Interim Management Statement Q2 2024
24 May 2024
HARGREAVE HALE AIM VCT PLC
(the “Company”)
Interim Management Statement
Q2 2024
Introduction
This interim management statement covers the second quarter of
the 2023/24 financial year, 1 January 2024 to 31 March 2024.
Investment performance measures contained in this report are
calculated on a pence per share basis and include realised and
unrealised gains and losses.
Overview
The inflation outlook continued to moderate in the UK, US and
elsewhere in the quarter. In contrast to the prior quarter, when
inflation fell more quickly than anticipated, inflation proved to
be more sticky, particularly in the US where the steep declines of
last year were replaced by a modest uptick in March 2024.
Whilst the situation is much improved, recent trends have not
supported the market’s previous expectation of six rate cuts in the
US this year. The current expectation is one to two. In response to
consistently robust economic data, borrowing costs in the US, which
fell so sharply in late 2023 and provided the impetus for a
significant rally in equity markets, have reverted to levels that
caused significant alarm in the autumn of 2023.
For now, equity and credit markets remain calm with current
financial conditions in the US more accommodating than at any point
since the Russian invasion of Ukraine. The foreign exchange markets
have not been so relaxed with the dollar strengthening
significantly against other major global currencies. The change in
outlook for the US monetary policy will weigh heavily on other
central banks as they contemplate the impact on their own monetary
policy.
The situation is notably better in the UK where inflation (CPI)
took longer to peak but has since fallen very rapidly, falling from
10.1% in March 2023 to 3.2% in March 2024 (Dec 23: 4.0%) and then,
post period end, to 2.3% in April.
News that the UK had endured a short and very shallow recession
in late 2024 briefly halted the recovery in UK consumer confidence
that had been underway since late 2022. However, the UK economy has
since returned to growth in the 3 months to March with improving
conditions in the service, construction and manufacturing sectors.
UK consumer confidence has reverted to its improving trend with
employment markets remaining healthy and real wage growth strongly
positive.
A period of consolidation seemed inevitable following the strong
run into Christmas 2023. AIM retreated 2.6% in the three months to
March 2024. Low levels of liquidity and continued fund outflows
from the UK equity markets, continue to make it difficult for a
broader rally to take hold.
Performance
In the 3 months to 31 March 2024, the unaudited NAV per share
decreased by -2.76 pence from 46.40 pence to 43.64 pence. A 1.50
pence dividend was paid in the quarter, giving a total return of
-2.72%.
The qualifying investments made a net loss of -1.21 pence per
share whilst the non-qualifying investments (including the
investments in the IFSL Marlborough UK Micro-Cap Growth Fund and
IFSL Marlborough Special Situations Fund) made a gain of 0.12 pence
per share. The adjusting balance was the net of running costs and
investment income.
Qualifying Investments
Positive contributors
Itaconix shares (+119.0%, +0.46 pence per share) moved sharply
higher after the company confirmed that 2023 results would be
in-line with market expectations. However, much of the gains were
surrendered in April after the company reported that it had not
been able to agree pricing whilst renegotiating a supply agreement
with its largest customer. Although this led to a substantial
revision to revenue forecasts for 2024, low margins meant the
impact on EBITDA was less severe. Management plan to replace the
lost revenues over time with higher margin agreements.
Beeks Financial (+77.3%, +0.40 pence per share) reported
excellent results for the 6 months to December 2023 with revenues
increasing by 25% to £13.0m and EBITDA by 28% to £4.6m. The company
is seeing strong commercial momentum and has announced several
significant contract wins which have driven upgrades to the outlook
for 2025.
Cohort (+21.0%, +0.15 pence per share) was awarded a £135m
10-year contract from the Ministry of Defence to supply the Royal
Navy with its Trainable Decoy Launcher System. The new award takes
the company’s contract wins within the financial year to £215m and
the order book to more than £500m. FY25 EBITDA expectations were
also upgraded by 10%.
Negative contributors
Kidly (-90.9%, -0.63 pence per share) has continued to
experience a difficult trading environment. Although revenues were
below budget, operational efficiencies resulted in significantly
lower losses.
Equipmake (-31.3%, -0.62 pence per share) reported a 97%
increase in its revenues for the 6 months to November 2023 to £2.1
million as the company continued to commercialize its EV solutions.
