30 January 2024
Gresham
House Renewable Energy VCT 1 PLC
(the
"VCT" or the "Company")
Full Year
Results
The VCT is pleased
to announce its full year results for
the year ended 30 September 2023.
The Company's Annual Report and
Financial Statements for the year ended 30 September 2023 will be
posted to shareholders who have elected to receive hard copies. In
accordance with Listing Rule 9.6.1 copies of the document have been
submitted to the UK Listing Authority and will shortly
be available to view on the Company's
corporate website at https://greshamhouse.com/real-assets/new-energy-sustainable-infrastructure/gresham-house-renewable-energy-vct-1-plc/ and
have also been submitted to the UK
Listing Authority and will be shortly available for inspection from
the National Storage Mechanism at: https://data.fca.org.uk/#/nsm/nationalstoragemechanism
- END
-
Gresham House Renewable Energy VCT 1
PLC - LEI: 213800IVQHJXUQBAAC06
For further information, please
contact:
Chairman's
Statement
I am pleased to present the Annual Report of
Gresham House Renewable Energy VCT1 plc (VCT) for the year ended
30 September 2023.
Following the results of the continuation vote
in July 2021, and therefore the decision to enter a Managed Wind
Down, the Board together with the Investment Adviser has continued,
throughout the year under review, to work towards realising the
Company's portfolio of assets in a manner that achieves a balance
between maximising net value received from the sale of assets and
making a timely return of capital.
As noted in the Interim Report, it was pleasing
to be able to report that, in April 2023, a sale of two
ground-mounted solar sites and approximately 1,600 commercial and
residential solar installations to Downing Renewables &
Infrastructure Trust plc for a cash consideration of £12.6mn was
concluded. Since this date, the Board has continued to seek an
acquiror for the remaining assets in the portfolio. As part of this
process a new Corporate Finance Adviser was appointed to assist
with the sale of the remaining solar assets to reinvigorate the
sale proposition amongst potential acquirers in the current
market.
The technical performance of the portfolio
continues to be fair following maintenance and repowering works
carried out in previous years, however given the age of the
portfolio, further technical maintenance has been necessary during
the year which has impacted output generation. Total revenue was
also affected by poor irradiation over the spring and summer,
resulting in a shortfall of 6.7% to budget. Conversely, high
inflation (which benefits the inflation-linked FiT tariffs
receivable by the portfolio) has continued to support cash
generation.
At the year end, the Company's NAV per 'pair'
of shares (one Ordinary share and one 'A' Share) was 55.7p compared
to 92.3p at 30 September 2022. This reduction is due to the
payment of dividends totalling 18.5p per Ordinary Share mainly
generated out of the proceeds from the partial sale in April, and
also the consequence of a reduction in value of the remaining
portfolio. Consistent with the previous year, the valuation of the
portfolio at 30 September 2023 takes into account the
Electricity Generator Levy (EGL), the EGL is a temporary (until
2028) 45% charge on exceptional receipts generated from the
production of wholesale electricity, where exceptional receipts are
defined as amounts from wholesale electricity sold at an average
price in excess of a benchmark price of £75/MWh over an accounting
period. This benchmark price will be adjusted in line with CPI from
April 2024. The EGL is likely to be payable by an acquiror of these
assets. Shareholders should take note that if, as in previous
years, a portfolio value based purely on the cash flows generated
by the assets were to be used, it would result in a value that
would be somewhat higher as the Company would not be subject to the
EGL. This is because the Company's generation output falls below
the threshold for the EGL, and the revenues are within the £10mn
allowance.
Despite headline inflation having been high
during the financial year, the expectation is that the fall as seen
in the last few months of 2023 will continue over the course of
2024. Expectations of these factors are a key consideration in
determining a valuation of the Company's assets. In addition, there
has been a general marked reduction in pricing in all energy
markets leading to lower electricity power prices. At the same time
there has been a very material increase since Q3 2022 in the
discount rates which buyers will apply to real assets largely
driven by higher interest rates, that results in a further
reduction in valuations. Another factor to consider as part of
portfolio valuation is that the Company's assets have a more
limited market compared with newer solar assets which are generally
much larger in scale as, given their age they can be challenging to
manage whilst also taking into consideration the complex financing
arrangements which any buyer must take over.
Investment portfolio
At the year end, the VCT held a portfolio of
eleven investments, which were valued at £17.7mn. There have been
no follow-on acquisitions. As part of the Managed Wind Down, five
investments were disposed of during the financial year.
The portfolio is analysed (by value) between
the different types of assets as follows:
Ground mounted solar
|
86.9%
|
Small wind including Tumblewind
Limited
|
13.1%
|
Non-renewable assets
|
0.0%
|
The Board has reviewed the investment
valuations at the year end and notes that the valuation of the
remaining renewables portfolio has decreased by £5.50mn or 23.7%.
As indicated earlier, the underlying portfolio has been impacted by
the general fall in electricity prices.
The portfolio is still benefiting from having
negotiated several PPAs at higher power prices which have been
locked into the portfolio and will generate stronger returns over
the next year. On the other hand, the discount rates applied are
now higher in line with equity investors' requirements compared to
other investment opportunities. Further, the UK Government's levy
on revenue from the sale of electricity, the EGL, has resulted in
the marginal rate of taxation on electricity revenues above £75/MWh
being 70% consisting of 25% corporation tax plus 45%
EGL.
As referred to previously, there has been an
ongoing issue in relation to the connection of the South Marston
solar farm to its off taker. This arose from the decision of the
off taker (Honda) to cease business at the site South Marston
supplies and to sell the site to a third party. It is taking
considerable time and effort to resolve the issue. Whilst the new
owner of the site, a provider of logistic facilities, says they
want to use the power from South Marston they cannot commit until
they have full planning permission (provisionally granted but
awaiting signature of the Section 106 arrangement which validates
the planning permissions) and customers on site. In order to
resolve the uncertainty around this situation, a new grid
connection offer has been accepted and existing agreements with
Honda that will be novated to the new buyer are being improved to
give South Marston better protection. This should remove this
impediment to the potential sale of the asset and the others within
the same loan structure.
In order to maintain VCT status,
the Company needs to ensure that it maintains certain
percentages of qualifying investments within its portfolio. The
Board anticipates that the Company will fall below these
percentages as the asset realisation process continues. Therefore,
to avoid a breach of VCT status, the Board has been advised that
the Company may in due course need to start the process of a
members' voluntary liquidation which would involve delisting of the
Company's shares. The Board continues to monitor those ratios and
to plan to ensure that the Company is not at risk of
breach.
Venture Capital investments
The VCT also still holds two investments that
are not in renewable energy. However, as reported in the Interim
Report, these companies entered administration during the year with
no recovery of any value expected.
Further detail on the investment portfolio is
provided in the Investment Adviser's Report.
Net asset value and results
At 30 September 2023, the Net Asset Value
(NAV) per Ordinary Share stood at 55.6p and the NAV per 'A' Share
stood at 0.1p, producing a combined total of 55.7p per 'pair' of
shares. The movement in the NAV per share during the year is
detailed in the table below:
|
Pence per
'pair' of shares
|
NAV as at
1 October 2022
|
92.3
|
Less dividend payments during the
year
|
(18.5)
|
Valuation increase on assets sold during the
year
|
3.1
|
Valuation decrease on assets still
held
|
(22.5)
|
Income less expenses
|
1.3
|
NAV as at
30 September 2023
|
55.7
|
The NAV Total Return (NAV plus cumulative
dividends) has decreased by 12.1% in the last year and at the year
end stands at 131.3p excluding the initial 30% VCT tax relief,
compared to the cost to investors in the initial fundraising of
£1.00 or 70.0p net of income tax relief.
The loss on ordinary activities after taxation
for the year was £4.6mn (2022: £0.5mn profit), comprising a revenue
profit of £391,000 (2022: £101,000) and a capital loss of £5.0mn
(2022: capital profit of £447,000) as shown in the Income
Statement.
Dividends
On 28 July 2023, total dividends of 18.5p
per Ordinary Share were paid to Shareholders, comprising 2.0p in
respect of the year ended 30 September 2022 and 16.5p as a
result of the partial sale of assets. The 2.0p per Ordinary Share
dividend was originally anticipated for payment in January 2023,
however due to the company not having sufficient distributable
reserves, payment was therefore delayed until sufficient
distributable reserves were deemed available (see cancellation of
share premium reserve below).
As outlined in the Interim Report, the Company
successfully obtained Court approval to cancel the Company's share
premium reserve. This process has the impact of increasing the
Company's distributable reserves allowing distributions to be
lawfully made. This approval, and subsequent filing of relevant
accounts allowed the resumption of dividend payments once
again.
After the year end, in addition to dividend
payments made during the financial year, the Board was pleased to
declare a 7.5p per Ordinary Share interim dividend. The 7.5p
interim dividend related to income generation from the portfolio,
but part also related to the distribution of the remaining proceeds
arising from the part sale of assets in April 2023. This dividend
has been paid on 21 December 2023 to Shareholders on the
register on 1 December 2023. No amounts were payable to 'A'
Shares during the year or after the year end.
Including this most recent 7.5p dividend, the
total dividends paid to date for a combined holding of one Ordinary
Share and one 'A' Share amounts to 83.1p. At 30 September
2023, dividends of 75.6p per 'pair' of shares were paid (2022:
57.1p).
2023 Annual General Meeting (AGM)
The VCT's twelfth AGM was held on 27 April
2023 at 11:00 a.m. and all resolutions were passed by way of a
poll.
2024 Annual General Meeting (AGM)
The VCT's thirteenth AGM will be held at The
Scalpel, 52 Lime Street, London EC3M 7AF on 19 March 2024
at 11.30 a.m.
Share Buybacks
As noted in previous Reports, the Board has
decided that the VCT will not be buying in shares for the
foreseeable future.
Acquisition of Gresham House plc, statement
regarding Investment Adviser
Further to the announcement on 17 July
2023 about the acquisition of Gresham House plc by Searchlight
Capital Partners L.P., the acquisition has now completed, and
Gresham House plc delisted from the London Stock Exchange on
20 December 2023, to become a privately owned company. Gresham
House Asset Management Limited, the Company's Investment Adviser,
is wholly owned by Gresham House plc. The acquisition is expected
to have minimal impact on the Company and business is continuing as
usual. For further information please visit the website link:
https://greshamhouse.com/about/.
Outlook
As noted in previous reports, the Board has not
been able to progress the sale of the Company's remaining assets as
quickly as Shareholders may have expected, due to challenging
market conditions over the past 18 months and issues on certain
assets (notably South Marston) which needed resolving. However it
is pleased to report significant progress has been made during the
year resulting in material distribution to Shareholders. The Board
continues to ensure that every effort is being made to maximise
Shareholder returns. Following a change in Corporate Finance
Adviser, the Board is optimistic that realisations in respect of
the remaining portfolio can be made in 2024.
In the meantime, as evidenced by the most
recent dividend payment after the year end, the strong cash flows
generated by the remaining portfolio are generating returns for the
Company. Despite this, costs throughout the remaining portfolio
continue to rise and, with only the Investment Advisers fees linked
to the NAV, the Company's costs largely remain at the pre-sale of
assets level. So the right course of action remains to find an
appropriate and willing purchaser who can achieve economies of
scale with the assets the Company is seeking to sell.
Once again, I would like to thank Shareholders
for their patience and continued interest and support.
Gill Nott
Chairman
29 January 2024
Investment Adviser's Report
Portfolio Highlights
Gresham House Renewable Energy VCT1 plc (VCT)
remains invested in the renewable energy projects that the VCT and
Gresham House Renewable Energy VCT2 plc (VCT2) have co-owned for a
period of between nine to twelve years, depending on the asset. The
total generation capacity of assets co-owned by the VCT at the
start of the year was 34.4MWp, but this reduced to 21.3MWp
following the sale of part of the portfolio during the period. The
VCT also owns two venture capital investments. However, these
companies entered administration during the year with no recovery
expected.
In April 2023, the sales process of some of the
solar projects that were owned jointly with VCT2 was concluded with
two ground mounted solar sites and approximately 1,600 commercial
and residential solar installations (collectively known as Surya)
being sold to Downing Renewables & Infrastructure Trust Plc. A
total cash consideration by the VCTs of £9.7mn, £4.87mn per VCT,
was received in the way of sale proceeds. In addition, a cash
consideration in the way of sale proceeds of £2.9mn was received on
SPV level. The remaining portfolio capacity at the end of the full
year (30 September 2023) was 21.3MWp made up of 20.3MWp from
six ground mounted solar FIT projects and 1MWp of micro-wind
projects spread across approximately 200 sites.
Work is now underway to sell the remainder of
the solar portfolio, with the appointment of Jones Lang LaSalle
(JLL) as the new Corporate Finance Adviser who have launched a
refreshed sale process to divest the remaining solar
assets.
The Investment Adviser continues to manage the
assets and deliver the best possible yield from them, whilst also
supporting the Boards of the VCTs and JLL in advancing the new
sale process.
The Investment Adviser has undertaken a
valuation exercise (as of the full year to 30 September 2023)
for the purpose of determining the Net Asset Value (NAV) and has
provided the Directors with several valuation scenarios based on a
range of key assumptions. It is the VCT Directors that have the
responsibility of valuing these assets. The valuation presented in
this annual report necessarily reflects the Directors' view of the
fair value of the assets which incorporates potential costs such as
the EGL (detailed in the Chairman's Statement) that an acquirer is
likely to incur through holding the assets, as well as their view
on the key assumptions that determine future operational and
financial performance. Where possible the Directors have checked
their assumptions with independent advisers, e.g. discount rates
with the JLL and energy yield assessments with the Technical
Advisers.
During the year the total revenue from
renewable energy generation was £14.7mn (2022: £13.1mn) and of
this, £10.0mn was from government incentives and inflation-linked
contracts. The total revenue was 6.7% behind budget due to a
combination of factors including lower than budgeted irradiation,
power prices and output due to some
technical issues.
The vast majority of the assets held by the VCT
produce solar power. The solar portfolio is older than over 90% of
the total installed solar capacity in the UK, but positively this
means that the VCT's solar assets have higher government-backed
incentives than most other solar installations, which benefits
valuations.
The downside of the age of the VCT's solar
assets is the additional maintenance required to keep them
operating effectively. Maintenance programmes to repair or replace
certain components across the three worst performing assets have
been successful in improving performance. Performance generally
remains good, with increased output and reliability. UK based
technical staff are readily available for ongoing repairs and
maintenance has also helped improve performance. Successful
warranty claims in the previous financial year at Beechgrove Farm
and South Marston led to additional remedial works that also
improved performance, particularly at Beechgrove Farm. Lake Farm
has suffered from faults due to deterioration of some of its
modules for which a warranty claim is being explored.
In terms of output, there was reduced solar
irradiation during the year which resulted in annual output being
2% below budget and 6.2% below budget for the period March 2023 to
August 2023. This poor spring and summer performance significantly
impacted total performance as these months are usually the months
of highest output. This, combined with some technical issues
(described in more detail later) resulted in reduced generation.
These issues have either now been addressed or continue to be
addressed through warranty claims and repair works.
In terms of the current macroeconomic
environment, the effects on the portfolio are
summarised below:
·
|
power price volatility was high during winter
2022/2023 following the invasion of Ukraine earlier in 2022, which
drove up gas and oil prices which fed through to higher electricity
prices. The volatility has then reduced substantially over the
course of 2023 as the energy crisis abated as can be seen by the
graph within the Annual Report
Power prices at certain sites benefited from
being fixed during the period when prices spiked, whereas other
sites came off their fixed price contracts during periods of lower
power prices. Overall it can be seen that prices since the start of
the calendar year have been around £100/MWh which is roughly double
the historic long-term norm of £50/MWh, which bodes well for the
future cash flows over the period of the fixed price contracts from
the VCT's assets.
The Investment Adviser took the opportunity
during the financial year (where possible) to fix power prices
under the PPAs at elevated levels for those sites which were not
already on fixed power price contracts. All but one site have fixed
power prices for the whole of Winter 2023 (October 2023 to March
2024), with the one site (Parsonage) fixed until December 2023. In
addition, all but Parsonage are fixed for Summer 2024 (April 2024
to September 2024) with Beechgrove fixed to July 2024. A further
two sites are also fixed for Winter 2024 and Summer 2025, again at
very attractive prices and at a multiple of their previous levels.
Fixing the power prices under the PPAs provides a good degree of
security over future revenues, subject to output being on
budget.
|
·
|
with a high degree of the portfolio's revenue
being inflation linked, higher and more sustained inflation
increases the profitability of the assets and therefore their
values. Inflation is starting to reduce but during the period has
remained high. The impact of high inflation is offset partially by
the operating costs and the debt also being inflation-linked.
Near-term and long-term inflation expectations have softened in
recent months.
|
·
|
interest rates have also increased
significantly during the period as the Bank of England raised
interest rates to try to curb inflation. Base Rates have increased
from near zero to 5.25%. This not only makes debt more expensive
but also raises discount rates as equity investors require higher
risk adjusted returns from asset backed investments compared to
other instruments such as bonds and gilts. This has had an impact
on the VCT's valuation and also on the purchase price potential
buyers are willing to pay for the assets.
|
Portfolio Composition
Portfolio Composition by Asset Type and Impact on VCT1
Net Asset Value (NAV)
|
|
30 September
2023
|
30 September
2022
|
Asset Type
|
kWp
|
VCT1 Value
('000)
|
% of Portfolio
value
|
VCT1 Value
('000)
|
% of Portfolio
value
|
Ground mounted solar (FiT)*
|
20,292
|
£15,395
|
86.9%
|
£20,745
|
74.7%
|
Ground mounted solar (ROC)** SOLD
|
0
|
£0
|
0%
|
£3,054
|
11.0%
|
Total ground mounted
solar
|
20,292
|
£15,395
|
86.9%
|
£23,799
|
85.7%
|
Rooftop solar (FiT)* SOLD
|
0
|
£0
|
0%
|
£2,425
|
8.7%
|
Total solar
|
20,292
|
£15,395
|
86.9%
|
£26,224
|
94.4%
|
Tumblewind Limited: post-sale Priory Farm Solar
Farm Limited
|
180
|
£1,310
|
7.4%
|
30 September 2022: Included in ground
mounted solar (ROC)
|
Wind assets (FiT)*
|
850
|
£1,008
|
5.7%
|
£1,156
|
4.2%
|
Total renewable energy generating
assets
|
21,322
|
£17,713
|
100%
|
£27,380
|
98.6%
|
Venture Capital investments
|
N.A.
|
£0
|
0%
|
£392
|
1.4%
|
TOTAL
|
21,322
|
£17,713
|
100.0%
|
£27,772
|
100.0%
|
* Feed in Tariff (FiT)
** Renewables Obligation Certificate
(ROC)
The above table shows the details of the assets
held as at 30 September 2023 and the assets held as at the
prior year end 30 September 2022. Some of the ground mounted
solar ROC assets and the rooftop solar FiT assets were sold during
the year (April 2023), hence do not appear in the latest
valuation.
The renewable energy assets in the portfolio of
the VCT and VCT2 (including the sold assets which contributed some
generation in the first part of the year), generated 23,372MWhs of
electricity over the financial year, sufficient to meet the annual
electricity consumption of c. 8,657 homes. The Investment Adviser
estimates that the carbon dioxide savings achieved by generating
this output from renewable energy sources versus gas-fired power
stations, are equivalent to 9,909 tonnes of carbon dioxide
emissions saved.
Portfolio
Summary
Portfolio revenues for the full year
1 October 2022 to 30 September 2023 and prior year
(1 October 2021 to 30 September 2022):
The performance against budget is shown
below:
|
1 October 2022 - 30 September
2023
|
1 October 2021 - 30 September
2022
|
Asset type
|
Budgeted
revenue
(£)
|
Actual
revenue
(£)
|
Revenue
performance
(%)
|
Budgeted
revenue
(£)
|
Actual
revenue
(£)
|
Revenue
performance
(%)
|
Ground mounted solar (FiT)
|
13,868,813
|
13,018,388
|
93.9
|
9,510,159
|
9,950,021
|
104.6
|
Ground mounted solar (ROC)
|
1,127,616*
|
1,108,103*
|
98.3
|
1,406,636
|
1,673,400
|
119.0
|
Roof mounted solar
|
391,028*
|
313,484*
|
80.2
|
1,248,280
|
1,191,092
|
95.4
|
Wind assets
|
417,653
|
303,517
|
72.7
|
375,675
|
278,776
|
74.2
|
TOTAL
|
15,805,110
|
14,743,492
|
93.3
|
12,540,750
|
13,093,289
|
104.4
|
* part year from 1 October 2022 to
31 March 2023
The revenue is affected by:
·
|
renewable energy resources (solar irradiation
or wind speed);
|
·
|
the performance of the assets in converting the
sun and wind into revenue; and
|
·
|
the revenue paid per unit of energy generated
and sold.
|
The ground-mounted solar farms benefitted from
high power prices and high inflation-linked increases to subsidies,
but technical problems and poor climatic conditions offset these
increases, such that actual revenue was below budget. The chart
below provides a breakdown for the ground mounted solar assets only
as these provide c.96% of the revenue:
Ground mounted
solar portfolio revenue analysis 1 October 2022 to
30 September 2023:
The replacement of faulty or failing equipment,
(panels, inverters, transformers) that previously caused the
reduction in output, plus the successful warranty claims against
Jinko Solar (who supplied Beechgrove and South Marston) continue to
bear fruit with improved performance. However, Lake Farm is
suffering from its solar panels degrading further, so the
Investment Adviser is exploring a warranty claim against the solar
panel manufacturer (Canadian Solar).
In addition, Priory Farm continued to suffer
from regular short duration outages that required manual
intervention from the Operations & Maintenance (O&M)
contractor, who continued to be slow in responding. A new O&M
contractor was appointed, but the under-performance of the previous
O&M contractor impacted on the overall portfolio
performance.
Renewable
energy resources
During the year the assets suffered from lower
solar irradiance than budgeted, with solar irradiation being 2%
behind for the year and most notably 6.2% behind budget during the
summer period, March 2023 to August 2023. This significantly
impacted overall performance as these summer months are the highest
output months.
