews the
Company’s discount/premium to NAV on a regular basis and holds
regular discussions with the Manager and the Company’s broker
regarding the discount/premium
level.
The Board believes that
the best way of maintaining the share rating at an optimal level
over the long-term is to create demand for the shares in the
secondary market. To this end the Investment Manager is devoting
considerable effort to broadening the awareness of the Company,
particularly to wealth managers and to the wider retail shareholder
market.
The Manager provides the
Board with feedback and key performance statistics regarding the
success of the Company’s marketing
initiatives.
Impact
The average discount for
the year to 30 November 2024 was
9.3%. During the year the Company’s share price has traded between
a discount of 3.5% and
13.7%.
Service levels of third
party providers
Issue
The Board acknowledges the
importance of ensuring that the Company’s principal suppliers are
providing a suitable level of service including: the Manager in
respect of investment performance and delivering on the Company’s
investment mandate; the Depositary in respect of its duties towards
safeguarding the Company’s assets; the Registrar in its maintenance
of the Company’s share register and dealing with investor queries
and the Company’s Brokers in respect of the provision of advice and
acting as a market maker for the Company’s
shares.
Engagement
The Manager reports to the
Board on the Company’s performance on a regular basis. The Board
carries out a robust annual evaluation of the Manager’s
performance, their commitment and available
resources.
The Board performs an
annual review of the service levels of all third party service
providers and concludes on their suitability to continue in their
role.
The Board has received
updates in respect of business continuity planning from the
Company’s Manager, Depositary, Fund Administrator, Brokers,
Registrar and Printers, and is confident that arrangements are in
place to ensure that a good level of service will continue to be
provided.
Impact
Performance evaluations
were performed on a timely basis and the Board concluded that all
third party service providers, including the Manager, Depositary
and Fund Administrator were operating effectively and providing a
good level of
service.
Board
composition
Issue
The Board is committed to
ensuring that its own composition brings an appropriate balance of
knowledge, experience and skills, and that it is compliant with
best corporate governance practice under the UK Corporate
Governance Code, including guidance on tenure and the composition
of the Board’s
committees.
Engagement
During the year the Board
undertook a review of succession planning arrangements and
identified the need for action to ensure that the composition of
the Board remained appropriate and that there was an ongoing
process of refreshment, bringing in new ideas and different
perspectives. The Board, through its Nomination Committee, agreed
the selection criteria and the method of selection, recruitment and
appointment. Board diversity, including factors such as age,
ethnicity, and gender, was taken into account when establishing the
criteria.
All Directors are subject
to a formal evaluation process on an annual basis (more details and
the conclusions in respect of the 2024 evaluation process are given
within the annual report and accounts). All Directors stand for
re-election by shareholders annually. Shareholders may attend the
AGM and raise any queries in respect of Board composition or
individual Directors in person or may contact the Company Secretary
or the Chairman using the details provided within the annual report
and accounts if they wish to raise any
issues.
Impact
The Directors are not
aware of any issues that have been raised directly by shareholders
in respect of Board composition in 2024. Details for the proxy
voting results in favour and against individual Directors’
re-election at the 2024 AGM are given on the Company’s website at
www.blackrock.com/uk/thrg.
Shareholders
Issue
Continued shareholder
support and engagement are critical to the continued existence of
the Company and the successful delivery of its long-term
strategy.
The dividend is funded out
of current year revenue and, where deemed appropriate, may be
supported from revenue reserves if current year revenue is
insufficient. The Company does not have a policy of seeking income,
however, the portfolio has, to date, continued to deliver a level
of income such that the Board is able to pay an attractive
dividend.
Engagement
The Board is committed to
maintaining open channels of communication and to engaging with
shareholders and welcomes and encourages attendance and
participation from shareholders at its Annual General Meetings.
Shareholders therefore have the opportunity to meet the Directors
and Investment Manager and to address questions to them directly.
The Chairman and Senior Independent Director also meet directly
with shareholders providing a forum for canvassing their views and
enabling the Board to be aware of any issues of
concern.
The Annual Report and Half
Yearly financial report are available on the BlackRock website and
are also circulated to shareholders either in printed copy or via
electronic communications. In addition, regular updates on
performance, monthly factsheets, the daily NAV and other
information are also published on the website at
www.blackrock.com/uk/thrg.
The Board also works
closely with the Manager to develop the Company’s marketing
strategy, with the aim of ensuring effective communication with
shareholders in respect of the investment mandate and objective.
Unlike trading companies, shareholder meetings usually take the
form of a meeting with the Investment Manager as opposed to members
of the Board. As well as attending regular investor meetings the
Investment Manager holds regular discussions with wealth management
desks and offices to build on the case for, and understanding of,
long-term investment opportunities in the UK smaller companies’
sector.
However, the Board is
ultimately responsible for communication with shareholders and all
substantive matters arising from such communication are referred to
the Board.
The Manager also
coordinates public relations activity, including meetings between
the Investment Manager and relevant industry publications to set
out their vision for the portfolio strategy and outlook for the UK
equity market. The Manager releases the daily NAV and monthly
portfolio updates to the market to ensure that investors are kept
up to date in respect of performance and other portfolio
developments and maintains a website on behalf of the Company that
contains relevant information in respect of the Company’s
investment mandate and objective. If shareholders wish to raise
issues or concerns with the Board, they are welcome to do so at any
time.
The Chairman is available
to meet directly with shareholders periodically to understand their
views on governance and the Company’s performance where they wish
to do so. He may be contacted via the Company Secretary whose
details are given within the annual report and
accounts.
Impact
The Board values any
feedback and questions from shareholders ahead of and during Annual
General Meetings in order to gain an understanding of their views
and will take action when and as appropriate. Feedback and
questions will also help the Company evolve its reporting, aiming
to make reports more transparent and
understandable.
Feedback from all
substantive meetings between the Investment Manager and
shareholders will be shared with the Board. The Directors will also
receive updates from the Company’s broker on any feedback from
shareholders, as well as share trading activity, share price
performance and an update from the Investment
Manager.
The Investment Manager
attended professional investor meetings and held discussions with a
range of different wealth management desks and offices in respect
of the Company during the year under review. Investors were also
impressed with the wide pool of resource available through
BlackRock’s Emerging Companies team, and the rigorous ‘bottom-up’
investment approach.
Responsible
Investing
Issue
Consideration of material
Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) information and
sustainability risks are considered when making investment
decisions. Sustainability-related risks, including climate-related
risks, are becoming a defining factor in companies’ long-term
prospects across the investment spectrum, with significant and
lasting implications for economic growth and
prosperity.
Engagement
The Board believes that
responsible investment and sustainability are integral to the
longer-term delivery of the Company’s success. The Board works
closely with the Investment Manager to regularly review the
Company’s performance, investment strategy and underlying policies
to ensure that the Company’s investment objective continues to be
met in an effective, responsible and sustainable way in the
interests of shareholders and future
investors.
The Investment Manager’s
approach to the consideration of ESG factors in respect of the
Company’s information and consideration of sustainability risks are
kept under review by the
Board.
The Investment Manager
reports to the Board in respect of its consideration of
sustainability risks and these are integrated into the investment
process; a summary of BlackRock’s approach to ESG integration is
set out within the annual report and accounts. The Investment
Manager’s engagement and voting policy is detailed within the
annual report and accounts.
Impact
The Investment Manager
believes there is often a positive correlation between good ESG
practices on the part of portfolio companies and investment
performance. Details of the Company’s performance in the year are
given in the Chairman’s Statement above and the Performance Record
contained within the annual report and
accounts.
BlackRock structures its
approach around three main pillars: investment processes, material
insights and transparency. These pillars underpin ESG integration
at BlackRock and they are supported by equipping BlackRock
employees with investment relevant E, S and/or G data, tools, and
education.
More information in
respect of BlackRock’s approach to ESG integration can be found at
https://www.blackrock.com/corporate/literature/publication/blk-esg-investment-statement-web.pdf.
BlackRock’s reporting and
disclosures
In terms of its own
reporting, BlackRock believes that the Sustainability Accounting
Standards Board provides a clear set of standards for reporting
sustainability information across a wide range of issues, from
labour practices to data privacy to business ethics. For evaluating
and reporting climate-related risks, as well as the related
governance issues that are essential to managing them, the Task
Force on Climate-related Financial Disclosures (TCFD) provides a
valuable framework. BlackRock recognises that reporting to these
standards requires significant time, analysis, and effort.
BlackRock’s 2023 TCFD report can be found at
www.blackrock.com/corporate/literature/continuous-disclosure-and-important-information/tcfd-report-2023-blkinc.pdf.
Future
prospects
The Board’s main focus is
on the achievement of capital growth and the future of the Company
is dependent upon the success of the investment strategy. The
outlook for the Company is discussed in the Chairman’s Statement
and in the Investment Manager’s Report
above.
