Appendix: GAAP reconciliation
Consolidated income statement
reconciliation
Year
ended 30 April
|
Footnote
(below)
|
Statutory
2024
£m
|
Adjustments
2024
£m
|
Underlying
2024
£m
|
Statutory
2023
£m
|
Adjustments
2023
£m
|
Underlying
2023
£m
|
Revenue
|
(a)
|
1,833.1
|
(312.5)
|
1,520.6
|
1,489.7
|
(152.8)
|
1,336.9
|
Cost of sales
|
(b)
|
(1,400.2)
|
312.5
|
(1,087.7)
|
(1,054.1)
|
106.3
|
(947.8)
|
Gross profit
|
|
432.9
|
-
|
432.9
|
435.6
|
(46.5)
|
389.1
|
Administrative expenses
|
(c)
|
(239.1)
|
18.6
|
(220.5)
|
(236.1)
|
33.7
|
(202.4)
|
Operating profit
|
|
193.8
|
18.6
|
212.4
|
199.5
|
(12.8)
|
186.7
|
Income from associates
|
|
1.3
|
-
|
1.3
|
2.5
|
-
|
2.5
|
EBIT
|
|
195.1
|
18.6
|
213.7
|
202.0
|
(12.8)
|
189.2
|
Finance income
|
|
0.6
|
-
|
0.6
|
0.1
|
-
|
0.1
|
Finance costs
|
|
(33.6)
|
-
|
(33.6)
|
(23.4)
|
-
|
(23.4)
|
Profit before taxation
|
|
162.1
|
18.6
|
180.7
|
178.7
|
(12.8)
|
165.9
|
Taxation
|
(d)
|
(37.1)
|
(4.5)
|
(41.6)
|
(39.5)
|
1.9
|
(37.6)
|
Profit for the year
|
|
125.0
|
14.1
|
139.1
|
139.2
|
(10.9)
|
128.3
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Shares for EPS
calculation
|
|
226.3m
|
|
226.3m
|
230.8m
|
|
230.8m
|
Basic EPS
|
|
55.2p
|
|
61.4p
|
60.3p
|
|
55.6p
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Adjustments comprise:
|
Footnotes
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Revenue: sale of
vehicles
|
(a)
|
|
(312.5)
|
|
|
(152.8)
|
|
Cost of sales: revenue sale of
vehicles net down
|
(a)
|
|
312.5
|
|
|
152.8
|
|
Depreciation adjustment (Note
6)
|
|
|
-
|
|
|
(46.5)
|
|
Cost of sales
|
(b)
|
|
312.5
|
|
|
106.3
|
|
Gross profit
|
(a)+(b)
|
|
-
|
|
|
(46.5)
|
|
Exceptional items (Note
6)
|
|
|
-
|
|
|
13.5
|
|
Amortisation of acquired intangible
assets (Note 6)
|
|
|
18.6
|
|
|
20.2
|
|
Administrative expenses
|
(c)
|
|
18.6
|
|
|
33.7
|
|
Adjustments to EBIT
|
|
|
18.6
|
|
|
(12.8)
|
|
Adjustments to PBT
|
|
|
18.6
|
|
|
(12.8)
|
|
Tax on exceptional items (Note
6)
|
|
|
(4.5)
|
|
|
(2.1)
|
|
Other tax adjustments
|
|
|
-
|
|
|
4.0
|
|
Tax adjustments
|
(d)
|
|
(4.5)
|
|
|
1.9
|
|
Adjustments to profit
|
|
|
14.1
|
|
|
(10.9)
|
|
OPERATING REVIEW
Group overview
The importance of customer
experience remains at the heart of the Group's commercial
proposition and has been a key driver of the Group's performance in
recent years. Our strategic and operational actions this year have
focused on continuing to enhance our delivery of a differentiated
and market-leading suite of end-to-end mobility services for our
customers. This commitment to the client proposition
has driven strong growth in underlying profit before tax of
8.9%.
Continued volume growth in our
Claims & Services business and in rental revenue in both
UK&I and Spain together reflect the ongoing strong demand
across our geographies and the attractiveness of our integrated
mobility platform. This is underpinned by the structural
trends of growth in outsourcing, and increasing connectedness
within the mobility environment and also in vehicles
themselves. This connectedness enhances the benefits for
customers taking multiple services from us, reducing operational
friction, and the potential for greater cost efficiencies from
further growth of the platform.
We have also introduced greater
process automation and are developing further digital tools to
expand the customer proposition and streamline our organisational
structure, delivering simplified customer relationships and focused
account management priorities.
Vehicle supply dynamics improved
throughout FY2024, enabling greater fleet replacement. This is
where our strong balance sheet gives us a competitive advantage and
flexibility in quickly responding to fleet opportunities. The
shortfall in industry supply continues to impact parts availability
and supports long-term residual values.
Alongside fleet, we have made
significant investments into our locations, people and processes
which are designed to grow capacity, build efficiencies and improve
the customer journey. We are very mindful of the importance
of long-term customer retention through providing high quality
value-added services. We have sought to mitigate cost inflation
through procurement activity and changes to processes within
branches; these have been supported by careful pricing
increases.
Our new strategic framework and
brand refresh was launched in May 2024 including the new corporate
name, ZIGUP plc. It reflects our growth aspirations and
forward-looking purpose, focused on keeping our customers mobile,
smarter.
Vehicle supply
A continued rebound in automotive
production has supported greater vehicle supply availability and
improved future
visibility. As a
result, average UK lead times from order to delivery reduced from
over 150 days in early 2023 to below 50 days by the end of the
financial year, closer to historic levels. While list prices
have continued to rise, the frequency and scale of increases has
reduced, along with greater manufacturer incentives to support high
volume purchases. Spain has seen a similar trend and a
return to 2019-lead times for most vehicles.
In both markets, residual values
have softened as expected over the course of the year, but there
remains a shortfall of vehicles in the used market in the short
term. We expect residual markets to remain strong due to
this shortfall in used supply combined with higher pricing of new
vehicles and also potentially more limited volumes of traditional
LCVs as manufacturers move away from ICE production.
Model availability also improved
in the second half of the year with an increase in the supply of
smaller vans into the UK
which are in high demand, increasing to a quarter of new vehicle
supply. With the
implementation of the ZEV mandate in the UK in early 2024 designed
to support vehicle decarbonisation, there is greater emphasis from
OEMs on selling EVs.
As a result, these are becoming
more commonly bundled with petrol and diesel (ICE) vehicles for
volume sales. This
has created attractive opportunities for purchasers of our scale
and we expect to benefit from access to greater bundled volumes and
support on internal combustion engine vehicles from OEMs impacted
by limitations from the ZEV
mandate.
Strategic progress
Since 2020, our corporate strategy
has been focused on delivering the benefits of our end-to-end range
of products and services, which together offer differentiated
mobility solutions across the vehicle lifecycle, through an
integrated platform and which has achieved substantial underlying
revenue growth over this period.
In early 2024 we put in place a
simplified reporting structure and established an Executive
Committee in order to better assess and capitalise on the breadth
of opportunities before us. Alongside the rebranding exercise
we also introduced a refreshed strategic framework under three new
pillars, with progress under these described below: -
Enable: Joined up, sustainable smarter mobility
solutions
This encompasses developing
sustainable products, services and operational capabilities that
embrace technologies which enable increasingly connected mobility
within our customer proposition.
Within UK&I Rental we have
been focused on improving workshop and branch productivity and
connectivity, with customer-focused digital apps and providing
more data insights and emissions data to fleet customers to support
their fleet management and reporting requirements. In Spain
Rental we are preparing for the launch of an enhanced e-auction
platform for fleet disposals to improve the experience for
prospective used vehicle purchasers, and we have migrated our
telematics offering to a next-gen provider to maximise the use of
data intelligence.
Investment within our Claims &
Services business has included further deployment of robotics
within claims process management, connected analytics within the
bodyshops, along with tooling such as plastic bumper welding to
reduce the cost to repair and level of waste.
Deliver: A differentiated & responsible customer
experience
Deliver is centred around being
trusted by our customers to provide expert advice and service that
exceeds expectations, delivering industry-leading responsiveness
and operational efficiencies.
Throughout all businesses we have
been reinforcing our 'customer first' culture with enhanced
training and tools to support the customer experience. Against the
backdrop of constrained vehicle availability, the rental businesses
have worked tirelessly and customers have understood the challenges
facing the sector. Our strong feedback routes have reflected the
significant efforts made to keep our customers mobile, with
Auxillis NPS at over 65% and 'Excellent' UK&I rental Trustpilot
scores significantly above industry levels.
Further enhancements include
simplifying access to the full range of products and ancillary
services and streamlining and digitalising processes and customer
channels, such as a direct hire booking app.
We believe these actions will help
grow our share of wallet from existing customers as we provide a
broader range of services through a single touchpoint and with a
more holistic view of a customer's total needs. This has already
been seen at Blakedale where the top three customers each grew
their fleets over 30% with us and we broadened the range of
vehicles provided. Spain has invested in a new CRM system to better
monitor and respond to customer requirements, and expanded to
two-shift workshop patterns to increase capacity.
Grow: Broadening customers & markets, and an expanded
product offering
We are continually exploring
opportunities to responsibly grow the business's breadth, size and
capabilities, including into both complementary and new products
and geographies.
During the year we opened nine new
facilities across the UK and Spain, expanding the footprint and
increasing capacity in a number of key locations. We will add
further locations in the coming year and continue to explore
inorganic opportunities to grow the business, focused on achieving
long term earnings growth and sustainable shareholder
value.
Claims & Services added
further specialist segments to its customer base and continued to
expand the number of customers taking more than one service from us
on multi-year contracts. Our product offering was further expanded
through the acquisition of FridgeXpress at the start of the year
adding refrigerated solutions to the UK rental proposition.
This was enhanced both by the
launch of a corporate-focused car rental solution and the
introduction of a broad range of micro-mobility rental solutions
offering light electric vehicles suitable for urban and
pedestrian-focused areas such as waste management and parks, where
a number of our customers have contracts. Our pipeline across the
business remains very strong.
Supporting sustainability
For customers, our Drive to Zero
programme supports fleet owners in identifying the right strategy
and first steps in utilising EVs, or improving their fleet
management and driver behaviour to reduce emissions. Over the year,
we held 10 open days and driving courses with over 300 customers
attending with the opportunity to test out new
vehicles.
In the UK&I, e-LCVs on hire
more than doubled in the year to c.1,000 units with a number of
fleets renting EVs at scale; the largest now has over 100 EVs and
continues to grow with more orders after the year end. In
Spain, the business won EU grants to support the purchase of 500
additional EVs and 3,000 telematics units. The business is also
preparing a fleet software tool to allow managers to continually
assess the potential to migrate vehicles on their fleet to
EVs. Our ChargedEV business added solar and battery solutions
to its product portfolio, and we have developed a range of key
partnerships with energy providers to offer bundled solutions for
domestic and commercial customers.
Within our business, we have also
made clear progress in meeting our sustainability ambitions.
Over 90% of our company cars will be EV or hybrid vehicles by the
end of the current year, we diverted 99% of our waste from
landfill, switched to a more sustainable paint supply and
introduced a new waste and resource efficiency policy to promote
the greater use of circular economy principles. EV charging is now
installed in 75% of our UK sites and in most of our Spanish urban
sites, and over a third of all employees have undertaken EV
awareness learning modules.
Our people
Our people are critical to our
continued growth, and we invest in their training and career
journeys as we know these are key elements in maximising retention
in a challenging labour market. One third of roles filled in
the year were sourced internally, with the majority achieved
through promotion. Our key people-engagement metric rose again, up
1ppt to 75% on a strong 83% engagement.