Technical
performance
The table below shows the technical performance
for each of the groups of assets during this and prior financial
year:
|
1 October 2022 - 30 September
2023
|
1 October 2021 - 30 September
2022
|
Asset Type
|
Budgeted
output
(kWh)
|
Actual
output
(kWh)
|
Technical
performance
(%)
|
Actual
output
(kWh)
|
Ground mounted solar (FiT)
|
20,576,224
|
19,417,739
|
94.37
|
20,392,254
|
Ground mounted solar (ROC)*
|
2,400,500
|
2,323,870
|
96.81
|
8,316,605
|
Roof mounted solar*
|
994,811
|
871,598
|
87.61
|
3,574,175
|
Wind assets
|
1,045,301
|
759,642
|
72.67
|
1,045,301
|
TOTAL
|
25,016,836
|
23,372,849
|
93.43
|
33,328,335
|
* part year from 1 October 2022 to
26 April 2023
The ground mount solar ROC figure is
considerably down on prior year's performance as is the rooftop
performance as those assets were sold part way through the year and
before the sunnier months.
Micro wind
performance:
The micro wind portfolio performed around 27%
lower than budget, continuing the poor performance experienced in
recent years. Micro wind accounts for only 4.8% of the portfolio in
terms of capacity, following the sale of the ROC and rooftop
projects.
The entire portfolio is comprised of two
hundred R9000 wind turbines, which have the support of an
experienced O&M contractor with access to spare parts and
maintenance crews.
The Investment Adviser has approached a number
of potential buyers for the micro wind portfolio with a view to
selling these assets outside of the JLL sales process, as JLL have
advised that the immateriality of these small, multi-location
assets is such that they may reduce the price bidders are willing
to pay for the VCT's complete portfolio.
Sold solar
asset's (ground mounted ROC and rooftop FiT)
performance:
Between the start of the year in October 2022
and the April 2023 sale, the ground mounted solar (ROC) assets also
performed behind budget. Both sites suffered from reduced
irradiation at times during the period as well as a drop in the
performance of the O&M contractor. This contractor was replaced
in March 2023, just ahead of the sale.
In the period up to their sale, generation of
the rooftop solar portfolio was 12.4% lower than budget.
Irradiation cannot be measured at roof mounted solar installations
as it is not cost effective to install pyranometers, but it is fair
to assume that the irradiation at these sites was low, in line with
the irradiation levels at the ground mounted sites. The Investment
Adviser continued to work with the O&M contractors and
landlords to get access to the rooftop installations that were
underperforming and have these repairs completed in a
cost-effective manner. The portfolio's performance was negatively
affected in particular by the installations on school rooftops.
These experienced technical issues but the O&M contractor's
efforts to repair them was hampered by the schools restricting
access to the sites to the school holidays.
All in all, despite some of the performance
problems mentioned above, as detailed in the Interim Report and the
Chairman's Statement, these assets were sold in April 2023 at an
uplift to the value at 30 September 2022.
South Marston
update
South Marston (4.97MW FiT) has historically
sold all its power to the Honda production plant adjacent to the
solar site at Swindon. Honda closed down this facility in July 2021
when production stopped and now Honda has agreed to sell the site
to a commercial real estate developer called Panattoni. The sale of
the freehold land is subject to Panattoni obtaining planning
consent from Swindon Borough Council (SBC) to the re-development of
the land into multipurpose units, which will be developed over a
period of the next 7 years. SBC have approved the application and
subject to the Section 106 agreement being signed), this planning
consent should become valid in early 2024.
The Investment Adviser is working with Honda
and Panattoni and various advisers to ensure the continuity of
supply of power from the solar farm, plus ensure the existing
contractual arrangements and protections are preserved with the new
owners. In addition, South Marston applied for and accepted a new
grid connection offer (as an insurance policy) such that the solar
farm could export directly to the grid, if necessary.
Panattoni is keen to make the solar power
available to its future tenants when they move onto the site and
has maintained in its planning submission all the existing
infrastructure including the switchgear through which South Marston
connects to the electricity grid. Both Honda and Panattoni have
been supportive of South Marston during this period of uncertainty,
agreeing to some new switching arrangements to allow South Marston
to temporarily export directly to the electricity network, whilst
consumption on site is limited. The Investment Adviser continues to
work with both parties to improve South Marston's contractual
rights which might be needed to satisfy any potential buyer of the
VCT's assets and expects to shortly sign an amended Cable Easement
agreement which gives South Marston the rights it needs. Once these
are agreed, the separate grid connection offer will be
cancelled.
Revenue per
kilowatt hour of renewable energy generated:
The UK Government has used several mechanisms
to encourage investment into renewable energy generation, including
the FiT and ROC support mechanisms.
The VCT's renewable assets benefit from these
schemes which provide revenues predominantly linked to the Retail
Price Index (RPI). As the solar asset class has matured and both
the costs and perceived risks of building new renewable energy
generating capacity have fallen, so have the value of the
incentives offered for new installations. For example, an asset
that generates electricity from solar power that was commissioned
and accredited for the FiT before the end of July 2011 currently
receives over 48p for every kilowatt hour (kWh) of electricity it
produced (with the added extra of a floor price support to ensure
it may also sell this power at a reasonable price).The incentives
for new capacity have fallen consistently since the assets owned by
the VCT were commissioned, and new solar installations built today
receive no such incentives and must rely on selling power at market
prices for their income.
Solar portfolio, revenue split for the full year
2022/2023
Ground mounted FiT
|
68.2%
|
Rooftop FiT
|
1.9%
|
Ground mounted ROC buyout
|
1.5%
|
Ground mounted ROC recycle
|
0.1%
|
Ground mounted export
|
32.1%
|
Rooftop export
|
0.3%
|
Ground mounted private wire
|
0.4%
|
Other
|
0.5%
|
Revenue split for 2022/23 post sale of rooftop
and ground mounted ROC assets:
Ground mounted FiT solar portfolio, revenue split for the
year 2022/2023
Ground mounted FiT
|
70.0%
|
Ground mounted export
|
29.0%
|
Ground mounted private wire
|
0.5%
|
Other
|
0.5%
|
Of total revenues generated in the year,
c. 67% was earned from government backed incentives for
generating renewable electricity.
The high proportion of income that is fixed by
the FiT scheme is RPI linked and not exposed to wholesale power
prices and is a significant driver of value in this portfolio. This
enables the portfolio to be insulated from any significant
reductions in the wholesale price of electricity whilst allowing it
to benefit from increases such as those experienced earlier in the
year.
As fixed price contracts for the export of
power expired during the period, new PPA contracts were secured or
updated with new prices valid for 1-2 years which allowed the
ground mounted solar portfolio to benefit from these new higher
wholesale prices.
Total revenues (power price and subsidies) per
MWh generated by the solar assets were £631/MWh for the year ended
30 September 2023.
Operating costs
The majority of the cost base is fixed and/or
contracted under long-term agreements and includes rent, business
rates, and regular O&M costs.
Many of these costs have also risen in line
with inflation.
The main variable cost item each year is the
repair and maintenance cost. Repair and maintenance expenditure
involving solar panels, the key component of a solar project, is
covered by cash held in the maintenance reserve account. At the end
of the financial year a reserve totalling £693k was in place for
the remaining ground mounted solar assets.
Venture Capital investments
As reported in the Interim Report, the
Investment Adviser is very disappointed to report that bio-bean and
Rezatec, the two venture capital investments the VCT held, both
went into administration shortly after the end of the half year
and, as a result, their value was marked down to zero. No recovery
is expected. See below two paragraphs extracted from the VCT's
Interim Report:
bio-bean had high operational leverage. It had
used the proceeds of the VCT's and other financial investors'
investments to upgrade its plant so that its margins could benefit
from economies of scale that would come from a growing supply of
waste coffee grounds. The pandemic affected deliveries and its
ability to cut costs and further funding rounds were not enough to
save the company.
The VCT's other potential growth investment was
in Rezatec, an integrator of satellite based geospatial data for
use in monitoring agriculture, infrastructure and forestry assets.
Rezatec's management managed to achieve steady growth but far below
the rate envisaged in the business plan. A trade sale route was
pursued last year but this process failed to generate interest and
the Directors of the company were forced to take it into
administration.
Portfolio valuation
The Investment Adviser is supporting the sale
of the remaining VCT's renewable assets and notes that a binding
offer to purchase the assets will be the best indication of value.
However, consistent with prior year's approach the NAV of the
renewable portfolio will be derived from the future projected cash
flows generated by the assets, plus the cash held by the companies
in the portfolio and the cash held by the VCT. This discounted cash
flow valuation of the overall portfolio also includes the nil value
of the venture capital investments in bio-bean and
Rezatec.
The future discounted cash flow projections for
renewable assets are impacted by:
·
|
Renewable
resources. This year's solar irradiation
performance has been assessed and factored into the assumptions on
irradiation going forward which has not been changed.
|
·
|
Technical
performance. The repairs at Lake Farm, Kingston
Farm and Beechgrove Farm largely resolved their historic
performance issues. Ayshford Court, South Marston and Priory Farm
suffered technical issues that have been addressed. The O&M
contractor for Ayshford Court, Priory Farm, Wychwood and Parsonage
has been replaced and this is expected to lead to better and more
timely maintenance of these assets.
|
·
|
Power
prices. Power price forecasts have fallen but
remain relatively high. The Investment Adviser was able to
capitalise on high power prices by entering into several new PPAs
in recent months that have locked in high prices for the
foreseeable future. The latest long-term generation-weighted
forecasts provided by a leading market consultant have been used to
value the assets, post any fixed power price contracts that are in
place.
|
·
|
New
taxes. The UK Government responded to the
cost-of-living crisis, caused in part by high energy bills for
households and businesses, by introducing the EGL that imposes a
45% charge on exceptional receipts generated from the production of
wholesale electricity where exceptional receipts will be defined as
wholesale electricity sold at an average price in excess of £75/MWh
over an accounting period. This does not cover revenues earned from
government subsidies such as ROCs and FiTs. The EGL will only apply
to exceptional receipts exceeding £10mn in an accounting period.
There is also a de minimis threshold of 50,000 (MWhs) of annual
generation at portfolio level below which the EGL is not charged.
The VCT is in the fortunate position that its portfolio falls below
this level. However, almost all potential buyers would not be
exempt from the EGL and would therefore have to account for its
impact in their offer prices. The EGL will be in effect from
1 January 2023 until 31 March 2028, and will apply to
pro-rated profits for accounting periods between those dates. The
levy will be administered via the Corporation Tax system and paid
by the responsible company in a group of companies.
|
·
|
Asset
life. The assets are valued based on the
existing terms of the subsidies, the leases and the planning
permissions, without assuming life extensions, as this is a prudent
approach. As the assets mature, asset owners would typically
approach landowners and local planning authorities with a view to
negotiating life extensions, unless the landowners have the right
to the assets at that point.
|
·
|
Costs. Up-to-date
costs for the assets are included, reflecting all commercial
negotiations, expectations for lower maintenance costs after the
older assets are repowered and the need to provision for the costs
of repairs to equipment such as panels, inverters, switchgear and
transformers that may be needed in the future. The asset management
costs going forward have been doubled from those charged by the
Investment Adviser, following feedback from the recent sales
process.
|
·
|
Corporation
tax. The actual corporation tax paid will
impact on the cash available to Shareholders, but is assumed to
remain at the current 25% level.
|
·
|
Inflation. With most
of the revenues being linked to RPI, any increase in inflation
projections increases the overall profitability, and therefore
valuation of the assets. This is countered, to some degree, by debt
service for the debt facilities also being indexed to inflation
with an increase in inflation resulting in higher interest charges.
It is particularly challenging to forecast the future direction of
inflation. Central Banks around the world have raised interest
rates in a bid to quell inflation. Financial markets are pricing
inflation in excess of 3% even in the medium to long-term. The
Investment Adviser has used various sources for its projections for
the short term and a prudent long run forecast of 3% has been used
in the calculation of the NAV.
|
·
|
Discount
rates. The free cash generated by the assets
needs to be estimated and valued. The Investment Adviser notes that
these future cash flows are supported by a high proportion of
government backed and index linked revenues and in the current
market, such stable cash flows are valuable. The discount rates
used in the valuation reflect the Investment Adviser's experience
in the market and evidence from other transactions, as well as
feedback from other advisers or market participants. Over the last
12 months discount rates have increased significantly, as equity
investors compare risk adjusted returns from infrastructure
investments and real assets such as solar parks to returns from so
called risk-free investments such as gilts and bonds.
|
Overall, post adjustment for reverse loans, a
value of £14.0mn for the assets remaining in the portfolio at year
end was delivered as a result of the various changes in market
conditions and assumptions used.
Outlook
The Investment Adviser's continued focus is to
ensure that the assets operate at or above budget whilst it
supports the Directors' efforts to maximise exit value for
Shareholders.
Addressing the contractual status of the grid
connection arrangement at South Marston with the new landowners
remains a key priority.
The repairs of the underperforming assets that
were completed appear, from this year's generation data to have
been successful, as have warranty claims for the Beechgrove ground
mounted solar asset and these have provided greater visibility and
reliability of revenues.
A new O&M contractor has been engaged for
four of the ground-mounted solar assets and this is expected to
improve reliability for those assets. The generation outlook for
the portfolio has improved as a result.
The Investment Adviser remains vigilant for
spotting any signs of degradation early so that the impact on
availability can be managed and reduced.
The high inflation outlook, whilst of concern
from the point of view of the wider UK and global economies, is
positive for the owners of subsidised UK renewable assets. Although
most costs also rise in line with inflation, as does the cost of
servicing the debt facilities, the net benefit of increased
inflation is positive since it increases the inflation linked
revenues more than it increases the costs.
All ground mounted solar assets had fixed price
PPAs during the financial year, which gave some certainty to
revenue. The Investment Adviser is pleased to have secured new
fixed price PPAs for one to two years to further de-risk near term
future cash flows from these assets.
The combined effect of inflation and power
prices locked in at high levels should translate into attractive,
stable revenue and cash flow over the next two years.
The VCT is fortunate that the EGL introduced by
the UK Government with effect from 1 January 2023 does not
apply to the VCT, as the total generation of its portfolio falls
below the de minimis threshold of 50GWh per year. However, most
likely buyers of the VCT's assets already have renewable energy
portfolios and would not therefore be able to avoid paying the EGL
as a result of the de minimis threshold. Accordingly, a fair value
has been determined with the assets valued for the purposes of the
NAV as if the EGL would need to be paid.
The outlook for renewable energy in the UK and
the rest of the world remains positive. In particular, the fallout
from Russia's invasion of Ukraine with high energy prices and
concerns about security of supply is expected to add additional
impetus to the deployment of renewable energy. COP28 concluded
recently with an historic agreement that marks a significant step
towards tackling climate change by calling on all nations to
transition away from fossil fuels which is encouraging for further
renewable energy deployment. For the portfolio as at
30 September 2023, that has had successful upgrades
implemented on many of its assets and which has locked in
attractive long-term power prices, the outlook remains positive.
The Investment Adviser will work with the newly appointed Corporate
Finance Adviser to try to ensure this translates into a successful
sale in 2024.
Gresham House
Asset Management Limited
29 January 2024
Review of Investments
Portfolio of investments
The following investments were held at
30 September 2023:
Qualifying and
part-qualifying investments
|
Operating
sites
|
Sector
|
Cost
£'000
|
Valuation
£'000
|
Valuation
movement
in year
£'000
|
% of
portfolio
|
Lunar 2 Limited*
|
South Marston, Beechgrove
|
Ground solar
|
1,330
|
11,101
|
(4,170)
|
62.5%
|
Lunar 1 Limited*
|
Kingston Farm, Lake Farm
|
Ground solar
|
124
|
1,925
|
(478)
|
10.8%
|
New Energy Era Limited
|
Wychwood Solar Farm
|
Ground solar
|
884
|
1,320
|
(515)
|
7.4%
|
Tumblewind Limited*
|
Tumblewind
|
Small wind
|
979
|
1,310
|
(3)
|
7.4%
|
Vicarage Solar Limited
|
Parsonage Farm
|
Ground solar
|
871
|
1,049
|
(187)
|
5.9%
|
HRE Willow Limited
|
HRE Willow
|
Small wind
|
875
|
622
|
(87)
|
3.5%
|
Minsmere Power Limited
|
Minsmere
|
Small wind
|
975
|
278
|
(34)
|
1.6%
|
Small Wind Generation Limited
|
Small Wind Generation
|
Small wind
|
975
|
108
|
(27)
|
0.6%
|
bio-bean Limited**
|
Cambridgeshire
|
Clean energy
|
695
|
0
|
0
|
0.0%
|
Rezatec Limited**
|
United Kingdom
|
Clean energy
|
1,000
|
0
|
0
|
0.0%
|
Lunar 3 Limited*
|
|
Ground solar
|
1
|
0
|
0
|
0.0%
|
|
|
|
8,709
|
17,713
|
(5,501)
|
99.7%
|
Cash at bank and in hand
|
|
|
|
46
|
|
0.3%
|
Total
investments
|
|
|
|
17,759
|
|
100.0%
|
* Partially qualifying
investment
** bio-bean Limited and Rezatec Limited
investments were fully impaired during the financial year. The
valuation movements in bio-bean Limited (£325,000) and Rezatec
Limited (£67,000) have been recognised as a realised
loss.
All venture capital investments are
incorporated in England and Wales.
Gresham House Renewable Energy VCT2 plc, of
which Gresham House is the Investment Adviser, holds the same
investments as above.
Investment movements for the year ended
30 September 2023
Disposals
|
Cost at
31 March
2023
£'000
|
Valuation at
31 March
2023
£'000
|
Redemption
of loan notes
£'000
|
Sale proceeds
£'000
|
Gross
realised
gain/(loss)
£'000
|
VCT Qualifying
and part-qualifying investments
|
|
|
|
|
|
Ayshford Solar (Holding) Limited
|
827
|
1,923
|
-
|
1,923
|
1,096
|
Gloucester Wind Limited
|
1,000
|
941
|
300
|
941
|
241
|
Hewas Solar Limited
|
1,000
|
919
|
131
|
919
|
50
|
St Columb Solar Limited
|
650
|
653
|
60
|
653
|
63
|
Penhale Solar Limited
|
825
|
434
|
180
|
434
|
(211)
|
Total
|
4,302
|
4,870
|
671
|
4,870
|
1,239
|
The sale included solar assets held within
Tumblewind Limited however the VCT still retains Small Wind assets
within Tumblewind Limited.
The transaction costs associated with the sale
of the assets amounted to £415,000 per VCT. The net realised gain
per VCT for the financial year amounts to £824,000.
The basis of valuation for the largest
investments is set out below.
Further details of the remaining investments
(by value):
Lunar 2 Limited
Lunar 2 Limited is a holding company of FiT
remunerated ground mounted solar farms of 5MW (Wiltshire), 4MW
(near Hawkchurch) and 0.6MW (Ilminster, Somerset).
Cost at
30/09/23:
|
£1,330,000
|
Cost at
30/09/22:
|
£1,330,000
|
Date of first
investment:
|
Dec 2013
|
Valuation at
30/09/23:
|
£11,101,000
|
Valuation at
30/09/22:
|
£15,271,000
|
Valuation
method:
|
Discounted cash flows (business)
|
Investment
comprises:
|
|
Ordinary
Shares:
|
£1,330,000
|
Proportion of
equity held:
|
50%
|
Summary
financial information from statutory accounts
(non-consolidated):
|
31 March 2023
|
Turnover:
|
*
|
Operating
profit/(loss):
|
*
|
Net
assets:
|
£1,643,000
|
* This information is not publicly
available
Lunar 1 Limited
Lunar 1 Limited is a holding company of FiT
remunerated ground mounted solar farms of two 5MW (Wiltshire) and
one 0.7MW (Oxfordshire).
Cost at
30/09/23:
|
£125,000
|
Cost at
30/09/22:
|
£125,000
|
Date of first
investment:
|
Dec 2013
|
Valuation at
30/09/23:
|
£1,925,000
|
Valuation at
30/09/22:
|
£2,403,000
|
Valuation
method:
|
Discounted cash flows (business)
|
Investment
comprises:
|
|
Ordinary
Shares:
|
£125,000
|
Proportion of
equity held:
|
5%
|
Summary
financial information from statutory accounts:
|
31 March 2023
|
Turnover:
|
£nil
|
Operating
loss:
|
£(7,000)
|
Net
assets:
|
£(515,000)
|
New Energy Era Limited
New Energy Era Limited owns a FiT remunerated
solar farm of 0.7MW near Shipton-under-Wychwood,
Oxfordshire.
Cost at
30/09/23:
|
£884,000
|
Cost at
30/09/22:
|
£884,000
|
Date of first
investment:
|
Nov 2011
|
Valuation at
30/09/23:
|
£1,320,000
|
Valuation at
30/09/22:
|
£1,835,000
|
Valuation
method:
|
Discounted cash flows (business)
|
Investment
comprises:
|
|
Ordinary
Shares:
|
£884,000
|
Proportion of
equity held:
|
45%
|
Summary
financial information from statutory accounts:
|
31 March 2023
|
Turnover:
|
£362,000
|
Operating
profit:
|
£225,000
|
Net
assets:
|
£2,082,000
|
Tumblewind Limited
Tumblewind Limited owns a portfolio of FiT
remunerated wind turbines on largely farmer owned sites located
throughout East Anglia. The total capacity of the wind assets owned
by Tumblewind Limited is 180kW. Tumblewind sold Priory Farm Solar
Farm Limited, which owns a ROC remunerated solar farm of 3.2MW near
Lowestoft, in April 2023.