Social, community and
human rights issues
As an investment trust,
the Company has no direct social or community responsibilities.
However, the Company believes that it is in shareholders’ interests
to consider human rights issues, and environmental, social and
governance factors when selecting and retaining investments.
Details of the Company’s approach to socially responsible
investment is set out above and within the annual report and
accounts.
Modern Slavery
Act
As an investment vehicle
the Company does not provide goods or services in the normal course
of business and does not have customers. Accordingly, the Directors
consider that the Company is not required to make any slavery or
human trafficking statement under the Modern Slavery Act 2015. The
Board considers the Company’s supply chain, dealing predominantly
with professional advisers and service providers in the financial
services industry, to be low risk in relation to this
matter.
Directors, gender
representation and employees
The Directors of the
Company on 30 November 2024, all of
whom held office throughout the year, are set out within the annual
report and accounts. The Board recognises the importance of having
a range of experienced Directors who, both individually and
collectively, possess a suitable balance of skills, knowledge,
independence and diversity to enable it to fulfil its obligations.
As at 30 November 2024, the Board
consisted of two men and three women, resulting in 60% female
representation. Following the appointment of Mr Will on
1 January 2025 the ratio was 50:50.
The Company has no employees, and all of its Directors are
non-executive. Therefore, there are no disclosures to be made in
respect of
employees.
The Chairman’s Statement
and the Investment Manager’s Report above form part of this
Strategic Report.
The Strategic Report was
approved by the Board at its meeting on 19
February 2025.
BY ORDER OF THE BOARD
KEVIN MAYGER
FOR AND ON BEHALF OF
BLACKROCK INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT (UK) LIMITED
COMPANY SECRETARY
19
February
2025
Related party and
transactions with the Investment Manager and
AIFM
BlackRock Fund Managers
Limited (BFM) provides management and administration services to
the Company under a contract which is terminable on six months’
notice. BFM has (with the Company’s consent) delegated certain
portfolio and risk management services, and other ancillary
services, to BlackRock Investment Management (UK) Limited
(BIM (UK)). Further details of the
investment management contract are disclosed in the Directors’
Report contained within the annual report and
accounts.
The investment management
fee due for the year ended 30 November
2024 amounted to £2,575,000 (2023: £2,518,000). At the year
end, £1,906,000 (2023: £1,864,000) was outstanding in respect of
management fees.
The performance fee
payable for the year ended 30 November
2024 amounted to £2,982,000 (2023: £nil). The total accrual
of performance fee for all rolling two year performance periods
amounted to £3,607,000 (2023: £2,014,000), calculated as
follows:
·
For the annualised rolling two-year performance period to
30 November 2024, the Company has
outperformed the benchmark by 2.7% as at 30
November 2024. A performance fee of £2,982,000 relating to
this performance period has been accrued at the date of this
report.
·
For the annualised rolling two-year performance period to
30 November 2025, the Company has
outperformed the benchmark by 0.6% as at 30
November 2024. A performance fee of £625,000 to this
performance period has been accrued at the date of this report,
which does not become payable until 30
November 2025, subject to the ongoing performance of the
Company.
In addition to the above
services, BIM (UK) has provided
marketing services. The total fees paid or payable for these
services for the year ended 30 November
2024 amounted to £175,000 excluding VAT (2023: £149,000).
Marketing fees of £124,000 (2023: £269,000) were outstanding at the
year end.
The Company has an
investment in the BlackRock Institutional Cash Series plc -
Sterling Liquid Environmentally Aware Fund of £43,477,000 (2023:
£24,328,000) which for the year ended 30
November 2024 and 30 November
2023 has been presented in the financial statements as a
cash equivalent.
The ultimate holding
company of the Manager and the Investment Manager is BlackRock,
Inc., a company incorporated in Delaware
USA.
As at 30 November 2024, the Board consisted of five
non-executive Directors, all of whom were considered to be
independent by the Board*. None of the Directors has a service
contract with the Company. With effect from 1 January 2025, the number of non-executive
Directors increased to six with the addition of Mr James Will to the Board. For the year
ended 30 November 2024, the Chairman
received an annual fee of £48,800, the Chairman of the Audit and
Management Engagement Committee received an annual fee of
£38,700, the Senior Independent
Director received an annual fee of £34,100 and each other Director
received an annual fee of £33,100. With effect from
1 December 2024 the Chairman will
receive an annual fee of £50,250, the Chairman of the Audit and
Management Engagement Committee will receive an annual fee of
£40,000, the Senior Independent Director will receive an annual fee
of £36,100 and each other Director will receive an annual fee of
£34,100.
As at 30 November 2024, all members of the Board held
shares in the Company. Christopher
Samuel held 67,263 ordinary shares, Louise Nash held 5,500 ordinary shares,
Angela Lane held 11,749 ordinary
shares, Nigel Burton held 16,986
ordinary shares and Merryn Somerset
Webb held 3,750 ordinary
shares.
All of the holdings of the
Directors are beneficial. Since the year end there have been no
further changes to the Directors’ share
interests.
Statement of Directors’
responsibilities in respect of the Annual Report and Financial
Statements
The Directors are
responsible for preparing the Annual Report and Financial
Statements, (including the Directors’ Remuneration Report) in
accordance with applicable United
Kingdom law and
regulations.
Company law requires the
Directors to prepare financial statements for each financial year.
Under that law, the Directors are required to prepare the financial
statements in accordance with international accounting standards in
conformity with the requirements of the Companies Act 2006. Under
company law the Directors must not approve the financial statements
unless they are satisfied that they give a true and fair view of
the state of affairs of the Company and of the profit or loss of
the Company for that period.
In preparing these
Financial Statements, the Directors are required
to:
·
present fairly the financial position, financial performance and
cash flows of the
Company;
·
select suitable accounting policies in accordance with IAS 8,
‘Accounting Policies, Changes in Accounting Estimates and Errors’
and then apply them
consistently;
·
present information, including accounting policies, in a manner
that provides relevant, reliable, comparable and understandable
information;
·
make judgements and estimates that are reasonable and
prudent;
·
state whether the Financial Statements have been prepared in
accordance with international accounting standards in conformity
with the requirements of the Companies Act 2006, subject to any
material departures disclosed and explained in the Financial
Statements;
·
provide additional disclosures when compliance with the specific
requirements in international accounting standards in conformity
with the requirements of the Companies Act 2006, is insufficient to
enable users to understand the impact of particular transactions,
other events and conditions on the Company’s financial position and
financial performance;
and
·
prepare the Financial Statements on the going concern basis unless
it is inappropriate to presume that the Company will continue in
business.
The Directors are
responsible for keeping adequate accounting records that are
sufficient to show and explain the Company’s transactions and
disclose with reasonable accuracy at any time the financial
position of the Company and enable them to ensure that the
Financial Statements comply with the Companies Act 2006. They are
also responsible for safeguarding the assets of the Company and
hence for taking reasonable steps for the prevention and detection
of fraud and other irregularities. The Directors are also
responsible for preparing the Strategic Report, the Directors’
Report, the Directors’ Remuneration Report and the Corporate
Governance Statement in accordance with the Companies Act 2006 and
applicable regulations, including the requirements of the Listing
Rules and the Disclosure Guidance and Transparency Rules. The
Directors have delegated responsibility to the Investment Manager
and the AIFM for the maintenance and integrity of the Company’s
corporate and financial information included on BlackRock’s
website. Legislation in the United
Kingdom governing the preparation and dissemination of
Financial Statements may differ from legislation in other
jurisdictions.
Each of the Directors,
whose names are listed within the annual report
and accounts, confirms to the best of his or her knowledge
that:
·
the Financial Statements, which have been prepared in accordance
with international accounting standards in conformity with the
requirements of the Companies Act 2006, give a true and fair view
of the assets, liabilities, financial position and net loss of the
Company; and
·
the Annual Report and Financial Statements include a fair review of
the development and performance of the business and the position of
the Company, together with a description of the principal risks and
uncertainties that it
faces.
The 2018 UK Corporate
Governance Code also requires Directors to ensure that the Annual
Report and Financial Statements are fair, balanced and
understandable. In order to reach a conclusion on this matter, the
Board has requested that the Audit Committee advise on whether it
considers that the Annual Report and Financial Statements fulfil
these requirements. The process by which the Committee has reached
these conclusions is set out in the Audit Committee’s report
contained within the annual report and accounts. As a result, the
Board has concluded that the Annual Report and Financial Statements
for the year ended 30 November 2024,
taken as a whole, are fair, balanced and understandable and
provided the information necessary for shareholders to assess the
Company’s position, performance, business model and
strategy.
