TIDMINF
RNS Number : 9509L
Informa PLC
25 July 2017
Press Release
25 July 2017
Informa PLC
Half-Year Results for Six Months to 30 June 2017
Full Year Performance on Track Following Integration of Penton
and Continuing Operational and Financial Delivery
Key financial and operating highlights for enlarged informa
group
-- Improving Revenue Growth: +3.7% underlying and +41.3% reported, including Penton
-- Growing Adjusted Operating Profit: +1.0% underlying and +41.0% reported
-- Higher Adjusted Diluted EPS Growth: +12.7% to 24.0p (H1 2016: 21.3p(1) )
-- Increased Interim Dividend: up 6.2% to 6.65p (H1 2016: 6.26p(1) )
-- Strong Free Cash Flow, On Track for GBP400m+ in Full Year: GBP113.8m (H1 2016: GBP74.2m)
-- Robust Balance Sheet following completion of refinancing: Gearing of 2.8x (H1 2016: 2.4x)
-- Enhanced Statutory Operating Profit: +28.7% to GBP182.2m (H1
2016: GBP141.6m); Statutory Diluted EPS +11.9% to 14.1p (H1 2016:
12.6p)
London: Informa (LSE: INF.L), the international Business
Intelligence, Exhibitions, Events and Academic Publishing Group,
today published results for the six months to 30 June 2017,
reporting continued growth in Revenue, Profit and Earnings in its
seasonally stronger first half of the year:
Stephen A. Carter, Group Chief Executive, said: "The Informa
Group continues to make steady operational and financial progress
in the fourth year of our acceleration programme, whilst
effectively integrating US-based Penton Information Services ahead
of plan."
He added: "Our increased Balance and Breadth, improving
operational fitness and the benefits of consistent product
investment give us confidence that we will meet our financial and
operational targets for 2017, including further growth in revenue,
earnings, cashflow and dividends."
-- Continuing Operational Performance and Financial Delivery:
o Global Exhibitions...Expansion: Clear benefits of building a
portfolio of large-scale international Brands in attractive
verticals, combined with continuous product innovation and a
positive weighting to the first-half of the year generates strong
underlying revenue growth, +11.0%;
o Academic Publishing...Resilience: Continued strength in
Academic Research Journals, combined with steady trading in Upper
Level reference-led Books offsets the challenging market for our
small, sub-scale holding in Lower Level textbooks, producing
underlying revenue growth of +1.2%;
o Business Intelligence...Growth: Improving underlying revenue
growth of +1.1%, reflects increased focus on core subscription
renewals, positive new product momentum and further traction in the
development of contingent revenues;
o Knowledge & Networking...Focus: Shift in portfolio balance
to the three end markets of Global Finance, Life Sciences and TMT
helps ease the decline in underlying revenue to -4.0%.
Portfolio focus continues today with the majority purchase by
Handelsblatt(2) of the German/Swiss domestic conference business,
Euroforum. This follows on from previous portfolio changes in
Scandinavia, the Netherlands, Russia and a number of other
markets;
o Penton Information Services...Integration: Effective
integration of US-based business ahead of plan; operating and
reporting as a single, enlarged Informa Group and on track to
deliver GBP14m net operating synergies in 2018;
o Dividend...Increase: Improving operational performance, strong
cash generation and confidence in full-year delivery leads to a
further increase in our GAP dividend commitment to a minimum of 6%
year-on-year growth for 2017, the final year of GAP.
(1) H1 2016 EPS and DPS restated to reflect November 2016 Rights
Issue.
(2) See separate press release
Financial Highlights
H1 2017 H1 2016 Reported Underlying(1)
GBPm GBPm % %
----------------------------------------------------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ----------------
Revenue 915.4 647.7 41.3 3.7
Statutory Operating Profit 182.2 141.6
Adjusted Operating Profit(2) 285.1 202.2 41.0 1.0
Adjusted Operating Margin (%)(2) 31.1 31.2
Operating Cash Flow(3) 168.1 123.2
Statutory Profit Before Tax 148.8 98.9
Adjusted Profit Before Tax(2) 256.4 184.8
Statutory Profit for the Period 118.6 90.1
Statutory Diluted Earnings Per Share (p) 14.1 12.6
Adjusted Diluted Earnings Per Share (p)(2) 24.0 21.3 12.7
Dividend Per Share (p) 6.7 6.3 6.2
Free Cash Flow(3) 113.8 74.2
Net Debt 1,566.4 1,054.9
----------------------------------------------------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ----------------
(1) In this document we refer to Underlying and Reported figures. Underlying refers to results
adjusted for acquisitions/disposals, the phasing of events and the effects of changes in foreign
currency. Year-on-year growth from material acquisitions/disposals is included on a pro-forma
basis from first day of ownership. Reported figures exclude all such adjustments.
(2) In this document we also refer to Adjusted and Statutory results. Adjusted results are
prepared to provide a useful alternative measure to explain the Group's business performance.
Adjusted results exclude adjusting items as set out in Note 4.
(3) Operating cash flow and free cash flow are as calculated in the Financial Review.
Divisional Highlights
H1 2017 H1 2016 Reported Underlying
-------------------------------
GBPm GBPm % %
------------------------------- -------- -------- --------- -----------
Global Exhibitions
Revenue 342.8 192.9 77.7 11.0
Statutory Operating Profit 100.9 71.4
Adjusted Operating Profit 144.8 88.3 64.0 10.9
Adjusted Operating Margin (%) 42.2 45.8
------------------------------- -------- -------- --------- -----------
academic publishing
Revenue 238.9 214.7 11.3 1.2
Statutory Operating Profit 58.1 48.2
Adjusted Operating Profit 85.5 72.9 17.3 0.3
Adjusted Operating Margin (%) 35.8 34.0
------------------------------- ------ ------ ----- ----
Business Intelligence
Revenue 187.6 134.6 39.4 1.1
Statutory Operating Profit 18.4 17.9
Adjusted Operating Profit 37.5 26.9 39.4 0.2
Adjusted Operating Margin (%) 20.0 20.0
------------------------------- ------ ------ ----- ----
Knowledge & Networking
Revenue 146.1 105.5 38.5 -4.0
Statutory Operating Profit 4.8 8.6
Adjusted Operating Profit 17.3 14.1 22.7 -40.2
Adjusted Operating Margin (%) 11.8 13.4
------------------------------- ------ ------ ----- ------
Enquiries
Informa PLC
+44 (0) 20 7017
Stephen A. Carter, Group Chief Executive 5771
+44 (0) 20 7017
Gareth Wright, Group Finance Director 7096
Richard Menzies-Gow, Director of +44 (0) 20 3377
Investor Relations 3445
Teneo Strategy
+44 (0) 20 7240
Tim Burt / Zoe Watt 2486
----------------------------------------- ---------------
Analysts and investors
There will be a presentation to analysts at 9.30am on 25 July
2017 at The London Stock Exchange, 10 Paternoster Square, London,
EC4M 7LS. A simultaneous webcast of the analysts' presentation will
be available via the Company's website (www.informa.com).
Trading Outlook
Informa's strategy of pursuing greater international scale,
building Balance and Breadth across geographies and verticals, and
increasing the proportion of forward-booked, recurring and
predictable revenue provides resilience and strength. This allows
us to continue making steady operational and financial progress
despite ongoing macro and geo-political uncertainty in the US and
Europe.
2014-2017 Growth Acceleration Plan ("GAP")
Our strategy to improve operational fitness and invest in
strengthening the Group's core capabilities is delivering steady
and consistent improvements in revenue growth. There is a natural
lag before this translates into profit growth, reflecting
associated depreciation as new products and platforms go live.
The ambition of our acceleration programme is to build an
international, predictable and resilient business with a cycle of
continuous re-investment at a level that delivers higher levels of
sustainable growth. We continue to target a post-GAP operating
framework producing consistent 3%+ underlying revenue growth for
the Group, with attractive 30%+ adjusted operating margins and
strong cash conversion and free cash flow.
As part of GAP, we have also been building international scale
in attractive and growing verticals, including the addition of
Virgo Publishing, Hanley Wood Exhibitions, Maney Publishing, FIME,
Penton Information Services, and most recently YPI. The integration
of Penton is progressing ahead of plan and we are on track to
deliver at least GBP14m of net operating synergies in 2018, with
half in 2017. Penton businesses have been combined with their
respective Informa Divisions, management responsibilities confirmed
and we are now operating and reporting as a single Group.
global exhibitions
Our focus on market leading Brands, international expansion and
building scale within attractive and growing verticals is
delivering consistently strong divisional growth, supported by
ongoing investment in product innovation, pricing initiatives and
digital platforms via our Market Maker strategy.
These positive attributes and continued healthy pre-booking
trends in the seasonally bigger first half provide good visibility
into the second half and beyond, giving us confidence of another
year of strong growth in 2017. Similar to last year, this is likely
to be at a moderated level compared to our first half performance,
when the majority of our larger, fastest-growing exhibitions take
place including Real Estate & Construction (World of Concrete,
TISE West), Health & Nutrition (Natural Products West,
Vitafoods) and Life Sciences (Arab Health, Medlab).
Academic Publishing
Our business is focused on Upper Level, scholarly research and
specialist, reference-led content, with close to 60% of revenue
from peer-reviewed Academic Journals. These attract high renewal
rates, deliver consistent levels of growth and strong cash
generation, providing visibility and resilience.
Technology continues to shape the Academic market, facilitating
greater collaboration and sharing of ideas, increased connectivity
between subjects and flexible pricing models. This is creating
growth opportunities but also a need for ongoing innovation. We
continue to invest to strengthen our capabilities most recently
through the addition of Colwiz, a technology business employing big
data analytics, machine learning and artificial intelligence to
search, collate and map targeted global research activities.