Cost at
30/09/23:
|
£979,000
|
Cost at
30/09/22:
|
£979,000
|
Date of first
investment:
|
Nov 2011
|
Valuation at
30/09/23:
|
£1,310,000
|
Valuation at
30/09/22:
|
£1,313,000
|
Valuation
method:
|
Discounted cash flows (business)
|
Investment
comprises:
|
|
Ordinary
Shares:
|
£79
|
Loan
stock:
|
£189,000
|
Proportion of
equity held:
|
50%
|
Proportion of
loan stock held:
|
32%
|
Summary
financial information from statutory accounts:
|
31 March 2023
|
Turnover:
|
£52,000
|
Operating
profit:
|
£12,000
|
Net
assets:
|
£919,000
|
Vicarage Solar Limited
Vicarage Solar Limited is the holding company
of a FiT remunerated solar farm of 0.7MW near Ilminster,
Somerset.
Cost at
30/09/23:
|
£871,000
|
Cost at
30/09/22:
|
£871,000
|
Date of first
investment:
|
Mar 2012
|
Valuation at
30/09/23:
|
£1,049,000
|
Valuation at
30/09/22:
|
£1,236,000
|
Valuation
method:
|
Discounted cash flows (business)
|
Investment
comprises:
|
|
Ordinary
Shares:
|
£871,000
|
Proportion of
equity held:
|
45%
|
Summary
financial information from statutory accounts
(non-consolidated):
|
31 March 2023
|
Turnover:
|
*
|
Operating
profit/(loss):
|
*
|
Net
assets:
|
£1,944,000
|
* This information is not publicly
available
HRE Willow Limited
HRE Willow Limited owns a portfolio of FiT
remunerated wind turbines on largely farmer-owned sites located
throughout East Anglia. The total capacity of the wind assets owned
by HRE Willow Limited is 430kW.
Cost at
30/09/23:
|
£875,000
|
Cost at
30/09/22:
|
£875,000
|
Date of first
investment:
|
Jun 2011
|
Valuation at
30/09/23:
|
£622,000
|
Valuation at
30/09/22:
|
£709,000
|
Valuation
method:
|
Discounted cash flows (business)
|
Investment
comprises:
|
|
Ordinary
Shares:
|
£875,000
|
Proportion of
equity held:
|
44%
|
Summary
financial information from statutory accounts:
|
31 March 2023
|
Turnover:
|
£133,000
|
Operating
profit:
|
£32,000
|
Net
assets:
|
£1,237,000
|
Minsmere Power Limited
Minsmere Power Limited owns a portfolio of FiT
remunerated wind turbines on largely farmer owned sites located
throughout East Anglia. The total capacity of the wind assets owned
by Minsmere Power Limited is 230kW.
Cost at
30/09/23:
|
£975,000
|
Cost at
30/09/22:
|
£975,000
|
Date of first
investment:
|
Nov 2011
|
Valuation at
30/09/23:
|
£278,000
|
Valuation at
30/09/22:
|
£311,000
|
Valuation
method:
|
Discounted cash flows (business)
|
Investment
comprises:
|
|
Ordinary
Shares:
|
£400,000
|
Proportion of
equity held:
|
50%
|
Summary
financial information from statutory accounts:
|
31 March 2023
|
Turnover:
|
£68,000
|
Operating
profit:
|
£15,000
|
Net
assets:
|
£93,000
|
Small Wind Generation Limited
Small Wind Generation Limited owns a portfolio
of FiT remunerated wind turbines on largely farmer owned sites
located throughout East Anglia. The total capacity of the wind
assets owned by Small Wind Generation Limited
is 190kW.
Cost at
30/09/23:
|
£168,000
|
Cost at
30/09/22:
|
£168,000
|
Date of first
investment:
|
Nov 2011
|
Valuation at
30/09/23:
|
£109,000
|
Valuation at
30/09/22:
|
£136,000
|
Valuation
method:
|
Discounted cash flows (business)
|
Investment
comprises:
|
|
Ordinary
Shares:
|
£1,680,000
|
Proportion of
equity held:
|
50%
|
Summary
financial information from statutory accounts:
|
31 March 2023
|
Turnover:
|
£50,000
|
Operating
loss:
|
£17,000
|
Net
assets:
|
£(418,000)
|
Lunar 3 Limited
Lunar 3 Limited was incorporated at end of 2013
as part of the refinancing of the ground-mounted solar assets owned
by Lunar 1 Limited and Lunar 2 Limited. Lunar 3 Limited is a
dormant company and does not own any assets.
Cost at
30/09/23:
|
£100
|
Cost at
30/09/22:
|
£100
|
Date of first
investment:
|
Dec 2013
|
Valuation at
30/09/23:
|
£0
|
Valuation at
30/09/22:
|
£0
|
Valuation
method:
|
n/a
|
Investment
comprises:
|
|
Ordinary
Shares:
|
£200
|
Proportion of
equity held:
|
50%
|
Summary
financial information from statutory accounts:
|
31 March 2023
|
Turnover:
|
*
|
Operating
profit/(loss):
|
*
|
Net
assets:
|
£200
|
* This information is not publicly
available
Explanatory notes
The summary financial information has been
sourced from the statutory accounts of the underlying investee
companies. The net asset/liability figures presented therefore do
not approximate a valuation.
The proportion of equity held in each
investment also represents the level of voting rights held by the
VCT in respect of the investment.
Summary of loan stock interest income
|
Year ended
30 September
2023
£'000
|
Year ended
30 September
2022
£'000
|
Loan stock
interest income in the period
|
|
|
bio-bean Limited
|
-
|
-
|
Tumblewind Limited
|
15
|
15
|
Minsmere Power Limited
|
11
|
11
|
Small Wind Generation Limited
|
11
|
11
|
|
37
|
37
|
Analysis of investments by commercial sector
The split of the investment portfolio by sector
(by cost and by value at 30 September 2023) is as
follows:
Spread of investment by sector (cost)
Ground-mounted solar
|
52%
|
Small wind
|
48%
|
Spread of investment by sector (value)
Ground-mounted solar
|
87%
|
Small wind
|
13%
|
Strategic Report
The Directors present the Strategic Report for
the year ended 30 September 2023. The Board has prepared this
report in accordance with the Companies Act 2006.
Business
model
The VCT acts as an investment company,
investing in a portfolio of businesses within the renewable and
clean energy sectors and operating as a VCT to ensure that its
Shareholders can benefit from the tax reliefs available.
Business
review and developments
The VCT's business review and developments
during the year, including updates on the Managed Wind Down process
for the VCT and the ongoing sale of the portfolio, are set out in
the Chairman's Statement, Investment Adviser's Report, and the
Review of Investments.
During the year to 30 September 2023,
realisations on sale of investments totalled £824,000. The
renewable investments held decreased in value by £5.4mn. As a
result of bio-bean and Rezatec entering administration in April
2023 and May 2023 respectively, the non-renewable investments were
fully impaired in the half-yearly financial statements decreasing
their value by £392,000.
Income over expenditure for the year resulted
in a net loss, after accounting for capital expenses, of £4.6mn
(2022: £547,000 profit).
Net assets at the year-end were £14.2mn (2022:
£23.6mn). An interim dividend of 18.5p per Ordinary Share was
announced on 28 June 2023 and was paid on 28 July 2023.
Of this dividend, 16.5p per Ordinary Share reflected the
distribution of proceeds arising from the completion of sale of
certain solar assets in April 2023 and 2.0p per Ordinary Share
reflected the reinstatement of the delayed dividend for the year to
30 September 2022 as announced on 25 January 2023. A
further interim dividend of 7.5p per Ordinary Share has been
declared and was paid on 21 December 2023. The 7.5p interim
dividend related to income generation from the portfolio, but also
arose from the distribution of the remaining proceeds from the sale
of some of the assets in April 2023.
The Directors initially obtained provisional
approval for the VCT to act as a Venture Capital Trust from HM
Revenue & Customs. The Directors consider that the VCT has
continued to conduct its affairs in a manner such that it complies
with Part 6 of the Income Tax Act 2007.
Investment
advisory and administration fees
Gresham House Asset Management Limited (Gresham
House) provides investment advisory services to the VCT, at a fee
equivalent to 1.15% of net assets. The agreement is for a minimum
term of two years, effective from 7 November 2017, with a nine
month notice period on either side thereafter.
The Board has reviewed the services to be
provided by Gresham House and has concluded that it is satisfied
with the strategy, approach and procedures which are to be
implemented in providing investment advisory services to the VCT.
The Board is also of the opinion that the allocation of the
investment advisory fee between capital and revenue of the VCT, as
described in Note 4 to the financial statements, is still
appropriate.
JTC (UK) Limited (JTC) acts as Administrator
and Company Secretary. JTC provides administration and accounting
services to the VCT for a fee of £40,000 (plus VAT, if applicable)
per annum. It also provides company secretarial services for a fee
of £40,000 (plus VAT, if applicable) per annum. The agreement shall
continue in force until determined by either party, with a six
month notice period on either side.
Trail
commission
Historically the VCT had an agreement to pay
trail commission annually to Hazel Capital LLP, in connection with
the funds raised under the Offers for subscription. This was
calculated at 0.4% of the net assets of the VCT at each year end.
Out of these funds Hazel Capital LLP was liable to pay trail
commission to financial intermediaries. The trail commission was
payable to Hazel Capital LLP until the earlier of (i) the sixth
anniversary of the closing of the Offers and (ii) the Investment
Advisory Agreement being terminated.
Upon the appointment of Gresham House as
Investment Adviser on 7 November 2017, the agreement with
Hazel Capital LLP was reissued and the new Investment Adviser
agreed to pay further trail commission to Haibun Partners LLP
(Haibun) and CH1 Investment Partners LLP (CH1), of which Matthew
Evans (Director of Gresham House Renewable Energy VCT2 plc) is a
Designated Member, with an agreement in place effective
11 July 2019. The trail commission payable is equal to 0.15%
of the net asset value of the shares issued by the VCT and its
sister company, VCT2, to Haibun and CH1 clients under each of the
2010, 2012 and 2014 Offers. This trail commission is payable each
year provided that applicable Shareholders remain clients of Haibun
and CH1, or until Gresham House ceases to act as Investment Adviser
to the VCTs. Payment of trail commission under this agreement is
not deemed to be a related party transaction and is therefore not
disclosed in Note 21 to the financial statements.
The amounts payable to Haibun and CH1 by
Gresham House, in aggregate across both the VCT and VCT2, are as
follows:
|
Year ended
30 September 2023
|
|
Haibun
£
|
CH1
£
|
Total
£
|
2010 Offer
|
10,397
|
13,704
|
24,101
|
2012 Offer
|
1,473
|
957
|
2,430
|
2014 Offer
|
571
|
1,150
|
1,721
|
Total
|
12,441
|
15,811
|
28,252
|
Investment policy
General
At the General Meeting held on 13 July
2021, 89.43% of the Shareholders resolved to approve the New
Investment Policy of the Company to reflect a realisation strategy
and the Company ceasing to make any new investments. The new
Investment Policy replaced the previous Investment Policy in its
entirety.
The Directors believed that being prescriptive
as regards the timeframe for realising the Company's investments
could prove detrimental to the value achieved on realisation.
Therefore, it was the Board's view that the strategy for the
realisation of the Company's investments would need to be flexible
and may need to be altered to reflect changes in the circumstances
of a particular investment or in the prevailing market
conditions.
Once all, or substantially all, of the
Company's investments have been realised and an initial
distribution in respect thereof made, the Company will, at an
appropriate time, seek Shareholders' approval for it to be placed
into members' voluntary liquidation.
Since inception to 13 July 2021
Up to 13 July 2021, the VCT's objectives
were to maximise tax free capital gains and income to Shareholders
from dividends and capital distributions by investing the VCT's
funds in:
·
|
a portfolio of clean technology and
environmentally sustainable investments, primarily being in the UK
and the EU, that have attractive income and growth characteristics,
with investments in existing asset-backed renewable generation
projects as the core of the portfolio; and
|
·
|
a range of non-qualifying investments,
comprised from a selection of cash deposits, fixed income funds,
securities and secured loans and which will have credit ratings of
not less than A minus (Standard & Poor's rated)/A3 (Moody's
rated). In addition, as the portfolio of VCT qualifying investments
will involve smaller start-up companies, non-qualifying loans could
be made to these companies to negate the need to borrow from banks
and, therefore, undermine the companies' security within the
conditions imposed on all VCTs under current and future VCT
legislation applicable to the VCT.
|
13 July 2021 to 30 September
2023
Following shareholder approval at the General
Meeting on 13 July 2021, the New Investment Policy of the VCT
is that the Company will be managed with the intention of realising
all remaining assets in the Portfolio in a prudent manner
consistent with the principles of good investment management and
with a view to returning cash to Shareholders in an orderly manner,
whilst protecting the tax position of Shareholders.
The Company will pursue its investment
objective by effecting an orderly realisation of its assets in a
manner that seeks to achieve a balance between maximising the value
received from those assets and making timely returns of capital to
Shareholders. This process might include sales of individual assets
or running off the portfolio in accordance with the existing terms
of the assets, or a combination of both. Pursuant to its investment
objective, the Company successfully completed the sale of a portion
of its solar assets in April 2023.
The Company will cease to make any new
investments or to undertake capital expenditure except where, in
the opinion of both the Board and the Investment Adviser (or, where
relevant, the Investment Adviser's successors):
·
|
the investment is a follow-on investment made
in connection with an existing asset in order to comply with the
Company's pre-existing obligations; or
|
·
|
failure to make the follow-on investment may
result in a breach of contract or applicable law or regulation by
the Company; or
|
·
|
the investment is considered necessary to
protect or enhance the value of any existing investments or to
facilitate orderly disposals; or
|
·
|
any cash received by the Company as part of the
realisation process prior to its distribution to Shareholders will
be held by the Company as cash on deposit and/or as cash
equivalents.
|
Investment
strategy
Investee companies generally reflect the
following criteria:
·
|
a well-defined business plan and ability to
demonstrate strong demand for its products and services;
|
·
|
products or services which are cash
generative;
|
·
|
objectives of management and Shareholders which
are similarly aligned;
|
·
|
adequate capital resources or access to further
resources to achieve the targets set out in its business
plan;
|
·
|
high calibre management teams;
|
·
|
companies where the Investment Adviser believes
there are reasonable prospects of an exit, either through a trade
sale or flotation in the medium term; and
|
·
|
a focus on small and long-term renewable energy
projects that utilise proven technology.
|
The new Investment Policy was adopted at the
General Meeting held on 13 July 2021 to reflect a realisation
strategy and the Company ceasing to make any new
investments.
Asset
allocation
Throughout the year under review and to date,
the Company continued to hold 80% of its funds in VCT qualifying
investments in order to retain its status as an approved Venture
Capital Trust. At 30 September 2023, the VCT had a significant
margin over the 80% qualifying holdings requirement as a result of
a 12 month disregard in respect of disposals and resultant dividend
payments. This margin will narrow in the course of the current
financial year and is being monitored closely to ensure compliance
is maintained.
It is expected that the VCT shall hold at least
eight investments to provide diversification and risk protection.
During the Managed Wind Down the number of investments will
continue to decrease following the sale of the VCT's assets, with
the Company intending to dispose of its remaining investments prior
to the appointment of liquidators. In relation to the VCT, no
single investment (including most loans to investee companies) will
represent more than 15% of the aggregate net asset value of its
fund save where such investment is in an investee company which has
acquired or is to acquire, whether directly or indirectly,
securities in the following companies: AEE Renewables UK 3 Limited,
AEE Renewables UK 26 Limited, South Marston Solar Limited,
Beechgrove Solar Limited, New Energy Era Limited and Vicarage Solar
Limited.
Risk Diversification
During the year, the structure of the VCT's
funds, and its investment strategies, have been designed to reduce
risk as much as possible.
The main risk management features
include:
·
|
portfolio of investee companies - the VCT seeks
to invest in at least eight different companies, thereby reducing
the potential impact of poor performance by any individual
investment. During the Managed Wind Down the number of investments
will continue to decrease following the sale of the VCT's
assets;
|
·
|
monitoring of investee companies - the
Investment Adviser will closely monitor the performance of all the
investments made by the VCT in order to identify any issues and to
enable necessary corrective action to be taken; and
|
·
|
the VCT will ensure that it has sufficient
influence over the management of the business of the investee
companies, in particular, through rights contained in the relevant
investment agreements and other shareholder/constitutional
documents.
|
The VCT has followed the above risk
diversification strategy with regard to the Lunar 1 Limited and
Lunar 2 Limited investments in AEE Renewables UK 3 Limited, AEE
Renewables UK 26 Limited, South Marston Solar Limited, Beechgrove
Solar Limited, New Energy Era Limited and Vicarage Solar
Limited.
Gearing
It is not intended that the VCT will borrow
(other than from investee companies). However, it will have the
ability to borrow up to 15% of its net asset value* save that this
limit shall not apply to any loan monies used to facilitate the
acquisition by the VCT, whether directly or indirectly, of any
shares or securities in the operational asset/holding
companies.**
The VCT has ensured that Lunar 1 Limited and
Lunar 2 Limited have borrowed no more than 90% of their respective
net asset values to facilitate the acquisition, whether directly or
indirectly, of any shares or securities in the following: AEE
Renewables UK 3 Limited, AEE Renewables UK 26 Limited, South
Marston Solar Limited, Beechgrove Solar Limited, New Energy Era
Limited and Vicarage Solar Limited.
The long-term creditors shown on the Balance
Sheet represent amounts owed to investee companies, which the Board
expect to be repaid in the future by way of dividends from, or the
sale of, these companies.
As at 30 September 2023, the VCT had the
ability to borrow £4.5mn in accordance with the articles, and had
actual borrowings of £nil.
The VCT has no intention to borrow any funding
in the foreseeable future.
Listing
rules
In accordance with the Listing
Rules:
i)
|
the VCT may not invest more than 10%, in
aggregate, of the value of the total assets of the VCT at the time
an investment is made in other listed closed-ended investment funds
except listed closed-ended investment funds which have published
investment policies which permit them to invest no more than 15% of
their total assets in other listed closed-ended investment
funds;
|
ii)
|
the VCT must not conduct any trading activity
which is significant in the context of the VCT; and
|
iii)
|
the VCT must, at all times, invest and manage
its assets in a way which is consistent with its objective of
spreading investment risk and in accordance with its published
investment policy set out in this document. This investment policy
is in line with Chapter 15 of the Listing Rules and Part 6 of the
Income Tax Act.
|
The Listing Rules have been complied with for
the year ended 30 September 2023.
Directors and senior management
The VCT has three Non-Executive Directors. The
board comprises one female and two males. The VCT has no
employees.
Key performance indicators
At each Board meeting, the Directors consider a
number of performance measures to assess the VCT's success in
meeting its objectives. The Board has identified the VCT's key
performance indicators as NAV Total Return and dividends paid per
share, the performance of which during the year are in the table
below:
Key performance
indicators per financial year:
|
Year ended
30 September
2023
|
Year ended
30 September
2022**
|
Net Asset Value Total Return (%
p.a.)
|
(12.1)%
|
1.4%
|
Dividends paid per share (p)*
|
24.0p
|
2.0p
|
* Dividend paid per Ordinary Share
year ended 30 September 2023: 16.5p (July 2023) and 7.5p
(December 2023). No dividend was paid in respect of the 'A'
Shares.
** Dividend paid per share - year ended
30 September 2022: restated as a result of delayed dividend
payment subsequently paid in July 2023.
See the Chairman's Statement for details on the
EGL. On the basis of the scope to which this levy applies, there is
no impact on the current or future revenues received by the VCT,
however the fair value of the portfolio incorporates the potential
additional costs a purchaser may incur.
These are defined as follows:
·
|
Net Asset
Value Total Return: the sum of NAV per Ordinary
Share, NAV per 'A' Share and cumulative dividends paid.
|
·
|
Net Asset
Value per Ordinary Share: The closing total net
asset position of the VCT as at the reporting date less the total
par value of all 'A' Shares in issue at the reporting date divided
by the total number of Ordinary Shares in issue at the reporting
date.
|
·
|
Net Asset
Value per 'A' Share: Par value per 'A'
Share.
|
·
|
Cumulative
dividends paid: The gross total of all
dividends paid for both Ordinary and 'A' Shares from inception up
to the reporting date.
|
The total net asset position of the VCT as at
the reporting date is as per the Balance Sheet, while the total
number of shares in issue for both Ordinary and 'A' Shares is
disclosed in Note 15.
In addition, the Board considers the VCT's
performance in relation to other VCTs.
The position of the VCT's NAV Total Return as
at 30 September 2023 and a summary of dividends paid per share
are as indicated in the table on this page. The VCTs dividend
policy is to distribute surplus funds generated by the underlying
investments, subject to maintaining an appropriate cash reserve at
SPV level to pay up to the VCT as and when required in order to
meet anticipated future requirements. The VCT has an objective of
paying dividends of 5p per share per annum. As part of the
Managed Wind Down, once the majority of the assets have been sold,
the intention is to return all sale proceeds to Shareholders
through dividend distributions or, if the VCT has since entered
voluntary liquidation, via capital distributions.
* Following the 2018 AGM the
articles of the VCT were amended such that amounts borrowed from
investee companies are now excluded from the calculation of the 15%
borrowing restriction.
** AEE Renewables UK 3 Limited, AEE Renewables
UK 26 Limited, South Marston Solar Limited, Beechgrove Solar
Limited, New Energy Era Limited and Vicarage Solar
Limited.
Principal risks and uncertainties
Schedule of principal and emerging risks
The other principal and emerging risks faced by
the VCT, along with the steps taken to mitigate these risks, are
shown in the table below. The risks have not materially changed
from the previous year, however changes in the factors impacting
the risks attributable are discussed below. These principally apply
during the period until the underlying assets are sold during the
Managed Wind Down process.
Principal
Risk
|
Context
|
Specific
risks
|
Possible
impact
|
Mitigation
|
Investment
Performance
|
The VCT
holds investments in unquoted UK businesses in the renewable energy
sector.
|
Poor
investment decisions or strategy or poor monitoring, management and
realisation of investments.
Adverse
weather conditions, low inflation rates and/or low power prices
resulting in below forecast investment returns.
|
Reduction
in the NAV of the VCT and the inability of the VCT to pay
dividends.
|
The
Investment Adviser has significant experience in the renewable
energy sector. The Investment Adviser also actively manages the
portfolio, engaging reputable and experienced Operations and
Maintenance (O&M) contractors. The assets have limited exposure
to power prices, due to the use of the Feed in Tariff (FiT)
regime.