FOR AND ON BEHALF OF THE
BOARD
CHRISTOPHER SAMUEL
Chairman
19
February
2025
Statement of Comprehensive
Income for the year ended
30 November
2024
|
|
2024 |
2023 |
|
Notes |
Revenue
£’000 |
Capital
£’000 |
Total
£’000 |
Revenue
£’000 |
Capital
£’000 |
Total
£’000 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Income from investments
held at fair value through profit or
loss |
3 |
16,070 |
518 |
16,588 |
15,981 |
– |
15,981 |
Net income from
derivatives |
3 |
1,024 |
– |
1,024 |
830 |
– |
830 |
Other
income |
3 |
1,569 |
– |
1,569 |
1,139 |
– |
1,139 |
|
|
--------------- |
--------------- |
--------------- |
--------------- |
--------------- |
--------------- |
Total
income |
|
18,663 |
518 |
19,181 |
17,950 |
– |
17,950 |
|
|
========= |
========= |
========= |
========= |
========= |
========= |
Net profit/(loss) on
investments held at fair value through profit or
loss |
|
– |
59,598 |
59,598 |
– |
(28,389) |
(28,389) |
Net loss on foreign
exchange |
|
– |
(61) |
(61) |
– |
(114) |
(114) |
Net profit from
derivatives |
|
– |
12,839 |
12,839 |
– |
242 |
242 |
|
|
--------------- |
--------------- |
--------------- |
--------------- |
--------------- |
--------------- |
Total |
|
18,663 |
72,894 |
91,557 |
17,950 |
(28,261) |
(10,311) |
|
|
========= |
========= |
========= |
========= |
========= |
========= |
Expenses |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Investment management and
performance fees |
4 |
(644) |
(3,524) |
(4,168) |
(629) |
(3,903) |
(4,532) |
Other operating
expenses |
5 |
(922) |
(21) |
(943) |
(792) |
(20) |
(812) |
|
|
--------------- |
--------------- |
--------------- |
--------------- |
--------------- |
--------------- |
Total operating
expenses |
|
(1,566) |
(3,545) |
(5,111) |
(1,421) |
(3,923) |
(5,344) |
|
|
========= |
========= |
========= |
========= |
========= |
========= |
Net profit/(loss) on ordinary activities before finance costs and
taxation |
|
17,097 |
69,349 |
86,446 |
16,529 |
(32,184) |
(15,655) |
Finance
costs |
|
(24) |
(73) |
(97) |
(25) |
(75) |
(100) |
|
|
--------------- |
--------------- |
--------------- |
--------------- |
--------------- |
--------------- |
Net profit/(loss) on ordinary activities before
taxation |
|
17,073 |
69,276 |
86,349 |
16,504 |
(32,259) |
(15,755) |
Taxation
(charge)/credit |
|
(27) |
– |
(27) |
6 |
– |
6 |
|
|
--------------- |
--------------- |
--------------- |
--------------- |
--------------- |
--------------- |
Profit/(loss) for the
year |
|
17,046 |
69,276 |
86,322 |
16,510 |
(32,259) |
(15,749) |
|
|
========= |
========= |
========= |
========= |
========= |
========= |
Earnings/(loss) per ordinary share
(pence) |
7 |
18.54 |
75.37 |
93.91 |
16.56 |
(32.36) |
(15.80) |
|
|
========= |
========= |
========= |
========= |
========= |
========= |
The total columns of this
statement represent the Company’s Statement of Comprehensive
Income, prepared in accordance with UK-adopted International
Accounting Standards (IAS). The supplementary revenue and capital
accounts are both prepared under guidance published by the
Association of Investment Companies (AIC). All items in the above
statement derive from continuing operations. No operations were
acquired or discontinued during the year. All income is
attributable to the equity holders of the
Company.
The Company does not have
any other comprehensive income/(loss) (2023: £nil). The net
profit/(loss) for the year disclosed above represents the Company’s
total comprehensive
income/(loss).
Statement of Changes in
Equity for the year ended 30 November
2024
|
Notes |
Called
up share
capital |
Share
premium
account |
Capital
redemption
reserve |
Special
reserve |
Capital
reserves |
Revenue
reserve |
Total |
|
|
£’000 |
£’000 |
£’000 |
£’000 |
£’000 |
£’000 |
£’000 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
For the year ended 30 November
2024 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
At 30 November
2023 |
|
5,160 |
242,122 |
11,905 |
3,231 |
295,624 |
17,883 |
575,925 |
Total comprehensive
income: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Net profit for the
year |
|
– |
– |
– |
– |
69,276 |
17,046 |
86,322 |
Transactions with owners,
recorded directly to
equity: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Ordinary shares bought
back into treasury |
8,
9 |
– |
– |
– |
(3,213) |
(48,620) |
– |
(51,833) |
Share buyback
costs |
8,
9 |
– |
– |
– |
(18) |
(247) |
– |
(265) |
Dividends
paid1 |
6 |
– |
– |
– |
– |
– |
(14,241) |
(14,241) |
|
|
--------------- |
--------------- |
--------------- |
--------------- |
--------------- |
--------------- |
--------------- |
At 30 November
2024 |
|
5,160 |
242,122 |
11,905 |
– |
316,033 |
20,688 |
595,908 |
|
|
========= |
========= |
========= |
========= |
========= |
========= |
========= |
For the year ended 30 November
2023 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
At 30 November
2022 |
|
5,160 |
242,122 |
11,905 |
33,038 |
327,883 |
13,249 |
633,357 |
Total comprehensive
(loss)/income: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Net (loss)/profit for the
year |
|
– |
– |
– |
– |
(32,259) |
16,510 |
(15,749) |
Transactions with owners,
recorded directly to
equity: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Ordinary shares bought
back into treasury |
8,
9 |
– |
– |
– |
(29,646) |
– |
– |
(29,646) |
Share buyback
costs |
8,
9 |
– |
– |
– |
(161) |
– |
– |
(161) |
Dividends
paid1 |
6 |
– |
– |
– |
– |
– |
(11,876) |
(11,876) |
|
|
--------------- |
--------------- |
--------------- |
--------------- |
--------------- |
--------------- |
--------------- |
At 30 November
2023 |
|
5,160 |
242,122 |
11,905 |
3,231 |
295,624 |
17,883 |
575,925 |
|
|
========= |
========= |
========= |
========= |
========= |
========= |
========= |
1 Final
dividend of 11.45p per share for the year ended 30 November 2023, declared on 2 February 2024 and paid on 28 March 2024 and interim dividend of 3.75p per
share for the year ended 30 November
2024, declared on 24 July 2024
and paid on 27 August
2024.
2 Final
dividend of 8.50p per share for the year ended 30 November 2022, declared on 10 February 2023 and paid on 31 March 2023 and interim dividend of 3.30p per
share for the year ended 30 November
2023, declared on 27 July 2023
and paid on 1 September
2023.
