TIDMGRA
RNS Number : 6897I
Grafenia plc
28 November 2018
The information contained within this announcement is deemed by
the Company to constitute inside information as stipulated under
the Market Abuse Regulations (EU) No. 596/2014 ("MAR"). With the
publication of this announcement via a Regulatory Information
Service, this inside information is now considered to be in the
public domain.
Grafenia plc
("Grafenia", "the Group" or "the Company")
Unaudited Interim Results for the period ended 30 September
2018
Financial highlights
2018 2017
Turnover GBP8.31m GBP6.74m
Normalised EBITDA* GBP(0.31)m GBP0.43m
Operating Loss GBP(1.36)m GBP(0.47)m
Loss before Tax GBP(1.44)m GBP(0.49)m
Tax Income GBP0.18m GBP0.10m
Total Comprehensive Loss GBP(1.26)m GBP(0.39)m
EPS (1.75)p (0.86)p
Capital Expenditure (excluding
acquisition) GBP0.22m GBP1.32m
Bank Cash/(Borrowings) GBP1.62m GBP(0.23)m
Net Debt** GBP(1.06)m GBP(2.54)m
* Normalised EBITDA is operating loss plus amortisation and
depreciation excluding non-recurring costs
** Net debt is the net of cash and cash equivalents less other
interest-bearing loans and borrowings
Operational highlights
-- Nettl UK partner network grows to over 170 locations
-- Revenues in Nettl company-owned Stores up by 140%, up 12% on
a like-for-like basis, driven by our new Nettl Business Store
format
-- Second Nettl Business Superstore planned
-- 25 Nettl locations in The Netherlands and Belgium
-- First 10 Founder Nettl partners launched in France
-- Nettl of America pre-launch activity commenced
-- Growth in 'ink on fabric' displays continues, sales up 30%
-- Continued investment in improving our finance and reporting
infrastructure with negative short-term impact on cost
For further information:
Grafenia plc
Peter Gunning (Chief Executive) 07973 191 632
Jan Mohr (Chairman) 0049 175 734 2740
Simon Barrell (Interim Finance Director) 07850 934 204
Allenby Capital Limited (Nominated Adviser
and broker)
David Hart / Liz Kirchner / Nicholas Chambers 0203 328 5656
Interim Statement
In last year's annual report, we set out the next part of our
transformation strategy. We're rolling-up sign businesses, building
Nettl Business Stores and licencing our brands. During the interim
period, revenues have grown in all of those segments and we're
increasingly confident in the merits of our transformation
strategy.
However, we continue to battle against certain headwinds, as our
costs have been increasing and margins eroding in other parts of
our business. Trade print has got tougher and prices are still
falling. To address this we aim to become less reliant on litho
trade print every day. We do this by scaling our company-owned
operations that sell to end clients, broadening our product
offerings (into areas like signs, ink on fabric and web services)
and adding new Brand Partners who pay licence fees to use our
platform and brands.
Trading Results and Cash
Turnover during the six month period was GBP8.31m (2017:
GBP6.74m), an increase of 23% compared to the corresponding period
last year. This period benefited from a full six month's trading of
Image Everything Limited ("Image Group"), compared to 10 weeks in
the previous interim period. It also includes revenue from two
businesses we didn't own in the comparative period.
Gross profit increased to GBP4.35m (2017: GBP3.88m), although as
a percentage it reduced from 57.5% to 52.4% (gross profit is
calculated after deducting direct materials, carriage and
production labour). Like last year, there are three drivers for
this.
Firstly, our input costs have increased. Almost all of our raw
materials are sourced from Europe, or paid in US Dollars. Like the
majority of printers, we've suffered from increased pricing on
paper, our biggest raw material purchase. This has been exacerbated
by demand for paper pulp created by the packaging industry and the
drive to move away from single-use plastics.
Secondly, the margin characteristics for sign production are
different to litho printing. As signage becomes a larger part of
our business, we would expect the percentage to change in line and
move closer to 50%.
Thirdly, despite rising costs, wholesale print prices continue
to fall as competitors discount to grow market share. We monitor
market pricing and take defensive action to maintain
competitiveness.
Encouragingly, gross profit only declined by low single digits
on an underlying basis (i.e. excluding businesses we bought during
the period). We now have visibility to achieve increasing gross
profits on a like-for-like basis after many years of decline. This
is mainly driven by licence fees and company-owned store
performance increasingly offsetting declines in trade litho print
profits.
Our overheads increased to GBP4.63m compared to GBP3.45m in the
same period last year. Much of this increase relates to businesses
which we have acquired during the year. It includes GBP0.05m in
respect of deferred consideration, shown as a cost to the business.