Continued Journals strength, combined with fresh leadership and
the benefits of a number of operational initiatives position us for
steady in-year performance, with the assumption that weakness in
Lower Level textbooks continues through the important fourth
quarter trading period.
business intelligence
Our programme of simplification and increased customer focus,
combined with significant investment in enhancing and upscaling our
core subscription products, is delivering consistent improvements
in underlying revenue growth.
Robust renewal rates, improving annualised contract values and
healthy customer pipelines point to continued positive growth
momentum in the second half. This is supported by the progressive
release of GAP-enhanced subscription products, alongside further
traction in contingent revenues, following the relaunch of our
Consulting offering and integration of Penton's Marketing Services
business.
knowledge & networking
Our strategy of operational improvement and portfolio focus is
gradually improving the mix, quality and visibility of revenue and
today's confirmed portfolio changes in Germany, Switzerland and
Brazil will further reduce volatility, as well as streamlining our
offering.
This will increase the focus on specialist communities in our
core end markets of Global Finance, Life Sciences and TMT. Combined
with continued operational focus and enhanced digital and data
capabilities, we are targeting a return to positive underlying
growth as we exit GAP, in 2018.
Operational Review
During the first half of 2017, the Group continued to make
steady operational and financial progress in the fourth and final
year of our Growth Acceleration Plan ("GAP"). Operational fitness
continues to improve and the progressive roll-out of new GAP-funded
products and enhanced platforms is being received positively by
customers. We have also been focused on the effective combination
of Penton Information Services with Informa, adding further scale
and bringing new capabilities to the Group.
growth, international expansion and scale in global
exhibitions
One of the key features of GAP has been our strategy to build
and buy a scale Exhibitions business through a combination of
consistent and strong underlying growth and targeted international
expansion, with a particular focus on building our presence in the
key US market.
Our approach has been to focus on verticals with features that
provide a rich backdrop for long-term, attractive Exhibitions
growth, including:
-- Fragmentation...large numbers of buyers and sellers
-- High value... contracts and purchases of high value goods and services
-- Innovation...high levels of new product development
-- Growth...underlying markets experiencing positive structural growth
-- International reach...markets with high levels of international trade
-- Business-to-Business...less exposure to retail cyclicality and shifts in consumer fashion
We have also largely focused on major Brands within verticals,
which tend to benefit from a network effect over time, as more
buyers and sellers gravitate towards them, where they can meet
potential customers or suppliers most efficiently.
Our focus on the US region reflects its scale (it represents
around half of global industry revenue), the high level of
innovation in US exhibitions and the supply of large, high quality
venues. This has led to a steady improvement in our divisional
performance as we have built our position in the region and the US
has become a larger proportion of our revenue mix.
The addition of Penton Information Services added around 30
major US Brands to the portfolio, with particular strength in
Agriculture (Farm Progress, Husker Harvest Days), Aviation (MRO
Network) and Health & Nutrition. The latter, which includes
Brands such as Natural Products Expo West and Engredea, have been
combined with Informa's existing Brands in the vertical, including
Vitafoods and Supplyside West, to create a global leader with
annual revenue of over $110m and exhibition space sales of more
than 125,000 square metres. In a vertical valued at over $200bn and
growing at more than 6% per annum, with all the attractive features
listed above, this is creating a future growth engine for our
business.
Our growth and expansion programme in Global Exhibitions has
increased Exhibitions revenue from less than $100m in 2009 to more
than $600m in 2017, with around 60% in North America. Our Top 30
Brands represent about 70% of this total, with 18 taking place in
the first six months of the year. This weights revenue and growth
to the first half period and with Global Exhibitions now our
largest division, this has a more pronounced impact at a Group
level, as was evident in the first half of 2017.
Product Innovation
A number of product initiatives also contributed to the high
level of growth through the first half of 2017. In Dubai we took
the decision to separate our Medlab brand focused on laboratory
equipment from within the venue-bound Arab Health show and run it
separately as a new, scale Exhibition in the subsequent week. Such
a move always carries risks but we made a smooth transition,
delivering strong aggregate year-on-year growth, with Medlab
becoming a Top 20 exhibition in its own right on debut.
Separately, we also started to roll out a customer value
initiative at a number of exhibitions following a successful trial
of tiered, value-based pricing at The International Surfaces Event
earlier this year. This provides flexibility for exhibitors through
a more customer service oriented approach, with the potential to
improve rebooking rates and generate incremental yields.
We also continue to invest in developing our digital and data
capabilities to strengthen our general digital marketing and sales
effectiveness but also, more specifically, in relation to our
Market Maker strategy. In this respect, we are building a number of
vertical-specific digital platforms to target revenue opportunities
outside of Exhibitions, leveraging our customer relationships and
industry knowledge to connect buyers and sellers online.
Effective integration of us-based penton with Informa
The integration of Penton Information Services has progressed
smoothly and quickly, ahead of our original timeline. This reflects
the positive and constructive attitude of our new Penton colleagues
and their eagerness to become part of a bigger group with all the
opportunities that brings. Progress has been achieved whilst
maintaining the focus on day-to-day trading, with Penton's
businesses delivering broadly consistent year-on-year revenue in
the first half of the year, in line with the acquisition plan.
Penton had historically organised and operated around franchises
and our approach from the start of the integration programme was to
keep Penton franchises intact where they were operating in an
integrated manner, rather than artificially separating them to fit
Informa's divisional product and format delineations. As we entered
the Combine stage of the integration programme, having owned and
managed the businesses for six months, we updated the original
allocation of Penton into Informa's four Operating Divisions to
ensure the best outcome for each business. After the final
allocations, around 90% of Penton revenue is still being allocated
into Global Exhibitions and Business Intelligence but is now
roughly split 60% and 30% respectively. Around 10% of Penton
revenue is still being allocated to the Knowledge & Networking
Division.
With Penton business units now combined into their respective
Informa divisions, we are operating and reporting as a single,
enlarged Informa business. Full systems integration plans are well
advanced and the harmonisation of employee benefits is scheduled to
take place through year-end. The integration plan means we are on
track to secure our targeted GBP14m of net operating synergies in
2018. These will come from a combination of management and
operational overlap, property consolidation, functional
duplication, procurement and commissions. We are also starting to
see early revenue benefits from cross-selling Exhibitions and
leveraging its Marketing Services capability across Informa.
management succession & operational initiatives in academic
publishing
In May, we announced the appointment of Annie Callanan as the
new Chief Executive of the Academic Publishing Division. An
experienced and proven leader of technology and information service
businesses, Annie joined from Quantros, the Healthcare technology
solutions group. She brings deep knowledge and expertise in digital
platforms and technology, with a strong track record of operational
improvement and innovation.
Prior to Annie's appointment, in 2016 we combined our UK and US
books operations into a single, global books business, delivering
operational efficiencies but also giving us greater flexibility and
bringing us closer to customers. This has led to a number of
operational benefits in 2017, including in the commissioning and
production of new titles, inventory management, invoice processing
and in our flexibility around digital product development. This is
strengthening customer relationships and ensuring we maximise any
potential revenue opportunities.
Strong cash generation and Increased dividend commitment
The Group's focus on the conversion of profits into cash and
strong levels of free cash flow generation provide liquidity and
balance sheet flexibility. Gearing at the end of June was 2.8x net
debt to EBITDA*, slightly above our target range of 2 times to 2.5
times net debt to EBITDA ahead of the Group's seasonally stronger
period for cash generation in the second half, which in the absence
of further acquisition activity, we expect to bring us comfortably
back into the target range by year-end. Free cash flow of GBP113.8m
in the first six months was still up strongly year-on-year due to
the profit contribution from Penton, as well as the utilisation of
some of the tax credits that came with the business. The Penton
businesses have similarly strong underlying cash dynamics to
Informa, reflecting the high level of forward-booked exhibitions
and subscription revenue within the mix.
This provides flexibility for continued reinvestment into
organic initiatives and further targeted acquisitions. We intend to
remain pro-active on both fronts and continue to scan the market
for opportunities, with particular focus on Global Exhibitions and
Business Intelligence.
Strong cash generation, continued operational progress, and our
confidence in meeting full year financial expectations leads the
Board to raise the GAP commitment to dividend growth from the
previous minimum of 4% to at least 6% for 2017, the final year of
GAP. On current projections, this leaves the group with an adjusted
dividend comfortably over 2 times adjusted earnings.
For 2018 and beyond, the Board will revisit dividend policy and
guidance post-GAP.
*Net debt to EBITDA is calculated using average net debt over
the previous 12-month period, in line with banking covenants
Divisional Trading Review
Informa delivered steady improvement in its operational and
financial performance through the first half of 2017, with positive
underlying business improvement bolstered by the effective
integration of Penton Information Services and favourable currency
trends. Underlying revenue growth was +3.7% and Reported growth was
41.3%, the difference reflecting a -1.2% impact from the phasing of
events, a +26.0% benefit from acquisitions and a +12.8% benefit
from currency. Adjusted operating profit rose +41.0% to
GBP285.1m.
The commentary below includes statutory and adjusted measures.
We believe adjusted operating profit is a useful additional measure
in monitoring Divisional trading performance.
Global exhibitions
H1 2017 H1 2016 Actual Underlying
-------------------------------
GBPm GBPm % %
------------------------------- -------- -------- ------- -----------
Revenue 342.8 192.9 77.7 11.0
Statutory Operating Profit 100.9 71.4
Adjusted Operating Profit 144.8 88.3 64.0 10.9
Adjusted Operating Margin (%) 42.2 45.8
------------------------------- -------- -------- ------- -----------
The Global Exhibitions Division organises transaction-oriented
Exhibitions and trade shows, providing buyers and sellers across
different industries and communities with a powerful platform to
meet face to face, build relationships and conduct business.