The Board
regularly reviews the performance of the portfolio, alongside the
Board of the sister company.
The higher
inflation outlook, whilst of concern from the point of view of the
wider UK and global economy, is positive for the owners of
subsidised UK renewable assets. Although most costs also rise in
line with inflation, as does the cost of servicing the debt
facility, the net benefit of increased inflation is positive since
it increases the inflation linked revenues more than it increases
the costs.
|
Loss of
VCT status
|
The VCT
must maintain continued compliance with the VCT Regulations, which
prescribe a number of tests and conditions.
|
Breach of
any of the rules could result in the loss of VCT status.
|
The loss of
VCT status would result in dividends becoming taxable and new
Shareholders losing their initial tax relief.
|
The VCT
Qualification is actively monitored by the Investment Adviser and
the Administrator, who liaise with the designated VCT Status
Adviser. The VCT Status Adviser also produces twice yearly reports
for the Board.
The
Investment Adviser is aware of the dates of the latest
fundraisings, and that the five year minimum holding period
finished in October 2023.
The
Investment Adviser has also prepared detailed forecasts relating to
the wind up of the VCTs, which takes this into account.
|
Legislative
|
In recent
years, the changes to VCT Regulations have narrowed the breadth of
permitted investments.
VCTs were
established to encourage private individuals to invest in early
stage companies that are considered to be risky and have limited
funding options. The state provides these investors with tax
relief.
|
A change in
government policy could result in a cessation of tax reliefs or
reduction of the amount of tax relief available to investors which
would make them less attractive to investors.
|
The loss of
VCT status would result in dividends becoming taxable and new
Shareholders losing their initial tax relief.
|
Both the
Investment Adviser and the Administrator closely monitor
developments and attend AIC conferences.
The VCT
Status Adviser also has significant experience in this field and
works closely with HMRC.
Further
commentary on VCT Status is provided within the Annual
Report.
The
Investment Adviser engages with HMT and industry representative
bodies to demonstrate the cost benefit of VCTs to the economy in
terms of employment generation and taxation revenue.
|
Regulatory and
compliance
|
As a listed
entity, the VCT is subject to the UK Listing Rules and related
regulations.
|
Any
breaches of relevant regulations could result in suspension of
trading in the VCT's shares or financial penalties.
|
Reduction
in the NAV of the VCT due to financial penalties and a suspension
of trading in its shares, also leading to loss of VCT
status.
|
The VCT
Secretary and Administrator have a long history of acting for VCTs.
The Board, Investment Adviser and Administrator also employ the
services of reputable lawyers, auditors and other advisers to
ensure continued compliance with its regulatory
obligations.
|
Operational - VCT
level
|
The VCT
relies on the Investment Adviser, Administrator and other third
parties to provide many of its services at the VCT
level.
|
Inferior
provision of these services, thereby leading to inadequate systems
and controls or inefficient management of the VCT's assets and its
reporting requirements. Service providers, predominantly the
Registrar, hold Shareholders' personal data and there is a risk of
an external shock (natural disaster or terrorist attack) or a cyber
attack on a provider.
|
Errors in
Shareholder records, incorrect mailings, misuse of data,
non-compliance with key legislation, loss of assets, breach of
legal duties and inadequate financial reporting.
|
The VCT,
the Investment Adviser and the Administrator engage experienced and
reputable service providers, the performance of which is reviewed
on an annual basis.
The
Directors and the Investment Adviser regularly review the service
providers, including their internal controls and the procedures and
policies they have in place for preventing cyber
attacks.
|
Operational - portfolio
level
|
At the
portfolio level, the VCT uses third party O&M contractors
managing the various sites.
|
Inferior
provision of these services, thereby leading to inadequate systems
and controls or inefficient management of the VCT's
assets.
Maintenance
and repairs not carried out in a timely manner.
|
Poor
investment performance due to assets being offline and non-revenue
generating.
|
The VCT,
the Investment Adviser and the Administrator engage experienced and
reputable service providers, the performance of which is reviewed
on an ongoing basis. At the portfolio level, technical reviews and
studies are conducted on the assets as appropriate.
Repair and
reconfiguration work is carried out and O&M procedures are
revised to reduce dependence on overseas contractors and
specialists.
|
Economic, political and other
external factors
|
The VCT's
investments are heavily exposed to the Feed in Tariff (FiT) regime.
Events such as the Russian Federation's invasion of Ukraine,
conflict in the Middle East, economic recession, increasing
interest rates and inflation.
|
Retrospective changes to the regimes. Changes in energy prices
and inflation. An increase in inflation results in higher interest
charges for the debt facility.
|
A
significant negative impact on performance in respect of regime
changes, low inflation and energy prices reduces portfolio
revenue.
|
The
Investment Adviser and Board members closely monitor policy and
geo-political developments. However, the UK Government has a
general policy of not introducing retrospective legislation. The
Investment Adviser and Board regularly review the valuation model
and its inputs. Higher energy prices and inflation can improve
portfolio performance as returns are directly linked to both
factors.
|
(Retroactive) change to
Energy Market regulation and policies
|
The VCT
operates within the UK Energy market which is governed by UK
regulation and could be subject to change.
|
The current
or future UK Government may decide that subsidies provided to
renewable energy generation assets in the form of feed-in-tariffs
(FiTs) pose too big a burden on electricity consumers and reduce or
even eliminate them retroactively. Similarly, other measures that
achieve a similar effect such as special taxes, a cap on applicable
inflation rates, limits on generated KWhs that earn
FiTs.
|
A
significant negative impact of the renewable energy generation
assets revenue reducing the cash availability of the VCT. The EGL
was introduced from 1 January 2023 and legislated for in Part
5 of Finance Act (Number 2) 2023. The levy is legislated to remain
in force until 31 March 2028.
|
The
Investment Adviser continuously monitors the regulatory landscape
in the UK. If an action that retroactively targets these subsides
it would join forces with other owners of these assets and
vigorously challenge such retroactive law changes in the courts.
All of the sites owned by the VCTs are fully-accredited which means
that there is no risk of an individual asset losing its
subsidy.
Risk
lowered as the government introduced the EGL from 1 January
2023 to tax exceptional profits, so they are unlikely to introduce
any more changes in the next five years as the EGL deals with this.
The EGL does not impact the VCT's portfolio given its smaller size,
but any potential acquirer may subsequently incur this
levy.
|
Emerging
Risk
|
Context
|
Specific
risks
|
Possible
impact
|
Mitigation
|
Climate
change and ESG
|
Failure to
address ESG related factors and potential climate change can have
impacts on the portfolio performance and therefore on SPVs revenue
and VCT's cash availability.
|
Reduction
of portfolio performance due to climate change.
|
Reduction
in portfolio revenue.
|
ESG and
climate change impacts are considered by the Investment Adviser and
the Board in respect of new investments. Updates on proposed new
legislation are monitored by the Board and Investment
Adviser.
The climate
change risk applies during the period until the underlying assets
are sold during the Managed Wind Down process. The climate change
risk on a short term basis is considered low.
|
Since inception to 13 July 2021
The principal financial risks faced by the VCT,
which include interest rate, market price, investment valuation,
credit and liquidity risks, are summarised within Note 18 to the
financial statements.
Note 18 includes an analysis of the sensitivity
of valuation of the portfolio to changes in each of the key inputs
to the valuation model.
Other principal risks faced by the VCT have
been assessed by the Board and grouped into the key categories
outlined below:
·
|
underperformance;
|
·
|
loss of VCT status;
|
·
|
VCT regulations;
|
·
|
regulatory and compliance;
|
·
|
operational;
|
·
|
economic, political and other external factors;
and
|
·
|
government intervention in the renewables
market.
|
13 July 2021 to 30 September 2023
In approving a new Investment Policy for the
Company, a number of risks which are material and currently known
to the Company have been disclosed. Additional risks and
uncertainties not currently known to the Company, or that the
Company deems immaterial, may also have an adverse effect on the
Company.
The main risks identified as part of the new
Investment Policy of the Company are:
Risk
identified
|
Context
|
Mitigation
|
Asset
diversification
|
In a
Managed Wind Down, the value of the portfolio will be reduced as
investments are realised and concentrated in fewer holdings, and
the mix of asset exposure will be affected accordingly
|
None
identified.
|
Ownership
|
All of the
VCT's main solar assets are owned 50:50 between the VCT and VCT2
and there are no rights attached to such ownership that would allow
one company to force the other to sell its share in each
asset
|
The VCTs
will sell their shares in each asset simultaneously, so that no VCT
holds more than 50% of the underlying assets.
|
Volatility in NAV and/or
share price
|
The VCT
might experience increased volatility in its Net Asset Value and/or
its share price as a result of possible changes to the Portfolio
structure following the adoption of the new Investment
Policy.
|
None
identified.
|
Sale of
assets
|
The VCT's
assets may not be realised at their carrying value, and it is
possible that the VCT may not be able to realise some assets at any
value. The VCT's assets' fair value is linked to estimates and
assumptions about a variety of matters, including macroeconomic
considerations, which assumptions may prove to be incorrect and
which are subject to change. A material change of governmental,
economic, fiscal, monetary or political policy, may result in a
reduction in the value of the VCT's assets on sale.
|
The Board
has engaged several experts in this field to ensure an appropriate
sale price is reached. The Directors will ensure that the sale
price reflects the best available offer for the Company's assets
taking into account future income generation by the portfolio and
the age and condition of the assets.
|
Sale of
assets
|
Sales
commissions, liquidation costs, taxes and other costs associated
with the realisation of the VCT's assets together with the usual
operating costs of the VCT will reduce the cash available for
distribution to the Shareholders.
|
The
Investment Adviser prepares detailed cash flow forecasts which are
presented to the Board quarterly. The forecasts include the
additional costs expected to be incurred during the Managed Wind
Down of the VCT.
|
Sale of
assets
|
A sale of
the VCT's assets may prove materially more complex than
anticipated, and the distribution of proceeds to Shareholders may
be delayed by a number of factors, including, without limitation,
the ability of a liquidator to make distributions to
Shareholders.
|
The Board
has engaged several experts in this field, to ensure against an
extended handover period. If an extended handover period occurs
then it is the Directors intention to ensure that the sale value
obtained will ultimately be in Shareholders interests.
|
Viability statement
In accordance with Provisions 33 and 36 of the
2019 AIC Code of Corporate Governance, the Directors have carried
out a robust assessment of the emerging and principal risks facing
the VCT that would threaten its business model, future performance,
solvency or liquidity, and have assessed the prospects of the VCT
over a longer period than the 12 months required by the 'Going
Concern' provision.
The Board has conducted this review for a
period of three years from the balance sheet date as developments
are considered to be reasonably foreseeable over this period. The
period of review has been shortened since the financial year ending
30 September 2021 due to the commencement of the Managed Wind
Down of the VCT. Following the results of the continuation vote at
the 2021 AGM and the Shareholders' subsequent approval of the
Managed Wind Down of the Company at the 2021 General Meeting, the
Board still considers that the VCT remains viable up until the
point at which its assets are fully sold, or the voluntary
liquidation completed, and as such the Board are satisfied that a
three-year viability assessment remains applicable.
In making the viability assessment, the Board
has taken the following factors into consideration:
● the
nature and liquidity of the remaining VCT's portfolio (long-term,
revenue generating fixed assets);
● the
sales process currently underway to realise the VCT's remaining
renewable assets;
● the
potential impact of the Principal Risks and
Uncertainties;
●
maintaining VCT approval status up to the VCT entering voluntary
liquidation;
●
operating expenditure; and
●
future dividends.
The Board is satisfied that the underlying
assets held by the SPVs have been built to a sufficient quality and
there are no current indications that the assets will degrade
substantially over the period. It is also considered highly
unlikely that the renewable portfolio would suffer from such poor
irradiation and severe degradation that it would be unable to
generate income over the period. The improvement in power prices
and the benefit of higher inflation on the portfolio performance
has improved the prospects for returns materially. Asset life,
along with the other inputs to the valuation model, are discussed
further in Note 2.
The Board also noted that the SPVs have very
good debt cover and that there are sufficient cash reserves at the
SPV level, available to be paid up to the VCT through dividends,
reverse loans or the repayment of existing shareholder loans, to
cover debt and running & sale of assets costs over the review
period.
The Board has assessed the VCT's ability to
cover its annual running costs under several stress scenarios
evaluating the impact of receiving up to 20% less funds from the
SPV level and the impact of increasing the VCT and SPV level
running costs by up to 20%. The Board noted that under none of
these scenarios was the VCT unable to cover
its costs.
The Directors believe that the VCT is well
placed to manage its business risks successfully. Based on the
results, the Board confirms that, taking into account the VCT's
current position and subject to the principal risks faced by the
business, the VCT will be able to meet its liabilities as they fall
due for a period of at least three years from the balance sheet
date, notwithstanding that the VCT is currently undergoing a
Managed Wind Down and may be wound up in this timeframe.
Directors' remuneration
It is a requirement under the Companies Act
2006 for Shareholders to vote on the Directors' remuneration every
three years, or sooner if the VCT wants to make changes to the
policy. The Directors' remuneration policy for the three-year
period from 27 April 2023 is set out in the Directors'
Remuneration Report..
Annual running costs cap
The annual running costs for the year are
capped at 3.0% of net assets; any excess will either be paid by the
Investment Adviser or refunded by way of a reduction of the
Investment Adviser's fees. Annual Running Costs for the year to
30 September 2023 were 2.8% (2022: 2.3%) and therefore less
than 3.0% of net assets.
Performance Incentive
The structure of the 'A' Shares, whereby
Management owns one third of the 'A' Shares in issue (known as the
"Management 'A' Shares"), acts as a Performance Incentive
mechanism. The allocation to the 'A' Shares of any revenue and/or
capital dividends declared by the VCT, will be increased if, at the
end of each year, the hurdle is met, which is illustrated
below:
i)
Shareholders who invested under the offer for subscription receive
dividends in excess of 5.0p per Ordinary Share in any one financial
period; and
ii) one
Ordinary Share and one 'A' Share has a combined net asset value of
at least 100.0p.
The Performance Incentive is calculated each
year and is not based on cumulative dividends paid.
A summary of how proceeds are allocated between
Shareholders and Management, before and after the hurdle is met,
and as dividends per Ordinary Share increase is as
follows:
Hurdle
criteria:
|
|
|
|
Annual dividend per Ordinary Share
|
0-5p
|
5-10p
|
>10p
|
Combined NAV Hurdle
|
N/A
|
>100p
|
>100p
|
Allocation:
|
|
|
|
Shareholders
|
99.97%
|
80%
|
70%
|
Management
|
0.03%
|
20%
|
30%
|
As the NAV as at 30 September 2023 was
below 100p, the NAV hurdle for the year was not met and no dividend
in respect of the 'A' Shares was paid during the year, therefore
there was no Performance Incentive paid.
Pursuant to historic financial intermediary
arrangements with Hazel Capital LLP and, upon the appointment of
Gresham House as Investment Adviser, CH1, of which Matthew Evans
(Director of Gresham House Renewable Energy VCT2 plc) is a
Designated Member, and Haibun, receive approximately 8.0% of the
Performance Incentive payments made to Management in respect of the
'Management 'A' Shares' by the VCT and its sister company,
VCT2.
VCT status
The VCT has reappointed Philip Hare &
Associates LLP (Philip Hare) to advise it on compliance with VCT
requirements, including evaluation of investment opportunities as
appropriate and regular review of the portfolio. Although Philip
Hare works closely with the Investment Adviser, they report
directly to the Board.
Compliance with the VCT regulations for the
year under review is summarised as follows:
|
|
Position at the
year ended
30 September
2023
|
1.
|
To ensure that the
VCT's income in the period has been derived wholly or mainly (70%
plus) from shares or securities;
|
99.6%
|
2.
|
To ensure that the VCT
has not retained more than 15% of its income from shares and
securities; - see note below
|
37.9%*
|
3.
|
To ensure that the VCT
has not made a prohibited payment to Shareholders derived from an
issue of shares since 6 April 2014;
|
0.0%
|
4.
|
To ensure that at
least 80% by value of the VCT's investments has been represented
throughout the period by shares or securities comprised in
qualifying holdings of the VCT;
|
100.0%
|
5.
|
To ensure that at
least 70% by value of the VCT's qualifying holdings has been
represented throughout the period by holdings of eligible shares
(disregarding investments made prior to 6 April 2018 from
funds raised before 6 April 2011);
|
94.9%
|
6.
|
To ensure that no
holding in any company has at any time in the period represented
more than 15% by value of the VCT's investments at the time of
investment;
|
Complied
|
7.
|
To ensure that, of
funds raised on or after 1 October 2018, at least 30% has been
invested in qualifying holdings by the anniversary of the end of
the accounting period in which the shares were issued.
|
Complied
|
8.
|
To ensure that the
VCT's ordinary capital has throughout the period been listed on a
regulated market;
|
Complied
|
9.
|
To ensure that the VCT
has not made an investment in a company which causes it to receive
more than the permitted investment from State Aid
sources;
|
Complied
|
10.
|
To ensure that since
17 November 2015, the VCT has not made an investment in a
company which exceeds the maximum permitted age
requirement;
|
Complied
|
11.
|
To ensure that since
17 November 2015, funds invested by the VCT in
another company
have not been used to make a prohibited acquisition; and
|
Complied
|
12.
|
To ensure that since
6 April 2016, the VCT has not made a prohibited non-qualifying
investment.
|
Complied
|
* As the VCT has negative revenue
reserves, the Company's VCT status adviser has confirmed that this
requirement is deemed to have been met for VCT compliance
purposes.
The Directors, with the help of the Investment
Adviser, actively monitor and ensure the investee companies have
less than £5mn state backed financing in a 12-month period listed
in order to remain compliant with the VCT regulations.
Share Buybacks
The Board has decided that the VCT will not be
buying in shares for the foreseeable future as highlighted in the
Interim Results, as the VCT needs to conserve such cash as it
generates for the Managed Wind Down of the VCT and the payment of
dividends.
Future prospects
The Board's assessment of the outlook and
future strategy of the VCT are set out in the Chairman's Statement
and Investment Adviser's Report.
Sustainable Investing
The Sustainable Investing report forms part of
the Strategic Report.
The VCT seeks to conduct its affairs
responsibly and Gresham House, the Investment Adviser, the
Investment Adviser is encouraged to consider environmental, social
and community issues, where appropriate, and the Board will
continue to monitor the Investment Adviser's progress in these
areas.
The Board is conscious of its potential impact
on the environment as well as its social and corporate governance
responsibilities. The Investment Adviser has presented its
Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) strategy to the
Board.
The VCT, whilst not having an explicit
sustainable investment objective, demonstrates clear promotion of
environmental characteristics by investing in technologies that
contribute to climate change mitigation by supporting a
decarbonisation of the energy system in the UK and a net zero
economy underpinned by cheap clean electricity.
Sustainable Investing at Gresham House
The Investment Adviser is committed to
sustainable investment as an integral part of its business
strategy. In 2021, Gresham House further enhanced its approach
to sustainability by publishing its first Corporate Sustainability
Strategy (CSS) which supports its GH25 ambition to "become a
leader in the sustainable investment, including Environmental,
Social and Governance (ESG)". The CSS details objectives and
actions to ensure its progresses against its ambition to be a
leader in sustainable investment and that ESG factors and
stewardship responsibilities continue to be integrated into the
management of each asset division. More information on Gresham
House's sustainability approach and CSS can be found in its
Sustainable Investment Report:
https://greshamhouse.com/sustainable-investment-report/
Policies and processes
Gresham House publishes a Sustainable Investing
Policy along with asset specific policies, including the New Energy
Sustainable Investment Policy, which covers Gresham House's
sustainable investment commitments, how the investment processes
meet these commitments and the application of the Sustainable
Investment Framework.
The Sustainable Investment Team assesses
adherence to the commitments in the Sustainable Investment Policies
on an annual basis and provides updates on the findings of these
assessments to the Sustainability Executive Committee and Board
Sustainability Committee.
Sustainability Executive Committee
The Investment Adviser's Sustainability
Executive Committee (Sustainability ExCo) was established in 2021.
The Sustainability ExCo is chaired by the Director of Sustainable
Investment and comprises heads of divisions and representation from
across the business including Group Management Committee
representatives, a Gresham House Ireland representative, investment
division heads and heads of operational teams. The ExCo sets and
oversees the Gresham House Corporate Sustainability Strategy and
ensures priority areas of sustainability related risks and
opportunities are proactively identified and debated.
New Energy Sustainable Investment Committee
In 2022, the New Energy division evolved its
structures with regards to the ownership and development of
Sustainable Investment objectives and actions for the division by
creating a New Energy Sustainable Investment Committee (NESIC). The
purpose of the New Energy Sustainability Committee's purpose is to
provide leadership, strategic direction and implement processes to
enhance the integration of sustainability across the New Energy
division, supporting the achievement of fund-specific objectives
and the CSS.
The core objectives of the NESIC
include:
·
|
to become the experts in sustainability within
the New Energy division and apply their knowledge to their areas of
business.
|
·
|
to be advocates for sustainable investment and
innovation for the division.
|
·
|
to set and oversee the New Energy
sustainability objectives and targets at fund and divisional level,
aligned to Gresham House Corporate Sustainability
Strategy.
|
·
|
to ensure key sustainability related risks and
opportunities are proactively identified and managed by the
division.
|
·
|
to ensure that New Energy SI-related tools,
processes, frameworks and data remain relevant and meet commitments
made in the New Energy Sustainable Investment Policy to ensure the
division is able to evidence SI contribution and progress to
external parties.
|
New Energy Sustainability Objectives
The NESIC developed and agreed a set of
sustainability objectives for the division applicable to all assets
under management. The objectives were determined by identifying the
ESG topics deemed most material to the assets. They were also
selected to align with the core topics and objectives in the
Investment Adviser's 2025 Corporate Sustainability
Strategy.
The objectives will focus future
sustainability-related activities for the division to 2025 and are
detailed below. The funds will provide updates against the
objectives in future reporting.