We've also invested in our store and partner performance teams
around the world and increased our finance team.
Normalised EBITDA before non-recurring costs was GBP(0.31)m
(2017: GBP0.43m). Non recurring costs amounted to GBP0.13m. There
was an operating loss of GBP1.36m (2017: operating loss GBP0.47m).
We recorded a pre-tax loss of GBP1.44m (2017: GBP0.49m).
At 30 September 2018, the Company had cash of GBP1.62m (2017
borrowings: GBP0.23m) and debt of GBP2.69m (2017 debt: GBP3.06m),
consisting of GBP0.99m in vendor loan notes, GBP1.03m of asset
finance and GBP0.67m of other borrowings. Our operating activities
utilised GBP0.73m of cash (2017: generated GBP0.66m) and, during
the period, working capital decreased by GBP0.38m (2017: decreased
by GBP0.27m).
Capital expenditure was GBP0.39m (2017: GBP1.32m). This total
includes GBP0.35m invested in the ongoing development of our
platform which underpins our operations and is licensed to our
Partners.
As communicated in our last two annual reports, some of our
investments might show as costs in our profit and loss statement.
Others show as capital expenditure or M&A consideration in our
cash-flow statement. To the board, they are all compared on the
same basis. It doesn't matter if we invest in opening a new country
operation for Nettl, buying a machine or increasing our sales
teams. We focus on what we hope will get us an attractive
cash-payback. This may distort our earnings figures temporarily.
For example, the opening of a new Nettl country (as discussed in
"Nettl of America" below) creates substantial start-up costs.
However, we clearly view this as an investment for the future - but
one that has to be booked in our profit and loss statement as a
cost.
Trading Review
We manufacture printing, signs and displays in our own
factories. Our range of products includes banners, business cards,
fabric stands, window and vehicle graphics, together with business
marketing materials.
We sell to businesses of all sizes, but we sell the most to
SMEs. We use a variety of sales channels and routes to market:
directly via company-owned stores, account managers and online
channels, and indirectly via resellers to whom we license software
and brands.
Nettl
Nettl is our retail store format. There are over 200 locations
across the globe, with over 170 in the UK and Ireland alone. Nettl
studios are popping up in France, Holland, Belgium, New Zealand and
Australia. We own six Nettl studios directly. The rest are operated
under licence by our Brand Partners.
Nettl studios help local businesses with their marketing. These
days, that usually starts with a website or signage. Then it often
leads to print, display and other online services like search
engine optimisation.
Nettl Company Stores
We have 'first generation' Nettl web studios in London, Dublin,
Exeter and a factory store in Manchester. In Birmingham, we operate
a 'second generation' Business Store and a Superstore in
Liverpool.
First generation Nettl web studios were typically 500sqft high
street locations. All were re-purposed printing.com stores. While
clients still come to meet us, footfall has been falling in these
studios. Performance across these locations is mixed and legacy
rent commitments affect unit profitability. We are not opening any
more locations of this type.
As our product range has expanded, we've needed more space to
display it. In 2016 we moved our Birmingham studio team to a larger
2,000sqft location. We called this a 'Business Store'. We wanted to
test if we could drive footfall with the sale of coffee and meeting
room hire. If we could, the increased rent for bigger locations
could be offset with new revenue streams. The test was successful.
In the interim period this 'Business Store' continued to grow. We
expect to open more stores like this and to license the format to
our Brand Partners.
In April 2018, we opened our first 5,000sqft Business Superstore
in Liverpool. This was born after relocating the team from ADD
Signs, acquired in January 2017. Like Birmingham, Liverpool has
display space, a studio team and meeting room hire. However, it
differs from the others - as it has some local manufacturing and a
sign and graphics installation and vehicle wrapping team. In the
first half, sales have grown by over 20% in this location. In the
last few weeks of the interim period we rolled in a nearby Nettl
team, which was previously partner-operated.
In December 2017, we acquired Nettl of Exeter - also formerly
operated by a partner. In July 2018, we acquired AG Signs &
Print, a nearby sign business. We plan to roll these businesses
together and open our second Business Superstore in Exeter during
the second half of our financial year. We have obtained planning
consent for change of use on a unit and are currently finalising a
lease.
When we acquire a sign business and convert it to a Nettl
Superstore, or we begin preparations to merge teams, the revenues
are disclosed as part of the company stores segment.
Total sales in our company-owned stores grew 140% in the half
year to GBP1.20m (2017: GBP0.50m). Like-for-like sales were up 12%
when we exclude Nettl of Exeter and AG Signs (which we did not own
in the comparative period).