Statement of Financial
Position as at 30 November
2024
|
Notes |
2024
£’000 |
2023
£’000 |
Non current
assets |
|
|
|
Investments held at fair
value through profit or
loss |
|
557,602 |
557,594 |
|
|
--------------- |
--------------- |
Current
assets |
|
|
|
Other
receivables |
|
1,536 |
2,280 |
Derivative financial
assets held at fair value through profit or
loss |
10 |
2,173 |
703 |
Current tax
asset |
|
400 |
365 |
Cash collateral pledged
with brokers |
10 |
700 |
775 |
Cash and cash equivalents
– cash at bank |
10 |
43,889 |
24,328 |
|
|
--------------- |
--------------- |
Total current
assets |
|
48,698 |
28,451 |
|
|
========= |
========= |
Total
assets |
|
606,300 |
586,045 |
|
|
========= |
========= |
Current
liabilities |
|
|
|
Other
payables |
|
(8,262) |
(7,740) |
Derivative financial
liabilities held at fair value through profit or
loss |
10 |
(360) |
(1,454) |
Cash and cash equivalents
– bank overdraft |
|
– |
(306) |
Liability for cash
collateral received |
10 |
(1,770) |
(620) |
|
|
--------------- |
--------------- |
Total current
liabilities |
|
(10,392) |
(10,120) |
|
|
========= |
========= |
Net
assets |
|
595,908 |
575,925 |
|
|
========= |
========= |
Equity |
|
|
|
Called up share
capital |
8 |
5,160 |
5,160 |
Share premium
account |
9 |
242,122 |
242,122 |
Capital redemption
reserve |
9 |
11,905 |
11,905 |
Special
reserve |
9 |
– |
3,231 |
Capital
reserves |
9 |
316,033 |
295,624 |
Revenue
reserve |
9 |
20,688 |
17,883 |
|
|
--------------- |
--------------- |
Total shareholders’
funds |
|
595,908 |
575,925 |
|
|
========= |
========= |
Net asset value per ordinary share
(pence) |
7 |
682.82 |
600.72 |
|
|
========= |
========= |
Cash Flow
Statement for the year ended
30 November
2024
|
2024
£’000 |
2023
£’000 |
Operating
activities |
|
|
Net profit/(loss) on
ordinary activities before
taxation1 |
86,349 |
(15,755) |
Add back finance
costs |
97 |
100 |
Net (profit)/loss on
investments held at fair value through profit or loss (including
transaction costs) |
(59,598) |
28,389 |
Net profit from
derivatives (including transaction
costs) |
(12,839) |
(242) |
Financing costs on
derivatives |
(3,230) |
(2,324) |
Net loss on foreign
exchange |
61 |
114 |
Sales of investments held
at fair value through profit or
loss |
310,643 |
207,680 |
Purchases of investments
held at fair value through profit or
loss |
(251,053) |
(216,892) |
Net receipts on closure of
derivatives |
13,505 |
5,915 |
Decrease/(increase) in
other receivables |
63 |
(470) |
Increase in other
payables |
1,499 |
2,892 |
Decrease in amounts due
from brokers |
681 |
1,321 |
(Decrease)/increase in
amounts due to
brokers |
(734) |
2,365 |
Net movement in cash
collateral held with
brokers |
1,225 |
(6,025) |
|
--------------- |
--------------- |
Net cash inflow from operating activities before
taxation |
86,669 |
7,068 |
Taxation
paid |
(62) |
(185) |
|
--------------- |
--------------- |
Net cash inflow from operating
activities |
86,607 |
6,883 |
|
========= |
========= |
Financing
activities |
|
|
Interest
paid |
(97) |
(100) |
Cash paid for ordinary
shares bought back into
treasury |
(52,341) |
(29,564) |
Dividends
paid |
(14,241) |
(11,876) |
|
--------------- |
--------------- |
Net cash outflow from financing
activities |
(66,679) |
(41,540) |
|
========= |
========= |
Increase/(decrease) in cash and cash
equivalents |
19,928 |
(34,657) |
Effect of foreign exchange
rate changes |
(61) |
(114) |
|
--------------- |
--------------- |
Change in cash and cash
equivalents |
19,867 |
(34,771) |
Cash and cash equivalents
at start of year |
24,022 |
58,793 |
|
--------------- |
--------------- |
Cash and cash equivalents at end of
year |
43,889 |
24,022 |
|
========= |
========= |
Comprised
of: |
|
|
Cash at
bank |
412 |
– |
Bank
overdraft |
– |
(306) |
Cash
Fund2 |
43,477 |
24,328 |
|
--------------- |
--------------- |
|
43,889 |
24,022 |
|
========= |
========= |
1
Dividends and interest received in cash during the year amounted to
£15,643,000 and £1,459,000 respectively (2023: £15,499,000 and
£1,191,000).
2 Cash
Fund represents funds held on deposit with the BlackRock
Institutional Cash Series plc – Sterling Liquid Environmentally
Aware Fund.
Notes to the Financial
Statements for the year ended
30 November
2024
1. Principal
activity
The principal activity of
the Company is that of an investment trust company within the
meaning of Section 1158 of the Corporation Tax Act
2010.
2. Accounting
policies
The principal accounting
policies adopted by the Company have been applied consistently,
other than where new policies have been adopted and are set out
below.
(a) Basis of
preparation
The financial statements
have been prepared under the historic cost convention modified by
the revaluation of certain financial assets and financial
liabilities held at fair value through profit or loss and in
accordance with UK-adopted International Accounting Standards
(IAS), with future changes being subject to endorsement by the UK
Endorsement Board and with the requirements of the Companies Act
2006 as applicable to companies reporting under those standards.
All of the Company’s operations are of a continuing
nature.
Insofar as the Statement
of Recommended Practice (SORP) for investment trust companies and
venture capital trusts, issued by the Association of Investment
Companies (AIC) in October 2019 and
updated in July 2022, is compatible
with UK-adopted IAS, the Financial Statements have been prepared in
accordance with the guidance set out in the
SORP.
Substantially all of the
assets of the Company consist of securities that are readily
realisable and, accordingly, the Directors are satisfied that the
Company has adequate resources to continue in operational existence
for the foreseeable future for the period to 30 November 2026, being a period of at least
twelve months from the date of approval of the Financial Statements
and therefore consider the going concern assumption to be
appropriate. The Directors have reviewed the income and expense
projections and the liquidity of the investment portfolio in making
their assessment.
The Directors have
considered the impact of climate change on the value of the
investments included in the Financial Statements and have concluded
that there was no further impact of climate change to be considered
as the investments are valued based on market pricing as required
by IFRS 13.
None of the Company’s
other assets and liabilities were considered to be potentially
impacted by climate change.
The Company’s Financial
Statements are presented in Sterling, which is the functional
currency of the Company and the currency of the primary economic
environment in which the Company operates. All values are rounded
to the nearest thousand pounds (£’000) except where otherwise
indicated.
Adoption of new and
amended International Accounting Standards and
interpretations:
IFRS 17 – Insurance
contracts (effective 1 January 2023). This standard replaced IFRS 4
and applies to all types of insurance contracts. IFRS 17 provides a
consistent and comprehensive model for insurance contracts covering
all relevant accounting
aspects.
IAS 12 – Deferred tax
related to assets and liabilities arising from a single
transaction (effective 1 January 2023). The International Accounting
Standards Board (IASB) has amended IAS 12 Income Taxes to require
companies to recognise deferred tax on particular transactions
that, on initial recognition, give rise to equal amounts of taxable
and deductible temporary differences. According to the amended
guidance, a temporary difference that arises on initial recognition
of an asset or liability is not subject to the initial recognition
exemption if that transaction gave rise to equal amounts of taxable
and deductible temporary differences. These amendments might have a
significant impact on the preparation of financial statements by
companies that have substantial balances of right-of-use assets,
lease liabilities, decommissioning, restoration and similar
liabilities. The impact for those affected would be the recognition
of additional deferred tax assets and
liabilities.
IAS 8 – Definition of
accounting estimates (effective 1 January 2023). The IASB has amended IAS 8
Accounting Policies, Changes in Accounting Estimates and Errors to
help distinguish between accounting policies and accounting
estimates, replacing the definition of accounting
estimates.
IAS 1 and IFRS Practice
Statement 2 – Disclosure of accounting
policies (effective 1 January 2023). The IASB has amended IAS 1
Presentation of Financial Statements to help preparers in deciding
which accounting policies to disclose in their financial statements
by stating that an entity is now required to disclose material
accounting policies instead of significant accounting
policies.
IAS 12 – International Tax
Reform Pillar Two Model Rules (effective 1 January 2023). The IASB has published
amendments to IAS 12 Income Taxes to respond to stakeholders’
concerns about the potential implications of the imminent
implementation of the OECD pillar two rules on the accounting for
income taxes. The amendment is an exception to the requirements in
IAS 12 that an entity does not recognise and does not disclose
information about deferred tax assets as liabilities related to the
OECD pillar two income taxes and a requirement that current tax
expenses must be disclosed separately to pillar two income
taxes.
The amendment of these
standards did not have any significant impact on the
Company.
Relevant International
Accounting Standards that have yet to be
adopted:
IAS 1 – Classification of
liabilities as current or non current
(effective 1 January 2024). The IASB has amended IAS 1
Presentation of Financial Statements to clarify its requirement for
the presentation of liabilities depending on the rights that exist
at the end of the reporting period. The amendment requires
liabilities to be classified as non current if the entity has a
substantive right to defer settlement for at least 12 months at the
end of the reporting period. The amendment no longer refers to
unconditional
rights.
IAS 1 – Non current
liabilities with covenants (effective 1 January 2024). The IASB has amended IAS 1
Presentation of Financial Statements to introduce additional
disclosures for liabilities with covenants within 12 months of the
reporting period. The additional disclosures include the nature of
covenants, when the entity is required to comply with covenants,
the carrying amount of related liabilities and circumstances that
may indicate that the entity will have difficulty complying with
the covenants.
IAS 21 – Lack of
exchangeability (effective 1 January 2025). The IASB issued amendments to
IAS 21 The Effects of Changes in Foreign Exchange Rates to specify
how an entity should assess whether a currency is exchangeable and
how it should determine a spot exchange rate when exchangeability
is lacking. The amendments also require disclosure of information
that enables users of its financial statements to understand how
the currency not being exchangeable into the other currency
affects, or is expected to affect, the entity’s financial
performance, financial position and cash
flows.
IFRS 18 – Presentation and
disclosure in financial statements
(effective 1 January 2027). The IASB issued IFRS 18, which
replaces IAS 1 Presentation of Financial Statements. IFRS 18
introduces new requirements for presentation within the statement
of profit or loss, including specified totals and subtotals.