Informa has around 200 Exhibition Brands, serving a number of core
verticals, including Agriculture, Beauty & Aesthetics,
Construction & Real Estate and Health & Nutrition.
In H1, Global Exhibitions accounted for 37% of Group Revenues
and 51% of Adjusted Profit.
Our strategy to build a portfolio of major Brands in attractive
and growing verticals delivered further double digital underlying
growth, including strong performances from our Top 20 exhibitions
in Health & Nutrition (Natural Products West, Vitafoods
Europe), Construction & Real Estate (World of Concrete, TISE
West) Life Sciences (Arab Health, Medlab) and Beauty &
Aesthetics (China Beauty).
This growth was broad-based, reflecting a combination of
improved yield, volume expansion at existing exhibitions, new
launches and geo-cloned events. The launch of Medlab as an
independent exhibition separate from Arab Health was particularly
successful, driving strong aggregate growth. The combination with
Penton also brought immediate benefits, most notably in Health
& Nutrition where the increased scale and international breadth
created by the combination with Informa is having immediate
traction with customers, opening up valuable cross-selling
opportunities.
Alongside this growth and expansion, we continued to invest in
the business to support future growth and scale. This largely
revolved around our Market Maker strategy as we continued to invest
in strengthening our data capabilities and building new digital
platforms for monetising customers relationships in new ways. This
incremental investment, combined with the mix effect of adding
lower-margin Penton revenue led to a lower year-on-year divisional
operating margin.
Academic publishing
H1 2017 H1 2016 Reported Underlying
-------------------------------
GBPm GBPm % %
------------------------------- --------- -------- --------- -----------
Revenue 238.9 214.7 11.3 1.2
Statutory Operating Profit 58.1 48.2
Adjusted Operating Profit 85.5 72.9 17.3 0.3
Adjusted Operating Margin (%) 35.8 34.0
------------------------------- --------- -------- --------- -----------
The Academic Publishing Division publishes specialist books and
journals. Operating as the Taylor & Francis Group, it is
recognised internationally as a leading Upper Level academic
publisher through a number of major publishing Brands, including
Taylor & Francis, Routledge, CRC Press and Cogent OA. It has a
portfolio of more than 130,000 book titles and 2,500 journals
available in both print and digital formats, across a range of
subject areas within Humanities & Social Sciences, and Science,
Technology & Medicine.
In H1, Academic Publishing accounted for 26% of Group Revenue
and 30% of Adjusted Profit.
Overall trading remained solid through the first half,
underpinned by another strong performance by our Journals business,
with high subscription renewals and continued growth in article
submissions and content usage.
Our monograph and reference-led books business performed
steadily. Library budgets remain tight and with journals typically
being allocated first, this is putting added pressure on books
expenditure.
However, certain subject categories continue to grow strongly,
illustrating demand is there for relevant specialist content that
is priced reasonably. Budget pressure is being felt most
prominently in the Lower Level textbook market where we have a
historical, sub-scale position representing around 10-15% of Books
revenue. Here average prices tend to be higher, the content less
specialist and users tend to have a relatively short-term
connection to the subject area.
We continued to invest in our technology capability to improve
the digital discoverability of our content and meet changing market
demands, opening up new growth possibilities in areas such as
Academic Digital Services. This included the acquisition and
ongoing investment in Colwiz in May.
Business intelligence
H1 2017 H1 2016 Reported Underlying
-------------------------------------
GBPm GBPm % %
------------------------------------- -------- -------- --------- -----------
Revenue 187.6 134.6 39.4 1.1
Statutory Operating Profit / (loss) 18.4 17.9
Adjusted Operating Profit 37.5 26.9 39.4 0.2
Adjusted Operating Margin (%) 20.0 20.0
------------------------------------- -------- -------- --------- -----------
The Business Intelligence Division provides specialist data,
intelligence and insight to businesses, helping them make better
decisions, gain competitive advantage and enhance return on
investment. It has more than 120 digital subscription Brands,
providing critical intelligence to niche communities within six
core industry verticals: Pharma, Finance, Transportation, TMT,
Agribusiness and Industry & Infrastructure. This is supported
by a portfolio of B2B media Brands and businesses targeting
contingent revenues in Consulting and Marketing Services.
In H1, Business Intelligence accounted for 21% of Group Revenue
and 13% of Adjusted Profit.
The focus on core subscriptions and strengthening customer
relationships continued to deliver positive trading momentum, with
high renewal rates and steady improvement in annualised contract
values. This translated into underlying revenue growth of 1.1%,
including pro-forma year-on-year growth from the Penton assets
integrated into the Division.
We also relaunched our Consulting business under fresh
leadership which, combined with the full integration of Penton's
Marketing Services business, forms part of our plan for growth in
contingent revenue in the second half of 2017.
The other feature of the first-half which will continue
throughout the rest of the year was the progressive roll-out of new
GAP-funded products and platform upgrades. These have generally
been received well by customers, improving utility and workflow
capabilities. This was evident in the strong performance of our
AgriBusiness and Transportation verticals in the first half,
following the planned launch of major new product launches.
Knowledge and networking
H1 2017 H1 2016 Reported Underlying
-------------------------------
GBPm GBPm % %
------------------------------- -------- -------- --------- -----------
Revenue 146.1 105.5 38.5 -4.0
Statutory Operating Profit 4.8 8.6
Adjusted Operating Profit 17.3 14.1 22.7 -40.2
Adjusted Operating Margin (%) 11.8 13.4
------------------------------- -------- -------- --------- -----------
The Knowledge & Networking Division is the Group's Community
Content, Connectivity and Data business, incorporating its
training, learning, conference, confex, advisory and congress
businesses. It organises content-driven events and programmes that
provide a platform for communities to meet, network and share
knowledge. It runs around 1,200 events each year globally, covering
a range of subjects, but with particular focus on Life Sciences,
TMT and Finance.
In H1, Knowledge & Networking accounted for 16% of Group
Revenue and 6% of Adjusted Profit.
We continued to make steady progress in the first half, with
continued improvements in trading amongst our core Brands within
the three end markets of Global Finance (SuperReturn, Fund Forum),
Life Sciences (Bio-Europe Spring) and TMT (London Tech Week). The
first year of London Tech Week under our management proved
successful, with good year-on-year growth in attendees and
sponsorship, providing good momentum for 2018.
Our domestic conference businesses continued to be more
volatile, impacting the overall revenue performance, which dropped
through to the bottom line, hence the reduction in margin. Today's
confirmation of portfolio changes in Brazil, Germany and
Switzerland will provide more stability going forward and we
continue to review our domestic conference businesses in Australia
/ Asia.
Financial Review
INCOME STATEMENT
Our strategy of strengthening operating capabilities, increasing
scale and international breadth resulted in an increase in Group
revenue in first half of 2017, up 41.3% to GBP915.4m, including a
3.7% increase on an underlying basis. This converted to Adjusted
Operating Profit of GBP285.1m, some 41.0% higher than the prior
half year and an 1.0% increase on an underlying basis. This also
reflects the continued progress in the final year of the
implementation of the 2014-2017 Growth Acceleration Plan.
Adjusted Adjusting Statutory Adjusted Adjusting Statutory
results items result results items result
H1 2017 H1 2017 H1 2017 H1 2016 H1 2016 H1 2016
GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm
-------------------- -------------- --------------- -------------- -------------- --------------- --------------
Revenue 915.4 - 915.4 647.7 - 647.7
Operating
Profit/(loss) 285.1 (102.9) 182.2 202.2 (60.6) 141.6
Loss on disposal - (4.7) (4.7) - (25.3) (25.3)
Net finance costs (28.7) - (28.7) (17.4) - (17.4)
-------------------- -------------- --------------- -------------- -------------- --------------- --------------
Profit/(loss)
before tax 256.4 (107.6) 148.8 184.8 (85.9) 98.9
Tax(charge)/credit (55.9) 25.7 (30.2) (33.4) 24.6 (8.8)
-------------------- -------------- --------------- -------------- -------------- --------------- --------------
Profit/(loss) for
the year 200.5 (81.9) 118.6 151.4 (61.3) 90.1
-------------------- -------------- --------------- -------------- -------------- --------------- --------------
Adjusted operating
margin 31.1% 31.2%
Adjusted diluted
EPS 24.0p 21.3p
-------------------- -------------- --------------- -------------- -------------- --------------- --------------
measurement and adjustments
In addition to the statutory results, Adjusted Results are
prepared for the Income Statement, including Adjusted Operating
Profit and Adjusted Diluted Earnings Per Share, as the Board
considers these non-GAAP measures to be the most appropriate way to
measure the Group's performance in a way that is comparable to the
prior year. This is in line with similar adjusted measures used by
our peer companies and therefore facilitates comparisons. Adjusted
Results are outlined in the table above and exclude the Adjusting
Items outlined in the next section. A reconciliation of adjusted
measures to statutory measures can be found in notes 3 and 9.
Following the combination of Penton with Informa, we have
adopted an approach where we include year-on-year growth from
material acquisitions in the calculation of growth from the first
day of ownership, as if we had owned them in the corresponding
period in the previous year. This measure of Underlying Growth,
which also strips out the impact of any events phasing during the
relevant period, the impact of any disposals and the impact of
foreign exchange movements, will ensure that all our teams are
focused on the underlying performance of acquired businesses
immediately.
Underlying growth in H1 2017 is analysed as follows:
H1 2017 Phasing and H1 2017
Underlying other items Acquisitions Currency change Reported growth
growth and disposals
----------------- --- ----------------- ---------------- ---------------- ----------------- -----------------
Revenue 3.7% (1.2%) 26.0% 12.8% 41.3%
Adjusted
operating profit 1.0% (1.4%) 25.6% 15.8% 41.0%
------------------ ----------------- ---------------- ---------------- ----------------- -----------------
Restatement of 2016 results
Results for the year ended 31 December 2016 have been restated
following revisions to the provisional amounts recognised in
respect of the fair value of assets acquired and liabilities
assumed related to the Penton Information Services acquisition that
completed on 2 November 2016 and finalisation of fair values
related to the Light Reading LLC acquisition that completed on 13
July 2016. There was no impact from the restatements on the income
statement for the 6 months ended 30 June 2016.