Notably, there was a 13ppt
increase to 75% in those stating they understood the Group's
success criteria and their role in it, and over 80% felt the Group
was well positioned for growth. The number of industry awards
won across the business is testament to the talent and commitment
of our people.
Our apprentice schemes are a key
route for us to develop new technical talent, and there are now
over 400 apprentices and trainers working in the Group. Over
the past year, the retention rate for apprentices exceeded 90%,
reflecting the importance we placed on providing clarity and
support for a career with ZIGUP from the start. Over 2,000 days of
technical training were undertaken across the Group, as we ensured
all of our workshop and bodyshop teams were properly equipped to
manage what is an increasingly technical and connected automotive
environment.
Strong financial capacity and sustainable shareholder
returns
We adopt a conservative and
long-term value-oriented approach to capital allocation, which is
appropriate for the industry in which we operate and where leverage
is a natural part of the business model. We have a strong
balance sheet which provides the business with the ability to be
both long-term in our organic investment approach and highly
responsive to the increasing range of fleet acquisition
opportunities as well as agile in our approach to M&A
opportunities.
EBITDA of £446m for the year
delivered substantial cashflow to support business growth,
progressive dividends and share buybacks. Our balance sheet and
business model is attractive to lenders, with a diverse customer
base and an asset-backed profile supported by £1.3bn of vehicle
fleet compared to net debt of £742m. Leverage remained well
within our 1-2x target range, finishing the year at 1.5x, in line
with the prior year while also enabling substantial investment in
the fleet and returns to shareholders.
Given our continued confidence in
the outlook for the business, subject to shareholder approval, the
Board has proposed a final dividend of 17.5p per share (2023:
16.5p) to be paid on 27 September 2024 to shareholders on the
register as at close of business on 30 August 2024, bringing the
total dividend to 25.8p (2023: 24.0p), a 7.5% increase on the prior
year.
The Board continues to view share
buybacks as a useful element within our capital allocation
framework alongside a progressive dividend and will keep further
share repurchase activities under review. The third £30m tranche of
our buyback programme was completed in June 2024 and in total
across all three programmes has acquired 25.3m shares since 2022,
equating to 10% of ordinary share capital as a risk-free
enhancement of shareholder returns.
Financial review
Group revenue and EBIT
Year
ended 30 April
|
2024
£m
|
2023
£m
|
Change
£m
|
Change
|
Revenue - Vehicle hire
|
649.3
|
610.5
|
38.8
|
6.4%
|
Revenue - Vehicle sales
|
312.5
|
152.9
|
159.6
|
104.4%
|
Revenue - Claims and
services
|
871.4
|
726.3
|
145.0
|
20.0%
|
Total revenue
|
1,833.1
|
1,489.7
|
343.4
|
23.0%
|
Rental profit
|
109.7
|
102.3
|
7.4
|
7.2%
|
Disposal profit
|
61.9
|
51.5
|
10.4
|
20.2%
|
Claims and services
profit
|
51.4
|
44.5
|
6.9
|
15.4%
|
Corporate costs
|
(10.6)
|
(11.6)
|
1.1
|
(9.4%)
|
Underlying operating
profit
|
212.4
|
186.7
|
25.7
|
13.8%
|
Income from associates
|
1.3
|
2.5
|
(1.2)
|
(48.6%)
|
Underlying EBIT
|
213.7
|
189.2
|
24.5
|
13.0%
|
Underlying EBIT margin[1]
|
14.1%
|
14.2%
|
|
(0.1ppt)
|
Statutory EBIT
|
195.1
|
202.0
|
(6.9)
|
(3.4%)
|
Revenue
Total Group revenue, including
vehicle sales, of £1,833.1m was 23.0% higher than prior year while
revenue excluding vehicle sales of £1,520.6m (2023: £1,336.9m), was
13.7% higher than the prior year.
Hire revenues increased 6.4%
mainly due to pricing actions to address cost inflation; average
rental VOH was 1.6% lower than the prior year. Spain was able to
grow VOH due to wider availability of new vehicles, whereas the UK
reduced the rentable fleet as the oldest vehicles were defleeted
with less vehicles being available to replace them. Claims and
services revenue growth of 20.0% reflected increased volumes from
new business wins.
Vehicle sales revenue increased by
104.4% driven by a 102.2% increase in vehicles sold as we defleeted
our oldest cohort of vehicles.
EBIT
Statutory EBIT reduced by 3.4%,
while underlying EBIT of £213.7m increased 13.0% compared to the
prior year; reflecting higher disposal profits and volume growth in
Claims & Services. Statutory EBIT included a credit of £46.5m
in the prior year for adjustments to depreciation rates which was
£nil in the current year, amortisation on acquired intangible
assets of £18.6m (2023: £20.2m) and other exceptional items of £nil
(2023: £13.5m).
Rental profit increased £7.4m to
£109.7m (2023: £102.3m) with a £4.1m increase in UK&I and an
£3.2m increase in Spain. Claims & Services saw volume growth
particularly in fleet management services, coupled with
efficiencies in repair services resulting in an £5.7m increase in
underlying EBIT, including income from associates, to £52.7m (2023:
£47.0m).
Total disposal profits for the
year of £61.9m were 20.2% higher than the prior year with 36,800
vehicles sold (2023: 18,200) with residual values softening in the
UK as expected, whilst continuing to be strong in Spain and
remaining higher than pre-COVID-19 levels in both
businesses.
UK&I Rental
Year ended 30 April
|
2024
|
2023
|
Change
|
Underlying financial
results
|
£m
|
£m
|
|
Revenue - Vehicle hire[2]
|
384.4
|
367.7
|
4.6%
|
Revenue - Vehicle sales
|
226.9
|
104.9
|
116.2%
|
Total revenue
|
611.4
|
472.6
|
29.4%
|
Rental profit
|
59.8
|
55.6
|
7.4%
|
Rental margin %
|
15.5%
|
15.1%
|
0.4ppt
|
Disposal profit
|
34.0
|
37.8
|
(9.9%)
|
Underlying EBIT
|
93.8
|
93.4
|
0.4%
|
EBIT margin %[3]
|
24.4%
|
25.4%
|
(1.0ppt)
|
ROCE %
|
15.1%
|
16.3%
|
(1.2ppt)
|
Year ended 30 April
|
2024
|
2023
|
Change
|
KPIs
|
('000)
|
('000)
|
|
Average VOH
|
45.1
|
48.9
|
(7.7%)
|
Closing VOH
|
43.8
|
46.5
|
(5.8%)
|
Average utilisation %
|
91%
|
93%
|
(2ppt)
|
Highlights
Rental revenue rose 4.6% compared
to the prior year, including strong growth in specialist vehicle
operations and ancillary revenues. Together with carefully
managed pricing actions this more than offset headwinds from
limited LCV supply. With demand remaining robust across all
customer sectors, the business worked to maximise availability to
deliver on customer requirements, including growing customer
interest in e-LCVs where vehicles on rent more than
doubled.
The acquisition of FridgeXpress
added refrigerated vehicle solutions to the overall customer
proposition, which is increasingly offered to rental customers
through more unified relationship management. Ancillary revenues
grew 15% with continued take-up of telematics and Blakedale grew
its specialist fleet by over 35% to 600 vehicles. These combined
efforts coupled with a strong focus on cost discipline contributed
to rental margins rising 0.4ppt across the year.
Rental fleet totalled 46,600 at
the end of April 2024, 8% lower than the prior year as we chose to
defleet vehicles, but with much greater supply visibility
developing through the year. Vehicle supply improved in the second
half of the year, allowing for greater fleet replacement activity
with over 10,000 new vehicles purchased and a reduction in closing
fleet age (excluding leased fleet) from a peak of 36.7 to 34.0
months at the end of the year. Our financial capacity has
delivered opportunities to acquire vehicles at scale, including
supporting OEMs operating under the new ZEV mandate.
LCV residual values softened but
continue to be well above historic levels, reflecting both
increased list prices for new vehicles and continued
undersupply. Disposal profits were £34.0m (2023: £37.8m) with
increased volumes of LCV sales offset by lower PPUs including
defleeting of Auxillis cars (these have more predictable
depreciation with minimal PPUs) through expanding the lower cost
Van Monster online platform.
The business has also invested in
its locations, processes and people with a clear focus on
delivering an improved customer experience and maximising vehicle
and workshop availability. Trustpilot
scores have improved significantly to 4.7, well above
industry averages of 3.3 in the van rental category. Two new
locations were opened alongside a refocus of Van Monster branch
operations.
A car rental initiative targeting
a new customer channel was launched in the year. The business
also launched a micro-mobility solution and widened ancillary
services offered in Ireland. ChargedEV added solar and battery
installation solutions and saw a 50% increase in domestic and a
150% increase in commercial installations, helped by new key energy
sector and facilities management partnerships.
Rental business
Vehicle hire revenue in UK&I
was £384.4m (2023: £367.7m), an increase of 4.6%. A 13.3% increase
in average revenue per vehicle reflected fleet mix, rate increases,
and was partially offset by a 7.7% reduction in average
VOH.
Average VOH of 45,100 was 3,800
lower than the prior year reflecting the continued shortage in
supply of new LCVs.
UK&I's minimum term
proposition accounted for 42% of average VOH (2023: 37%). The
average term of these contracts is approximately three years,
providing both improved visibility of future rental revenue and
earnings, as well as lower transactional costs.
Rental margin was 15.5% compared
to 15.1% in the prior year. Margin reflects the change in business
mix and was maintained through operating efficiencies and
increasing hire rates to offset cost inflation.
Management of fleet and vehicle sales
The closing UK&I rental fleet
was 46,600 compared to 50,800 at 30 April 2023. During the year,
10,900 vehicles were purchased (2023: 4,800) and 15,900 vehicles
were defleeted (2023: 8,600). The leased fleet increased by 500
vehicles.
The average age of the fleet
(excluding leased vehicles) was 34.0 months at the end of the year
which was a 1.7 month decrease from 30 April 2023 as we have begun
to recycle the older cohorts of the fleet upon supply availability
improving in early 2024.
A total of 22,200 vehicles were
sold in UK&I during the year which was 118% higher than the
prior year (2023: 10,200) including 7,000 cars and other non-fleet
vehicles (2023: 300) including those which had been defleeted from
the Claims & Services fleet and sold via Van
Monster.
Disposal profits of £34.0m (2023:
£37.8m) decreased 9.9% compared to prior year with an expected
reduction in residual values being partially offset by increases in
sales volumes.
Spain Rental
Year ended 30 April
|
2024
|
2023
|
Change
|
Underlying financial
results
|
£m
|
£m
|
|
Revenue - Vehicle hire
|
274.0
|
252.7
|
8.4%
|
Revenue - Vehicle sales
|
84.5
|
47.3
|
78.8%
|
Total revenue
|
358.5
|
300.0
|
19.5%
|
Rental profit
|
50.0
|
46.7
|
6.9%
|
Rental margin %
|
18.2%
|
18.5%
|
(0.3ppt)
|
Disposal profit
|
27.8
|
13.7
|
102.7%
|
Underlying EBIT
|
77.8
|
60.4
|
28.7%
|
EBIT margin %[4]
|
28.4%
|
23.9%
|
4.5ppt
|
ROCE %
|
14.2%
|
12.9%
|
1.3ppt
|
Year ended 30 April
|
2024
|
2023
|
Change
|
KPIs
|
('000)
|
('000)
|
|
Average VOH
|
55.7
|
53.6
|
4.1%
|
Closing VOH
|
57.6
|
54.7
|
5.2%
|
Average utilisation %
|
91%
|
92%
|
(1ppt)
|
Highlights
Continued positive market
conditions helped Spain Rental achieve rental revenue growth of
8.4% with total revenues up 19.5%. Our differentiated rental
proposition, focused on the customer experience, encouraged strong
demand for the flexible rental solution in what is a higher
interest rate environment for customers. Revenue growth was
supported by much improved access to vehicle supply and rate
increases achieved for both flex and minimum term offerings which
helped to mitigate cost inflation.