Furthermore, entities are required to classify all income and
expenses within the statement of profit or loss into one of five
categories: operating, investing, financing, income taxes and
discontinued operations, whereof the first three are new. It also
requires disclosure of newly defined management defined performance
measures, subtotals of income and expenses, and includes new
requirements for aggregation and disaggregation of financial
information based on the identified ‘roles’ of the primary
financial statements and the
notes.
None of the standards that
have been issued, but are not yet effective, are expected to have a
material impact on the
Company.
(b) Presentation of the
Statement of Comprehensive Income
In order to better reflect
the activities of an investment trust company and in accordance
with guidance issued by the AIC, supplementary information which
analyses the Statement of Comprehensive Income between items of a
revenue and a capital nature has been presented alongside the
Statement of Comprehensive
Income.
(c) Segmental
reporting
The Directors are of the
opinion that the Company is engaged in a single segment of business
being investment
business.
(d)
Income
Dividends receivable on
equity shares are recognised as revenue for the year on an
ex-dividend basis. Where no ex-dividend date is available,
dividends receivable on or before the year end are treated as
revenue for the year. Provision is made for any dividends not
expected to be received. Special dividends, if any, are treated as
a capital or a revenue receipt depending on the facts or
circumstances of each particular case. The return on a debt
security is recognised on a time apportionment basis so as to
reflect the effective yield on the debt
security.
Deposit interest
receivable is accounted for on an accruals basis. Interest income
from the Cash Fund is accounted for on an accruals
basis.
Where the Company has
elected to receive its dividends in the form of additional shares
rather than in cash, the cash equivalent of the dividend is
recognised as income. Any excess in the value of the shares
received over the amount of the cash dividend is recognised in
capital.
(e)
Expenses
All expenses, including
finance costs, are accounted for on an accruals basis. Expenses
have been charged wholly to the revenue column of the Statement of
Comprehensive Income, except as
follows:
·
expenses which are incidental to the acquisition or sale of an
investment are charged to the capital column of the Statement of
Comprehensive Income. Details of transaction costs on the purchases
and sales of investments are disclosed within note 10 to the
Financial Statements contained within the annual report and
accounts;
·
expenses are treated as capital where a connection with the
maintenance or enhancement of the value of the investments can be
demonstrated;
·
the investment management fee and finance costs have been allocated
25% to the revenue account and 75% to the capital account column of
the Statement of Comprehensive Income in line with the Board’s
expected long term split of returns, in the form of capital gains
and income, respectively, from the investment portfolio;
and
·
performance fees are allocated 100% to the capital column of the
Statement of Comprehensive Income as fees are generated in
connection with enhancing the value of the investment
portfolio.
(f)
Taxation
The tax expense represents
the sum of the tax currently payable and deferred tax. The tax
currently payable is based on the taxable profit for the year.
Taxable profit differs from net profit as reported in the Statement
of Comprehensive Income because it excludes items of income or
expenses that are taxable or deductible in other years and it
further excludes items that are never taxable or deductible. The
Company’s liability for current tax is calculated using tax rates
that were applicable at the balance sheet
date.
Where expenses are
allocated between capital and revenue accounts, any tax relief in
respect of expenses is allocated between capital and revenue
returns on the marginal basis using the Company’s effective rate of
corporation tax for the accounting
period.
Deferred taxation is
recognised in respect of all temporary differences that have
originated but not reversed at the financial reporting date, where
transactions or events that result in an obligation to pay more
taxation in the future or right to pay less taxation in the future
have occurred at the financial reporting date. This is subject to
deferred taxation assets only being recognised if it is considered
more likely than not that there will be suitable profits from which
the future reversal of the temporary differences can be deducted.
Deferred taxation assets and liabilities are measured at the rates
applicable to the legal jurisdictions in which they
arise.
(g) Investments held at
fair value through profit or loss
In accordance with IFRS 9,
the Company classifies its investments at initial recognition as
held at fair value through profit or loss and are managed and
evaluated on a fair value basis in accordance with its investment
strategy and business
model.
All investments are
measured initially and subsequently at fair value through profit or
loss. Purchases of investments are recognised on a trade date
basis. Sales of investments are recognised at the trade date of the
disposal.
The fair value of the
financial investments is based on their quoted bid price at the
financial reporting date, without deduction for the estimated
selling costs. This policy applies to all current and non-current
asset investments held by the
Company.
Changes in the value of
investments held at fair value through profit or loss and gains and
losses on disposal are recognised in the Statement of Comprehensive
Income as “Net profit/(loss) on investments held at fair value
through profit or loss”. Also included within the heading are
transaction costs in relation to the purchase or sale of
investments.
For all financial
instruments not traded in an active market, the fair value is
determined by using various valuation techniques. Valuation
techniques include market approach (i.e., using recent arm’s length
market transactions adjusted as necessary and reference to the
current market value of another instrument that is substantially
the same) and the income approach (e.g., discounted cash flow
analysis and option pricing models making use of available and
supportable market data where possible). See note 2(o)
below.
(h)
Derivatives
The Company can hold long
and short positions in contracts for difference (CFDs) and index
futures which are held at fair value based on the bid prices of the
underlying securities in respect of long positions and the offer
prices of the underlying securities in respect of short
positions.
Profits and losses on
derivative transactions are recognised in the Statement of
Comprehensive Income. They are shown in the capital column of the
Statement of Comprehensive Income if they are of a capital nature
and are shown in the revenue column of the Statement of
Comprehensive Income if they are of a revenue nature. To the extent
that any profits or losses are of a mixed revenue and capital
nature, they are apportioned between revenue and capital
accordingly. Derivative assets and derivative liabilities that are
subject to netting arrangements are offset in the Statement of
Financial Position.
(i) Other receivables and
other payables
Other receivables and
other payables do not carry any interest and are short term in
nature and are accordingly stated on an amortised cost
basis.
(j) Dividends
payable
Under IAS, final dividends
should not be accrued in the Financial Statements unless they have
been approved by shareholders before the financial reporting date.
Interim dividends should not be recognised in the Financial
Statements unless they have been
paid.
Dividends payable to
equity shareholders are recognised in the Statement of Changes in
Equity.
(k) Foreign currency
translation
Transactions involving
foreign currencies are converted at the rate ruling at the date of
the transaction. Foreign currency monetary assets and liabilities
and non-monetary assets held at fair value are translated into
Sterling at the rate ruling on the financial reporting date.
Foreign exchange differences arising on translation are recognised
in the Statement of Comprehensive Income as a revenue or capital
item depending on the income or expense to which they relate. For
investment transactions and investments held at the year end,
denominated in a foreign currency, the resulting gains or losses
are included in the gain on investments held at fair value through
profit or loss in the Statement of Comprehensive
Income.
(l) Cash and cash
equivalents
Cash comprises cash in
hand and on demand deposits. Cash equivalents are short term,
highly liquid investments that are readily convertible to known
amounts of cash and that are subject to an insignificant risk of
changes in
value.
The Cash Fund is managed
by BlackRock Asset Management Ireland Limited and is subject to
fees and expenses which are capped at 0.03% of the NAV. The
investment is managed as part of the Company’s cash and cash
equivalents as defined under IAS 7 and is presented as a cash
equivalent in the Financial
Statements.
(m) Bank
borrowings
Bank overdrafts are
recorded as the proceeds received. Finance charges, including any
premium payable on settlement or redemption and direct issue costs,
are accounted for on an accruals basis in the Statement of
Comprehensive Income using the effective interest rate method and
are added to the carrying amount of the instruments to the extent
that they are not settled in the period in which they
arise.
(n) Share repurchases,
share reissues and new share issues
Shares repurchased and
subsequently cancelled – share capital is reduced by the nominal
value of the shares repurchased, and the capital redemption reserve
is correspondingly increased in accordance with Section 733 of the
Companies Act 2006. The full cost of the repurchase is charged to
the special
reserve.
Shares repurchased and
held in treasury – the full cost of the repurchase is charged to
the special reserve.
Where treasury shares are
subsequently re-issued:
·
amounts received to the extent of the repurchase price are credited
to the special reserve;
and
·
any surplus received in excess of the repurchase price is taken to
the share premium
account.
Where new shares are
issued, the par value is taken to called up share capital and
amounts received to the extent of any surplus received in excess of
the par value are taken to the share premium
account.
Share issue costs are
charged to the share premium account. Costs on share reissues are
charged to the special reserve and capital
reserves.
(o) Critical accounting
estimates and judgements
The Directors of the
Company make estimates and assumptions concerning the future. The
resulting accounting estimates and assumptions will, by definition,
seldom equal the related actual results. Estimates and judgements
are regularly evaluated and are based on historical experience and
other factors, including expectations of future events that are
believed to be reasonable under the circumstances. The Directors do
not believe that any accounting judgements or estimates have a
significant risk of causing a material adjustment to the carrying
amount of assets and liabilities within the next financial year.
There are no critical accounting estimates or
judgements.
3.