We continue to search for and evaluate other sign businesses to
acquire and convert to Nettl Business Superstores.
Our focus for company-owned locations is to improve sales
performance by helping clients get more from their marketing
activity. We continue to test new products and services in these
stores, before rolling them out to our partner network.
Licencing our brands
We license Nettl and printing.com to selected businesses. We
call them 'Brand Partners' since our brands are exposed to
end-clients. Brand Partners are usually established graphics
businesses, such as designers, printers or sign companies. They
'bolt-on' Nettl to their existing business and co-brand with their
own name, or adopt Nettl branding if they prefer. In towns and
suburbs, these bolt-on partners pay an initial subscription fee
which is typically GBP2,000. That gets them an exclusive territory,
plus classroom training and a marketing starter kit. New partners
pay ongoing monthly subscription fees of GBP499.
We reserve city centre locations for fully-branded Nettl
partners. Back in 1998, the first printing.com store opened in
Edinburgh. Twenty years later, that store has relocated to become
our first partner-operated Nettl Business Store. They're now in a
former bank, a few doors along from the original site. This new
2,500sqft site has the same prominence of fabric displays as our
Birmingham Business Store and multiple meeting rooms for hire.
In the interim period, we added 22 new Nettl partners in the UK
and Ireland, taking the network to over 170 locations. We remain
confident that the nation can support 300 locations.
We continue to license printing.com, also as a bolt-on format.
Brand Partners pay monthly subscription fees of GBP299 and an
initial subscription fee of GBP1k-GBP2k. Becoming a printing.com
partner is often a stepping stone to upgrading to a Nettl partner.
We added 25 new printing.com partners in the half year and have
over 100 in operation today.
Licence income from UK Nettl and printing.com partners grew to
GBP0.60m (2017: GBP0.47m). The total partner count we report is
always the sum of current partners on the date of this letter and,
like most subscription models, we experience some churn.
Brand Partners tell us our software makes their businesses run
more efficiently, and our marketing attracts new clients and
encourages existing clients to return.
Aside from licence fee income, Brand Partners are hooked into
our supply chain and can buy our full range of print, display and
signage at wholesale prices. Sales of print and product to Brand
Partners was GBP2.08m (2017: GBP2.01m). Print supply has got
tougher. Despite rising input costs, there are plenty of
competitors willing to discount heavily. We don't expect margins
from the sale of print to recover in the near future while there is
still overcapacity in the market.
However, the product mix sold via Brand Partners has changed
during the year. It now includes a greater proportion of ink on
fabric, signage and display products.
Nettl of The Netherlands and Belgium
We launched Nettl in The Netherlands during the summer of 2017.
We hired a consultant to help us tailor the model for the Benelux
market. His fixed-term contract ended after the first year.
Initially, we experienced a higher partner churn rate in The
Netherlands than the UK, albeit for similar reasons. However, since
hiring and training a full-time Partner Acquisition Manager, we
have seen a return to partner growth and expect to scale the
network further, without materially increasing our cost base. We
have 25 partners (2017: 19) in Holland and Belgium and our
objective remains to get to 150. On a monthly basis, the Benelux
business is now profitable.
Nettl of France
We have operated printing.com in France since 2003. For a
variety of reasons, we have not yet managed to achieve the size of
network seen in our home market. The business segment has traded
around or slightly below breakeven for some time, although it has
made a contribution to our print volumes. However, in December 2017
we began licensing Nettl partners. We now have 10 partners (2017:
0) and an encouraging deal pipeline. There is a plausible prospect
of this segment becoming a meaningful contributor to
profitability.
Nettl of New Zealand and Australia
We have a master licensee which covers both these countries.
In New Zealand, Nettl is a network of company-owned outlets and
printing.com bolt-on franchisees. A new company-owned Nettl
location was opened in Auckland during the half year.
In Australia, Nettl is being marketed as a software licence. The
first licensees are trading and our partners continue to test and
tweak their model.
Nettl of America
Back in 2007, we granted a printing.com master licence for the
states of Florida and Georgia in the US. The network grew to around
50 franchise locations before pivoting to a white-label SaaS model.
We were paid a share of licence fees for the use of our
platform.
That licence agreement has now come to an end. To provide
continuity and uninterrupted service, we now support the remaining
SaaS licensees with our UK-based team. These licensees pay us
subscription licence fees directly. The amounts we receive under
these agreements should not materially change, compared to the
share previously paid by the master licensee. However, the
licencees are currently on rolling contracts with 30 day notice
periods. We have migrated most product supply to a US-based printer
and we intend to supply some niche products from our existing
supply chain.