Recent new business lines have
continued to develop, with rental fleet supplied through our B2C
digital offering up over 110% and revenues from third party
servicing in our workshops rising over 50%. The telematics service
was consolidated through a partnership with a market leading
provider, with 11,400 vehicles (+46%) equipped by the end of the
year.
Rental margin of 18.2% remained
close to the prior year record of 18.5%. This followed the normal
seasonal profile where a higher volume of repair costs are
typically booked within the second half. Margins were supported by
a clear focus on mitigating cost inflation through hire rates,
whilst optimising utilisation levels and strong cost discipline,
including a greater saving from using green recycled parts in
repairs.
The vehicle supply market was
relatively stable throughout the year, allowing 17,600 fleet
purchases from a broad range of OEMs. Closing VOH was up over
5% and the average age of the fleet fell to 30.1 months in April
2024, down 2.8 months from the peak in November 2022. The
increase in disposal profits to £27.8m (2023: £13.7m) was
principally due to vehicle sales volumes of 14,500, 84% higher than
in the prior year, together with continuing strength in residual
values. This was reflected in disposal PPUs rising 10% to
£1,900.
Investment in new locations saw
the León branch open in the first half, followed by a new branch in
Barcelona and the relocation and expansion of the Cadiz branch.
This capacity growth was also supported by a recruitment drive for
workshop technicians in a tight labour market.
EV and hybrid vehicles within the
fleet increased 65% over the year, as part of a range of low carbon
initiatives. This included a partnership with Iberdrola to
provide an end-to-end vehicle and green energy infrastructure
offering. The business also won grants (EU funds programme)
to support buying EVs and installing telematics in fleet vehicles
to help optimise fuel efficiency.
Rental business
Hire revenue in Spain increased
8.4% to £274.0m (2023: £252.7m), driven by the increase in average
VOH and managed increases in pricing. Closing VOH increased 5.2% to
57,600.
Spain's minimum term proposition
accounted for 36.6% (2023: 35%) of average VOH. The average term of
these contracts is approximately three years, providing
greater certainty of future generated revenues.
The rental margin was 0.3ppt lower
than the prior year at 18.2%, with pricing increases partially
offsetting cost inflation.
The increase in hire revenue
resulted in a 6.9% increase in rental profits to £50.0m (2023:
£46.7m).
Management of fleet and vehicle sales
The closing Spain rental fleet was
65,100 compared to 61,400 vehicles at 30 April 2023. During the
year 17,600 vehicles were purchased (2023: 13,200) and 13,900
vehicles were de-fleeted (2023: 9,400 vehicles).
The average age of the fleet at
the end of the year was 30.1 months, 2.6 months lower than at the
same time last year, as vehicle availability has improved and we
replaced the oldest of our fleet.
A total of 14,500 (2023: 7,900)
vehicles were sold in Spain during the year, 83.5% higher than the
prior year reflecting a higher rotation of the fleet with new
vehicles being more readily available.
Disposal profits of £27.8m (2023:
£13.7m) increased 102.7% due to the increased number of vehicles
sold and continued strength in residual values, resulting in an
increase in PPU on disposals to £1,900 (2023: £1,700).
Claims & Services
Year ended 30 April
|
2024
|
2023
|
Change
|
Underlying financial
results
|
£m
|
£m
|
|
Revenue - Claims and
services[5]
|
882.3
|
738.9
|
19.4%
|
Revenue - Vehicle
sales[6]
|
77.9
|
31.0
|
151.7%
|
Total revenue
|
960.3
|
769.8
|
24.7%
|
Gross profit
|
171.0
|
151.5
|
12.9%
|
Gross margin %7
|
19.4%
|
20.5%
|
(1.1ppt)
|
Operating profit
|
51.4
|
44.5
|
15.5%
|
Income from associates
|
1.3
|
2.5
|
(48.6%)
|
Underlying EBIT
|
52.7
|
47.0
|
12.1%
|
EBIT margin %[7]
|
6.0%
|
6.4%
|
(0.4ppt)
|
ROCE %
|
17.6%
|
15.9%
|
1.7ppt
|
Highlights
Claims and services revenue
increased 19.4% on the prior year, with increased volumes from
existing customers together with new contracts going live early in
the financial year. These included full-service contracts for
Abacai insurance and Lex Autolease which quickly reached expected
activity levels. Externally owned fleet vehicles covered by
our repair and claims management services now total over 900,000,
broadly equally split between insurer and other fleets.
One of our key insurance partners
extended their credit and direct hire multi-year contracts out to
2026, and other renewals included a blue-light incident management
contract, reflecting the breadth of our offering and customer
base. In the first half, the business also expanded its
product offering to one of its largest insurance partners, adding
repair capacity support to a new specialist customer segment.
Vehicle sales of £77.9m reflect recycling of the car fleet, the
majority of which was sold through Van Monster.
The business has worked hard to
manage cost inflation, making progress in productivity metrics,
including in our repair centres. Improving timeframes within
parts supply chains helped reduce repair lead times, also resulting
in average replacement hire lengths moderating closer to historic
levels.
Our key customer partners
appreciate the challenges presented by cost inflation and labour
shortages, with agreements on price increases in place. This
was also reflected in industry guide to retail charges noting a 12%
increase in repair labour rates in the first half. EBIT grew
over 12% while EBIT margin of 6.0% was 0.4 ppts lower than the
prior year. This principally reflects greater direct hire and
repair, and fleet management services within the product mix rather
than cost inflation, as the business worked hard to achieve supply
chain cost efficiencies, such as for paint and vehicle
parts.
There remains a pipeline of
contract opportunities in active discussion across the product and
margin range, as existing and potential customers see the benefit
of working with a trusted, multi-service and expert
partner.
The business has invested in its
processes and people, introducing a greater use of robotics and new
client facing apps and client digital interfaces to further
digitalise and automate highly process-driven activities within
claims management. At the same time the business continues to
support its people with enhanced training and expansion of our
apprentice scheme, where there are now over 135 apprentices within
the business. Repair capacity was also expanded through investment
in three new bodyshop repair facilities as well as workshop tools
supporting higher productivity and parts reuse.
Revenue and profit
Revenue for the year (excluding
vehicle sales) increased 19.4% to £882.3m (2023: £738.9m)
reflecting the full impact of recent contract wins. These
favourable variances were offset by a reduction in credit hire
length in comparison to the prior year. The prior year was affected
by macro challenges in supply chains for parts and labour with
those conditions seeing improvement in the current year.
Gross margin of 19.4% declined
1.1ppt (2023: 20.5%) due to volume mix across each business within
the segment.
EBIT increased 12.1% to £52.7m
reflecting both growth in repairs services driven by parts and
paints margins coupled with technician efficiency and fleet
management services with full year impacts of recent contract wins.
EBIT margin lowered slightly to 6.0% vs. 6.4% in the prior year due
to volume mix.
Management of fleet
The total fleet in Claims &
Services was 16,500 vehicles at the end of the year (2023: 18,500)
and the average fleet age (including leased vehicles) was 16 months
(2023: 15 months). This reflects the lower fleet holding period
than in the rental businesses due to the different usage of
vehicles and the optimal holding period of this vehicle
mix.
Group PBT and EPS
Year
ended 30 April
|
2024
£m
|
2023
£m
|
Change
£m
|
Change
|
Underlying EBIT
|
213.7
|
189.2
|
24.5
|
13.0%
|
Net underlying finance
costs
|
(33.0)
|
(23.3)
|
(9.7)
|
41.7%
|
Underlying profit before
taxation
|
180.7
|
165.9
|
14.8
|
8.9%
|
Statutory profit before
taxation
|
162.1
|
178.7
|
(16.6)
|
(9.3%)
|
Underlying effective tax
rate
|
23.0%
|
22.6%
|
-
|
0.4ppt
|
Underlying EPS
|
61.4p
|
55.6p
|
5.8p
|
10.4%
|
Statutory EPS
|
55.2p
|
60.3p
|
(5.1)p
|
(8.5%)
|
Profit before taxation
Underlying PBT was 8.9% higher
than prior year reflecting the higher EBIT across the Group.
Statutory PBT was 9.3% lower than the prior year, with £nil net
adjustment for changes to depreciation rates on the older fleet
compared to £46.5m credit in the prior year.
Exceptional items
During the year, there were no
items that were recognised as exceptional items. Exceptional costs
in the prior year of £13.5m arose from the impairment of goodwill
and other intangibles of NewLaw.
Amortisation of acquired
intangibles is not an exceptional item as it is recurring. However,
it is excluded from underlying results in order to provide a better
comparison of performance of the Group. The total charge for the
year was £18.6m (2023: £20.2m). Depreciation rate adjustments of
£nil (2023: £46.5m credit) on vehicles purchased before FY2021 have
been excluded from underlying results in order to better compare
results over time as explained further below.
Depreciation rate changes
When a vehicle is acquired, it is
recognised as a fixed asset at its cost net of any discount or
rebate received. The cost is then depreciated evenly over its
rental life, matching its pattern of usage down to the expected
future residual value at the point at which the vehicle is expected
to be sold net of directly attributable selling costs.
Accounting standards require a
review of residual values during a vehicle's useful economic life
at least annually, with changes to depreciation rates being
required if the expectation of future values changes
significantly.
Matching of future market values
of vehicles to net book value (NBV) on the estimated disposal date
requires significant judgement for the following
reasons:
• Used vehicle
prices are subject to short term volatility which makes it
challenging to estimate future residual values;
• The exact disposal
age is not known at the point at which rates are set and therefore
the book value at disposal date is not certain; and
• Mileage and
condition are the key factors in influencing the market value of a
vehicle. These can vary significantly through a vehicle's life
depending upon how the vehicle is used.
Due to the above uncertainties, a
difference normally arises between the NBV of a vehicle and its
actual market value at the date of disposal. Where these
differences are within an acceptable range they are adjusted
against the depreciation charge in the income statement. Where
these differences are outside of the acceptable range, changes must
be made to depreciation rate estimates to better reflect market
conditions and the usage of vehicles.
Residual values have increased
significantly in recent years due to the disruption of new vehicle
supply that has increased demand for used vehicles. Uncertainty to
the extent and longevity of this buoyancy in residual values meant
that there were a number of vehicles on our fleet where the
depreciated book value was below or very close to the expected
residual value at disposal. In line with the requirements of
accounting standards and as previously disclosed, a decision was
made to reduce depreciation rates from 1 May 2022 on certain
vehicles remaining on the fleet which were purchased before
FY2021.
The actual phasing of the
adjustment will change if these vehicles are held for a longer or
shorter period than anticipated. The depreciation rate change is
expected to impact the statutory income statement over the
remaining holding period of those vehicles as follows:
£m
|
FY2023
|
FY2024
|
FY2025
|
FY2026
|
FY2027
|
Total
|
Reduced depreciation
|
55.1
|
38.3
|
15.7
|
4.1
|
-
|
113.2
|
Reduced disposal profits
|
(8.5)
|
(38.3)
|
(40.5)
|
(22.3)
|
(3.6)
|
(113.2)
|
Updated expected impact on
statutory EBIT
|
46.6
|
-
|
(24.8)
|
(18.2)
|
(3.6)
|
-
|
Previously expected impact on
statutory EBIT
|
46.5
|
12.7
|
(28.3)
|
(26.4)
|
(4.5)
|
-
|
No further depreciation rate
changes have been made on the existing fleet since the impact on
EBIT was outlined last year. The updated phasing of the adjustment
relates to an updated expectation of refreshing the older fleet
more quickly than originally envisaged. This has been the case in
the current year due to better availability of new vehicles than
previously expected.