In addition, the business segment results for the year ended 31
December 2016 have been restated for the allocation of Penton
business units into the business segments of Business Intelligence,
Global Exhibitions and Knowledge & Networking, reflecting the
integration of Penton into the relevant divisions.
Statutory and Adjusted earnings per share and dividends per
share for the 6 months ended 30 June 2016 have been restated to
reflect the adjustment required for the bonus element of the 2016
rights issue associated with the Penton acquisition.
ADJUSTING ITEMS
The Adjusting Items below have been excluded from Adjusted
Results. The total charge against Operating Profit for Adjusting
Items was GBP102.9m in H1 2017 (H1 2016: GBP60.6m) with
amortisation of acquired intangible assets being the major
element.
H1 2017 H1 2016
GBPm GBPm
------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Intangible amortisation and impairment:
Intangible asset amortisation1 79.4 51.2
Impairment of goodwill and intangibles 2.8 2.3
Acquisition and integration costs 12.1 6.5
Restructuring and reorganisation costs:
Redundancy and reorganisation costs 2.5 2.7
Vacant property costs 6.1 (0.1)
Re-measurement of contingent consideration - (2.0)
Adjusting items in operating profit 102.9 60.6
Loss on disposal of subsidiaries and operations 4.7 25.3
Adjusting items in profit before tax 107.6 85.9
Tax related to adjusting items (25.7) (24.6)
------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Adjusting items in profit for the period 81.9 61.3
------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
1 Intangible asset amortisation is in respect of acquired
intangibles and excludes amortisation of software and product
development
Our proactive and targeted acquisition programme led to an
increase in intangible asset amortisation arising from acquired
intangibles to GBP79.4m. This comprised amortisation of book lists
and journal titles, database content and customer and attendee
relationships related to exhibitions and conferences. Intangible
asset amortisation arising from software assets and product
development is not treated as an Adjusting Item and is included
within the calculation of Adjusted Operating Profit.
Acquisition and integration costs of GBP12.1m included costs
relating to the integration of Penton Information Services through
H1 2017 totalling GBP8.9m.
In H1 2017 the GBP4.7m loss on disposal relates primarily to the
disposal of the Lloyds List Australia business in Business
Intelligence (GBP4.4m loss). In H1 2016 the GBP25.3m loss on
disposal related to a GBP23.5m impairment of the loan note
receivable associated with the disposal in 2013 of five Corporate
Training businesses and GBP1.8m from the loss on disposal of other
businesses.
The following table provides a breakdown of the Adjusted Items
by Division:
AP BI GE K&N Total
GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm
---------------------------------------- ------ ------ ------ ------ ------
Statutory operating profit 58.1 18.4 100.9 4.8 182.2
Add back:
Intangible asset amortisation(1) 25.2 12.4 32.7 9.1 79.4
Impairment of goodwill and intangibles 2.0 0.8 - - 2.8
Acquisition and integration costs 0.2 1.9 9.4 0.6 12.1
Restructuring and reorganisation costs - 4.0 1.8 2.8 8.6
Adjusted operating profit 85.5 37.5 144.8 17.3 285.1
---------------------------------------- ------ ------ ------ ------ ------
1 Intangible asset amortisation is in respect of acquired
intangibles, and excludes amortisation of software and product
development
Net Finance Costs
Adjusted net finance costs, which consist principally of
interest costs on US private placement loan notes and bank
borrowings, increased by GBP11.3m to GBP28.7m. This principally
reflects the effect of higher average debt levels following the
acquisition of Penton.
Taxation
Tax Expense
Our effective tax rate reflects the blend of tax rates and
profits in the Group's various jurisdictions, some with lower
corporate tax rates than the UK. In H1 2017, the adjusted effective
tax rate was 21.8% (H1 2016: 18.1%).
The principal reason for the increase relates to changes to UK
tax legislation, introduced from 1 January 2017, which reduced the
tax benefit of certain internal financing structures. This provided
a tax benefit of approximately GBP8m in 2016 and no further benefit
is available from 1 January 2017. Additionally, there has a mix
effect from more profits being generated in the US following the
Penton acquisition.
The Group tax charge on statutory Profit Before Tax ("PBT") was
20.3% (H1 2016: 8.9%).
Tax Payments
During H1 2017, the Group paid GBP29.0m (H1 2016: GBP27.7m) of
corporation and similar taxes on profits, including approximately
GBP21.5m (H1 2016: GBP10.4m) of UK Corporation Tax. UK tax payments
have increased in H1 2017 compared to H1 2016 primarily as a result
of the payment in full of tax related to profits on the contingent
forward foreign exchange transaction we took out to act as a
partial hedge for the purchase price of the Penton acquisition.
However, US tax payments are significantly reduced in 2017 largely
due to tax deductions available from the write-off of loans in 2016
and prior years, including deductions on elements of these
write-offs previously provided for in earlier years. These
deductions will also reduce cash tax outflows in the US in
2018.
Earnings PER SHARE
Basic and diluted earnings per share (EPS) calculated on the
statutory profit for the year for equity shareholders of GBP116.2m
(H1 2016: GBP89.2m), resulted in Basic EPS of 14.1p (H1 2016: 12.7p
restated).
Adjusted diluted EPS of 24.0p is 12.7% ahead of H1 2016 (H1
2016: 21.3p restated amount), principally reflecting the increase
in adjusted profit before tax.
H1 2017 H1 2016
GBPm GBPm
--------------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Adjusted Profit for the year 200.5 151.4
Non-controlling interests (2.4) (0.9)
--------------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Adjusted earnings 198.1 150.5
Weighted average number of shares used in diluted EPS (m) (1) 826.0 706.3
--------------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Adjusted Diluted EPS (pence) 24.0p 21.3p
--------------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
(1) H1 2016 number of shares restated for bonus element of 2016
rights issue
The increase in average number of shares reflects the equity
raised for the acquisition of the Penton Information Services,
resulting in 162.2m of shares issued in a rights issue and 12.8m of
shares issued to the vendors of Penton.
Dividends
The Board has recommended an interim dividend of 6.65p per share
(H1 2016: 6.26p per share restated amount) representing a 6.2%
increase. The interim dividend will be paid on 15 September 2017 to
ordinary shareholders registered as at the close of business on 11
August 2017.
TRANSLATION IMPACT
Given our stated strategy of international expansion and
purposeful shift to add businesses in North America, there has been
an increase in exposure to US Dollar revenues and costs. In H1 2017
the Group currently receives approximately 67% (H1 2016: 57%) of
its revenues and incurred approximately 56% (H1 2016: 45%) of its
costs in USD or currencies pegged to USD. Each 1 cent ($0.01)
movement in the USD to GBP exchange rate, based on the 30 June 2017
closing rate, has a circa GBP9m (H1 2016: GBP6m) impact on annual
revenue and a circa GBP4m (H1 2016: GBP3m) impact on annual
adjusted operating profit and a circa 0.4p (H1 2016: 0.2p) impact
on full year adjusted diluted EPS.
The following US dollar rates versus GBP were applied during the
period:
H1 H1 Full Year
2017 2016 2016
----- ------------------ ------------------ ------------------
Closing Average Closing Average Closing Average
Rate Rate rate rate Rate rate
USD 1.30 1.26 1.35 1.43 1.23 1.36
----- -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- --------
For debt covenant testing purposes and for calculating Informa's
leverage, both profit and net debt are translated using the average
rate of exchange throughout the relevant period.
free CASH FLOW
Cash flow generation remains one of the Group's priorities,
providing the funds and flexibility for future investment. The
following table shows the Adjusted Operating Profit and Free Cash
Flow reconciled to movements in Net Debt. Free Cash Flow is our key
financial measure of cash generation and is stated before cash
flows relating to acquisitions and disposals, dividends and any new
equity issuance.
H1 H1 Full Year
2017 2016 2016
GBPm GBPm GBPm
------------------------------------------------------- ------- ------- ----------
Adjusted operating profit 285.1 202.2 415.6
Depreciation of property and equipment 4.7 3.0 6.5
Software and product development amortisation 11.1 6.1 14.2
Share-based payments 2.4 1.3 3.9
Loss on disposal of other assets - - 0.1
Adjusted share of joint venture and associate results (0.2) (0.1) (0.8)
Adjusted EBITDA 303.1 212.5 439.5
Net capital expenditure (41.0) (25.9) (52.0)
Working capital movement (1) (94.0) (63.4) 6.4
------------------------------------------------------- ------- ------- ----------
Operating cash flow 168.1 123.2 393.9
Restructuring and reorganisation (2.8) (4.9) (9.9)
Net interest (22.5) (16.4) (35.0)
Taxation (29.0) (27.7) (43.3)
------------------------------------------------------- ------- ------- ----------
Free cash flow(2) 113.8 74.2 305.7
------------------------------------------------------- ------- ------- ----------
(1 Working Capital movement above excludes movement on
restructuring, reorganisation, acquisition and integration
accruals)
(2 Free Cash Flow for H1 2016 has been restated to show GBP6.5m
of acquisition and integration costs within the acquisition and
disposals line)
Our focus on cash generation across the Group led to another
year of strong cash conversion in H1 2017, with Operating Cash Flow
of GBP168.1m equating to 59% of Adjusted Operating Profit (H1 2016:
61%).