We believe there is product-market fit for the Nettl model and
are making preparations to launch Nettl of America. The regulatory
landscape in the US is different to the UK and requires our
offering to be launched as a franchise. We are currently preparing
legal agreements, marketing collateral and adapting the platform.
Clearly, the US is a large market and potential upside is high.
However, until we begin, we cannot know for certain whether the
lifetime value characteristics and gestation period will be similar
to Europe.
As we invest in the roll-out of this model, costs are
front-loaded, like in other countries. We pay out before we receive
a dollar in licence income. We have begun training US-based team
members to acquire and support future franchisees and plan to
commence granting Nettl 'bolt-on' Franchises in early 2019.
Image Group
We acquired Image Group, in July 2017. Sales in the half year
were GBP2.68m (2017: GBP1.68m in partial period).
We have made progress with integration. In the first half, the
Image Group sign hub supplied over 5,000 discrete orders to our
network. Those orders were a mix of large format posters, display
boards and vinyl graphics. We continue to productise our signage
range so that our Brand Partners can take advantage of the
opportunities that open up.
Image Group has undertaken larger scale projects for most of our
company-owned stores and a few of our Partners. We have system and
process development to do before we can provide a national
installation capability, but that remains our goal.
Other channels
We operate a variety of different web-to-print sites, some
targeting trade suppliers, some private-branded portals and others
for micro-businesses. They are all handled by the same centralised
client service team. Whilst we value the business from clients of
these sites, we do not currently find the customer acquisition and
lifetime value metrics to be scalable. In the interim period, we
have continued to redeploy team members into supporting and
developing our Nettl Brand Partners. Sales in trade and online
channels were GBP1.45m (2017: GBP1.70m) during the half year.
Growth of fabric
We sell a range of exhibition displays and corporate furniture
through our network. Many of the products have two components - a
frame and a fabric cover. We bulk import the frames and print and
finish the fabric covers at our central hub. We have extended the
range during the interim period and have a wider selection of
displays suitable for outdoor promotion. During the interim period,
we sold over GBP0.50m (2017: GBP0.39m) of ink-on-fabric - up 30% on
the comparative period.
Dividend
The Directors are not declaring an Interim Dividend (2017:
Nil).
Finance Systems Investment
Since we changed the leadership of our finance team in the
summer, we have identified several areas for improvement. In light
of our strategy to roll-in various sign businesses, our reporting
has to become more agile and granular. To that end, we are
overhauling the entire finance organisation and are rebuilding
processes to be scalable and ready for a much larger Grafenia
organisation. We incurred substantial costs for consulting,
additional software and new team members. In addition, our focus on
improving our finance processes has taken a substantial amount of
management attention away from other areas, such as M&A.
However, the board believes this investment of time and capital is
necessary to support further M&A. We have changed how we report
on our business internally and are considering changing our future
external reporting format as well. We welcome shareholder input
regarding any changes we can make to make our reporting more useful
and clear.
Acquiring other businesses
We remain on the lookout for other sign businesses to roll into
Grafenia. The signs sector is highly fragmented and we have
evaluated many business opportunities.
In each primary location, we are seeking a 'remainer' looking to
grow their business. That could be a sign business or a Nettl
partner. Once we have made that acquisition, our focus shifts to
finding other local businesses to roll-in. Usually, those are where
the owner is retiring. Our plan is to replicate what we have done
in Liverpool and Exeter and to convert those businesses into Nettl
Business Superstores.
We are also looking for a few larger sign businesses - similar
in scale to Image Group. These will act as regional manufacturing
and installation hubs, to support a local network of Nettl Business
Stores and studios.
Integrating sign businesses
When we're looking at prospective acquisitions, we place a high
degree of importance on cultural fit. We have a few methods to help
with that. During the interim we've developed GrafOS, our operating
system for people. We've defined roles with required competencies,
which we call 'intelligences'. Our teams will begin collecting
'badges' as they gain competence in a certain intelligence.
The aim of GrafOS is to structure and standardise the roles that
we'll need in future superstores. We're doing this so that people
can have a view of their 'storyline' or career path - and see what
mission goals they need to complete to collect a badge and be
qualified for promotion.
This project is a major undertaking. But we believe it's
necessary to put this development in at this stage to prepare for
scale.
Outlook
After the interim period ended, trading has been mostly
positive. We beat a previous record for sales of ink-on-fabric in
October and in that month our company stores outperformed the same
period last year. We continue to see growth in the number of
partners across our brands.