Income
|
2024
£’000 |
2023
£’000 |
Investment
income: |
|
|
UK
dividends |
12,887 |
12,168 |
UK special
dividends |
575 |
1,464 |
UK property income
distributions |
803 |
610 |
Dividends from UK
REITs1 |
169 |
33 |
Overseas
dividends |
1,346 |
1,706 |
Overseas property income
distributions |
118 |
– |
Dividends from overseas
REITs1 |
172 |
– |
|
--------------- |
--------------- |
Total investment
income2 |
16,070 |
15,981 |
|
========= |
========= |
Net income from
derivatives |
1,024 |
830 |
Other
income: |
|
|
Deposit
interest |
14 |
3 |
Interest from Cash
Fund |
1,530 |
1,083 |
Collateral
interest |
25 |
53 |
|
--------------- |
--------------- |
Total other
income |
1,569 |
1,139 |
|
========= |
========= |
Total
income |
18,663 |
17,950 |
|
========= |
========= |
1 REITs
– real estate investment
trusts.
2 UK and
overseas dividends are presented based on the country of domicile
of the respective underlying portfolio
company.
Special dividends of
£518,000 have been recognised in capital during the year (2023:
£nil).
4. Investment management
and performance
fees
|
2024 |
2023 |
|
Revenue
£’000 |
Capital
£’000 |
Total
£’000 |
Revenue
£’000 |
Capital
£’000 |
Total
£’000 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Investment management
fee |
644 |
1,931 |
2,575 |
629 |
1,889 |
2,518 |
Performance
fee |
– |
1,593 |
1,593 |
– |
2,014 |
2,014 |
|
--------------- |
--------------- |
--------------- |
--------------- |
--------------- |
--------------- |
Total |
644 |
3,524 |
4,168 |
629 |
3,903 |
4,532 |
|
========= |
========= |
========= |
========= |
========= |
========= |
Investment management
fee
The investment management
fee is calculated at the rate of 0.35% per annum on month end Gross
Assets. For the purposes of this note, Gross Assets are defined as
the value of the portfolio of the Company, including uninvested
cash, with the portfolio valuation based on value at risk (with
value at risk being the gross asset value of the long-only
portfolio plus the gross value of the underlying equities, long and
short, to which the Company is exposed through derivatives
including CFDs and index futures). The management fee is charged
25% to the revenue account and 75% to the capital account of the
Statement of Comprehensive Income. There is no additional fee for
company secretarial and administration
services.
Performance
fee
The performance fee is
calculated at the rate of 15% of the outperformance of the Company.
For the purpose of this note, outperformance is defined as the
amount by which the annualised percentage Net Asset Value total
return of the Company arithmetically exceeds the annualised
percentage return of the Benchmark Index, measured over a rolling
two-year performance period. This rate is applied to the average
Gross Assets, in that rolling two-year performance period.
Outperformance is the amount by which the Net Asset Value total
return arithmetically exceeds the Benchmark Index total
return.
There is a cap on the
annual total management and performance fees of 1.25% per financial
year of the average Gross Assets over the rolling two-year
performance period (the “Cap” or “Capped Amount”) which has the
effect of capping the annual performance fees at circa 0.9% of
average Gross Assets and which means that the performance fee from
any performance period will not exceed 0.9% of average Gross Assets
for the relevant performance
period.
The performance fee is
calculated daily for the rolling two-year performance period ending
30 November 2024 and the rolling two-year performance period ending
30 November 2025, and accruals are made in the NAV subject to the
Cap. The performance fee is payable on 30 November each year
in relation to the rolling two-year performance period ending on
that date. The accrual is calculated applying the following
assumptions:
·
The Benchmark Index remains
unchanged;
·
The Net Asset Value total return performs in line with the
Benchmark Index total return for the remainder of the respective
rolling two-year performance periods ending 30 November 2024 and 30
November 2025;
and
·
The future value of Gross Assets for performance fee purposes is
the same at the balance sheet
date.
The amount of
outperformance on which a performance fee has not been paid in a
financial year due to the application of the Cap will be carried
forward to offset against future shortfall returns. As at 1
December 2024, the carried forward unpaid net outperformance, net
of prior period shortfall returns, available to offset against
future shortfall returns was 4.8% (1 December 2023:
4.8%).
On the first day of the
financial year, due to the application of the Cap in the prior
financial year, any performance fee for the ongoing rolling
two-year performance period not yet recognised is accrued in the
daily NAV released to the London Stock Exchange on that
day.
Performance fees have been
wholly allocated to the capital account of the Statement of
Comprehensive Income as the performance has been predominantly
generated through capital returns from the investment portfolio.
For the year ended 30 November 2024, the total accrual of the
performance fee for all rolling two-year performance periods
amounted to £3,607,000 (2023: £2,014,000), calculated as
follows:
·
For the annualised rolling two-year performance period to 30
November 2024, the Company outperformed the benchmark by 2.7% as at
30 November 2024. A performance fee of £2,982,000 relating to this
performance period was accrued at the date of this report;
and
·
For the annualised rolling two-year performance period to 30
November 2025, the Company has outperformed the benchmark by 0.6%
as at 30 November 2024. A performance fee of £625,000 relating to
this performance period has been accrued at the date of this
report, which does not become payable until 30 November 2025,
subject to the ongoing performance of the
Company.
5. Other operating
expenses
|
2024
£’000 |
2023
£’000 |
Allocated to
revenue: |
|
|
Custody
fee |
7 |
7 |
Auditor’s
remuneration1 |
70 |
58 |
Registrar’s
fee |
44 |
44 |
Directors’
emoluments2 |
211 |
224 |
Broker
fees |
48 |
36 |
Depositary
fees |
70 |
70 |
Marketing
fees |
175 |
149 |
FCA
fees |
29 |
27 |
Printing and postage
fees |
55 |
43 |
Directors search
fees |
51 |
– |
Directors evaluation
fees |
30 |
– |
AIC
fees |
22 |
21 |
Stock exchange listing
fees |
36 |
31 |
Write back of prior year
expenses3 |
(27) |
(12) |
Other administrative
costs |
101 |
94 |
|
--------------- |
--------------- |
Total revenue
expenses |
922 |
792 |
|
========= |
========= |
Allocated to
capital: |
|
|
Custody transaction
charges4 |
21 |
20 |
|
--------------- |
--------------- |
Total |
943 |
812 |
|
========= |
========= |
The Company’s ongoing
charges5, calculated as a percentage of average daily
net assets and using the management fee and all other operating
expenses, excluding performance fees, finance costs, direct
transaction costs, custody transaction charges, VAT recovered,
taxation, prior year expenses written back and certain
non-recurring items
were: |
0.56% |
0.54% |
The Company’s ongoing
charges5, calculated as a percentage of average daily
net assets and using the management fee and all other operating
expenses, including performance fees but excluding finance costs,
direct transaction costs, custody transaction charges, VAT
recovered, taxation, prior year expenses written back and certain
non-recurring items
were: |
0.82% |
0.87% |
|
========= |
========= |
1 No
non-audit services were provided by the Company’s
auditors.
2
Further information on Directors’ emoluments can be found in the
Directors’ Remuneration Report contained within the annual report
and accounts. The Company has no
employees.
3
Relates to audit fees, printing fees, legal fees, professional
fees, miscellaneous fees and Directors’ expenses written back
during the year (2023: Directors’ recruitment fees, miscellaneous
fees and postage fees).
4 For
the year ended 30 November 2024, expenses of £21,000 (2023:
£20,000) were charged to the capital account of the Statement of
Comprehensive Income. These relate to transaction costs charged by
the Custodian on sale and purchase
trades.
5
Alternative Performance Measures, see Glossary contained within the
annual report and accounts.
6.
Dividends
Dividends paid on equity
shares: |
Record
date |
Payment
date |
2024
£’000 |
2023
£’000 |
|
|
|
|
|
Final dividend of 11.45p
per share for the year ended 30 November 2023 (2022:
8.50p) |
23 February
2024 |
28 March
2024 |
10,841 |
8,595 |
Interim dividend of 3.75p
per share for the year ended 30 November 2024 (2023:
3.30p) |
2 August
2024 |
27 August
2024 |
3,400 |
3,281 |
|
|
|
--------------- |
--------------- |
Total |
|
|
14,241 |
11,876 |
|
|
|
========= |
========= |
The total dividends
payable in respect of the year ended 30 November 2024 which form
the basis of Section 1158 of the Corporation Tax Act 2010 and
Section 833 of the Companies Act 2006, and the amounts proposed,
meet the relevant requirements as set out in this
legislation.