Net capital expenditure was GBP41.0m which is equivalent to 4.5%
of H1 2017 revenue. We expect full year 2017 capital expenditure to
be in the 3% to 5% range previously communicated.
The working capital outflow of GBP94.0m in H1 2017 was GBP30.6m
higher than the outflow of GBP63.4m in H1 2016, and this included
the effect of the working capital profile of the acquired Penton
business.
Net Interest paid increased in line with the increase in net
debt, largely associated with the Penton acquisition. In H1 2017,
the Group paid GBP29.0m (H1 2016: GBP27.7m) of Corporation and
similar taxes on profits, including GBP21.5m (H1 2016: GBP10.4m) of
UK corporation tax.
The following table reconciles net cash inflow from operating
activities, as shown in the Consolidated Cash Flow Statement, to
Free Cash Flow:
H1 H1 Full Year
2017 2016 2016
GBPm GBPm GBPm
-------------------------------------------------- ------- ------- ----------
Net cash inflow from operating activities 132.3 93.4 336.3
Interest received 0.3 0.2 0.6
Purchase of property and equipment (5.5) (1.8) (4.6)
Proceeds on disposal of property and equipment 0.4 0.2 0.6
Purchase of intangible software assets (28.9) (19.4) (36.5)
Product development cost additions (7.0) (4.9) (11.5)
Add back: Acquisition and integration costs paid 22.2 6.5 20.8
Free Cash Flow(1) 113.8 74.2 305.7
-------------------------------------------------- ------- ------- ----------
1 (Free Cash Flow for H1 2016 has been restated to show GBP6.5m
of acquisition and integration costs within the acquisition and
disposals line)
net debt
Net debt increased by GBP81.0m to GBP1,566.4m at 30 June 2017
and this included the favourable impact from foreign exchange of
GBP74.0m primarily associated with the USD weakening by 5.6%
against GBP from the closing rate of 1.23 at 31 December 2016 to
1.30 at 30 June 2017.
H1 H1 Full Year
2017 2016 2016
GBPm GBPm GBPm
---------------------------------- ---------- ---------- ----------
Free cash flow 113.8 74.2 305.7
Acquisitions and disposals (158.5) (60.0) (1,313.1)
Equity Rights Issue net proceeds - - 701.5
Dividends paid (108.7) (87.7) (134.5)
Shares acquired (0.4) (0.2) (1.0)
---------------------------------- ---------- ---------- ----------
Net funds flow (153.8) (73.7) (441.4)
Non-cash movements (1.2) (0.8) (2.7)
Foreign exchange 74.0 (85.1) (146.0)
Net debt at 1 January (1,485.4) (895.3) (895.3)
---------------------------------- ---------- ---------- ----------
Closing net debt (1,566.4) (1,054.9) (1,485.4)
---------------------------------- ---------- ---------- ----------
Our strategy to retain a robust and flexible financing framework
led to two key developments in the first half of 2017. Firstly, on
25 January 2017 we issued USD 500m of private placement loan notes,
with a maturity of six years (USD 55m), eight years (USD 80m) and
ten years (USD 365m), at an average interest rate of 3.6%.
Secondly, we arranged a new bank Term Loan Facility in March 2017
for USD 400m, with a maturity of up to 12 months, which refinanced
the Acquisition Facility that was used to fund the Penton
acquisition, on more favourable terms.
At 30 June 2017, the Group had GBP2.4bn of committed facilities,
(GBP1.5bn at 30 June 2016 and GBP2.3bn at 31 December 2016).
30 June 30 June 31 December 2016
2017 2016 GBPm
GBPm GBPm
--------------------------------------------- -------- -------- -----------------
Cash at bank and in hand (43.5) (51.4) (49.6)
Bank overdraft 5.0 2.0 9.4
Loans receivable - (0.4) (0.2)
Private placement loan notes 1,036.2 629.4 682.2
Private placement fees (2.1) (1.4) (1.5)
Bank borrowings - Revolving Credit Facility
(due Oct 2020) 265.8 480.3 300.2
Bank borrowings - Term Loan Facility
(due March 2018) 307.8 - -
Bank borrowings - Acquisition Facility - - 548.6
Bank loan fees (2.8) (3.6) (3.7)
--------------------------------------------- -------- -------- -----------------
Net debt 1,566.4 1,054.9 1,485.4
--------------------------------------------- -------- -------- -----------------
Revolving credit facility 634.2 419.7 599.8
Term facilities agreement 150.0 - 150.0
--------------------------------------------- -------- -------- -----------------
Unutilised committed facilities 784.2 419.7 749.8
--------------------------------------------- -------- -------- -----------------
The principal financial covenant ratios under the private
placement loan notes and Revolving Credit Facility are maximum net
debt to EBITDA of 3.5 times and minimum EBITDA interest cover of
4.0 times, tested semi-annually. The ratio of net debt to EBITDA
was 2.8 times (at 30 June 2016: 2.4 times, at 31 December 2016: 2.6
times) calculated as per our facility agreements (using average
exchange rates and including a full year's trading for
acquisitions). The ratio of EBITDA to net interest payable was 10.4
times (at 30 June 2016: 12.8 times, at 31 December 2016: 11.0
times).
We have a net pension liability position of GBP27.6m from
defined benefit pension schemes, which remains relatively
immaterial compared to the size of our balance sheet. All schemes
are closed to future accrual and there were no employer cash
contributions paid in the 6 months ended 30 June 2017.
corporate development
The Group continued to pursue its disciplined and targeted
acquisition strategy during H1 2017, adding several businesses to
the portfolio. Total net spend on additions and disposals was
GBP158.5m (H1 2016: GBP60.0m), which included acquisition
expenditure of GBP140.9m (H1 2016: GBP51.1m), acquisition and
integration costs of GBP22.2m (H1 2016: GBP6.5m), disposal proceeds
of GBP4.6m (H1 2016: cash outflow of GBP2.4m). Acquisitions
included GBP13.0m (H1 2016: GBP30.9m) of expenditure on other
intangible assets and GBP127.9m (H1 2016: GBP20.2m) on the addition
of subsidiaries, net of cash acquired.
As part of our disciplined approach, potential acquisition
opportunities are assessed on a case-by-case basis against a broad
set of financial and strategic criteria. This includes delivering
returns in excess of the Group's weighted average cost of capital
and being accretive or neutral to earnings in the first full year
of ownership. For certain selective acquisitions, the Group will
take a longer-term view on these metrics, to allow time for full
integration of the acquired business, coupled with additional
investment to maximise long-term returns.
The principal acquisition during the period was YPI the operator
of some of the largest yachting and boat shows in the US. We
acquired 100% of the issued share capital of YPI on 14 March 2017,
and the business now forms part of the Global Exhibitions segment.
The net cash consideration at closing, using an exchange rate of
1.24 was GBP111.2m (USD 138.3m), comprising GBP111.8m (USD 139.0m)
paid to the vendors at closing that included working capital
payments, less cash acquired of GBP0.6m (USD 0.7m).
New accounting standards
A description of the expected impact from the adoption of new
accounting standards that are in issue but are not yet effective is
provided in Note 2 of Annual Report for the year ended 31 December
2016. This outlines the expected impact of IFRS 9 Financial
Instruments, IFRS 15 Revenue from Contracts with Customers and IFRS
16 Leases. The review concluded that the Directors do not expect
the adoption of these standards, except for IFRS 16 Leases, will
have a material impact on the financial statements of the
Group.
IFRS 9 Financial Instruments is effective for the 2018 financial
year and our initial assessment is that the Group does not expect
there to be any change to the Income Statement or Balance Sheet of
the Group. Full disclosure of the final assessment of the impact
will be provided in the Annual Report for the year ending 31
December 2017.
IFRS 15 Revenue from contract with customers is effective for
the 2018 financial year and our initial assessment is that the
Group does not expect there to be any material change to the Income
Statement or Balance Sheet of the Group. Full disclosure of the
final assessment of the impact will be provided in the Annual
Report for the year ending 31 December 2017.
IFRS 16 Leases is effective for the 2019 financial year and the
Group is in the process of assessing the impact of this new
standard.
Principal Risks and Uncertainties
The Group recognises 12 Principal Risks which have the potential
to cause the most significant impact to Informa's strategic
objectives, performance, future prospects and reputation. They
arise from the external market as well as internal business
operations.
The Principal Risks and uncertainties affecting the business
activities of the Group were identified on pages 25-31 of the 2016
Annual Report (available on the Company's website at
www.informa.com).
Regular analysis and scanning for emerging risks is embedded in
our processes to ensure that the Principal Risks are current and
relevant to the Group's objectives. A recent change is the widening
of the cyber breach risk to encompass data loss, this is to
recognise and increase focus on the human causal factors which can
lead to data loss and cyber breaches. There is increased focus on
data protection as the Group prepares for the General Data
Protection Regulation.
As described in the 2016 Annual Report, the Risk Committee and
Board considered the impact of the UK's decision to leave the
European Union (Brexit) on the Group. Brexit has led to currency
fluctuations which continues to be considered as part of the
Principal Risk of economic instability and is managed through
proportionate foreign exchange hedging. Given the global nature of
the Informa's activities, we consider the Group to be in a
resilient position, however, it is acknowledged that Brexit is an
evolving risk and developments will be closely monitored as they
unfold.
These risks are summarised below (in no order of priority):
Strategic Risks Description
------------------------- -----------------------------------------
Failure to deliver Growth under the Growth Acceleration
anticipated growth Plan may not be delivered within
under the Growth the expected timeline or at
Acceleration Plan a rate that will not deliver
targeted returns on investment.
------------------------- -----------------------------------------
Sub-optimal acquisitions Acquisitions which do not deliver
the expected business case.
------------------------- -----------------------------------------
Ineffective change Informa's growth strategy involves
management measured change across many
parts of the Group and requires
the assimilation of new ways
of working and different corporate
cultures.