Starting Nettl of America will be a headwind to our reported
operating costs in the coming half-year and into the next fiscal
year. However, the opportunity is significant.
The Board continues to look for M&A opportunities in the
sign space, that would, if they should materialise, change the size
and structure of the Group materially.
However, given the political and economic situation, we remain
cautious on quantifying the outlook.
Jan Mohr Peter Gunning
Chairman Chief Executive Officer
27 November 2018
Unaudited Interim Results for the period ended 30 September
2018
Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive Income
for the six months ended 30 September 2018
Unaudited Unaudited Audited
Period ended Period ended Year ended
30 September 30 September 31 March
Continuing Operations Note 2018 2017 2018
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
Revenue 3 8,309 6,738 14,630
Raw materials and consumables
used (3,957) (2,861) (6,293)
Gross profit 4,352 3,877 8,337
------------------------------ ---- ------------- ------------- ----------
Staff costs (2,709) (2,067) (4,577)
Other operating charges (1,922) (1,383) (3,071)
Share based payments (26) - -
Normalised EBITDA (305) 427 689
------------------------------ ---- ------------- ------------- ----------
Non-recurring costs 4 (132) 18 82
Depreciation and amortisation (918) (892) (1,874)
Operating loss (1,355) (467) (1,103)
------------------------------ ---- ------------- ------------- ----------
Financial income - - 1
Financial expenses (82) (40) (138)
Net financing (expense) (82) (40) (137)
------------------------------ ---- ------------- ------------- ----------
Loss before tax (1,437) (487) (1,240)
Taxation 181 97 294
Loss for the period (1,256) (390) (946)
------------------------------ ---- ------------- ------------- ----------
Total comprehensive expense
for the period (1,256) (390) (946)
------------------------------ ---- ------------- ------------- ----------
EPS - Continuing Operations 8 (1.75)p (0.86)p (2.07)p
------------------------------ ---- ------------- ------------- ----------
Consolidated Statement of Financial Position
at 30 September 2018
Unaudited Unaudited Audited
Note 30 September 30 September 31 March
2018 2017 2018
GBP000 GBP000 GBP000
Non-current assets
Property, plant and equipment 1,949 1,897 2,076
Intangible assets 4,614 4,691 4,808
Other receivables - 63 -
------------------------------ ---- ------------ ------------ --------
Total non-current assets 6,563 6,651 6,884
------------------------------ ---- ------------ ------------ --------
Current assets
Inventories 466 439 450
Trade and other receivables 5 3,305 3,331 3,295
Current tax receivable 159 191 111
Cash and cash equivalents 1,616 - 171
------------------------------ ---- ------------ ------------ --------
Total current assets 5,546 3,961 4,027
------------------------------ ---- ------------ ------------ --------
Total assets 12,109 10,612 10,911
------------------------------ ---- ------------ ------------ --------
Current liabilities
Other interest-bearing loans
and borrowings 6 (1,432) (1,101) (2,009)
Trade and other payables (1,201) (1,550) (1,437)
Accruals and deferred income (1,022) (963) (983)
Other liabilities (383) (268) (504)
------------------------------ ---- ------------ ------------ --------
Total current liabilities (4,038) (3,882) (4,933)
------------------------------ ---- ------------ ------------ --------
Non-current liabilities
Other interest-bearing loans
and borrowings 6 (1,242) (2,241) (1,055)
Provisions - - (358)
Deferred tax liabilities (584) (267) (580)
------------------------------ ---- ------------ ------------ --------
Total non-current liabilities (1,826) (2,508) (1,993)
------------------------------ ---- ------------ ------------ --------
Total liabilities (5,864) (6,390) (6,926)
------------------------------ ---- ------------ ------------ --------
Net assets 6,245 4,222 3,985
------------------------------ ---- ------------ ------------ --------
Equity
Share capital 7 768 475 475
Share premium account 3,151 - -
Merger reserve 838 838 838
Retained earnings 1,462 3,170 2,672
Share Option reserve 26 - -
Treasury Shares - (261) -
------------------------------ ---- ------------ ------------ --------
Total equity 6,245 4,222 3,985
------------------------------ ---- ------------ ------------ --------
Consolidated Statement of Changes in Shareholders Equity
for the six months ended 30 September 2018 (unaudited)
Share Share Merger Treasury Retained Share Total
Capital Premium Reserve Shares earnings based
payment
reserve
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
Opening shareholders' funds
at 1 April 2017 475 - 838 (261) 3,561 - 4,613
Loss and total comprehensive
income for the period - - - - (390) - (390)
Exchange difference - - - - (1) - (1)