The impact of the changing
depreciation rates on this component of the fleet will re-phase
statutory EBIT over this five-year period but will have no impact
on underlying results, no overall impact on statutory profit over
the life of the fleet and does not impact cash.
Depreciation rates on vehicles
purchased in FY2025 will be set based on management's best
estimates of future residual values when those vehicles are sold,
with holding periods ranging from 12 to 60 months.
Interest
Net underlying finance charges
increased to £33.0m (2023: £23.3m) due to higher average debt and
the increase in floating interest rates over the year. Interest
rates are significantly sheltered due to holding approximately 65%
of borrowing as fixed rate debt.
Taxation
The Group's underlying tax charge
was £41.6m (2023: £37.6m) and the underlying effective tax rate was
23.0% (2023: 22.6%). The statutory effective tax rate was 22.9%
(2023: 22.1%).
Earnings per share
Underlying EPS of 61.4p was 5.8p
higher than prior year, reflecting increased profits in the year
and a 1.5p in year impact of the share buyback programme. Statutory
EPS of 55.2p was 5.1p lower, reflecting the movement in underlying
EPS being offset by the movement in exceptional items and credits
recognised in the prior year with respect to deprecation rates
adjustments which are not included within the underlying
results.
Business combinations
In May 2023 the Group acquired
100% of the equity capital of Fridgexpress (UK) Limited for
provisional consideration of £5.0m. The provisional fair value of
net assets acquired was £2.9m resulting in the recognition of £2.1m
of goodwill.
Share buyback programme
The Group completed its initial
£60m share buyback programme in December 2022. A further £30m share
buyback programme commenced in August 2023 and was completed in
June 2024. During the year to 30 April 2024, 7,104,291 shares were
purchased for a total consideration of £24.9m.
Group balance sheet
Net assets at 30 April 2024 were
£1,043.4m (2023: £994.6m), equivalent to net assets per share of
459p (2023: 434p). Net tangible assets at 30 April 2024 were
£816.4m (2023: £752.9m), equivalent to a net tangible asset value
of 359p per share (2023: 328p per share).
The calculations above are based
on the number of shares in issue at 30 April 2024 of 246,091,423
(2023: 246,091,423) less treasury shares of 18,981,862 (2023:
16,877,571).
Gearing at 30 April 2024 was 90.9%
(2023: 92.2%) and ROCE was 14.5% (2023: 14.1%).
Group cash generation
Year
ended 30 April
|
2024
£m
|
2023
£m
|
Change
£m
|
Underlying EBIT
|
213.7
|
189.2
|
24.5
|
Depreciation and
amortisation[8]
|
232.6
|
223.0
|
9.6
|
EBITDA
|
446.3
|
412.2
|
34.1
|
Net replacement capex[9]
|
(280.2)
|
(155.6)
|
(124.6)
|
Lease principal
payments[10]
|
(65.0)
|
(65.1)
|
0.1
|
Steady state cash
generation
|
101.1
|
191.5
|
(90.4)
|
Working capital and non-cash
items
|
(5.6)
|
(0.3)
|
(5.3)
|
Growth capex9
|
(1.7)
|
(122.6)
|
120.9
|
Taxation
|
(33.4)
|
(36.6)
|
3.2
|
Net operating cash
|
60.4
|
32.0
|
28.4
|
Distributions from
associates
|
2.0
|
3.1
|
(1.1)
|
Interest and other financing cash
flows
|
(28.0)
|
(20.6)
|
(7.4)
|
Acquisition
of business
|
(4.1)
|
(10.0)
|
5.9
|
Free cash flow
|
30.3
|
4.5
|
25.8
|
Dividends paid
|
(56.2)
|
(52.2)
|
(4.0)
|
Payments to acquire treasury
shares
|
(24.9)
|
(53.0)
|
28.1
|
Add back: Lease principal
payments[11]
|
65.0
|
65.1
|
(0.1)
|
Net cash generated
(consumed)
|
14.2
|
(35.6)
|
49.8
|
Steady state cash generation
Steady state cash generation
reduced to £101.1m compared to prior year (2023: £191.5m).
Increases in underlying EBIT have been offset by increases in net
replacement capex as we recycle the fleet.
Net capital expenditure
Net capital expenditure increased
by £3.7m at £281.9m reflecting a differing mix between net
replacement capex and growth capex as detailed below.
Net replacement capex was £280.2m,
which was £124.6m higher than in the prior year. This was due to
both volume increases as well as increases in average replacement
cost due to change in mix of vehicles and the impact of price
inflation. Net replacement capex was £77.4m higher in UK&I,
£81.3m higher in Spain and £34.1m lower in Claims & Services.
Growth capex of £1.7m (2023:
£122.6m) included £48.5m to grow the fleet size in Spain offset by
a £46.8m inflow in UK&I and Claims & Services where the
fleet size was reduced.
Free cash flow
Free cash flow increased by £25.8m
to £30.3m (2023: £4.5m) with growth in underlying EBITDA and a
reduction in financing of acquisitions offset by movements in net
capital expenditure as explained above, increases in working
capital and increases in interest and other financing due to higher
interest rates throughout the year.
Free cash flow is stated after
taking account of investments that have been made in the year which
will return future cash flow at a sustainable rate of return ahead
of our cost of capital. This includes investment in net replacement
capex of £280.2m, lease payments of £65.0m, growth capex of £1.7m,
the acquisition of FridgeXpress of £4.1m and working capital in
Claims & Services.
Removing the impact of growth
capex in the year, the underlying free cash flow of the Group was
£32.0m compared to £127.1m in the previous year due to the increase
in net replacement capex.
Net cash generation
Net cash generated of £14.2m
(2023: £35.6m consumed) includes £56.2m of dividends paid (2023:
£52.2m) and £24.9m (2023: £52.9m) for treasury shares purchased
under the share buyback programme. Leverage has been maintained at
1.5x (2023: 1.5x).
Net debt
Net debt reconciles as
follows:
As at 30
April
|
2024
£m
|
2023
£m
|
Opening net debt
|
694.4
|
582.5
|
Net cash (generated)
consumed
|
(14.2)
|
35.6
|
Other non-cash items
|
75.1
|
57.8
|
Exchange differences
|
(13.1)
|
18.5
|
Closing net debt
|
742.2
|
694.4
|
Closing net debt increased by
£47.8m in the year driven by net cash consumed, non-cash items and
exchange differences. Other non-cash items consist of £73.3m of new
leases acquired and £1.8m of other items. Foreign exchange
movements reduced net debt by £13.1m.
Borrowing facilities
As at 30 April 2024 the Group had
headroom on facilities of £244m (2023: £290m), with £582m drawn
(net of available cash balances) against total facilities of £826m
as detailed below:
|
Facility
£m
|
Drawn
£m
|
Headroom
£m
|
Maturity
|
Borrowing
cost
|
UK bank facilities
|
493
|
251
|
242
|
Nov 26
|
6.1%
|
Loan notes
|
320
|
320
|
-
|
Nov 27-Nov 31
|
1.3%
|
Other loans
|
13
|
11
|
2
|
Nov 24
|
4.9%
|
|
826
|
582
|
244
|
|
3.5%
|
The other loans drawn consist of
£10m of local borrowings in Spain which were renewed for a further
year in November 2023 and £0.5m of preference shares.
The above drawn amounts reconcile
to net debt as follows:
|
Drawn
£m
|
Borrowings
|
582
|
Unamortised finance fees
|
(5)
|
Leases
|
165
|
Net debt
|
742
|
The overall cost of borrowings at
30 April 2024 is 3.5% (2023: 3.1%).
The margin charged on bank debt is
dependent upon the Group's net debt to EBITDA ratio, ranging from a
minimum of 1.45% to a maximum of 3.25%. The net debt to EBITDA
ratio at 30 April 2024 corresponded to a margin of 1.95% (2023:
1.95%).
The split of net debt by currency
was as follows:
As at 30
April
|
2024
£m
|
2023
£m
|
Euro
|
522.2
|
388.0
|
Sterling
|
224.9
|
313.2
|
Borrowings and lease obligations before unamortised
arrangement fees
|
747.1
|
701.2
|
Unamortised
finance fees
|
(4.9)
|
(6.8)
|
Net debt
|
742.2
|
694.4
|
There are three financial covenants
under the Group's facilities as follows:
As at 30 April
|
Threshold
|
2024
|
Headroom
|
2023
|
Interest cover
|
3x
|
8.3x
|
£132m (EBIT)
|
10.6x
|
Loan to value
|
70%
|
41%
|
£429m (Net debt)
|
42%
|
Debt leverage
|
3x
|
1.5x
|
£195m (EBITDA)
|
1.5x
|
The covenant calculations have
been prepared in accordance with the requirements of the facilities
to which they relate.
Dividend and capital
allocation
Subject to approval, the final
dividend proposed of 17.5p per share (2023: 16.5p) will be paid on
27 September 2024 to shareholders on the register as at close of
business on 30 August 2024.
Including the interim dividend
paid of 8.3p (2023: 7.5p), the total dividend relating to the year
would be 25.8p (2023: 24.0p). The dividend is covered 2.4x by
underlying earnings.
The Group's objective is to employ
a disciplined approach to investment, returns and capital
efficiency to deliver sustainable compounding growth. Capital will
be allocated within the business in accordance with the framework
outlined below:
•
Funding organic growth
•
Sustainable and growing dividend
•
Inorganic growth
•
Returning excess cash to shareholders
The Group plans to maintain a
balance sheet within a target leverage range of 1.0x to 2.0x net
debt to EBITDA, and during periods of significant growth net debt
would be expected to be towards the higher end of this range. This
is consistent with the Group's objective of maintaining a balance
sheet that is efficient in terms of providing long term returns to
shareholders and safeguards the Group's financial position through
economic cycles.
Treasury
The function of the Group's
treasury operations is to mitigate financial risk, to ensure
sufficient liquidity is available to meet foreseeable requirements,
to secure finance at minimum cost and to invest cash assets
securely and profitably. Treasury operations manage the Group's
funding, liquidity and exposure to interest rate risks within a
framework of policies and guidelines authorised by the Board of
Directors.
The Group uses derivative
financial instruments for risk management purposes only. Consistent
with Group policy, Group Treasury does not engage in speculative
activity and it is Group policy to avoid using more complex
financial instruments.
Credit risk
The policy followed in managing
credit risk permits only minimal exposures with banks and other
institutions meeting required standards as assessed normally by
reference to major credit agencies. Group credit exposure for
material deposits is limited to banks which maintain an A rating.
Individual aggregate credit exposures are also limited
accordingly.
Liquidity and funding
The Group has sufficient funding
facilities to meet its normal funding requirements in the medium
term as outlined in the borrowing facilities section above.
Covenants attached to those facilities as outlined above are not
restrictive to the Group's operations.
Capital management
The Group's objective is to
maintain a balance sheet structure that is efficient in terms of
providing long term returns to shareholders and safeguards the
Group's financial position through economic cycles.
Operating subsidiaries are
financed by a combination of retained earnings and
borrowings.
The Group can choose to adjust its
capital structure by varying the amount of dividends paid to
shareholders, by issuing new shares or by adjusting the level of
capital expenditure.