------------------------- -----------------------------------------
Inability to attract The inability to attract, recruit
and retain key and retain key colleagues, and
talent inadequate succession planning
at senior management levels.
------------------------- -----------------------------------------
Economic instability The arrival, or impending arrival,
of an economic downturn or period
of uncertainty affecting customer
appetite for discretionary expenditure.
------------------------- -----------------------------------------
Market risk Customer demands can change
quickly and the Group may not
keep pace with demand or customer
behaviours. Competitors may
offer preferable products and
services. Market disruptors
may enter and suddenly change
markets in which we operate.
------------------------- -----------------------------------------
Reliance on key The overreliance on, or loss
counterparties of, key counterparties.
------------------------- -----------------------------------------
Data loss & cyber Major information security breach
breach or cyber-attack resulting in
loss or theft of data, content
or intellectual property.
------------------------- -----------------------------------------
Operational Risks Description
------------------------- -----------------------------------------
Technology failure A major technology infrastructure
failure or the prolonged loss
of critical systems, networks
and similar services.
------------------------- -----------------------------------------
Health and safety A significant accident or incident
incident at an exhibition, event or business
premises, or an incident that
affects colleagues when travelling
on company business.
------------------------- -----------------------------------------
Major incident A significant event with the
potential to cause harm to colleagues
and customers.
------------------------- -----------------------------------------
Governance Risks Description
------------------------- -----------------------------------------
Changes to regulation There are regulations with which
and inadequate the Group must comply. We could
regulatory compliance be adversely affected by changes
in legislation and regulation
impacting the Group or customers
and by enforcement activities.
------------------------- -----------------------------------------
Going concern
The Directors confirm that, after making an assessment, they
have a reasonable expectation that the Group has adequate resources
to continue in operational existence for the forseeable future.
Accordingly, they continue to adopt the going concern basis in
preparing the financial statements.
To make the assessment, we considered each Principal Risk for
its potential financial impacts and modelled these, where material,
to test the Group's viability over the Group's business planning
horizon. Each principal risk was evaluated for the estimated
financial impacts that could occur given the implemented mitigating
controls. Wider consideration is given to risks which are not
recognised as principal risks but working in combination with
principal or other risks, may contribute to a Reasonable Worst Case
Scenario. When the financial impacts of these scenarios are
considered to pose a material impact over the period of the Group's
planning horizon, they are modelled to assess their financial
impacts. To make this assessment, the Group's growth drivers,
forecast revenue, operating profits, EBITDA and cash flows over the
assessment period were subject to robust downside testing.
Cautionary Statements
This interim management report contains certain forward-looking
statements. These statements are subject to a number of risks and
uncertainties and actual results and events could differ materially
from those currently being anticipated. The terms 'expect', 'should
be', 'will be' and similar expressions (or their negative) identify
forward looking statements. Factors which may cause future outcomes
to differ from those foreseen in forward-looking statements
include, but are not limited to: general economic conditions and
business conditions in Informa's markets; exchange rate
fluctuations, customers' acceptance of its products and services;
the actions of competitors; legislative, fiscal and regulatory
developments; changes in law and legal interpretation affecting
Informa's intellectual property rights and internet communications;
and the impact of technological change.
Past performance should not be taken as an indication or
guarantee of future results, and no representation or warranty,
express or implied, is made regarding future performance. These
forward-looking statements speak only as of the date of this
interim management report and are based on numerous assumptions
regarding Informa's present and future business strategies and the
environment in which Informa will operate in the future. Except as
required by any applicable law or regulation, the Group expressly
disclaims any obligation or undertaking to release publicly any
updates or revisions to any forward-looking statements contained in
this document to reflect any change in the Group's expectations or
any change in events, conditions or circumstances on which any such
statement is based after the date of this announcement or to update
or keep current any other information contained in this interim
management report.
Nothing in this interim management report should be construed as
a profit forecast. All persons, wherever located, should consult
any additional disclosures that Informa may make in any regulatory
announcements or documents which it publishes. This announcement
does not constitute an invitation to underwrite, subscribe for or
otherwise acquire or dispose of any Informa PLC shares, in the UK,
or in the US, or under the US Securities Act 1933 or in any other
jurisdiction.
Board of Directors
The Directors of Informa PLC are listed at www.informa.com.
Responsibility Statement
We confirm that to the best of our knowledge:
a) the Condensed set of Consolidated Financial Statements has
been prepared in accordance with IAS 34 'Interim Financial
Reporting' as adopted by the European Union;
b) the Condensed set of Consolidated Financial Statements, which
has been prepared in accordance with the applicable set of
accounting standards, gives a true and fair view of the assets,
liabilities, financial position and profit or loss of the issuer,
or the undertakings included in the consolidation as a whole as
required by DTR 4.2.4R; and
c) the interim management report includes a fair review of the
following information as required by DTR 4.2.7R;
i. an indication of important events that have occurred during
the first six months of the financial year, and their impact on the
Condensed set of Consolidated Financial Statements; and
ii. a description of the principal risks and uncertainties for
the remaining six months of the year.
d) the interim management report includes the following information as required by DTR 4.2.8R:
i. related-party transactions that have taken place in the first
six months of the current financial year and that have materially
affected the financial position or performance of the Group in that
period; and
ii. any changes in the related-party transactions described in
the 2016 Annual Report that could have material effect on the
financial position or performance of the Group in the current
period.
By order of the Board
Stephen A. Carter Gareth Wright
Group Chief Executive Group Finance
Director
24 July 2017
Independent Review Report to Informa PLC
We have been engaged by the Company to review the Condensed set
of Consolidated Financial Statements in the half-yearly financial
report for the six months ended 30 June 2017 which comprises the
Condensed Consolidated Income Statement, the Condensed Consolidated
Statement of Comprehensive Income, the Condensed Consolidated
Statement of Changes in Equity, the Condensed Consolidated Balance
Sheet, the Condensed Consolidated Cash Flow Statement and related
notes 1 to 16. We have read the other information contained in the
half-yearly financial report and considered whether it contains any
apparent misstatements or material inconsistencies with the
information in the Condensed set of Consolidated Financial
Statements.
This report is made solely to the Company in accordance with
International Standard on Review Engagements (UK and Ireland) 2410
'Review of Interim Financial Information Performed by the
Independent Auditor of the Entity' issued by the Auditing Practices
Board. Our work has been undertaken so that we might state to the
Company those matters we are required to state to them in an
independent review report and for no other purpose. To the fullest
extent permitted by law, we do not accept or assume responsibility
to anyone other than the Company, for our review work, for this
report, or for the conclusions we have formed.
Directors' responsibilities
The half-yearly financial report is the responsibility of, and
has been approved by, the Directors. The Directors are responsible
for preparing the half-yearly financial report in accordance with
the Disclosure and Transparency Rules of the United Kingdom's
Financial Conduct Authority.
As disclosed in Note 1, the Annual Financial Statements of the
Group are prepared in accordance with IFRSs as adopted by the
European Union. The condensed set of financial statements included
in this half-yearly financial report has been prepared in
accordance with International Accounting Standard 34, 'Interim
Financial Reporting', as adopted by the European Union.
Our responsibility
Our responsibility is to express to the Company a conclusion on
the condensed set of financial statements in the half-yearly
financial report based on our review.
Scope of review
We conducted our review in accordance with International
Standard on Review Engagements (UK and Ireland) 2410 'Review of
Interim Financial Information Performed by the Independent Auditor
of the Entity' issued by the Auditing Practices Board for use in
the United Kingdom. A review of interim financial information
consists of making inquiries, primarily of persons responsible for
financial and accounting matters, and applying analytical and other
review procedures. A review is substantially less in scope than an
audit conducted in accordance with International Standards on
Auditing (UK and Ireland) and consequently does not enable us to
obtain assurance that we would become aware of all significant
matters that might be identified in an audit. Accordingly, we do
not express an audit opinion.
Conclusion
Based on our review, nothing has come to our attention that
causes us to believe that the Condensed set of Consolidated
Financial Statements in the half-yearly financial report for the
six months ended 30 June 2017 is not prepared, in all material
respects, in accordance with International Accounting Standard 34
as adopted by the European Union and the Disclosure and
Transparency Rules of the United Kingdom's Financial Conduct
Authority.
Deloitte LLP
Statutory Auditor
London, UK
24 July 2017
CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED INCOME STATEMENT
For the six months ended 30 June 2017
6 months ended 30 June (unaudited)
-------------------------------------------------------------
Adjusting Statutory Adjusted Adjusting Statutory Year ended 31
Adjusted results items results results items results December
2016
2017 2017 2017 2016 2016 2016 (audited)(1)
Notes GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm
--------------- --------- --------- ----------- ----------- ----------- ----------- ----------- --------------
Revenue 3 915.4 - 915.4 647.7 - 647.7 1,344.8
Net operating
expenses (630.5) (102.9) (733.4) (445.6) (60.6) (506.2) (1,147.0)
--------------- --------- --------- ----------- ----------- ----------- ----------- ----------- --------------
Operating
profit/(loss)
before joint
ventures and
associate 284.9 (102.9) 182.0 202.1 (60.6) 141.5 197.8
Share of
results of
joint
ventures and
associate 0.2 - 0.2 0.1 - 0.1 0.8
--------------- --------- --------- ----------- ----------- ----------- ----------- ----------- --------------
Operating
profit/(loss) 285.1 (102.9) 182.2 202.2 (60.6) 141.6 198.6
Loss on
disposal of
subsidiaries
and
operations - (4.7) (4.7) - (25.3) (25.3) (39.8)
Investment
income 5 0.3 - 0.3 0.2 - 0.2 59.5
Finance costs 6 (29.0) - (29.0) (17.6) - (17.6) (40.2)
--------------- --------- --------- ----------- ----------- ----------- ----------- ----------- --------------
Profit/(loss)
before tax 256.4 (107.6) 148.8 184.8 (85.9) 98.9 178.1
Tax (charge) /
credit 7 (55.9) 25.7 (30.2) (33.4) 24.6 (8.8) (4.7)
--------------- --------- --------- ----------- ----------- ----------- ----------- ----------- --------------
Profit/(loss)
for the
period 200.5 (81.9) 118.6 151.4 (61.3) 90.1 173.4
--------------- --------- --------- ----------- ----------- ----------- ----------- ----------- --------------
Attributable to:
- Equity holders of the parent 116.2 89.2 171.5
- Non-controlling interest 2.4 0.9 1.9
------------------------------------- ----------- ----------- ----------- ----------- ----------- --------------
Earnings per share(2)
- Basic (p) 9 24.1 14.1 21.4 12.7 23.6
- Diluted (p) 9 24.0 14.1 21.3 12.6 23.6
--------------- --------- --------- ----------- ----------- ----------- ----------- ----------- --------------
(1) 2016 restated for updates to the fair value of assets acquired and liabilities assumed
for certain acquisitions completed in 2016 (see Note 16).