Dividends paid or declared
on equity
shares: |
2024
£’000 |
2023
£’000 |
|
|
|
Interim dividend of 3.75p
per share for the year ended 30 November 2024 (2023:
3.30p) |
3,400 |
3,281 |
Final dividend of 14.25p
per share for the year ended 30 November 20241 (2023:
11.45p) |
11,603 |
10,911 |
|
--------------- |
--------------- |
Total |
15,003 |
14,192 |
|
========= |
========= |
1
Based on 81,421,864 ordinary shares in issue on 18 February
2025.
7. Earnings/(loss) and net
asset value per ordinary share
Total revenue, capital
earnings/(loss) and net asset value per ordinary share are shown
below and have been calculated using the
following:
|
Year
ended
30 November
2024 |
Year
ended
30 November
2023 |
|
|
|
Net revenue profit
attributable to ordinary shareholders
(£’000) |
17,046 |
16,510 |
Net capital profit/(loss)
attributable to ordinary shareholders
(£’000) |
69,276 |
(32,259) |
|
--------------- |
--------------- |
Total profit/(loss) attributable to ordinary shareholders
(£’000) |
86,322 |
(15,749) |
|
========= |
========= |
Equity shareholders’ funds
(£’000) |
595,908 |
575,925 |
|
========= |
========= |
The weighted average
number of ordinary shares in issue during the year on which the
earnings per ordinary share was calculated
was: |
91,924,583 |
99,704,909 |
The actual number of
ordinary shares in issue at the end of the year on which the net
asset value per ordinary share was calculated
was: |
87,271,864 |
95,872,161 |
|
--------------- |
--------------- |
Earnings/(loss) per ordinary
share |
|
|
Revenue earnings per share
(pence) – basic and
diluted |
18.54 |
16.56 |
Capital earnings/(loss)
per share (pence) – basic and
diluted |
75.37 |
(32.36) |
|
--------------- |
--------------- |
Total earnings/(loss) per share (pence) – basic and
diluted |
93.91 |
(15.80) |
|
========= |
========= |
|
As
at
30 November
2024 |
As
at
30 November
2023 |
|
|
|
Net asset value per
ordinary share
(pence) |
682.82 |
600.72 |
Ordinary share price
(pence) |
593.00 |
579.00 |
|
========= |
========= |
There were no dilutive
securities at the year end.
8. Called up share
capital
|
Ordinary
shares
in issue
number |
Treasury
shares
number |
Total
shares
number |
Nominal
value
£’000 |
Allotted, called up and fully paid share capital
comprised: |
|
|
|
|
Ordinary shares of 5 pence
each |
|
|
|
|
At 30 November
2022 |
101,158,864 |
2,051,000 |
103,209,864 |
5,160 |
Ordinary shares bought
back into treasury |
(5,286,703) |
5,286,703 |
– |
– |
|
------------------ |
------------------ |
------------------ |
------------------ |
At 30 November
2023 |
95,872,161 |
7,337,703 |
103,209,864 |
5,160 |
|
=========== |
=========== |
=========== |
=========== |
Ordinary shares bought
back into treasury |
(8,600,297) |
8,600,297 |
– |
– |
|
------------------ |
------------------ |
------------------ |
------------------ |
At 30 November
2024 |
87,271,864 |
15,938,000 |
103,209,864 |
5,160 |
|
=========== |
=========== |
=========== |
=========== |
During the year ended 30
November 2024, the Company bought back 8,600,297 shares into
treasury (2023: 5,286,703) for a total consideration of £52,098,000
(2023: £29,807,000) including
costs.
Since 30 November 2024 and
up to 18 February 2025, 5,850,000 shares have been bought back into
treasury for a total consideration of
£34,228,000.
The ordinary shares give
shareholders voting rights, the entitlement to all of the capital
growth in the Company’s assets and to all income from the Company
that is resolved to be
distributed.
9.
Reserves
|
|
|
Distributable
reserves |
|
Share
premium
account
£’000 |
Capital
redemption
reserve
£’000 |
Special
reserve
£’000 |
Capital
reserve
arising on
investments
sold
£’000 |
Capital
reserve
arising on
revaluation
of
investments
held
£’000 |
Revenue
reserve
£’000 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
At 30 November
2023 |
242,122 |
11,905 |
3,231 |
322,729 |
(27,105) |
17,883 |
Movement during the
year: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total comprehensive
income: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Net profit for the
year |
– |
– |
– |
895 |
68,381 |
17,046 |
Transactions with owners,
recorded directly to
equity: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Ordinary shares bought
back into treasury |
– |
– |
(3,213) |
(48,620) |
– |
– |
Share buyback
costs |
– |
– |
(18) |
(247) |
– |
– |
Dividends
paid |
– |
– |
– |
– |
– |
(14,241) |
|
--------------- |
--------------- |
--------------- |
--------------- |
--------------- |
--------------- |
At 30 November
2024 |
242,122 |
11,905 |
– |
274,757 |
41,276 |
20,688 |
|
========= |
========= |
========= |
========= |
========= |
========= |
|
|
|
Distributable
reserves |
|
Share
premium
account
£’000 |
Capital
redemption
reserve
£’000 |
Special
reserve
£’000 |
Capital
reserve
arising on
investments
sold
£’000 |
Capital
reserve
arising on
revaluation
of
investments
held
£’000 |
Revenue
reserve
£’000 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
At 30 November
2022 |
242,122 |
11,905 |
33,038 |
321,274 |
6,609 |
13,249 |
Movement during the
year: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total comprehensive
income/(loss): |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Net profit/(loss) for the
year |
– |
– |
– |
1,455 |
(33,714) |
16,510 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Transactions with owners,
recorded directly to
equity: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Ordinary shares bought
back into treasury |
– |
– |
(29,646) |
– |
– |
– |
Share buyback
costs |
– |
– |
(161) |
– |
– |
– |
Dividends
paid |
– |
– |
– |
– |
– |
(11,876) |
|
--------------- |
--------------- |
--------------- |
--------------- |
--------------- |
--------------- |
At 30 November
2023 |
242,122 |
11,905 |
3,231 |
322,729 |
(27,105) |
17,883 |
|
========= |
========= |
========= |
========= |
========= |
========= |
The share premium account
and capital redemption reserves are not distributable reserves
under the Companies Act 2006. In accordance with ICAEW Technical
Release 02/17BL on Guidance on Realised and Distributable Profits
under the Companies Act 2006, the special reserve and capital
reserves may be used as distributable reserves for all purposes
and, in particular, the repurchase by the Company of its ordinary
shares and for payments such as dividends. In accordance with the
Company’s Articles of Association, the special reserve, capital
reserves and the revenue reserve may be distributed by way of
dividend. At 30 November 2024, the gain on capital reserve arising
on the revaluation of investments of £41,276,000 (2023: no gain) is
subject to fair value movements and may not be readily realisable
at short notice, as such any gains may not be entirely
distributable. The investments are subject to financial risks, as
such capital reserves (arising on investments sold) and the revenue
reserve may not be entirely distributable if a loss occurred during
the realisation of these
investments.
10. Valuation of financial
instruments
Financial assets and
financial liabilities are either carried in the Statement of
Financial Position at their fair value (investments and
derivatives) or at an amount which is a reasonable approximation of
fair value (due from brokers, dividends and interest receivable,
due to brokers, accruals, cash at bank and bank overdrafts). IFRS
13 requires the Company to classify fair value measurements using a
fair value hierarchy that reflects the significance of inputs used
in making the measurements. The valuation techniques used by the
Company are explained in the accounting policies note 2(g) to the
Financial Statements
above.
Categorisation within the
hierarchy has been determined on the basis of the lowest level
input that is significant to the fair value measurement of the
relevant asset or liability.
The fair value hierarchy
has the following levels:
Level 1 – Quoted market
price for identical instruments in active
markets
A financial instrument is
regarded as quoted in an active market if quoted prices are readily
available from an exchange, dealer, broker, industry group, pricing
service or regulatory agency and those prices represent actual and
regularly occurring market transactions on an arm’s length basis.
The Company does not adjust the quoted price for these
instruments.
Level 2 – Valuation
techniques using observable inputs
This category includes
instruments valued using quoted prices for similar instruments in
markets that are considered less than active, or other valuation
techniques where all significant inputs are directly or indirectly
observable from market
data.
Valuation techniques used
for non-standardised financial instruments such as options,
currency swaps and other over-the-counter derivatives include the
use of comparable recent arm’s length transactions, reference to
other instruments that are substantially the same, discounted cash
flow analysis, option pricing models and other valuation techniques
commonly used by market participants making the maximum use of
market inputs and relying as little as possible on entity specific
inputs.
As at the year end the
long and short derivative positions were valued using the
underlying equity bid price (offer price in respect of short
positions) and the contract price at the inception of the trade or
at the trade reset date. There have been no changes to the
valuation technique since the previous year or as at the date of
this report.
Contracts for difference
have been classified as Level 2 investments as their valuation has
been based on market observable inputs represented by the market
prices of the underlying quoted securities to which these contracts
expose the Company.