Table 1: New Energy Sustainability Objectives
Topic
|
2025
Objective
|
G: Commitment to
Sustainability
|
Meet all relevant regulatory sustainability
requirements.
|
G: Risk and
Compliance
|
Become a leader in the measurement and
disclosure of ESG risks and outcomes.
|
Have a comprehensive set of ESG KPIs to support
investment and asset management decisions and regularly report
these to stakeholders.
|
G: Marketplace
Responsibility
|
Have market-leading Sustainable Investment
policies and processes and ensure all investment activities meet
commitments at a high-quality level.
|
G: Governance &
Ethics
|
Engage with key counterparties to increase
capacity of renewable energy or battery storage and the
contribution of these assets to a low carbon economy.
|
E: Climate Change
& Pollution
|
Demonstrate the role of New Energy in the
energy transition and understand the carbon footprint of the full
lifecycle of assets.
|
E: Natural
Capital
|
Fully understand natural capital impacts and
dependencies and aim to demonstrate enhancement of biodiversity for
all sites.
|
S: Supply Chain
Management
|
Determine best-in-class suppliers to work with
long-term, and encourage more responsible supplier practices,
reducing supply chain sustainability risks.
|
E: Waste
Management
|
Incorporate full lifecycle analysis into
investment and supplier decision making (product design,
construction, operation and end-of-life use) to reduce negative
environmental and social impacts of assets.
|
Develop a market-leading approach to
end-of-life use.
|
Risk and Compliance: Embedding ESG factors
As the assets within the VCTs are all well-
established, the assessment of ESG is applied as part of our asset
management activities. All Operations & Maintenance providers
are required to report on various ESG factors, including Health
& Safety and Environmental risks or incidents. Any significant
incidents must be reported to us within 24 hours. Furthermore, they
are also expected to be proactive and to make recommendations for
improvements.
The team continues to work to expand the ESG
key performance indicators (KPIs) measured, reported, and monitored
by the New Energy division for all assets under management,
including the VCTs. This reflects increased investor and regulatory
demand for ESG data and the Investment Adviser's ambitions to
enhance ESG data and transparency. It is anticipated that the
expanded ESG data will be used by investment teams and asset
management teams to increase their understanding of the operational
ESG performance of assets under management and to identify any
material ESG risks. It is expected that the asset management team
will aim to improve ESG metrics over time, as feasible within the
context of the existing fund mandate.
In 2023, this project has been led by the
Construction and Asset Management team who have incorporated the
request for ESG data into ongoing EPC and supplier contracts and
receives or will receive - dependent on the availability - data on
a quarterly basis. It is anticipated that fund-level data will be
available for reporting purposes from the end of 2023.
Supply Chain Management
The Investment Adviser has had a Supply Chain
Policy in place since 2020. The Supply Chain Policy covers material
ESG topics and places obligations on suppliers (including
contractors) to ensure their own compliance, as well as the
compliance of their subcontractors, with the Policy. It also
requires suppliers to monitor and report any non-compliance to the
Investment Adviser.
Since July 2021, all new supplier contracts
have been updated to include clauses specifically mandating
suppliers to declare that they have not been involved in any
practices linked to modern slavery and that they will permit
on-site audits at any time should we have reason to suspect
instances of slavery and human trafficking. Any VCT suppliers with
contracts due for renewal will be obliged to update clauses
relating to modern slavery within their contract terms.
Operators of Gresham House managed renewables
projects were asked to complete a modern slavery questionnaire to
assess modern slavery related risk to the New Energy division's
renewables assets in 2021 and an updated version of this
questionnaire was sent in Q1 2023 to determine any material changes
regarding the risk profile associated with this topic. There is an
ongoing workstream to enhance Gresham House's approach to modern
slavery and identify proposed engagement actions for consideration
as part of the next steps of this workstream into 2024.
Gresham House recognizes that challenges
relating to modern slavery in the solar module supply chain are a
system issue that can be hard to influence as a relatively small
player in the renewables industry. Therefore, Gresham House became
a member of the Solar Energy UK Responsible Sourcing Steering Group
in Q2 2023. The Investment Adviser believes this is a key mechanism
through which it can better understand risks relating to modern
slavery in the supply chain and encourage regulatory and long-term
solutions for a more diversified, modern slavery free supply
chain.
Climate Change & Pollution
Based on the 23,372,848kWh renewable
electricity generated by the VCT wind and solar assets, it is
estimated that the fund avoided 9,909 tonnes of
CO21
and powered c. 8,657
homes2 during the reporting
period.
As a UK quoted company, the VCT is required to
report on its Greenhouse Gas (GHG) Emissions. Emissions can be
broken down into three categories by the Greenhouse Gas
Protocol:
·
|
Scope 1: all direct emissions from the
activities of the VCT or under its control.
|
·
|
Scope 2: indirect emissions from electricity
purchased and used by the VCT.
|
·
|
Scope 3: all other indirect emissions from
activities of the VCT, occurring from sources that it does not use
or control.
|
The VCT does not itself produce any Scope 1 or
Scope 2 carbon emissions as it does not itself directly or
indirectly create carbon emissions by generating or purchasing
electricity for its own use. The reporting of Scope 1 and 2 carbon
emissions for the fund as 0
tCO2e is in line with industry
standards and guidance by an external consultant that supported the
Investment Adviser in the carbon footprint measurement for all
Gresham House financed emissions. The Investment Adviser continues
to consider how best to monitor and measure the Scope 3 emissions
relevant to the VCT.
Natural Capital
The Investment Adviser continues to manage all
assets in line with the biodiversity commitments and habitat
management plans instigated as part of project development and
approvals.
Director's Duties
Directors must consider the long-term
consequences of any decision they make. They must also consider the
interests of the various stakeholders of the VCT, the impact the
VCT has on the environment and community and operate in a manner
which maintains the VCT's reputation for having high standards of
business conduct and fair treatment between
Shareholders.
Fulfilling this duty naturally supports the VCT
in its Investment Objective to maximise tax-free capital gains and
income to Shareholders and helps ensure that all decisions are made
in a responsible and sustainable way. In accordance with the
requirements of the Companies (Miscellaneous Reporting) Regulations
2018, and the AIC Code, the information overleaf explains how the
Directors have individually and collectively discharged their
duties under section 172 of the Companies Act 2006.
1 Assuming an "all non-renewable
fuels" emissions statistic of
424tCO2/GWh of electricity
supplied, BEIS statistics July 2023, Digest of UK Energy
Statistics, Table 5.14 ("Estimated carbon dioxide emissions from
electricity supplied"). "Carbon avoided" calculated using Renewable
UK methodology: Carbon reduction is calculated by multiplying the
total amount of electricity generated by solar and wind per year by
the number of tonnes of carbon which fossil fuels would have
produced to generate the same amount of electricity.
2 Assuming an average annual
electricity usage per household of 2.7MWh, as quoted by OFGEM
October 2023. "Homes powered" calculated using Renewable UK
methodology: MWh divided by average annual domestic electricity
consumption. Household power consumption dropped in 2023 due to
high power prices.
Section 172
The Section 172 statement forms part of the
Strategic Report.
The Directors
consider that in conducting the business of the VCT over the course
of the year they have complied with Section 172(1) of the Companies
Act 2006 (the Act) by fulfilling their duty to promote the success
of the VCT and to act in the way they consider, in good faith,
would be most likely to promote the success of the VCT for the
benefit of its members as a whole, whilst also considering the
broad range of stakeholders who interact with and are impacted by
the VCT's business, especially with regard to major
decisions.
Role of the Board
The Board, which comprised of three independent
Non-Executive Directors during the financial year with a broad
range of skills and experience, retains responsibility for taking
all decisions relating to the VCT's principal objectives, corporate
governance and strategy, and for monitoring the performance of the
VCT's service providers.
The Board aims to ensure that the VCT operates
in a transparent culture where all parties are able to contribute
to the decisions made and challenge where necessary with the
overall aim of achieving the expectations of Shareholders and other
stakeholders alike.
In discharging their Section 172 duties the
Directors have regard to the likely consequences of any decisions
during the Managed Wind Down process; the need to foster the VCT's
business relationships with suppliers, customers and others; the
impact of the VCT's operations on the community and environment;
the desirability of the VCT maintaining a reputation for high
standards of business conduct and the need to act fairly as between
members of the VCT.
The Board works very closely with the
Investment Adviser and Company Secretary to ensure there is
visibility and openness in how the affairs of the VCT are being
conducted. The VCT co-owns all its assets with Gresham House
Renewable Energy VCT2 plc (VCT2).
The VCT is an investment vehicle, externally
managed, has no employees, and is overseen by an independent
Non-Executive board of Directors. As such the Board considers its
stakeholders to be the Shareholders, the service providers,
including the Investment Adviser, and regulatory bodies.
Following the adoption of the new Investment
Policy from 13 July 2021, the VCT's principal objective is to
manage the Company with the intention of realising all remaining
assets in the portfolio in a prudent manner consistent with the
principles of good investment management and with a view to
returning to Shareholders in an orderly manner.
Key Stakeholders
Shareholders
The Board engages with the VCT's Shareholders
in a variety of ways, including annual and half-yearly reports and
accounts, an AGM and information provided on the Investment
Adviser's website as well as ad hoc communications with
Shareholders.
The Registrar is available to help Shareholders
to manage their Shareholding.
The VCT welcomes and encourages attendance and
participation from Shareholders at the AGM and values any feedback
and questions it may receive from Shareholders ahead of and during
the AGM.
The Board communicates with its Shareholders
through the publication of Annual and Half-Year reports which are
available on the VCT's website
(https://greshamhouse.com/real-assets/new-energy-sustainable-infrastructure/)
and sent to Shareholders.
The Board is also happy to respond to any
written queries made by Shareholders during the course of the
period, or to meet with major Shareholders if so requested. In
addition to the formal business of the AGM, representatives of the
Investment Adviser and the Board are available to answer any
questions a Shareholder may have. During the period the Board
engaged with Shareholders on several matters, including the update
on the sale of solar assets, the cancellation of the interim
dividend in January 2023 and the cancellation of the Company's
share premium account and capital redemption reserve. Details of
this is included in the Chairman's Statement.
Investment Adviser
The Board has delegated authority for
day-to-day management of the VCT to the Investment Adviser. The
Board then engages with the Investment Adviser in setting,
approving and overseeing the execution of the business strategy and
related policies. The Investment Adviser attends Valuation Forums,
Board meetings and Audit Committee meetings to update the Directors
on the performance of the portfolio. At every quarterly Board
meeting a review of financial and operational performance, as well
as legal and regulatory compliance, is undertaken. Since the
General Meeting held on 13 July 2021, the Managed Wind Down of
the Company has been reviewed at each quarterly Board meeting and
at ad hoc board meetings being held as and
when required.
The Board also reviews other areas over the
course of the financial year including the VCT's business strategy;
key risks; stakeholder-related matters; diversity and inclusion;
environmental matters; corporate responsibility and governance,
compliance and legal matters.
The Investment Adviser's performance is
critical for the VCT to successfully deliver its investment
strategy and meet its objectives.
Service Providers
The VCT has a limited pool of service providers
which include the Investment Adviser, the Administrator, the
Registrar, the Legal Advisers, the Auditor, the Tax Adviser and the
VCT Status Advisers.
These service providers are fundamental to
ensuring that as a business the VCT meets the high standards of
conduct that the Board sets. The Board meets at least annually to
review the performance of the key service providers and receives
reports from them at Board and Committee meetings.
The Board has regular contact with the two main
service providers (the Investment Adviser and Administrator)
through quarterly board meetings, with the Chairman and Audit
Chairman meeting these providers more regularly. The Audit
Committee also reviews the controls of the VCT's service providers
on an annual basis to ensure that they are performing their
responsibilities in line with Board expectations and providing
value for money.
Regulators/Government
The Board regularly considers how it meets
regulatory and statutory obligations and follows voluntary and
best-practice guidance, including how any governance decisions it
makes impact its stakeholders both in the shorter and in the
longer-term.
The VCT engages an external adviser to report
half-yearly on its compliance with the VCT rules and a Company
Secretary report is tabled quarterly at board meetings.
ESG
Details on ESG are included in the Sustainable
Investing section within the Annual Report.
Key Board decisions and specific examples of Stakeholder
consideration during the year
The Board is fully engaged in both oversight
and the general strategic direction of the VCT. During the year,
the Board's main strategic discussions focused around the below
items.
Managed Wind Down process
Following the General Meeting held on
13 July 2021, the Shareholders resolved to approve the Managed
Wind Down of the Company and associated amendments to the Company's
Investment Policy. Under the Managed Wind Down process, the Company
has continued to be managed with the intention of realising all
assets in its Portfolio in a prudent manner consistent with the
principles of good investment management and with a view achieving
fair value for the Company's assets and subsequently returning cash
to Shareholders in an orderly manner.
To that effect, the Board's strategic
discussions have centred on the sale of the full portfolio of solar
assets. Particular oversight and direction from the Board has been
provided with regard to the successful completion of the sale of a
portion of the Company's solar assets in April 2023 and the
resolution of the ongoing grid connection issue at the site in
South Marston.
Time has also been spent by the Board in
considering the impact of the portfolio sale on compliance with the
80% qualifying holdings requirement that applies to the Company as
a VCT. With part of the assets having being sold and the sale of
the remaining assets ongoing, the Board with the Investment Adviser
and other service providers have commenced the planning of the
Company's eventual voluntary liquidation. The Board has approached
potential liquidators with a view to an appointment to oversee the
process.
Throughout the year, the Board has also
considered how to maximise dividend returns to Shareholders whilst
taking into account the Company's expected cash requirements and
the potential impact of the sale of investment assets in accordance
with Shareholder wishes. After obtaining Shareholder approval at
the Annual General Meeting held on 27 April 2023, the Company
commenced a court-led process to cancel the Company's share premium
account and capital redemption reserve. The successful conclusion
of this process, along with the receipt of proceeds of sale arising
from the disposal of the solar assets, allowed the Company to
declare an interim dividend of 18.5p in June 2023 that reinstated
the delayed 2.0p dividend that had been initially announced earlier
in the year.
The Board takes seriously its responsibilities
to uphold the highest standards of corporate governance and is open
to constructive dialogue with Shareholders and shareholder
bodies.
By order of the Board
Gill Nott
Chairman
29 January 2024
Report of the Directors
The Directors
present the thirteenth Annual Report and Accounts of the VCT for
the year ended 30 September 2023.
The Corporate Governance Report forms part of
this report.
Share capital
At the year end, the VCT had in issue
25,515,242 Ordinary Shares and 38,512,032 'A' Shares. There are no
other share classes in issue.
All shares have voting rights; each Ordinary
Share has 1,000 votes and each 'A' Share has one vote. Where there
is a resolution in respect of a variation of the rights of 'A'
Shareholders or a Takeover Offer, the voting rights of the 'A'
Shares rank pari-passu with those of
Ordinary Shares.
Pursuant to the articles and subject to a
special resolution, the VCT is able to make market purchases of its
own shares, up to a maximum number of shares equivalent to a set
percentage of the total number of each class of issued shares from
time to time. No such resolution was passed at the Company's 2023
Annual General Meeting.
Substantial interests
As at 30 September 2023, and the date of
this report, the VCT had not been notified of any beneficial
interest exceeding 3% of the issued share capital.
Results and dividends
Year ended
30 September 2023
|
£'000
|
Pence
per Ord
Share
|
Pence
per 'A'
Share
|
Loss for the year
|
(4,620)
|
(18.1)
|
-
|
Dividend paid 28 July 2023
|
4,720
|
18.5
|
-
|
Directors
The Directors of the VCT during the year and
their beneficial interests in the issued Ordinary Shares and 'A'
Shares at 30 September 2023 and at the date of this report are
detailed in the Remuneration Report.
Biographical details of the Directors, all of
whom are Non-Executive, can be found within the Annual
Report.
It is the Board's policy that Directors do not
have service contracts, but each Director is provided with a letter
of appointment. The Directors' letters of appointment, are
terminable on three months' notice by either side. They are
available on request at the Company's registered office during
business hours and will be available for 15 minutes prior to and
during the forthcoming AGM.
The Articles of Association require that each
Director retire from office at the next AGM following their first
appointment and that each Director retires by rotation every three
years and being eligible, offer themselves for re-election. Giles
Clark was appointed as a director on 30 September 2022 and
accordingly stood for re-election at the 2023 Annual General
Meeting. David Hunter also stood for re-election in 2023 and Gill
Nott will be required to stand for election in 2025 in the event
that the Company has not entered a members voluntary
liquidation.
The Directors' appointment dates and the date
of their last election are shown below:
Director
|
Date of
original
appointment
|
Most recent
date of
re-election
|
Gill Nott
(Chairman)
|
01/05/2018
|
23/03/2022
|
David
Hunter
|
18/09/2019
|
27/04/2023
|
Giles
Clark
|
30/09/2022
|
27/04/2023
|
The Directors believe that the Board has an
appropriate balance of skills, experience, independence and
knowledge of the Company and the sector in which it operates to
enable it to provide effective strategic leadership and proper
guidance of the Company.
The Board confirms that, following the
evaluation exercise set out in the Corporate Governance Statement,
the performance of the Directors is, and continues to be, effective
and demonstrates commitment to the role.
Each Director is required to devote such time
to the affairs of the VCT as the Board reasonably
requires.
Annual General Meeting
The VCT's thirteenth Annual General Meeting
("AGM") will be held at The Scalpel, 18th Floor, 52 Lime Street,
London EC3M 7AF at 11:30 a.m. on 19 March 2024. The
Notice of the Annual General Meeting and Form of Proxy will be
circulated separately following the publication of this Annual
Report.
Any change of format will be notified via the
Company's website and Regulatory Information Service.
Auditor
The Independent Auditor's Report can be found
within the Annual Report. At the 2023 AGM, the Shareholders
approved the re-appointment of BDO LLP as the auditor. Separate
resolutions will be proposed at the 2024 AGM to re-appoint BDO LLP
and to authorise the Directors to determine their
remuneration.
Directors' Responsibilities
The Directors are responsible for preparing the
Strategic Report, the Report of the Directors, the Directors'
Remuneration Report and the financial statements in accordance with
applicable law and regulations. They are also responsible for
ensuring that the Annual Report includes information required by
the Listing Rules of the Financial Conduct Authority.
Company law requires the Directors to prepare
financial statements for each financial year. Under that law the
Directors have elected to prepare the financial statements in
accordance with United Kingdom Generally Accepted Accounting
Practice (United Kingdom accounting standards and applicable law),
including Financial Reporting Standard 102, the financial reporting
standard applicable in the UK and Republic of Ireland (FRS 102).
Under company law, the Directors must not approve the financial
statements unless they are satisfied that they give a true and fair
view of the state of affairs of the VCT and of the profit or loss
of the VCT for that period.
In preparing these financial statements the
Directors are required to:
·
|
select suitable accounting policies and then
apply them consistently;
|
·
|
make judgments and accounting estimates that
are reasonable and prudent;
|
·
|
state whether applicable UK accounting
standards have been followed, subject to any material departures
disclosed and explained in the financial statements; and
|
·
|
prepare the financial statements on the going
concern basis unless it is inappropriate to presume that the VCT
will continue in business. As explained in note 1 to the financial
statements, as last year, following the continuation vote on
13 July 2021, the directors do not believe the going concern
basis to be appropriate and, in consequence, these financial
statements have not been prepared on that basis.
|
The Directors are responsible for keeping
adequate accounting records that are sufficient to show and explain
the VCT's transactions, to disclose with reasonable accuracy at any
time the financial position of the VCT and to enable them to ensure
that the financial statements comply with the Companies Act 2006.
They are also responsible for safeguarding the assets of the VCT
and hence for taking reasonable steps for the prevention and
detection of fraud and other irregularities.
In addition, each of the Directors considers
that the Annual Report, taken as a whole, is fair, balanced and
understandable and provides the information necessary for
Shareholders to assess the VCT's position and performance, business
model and strategy.
Directors' Statement pursuant to the Disclosure and
Transparency Rules
Each of the Directors, whose names and
functions are listed within the Annual Report, confirms that, to
the best of each person's knowledge:
● the
financial statements, which have been prepared in accordance with
UK Generally Accepted Accounting Practice and the 2014 Statement of
Recommended Practice (updated in April 2021), 'Financial Statements
of Investment Trust Companies and Venture Capital Trusts' give a
true and fair view of the assets, liabilities, financial position
and profit or loss of the VCT; and
●
that the management report, comprising the Chairman's Statement,
Investment Adviser's Report, Review of Investments, Strategic
Report, and Report of the Directors includes a fair review of the
development and performance of the business and the position of the
VCT together with a description of the principal risks and
uncertainties that it faces.
Insurance Cover
Directors' and Officers' liability insurance
cover is held by the VCT in respect of the Directors.
Website Publication
The Directors are responsible for ensuring the
Annual Report and the Financial Statements are made available on a
website. Financial statements are published on the website of the
Investment Adviser
(https://greshamhouse.com/real-assets/new-energy-sustainable-infrastructure/)
in accordance with legislation in the United Kingdom governing the
preparation and dissemination of financial statements, which may
vary from legislation in other jurisdictions. The Directors'
responsibility also extends to the on-going integrity of the
financial statements contained therein.
Corporate Governance
The VCT's Corporate Governance statement and
compliance with, and departures from the 2019 AIC Code of Corporate
Governance which has been endorsed by the Financial Reporting
Council (www.frc.org.uk).
Other Matters
The likely future developments in the business
of the Company including the Managed Wind Down are set out in the
Chairman's Statement and in the Investment Adviser's
Report.
Information in respect of risk management and
risk diversification has been disclosed within the Strategic
Report.
Information in respect of greenhouse emissions
which is normally disclosed within the Report of the Directors has
been disclosed within the Strategic Report.
During the year, the VCT did not have any
employees (2022: nil) and therefore there is no comparison data
available for the change in Directors' remuneration to average
change in employee remuneration.
Events after the end of the Reporting Period
Following the year end the VCT paid an interim
dividend, of 7.5p per Ordinary Share. This dividend was paid on
21 December 2023 to holders of Ordinary Shares on the register
at 1 December 2023. No dividend was declared in respect of the
'A' Shares.