Interest rate
management
The Group's bank facilities, other
loan agreements and lease obligations incorporate variable interest
rates. The Group seeks to ensure that the exposure to future
changes in interest rates is managed to an acceptable level by
having in place an appropriate balance of fixed rate and floating
rate financial instruments at any time. The proportion of gross
borrowings (including leases arising under HP obligations) held in
fixed rates was 65% at 30 April 2024 (2023: 62%).
Foreign exchange risk
The Group's reporting currency is
Sterling and 80% of its revenue was generated in Sterling during
the year (2023: 78%). The Group's principal currency translation
exposure is to the Euro, as the results of operations, assets and
liabilities of its Spanish and Irish businesses are translated into
Sterling to produce the Group's consolidated financial
statements.
The average and year end exchange
rates used to translate the Group's overseas operations were as
follows:
|
2024
£:€
|
2023
£:€
|
Average
|
1.16
|
1.15
|
Year end
|
1.17
|
1.14
|
Going concern
Having considered the Group's
current trading, cash flow generation and debt maturity including
severe but plausible stress testing scenarios (as detailed further
in the notes to the financial statements) the Directors have
concluded that it is appropriate to prepare the Group financial
statements on a going concern basis.
Alternative performance measures and glossary of
terms
A reconciliation of statutory to
underlying Group performance is outlined at the front of this
document. A reconciliation of underlying cash flow measures and
additional alternative performance measures used to assess
performance of the Group is shown below.
Cash Flow Reconciliation
Year
ended 30 April
|
2024
£m
|
2023
£m
|
Underlying EBIT
|
213.7
|
189.2
|
Add back:
|
|
|
Depreciation of property, plant and
equipment
|
231.3
|
175.1
|
Depreciation adjustment not
included in underlying EBIT
|
-
|
46.5
|
Loss on disposal of
assets
|
(0.1)
|
0.2
|
Intangible amortisation included in
underlying operating profit (Note 6)
|
1.4
|
1.2
|
EBITDA
|
446.3
|
412.2
|
Net replacement capex
|
(280.2)
|
(155.6)
|
Lease principal payments
|
(65.0)
|
(65.1)
|
Steady state cash
generation
|
101.1
|
191.5
|
Working capital and non-cash
items
|
(5.6)
|
(0.3)
|
Growth capex
|
(1.7)
|
(122.6)
|
Taxation
|
(33.4)
|
(36.6)
|
Net operating cash
|
60.4
|
32.0
|
Distributions from
associates
|
2.0
|
3.1
|
Interest and other financing
costs
|
(28.0)
|
(20.6)
|
Acquisition of business net of cash
acquired
|
(4.1)
|
(10.0)
|
Free cash flow
|
30.3
|
4.5
|
Dividends paid
|
(56.2)
|
(52.2)
|
Purchase of treasury
shares
|
(24.9)
|
(53.0)
|
Add back: Lease principal
payments
|
65.0
|
65.1
|
Net cash generated
(consumed)
|
14.2
|
(35.6)
|
|
|
|
Reconciliation to cash flow
statement:
|
|
|
Net decrease in cash and cash
equivalents
|
(17.7)
|
(3.9)
|
Add back:
|
|
|
Receipt of bank loans and other
borrowings
|
(33.1)
|
(96.8)
|
Principal element of lease
payments
|
65.0
|
65.1
|
Net cash generated
(consumed)
|
14.2
|
(35.6)
|
Cash Flow Reconciliation
Year
ended 30 April
|
2024
£m
|
2023
£m
|
Reconciliation of capital
expenditure
|
|
|
Purchases of vehicles for
hire
|
553.6
|
398.2
|
Proceeds from disposals of vehicles
for hire
|
(288.0)
|
(128.4)
|
Proceeds from disposal of other
property, plant and equipment
|
(1.4)
|
(0.7)
|
Purchases of other property, plant
and equipment
|
15.7
|
7.4
|
Purchases of intangible
assets
|
2.0
|
1.8
|
Net capital expenditure
|
281.9
|
278.2
|
Net replacement capex
|
280.2
|
155.6
|
Growth capex
|
1.7
|
122.6
|
Net capital expenditure
|
281.9
|
278.2
|
|
UK&I
Rental
2024
£000
|
Spain
Rental
2024
£000
|
Group
sub-total
2024
£000
|
Underlying operating
profit12
|
93,788
|
77,789
|
171,577
|
Exclude:
|
|
|
|
Vehicle disposal profits
|
(34,017)
|
(27,834)
|
(61,851)
|
Rental profit
|
59,771
|
49,955
|
109,726
|
Divided by: Revenue: hire of
vehicles13
|
384,448
|
274,016
|
658,464
|
Rental margin
|
15.5%
|
18.2%
|
16.9%
|
|
UK&I
Rental
2023
£000
|
Spain
Rental
2023
£000
|
Group
sub-total
2023
£000
|
Underlying operating
profit12
|
93,382
|
60,440
|
153,822
|
Exclude:
|
|
|
|
Vehicle disposal profits
|
(37,746)
|
(13,730)
|
(51,476)
|
Rental profit
|
55,636
|
46,710
|
102,346
|
Divided by: Revenue: hire of
vehicles13
|
367,694
|
252,691
|
620,385
|
Rental margin
|
15.1%
|
18.5%
|
16.5%
|
12 See Note 1 of the financial statements for
reconciliation of segment underlying operating profit to Group
underlying operating profit.
13 Revenue: hire of vehicles including intersegment
revenue (see Note 1 of the financial statements).
The following defined terms have
been used throughout this document:
Term
|
Definition
|
Average capital employed
|
A two-point average of capital
employed at last day of the current and previous financial
years
|
Auxillis
|
A business within the Claims &
Services operating segment providing fault and non-fault accident
management assistance and related services
|
B2C
|
Consumer related business
activity
|
Blakedale
|
A business within the UK&I
Rental operating segment providing specialist traffic management
services
|
Capex
|
Capital expenditure
|
Capital employed
|
Net assets excluding net debt,
acquired goodwill and acquired intangible assets, and the
adjustment to net book values for changes to depreciation rates
which have not been reflected in underlying results
|
CEO
|
Chief Executive Officer
|
ChargedEV
|
A business within the UK&I
Rental operating segment providing EV charging and solar
infrastructure and solutions
|
Claims & Services
|
The Claims & Services operating
segment providing a range of mobility solutions (previously called
Redde)
|
Disposal profit(s)
|
This is a non-GAAP measure used to
describe the adjustment in the depreciation charge made in the year
for vehicles sold at an amount different to their net book value at
the date of sale (net of attributable selling costs)
|
e-auction
|
The part of the Group which
generates vehicles sales revenue through the Group's online sales
platforms
|
EBIT
|
Earnings before interest and
taxation
|
EBITDA
|
Earnings before interest, taxation,
depreciation and amortisation
|
e-LCV(s)
|
Electrically powered
LCV(s)
|
EPS
|
Earnings per share. Underlying
unless otherwise stated
|
EV(s)
|
Electrically powered
vehicle(s)
|
Facility headroom
|
Calculated as facilities of £826m
less net borrowings of £582m. Net borrowings represent net debt of
£742m excluding lease liabilities of £165m and unamortised
arrangement fees of £5m and are stated after the deduction of £40m
of cash balances which are available to offset against
borrowings
|
Free cash flow
|
Net cash generated after principal
lease payments and before the payment of dividends and payments to
acquire treasury shares
|
FridgeXpress
|
A business within the UK&I
Rental operating segment providing specialised temperature
controlled vehicle services, introduced into the Group following
the acquisition of Fridgexpress (UK) Limited
|
FY2021
|
The year ended 30 April
2021
|
FY2022
|
The year ended 30 April
2022
|
FY2023
|
The year ended 30 April
2023
|
FY2024
|
The year ended 30 April
2024
|
FY2025
|
The year ending 30 April
2025
|
FY2026
|
The year ending 30 April
2026
|
FY2027
|
The year ending 30 April
2027
|
GAAP
|
Generally Accepted Accounting
Practice: meaning compliance with IFRS
|
Gearing
|
Calculated as net debt divided by
net tangible assets
|
Growth capex
|
Growth capex represents the cash
consumed in order to grow the total owned rental fleet or the cash
generated if the fleet size is reduced in periods of
contraction
|
H1/H2
|
Half year period. H1 being the first
half and H2 being the second half of the financial year
|
ICE vehicles
|
Vehicles powered by an internal
combustion engine
|
IFRS
|
International Financial Reporting
Standards
|
Income from associates
|
The Group's share of net profit of
associates accounted for using the equity method
|
LCV
|
Light commercial vehicle: the
official term used within the UK and European Union for a
commercial carrier vehicle with a gross vehicle weight of not more
than 3.5 tonnes
|
Lease principal payments
|
Principal payment on leases
recognised under IFRS 16 (Leases)
|
Net replacement capex
|
Net capital expenditure other than
that defined as growth capex and lease principal
payments.
|
Net tangible assets
|
Net assets less goodwill and other
intangible assets
|
NewLaw
|
A business within the Claims &
Services operating segment providing legal services
|
Non-GAAP
|
A financial metric used which is not
defined under GAAP
|
Non-ICE vehicles
|
Vehicles not powered by an internal
combustion engine
|
NPS
|
Net promoter score: a measure used
to gauge customer satisfaction
|
OEM(s)
|
Original Equipment Manufacturer(s):
a reference to our vehicle suppliers
|
PBT
|
Profit before taxation. Underlying
unless otherwise stated
|
PPU
|
Profit per unit/loss per unit - this
is a non-GAAP measure used to describe disposal profit (as
defined), divided by the number of vehicles sold
|
Rental margin
|
Calculated as rental profit divided
by revenue (excluding vehicle sales)
|
Rental profits
|
EBIT excluding disposal
profits
|
ROCE
|
Underlying return on capital
employed: calculated as underlying EBIT (see non-GAAP
reconciliation) divided by average capital employed
|
Spain
|
Referring to the Spain Rental
operating segment
|
Spain Rental
|
The Northgate Spain operating
segment located in Spain and providing commercial vehicle hire and
ancillary services (previously called Northgate Spain)
|
Steady state cash
generation
|
EBITDA less net replacement capex
and lease principal payments
|
The Company
|
ZIGUP plc (formerly Redde Northgate
plc)
|
The Group
|
The Company and its
subsidiaries
|
UK&I
|
Referring to the UK&I Rental
operating segment
|
UK&I Rental
|
The UK&I Rental operating
segment located in the United Kingdom and the Republic of Ireland
providing commercial vehicle hire and ancillary services
(previously called Northgate UK&I)
|
Underlying free cash flow
|
Free cash flow excluding growth
capex
|
Utilisation
|
Calculated as the average number of
vehicles on hire divided by average rentable fleet in any
period
|
Van Monster
|
A trading name used within the
UK&I Rental operating business, when selling used vehicles to
business and retail customers
|
VOH
|
Vehicles on hire. Average unless
otherwise stated
|
ZEV mandate
|
The Zero Emissions Vehicle mandate:
a legal framework introduced by the UK government to increase the
proportion of zero emission vehicles sold in the UK
|
Principal risks and
uncertainties
The world we live
in
Risk description
The successful delivery of our
strategy is influenced by the world we live in, and we need to
adapt to a changing global environment. Changes in both
economic and environmental conditions in the countries that the
Group operates in or are linked to through our supply chain could
affect how we deliver our services or change the cost base of the
business.