Despite good progress, the company moderated its revenue
expectations for the year to May 2024. Cost control has meant the
forecast for operating losses was largely unchanged. The company
has hired a new chief operating officer, a new business development
director and a new finance director and raised additional funding
to assist with the delivery of its growth plan.
In an unscheduled update in January, Zoo Digital (-46.2%, -0.38
pence per share) reported that trading had been weaker than
expected as US television and film studios restarted production
following the actors and screen writers strikes in America.
Illustrating the fluid environment, the company then released
another update in March which reported that trading through the
balance of the final quarter had improved, leading to an upwards
revision for the revenue estimate for the financial year to March
2024. The company highlighted a 30% increase in its order book for
the first quarter of the new financial year, underpinning
expectations for a rapid recovery and a return to profit.
Non-Qualifying Investments
Positive Contributors
BAE Systems (+21.5%, +0.07 pence per share) continued to benefit
from strong demand in the defence sector and reported strong FY23
results, with cash generation well ahead of market expectations.
The company also reported record order intake, providing excellent
visibility over 2024 and beyond.
Bodycote’s (+17.2%, +0.06 pence per share) results for the year
to December 2023 showed good growth in its Specialist Technologies
division as well as from the aerospace, oil and gas and medical
markets. Progress on operating margins, helped lift headline
operating profit by 17%. The company remains positive on the 2024
outlook.
Shares in TP ICAP (+15.7%, +0.05 pence per shares) were boosted
by good FY23 results which prompted small upgrades, combined with
the news that the company is exploring strategic options to unlock
the value of its data business, Parameta Solutions.
Negative Contributors
Bytes (-16.4%, -0.04 pence per share) announced the resignation
of its CEO following news that he had personally traded the
company’s shares without board approval or appropriate
disclosure.
Despite rebasing forecasts in October 2023 and then issuing two
subsequent trading updates in November 2023 and January 2024, XP
Power (-22.4%, -0.04 pence per share) went on to warn in February
that it was reducing guidance for 2024 following weaker than
expected orders in its first quarter.
On The Beach (-5.5%, -0.02 pence per share) shares had a modest
pullback despite a positive AGM trading update which pointed to 27%
growth in bookings over the peak 2024 January period. The company
confirmed that it continued trade in line with expectations.
Portfolio structure
The VCT is comfortably above the HMRC defined investment test
and ended the period at 93.48% invested as measured by the HMRC
investment test. By market value, the weighting to qualifying
investments increased from 51.50% to 53.10%.
Although Qualifying investment activity was healthy within the
period with £5.4m invested into qualifying companies, more broadly
the market remains very subdued with just one VCT qualifying
IPO1 within the last 12 months. £2.9m was invested
across three existing portfolio companies Strip Tinning, Equipmake
and PCI-PAL. We also invested £2.5m in one new qualifying private
company Qureight Ltd, a techbio company specialising in clinical
data curation. We made full exits from Velocys and Smoove following
their acquisitions in the quarter.
We made modest adjustments to the non-qualifying portfolio in
response to company updates including adding to Wickes Group and
exiting our positions in Bytes, XP Power and Ashtead. We also added
modestly to our holding in the IFSL Marlborough UK Micro-Cap
Fund.
There were no substantial changes to the allocation to the two
IFSL Marlborough Funds, non-qualifying equities, fixed income or
cash, which respectively represented 12.0%, 8.7%, 13.5% and 13.0%
of net assets.
The HMRC investment tests are set out in Chapter 3 of Part 6
Income Tax Act 2007, which should be read in conjunction with this
interim management statement. Funds raised by VCTs are first
included in the investment tests from the start of the accounting
period containing the third anniversary of the date on which the
funds were raised. Therefore, the allocation of qualifying
investments as defined by the legislation can be different to the
portfolio weighting as measured by market value relative to the net
assets of the VCT.
Share Buy Backs & Discount Control
3,708,093 shares were acquired in the quarter at an average
price of 42.47 pence per share. The share price decreased from
42.80p to 42.20p within the quarter and traded at a discount of
4.22% following the publication of the 31 March 2024 NAV on 8 April
2024.
Post Period End
The unaudited NAV per share increased from 43.64 pence to 44.89
pence as at 17 May 2024, an increase of 2.86%. The FTSE AIM
All-Share index increased by 6.83%.
END
For further information please contact:
Oliver Bedford, Canaccord Genuity Asset Management
Tel: 020 7523 4837
LEI:
213800LRYA19A69SIT31
1 A second company sought funding at IPO but failed
to attract any capital from VCTs.
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