Statement as to Disclosure of Information to the
Auditor
The Directors in office at the date of the
report have confirmed, as far as they are aware, that there is no
relevant audit information of which the Auditor is unaware. Each of
the Directors has confirmed that they have taken all the steps that
they ought to have taken as Directors in order to make themselves
aware of any relevant audit information and to establish that it
has been communicated to the Auditor.
For and on behalf of the Board
Gill Nott
Chairman
29 January 2024
Directors' Remuneration Report
Annual statement of the Remuneration
Committee
The Remuneration Committee consists of each of
the VCT Directors. The Remuneration Committee assists the Board to
fulfil its responsibility to Shareholders to ensure that the
remuneration policy and practices of the VCT reward the Directors
fairly and responsibly, with a clear link to corporate and
individual performance and having regard to statutory and
regulatory requirements. The Remuneration Committee meets as and
when required to review the levels of Directors' remuneration. The
Committee is also responsible for considering the need to appoint
external remuneration consultants.
During the year, in recognition of increased
oversight responsibilities in relation to the completion of the
sale of certain solar assets in April 2023, the Remuneration
Committee approved an additional special payment of £7,500 to the
Chairman. This additional payment was paid on 12 July 2023.
The Chairman did not vote upon her own additional special
payment.
Following a review of the remuneration during
the financial year 2022/2023 by the Remuneration Committee, the
Board approved a 6% increase in the Directors' remuneration. These
increases took effect from 1 October 2023. The changes to the
Directors' remuneration are outlined in this report.
Details of the specific levels of remuneration
to each Director as well as the fee increases are outlined in the
report.
Report on Remuneration Policy
Below is the VCT's remuneration policy. This
policy applies from 27 April 2023. Shareholders must vote on
the remuneration policy every three years, or sooner, if the VCT
wants to make changes to the policy. The policy was last approved
by Shareholders at the 2023 AGM and, if the Managed Wind Down of
the Company was still to be completed, will be presented to
Shareholders for approval at the 2026 AGM. There are currently no
planned changes to the remuneration policy.
The VCT's policy on Directors' remuneration is
to seek to remunerate Board members at a level appropriate for the
time commitment required and degree of responsibility involved and
to ensure that such remuneration is in line with general market
rates. Non-Executive Directors will not be entitled to any
performance related pay or incentive.
Directors' remuneration is also subject to the
VCT's Articles of Association which provide that:
(i) the
aggregate fees will not exceed £100,000 per annum (excluding any
Performance Incentive fees to which the Directors may be entitled
from time to time); and
(ii) the
Directors shall be entitled to be repaid all reasonable travelling,
hotel and other expenses incurred by them respectively in or about
the performance of their duties as Directors.
Agreement for services
Information in respect of the Directors'
agreements has been disclosed within the Report of the
Directors.
Performance incentive
The structure of 'A' Shares, whereby Management
(being staff of the Investment Adviser) owns one third of the 'A'
Shares in issue (known as the "Management 'A' Shares"), enables a
payment, by way of a distribution of income, of the Performance
Incentive to the Management Team. The performance incentive
structure of 'A' Shares is detailed in the Strategic
Report.
The NAV hurdle was not met for the financial
year end 30 September 2023 and no dividend was paid in respect
of the 'A' Shares during the year, therefore there was no
Performance Incentive.
Annual Report on remuneration
The Board has prepared this report in
accordance with the requirements of the Large and Medium-sized
Companies and Groups (Accounts and Reports) Regulations 2008
(SI2008/410) and the Companies Act 2006.
Under the requirements of Section 497 of the
Companies Act 2006, the VCT's Auditor is required to audit certain
disclosures contained within this report. These disclosures have
been highlighted and the audit opinion thereon is contained within
the Auditor's Report.
Directors' remuneration (audited)
Directors' remuneration for the VCT for the
year under review are shown in the table below.
The basic annual fees of the Directors during
the year were £27,825 for the Chairman, £25,200 for the Audit
Committee Chairman and £22,575 for the other Non-Executive
Director. In addition, as reported above, an additional special
payment was made to the Chairman in July 2023 for increased
oversight responsibilities in relation to the completion of sale of
certain solar assets held by the VCT in April 2023.
Effective 30 September 2022, Stuart Knight
and Duncan Grierson resigned from the Board and Giles Clark was
appointed as a new Non-Executive Director following his resignation
from the Board of VCT2. Effective 1 October 2023, an increase
of 6% will be applied to director fees. This increase is within the
limit set by the Remuneration Policy. Both changes are shown in the
table below.
|
Current
Annual
Fee
£
|
Year ended
30 September
2023
fee
£
|
Additional
Special
Payment
for the
year end
30 September
2023
£
|
Total
Year ended
30 September
2023
fee
£
|
Year ended
30 September
2022
fee
£
|
Additional
Special
Payment
for the
year end
30 September
2022
£
|
Total
Year ended
30 September
2022
fee
£
|
Gill Nott
|
29,494
|
27,825
|
7,500
|
35,325
|
26,500
|
3,314
|
29,814
|
David Hunter
|
26,712
|
25,200
|
N/A
|
25,200
|
24,000
|
3,000
|
27,000
|
Giles Clark
|
23,930
|
22,575
|
N/A
|
22,575
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Stuart Knight
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
21,500
|
N/A
|
21,500
|
Duncan Grierson
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
21,500
|
N/A
|
21,500
|
Totals
|
80,136
|
75,600
|
7,500
|
83,100
|
93,500
|
6,314
|
99,814
|
No other emoluments, pension contributions or
life assurance contributions were paid by the VCT to, or on behalf
of, any Director. The VCT does not have any share options in
place.
Annual percentage change in Directors'
remuneration
The following table sets out the annual
percentage change in Directors' fees for the year up to
30 September 2023:
|
% change
for the year to
30 September
2023
|
% change
for the year to
30 September
2022
|
% change
for the year to
30 September
2021
|
% change
for the year to
30 September
2020
|
Gill Nott
|
5
|
0
|
6
|
0
|
David Hunter
|
5
|
0
|
6.7
|
0
|
Giles Clark
|
5
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Stuart Knight
|
N/A
|
0
|
7.5
|
0
|
Duncan Grierson
|
N/A
|
0
|
7.5
|
0
|
Directors' Shareholding (Audited)
The Directors of the VCT during the year and
their beneficial interests in the issued Ordinary Shares and 'A'
Shares at 30 September 2023 and at the date of this report
were as follows:
Directors
|
|
At the date of
this report
|
At
30 September
2023
|
At
30 September
2022
|
Gill Nott
|
Ord
|
24,953
|
24,953
|
24,953
|
|
'A'
|
24,953
|
24,953
|
24,953
|
David Hunter
|
Ord
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
|
'A'
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Giles Clark
|
Ord
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
|
'A'
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Statement of voting at AGM
Remuneration report
At the AGM on 27 April 2023, the votes in
respect of the resolution to approve the Director's Remuneration
Report were as follows:
In favour
|
91.56%
|
Against
|
8.44%
|
Withheld
|
72,720 votes
|
Remuneration policy
At the 2023 AGM, when the remuneration policy
was last put to a Shareholder vote, 91.56% voted for the
resolution, showing significant shareholder support.
Relative importance of spend on pay
The difference in actual spend between
30 September 2023 and 30 September 2022 on Directors'
remuneration in comparison to distributions (dividends and share
buybacks) and other significant spending are set out in the chart
within the Annual Report..
2023/2024 Remuneration
The remuneration levels for the forthcoming
year for the Directors of the VCT are shown in the above
table.
Performance graph
The graph below represents the VCT's
performance over the reporting periods since the VCT's Ordinary
Shares and 'A' Shares were first listed on the London Stock
Exchange, and shows share price total return and net asset value
total return performance on a dividends reinvested basis. All
returns are rebased to 100 at 10 January 2011, being the date
the VCT's shares were listed.
The Numis Smaller Companies Index has been
chosen as a comparison as it is a publicly available broad equity
index which focuses on smaller companies and is therefore more
relevant than most other publicly available indices.
Giles Clark
Remuneration
Committee Chairman
29 January 2024
Corporate Governance
The Board of Gresham House Renewable Energy
VCT1 plc has considered the Principles and Provisions of the 2019
AIC Code of Corporate Governance (the AIC Code). The AIC Code
addresses the Principles and Provisions set out in the UK Corporate
Governance Code (the UK Code), as well as setting out additional
Provisions on issues that are of specific relevance to Gresham
House Renewable Energy VCT1 plc.
The Board considers that reporting against the
Principles and Provisions of the AIC Code, which has been endorsed
by the Financial Reporting Council, provides more relevant
information to Shareholders.
Compliance with the Principles and Provisions
of the AIC Code by the VCT is detailed within the Annual
Report.
The AIC Code is available on the AIC website
(www.theaic.co.uk). It includes an explanation of how the AIC Code
adapts the Principles and Provisions set out in the UK Code to make
them relevant for investment companies.
The Board
The VCT has a Board comprising three
Non-Executive Directors, chaired by Gill Nott. Gill Nott, Giles
Clark and David Hunter are independent from the Investment Adviser.
The VCT has not appointed a Senior Independent Director.
Biographical details of all Board members (including significant
other commitments of the Chairman) are shown within the Annual
Report.
Full Board meetings take place quarterly and
the Board meets or communicates more regularly to address specific
issues. The Board has a formal schedule of matters specifically
reserved for its decision which includes, but is not limited to:
considering recommendations from the Investment Adviser; making
decisions concerning the acquisition or disposal of investments;
and reviewing, annually, the terms of engagement of all third party
advisers (including the Investment Adviser and
Administrator).
The Board has also established procedures
whereby Directors wishing to do so in the furtherance of their
duties may take independent professional advice at the
VCT's expense.
All Directors have access to the advice and
services of the Company Secretary. The Company Secretary
facilitates the Board's access to full information on the VCT's
assets and liabilities and other relevant information requested by
the Chairman in advance of each Board meeting.
The Board has decided that the VCT will not be
buying shares for the foreseeable future as the VCT wishes to
conserve such cash as it generates for the Managed Wind Down of the
VCT and the potential payment of dividends.
The capital structure of the VCT is disclosed
in Note 19 to the financial statements.
During the period under review, all the
Directors of the VCT were Non-Executive and served on each
committee of the Board. The Audit Committee is chaired by David
Hunter, the Remuneration and Nomination Committees are chaired by
Giles Clark. The Audit Committee normally meets four times yearly,
and the Remuneration and Nomination Committees meet as required.
The Board has delegated a number of areas of responsibility to its
committees and each committee has defined terms of reference and
duties.
Audit Committee
The Audit Committee is responsible for
reviewing the half- year and annual accounts before they are
presented to the Board, the terms of appointment of the Auditor,
together with their remuneration, as well as a full review of the
effectiveness of the VCT's internal control and risk management
systems.
In particular, the Committee reviews,
challenges (where appropriate) and agrees the basis for the
carrying value of the unquoted investments, as prepared by the
Investment Adviser, for presentation within the half-year and
annual accounts.
The Committee also takes into consideration
comments on matters regarding valuation, revenue recognition and
disclosures arising from the Report to the Audit Committee as part
of the finalisation process for the annual accounts.
The Committee is also responsible for reviewing
the going concern assessment and viability statement including
consideration of all reasonably available information about the
future financial prospects of the VCT, the possible outcomes of
events and changes in conditions and realistic possible responses
to such events and conditions.
The Audit Committee met four times during the
year. The Committee reviewed the internal financial controls and
concluded that they were appropriate.
As the VCT has no staff, other than the
Directors, there are no procedures in place in respect of whistle
blowing. The Audit Committee understands that the Investment
Adviser and Administrator have whistle blowing procedures in
place.
External Auditor
The Audit Committee reviews and agrees the
audit strategy paper, presented by the Auditor in advance of the
audit, which sets out the key risk areas to be covered during the
audit and confirms their status on independence.
The Committee also confirms that the main areas
of risk for the period under review are the carrying value of
investments and, in anticipation of the Company's need to enter
voluntary liquidation once the majority of the assets have been
sold, liquidity and solvency risks.
The Committee, after taking into consideration
the proposed liquidation of the Company in addition to comments
from the Investment Adviser and Administrator, regarding the
effectiveness of the audit process; immediately before the
conclusion of the annual audit, will recommend to the Board either
the re‑appointment or removal of the Auditor.
Under the Competition and Markets Authority
regulations and subject to transitional provisions, there is a
requirement that an audit tender process be carried out every ten
years and mandatory rotation at least every twenty years. The VCT
undertook an audit tender in respect of the audit required for the
year ended 30 September 2021 and, following a competitive
tender process in early 2021, BDO was re-appointed.
Board and Committee Meetings
The following table sets out the Directors'
attendance at the Board and Committee meetings during the
year:
|
Quarterly
Board
meetings
attended
|
Adhoc
Board
meetings
attended
|
Audit
Committee
meetings
attended
|
Nomination
Committee
meetings
attended
|
Remuneration
Committee
meetings
attended
|
|
(4
held)
|
(13
held)
|
(4
held)
|
(1
held)
|
(1
held)
|
Gill Nott
|
4
|
11
|
3
|
1
|
1
|
David Hunter
|
4
|
10
|
4
|
1
|
1
|
Giles Clark
|
4
|
12
|
4
|
1
|
1
|
In addition, the Directors attended a number of
ad hoc board meetings, mainly to discuss the Managed Wind Down of
the VCT and the sale of certain solar assets held by the Company
that completed in April 2023.
Remuneration Committee
The Committee meets as and when required to
review the levels of Directors' remuneration. The Committee is also
responsible for considering the need to appoint external
remuneration consultants.
Details of the specific levels of remuneration
to each Director are set out in the Directors' Remuneration
Report.
Recognising the increased oversight
responsibilities during the financial year 2022/2023 in relation to
the sale of certain solar assets of the Company, the Remuneration
Committee resolved to approve an additional special payment of
£7,500 to the Chairman. Details of this additional fee can be found
in the Directors' Remuneration Report.
Financial Reporting
The Directors' responsibilities statement for
preparing the accounts is set out in the Report of the Directors
and a statement by the Auditor about their reporting
responsibilities is set out in the Independent Auditor's
report.
Nomination Committee
The Nomination Committee's primary function is
to make recommendations to the Board on all new appointments and
also to advise generally on issues relating to Board composition
and balance. The Committee meets as and when appropriate. Before
any appointment is made by the Board, the Committee shall evaluate
the balance of skills, knowledge and experience, and consider
candidates on merit, against objective criteria, and with due
regard for the benefits of diversity on the Board. Diversity
includes and makes good use of differences in knowledge and
understanding of relevant diverse geographies, peoples and their
backgrounds including race or ethnic origin, sexual orientation,
gender, age, disability or religion.
During the period, the Committee carried out a
rigorous internal board evaluation during which it assessed the
effectiveness of the Board and its committees. The Committee found
that the Board was functioning well and that all Directors
contributed to the discussions at meetings. A number of topics were
raised and discussed and overall the Board and its committees were
found to be performing satisfactorily.
Relations with Shareholders
Shareholders have the opportunity to meet the
Board at the AGM. The Board is also happy to respond to any written
queries made by Shareholders during the course of the period, or to
meet with major Shareholders if so requested.
In addition to the formal business of the AGM,
representatives of the Investment Adviser and the Board are
available to answer any questions a Shareholder may have. The
notice of the thirteenth AGM and proxy form will be circulated
separately following the publication of this Annual
Report.
The terms of reference of the Committees and
the conditions of appointment of Non-Executive Directors are
available to Shareholders on request.
Internal Control
The Directors are fully informed of the
internal control framework established by the Investment Adviser
and the Administrator to provide reasonable assurance on the
effectiveness of internal financial control.
The Board is responsible for ensuring that the
procedures to be followed by the advisers and themselves are in
place, and they review the effectiveness of the internal controls,
based on the report from the Audit Committee, on an annual basis to
ensure that the controls remain relevant and were in operation
throughout the year.
The Board also reviews the perceived risks
faced by the VCT in line with relevant guidance on an annual basis
and implements additional controls as appropriate.
The Board also considered the requirement for
an internal audit function and considered that this was not
necessary as the internal controls and risk management in place
were adequate and effective.
Although the Board is ultimately responsible
for safeguarding the assets of the VCT, the Board has delegated,
through written agreements, the day-to-day operation of the VCT
(including the Financial Reporting Process) to the following
advisers:
Investment Adviser
Gresham House Asset Management
Limited
Administrator and Company Secretary
JTC (UK) Limited
Anti-bribery policy
In order to ensure compliance with the UK
Bribery Act 2010, the Directors confirm that the VCT has zero
tolerance towards bribery and a commitment to carry out business
openly, honestly and fairly.
Going concern
In assessing the VCT as a going concern, the
Directors have considered the forecasts which reflect the proposed
strategy for portfolio investments and the results of the
continuation votes at the AGM and General Meeting held on
22 March 2021 and 13 July 2021 respectively. At the
meeting on 13 July 2021, the proposed special resolution was
approved by Shareholders, resulting in the VCTs entering a Managed
Wind Down and a new investment policy replacing the existing
investment policy. The Board agreed to realise the VCTs'
investments in a manner that achieves balance between maximising
the net value received from those investments and making timely
returns to Shareholders.
Given a formal decision has been made to wind
the VCT up, the financial statements have been prepared on a basis
other than going concern. The Board notes that the VCT has
sufficient liquidity to pay its liabilities as and when they fall
due, during the Managed Wind Down, and that the VCT has adequate
resources to continue in business until the formal liquidation and
wind-up commences.
Share capital
The VCT has two classes of share capital:
Ordinary Shares and 'A' Shares. The rights and obligations attached
to those shares, including the power of the VCT to buy back shares
and details of any significant shareholdings, are set out in the
Report of the Directors.
Compliance statement
The Listing Rules require the Board to report
on compliance with the AIC Code provisions throughout the
accounting period. With the exception of the limited items outlined
below, the VCT has complied throughout the accounting year ended
30 September 2023 with the provisions set out in Section 5 to
9 of the AIC Code.
a)
|
The VCT has no major Shareholders so
Shareholders are not given the opportunity to meet any new Non-
Executive Directors at a specific meeting other than the AGM.
(5.2.3)
|
b)
|
Due to the size of the Board and the nature of
the VCT's business, a senior independent director has not been
appointed. (6.2.14)
|
c)
|
Due to the size of the Board and the nature of
the VCT's business, the Board considers it appropriate for the
entire Board to fulfil the role of the nomination and remuneration
committees. (7.2.22, 9.2.37)
|
d)
|
Due to the size of the VCT, the Board thought
it would be unnecessarily burdensome to establish a separate
management engagement committee to review the performance of the
Investment Adviser. (6.2.17, 7.2.26)
|
e)
|
Due to the size of the Board and the nature of
the VCT's business, the Board considers it appropriate for the
entire Board, including the Chairman, to fulfil the role of the
audit committee. (8.2.29)
|
f)
|
The Directors are not subject to annual
re-election but must be re-elected every three years. A Director
may retire at any Annual Meeting following the Annual General
Meeting at which he last retired and was re-elected provided that
he must retire from office at or before the third Annual General
Meeting following the Annual General Meeting at which he last
retired and was re-elected. (7.2.23)
|
By order of the Board
JTC (UK) Limited
Company
Secretary
Company number: 0430176
Registered office:
The Scalpel, 18th Floor
52 Lime Street
London EC3M 7AF
29 January 2024
Income Statement
For the year ended 30 September
2023
|
|
Year ended
30 September 2023
|
Year ended
30 September 2022
|
|
Note
|
Revenue
£'000
|
Capital
£'000
|
Total
£'000
|
Revenue
£'000
|
Capital
£'000
|
Total
£'000
|
Income
|
3
|
1,038
|
-
|
1,038
|
696
|
-
|
696
|
(Loss)/gain on investments
|
10
|
-
|
(4,933)
|
(4,933)
|
-
|
512
|
512
|
|
|
1,038
|
(4,933)
|
(3,895)
|
696
|
512
|
1,208
|
Investment advisory fees
|
4
|
(235)
|
(78)
|
(313)
|
(197)
|
(65)
|
(262)
|
Other expenses
|
5
|
(412)
|
-
|
(412)
|
(399)
|
-
|
(399)
|
|
|
(647)
|
(78)
|
(725)
|
(596)
|
(65)
|
(661)
|
(Loss)/profit
on ordinary activities before tax
|
|
391
|
(5,011)
|
(4,620)
|
100
|
447
|
547
|
Tax on total comprehensive income/(loss) and
ordinary activities
|
7
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(Loss)/profit
for the year and total comprehensive
income/(loss)
|
|
391
|
(5,011)
|
(4,620)
|
100
|
447
|
547
|
Basic and
diluted earnings/(loss) per share:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Ordinary
Share
|
9
|
1.5p
|
(19.6p)
|
(18.1p)
|
0.4p
|
1.7p
|
2.1p
|
'A'
Share
|
9
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
All Revenue and Capital items in the above
statement derive from continuing operations. As part of the Managed
Wind Down, five investments were disposed of during the financial
year. The total column within the Income Statement represents the
Statement of Total Comprehensive Income of the VCT prepared in
accordance with Financial Reporting Standards (FRS 102). The
supplementary revenue and capital return columns are prepared in
accordance with the Statement of Recommended Practice issued in
November 2014 (updated in July 2022) by the Association of
Investment Companies (AIC SORP).
Other than revaluation movements arising on
investments held at fair value through the profit or loss, there
were no differences between the return/loss as stated above and at
historical cost.
The accompanying Notes form an integral part of
these financial statements.