Closing shareholders' funds
at 30 September 2017 475 - 838 (261) 3,170 - 4,222
----------------------------- -------- -------- -------- -------- --------- -------- -------
Opening shareholders' funds
at 1 October 2017 475 - 838 (261) 3,170 - 4,222
Loss and total comprehensive
income for the period - - - - (556) - (556)
Own shares sold - - - 261 (13) - 248
Exchange differences - - - - 71 - 71
Closing shareholders' funds
at 31 March 2018 475 - 838 - 2,672 - 3,985
----------------------------- -------- -------- -------- -------- --------- -------- -------
Opening shareholders' funds
at 1 April 2018 475 - 838 - 2,672 - 3,985
Shares issued in the period 293 3,218 - - - - 3,511
Costs associated with share
issue - (67) - - - - (67)
Loss and total comprehensive
income for the period - - - - (1,256) - (1,256)
Share based payments - - - - - 26 26
Exchange difference - - - - 46 - 46
Closing shareholders' funds
at 30 September 2018 768 3,151 838 - 1,462 26 6,245
----------------------------- -------- -------- -------- -------- --------- -------- -------
Consolidated Statement of Cash Flows
for the six months ended 30 September 2018
Unaudited Unaudited Audited
Six months Six months Year ended
to 30 September to 30 September 31 March
2018 2017 2018
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
Cash flows from operating activities
Loss for the period (1,256) (390) (946)
Adjustments for:
Depreciation, amortisation and
impairment 918 892 1,874
Profit on sale of plant and equipment (105) (18) (102)
Net finance expense/(income) 82 37 137
Exchange loss 46 3 -
Share option costs 26 - -
Taxation (181) (97) (294)
Operating cash flow before changes
in working capital and provisions (470) 427 669
-------------------------------------- ---------------- ---------------- ----------
Change in trade and other receivables 32 (474) (882)
Change in inventories 6 (70) (81)
Change in trade and other payables (314) 816 1,528
Cash generated from operations (746) 699 1,234
-------------------------------------- ---------------- ---------------- ----------
Interest paid (82) (40) (138)
Tax (paid)/received 103 (4) (3)
Net cash inflow from operating
activities (725) 655 1,093
-------------------------------------- ---------------- ---------------- ----------
Cash flows from investing activities
Proceeds from sale of plant and
equipment - 900 900
Acquisition of plant and equipment (42) (1,299) (1,136)
Capitalised development expenditure (164) (226) (424)
Acquisition of other intangible
assets (186) (125) (430)
Acquisition of subsidiary net
of cash (100) (2,391) (1,000)
Overdraft purchased on acquisition - - (38)
Net cash used in investing activities (492) (3,141) (2,128)
-------------------------------------- ---------------- ---------------- ----------
Cash flows from financing activities
Proceeds from share issue 3,444 - -
(Repayment)/Proceeds from invoice
finance (423) - 1,098
Net change on vendor loan notes 184 1,145 -
Payment of loan notes (297) 900 (258)
Deferred consideration 37 - -
Sale of own shares - - 246
Payment of supplier finance - (295) (40)
Payment of finance leases (316) - (404)
Net cash inflow/(outflow) from
financing activities 2,629 1,750 682
-------------------------------------- ---------------- ---------------- ----------
Net increase/(decrease) in cash
and cash equivalents 1,432 (736) (353)
Exchange difference on cash and
cash equivalents - 1 -
Cash acquired on acquisition 13 - -
Cash and cash equivalents at start
of period 171 524 524
Cash and cash equivalents at end
of period 1,616 (211) 171
-------------------------------------- ---------------- ---------------- ----------
Notes
(forming part of the interim financial statements)
1. Basis of preparation
Grafenia plc (the "Company") is a company incorporated and
domiciled in the UK.
These financial statements do not include all information
required for full annual financial statements, and should be read
in conjunction with the financial statements of the Company as at
and for the year ended 31 March 2018.
The comparative figures for the year ended 31 March 2018 are not
the Company's statutory accounts for that financial year. Those
accounts have been reported on by the Company's auditors and
delivered to the Registrar of Companies. The report of the auditors
was (i) unqualified, (ii) did not include a reference to any
matters to which the auditors drew attention by way of emphasis
without qualifying their report, and (iii) did not contain a
statement under section 498 (2) or (3) of the Companies Act
2006.
The Directors review a two year forecast when approving the
interim financial statements to ensure that adequate cash resources
are in operational existence to support trading for the foreseeable
future.
These condensed consolidated interim financial statements were
approved by the Board of Directors on 27 November 2018.