Influencing factors
·
Changes in economic conditions including economic
growth forecasts, exchange rates, interest rates and inflationary
pressures
·
Influences of global conflicts on global supply
chains
·
The impact that environmental conditions such as
extreme weather could have on our operations as well as our impact
on the environments in which we operate
Controls and mitigating activities
• The Group's
business model and balance sheet strength provides resilience to
economic downturns, with the flexibility of our offer being
attractive in times of uncertainty
• In the event of
a downturn, the Group can manage its fleet flexibly, generating
cash and reducing debt by reducing vehicle purchases or
accelerating disposals
• The cost base
related to management of insurance claims and services is flexible
and can be scaled back in response to a downturn in
revenue
• Pricing
structures remain under review in context of cost inflation with
minimum return thresholds protecting margins
• Credit risk of
new and existing customers is continually assessed, and the Group
has a diversified customer base without overreliance on an
individual or group of customers across any sector
• The Group
maintains close relationships with key suppliers to ensure
continuity of supply and diversifies the supplier base in periods
when supply becomes restricted
• Foreign
exchange exposure is minimised through sourcing supplies in the
same currency as the revenue is generated. Translation risk is
managed through holding a proportion of borrowings in Euro in order
to hedge against the investment in Euro net assets
Our markets and
customers
Risk description
We operate in markets undergoing
significant transformations both through changing business models
and customer expectations for smarter and increasingly sustainable
mobility. If the Group does not respond to behavioural, structural,
legal, or technological changes in our markets there is a risk that
demand for our services will reduce. Changes to the insurance
market or loss of a key insurance referral partner could adversely
impact the Group's revenues.
Influencing factors
•
Structural changes to the rental and insurance and
legal services markets such as consolidation, digitalisation or
vertical integration could impact on the viability of the business
model if we are not agile enough to respond to those
trends
• Changes to
regulations for operation of ICE vehicles and widening of low
emission zones will change the way in which mobility services will
need to be delivered
• Price
competition for an equivalent service, could impact our ability to
attract and retain customers at appropriate rates of
return
• Increases in
insurance referral rates or cost increases which cannot be passed
on through claims could impact viability of returns
• Loss of a major customer or
insurance referral partner could diminish returns if the cost base
is not managed appropriately
Controls and mitigating activities
• Our strong
reputation for trusted and expert advice and customer service
improves retention of existing customers and attractiveness to new
customers by differentiating our offer from other market
participants
• Continued
evolution of the fleet towards non-ICE vehicles with development of
supplier relationships and investments in supporting
infrastructure
• Continual benchmarking of
pricing and service offer compared to competitors and other market
participants. Pricing controls over target levels of returns and
discount authorities protect margins
• Minimising the
concentration of business customers and maintaining long term
relationships with insurance partners with a large proportion of
revenue coming from contracts with customers, greater than one year
in length
Fleet
availability
Risk description
Failure to secure sufficient access
to fleet at appropriate pricing would impact on our ability to meet
operational and customer service delivery, overall returns and our
ability to grow organically.
An increase in fleet holding costs
either through higher new vehicle pricing or lower residual values,
if not recovered through pricing increases or operational
efficiencies, would adversely affect returns.
Influencing factors
• Over recent
years, global vehicle supply has been restricted following COVID-19
and geo-political conflict which has shortened the availability of
vehicles and influenced vehicle pricing. Whilst supply has
improved, it still remains below pre-COVID levels
• Residual values
continue to be affected by the vehicle supply interruption and are
influenced by other economic conditions
Controls and mitigating activities
• Flexibility
over asset management means that in the short term the Group can
mitigate the shortage of supply of new vehicles by ageing out the
fleet
• The business
model supports high levels of utilisation and vehicles returned
from customers are redeployed within the fleet
• The Group
maintains close relationships with key suppliers to ensure
continuity of supply and has diversified the supplier base in order
to broaden access to new vehicles
• The Group
minimises vehicle holding costs by flexibly managing the fleet so
that vehicles can be defleeted at the optimal point in their
lifecycle through our own sales channels. We manage vehicle sales
through our own retail sales network and online sales
channels.
Our people
Risk description
We rely on the expertise and
experience of our people in order to stay at the forefront of
changes to our markets and to maintain and deliver high levels of
customer service. Failure to attract, retain, develop and
motivate this talent would impact the Group's ability to meet its
strategic objectives.
We also understand our
responsibility to keep our people safe through appropriate health
and safety risk management to maintain trust with our employees and
reputation across all stakeholders.
Influencing factors
• External
pressures in the labour market creates issues in attracting and
retaining talent and therefore delivery of the operating model and
commercial proposition
• The diverse
operations of a Group growing organically and inorganically across
a wide geographical area increases the challenge of fostering a
shared culture in line with strategic objectives
• Not
safeguarding employees' health and welfare and failure to invest in
our workforce will lead to high levels of staff turnover, which
will affect customer service, operational efficiency and overall
delivery of the Group's strategy
Controls and mitigating activities
• Employee
engagement with Group management through the Employee Engagement
Forum and employee surveys
• Internal
communications establish values which are aligned to Group strategy
and we undertake regular communication of the strategic progress
through various platforms including the launch of the new brand and
strategy and how that best serves our people
• Ongoing
benchmarking of reward and benefits against the comparable
employment market
• Regular
performance reviews including personal development and tailored
training as well as introduction of a mentoring
programme
• Regular
engagement with employees and access to health and wellbeing
initiatives
• Widening of
rewards and benefits including share ownership, financial wellbeing
initiatives and improved annual and family
• Group health
and safety team develops policy and processes to ensure safe
working practices and monitors compliance with those
policies
• Continual
development of Group health and safety initiatives to promote an
ongoing safe working environment
Regulatory
environment
Risk description
The Group must comply with all laws
and regulations and certain activities within the Group are
regulated, therefore ongoing compliance with regulations is
required to ensure continuity of business.
Legal cases relating to the
provision of credit hire and insurance related services have
provided a precedent framework which has remained stable for
several years. Legal challenges or changes in legislation could
undermine this framework with consequences for the markets in which
the Group operates.
Influencing factors
• Changes to the
legislation or regulatory environment in any of the Group's markets
could impact revenue and profitability, particularly within the
credit hire, insurance and legal services businesses
• Inadequate
operation of systems to monitor and ensure compliance with
regulation could expose the Group to fines and penalties or
operating licences could be suspended and also adversely impact our
reputation across all stakeholder groups
Controls and mitigating activities
• In-house legal
and compliance team continuously monitoring regulatory and legal
compliance
• Horizon
scanning and monitoring of legal and regulatory
developments
• Policies and
procedures and compliance monitoring programmes
• Training in
relation to relevant legislation, regulatory responsibilities and
Company policies and procedures
• External
advisors are retained where necessary
Technology and
digitalisation
Risk description
The Group relies on technology to
ensure the safe continuity of business operations and advances in
technology offer opportunities to leverage efficiencies in
processes and enhanced service delivery with stakeholders
continuing to seek deeper digital engagement. Failure of existing systems, lack of development in new
systems or poor integration of new systems, could result in a loss
of commercial agility and/or harm the efficiency and continuity of
our operations.
The global treat of cyber-attacks
is continuing to increase in frequency and sophistication therefore
unsuccessfully defending against data theft
or cyber-attacks, could cause significant business interruption and
reputational harm across all stakeholders.
Influencing factors
• Inadequate IT systems can
be at risk from failed processes, systems or infrastructure and
from error, fraud or cyber-crime
• The Group's business is
dependent on the safe and efficient processing of a large number of
complex transactions and stakeholder interactions. The effective
performance and availability of core systems is central to the
operation of the business
• Growth through inorganic
acquisitions increases the complexity and diversity of operations,
IT systems and infrastructure
• Cyber attacks are
becoming increasingly frequent and sophisticated. The Group remains
vigilant to changes in the cyber threat landscape and continues to
review the technology deployed to defend against these
threats
Controls and mitigating activities
• Investments in key IT
platforms and systems to ensure continued operational performance
and delivery
• Changes to key IT
systems are considered as part of wider Group change programmes and
are implemented in phases where possible with appropriate
governance structures put in place to oversee progress against
project objectives
• Ongoing monitoring of the
continuity of IT systems with access to support where
required
• Back-up and recovery
procedures for key systems including disaster recovery
plans
• Operation
of information security and data protection protocols to ensure
that data is held securely, and is adequately protected from
cyber-attacks or other unauthorised access
Recovery of contract
assets
Risk description
Our credit hire and repair business
involves the provision of goods and services on credit. The Group
receives payment for the goods and services it has provided after a
claim has been pursued against the party at fault (and the relevant
third party insurer). This process can require a long period of
time before claims are agreed and settled.
Influencing factors
• Recovery of
insurance claims requires the orderly running of insurance markets
with claims being settled on commonly agreed terms
• Due to the
relative strength of insurance companies, they could influence the
speed of settlement of claims in order to secure better
terms
• Settlement of
claims is normally reached through mutual agreement. Settlement
through court arbitrations can be lengthy and relies on efficient
operation of the court process
Controls and mitigating activities
• Services are
only provided to customers after a full risk assessment process to
ensure that the claim will be legally recoverable from a third
party
• The Group
manages collection risk by standardising terms with third party
insurers (protocol agreements) where possible, which reduces
collection risk under shorter payment terms. The proportion of
claims under protocol terms has increased in the year to
c.70%
• Other claims
are managed through specialist teams in order to settle claims or
manage through a court arbitration process
Access to
capital
Risk description
The Group needs access to
sufficient capital to maintain and grow the fleet and fund working
capital requirements.
Investors increasingly require
businesses to demonstrate that they act in a responsible and
sustainable manner prior to granting access to financing
facilities.
Influencing factors
• Debt markets
can be volatile in terms of liquidity and pricing
• Failure to
maintain or extend access to credit and fleet finance facilities or
non-compliance with debt covenants could affect the Group's ability
to achieve its strategic objectives or continue as a going
concern
Controls and mitigating activities
• Debt facilities
are diversified across a range of lenders and close relationships
are maintained with key funders of the Group to ensure continuity
of funding
• Debt facilities
have been put in place to provide adequate headroom and maturities
in order to support the strategy of the Group
• The Group
continually monitors cash flow forecasts to ensure adequate
headroom on facilities and ongoing compliance with debt
covenants
• The Group
maintains leverage within stated policy and the business model
allows cash to be generated through economic cycles
• The impact of
access to capital on the Group's viability is considered in the
viability statement .
CONSOLIDATED INCOME STATEMENT
|
|
|
|
FOR THE YEAR ENDED 30 APRIL 2024
|
|
|
|
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
Note
|
£000
|
£000
|
Revenue: hire of
vehicles
|
1
|
649,271
|
610,502
|
Revenue: sale of
vehicles
|
1
|
312,469
|
152,894
|
Revenue: claims and
services
|
1
|
871,387
|
726,350
|
Total revenue
|
1
|
1,833,127
|
1,489,746
|
Cost of sales
|
|
(1,400,236)
|
(1,054,173)
|
Gross profit
|
|
432,891
|
435,573
|
Administrative expenses (excluding
exceptional items)
|
|
(229,270)
|
(213,658)
|
Net impairment of trade
receivables
|
|
(9,782)
|
(8,902)
|
Exceptional administrative
expenses: impairment of goodwill
|
6
|
-
|
(5,009)
|
Exceptional administrative
expenses: impairment of other intangibles
|
6
|
-
|
(8,482)
|
Total administrative
expenses
|
|
(239,052)
|
(236,051)
|
Operating profit
|
|
193,839
|
199,522
|
Share of net profit of associates
accounted for using the equity method
|
|
1,296
|
2,520
|
EBIT
|
1
|
195,135
|
202,042
|
Finance income
|
|
596
|
90
|
Finance costs
|
|
(33,628)
|
(23,405)
|
Profit before taxation
|
|
162,103
|
178,727
|
Taxation
|
|
(37,085)
|
(39,489)
|
Profit for the year
|
|
125,018
|
139,238
|
Profit for the year is wholly
attributable to owners of the Parent Company. All results arise
from continuing operations.