Level 3 – Valuation
techniques using significant unobservable
inputs
This category includes all
instruments where the valuation technique includes inputs not based
on market data and these inputs could have a significant impact on
the instrument’s
valuation.
This category also
includes instruments that are valued based on quoted prices for
similar instruments where significant entity determined adjustments
or assumptions are required to reflect differences between the
instruments and instruments for which there is no active market.
The Investment Manager considers observable data to be that market
data that is readily available, regularly distributed or updated,
reliable and verifiable, not proprietary, and provided by
independent sources that are actively involved in the relevant
market.
The level in the fair
value hierarchy within which the fair value measurement is
categorised in its entirety is determined on the basis of the
lowest level input that is significant to the fair value
measurement. If a fair value measurement uses observable inputs
that require significant adjustment based on unobservable inputs,
that measurement is a Level 3
measurement.
Assessing the significance
of a particular input to the fair value measurement in its entirety
requires judgement, considering factors specific to the asset or
liability including an assessment of the relevant risks including
but not limited to credit risk, market risk, liquidity risk,
business risk and sustainability risk. The determination of what
constitutes ‘observable’ inputs requires significant judgement by
the Investment Manager and these risks are adequately captured in
the assumptions and inputs used in measurement of Level 3 assets or
liabilities.
Fair values of financial
assets and financial liabilities
The table below sets out
fair value measurements using the IFRS 13 fair value
hierarchy.
Financial
assets/(liabilities) at fair value through profit or loss at 30
November
2024 |
Level
1
£’000 |
Level
2
£’000 |
Level
3
£’000 |
Total
£’000 |
Assets: |
|
|
|
|
Equity
investments |
557,602 |
– |
– |
557,602 |
Contracts for difference
(fair value) |
– |
2,173 |
– |
2,173 |
|
--------------- |
--------------- |
--------------- |
--------------- |
Liabilities: |
|
|
|
|
Contracts for difference
(fair value) |
– |
(72) |
– |
(72) |
Index
future |
(288) |
– |
– |
(288) |
|
--------------- |
--------------- |
--------------- |
--------------- |
Total |
557,314 |
2,101 |
– |
559,415 |
|
========= |
========= |
========= |
========= |
Financial
assets/(liabilities) at fair value through profit or loss at 30
November
2023 |
Level
1
£’000 |
Level
2
£’000 |
Level
3
£’000 |
Total
£’000 |
Assets: |
|
|
|
|
Equity
investments |
557,594 |
– |
– |
557,594 |
Contracts for difference
(fair value) |
– |
703 |
– |
703 |
|
--------------- |
--------------- |
--------------- |
--------------- |
Liabilities: |
|
|
– |
|
Contracts for difference
(fair value) |
– |
(1,352) |
– |
(1,352) |
Index
future |
(102) |
– |
– |
(102) |
|
--------------- |
--------------- |
--------------- |
--------------- |
Total |
557,492 |
(649) |
– |
556,843 |
|
========= |
========= |
========= |
========= |
There were no transfers
between levels for financial assets and financial liabilities
during the year recorded at fair value as at 30 November 2024 and
30 November 2023. The Company did not hold any Level 3 securities
throughout the financial year or as at 30 November 2024 (2023:
nil).
For exchange listed equity
investments, the quoted price is the bid price. Contracts for
difference are valued based on the bid price of the underlying
quoted securities that the contracts relate to. Substantially, all
investments are valued based on unadjusted quoted market prices.
Where such quoted prices are readily available in an active market,
such prices are not required to be assessed or adjusted for any
price related risks, including climate risk, in accordance with the
fair value related requirements of the Company’s financial
reporting framework.
11. Related party
disclosure
Directors’
emoluments
At the date of this
report, the Board consists of six non-executive Directors, all of
whom are considered to be independent of the Manager by the
Board.
Disclosures of the
Directors’ interests in the ordinary shares of the Company and fees
and expenses payable to the Directors are set out in the Directors’
Remuneration Report contained within the annual report and
accounts. At 30 November 2024, £16,000 (2023: £18,000) was
outstanding in respect of Directors’
fees.
Significant
Holdings
The following investors
are:
a.
funds managed by the BlackRock Group or are affiliates of
BlackRock, Inc. (Related BlackRock Funds)
or
b.
investors (other than those listed in (a) above) who held more than
20% of the voting shares in issue in the Company and are as a
result, considered to be related parties to the Company
(Significant Investors).
|
Total % of
shares
held by Related
BlackRock
Funds |
Total % of shares held
by
Significant Investors
who
are not affiliates of
BlackRock Group or
BlackRock,
Inc. |
Number of
Significant
Investors who
are not affiliates of
BlackRock Group or
BlackRock,
Inc. |
As at 30 November
2024 |
1.2 |
n/a |
n/a |
As at 30 November
2023 |
1.3 |
n/a |
n/a |
12. Transactions with the
Investment Manager and AIFM
BlackRock Fund Managers
Limited (BFM) provides management and administration services to
the Company under a contract which is terminable on six months’
notice. BFM has (with the Company’s consent) delegated certain
portfolio and risk management services, and other ancillary
services, to BlackRock Investment Management (UK) Limited (BIM
(UK)). Further details of the investment management contract are
disclosed in the Directors’ Report contained within the annual
report and
accounts.
The investment management
fee due for the year ended 30 November 2024 amounted to £2,575,000
(2023: £2,518,000). At the year end, £1,906,000 (2023: £1,864,000)
was outstanding in respect of management
fees.
The performance fee
payable for the year ended 30 November 2024 amounted to £2,982,000
(2023: £nil). The total accrual of the performance fee for all
rolling two year performance periods amounted to £3,607,000 (2023:
£2,014,000), calculated as
follows:
·
For the annualised rolling two-year performance period to 30
November 2024, the Company has outperformed the benchmark by 2.7%
as at 30 November 2024. A performance fee of £2,982,000 relating to
this performance period has been accrued at the date of this
report; and
·
For the annualised rolling two-year performance period to 30
November 2025, the Company has outperformed the benchmark by 0.6%
as at 30 November 2024. A performance fee of £625,000 to this
performance period has been accrued at the date of this report,
which does not become payable until 30 November 2025, subject to
the ongoing performance of the
Company.
In addition to the above
services, BIM (UK) has provided marketing services. The total fees
paid or payable for these services for the year ended 30 November
2024 amounted to £175,000 excluding VAT (2023: £149,000). Marketing
fees of £124,000 (2023: £269,000) were outstanding at the year
end.
The Company has an
investment in the BlackRock Institutional Cash Series plc -
Sterling Liquid Environmentally Aware Fund of £43,477,000 (2023:
£24,328,000) which for the year ended 30 November 2024 and 30
November 2023 has been presented in the financial statements as a
cash equivalent.
The ultimate holding
company of the Manager and the Investment Manager is BlackRock,
Inc., a company incorporated in Delaware
USA.
13. Contingent
liabilities
There were no contingent
liabilities at 30 November 2024 (2023:
none).
14. Publication of
non-statutory accounts
The financial information
contained in this announcement does not constitute statutory
accounts as defined in the Companies Act 2006. The Annual
Report and Financial Statements for the year ended 30 November 2024
will be filed with the Registrar of Companies after the Annual
General
Meeting.
The figures set out above
have been reported upon by the auditor, whose report for the year
ended 30 November 2024 contains no qualification or statement under
section 498(2) or (3) of the Companies Act
2006.
The comparative figures
are extracts from the audited financial statements of BlackRock
Throgmorton Trust plc for the year ended 30 November 2023, which
have been filed with the Registrar of Companies. The report
of the auditor on those financial statements contained no
qualification or statement under Section 498 of the Companies
Act.
15. Annual
report
Copies of the Annual
Report and Financial Statements will be sent to members shortly and
will be available from the registered office, c/o The Company
Secretary, BlackRock Throgmorton Trust plc, 12 Throgmorton Avenue,
London EC2N
2DL.
16. Annual general
meeting
The Annual General Meeting
of the Company will be held at 12 Throgmorton Avenue, London EC2N
2DL on Tuesday, 25 March 2025 at 12:00
p.m.
ENDS
The Annual Report will
also be available on the BlackRock website at
blackrock.com/uk/thrg. Neither the contents of the Manager’s
website nor the contents of any website accessible from hyperlinks
on the Manager’s website (or any other website) is incorporated
into, or forms part of, this
announcement.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION,
PLEASE CONTACT:
Sarah Beynsberger,
Director, Closed End Funds, BlackRock Investment Management (UK)
Limited
Tel: 020 7743 3000
Press
Enquiries:
Ed Hooper, Lansons
Communications – Tel: 0207 294 3616
E-mail: edh@lansons.com;
BlackRockInvestmentTrusts@lansons.com
19 February
2024
12 Throgmorton Avenue
London EC2N
2DL