2. Significant accounting policies
The accounting policies applied by the Company in these
condensed consolidated interim financial statements are the same as
those applied by the Company in its consolidated financial
statements for the year ended 31 March 2018 with the addition of
IFRS 9, Financial Instruments and IFRS 15, Revenue from Contracts
with Customers.
IFRS 9 in respect of Financial Instruments requires the Group to
value financial assets either at amortised cost or fair value. The
Groups financial assets are its debtors where the assets are held
to collect contractually specified cash flows. Therefore, the Group
carries the debtors at amortised cost.
There has been no financial effect on the results on the
implementation of IFRS 9.
IFRS 15 in respect of the recognition of Revenue from Contracts
with customers required the Group to recognise revenue with respect
to various components of the contractual arrangements with the
customer. The Group contracts with its customers on two main
bases:
-- Production of product. The revenue is recognised when the
product is delivered and where required installed.
-- Licence fees for SaaS products are recognised monthly as
supplied. Any initial fees are spread over the period of the
agreement.
There has been no financial effect on the results on the
implementation of IFRS 15.
IFRS 16, Leases, is not yet in force for the Group. The Group is
reviewing its leases and the impact that IFRS 16 will have on the
financial statements.
3. Segmental information
The Company's primary operating segments are geographic being UK
& Ireland, Europe and others. The secondary segmental analysis
is by nature of sales channel and service.
This disclosure correlates with the information which is
presented to the Chief Operating Decision Maker, the Chief
Executive (CEO), who reviews revenue (which is considered to be the
primary growth indicator) by segment. The Company's costs, finance
income, tax charges, non-current liabilities, net assets and
capital expenditure are only reviewed by the CEO at a consolidated
level and therefore have not been allocated between segments.
Analysis by location of sales
Period ended 30 September UK & Ireland Europe Other Total
2018
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
Segment Revenues 7,897 244 168 8,309
--------------------------- ------------- -------- ---------- ----------
Period ended 30 September UK & Ireland Europe Other Total
2017
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
Segment Revenues 6,339 217 182 6,738
--------------------------- ------------- -------- ---------- ----------
Period ended 31 March UK & Ireland Europe Other Total
2018
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
Segment Revenues 13,791 489 350 14,630
----------------------- ------------- -------- ---------- ----------
Analysis by type
Period ended 30 September Licence Company Brand Signs Online Total
2018 Fees Studios Partners & Trade
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
Segment Revenues 901 1,202 2,080 2,676 1,450 8,309
--------------------------- -------- --------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ----------
Period ended 30 September Licence Company Brand Signs Online Total
2017 Fees Studios Partners & Trade
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
Segment Revenues 840 505 2,015 1,675 1,702 6,738
Period ended 31 March Licence Company Brand Signs Online Total
2018 Fees Studios Partners & Trade
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
Segment Revenues 1,773 1,594 3,870 4,000 3,393 14,630
4. Non-recurring costs
Unaudited Unaudited Audited
Six months Six months Year ended
to to 31 March
30 September 30 September 2018
2018 2017
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
Profit on sale and leaseback
of assets 105 18 102
Restructuring costs (107) - (20)
Other non-recurring costs (130) - -
------------------------------ -------------- -------------- -----------
Total non-recurring costs (132) 18 82
------------------------------ -------------- -------------- -----------
5. Trade and other receivables
Unaudited Unaudited Audited
Six months Six months Year ended
to 30 September to 30 September 31 March
2018 2017 2018
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
Trade receivables 2,958 2,708 2,765
Prepayments 240 602 482
Other receivables 107 21 48
------------------- ----------------- ----------------- -----------
3,305 3,331 3,295
------------------- ----------------- ----------------- -----------
Trade receivables as at 30 September 2018 are shown net of an
impairment allowance of GBP(362,000), September 2017: GBP(385,000)
and 31 March 2018 GBP(339,000).
6. Other interest-bearing loans and borrowings
Current liabilities in respect of other interest-bearing loans,
representing finance leases, vendor loans and invoice financing,
amounted to GBP1,432,000 (30 September 2017: GBP1,101,000 and 31
March 2018: GBP2,009,000).
Non-current liabilities in respect of other interest-bearing
loans, representing finance leases vendor loans and invoice
financing amounted to GBP1,242,000 (30 September 2017 GBP2,241,000
and 31 March 2018 GBP1,055,000).
7. Share Capital
On 3 May 2018, the company issued 29,258,331 ordinary shares of
GBP0.01 each at an issue price of GBP0.12.
The difference between the issue price and the nominal value
being taken to the share premium account.