Earnings per share
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
Basic
|
2
|
55.2p
|
60.3p
|
Diluted
|
2
|
54.0p
|
58.7p
|
See GAAP reconciliation at the front
of this report for a reconciliation between reported
results as shown above and underlying measures
used to explain performance throughout this report.
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF COMPREHENSIVE
INCOME
FOR THE YEAR ENDED 30 APRIL 2024
|
|
|
|
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
|
£000
|
£000
|
Amounts attributable to owners of the Parent
Company
|
|
|
|
Profit attributable to the
owners
|
|
125,018
|
139,238
|
Other comprehensive (expense) income
Foreign exchange differences on
retranslation of net assets of subsidiary undertakings
|
|
(15,326)
|
23,689
|
Net foreign exchange differences
on long term borrowings held as hedges
|
|
11,252
|
(17,741)
|
Foreign exchange difference on
revaluation reserve
|
|
(33)
|
54
|
Net fair value gain on cash flow
hedges
|
|
104
|
-
|
Deferred tax charge recognised
directly in equity relating to cash flow hedges
|
|
(26)
|
-
|
Total other comprehensive (expense) income
|
|
(4,029)
|
6,002
|
Total comprehensive income for the year
|
|
120,989
|
145,240
|
All items will subsequently be
reclassified to the consolidated income statement.
CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEET
|
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
AS AT 30 APRIL 2024
|
|
|
£000
|
£000
|
Non-current assets
|
|
|
|
|
Goodwill
|
|
|
115,918
|
113,873
|
Other intangible assets
|
|
|
111,054
|
127,828
|
Property, plant and
equipment
|
|
|
1,483,344
|
1,332,923
|
Deferred tax assets
|
|
|
1,878
|
2,061
|
Interest in associates
|
|
|
4,502
|
5,207
|
Total non-current assets
|
|
|
1,716,696
|
1,581,892
|
Current assets
|
|
|
|
|
Inventories
|
|
|
38,261
|
54,537
|
Receivables and contract
assets
|
|
|
421,032
|
441,277
|
Derivative financial instrument
assets
|
|
|
104
|
-
|
Current tax assets
|
|
|
9,271
|
14,951
|
Cash and bank balances
|
|
|
39,802
|
14,122
|
Total current assets
|
|
|
508,470
|
524,887
|
Total assets
|
|
|
2,225,166
|
2,106,779
|
Current liabilities
|
|
|
|
|
Trade and other
payables
|
|
|
335,597
|
344,867
|
Provisions
|
|
|
4,170
|
822
|
Current tax liabilities
|
|
|
29
|
20
|
Lease liabilities
|
|
|
51,442
|
49,493
|
Borrowings
|
|
|
57,542
|
14,079
|
Total current liabilities
|
|
|
448,780
|
409,281
|
Net current assets
|
|
|
59,690
|
115,606
|
Non-current liabilities
|
|
|
|
|
Provisions
|
|
|
10,336
|
6,609
|
Lease liabilities
|
|
|
113,082
|
107,272
|
Borrowings
|
|
|
559,964
|
537,712
|
Deferred tax
liabilities
|
|
|
49,607
|
51,310
|
Total non-current
liabilities
|
|
|
732,989
|
702,903
|
Total liabilities
|
|
|
1,181,769
|
1,112,184
|
Net assets
|
|
|
1,043,397
|
994,595
|
Equity
|
|
|
|
|
Share capital
|
|
|
123,046
|
123,046
|
Share premium account
|
|
|
113,510
|
113,510
|
Treasury shares reserve
|
|
|
(67,488)
|
(60,420)
|
Own shares reserve
|
|
|
(9,694)
|
(9,615)
|
Translation reserve
|
|
|
(6,759)
|
(2,685)
|
Other reserves
|
|
|
330,534
|
330,489
|
Retained earnings
|
|
|
560,248
|
500,270
|
Total equity
|
|
|
1,043,397
|
994,595
|
CONSOLIDATED CASH FLOW STATEMENT
|
|
|
FOR THE YEAR ENDED 30 APRIL 2024
|
|
|
|
|
Note
|
2024
£000
|
2023
£000
|
Net cash generated from operations
|
4
|
110,260
|
84,322
|
Investing activities
|
|
|
|
Finance income
|
|
596
|
90
|
Distributions from
associates
|
|
2,001
|
3,156
|
Payment for acquisition of
subsidiary, net of cash acquired
|
|
(4,051)
|
(10,004)
|
Proceeds from disposal of other
property, plant and equipment
|
|
1,432
|
678
|
Purchases of other property, plant
and equipment
|
|
(15,757)
|
(7,362)
|
Purchases of intangible
assets
|
|
(2,019)
|
(1,765)
|
Net cash used in investing activities
|
|
(17,798)
|
(15,207)
|
Financing activities
|
|
|
|
Dividends paid
|
|
(56,178)
|
(52,220)
|
Receipt of bank loans and other
borrowings
|
|
33,078
|
96,807
|
Debt issue costs paid
|
|
-
|
(950)
|
Principal element of lease
payments
|
|
(65,047)
|
(65,110)
|
Payments to acquire treasury
shares
|
|
(24,878)
|
(52,927)
|
Proceeds from sale of own
shares
|
|
2,829
|
1,414
|
Net cash used in financing activities
|
|
(110,196)
|
(72,986)
|
Net decrease in cash and cash equivalents
|
|
(17,734)
|
(3,871)
|
Cash and cash equivalents at 1
May
|
|
11,681
|
15,769
|
Effect of foreign exchange
movements
|
|
(765)
|
(217)
|
Cash and cash equivalents at 30 April
|
(a)
|
(6,818)
|
11,681
|
|
|
|
|
(a) Cash and cash equivalents comprise:
|
|
|
|
Cash and bank balances
|
|
39,802
|
14,122
|
Bank overdrafts
|
|
(46,620)
|
(2,441)
|
Cash and cash equivalents
|
|
(6,818)
|
11,681
|
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN EQUITY
FOR THE YEAR ENDED 30 APRIL 2024
|
Share
capital and share premium
£000
|
Treasury
shares reserve
£000
|
Own
shares reserve
£000
|
Translation reserve
£000
|
Other
reserves
£000
|
Retained
earnings
£000
|
Total
£000
|
Total equity at 1 May
2022
|
236,556
|
(7,493)
|
(16,439)
|
(8,633)
|
330,435
|
412,335
|
946,761
|
Share options fair value
charge
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
4,647
|
4,647
|
Share options exercised
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(5,410)
|
(5,410)
|
Dividends paid
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(52,220)
|
(52,220)
|
Purchase of shares net of proceeds
received on exercise of share options
|
-
|
(52,927)
|
1,414
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(51,513)
|
Transfer of shares on vesting of
share options
|
-
|
-
|
5,410
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
5,410
|
Deferred tax on share based
payments recognised in equity
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
1,680
|
1,680
|
Total comprehensive income
(expense)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
5,948
|
54
|
139,238
|
145,240
|
Total equity at 30 April 2023 and 1
May 2023
|
236,556
|
(60,420)
|
(9,615)
|
(2,685)
|
330,489
|
500,270
|
994,595
|
Share options fair value
charge
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
5,239
|
5,239
|
Share options exercised
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(14,902)
|
(14,902)
|
Dividends paid
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(56,178)
|
(56,178)
|
Purchase of shares net of proceeds
received on exercise of share options
|
-
|
(24,878)
|
2,829
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(22,049)
|
Transfer of treasury shares to own
shares reserve
|
-
|
17,810
|
(17,810)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Transfer of shares on vesting of
share options
|
-
|
-
|
14,902
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
14,902
|
Deferred tax on share based
payments recognised in equity
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
801
|
801
|
Total comprehensive
income
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(4,074)
|
45
|
125,018
|
120,989
|
Total equity at 30 April 2024
|
236,556
|
(67,488)
|
(9,694)
|
(6,759)
|
330,534
|
560,248
|
1,043,397
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Other reserves comprise the other
reserve, capital redemption reserve, revaluation reserve and merger
reserve.
NOTES TO THE ACCOUNTS
FOR THE YEAR ENDED 30 APRIL 2024
1. SEGMENTAL ANALYSIS
|
UK&I
Rental
2024
£000
|
Spain
Rental
2024
£000
|
Claims &
Services
2024
£000
|
Corporate
2024
£000
|
Eliminations
2024
£000
|
Total
2024
£000
|
Revenue: hire of vehicles
|
375,255
|
274,016
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
649,271
|
Revenue: sale of vehicles
|
226,936
|
84,531
|
1,002
|
-
|
-
|
312,469
|
Revenue: claims and
services
|
-
|
-
|
871,387
|
-
|
-
|
871,387
|
External revenue
|
602,191
|
358,547
|
872,389
|
-
|
-
|
1,833,127
|
Intersegment revenue
|
9,193
|
-
|
87,865
|
-
|
(97,058)
|
-
|
Total revenue
|
611,384
|
358,547
|
960,254
|
-
|
(97,058)
|
1,833,127
|
Timing of revenue recognition:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
At a point in time
|
226,936
|
84,531
|
442,360
|
-
|
-
|
753,827
|
Over time
|
375,255
|
274,016
|
430,029
|
-
|
-
|
1,079,300
|
External revenue
|
602,191
|
358,547
|
872,389
|
-
|
-
|
1,833,127
|
Underlying operating profit (loss)
|
93,788
|
77,789
|
51,419
|
(10,577)
|
-
|
212,419
|
Share of net profit of associates
accounted for using the equity method
|
-
|
-
|
1,296
|
-
|
-
|
1,296
|
Underlying EBIT*
|
93,788
|
77,789
|
52,715
|
(10,577)
|
-
|
213,715
|
Amortisation on acquired intangible
assets
|
|
|
|
|
|
(18,563)
|
Depreciation adjustment (Note
6)
|
|
|
|
|
|
(17)
|
EBIT
|
|
|
|
|
|
195,135
|
Finance income
|
|
|
|
|
|
596
|
Finance costs
|
|
|
|
|
|
(33,628)
|
Profit before taxation
|
|
|
|
|
|
162,103
|
1. SEGMENTAL ANALYSIS
(Continued)
|
UK&I
Rental
2023
£000
|
Spain
Rental
2023
£000
|
Claims
& Services
2023
£000
|
Corporate
2023
£000
|
Eliminations
2023
£000
|
Total
2023
£000
|
Revenue: hire of vehicles
|
357,811
|
252,691
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
610,502
|
Revenue: sale of vehicles
|
104,945
|
47,280
|
669
|
-
|
-
|
152,894
|
Revenue: claims and
services
|
-
|
-
|
726,350
|
-
|
-
|
726,350
|
External revenue
|
462,756
|
299,971
|
727,019
|
-
|
-
|
1,489,746
|
Intersegment revenue
|
9,883
|
-
|
42,793
|
-
|
(52,676)
|
-
|
Total revenue
|
472,639
|
299,971
|
769,812
|
-
|
(52,676)
|
1,489,746
|
Timing of revenue
recognition:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
At a point in time
|
104,945
|
47,280
|
291,996
|
-
|
-
|
444,221
|
Over time
|
357,811
|
252,691
|
435,023
|
-
|
-
|
1,045,525
|
External revenue
|
462,756
|
299,971
|
727,019
|
-
|
-
|
1,489,746
|
Underlying operating profit
(loss)
|
93,382
|
60,440
|
44,521
|
(11,670)
|
-
|
186,673
|
Share of net profit of associates
accounted for using the equity method
|
-
|
-
|
2,520
|
-
|
-
|
2,520
|
Underlying EBIT*
|
93,382
|
60,440
|
47,041
|
(11,670)
|
-
|
189,193
|
Exceptional items (Note
6)
|
|
|
|
|
|
(13,491)
|
Amortisation on acquired intangible
assets
|
|
|
|
|
|
(20,206)
|
Gain on bargain purchase (Note
6)
|
|
|
|
|
|
46,546
|
EBIT
|
|
|
|
|
|
202,042
|
Finance income
|
|
|
|
|
|
90
|
Finance costs
|
|
|
|
|
|
(23,405)
|
Profit before taxation
|
|
|
|
|
|
178,727
|
*Underlying EBIT stated
before amortisation on acquired intangible assets and exceptional items is the
measure used by the Board of Directors to assess segment
performance.