Balance Sheet
As at 30 September 2023
|
|
2023
|
2022
|
|
Note
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Current
assets
|
|
|
|
|
|
Investments
|
10
|
17,713
|
|
27,772
|
|
Costs incurred on sale of VCT's
assets
|
11
|
253
|
|
480
|
|
Debtors
|
12
|
38
|
|
27
|
|
Cash at bank and in hand
|
|
46
|
|
3
|
|
|
|
18,050
|
|
28,282
|
|
Creditors
|
13
|
(1,596)
|
|
(2,213)
|
|
Net current
asset
|
|
|
16,454
|
|
26,069
|
Creditors: amounts
falling due after more than one year
|
14
|
(2,217)
|
|
(2,492)
|
|
Net
assets
|
|
|
14,237
|
|
23,577
|
Capital and
reserves
|
|
|
|
|
|
Called up Ordinary Share capital
|
15
|
|
28
|
|
28
|
Called up 'A' Share capital
|
15
|
|
41
|
|
41
|
Share premium account
|
16
|
|
-
|
|
9,541
|
Treasury Shares
|
16
|
|
(2,991)
|
|
(2,991)
|
Special reserve
|
16
|
|
8,995
|
|
4,171
|
Revaluation reserve
|
16
|
|
11,506
|
|
16,871
|
Capital redemption reserve
|
16
|
|
-
|
|
3
|
Capital reserve - realised
|
16
|
|
(3,253)
|
|
(3,607)
|
Revenue reserve
|
16
|
|
(89)
|
|
(480)
|
Total
Shareholders' funds
|
|
|
14,237
|
|
23,577
|
Basic and
diluted net asset value per share
|
|
|
|
|
|
Ordinary
Share
|
17
|
|
55.6p
|
|
92.2p
|
'A'
Share
|
17
|
|
0.1p
|
|
0.1p
|
The financial statements of Gresham House
Renewable Energy VCT1 plc were approved and authorised for issue by
the Board of Directors and were signed on its behalf by:
Gill Nott
Chairman
Company number: 07378392
Date: 29 January 2024
The accompanying Notes form an integral part of
these financial statements.
Statement of Changes in Equity
For the year ended 30 September
2023
|
Called
up share
capital
£'000
|
Share
Premium
Account
£'000
|
Treasury
Shares
£'000
|
Funds
held in
respect
of Shares
not yet
allotted
£'000
|
Special
reserve
£'000
|
Revaluation
reserve
£'000
|
Capital
redemption
reserve
£'000
|
Capital
reserve
realised
£'000
|
Revenue
reserve
£'000
|
Total
£'000
|
At
30 September 2021*
|
69
|
9,541
|
(2,991)
|
-
|
4,171
|
15,056
|
3
|
(2,239)
|
(580)
|
23,030
|
Total comprehensive
income
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
1,815
|
-
|
(1,368)
|
100
|
547
|
At
30 September 2022
|
69
|
9,541
|
(2,991)
|
-
|
4,171
|
16,871
|
3
|
(3,607)
|
(480)
|
23,577
|
Total comprehensive
(loss)/income
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(5,365)
|
-
|
354
|
391
|
(4,620)
|
Cancellation of Share premium and
Capital redemption reserve
|
-
|
(9,541)
|
-
|
-
|
9,544
|
-
|
(3)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Dividend paid
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(4,720)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(4,720)
|
At
30 September 2023
|
69
|
-
|
(2,991)
|
-
|
8,995
|
11,506
|
-
|
(3,253)
|
(89)
|
14,237
|
* Previous transfer from
revaluation reserve relates to historic losses on Small
Wind
The accompanying Notes form an integral part of
these financial statements.
Cash Flow Statement
For the year
ended 30 September 2023
|
Note
|
Year ended
30 September
2023
£'000
|
Year ended
30 September
2022
£'000
|
Cash flows
from operating activities
|
|
|
|
(Loss)/profit for the financial year
|
|
(4,620)
|
547
|
Loss/(gain) arising on the revaluation of
investments
|
10
|
4,933
|
(512)
|
Dividend income
|
|
(998)
|
(659)
|
Interest income
|
|
(37)
|
(37)
|
Interest income - written off
|
|
-
|
47
|
(Increase)/decrease in debtors
|
|
-
|
(5)
|
(Decrease)/increase in creditors
|
|
(131)
|
82
|
Net cash
outflow from operating activities
|
|
(853)
|
(537)
|
Cash flows
from investing activities
|
|
|
|
Net proceeds from sale of
investments
|
10
|
4,456
|
-
|
Purchase of investments
|
10
|
-
|
(67)
|
Cost incurred as part of the sale of VCT's
assets
|
11
|
(126)
|
(109)
|
Interest received
|
|
25
|
28
|
Dividend income received
|
|
998
|
659
|
Net cash
inflow from investing activities
|
|
5,353
|
511
|
Net cash
inflow/(outflow) before financing activities
|
|
4,500
|
(26)
|
Cash flows
from financing activities
|
|
|
|
Dividend paid
|
|
(4,720)
|
-
|
Proceeds from loans
|
|
263
|
-
|
Repayment of loan
|
|
-
|
(2)
|
Net cash
outflow from financing activities
|
|
(4,457)
|
(2)
|
Net
increase/(decrease) in cash
|
|
43
|
(28)
|
Cash and cash equivalents at start of
year
|
|
3
|
31
|
Cash and cash
equivalents at end of year
|
|
46
|
3
|
Cash and cash
equivalents comprise
|
|
|
|
Cash at bank and in hand
|
|
46
|
3
|
Total cash and
cash equivalents
|
|
46
|
3
|
The accompanying Notes form an integral part of
these financial statements.
Notes to the Accounts
For the year
ended 30 September 2023
1. General Information
Gresham House Renewable Energy VCT1 plc (VCT)
is a Venture Capital Trust established under the legislation
introduced in the Finance Act 1995 and is domiciled in the United
Kingdom and incorporated in England and Wales under the Companies
Act 2006. The Company's principal activity is that of a VCT which
invests in renewable energy investments. The registered office of
the Company is The Scalpel 18th floor, 52 Lime Street, London, EC3M
7AF. Its share capital is denominated in Pound Sterling (GBP) and
consists of Ordinary Shares and 'A' Shares.
At the General Meeting on 13 July 2021 a
formal decision was made to wind the VCT up, therefore the VCT
financial statements have since been prepared on a non-going
concern basis. As a result, the investments held at fair value
through profit or loss were transferred from fixed assets to
current assets in the 30 September 2021 annual financial
statements. No further adjustments were made in the VCT's financial
statements relating to the non-going concern basis.
Following the adoption of the New Investment
Policy from 13 July 2021 (the "New Investment Policy"), the
VCT's principal objective is to manage the VCT with the intention
of realising the sale or monetisation otherwise of all remaining
assets in the portfolio in a prudent manner consistent with the
principles of good investment management and with a view to
returning value to Shareholders in an orderly manner, whilst
protecting the tax position of Shareholders.
The VCT will pursue its investment objective by
effecting an orderly realisation of its assets in a manner that
seeks to achieve a balance between maximising the value received
from those assets and making timely returns of capital to
Shareholders. This process might include sales of individual assets
or running of the portfolio in accordance with the existing scope
of the assets, or a combination of both.
Investments held at fair value through profit
or loss are held as current assets.
2. Accounting
policies
Basis of accounting
The VCT has prepared its financial statements
under FRS 102 "The Financial Reporting Standard applicable in the
UK and Republic of Ireland" and in accordance with the Statement of
Recommended Practice "Financial Statements of Investment Trust
Companies and Venture Capital Trusts" issued by the Association of
Investment Companies (AIC) in November 2014 and revised in July
2022 (SORP) as well as the Companies Act 2006.
The VCT implements new Financial Reporting
Standards (FRS) issued by the Financial Reporting Council when they
become effective. No new FRS were implemented during the
year.
The financial statements are presented in
Sterling (£).
Presentation of income statement
In order to better reflect the activities of a
Venture Capital Trust and in accordance with the SORP,
supplementary information which analyses the Income Statement
between items of a revenue and capital nature has been presented
alongside the Income Statement. The net revenue is the measure the
Directors believe appropriate in assessing the VCT's compliance
with certain requirements set out in Part 6 of the Income Tax Act
2007.
Investments
All investments are designated as "fair value
through profit or loss" assets due to investments being managed and
performance evaluated on a fair value basis. A financial asset is
designated within this category if it is both acquired and managed
on a fair value basis, in accordance with the VCT's documented
investment policy. The fair value of an investment upon acquisition
is deemed to be cost. Thereafter investments are measured at fair
value in accordance with the International Private Equity and
Venture Capital Valuation Guidelines (IPEV) together with FRS 102
sections 11 and 12.
For unquoted investments and subsequent to
acquisition, fair value is established by using the IPEV
guidelines. The valuation methodologies for unquoted entities used
by the IPEV to ascertain the fair value of an investment are as
follows:
●
multiples;
● net
assets;
●
discounted cash flows or earnings (of underlying
business);
●
discounted cash flows (from the investment); and
●
industry valuation benchmarks.
Of the valuation methodologies above, the
multiples and discounted cash flow approaches are applied to the
VCT's investments. Effective 1 January 2019, the IPEV
guidelines to establish fair value were updated whereby the cost or
price of a recent investment are no longer considered valid
valuation methodologies for establishing the fair value of an
investment. The VCT along with its Investment Adviser may, under
orderly market conditions, deem the cost or recent price paid for
an investment as an appropriate fair value for an investment at the
time of acquisition but subsequent to recognition must reconsider
the assigned fair value based on up-to-date market conditions and
performance of the underlying investee company in order to assign a
fair value in line with the IPEV guidelines.
The methodology applied takes account of the
nature, facts and circumstances of the individual investment and
uses reasonable data, market inputs, assumptions and estimates in
order to ascertain fair value.
Gains and losses arising from changes in fair
value are included in the Income Statement for the year as a
capital item and transaction costs on acquisition or disposal of
the investment are expensed. Where an investee company has gone
into receivership or liquidation, or administration (where there is
little likelihood of recovery), the loss on the investment,
although not physically disposed of, is treated as being
realised.
The investee companies held by the VCT are
treated as a portfolio of investments and are therefore measured at
fair value in accordance with section 9 of FRS 102. The results of
these companies are not incorporated into the Income Statement
except to the extent of any income accrued. This is in accordance
with the SORP and FRS 102 sections 14 and 15 that does not require
portfolio investments, where the interest held is greater than 20%,
to be accounted for using the equity method of
accounting.
Income
Dividend income from investments is recognised
when the Shareholders' rights to receive payment have been
established, normally the ex-dividend date.
Interest income is accrued on a time
apportionment basis, by reference to the principal sum outstanding
and at the effective interest rate applicable and only where there
is reasonable certainty of collection in the foreseeable
future.
Expenses
All expenses are accounted for on an accruals
basis. In respect of the analysis between revenue and capital items
presented within the Income Statement, all expenses have been
presented as revenue items except as follows:
·
|
expenses which are incidental to the disposal
of an investment are deducted from the disposal proceeds of the
investment; and
|
·
|
expenses are split and presented partly as
capital items where a connection with the maintenance or
enhancement of the value of the investments held can be
demonstrated. The VCT has adopted a policy of charging 75% of the
investment advisory fees to the revenue account and 25% to the
capital account to reflect the Board's estimated split of
investment returns which will be achieved by the VCT over its
lifetime.
|
Taxation
The tax effects on different items in the
Income Statement are allocated between capital and revenue on the
same basis as the particular item to which they relate, using the
VCT's effective rate of tax for the accounting period.
Due to the VCT's status as a Venture Capital
Trust and the continued intention to meet the conditions required
to comply with Part 6 of the Income Tax Act 2007, no provision for
taxation is required in respect of any realised or unrealised
appreciation of the VCT's investments which arises.
Deferred taxation, which is not discounted, is
provided in full on timing differences that result in an obligation
at the balance sheet date to pay more tax, or a right to pay less
tax, at a future date, at rates expected to apply when they
crystallise based on current tax rates and law. Timing differences
arise from the inclusion of items of income and expenditure in
taxation computations in periods different from those in which they
are included in the accounts.
Other debtors, other creditors and loan notes
Other debtors (including accrued income), other
creditors and loan notes (other than those held as part of the
investment portfolio as set out in Note 10) are included within the
accounts at amortised cost.
3. Income
|
Year ended
30 September
2023
£'000
|
Year ended
30 September
2022
£'000
|
Income
|
|
|
Bank interest
|
3
|
-
|
Dividend income
|
998
|
659
|
Loan stock interest
|
37
|
37
|
|
1,038
|
696
|
4. Investment advisory fees
The investment advisory fees for the year ended
30 September 2023, which were charged quarterly to the VCT,
were based on 1.15% of the net assets as at the previous quarter
end. In addition, management fees of £44,000 relating to additional
costs incurred by the Investment Adviser during the financial year
were approved by the Board.
|
Year ended
30 September 2023
|
Year ended
30 September 2022*
|
|
Revenue
£'000
|
Capital
£'000
|
Total
£'000
|
Revenue
£'000
|
Capital
£'000
|
Total
£'000
|
Investment advisory fees
|
235
|
78
|
313
|
197
|
65
|
262
|
5. Other expenses
|
Year ended
30 September 2023
|
Year ended
30 September 2022
|
|
Revenue
£'000
|
Capital
£'000
|
Total
£'000
|
Revenue
£'000
|
Capital
£'000
|
Total
£'000
|
Administration services
|
96
|
-
|
96
|
96
|
-
|
96
|
Directors' remuneration
|
79
|
-
|
79
|
106
|
-
|
106
|
Social security costs
|
3
|
-
|
3
|
3
|
-
|
3
|
Auditor's remuneration for audit
|
59
|
-
|
59
|
48
|
-
|
48
|
Interest written off
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
47
|
-
|
47
|
Other
|
175
|
-
|
175
|
99
|
-
|
99
|
|
412
|
-
|
412
|
399
|
-
|
399
|
The annual running costs of the VCT for the
year are subject to a cap of 3.0% of the net assets of the VCT.
During the year ended 30 September 2023, the annual running
costs came to 2.8% of net assets (2022: 2.3%), therefore this cap
has not been breached.
6. Directors' remuneration
Details of remuneration (excluding employer's
NIC) are given in the audited part of the Directors' Remuneration
Report.
The VCT had no employees during the year. Costs
in respect of the Directors are referred to in Note 5 above. No
other emoluments or pension contributions were paid by the VCT to,
or on behalf of, any Director.
7. Tax on ordinary activities
|
Year ended
30 September
2023
£'000
|
Year ended
30 September
2022
£'000
|
(a) Tax charge
for the year
|
|
|
UK corporation tax at 22% (2022:
19%)
|
-
|
-
|
Charge for the year
|
-
|
-
|
(b) Factors
affecting tax charge for the year
|
|
|
(Loss)/profit on ordinary activities before
taxation
|
(4,620)
|
547
|
Tax/(tax credit) calculated on loss on ordinary
activities before taxation at the applicable rate of 22% (2022:
19%)
|
(1,016)
|
104
|
Effects of:
|
|
|
UK dividend income
|
(220)
|
(125)
|
Losses/(gains) on investments
|
1,085
|
(97)
|
Excess management expenses on which deferred
tax not recognised
|
151
|
118
|
Total tax charge
|
-
|
-
|
Excess management fees, which are available to
be carried forward and set off against future taxable income,
amounted to £4.8mn (25%) (2022: £4.4mn (25%)). The associated
deferred tax asset of £1.2mn (2022: £1.1mn) has not been recognised
due to the fact that it is unlikely that the excess management fees
will be set off against future taxable profits in the foreseeable
future. The corporation tax rate of 25% is effective from
1 April 2023. A blended rate of 22% has been applied for the
year ended 30 September 2023
8. Dividends
|
Year ended
30 September 2023
|
Year ended
30 September 2022
|
|
Revenue
£'000
|
Capital
£'000
|
Total
£'000
|
Revenue
£'000
|
Capital
£'000
|
Total
£'000
|
Paid
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2022 Interim Ordinary - 2.0p
|
-
|
510
|
510
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
2023 Interim Ordinary - 16.5p
|
-
|
4,210
|
4,210
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
|
-
|
4,720
|
4,720
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
The Interim 2022 and 2023 dividends were paid
on 28 July 2023 to Shareholders on the register as at
7 July 2023.
9. Basic and diluted earnings per share
|
|
Weighted
average number
of shares
in issue
|
Revenue
profit
£'000
|
Pence
per share
|
Capital
(Loss)/
profit
£'000
|
Pence
per share
|
Net
(loss)/
profit
£'000
|
Pence
per share
|
30 September
2023
|
Ordinary Shares
|
25,515,242
|
391
|
1.5
|
(5,011)
|
(19.6)
|
(4,620)
|
(18.1)
|
|
'A' Shares
|
38,512,032
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
30 September
2022
|
Ordinary Shares
|
25,515,242
|
100
|
0.4
|
447
|
1.7
|
547
|
2.1
|
|
'A' Shares
|
38,512,032
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
As the VCT has not issued any convertible
securities or share options, there is no dilutive effect on
earnings per Ordinary Share or 'A' Share. The earnings per share
disclosed therefore represents both the basic and diluted return
per Ordinary Share or 'A' Share.
10. Investments
|
2023
Unquoted
investments
£'000
|
2022
Unquoted
investments
£'000
|
Opening cost at start of the year
|
13,011
|
12,944
|
Permanent impairment in cost of
investments
|
(1,303)
|
-
|
Net unrealised gains at start of the
year
|
16,064
|
14,249
|
Opening fair
value at start of the year
|
27,772
|
27,193
|
Movement in
the year:
|
|
|
Purchased at cost
|
-
|
67
|
Disposals at cost
|
(4,302)
|
-
|
Permanent impairment in cost of
investments
|
(392)
|
(1,303)
|
Net unrealised (losses)/gains in the income
statement
|
(5,365)
|
1,815
|
Closing fair
value at year end
|
17,713
|
27,772
|
Closing cost at year end
|
8,709
|
13,011
|
Permanent impairment in cost of investments as
at 30 September 2023
|
(1,695)
|
(1,303)
|
Net unrealised gains at year end
|
10,699
|
16,064
|
Closing fair
value at year end
|
17,713
|
27,772
|
In April 2023, five VCT portfolio investments
were sold by the VCT for proceeds of £4.9mn. These proceeds
generated a realised gain in the period of £153,000 (after
transaction costs of £415,000). As part of the transaction, loans
payable by the VCT totalling £671,000 were forgiven. This increased
the realised gain on the sold assets to £824,000. This gain,
reduced by realised losses attributable to other non-renewable
assets of £392,000, as well as unrealised losses in the period on
the remaining portfolio of £5.4mn, equals losses on investments' of
£4.9mn per the Income Statement.
The VCT has categorised its financial
instruments using the fair value hierarchy as follows
Level 1
Reflects financial instruments quoted in an active
market;
Level 2
Reflects financial instruments that have prices that are observable
either directly or indirectly; and
Level 3
Reflects financial instruments that use valuation techniques that
are not based on observable market data (unquoted equity
investments and loan note investments).
|
Level 1
|
Level 2
|
Level 3
|
2023
|
Level 1
|
Level 2
|
Level 3
|
2022
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Unquoted loan notes
|
-
|
-
|
459
|
459
|
-
|
-
|
752
|
752
|
Unquoted equity
|
-
|
-
|
17,254
|
17,254
|
-
|
-
|
27,020
|
27,020
|
|
-
|
-
|
17,713
|
17,713
|
-
|
-
|
27,772
|
27,772
|
During the years ended 30 September 2023
and 30 September 2022 there were no transfers between
levels.
A reconciliation of fair value for Level 3
financial instruments held at the year end is shown
below:
|
Unquoted
loan notes
£'000
|
Unquoted
equity
£'000
|
Total
£'000
|
Balance at 30 September 2022
|
752
|
27,020
|
27,772
|
Movement in
the income statement:
|
|
|
|
Unrealised losses in the income
statement
|
-
|
(5,365)
|
(5,365)
|
Impairment realised during the
period
|
(67)
|
(325)
|
(392)
|
|
685
|
21,330
|
22,015
|
Redemption of loan notes/Cost of
disposal
|
(226)
|
(4,076)
|
(4,302)
|
Balance at 30 September 2023
|
459
|
17,254
|
17,713
|
FRS 102 sections 11 and 12 require disclosure
to be made of the possible effect of changing one or more of the
inputs to reasonable possible alternative assumptions where this
would result in a significant change in the fair value of the Level
3 investments. There is an element of judgement in the choice of
assumptions for unquoted investments and it is possible that, if
different assumptions were used, different valuations could have
been attributed to some of the VCT's investments.
Investments which are reaching maturity or have
an established level of maintainable earnings are valued on a
discounted cash flow basis. This was also the case in the prior
year.
The Board and the Investment Adviser believe
that the valuation as at 30 September 2023 reflects the most
appropriate assumptions at that date, giving due regard to all
information available from each investee company. Consequently, the
variation in the spread of reasonable, possible, alternative
valuations is likely to be within the range set out in Note
18.
11. Costs incurred on sale of VCT's assets
Since the beginning of the Managed Wind Down in
2021, the VCT has capitalised the professional fees in relation to
the sale of assets. The costs are directly attributable to the
sales process and have been recognised as part of the asset value.