Number of GBP'000
Ordinary
Shares
At 31 March 2018 47,557,835 475
Shares Issued on 3 May
2018 29,258,331 293
At 30 September 2018 76,816,166 768
------------------------- ----------- ----------
8. Earnings per share
The calculation of the basic earnings per share is based on the
loss after taxation divided by the weighted average number of
shares in issue, being 71,671,884 in the period ended 30 September
2018 (45,407,835: period ended 30 September 2017; 45,638,192: year
ended 31 March 2018).
Unaudited Unaudited Audited
30 September 30 September 31 March
2018 2017 2018
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
Loss after taxation for
the period (1,256) (390) (949)
--------------------------- ------------- ------------- -----------
Weighted average number
of shares in issue 71,671,884 45,407,835 45,638,192
--------------------------- ------------- ------------- -----------
Basic earnings per share (1.75)p (0.86)p (2.07)p
--------------------------- ------------- ------------- -----------
Share options had no dilutive effect on the weighted average
number of shares and therefore no diluted earnings per share have
been stated.
9. Acquisitions of subsidiaries
Acquisitions in previous period
The Acquisition Agreement with the vendors of Image Group
reported in the prior year has been amended in that the potential
"Earn--out" of GBP0.6m is replaced with a fixed additional deferred
consideration of GBP0.55m, payable in cash (the "Deferred
Consideration"). The Deferred Consideration will be paid in 12
monthly instalments commencing 30 September 2019. Under the
original terms of the acquisition, approximately one third of the
Earn--out would have been payable in September 2018 with the
remaining two thirds payable in September 2019.
Additionally, it has been agreed that the repayments to be made
in respect of the vendor loan notes of GBP1.25m issued in
conjunction with the acquisition of Image will be reduced in total
by GBP0.19m, in respect of warranty claims made in the prior year
and current year.
Following the variation of the terms of the acquisition, the
total consideration for Image is expected to be GBP2.76m, including
costs allocated to the income statement in respect of deferred
consideration dependent on various terms, satisfied in cash of
GBP1.15m on completion, secured vendor loan notes of GBP1.06m
repayable in monthly instalments over a period of approximately two
years from completion (final payment August 2019) and unsecured
deferred consideration of GBP0.55m, payable in monthly instalments
over the following 12 month period (final payment August 2020).
Acquisitions in the current period
On 5 July 2018, the Company acquired all of the ordinary shares
in AG Signs Limited (AG) for a consideration of GBP150,000,
satisfied in cash and deferred consideration. AG is a sign
manufacturer and exhibition contractor.
In the three months to the period end, AG contributed an
operating profit of GBP11,000 to the consolidated results for the
period. If the acquisition had occurred on 1(st) April 2018, Group
revenue would have been GBP164,000 higher and an estimated net
profit of GBP31,000 would have been added to Group results. In
determining these amounts, management has assumed that the fair
value adjustments that arose on the date of acquisition would have
been the same if the acquisition occurred on the first day of the
accounting period.
Effect of acquisition
The acquisition had the following effect on the Group's assets
and liabilities.
Book and Fair Intangibles Total assets
values on acquisition acquired and liabilities
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
Acquiree's net assets at the
acquisition date:
Property, plant and equipment 47 - 47
Intangible assets - 81 81
Inventories 22 - 22
Trade and other receivables 85 - 85
Cash and cash equivalents 13 - 13
Trade and other payables (125) - (125)
Deferred tax - (15) (15)
------------------------------- ------------------------- -------------- ------------------
Net identifiable assets and
liabilities 42 66 108
------------------------------- ------------------------- -------------- ------------------
Goodwill 39
------------------------------- ------------------------- -------------- ------------------
147
Consideration paid:
Initial cash price paid 100
Deferred consideration 47
Total consideration 147
------------------------------- ------------------------- -------------- ------------------
Intangibles acquired include the Customer Base arising on the
acquisition and recognising the value placed upon acquired customer
revenues.
The initial consideration, paid on completion, comprised cash of
GBP100,000, together with deferred consideration payable over 12
months of GBP52,800 less warranty deductions of GBP7,785.
The Company's half yearly report will shortly be sent to
shareholders and will be available on the Company's website
www.grafenia.com.
This information is provided by RNS, the news service of the
London Stock Exchange. RNS is approved by the Financial Conduct
Authority to act as a Primary Information Provider in the United
Kingdom. Terms and conditions relating to the use and distribution
of this information may apply. For further information, please
contact rns@lseg.com or visit www.rns.com.
END
IR PGGAGGUPRGBM
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
November 28, 2018 02:00 ET (07:00 GMT)
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