The operating segments have been
renamed in the year but have the same composition and remain
unchanged. See glossary for reference to previous
names.
2.
EARNINGS PER SHARE
|
2024
£000
|
2023
£000
|
Basic and diluted earnings per share
|
|
|
The calculation of basic and
diluted earnings per share is based on the following
data:
|
|
|
Earnings
|
|
|
Earnings for the purposes of basic
and diluted earnings per share, being profit for the year
attributable to the owners of the Parent Company
|
125,018
|
139,238
|
Number of shares
|
|
|
Weighted average number of
ordinary shares for the purposes of basic earnings per
share
|
226,332,009
|
230,778,502
|
Effect of dilutive potential
ordinary shares - share options
|
5,023,528
|
6,290,275
|
Weighted average number of
ordinary shares for the purposes of diluted earnings per
share
|
231,355,537
|
237,068,777
|
Basic earnings per
share
|
55.2p
|
60.3p
|
Diluted earnings per
share
|
54.0p
|
58.7p
|
The calculated weighted average
number of ordinary shares for the purposes of basic earnings per
share includes a reduction of 19,759,414 shares (2023: 15,312,921)
relating to treasury shares and shares held in employee
trusts.
3. DIVIDENDS
An interim dividend of 8.3p per
ordinary share was paid in January 2024 (2023: 7.5p). The Directors
propose a final dividend for the year ended 30 April 2024 of 17.5p
per ordinary share (2023: 16.5p), which is subject to approval at
the AGM and has not been included as a liability as at 30 April
2024. Based upon the shares in issue at 30 April 2024 and excluding
treasury shares and shares in employee trust where dividends are
waived, this equates to a final dividend payment of £39m (2023:
£37m). No dividends have been paid between 30 April 2024 and the
date of signing the financial statements.
4. NOTES TO THE CASH FLOW STATEMENT
FOR THE YEAR ENDED 30 APRIL 2024
|
|
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
Net cash generated from operations
|
£000
|
£000
|
Operating profit
|
193,839
|
199,522
|
Adjustments for:
|
|
|
Depreciation of property, plant
and equipment
|
231,293
|
175,066
|
Impairment of goodwill
|
-
|
5,009
|
Impairment of other
intangibles
|
-
|
8,482
|
Amortisation of intangible
assets
|
19,961
|
21,408
|
(Gain) loss on disposal of other
property, plant and equipment
|
(76)
|
218
|
Share options fair value
charge
|
5,239
|
4,647
|
Operating cash flows before movements in working
capital
|
450,256
|
414,352
|
(Decrease) increase in non-vehicle
inventories
|
(2,788)
|
273
|
Decrease (increase) in
receivables
|
26,049
|
(81,981)
|
(Increase) decrease in
payables
|
(39,630)
|
71,810
|
Increase in provisions
|
6,784
|
7,431
|
Cash generated from operations
|
440,671
|
411,885
|
Income taxes paid, net
|
(33,371)
|
(36,640)
|
Interest paid
|
(31,486)
|
(21,150)
|
Net cash generated from operations before purchases of and
proceeds from disposal of vehicles for hire
|
375,814
|
354,095
|
Purchases of vehicles for
hire
|
(553,537)
|
(398,187)
|
Proceeds from disposals of
vehicles for hire
|
287,983
|
128,414
|
Net cash generated from operations
|
110,260
|
84,322
|
5. ANALYSIS OF CONSOLIDATED NET DEBT
|
|
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
£000
|
£000
|
Cash and bank balances
|
(39,802)
|
(14,122)
|
Bank overdrafts
|
46,620
|
2,441
|
Bank loans
|
250,052
|
218,403
|
Loan notes
|
320,267
|
329,854
|
Lease liabilities
|
164,524
|
156,765
|
Cumulative preference
shares
|
500
|
500
|
Confirming facilities
|
67
|
593
|
Consolidated net debt
|
742,228
|
694,434
|
|
|
| |
6.
EXCEPTIONAL ITEMS
Details of exceptional items
recognised in the income statement are as follows:
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
£000
|
£000
|
Impairment of goodwill
|
-
|
5,009
|
Impairment of other
intangibles
|
-
|
8,482
|
Exceptional administrative expenses
|
-
|
13,491
|
Total exceptional items included within
EBIT
|
-
|
13,491
|
Total pre-tax exceptional items
|
-
|
13,491
|
Tax credits relating to exceptional
items
|
-
|
(2,065)
|
|
|
|
Cash expenses
|
-
|
-
|
Non-cash expenses
|
-
|
13,491
|
Total pre-tax exceptional items
|
-
|
13,491
|
Impairment of NewLaw
In the prior year, following a
strategic business review, the carrying amount of assets relating
to the NewLaw CGU was considered to be below its recoverable amount
and therefore an impairment charge of £5,009,000 and £8,482,000,
for goodwill and other intangibles respectively, was recognised as
an exceptional item in the consolidated income statement. The Group
also reassessed the useful lives of property, plant and equipment
relating to the NewLaw CGU and determined that no change in the
useful lives is required. In the current year, it was concluded
that there were no indicators of additional impairment or reversal
of impairment of other non-current assets previously
charged
Details of other items which are
not classified as exceptional items but are not included within
underlying profit in the income statement are as
follows:
Amortisation on acquired intangible assets
Amortisation on acquired
intangible assets of £18,563,000 (2023: £20,206,000) is not
classified as an exceptional item as it is recurring. However, it
is excluded from underlying results in order to provide a better
comparison of results between periods as the Group grows through a
combination of organic and inorganic growth. The revenue and
operating costs of these acquisitions are included within
underlying results. Amortisation of intangible assets of £1,398,000
(2023: £1,202,000) which does not relate to acquisitions is
included within underlying profit.
Depreciation rate changes
The Group has adjusted the
depreciation rates from 1 May 2022 on vehicles remaining on the
fleet which were purchased before FY2021. This adjustment is
explained further in the Financial Review. The depreciation
adjustment is a debit to the consolidated income statement of
£17,000 (2023: credit of £46,546,000). This adjustment is not
classified as an exceptional item, however, it is excluded from
underlying results in order to provide a better comparison of
results between periods.
7. BASIS OF PREPARATION
These financial statements have
been prepared in accordance with United Kingdom adopted
international accounting standards ('IFRS') and with those parts of
the Companies Act 2006 applicable to companies reporting under
IFRS.
ZIGUP plc ("the Company") has
adopted all IFRS in issue and effective for the year.
While the financial information
included in this preliminary announcement has been prepared in
accordance with the recognition and measurement criteria of IFRS,
this announcement does not itself contain sufficient information to
comply with IFRS. The Company expects to publish full financial
statements that comply with IFRS in July 2024.
The financial information set out
above does not constitute the Company's statutory accounts for the
years ended 30 April 2024 or 2023 but is derived from those
accounts. Statutory accounts for 2023 have been delivered to the
Registrar of Companies and those for 2024 will be delivered
following the Company's Annual General Meeting. The auditors have
reported on those accounts: their reports were unqualified, did not
draw attention to any matters by way of emphasis and did not
contain statements under s498 (2) or (3) of the Companies Act
2006.
The financial information
presented in respect of the year ended 30 April 2024 has been
prepared on a basis consistent with that presented in the annual
report for the year ended 30 April 2023.
Having considered the Group's
current trading, cash flow generation and debt maturity including
severe but plausible stress testing scenarios, the Directors have
concluded that it is appropriate to prepare the Group financial
statements on a going concern basis as explained further
below.
Assessment of
prospects
In the year, the Group launched a
new corporate brand and name, with ZIGUP encompassing the strength
and depth of the enlarged Group. To better reflect the future of
the Group, a new purpose was developed underpinning a refreshed
strategic framework, subject to the ongoing monitoring and
development described below. The Group is well established within
the markets it operates in and has proven resilience through
difficult economic conditions in recent years and strong momentum
has continued throughout the year ended 30 April 2024.
In the year, the Board retired the
previous strategic framework and introduced 'Enable, Deliver, Grow'
as the next phase of our strategy. The Board maintains a measured
approach to strategic risk whilst continuing to explore growth
opportunities intended to add long term value to the Group, both
organically and inorganically. The Board continually assesses the
changes in the risk profile and emerging risks to the Group. The
Group pursues only those activities which are acceptable in the
context of the risk appetite of the Group as a whole.
Assessment of
viability
To assess the Group's viability,
the three year strategic plan was stress tested against various
scenarios and other sensitivities.
Sensitivity analysis of our
strategy
A detailed three year strategic
review was conducted which considers the Group's cash flows,
dividend cover assuming operation of stated policy, and headroom
against borrowing facilities and financial covenants under the
Group's existing facilities. These metrics were subjected to
sensitivity analysis to assess the Group's ability to deliver its
strategic objectives.
Financial
position
The Group's principal banking
facilities mature in November 2026. Private placement loan notes of
€375m give a longer profile of maturities spread across 6, 8 and 10
years. Headroom against the Group's existing banking facilities at
30 April 2024 was £244m. This compares with headroom of £290m at 30
April 2023 and reflects the ongoing investment in fleet. Given the
financial strength of the Group, we do not anticipate any material
deterioration in the credit status of the Group or access to credit
markets that would contradict this assumption.
Taking this into account, the
Group's facilities provide sufficient headroom to fund the capital
expenditure and working capital requirements during the planned
period.
The Directors have further
considered the resilience of the Group, considering its current
position and the principal risks facing the business. The plan was
stress tested for severe but plausible scenarios over the planned
period as follows:
• No further growth in
vehicles on hire with rental customers
• A 1% reduction in pricing
of rental hire rates
• A 2% increase above plan
assumptions in the purchase cost of vehicles and other operating
expenses not passed on to customers
• A 5% reduction to
assumptions in the plan for the residual value of used
vehicles
• A 10% reduction in
insurance claims and services revenue in aggregate, either through
lower demand or through ending the commercial relationship with a
group of key insurance partners
• A prudent working capital
view reflecting the impact of a slow-down in collections of
historic insurance claims
The above scenarios took into
account the effectiveness of mitigating actions that would be
reasonably taken, such as reducing variable costs that are directly
related to revenue, but did not take into account further
management actions that would likely be taken, such as a change to
the indirect cost base of the Group or a reduction in capital
expenditure and ageing out of the vehicle fleet, both of which
would generate cash and reduce debt.
Conclusions relating to
viability and going concern
After considering the above
sensitivities and reasonable mitigating actions, sufficient
headroom remained against available debt facilities and the
covenants attached to those facilities. The Directors have a
reasonable expectation that the Group will continue to be able to
meet its obligations as they fall due and continue to be viable
over the period to 30 April 2027. The Directors also considered it
appropriate to prepare the financial statements on the going
concern basis.