The costs incurred on the VCT's assets sold in April 2023 have been
expensed.
|
2023
£'000
|
2022
£'000
|
Cost incurred on sale of VCT's
assets
|
253
|
480
|
|
253
|
480
|
12. Debtors
|
2023
£'000
|
2022
£'000
|
Prepayments and accrued income
|
38
|
27
|
|
38
|
27
|
13. Creditors: amounts falling due within one
year
|
2023
£'000
|
2022
£'000
|
Other loans
|
1,472
|
1,605
|
Taxation and social security
|
3
|
3
|
Accruals and deferred income
|
99
|
368
|
Creditors
|
22
|
237
|
|
1,596
|
2,213
|
The balance of other loans is made up of
amounts borrowed from the underlying portfolio companies. All loans
are interest free. Other loans falling due within one year are
repayable as follows:
Investee
company
|
Drawdown
date
|
Repayment
date
|
2023
£'000
|
2022
£'000
|
Hewas Solar Limited
|
7 September 2015
|
^
|
-
|
65
|
|
30 April 2016
|
^
|
-
|
66
|
|
|
|
|
131
|
St Columb Solar Limited
|
30 April 2016
|
^
|
-
|
20
|
|
2 February 2018
|
^
|
-
|
40
|
|
|
|
|
60
|
HRE Willow Limited
|
15 June 2016
|
^
|
18
|
18
|
|
12 September 2016
|
^
|
68
|
68
|
|
23 September 2016
|
^
|
29
|
29
|
|
|
|
115
|
115
|
|
|
|
115
|
306
|
|
|
|
|
|
Lunar 2 Limited
|
23 December 2020
|
^^
|
808
|
808
|
|
8 February 2023
|
^^
|
134
|
-
|
|
10 March 2023
|
^^
|
89
|
-
|
|
31 March 2023
|
^^
|
40
|
-
|
|
|
|
1,071
|
808
|
Gloucester Wind Limited
|
22 December 2020
|
^^
|
-
|
100
|
Penhale Solar Limited
|
22 December 2020
|
^^
|
-
|
105
|
HRE Willow Limited
|
22 December 2020
|
^^
|
114
|
114
|
|
18 March 2021
|
^^
|
63
|
63
|
|
6 June 2022
|
^^
|
44
|
44
|
|
|
|
221
|
221
|
Minsmere Power Limited
|
22 December 2020
|
^^
|
25
|
25
|
|
30 June 2021
|
^^
|
27
|
27
|
|
6 June 2022
|
^^
|
13
|
13
|
|
|
|
65
|
65
|
|
|
|
1,357
|
1,299
|
Amounts
repayable within one year
|
|
|
1,472
|
1,605
|
^ The lender may demand full
repayment of all amounts outstanding at any time after five years
and one day from the date of the initial drawdown of the loan. The
loans are interest free.
^^ The VCT and the indicated SPVs (the
"lender") entered into loan agreements whereby the lender, at any
time, without having to provide any reason, by one or several
demands require immediate repayment of all or any part of the loan
and all or any accrued interest thereon. The loans are interest
free.
14. Creditors: amounts falling due after more than one
year
|
2023
£'000
|
2022
£'000
|
Other loans
|
2,217
|
2,492
|
|
2,217
|
2,492
|
The balance of other loans is made up of
amounts borrowed from the underlying portfolio companies. The
classification of the loans shown below is by reference to the
contractual agreement repayment date. Subject to any sale of assets
as part of the Managed Wind Down, these loans will be repaid at the
date of such transaction. All loans are interest free.
Creditors falling due after more than one year
are repayable as follows:
Investee
company
|
Repayment
date
|
2023
£'000
|
2022
£'000
|
Minsmere Power Limited
|
14 January 2025
|
50
|
50
|
Lunar 2 Limited
|
18 December 2024
|
1,543
|
1,543
|
|
14 January 2025
|
474
|
474
|
|
1 April 2025
|
50
|
50
|
|
23 April 2025
|
100
|
100
|
|
|
2,167
|
2,167
|
Gloucester Wind Limited*
|
14 January 2025
|
-
|
200
|
Penhale Solar Limited*
|
14 January 2025
|
-
|
75
|
Amounts
repayable after more than one year
|
|
2,217
|
2,492
|
* Investments sold in April
2023
15. Called up share capital
|
2023
£'000
|
2022
£'000
|
Allotted,
called up and fully-paid:
|
|
|
25,515,242 (2022: 25,515,242) Ordinary Shares
of 0.1p each
|
28
|
28
|
38,512,032 (2022: 38,512,032) 'A' Shares of
0.1p each
|
41
|
41
|
|
69
|
69
|
The VCT's capital is managed in accordance with
its investment policy as shown in the Strategic Report, in pursuit
of its principal investment objectives. There has been no
significant change in the objectives, policies or processes for
managing capital from the previous period.
The VCT has the authority to buy back shares as
described in the Report of the Directors. During the year ended
30 September 2023 the VCT did not repurchase any Ordinary
Shares or 'A' Shares.
During the year ended 30 September 2023
the VCT issued no Ordinary Shares or 'A' Shares.
The holders of Ordinary Shares and 'A' Shares
shall have rights as regards to dividends and any other
distributions or a return of capital (otherwise than on a market
purchase by the VCT of any of its shares) which shall be applied on
the following basis:
1) unless
and until Ordinary Shareholders receive a dividend of at least 5.0p
per Ordinary Share, and one Ordinary Share and one 'A' Share has a
combined net asset value of 100p (the Hurdle), distributions will
be made as to 99.9% to Ordinary Shares and 0.1% to 'A'
Shares;
2) after
(and to the extent that) the Hurdle has been met, and subject to
point 3 below, the balance of such amounts shall be applied as to
40% to Ordinary Shares and 60% to 'A' Shares; and
3) any
amount of a dividend which, but for the entitlement of 'A' Shares
pursuant to point 2 above, would have been in excess of 10p per
Ordinary Share in any year shall be applied as to 10% to Ordinary
Shares and 90% to 'A' Shares.
If, on the date on which a dividend is to be
declared on the Ordinary Shares, the amount of any dividend which
would have been payable to the 'A' Shares (the ''A' Dividend
Amount'), together with any previous amounts which were not paid as
a result of this clause (the ''A' Share Entitlement'),
would together:
a)
|
in aggregate be less than £5,000; or
|
b)
|
be less than an amount being equivalent to
0.25p per 'A' Share.
|
then the 'A' Dividend amount shall not be
declared and paid, but shall be aggregated with any 'A' Share
Entitlement and retained by the VCT until either threshold is
reached. No interest shall accrue on any 'A' Share
Entitlement.
The VCT does not have any externally imposed
capital requirements.
16. Reserves
|
2023
£'000
|
2022
£'000
|
Share premium account
|
-
|
9,541
|
Treasury Shares
|
(2,991)
|
(2,991)
|
Special reserve
|
8,995
|
4,171
|
Revaluation reserve
|
11,506
|
16,871
|
Capital redemption reserve
|
-
|
3
|
Capital reserve - realised
|
(3,253)
|
(3,607)
|
Revenue reserve
|
(89)
|
(480)
|
|
14,168
|
23,508
|
The Special reserve is available to the VCT to
enable the purchase of its own shares in the market. Following a
successful application to the High Court and lodgement of the
Company's statement of capital with the Registrar of Companies, the
Company was permitted to cancel its Share premium account as well
as its Capital redemption reserve. This was effected on 25 May
2023 by a transfer of the balance of £9.5mn from the Share premium
account and £3,000 from its Capital redemption reserve, to the
Special reserve. The Special reserve, Capital reserve - realised
and Revenue reserve are all distributable reserves for the purposes
of dividend payments to Shareholders. At 30 September 2023,
distributable reserves were £5.7mn (2022: £84,000).
Share premium account
This reserve accounts for the difference
between the prices at which shares are issued and the nominal value
of the shares, less issue costs and transfers to the other
distributable reserves.
Treasury Shares
This reserve represents the aggregate
consideration paid for the Shares repurchased by the
VCT.
Revaluation reserve
Increases and decreases in the valuation of
investments held at the year end against cost are included in this
reserve.
Capital redemption reserve
This reserve accounts for amounts by which the
issued share capital is diminished through the repurchase and
cancellation of the VCT's own shares.
Capital reserve - realised
The following are disclosed in this
reserve:
·
|
gains and losses compared to cost on the
realisation of investments; and
|
·
|
expenses, together with the related taxation
effect, charged in accordance with the above accounting
policies.
|
Revenue reserve
This reserve accounts for movements from the
revenue column of the Income Statement and other non-capital
realised movements.
17. Basic and diluted net asset value per
share
|
2023
|
2022
|
2023
|
2022
|
|
Shares in
issue
|
Net asset
value
|
Net asset
value
|
|
|
|
Pence
per share
|
£'000
|
Pence
per share
|
£'000
|
Ordinary Shares
|
25,515,242
|
25,515,242
|
55.6p
|
14,198
|
92.2p
|
23,538
|
'A' Shares
|
38,512,032
|
38,512,032
|
0.1p
|
39
|
0.1p
|
39
|
Total
|
55.7p
|
14,237
|
92.3p
|
23,577
|
The Directors allocate the assets and
liabilities of the VCT between the Ordinary Shares and 'A' Shares
such that each share class has sufficient net assets to represent
its dividend and return of capital rights as described in Note
15.
As the VCT has not issued any convertible
shares or share options, there is no dilutive effect on net asset
value per Ordinary Share or per 'A' Share. The net asset value per
share disclosed therefore represents both the basic and diluted net
asset value per Ordinary Share and per 'A' Share.
18. Financial instruments
The VCT held the following categories of
financial instruments at 30 September 2023:
|
2023
Cost
£'000
|
2023
Value
£'000
|
2022
Cost
£'000
|
2022
Value
£'000
|
Assets at fair value through profit or
loss
|
8,709
|
17,713
|
13,011
|
27,772
|
Other financial liabilities
|
(86)
|
(86)
|
(591)
|
(591)
|
Cash at bank
|
46
|
46
|
3
|
3
|
Other loans
|
(3,689)
|
(3,689)
|
(4,097)
|
(4,097)
|
Total
|
4,980
|
13,984
|
8,326
|
23,087
|
The VCT's financial instruments comprise
investments held at fair value through profit or loss, being equity
and loan stock investments in unquoted companies, capitalised costs
in relation to sale of VCT's assets (Note 11), loans and
receivables consisting of short-term debtors, cash deposits and
financial liabilities being creditors arising from its operations.
Other financial liabilities and assets include operational debtors
and prepaid expenses and short-term creditors which are measured at
amortised cost. The main purpose of these financial instruments is
to generate cash flow and revenue and capital appreciation for the
VCT's operations. The VCT has no gearing or other financial
liabilities apart from short and long-term creditors and does not
use any derivatives.
The fair value of investments is determined
using the detailed accounting policy as shown in Note 2. The
composition of the investments is set out in Note 10.
The VCT's investment activities expose the VCT
to a number of risks associated with financial instruments and the
sectors in which the VCT invests. The principal financial risks
arising from the VCT's operations are:
·
|
market risks;
|
·
|
credit risk; and
|
·
|
liquidity risk.
|
The Board regularly reviews these risks and the
policies in place for managing them. There have been no significant
changes to the nature of the risks that the VCT was expected to be
exposed to over the year and there have also been no significant
changes to the policies for managing those risks during the
year.
The risk management policies used by the VCT in
respect of the principal financial risks and a review of the
financial instruments held at the year-end are provided
below:
Market risks
As a Venture Capital Trust, the VCT is exposed
to investment risks in the form of potential losses and gains that
may arise on the investments it holds in accordance with its
investment policy and since 13 July 2021, with reference to
the New Investment Policy. The management of these investment risks
is a fundamental part of investment activities undertaken by the
Investment Adviser and overseen by the Board. The Adviser monitors
investments through regular contact with management of investee
companies, regular review of management accounts and other
financial information and attendance at investee company board
meetings. This enables the Adviser to manage the investment risk in
respect of individual investments. Investment risk is also
mitigated by holding a diversified portfolio spread across various
operating sites across several asset classes, however following the
partial sale of assets in April 2023, the portfolio diversification
has subsequently reduced.
The key investment risks to which the VCT is
exposed are:
·
|
investment price risk; and
|
·
|
interest rate risk.
|
Investment price risk
The VCT's investments which comprise both
equity and debt financial instruments in unquoted investments are
concentrated in renewable energy projects with predetermined
expected returns. Consequently, the investment price risk arises
from uncertainty about the future prices and valuations of
financial instruments held in accordance with the VCT's investment
objectives which can be influenced by many macro factors such as
changes in interest rates, electricity power prices and movements
in inflation. It represents the potential loss that the VCT might
suffer through changes in the fair value of unquoted investments
that it holds.
At 30 September 2023, the unquoted
portfolio post part sale of assets in April 2023 was valued at
£17.7mn (2022: £27.8mn). The key inputs to the valuation model are
discount rates, inflation, irradiation, degradation, power prices
and asset life. The Board has undertaken a sensitivity analysis
into the effects of fluctuations in these inputs.
The analysis below is provided to illustrate
the sensitivity of the fair value of investments to an individual
input, while all other variables remain constant. The Board
considers these changes in inputs to be within reasonable expected
ranges. This is not intended to imply the likelihood of change or
that possible changes in value would be restricted to this range.
The possible effects are quantified below:
Input
|
Base case
|
Change in
input
|
Change in
fair value of
investments
£'000
|
Change in
NAV per
share
pence
|
Discount rate
|
9.0% -
14.0%
|
+0.5%
|
(45)
|
(0.2)
|
|
|
-0.5%
|
730
|
2.9
|
Inflation
|
3.0% - 4.5%
|
+1.0%
|
908
|
3.6
|
|
|
-1.0%
|
(844)
|
(3.3)
|
Irradiation
|
785 - 1,270kWh/m2
|
+1.0%
|
195
|
0.8
|
|
|
-1.0%
|
(199)
|
(0.8)
|
Degradation
|
0.3% - 0.4%
|
+0.1%
|
(186)
|
(0.7)
|
|
|
-0.1%
|
182
|
0.7
|
Power prices
|
£30 - £211/MWh
|
+10.0%
|
347
|
1.4
|
|
|
-10.0%
|
(359)
|
(1.4)
|
Asset life
The Board has also considered the potential
impact of changes to the anticipated lives of assets in the
portfolio. Just over eighty five percent of the VCT's value is in
assets refinanced by debt, and under the debt facility agreement, a
maintenance reserve is in place for renewing key equipment such as
solar panels as and when required. Furthermore, the underlying
assets have 25 years leases, in line with the asset life assumption
at the time of signing, which cannot be terminated early, and any
extensions to the leases would require further planning permission.
Accordingly, the asset life assumption is that the asset lives are
equal to the length of the relevant leases and the Board does not
consider it appropriate to disclose a sensitivity analysis in
respect of asset life.
Interest rate risk
The VCT accepts exposure to interest rate risk
on floating-rate financial assets through the effect of changes in
prevailing interest rates. The VCT receives interest on its cash
deposits at a rate agreed with its bankers. Where investments in
loan stock attract interest, this is predominately charged at fixed
rates. A summary of the interest rate profile of the VCT's
investments is shown below.
There are three categories in respect of
interest which are attributable to the financial instruments held
by the VCT as follows:
·
|
"Fixed rate" assets represent investments with
predetermined yield targets and comprise certain loan note
investments and preference shares;
|
·
|
"Floating rate" assets predominantly bear
interest at rates linked to The Bank of England base rate or
Sterling Overnight Index Average (SONIA) and comprise cash at bank;
and
|
·
|
"No interest rate" assets do not attract
interest and comprise equity investments, certain loan note
investments, loans and receivables.
|
|
Average
interest rate
|
Average period
until maturity
|
2023
£'000
|
2022
£'000
|
Fixed rate
|
8%
|
2,792 days
|
459
|
459
|
Floating rate
|
0%
|
|
46
|
3
|
No interest rate
|
|
|
13,479
|
22,625
|
|
|
|
13,984
|
23,087
|
The VCT monitors the level of income received
from fixed and floating rate assets and, if appropriate, may make
adjustments to the allocation between the categories, in
particular, should this be required to ensure compliance with the
VCT regulations.
It is estimated that an increase of 1% in
interest rates would have increased profit before tax for the year
by £460 (2022: £30). As at 30 September 2023 the Bank of
England (BoE) base rate was 5.25%, the base rate increased from
5.0% to 5.25% on 3 August 2023, the base rate was 2.25% at the
beginning of the financial year. Any potential further change in
the base rate, at the current level, would have an immaterial
impact on the net assets and total return of the VCT.
Credit risk
Credit risk is the risk that a counterparty to
a financial instrument is unable to discharge a commitment to the
VCT made under that instrument. The VCT is exposed to credit risk
through its holdings of loan stock in investee companies, cash
deposits and debtors. Credit risk relating to loan stock in
investee companies is considered to be part of market risk as the
performance of the underlying SPVs impacts the carrying
values.
The VCT's financial assets that are exposed to
credit risk are summarised as follows:
|
2023
£'000
|
2022
£'000
|
Investments in loan stocks
|
459
|
752
|
Cash and cash equivalents
|
46
|
3
|
Interest, dividends and other
receivables
|
29
|
17
|
|
534
|
772
|
The Investment Adviser manages credit risk in
respect of loan stock with a similar approach as described under
"Market risks". Similarly, the management of credit risk associated
with interest, dividends and other receivables is covered within
the investment advisory procedures. The level of security is a key
means of managing credit risk. Additionally, the risk is mitigated
by the security of the assets in the underlying investee
companies.
Cash is held by the Royal Bank of Scotland plc
which is an investment grade rated financial institution.
Consequently, the Directors consider that the credit risk
associated with cash deposits is low.
There have been no changes in fair value during
the year that are directly attributable to changes in credit risk.
Any balances that are past due are disclosed further under
liquidity risk.
Liquidity risk
Liquidity risk is the risk that the VCT
encounters difficulties in meeting obligations associated with its
financial liabilities. Liquidity risk may also arise from either
the inability to sell financial instruments when required at their
fair values or from the inability to generate cash inflows as
required.
The VCT's creditors at year end were £125,000
(2022: £608,000) of which £Nil related to the Costs incurred on
sale of VCT's assets and has both short-term and long-term loans
from investee companies (see Note 13 and Note 14 for an analysis of
the repayment terms), which are expected to be repaid by way of
future dividends from, or the sale of these companies, being £3.7mn
(2022: £4.1mn). The Board therefore believes that the VCT's
exposure to liquidity risk is low. The SPVs hold sufficient levels
of funds as cash to pay up in order to meet the VCT expenses and
other cash outflows as they arise. For these reasons the Board
believes that the VCT's exposure to liquidity risk is
minimal.
The VCT's liquidity risk is managed by the
Investment Adviser in line with guidance agreed with the Board and
is reviewed by the Board at regular intervals.
The following table analyses the VCT's loan
payables by contractual maturity date:
As at
30 September 2023
|
Due in
less than
1 year
£'000
|
Due between
1 year and
5 years
£'000
|
Due after
5 years
£'000
|
Total
£'000
|
Loans payable to investee companies
|
1,472
|
2,217
|
-
|
3,689
|
|
1,472
|
2,217
|
-
|
3,689
|
As at
30 September 2022
|
Due in
less than
1 year
£'000
|
Due between
1 year and
5 years
£'000
|
Due after
5 years
£'000
|
Total
£'000
|
Loans payable to investee companies
|
1,605
|
2,492
|
-
|
4,097
|
|
1,605
|
2,492
|
-
|
4,097
|
Although the VCT's investments are not held to
meet the VCT's liquidity requirements, the table below shows an
analysis of the assets, highlighting the length of time that it
could take the VCT to realise its assets if it were required to do
so.
The carrying value of loan stock investments
held at fair value through the profit and loss account at
30 September 2023 as analysed by the expected maturity date is
as follows:
As at
30 September 2023
|
Not later
than
1 year
£'000
|
Between
1 and
2 years
£'000
|
Between
2 and
3 years
£'000
|
Between
3 and
5 years
£'000
|
More
than
5 years
£'000
|
Total
£'000
|
Fully performing loan stock
|
459
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
459
|
Past due loan stock
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
|
459
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
459
|
As at
30 September 2022
|
Not later
than
1 year
£'000
|
Between
1 and
2 years
£'000
|
Between
2 and
3 years
£'000
|
Between
3 and
5 years
£'000
|
More
than
5 years
£'000
|
Total
£'000
|
Fully performing loan stock
|
752
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
752
|
Past due loan stock
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
|
752
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
752
|
19. Capital management
The VCT's objectives when managing capital are
to safeguard the VCT's ability to provide returns for Shareholders
and to provide an adequate return to Shareholders by allocating its
capital to assets commensurately with the level of risk.
By its nature, the VCT has an amount of
capital, at least 80% (as measured under the tax legislation; and
for the VCT effective 1 October 2019) of which is and must be,
and remain, invested in the relatively high risk asset class of
small UK companies within three years of that capital being
subscribed. The VCT accordingly has limited scope to manage its
capital structure in the light of changes in economic conditions
and the risk characteristics of the underlying assets. Subject to
this overall constraint upon changing the capital structure, the
VCT may adjust the amount of dividends paid to Shareholders, return
capital to Shareholders, issue new shares, or sell assets if so
required to maintain a level of liquidity.
As the Investment Policy implies, the Board
would consider levels of gearing. As at 30 September 2023, the
VCT had loans from investee companies of £3,689,000 (2022:
£4,097,000). It regards the net assets of the VCT as the VCT's
capital, as the level of liabilities are small and the management
of them is not directly related to managing the return to
Shareholders. There has been no change in this approach from the
previous period.
20. Contingencies, guarantees and financial
commitments
At 30 September 2023, the VCT had no
contingencies, guarantees or financial commitments. Subsequent to
the year end at the date of this report, the VCT has entered into
financial commitments in respect of the Managed Wind Down process
amounting to an estimated £500,000. However, this amount may be
less if any of the agreements are terminated early.
21. Controlling party and related party
transactions
In the opinion of the Directors there is no
immediate or ultimate controlling party. For total Directors'
remuneration during the year, please refer to Note 5 as well as the
Directors' Remuneration Report.
22. Significant interests
Following the sale of part of the VCTs assets
in April 2023, the details of all shareholdings in the remaining
companies where the VCT's holding, as at 30 September 2023,
represents more than 20% of the nominal value of any class of
shares issued by the portfolio company are disclosed in the Review
of Investments.
23. Net debt reconciliation
|
1 October
2022
£'000
|
Non
cash flows
£'000
|
Cash flows
£'000
|
30 September
2023
£'000
|
Cash at bank and in hand
|
3
|
-
|
43
|
46
|
Other loans
|
4,097
|
(671)
|
263
|
3,689
|
Non cash flows consists of loans forgiven as
disclosed in Note 10.
24. Events after the end of the reporting
period
On 22 November 2023, the Board declared an
interim dividend of 7.5p per Ordinary Share. The dividend was paid
on 21 December 2023 to holders of Ordinary Shares on the
register as at the close of business on 1 December 2023. No
dividend was declared in respect of the 'A' Shares.
No further significant events have occurred
between the statement of financial position date and the date when
the financial statements have been approved, which would require
adjustments to, or disclosure in the financial
statements.