(2) H1 2016 earnings per share amounts restated to reflect adjustments associated with the
2016 rights issue
All results relate to continuing operations. Adjusting items are
detailed in Note 4.
The notes on pages 25 to 41 are an integral part of these
Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements.
CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF COMPREHENSIVE INCOME
For the six months ended 30 June 2017
6 months 6 months
ended ended Year ended
30 June 30 June 31 December
2017 2016 2016
(restated)
(unaudited) (unaudited) (1)
GBPm GBPm GBPm
-------------------------------------- --- ------------- ------------- ------------
Profit for the period 118.6 90.1 173.4
Items that will not be
reclassified subsequently
to profit or loss:
Actuarial gain/(loss) on
defined benefit pension
schemes 10.2 (11.6) (14.3)
Tax relating to items that
will not be reclassified
to profit or loss (2.3) 2.3 2.0
------------------------------------------- ------------- ------------- ------------
Total items that will not
be reclassified subsequently
to profit or loss 7.9 (9.3) (12.3)
Items that may be reclassified
subsequently to profit
or loss:
Exchange (loss)/gain on
translation of foreign
operations (101.7) 151.8 270.2
Exchange gain/(loss) on
net investment hedge debt
and non controlling interest 31.3 (77.5) (162.2)
Total items that may be
reclassified subsequently
to profit or loss (70.4) 74.3 108.0
Other comprehensive (expense)/income
for the period (62.5) 65.0 95.7
------------------------------------------- ------------- ------------- ------------
Total comprehensive income
for the period 56.1 155.1 269.1
------------------------------------------- ------------- ------------- ------------
Total comprehensive income
attributable to:
- Equity holders of the
parent 53.6 154.3 267.4
- Non-controlling interest 2.5 0.8 1.7
------------------------------------------- ------------- ------------- ------------
(1) 2016 restated for updates to the fair value
of assets acquired and liabilities assumed for certain
acquisitions completed in 2016 (See Note 16).
The notes on pages 25 to 41 are an integral part of these
Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements.
CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN EQUITY
For the six months ended 30 June 2017 (unaudited)
Share
Share premium Translation Other Retained Non-controlling Total
capital account reserve reserves earnings Total(1) interest equity
GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm
------------------- --------- --------- ------------ ---------- ---------- --------- ---------------- --------
At 1 January
2017 as
previously
reported 0.8 905.3 74.1 (1,570.8) 2,777.4 2,186.8 1.2 2,188.0
Restatement - - (0.1) - (0.1) (0.2) - (0.2)
------------------- --------- --------- ------------ ---------- ---------- --------- ---------------- --------
At 1 January
2017 Restated 0.8 905.3 74.0 (1,570.8) 2,777.3 2,186.6 1.2 2,187.8
------------------- --------- --------- ------------ ---------- ---------- --------- ---------------- --------
Profit for
the period - - - - 116.2 116.2 2.4 118.6
Exchange loss
on translation
of foreign
operations - - (101.8) - - (101.8) 0.1 (101.7)
Exchange gain
on net investment
hedge debt - - 31.3 - - 31.3 - 31.3
Actuarial
gain on defined
benefit pension
schemes - - - - 10.2 10.2 - 10.2
Tax relating
to components
of other
comprehensive
income - - - - (2.3) (2.3) - (2.3)
------------------- --------- --------- ------------ ---------- ---------- --------- ---------------- --------
Total
comprehensive
income for
the period - - (70.5) - 124.1 53.6 2.5 56.1
Dividends
to shareholders
(Note 8) - - - - (107.4) (107.4) - (107.4)
Dividend to
Non-controlling
interests - - - - - - (2.0) (2.0)
Share award
expense - - - 2.4 - 2.4 - 2.4
Own shares
purchased - - - (0.4) - (0.4) - (0.4)
Transfer of
vested LTIPs - - - (0.9) 0.9 - - -
At 30 June
2017 0.8 905.3 3.5 (1,569.7) 2,794.9 2,134.8 1.7 2,136.5
------------------- --------- --------- ------------ ---------- ---------- --------- ---------------- --------
(1) Total attributable to equity holders of the parent
For the six months ended 30 June 2016 (unaudited)
Share
Share premium Translation Other Retained Non-controlling Total
capital account reserve reserves earnings Total(1) interest equity
GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm
------------------- --------- --------- ------------ ---------- ---------- --------- ---------------- --------
At 1 January
2016 0.6 204.0 (34.2) (1,652.8) 2,748.4 1,266.0 2.1 1,268.1
------------------- --------- --------- ------------ ---------- ---------- --------- ---------------- --------
Profit for
the period - - - - 89.2 89.2 0.9 90.1
Exchange gain
on translation
of foreign
operations - - 151.9 - - 151.9 (0.1) 151.8
Exchange loss
on net investment
hedge debt - - (77.5) - - (77.5) - (77.5)
Actuarial loss
on defined
benefit pension
schemes - - - - (11.6) (11.6) - (11.6)
Tax relating
to components
of other
comprehensive
income - - - - 2.3 2.3 - 2.3
------------------- --------- --------- ------------ ---------- ---------- --------- ---------------- --------
Total
comprehensive
income for
the period - - 74.4 - 79.9 154.3 0.8 155.1
Dividends to
shareholders
(Note 8) - - - - (87.9) (87.9) - (87.9)
Dividend to
Non-controlling
interests - - - - - - (0.9) (0.9)
Share award
expense - - - 1.3 - 1.3 - 1.3
Own shares
purchased - - - (0.2) - (0.2) - (0.2)
Transfer of
vested LTIPs - - - (1.4) 1.4 - - -
------------------- --------- --------- ------------ ---------- ---------- --------- ---------------- --------
At 30 June
2016 0.6 204.0 40.2 (1,653.1) 2,741.8 1,333.5 2.0 1,335.5
------------------- --------- --------- ------------ ---------- ---------- --------- ---------------- --------
(1) Total attributable to equity holders of the parent
The notes on pages 25 to 41 are an integral part of these
Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements.
CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN EQUITY
(CONTINUED)
For the twelve months ended 31 December 2016 (audited)
Share
Share premium Translation Other Retained Non-controlling Total
capital account reserve(2) reserves earnings(2) Total(1,2) interest equity(2)
GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm
----------------- -------- -------- ------------ ---------- ------------ ----------- ---------------- ----------
At 1 January
2016 0.6 204.0 (34.2) (1,652.8) 2,748.4 1,266.0 2.1 1,268.1
----------------- -------- -------- ------------ ---------- ------------ ----------- ---------------- ----------
Profit for the
year - - - - 171.5 171.5 1.9 173.4
Exchange gain
on translation
of foreign
operations - - 270.4 - - 270.4 (0.2) 270.2
Exchange loss
on net
investment
hedge debt - - (162.2) - - (162.2) - (162.2)
Actuarial gain
on defined
benefit
pension schemes - - - - (14.3) (14.3) - (14.3)
Tax relating
to components
of other
comprehensive
income - - - - 2.0 2.0 - 2.0
----------------- -------- -------- ------------ ---------- ------------ ----------- ---------------- ----------
Total
comprehensive
income for the
year - - 108.2 - 159.2 267.4 1.7 269.1
Dividends to
shareholders
(Note 8) - - - - (131.9) (131.9) - (131.9)
Dividends to
non-controlling
interests - - - - - - (2.6) (2.6)
Shares issued 0.2 701.3 - 82.2 - 783.7 - 783.7
Share award
expense - - - 3.9 - 3.9 - 3.9
Own shares
purchased - - - (1.0) - (1.0) - (1.0)
Transfer of
vested LTIPs - - - (1.6) 1.6 - - -
Put option on
acquisition
of
non-controlling
interests - - - (1.5) - (1.5) - (1.5)
----------------- -------- -------- ------------ ---------- ------------ ----------- ---------------- ----------
At 31 December
2016 (restated) 0.8 905.3 74.0 (1,570.8) 2,777.3 2,186.6 1.2 2,187.8
----------------- -------- -------- ------------ ---------- ------------ ----------- ---------------- ----------
(1) Total attributable to equity holders of the parent
(2) 31 December 2016 restated for updates to the fair value of
assets acquired and liabilities assumed for certain acquisitions
completed in 2016 (see Note 16).
The notes on pages 25 to 41 are an integral part of these
Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements.
CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEET
As at 30 June 2017
30 June 30 June 31 December
2017 2016(1) 2016(1)
(unaudited) (unaudited) (audited)
Notes GBPm GBPm GBPm
Non-current assets
Goodwill 2,660.1 1,839.2 2,699.5
Other intangible assets 1,761.7 1,041.9 1,802.1
Property and equipment 25.9 16.6 24.1
Investments in joint ventures and Associate 1.6 0.8 1.5
Investments 1.6 1.5 1.6
Deferred tax assets 11.7 - 13.0
Other receivables 0.4 15.4 0.5
4,463.0 2,915.4 4,542.3
-------------------------------------------------------------- ------ ------------- ------------- ------------
Current assets
Inventory 53.1 52.3 52.4
Trade and other receivables 376.3 286.0 356.2
Current tax asset 31.1 3.6 31.1
Cash at bank and in hand 11 43.5 51.4 49.6
Assets classified as held for sale 21.4 - -
525.4 393.3 489.3
-------------------------------------------------------------- ------ ------------- ------------- ------------
Total assets 4,988.4 3,308.7 5,031.6
-------------------------------------------------------------- ------ ------------- ------------- ------------
Current liabilities
Borrowings 12 (475.1) (2.0) (174.9)
Current tax liabilities (30.0) (26.4) (30.0)
Provisions (18.3) (31.9) (34.4)
Trade and other payables (242.8) (205.8) (246.5)
Deferred income (489.1) (384.3) (563.0)
Liabilities directly associated with assets classified as
held for sale (17.6) - -
(1,272.9) (650.4) (1,048.8)
-------------------------------------------------------------- ------ ------------- ------------- ------------
Non-current liabilities
Borrowings 12 (1,134.8) (1,104.7) (1,360.3)
Deferred tax liabilities (355.9) (186.4) (349.0)
Retirement benefit obligation (27.6) (15.6) (38.0)
Provisions (25.3) (9.5) (11.8)
Non-current tax liabilities (8.3) - (8.3)
Trade and other payables (27.1) (6.6) (27.6)
-------------------------------------------------------------- ------ ------------- ------------- ------------
(1,579.0) (1,322.8) (1,795.0)
-------------------------------------------------------------- ------ ------------- ------------- ------------
Total liabilities (2,851.9) (1,973.2) (2,843.8)
-------------------------------------------------------------- ------ ------------- ------------- ------------
Net assets 2,136.5 1,335.5 2,187.8
-------------------------------------------------------------- ------ ------------- ------------- ------------
Equity
Share capital 10 0.8 0.6 0.8
Share premium account 905.3 204.0 905.3
Translation reserve 3.5 40.2 74.0
Other reserves (1,569.7) (1,653.1) (1,570.8)
Retained earnings 2,794.9 2,741.8 2,777.3
-------------------------------------------------------------- ------ ------------- ------------- ------------
Equity attributable to equity holders of the parent 2,134.8 1,333.5 2,186.6
Non-controlling interest 1.7 2.0 1.2
-------------------------------------------------------------- ------ ------------- ------------- ------------
Total equity 2,136.5 1,335.5 2,187.8
-------------------------------------------------------------- ------ ------------- ------------- ------------
(1) 30 June 2016 and 31 December 2016 restated for updates to the valuation of the separately
identifiable intangible assets of certain acquisitions completed in
2016 (see Note 16).
The notes on pages 25 to 41 are an integral part of these Condensed Consolidated Financial
Statements.
The Board of Directors approved these Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements on 24 July
2017.
CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED CASH FLOW STATEMENT
For the six months ended 30 June 2017
6 months 6 months
ended ended Year ended
30 June 30 June 31 December
2017 2016 2016
(unaudited) (unaudited) (audited)
Notes GBPm GBPm GBPm
------------------------------------ ------ ------------- ------------- ------------
Operating activities
Cash generated by operations 11 184.1 137.7 415.2
Income taxes paid (29.0) (27.7) (43.3)
Interest paid (22.8) (16.6) (35.6)
Net cash inflow from operating
activities 132.3 93.4 336.3
------------------------------------ ------ ------------- ------------- ------------
Investing activities
Interest received 0.3 0.2 0.6
Purchase of property and
equipment (5.5) (1.8) (4.6)
Proceeds on disposal of
property and equipment 0.4 0.2 0.6
Purchase of intangible
software assets (28.9) (19.4) (36.5)
Product development cost (7.0) (4.9) (11.5)
Purchase of intangible
assets related to titles,
brands and customer relationships (13.0) (30.9) (54.5)
Acquisition of subsidiaries
and operations, net of
cash acquired (127.9) (20.2) (1,294.2)
Cash inflow/(outflow)
on disposal of subsidiaries
and operations 4.4 (2.1) (4.1)
Proceeds/(cash outflow)
from disposal of other
intangible assets 0.2 (0.3) 1.6
Net cash outflow from
investing activities (177.0) (79.2) (1,402.6)
------------------------------------ ------ ------------- ------------- ------------
Financing activities
Dividends paid to Shareholders 8 (106.7) (86.8) (131.9)
Dividends paid to non-controlling
interests (2.0) (0.9) (2.6)
Proceeds from settlement
of acquisition-related
derivative forward contract - - 58.9
Repayment of loans (1,062.5) (366.9) (1,455.9)
New loan advances 1,217.2 452.6 1,888.9
Borrowing fees paid (0.9) - (2.1)
Cash inflow on other loans 0.2 - 0.2
Rights Issue net proceeds - - 701.5
Cash outflow from the
purchase of share capital (0.4) (0.2) (1.0)
Net cash inflow/(outflow)
from financing activities 44.9 (2.2) 1,056.0
------------------------------------ ------ ------------- ------------- ------------
Net increase/(decrease)
in cash and cash equivalents 0.2 12.0 (10.3)
Effect of foreign exchange
rate changes (1.9) 5.1 18.2
Cash and cash equivalents
at beginning of the year 40.2 32.3 32.3
Cash and cash equivalents
at end of period 11 38.5 49.4 40.2
------------------------------------ ------ ------------- ------------- ------------
The notes on pages 25 to 41 are an integral part of these
Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements.
RECONCILIATION OF MOVEMENT IN NET DEBT
For the six months ended 30 June 2017
Year
6 months ended 6 months ended ended
30 June 30 June 31 December
2017 2016 2016
(unaudited) (unaudited) (audited)
Notes GBPm GBPm GBPm
Increase in cash and cash equivalents in the period 0.2 12.0 (10.3)
Cash flows from net draw-down of borrowings (154.0) (85.7) (431.1)
----------------------------------------------------- ------ --------------- --------------- ------------
Change in net debt resulting from cash flows 11 (153.8) (73.7) (441.4)
Other non-cash movements including foreign exchange 11 72.8 (85.9) (148.7)
----------------------------------------------------- ------ --------------- --------------- ------------
Movement in net debt in the period (81.0) (159.6) (590.1)
Net debt at beginning of the period 11 (1,485.4) (895.3) (895.3)
----------------------------------------------------- ------ --------------- --------------- ------------
Net debt at end of the period 11 (1,566.4) (1,054.9) (1,485.4)
----------------------------------------------------- ------ --------------- --------------- ------------
The notes on pages 25 to 41 are an integral part of these
Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements.
Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements
For the six months ended 30 June 2017
1. General information and basis of preparation
Informa PLC (the 'Company') is a company incorporated in the
United Kingdom under the Companies Act 2006 and is listed on the
London Stock Exchange. The Company is a public company limited by
shares and is registered in England and Wales with registration
number 08860726. The address of the registered office is 5 Howick
Place, London, SW1P 1WG.
The unaudited Condensed set of Consolidated Financial Statements
as at 30 June 2017 and for the six months then ended comprise those
of the Company and its subsidiaries and its interests in joint
ventures and associate (together referred to as the 'Group').
These Condensed set of Consolidated Financial Statements were
approved for issue by the Board of directors on 24 July 2017 and
have been prepared in accordance with International Accounting
Standard (IAS) 34 Interim Financial Reporting, as adopted by the
European Union.
The Condensed set of Consolidated Financial Statements has been
prepared on a going concern basis, as outlined on page 15, and does
not constitute the Group's statutory financial statements within
the meaning of section 434 of the Companies Act 2006. The Condensed
set of Consolidated Financial Statements should be read in
conjunction with the Annual Report and audited Financial Statements
for the year ended 31 December 2016, which have been prepared in
accordance with International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRSs)
as adopted by the European Union.
The Group's most recent statutory financial statements, which
comprise the Annual Report and audited Financial Statements for the
year ended 31 December 2016, were approved by the Directors on 5
March 2017 and delivered to the Registrar of Companies. The
Auditor's Report on those accounts was not qualified, did not
include a reference to any matters to which the auditors drew
attention by way of emphasis without qualifying the report and did
not contain statements under section 498 of the Companies Act 2006.
The Consolidated Financial Statements of the Group as at, and for
the year ended, 31 December 2016 is available upon request from the
Company's registered office at 5 Howick Place, London, SW1P 1WG,
United Kingdom or at www.informa.com.
2. Accounting policies and estimates
The accounting policies, significant judgements and key sources
of estimation adopted in the preparation of the Condensed set of
Consolidated Financial Statements are consistent with those applied
by the Group in its Consolidated Financial Statements for the year
ended 31 December 2016 except for the adoption of new standards and
interpretations effective as of 1 January 2017 listed below.
-- Amendments to IAS 12: Recognition of Deferred Tax Assets for
Unrealised losses - not yet EU endorsed, effective from 1 January
2017;
-- Amendments to IAS 7: Disclosure Initiative - not yet EU
endorsed, effective from 1 January 2017;
-- Annual improvements to IFRSs: 2014-2016 cycle - not yet EU
endorsed, specific items effective from 1 January 2017.
The adoption of these standards and interpretations has not led
to any changes to the Group's accounting policies or had any other
material impact on the financial position or performance of the
group. Other amendments to IFRSs effective for the period ending 30
June 2017 have no impact on the group.
The preparation of the Condensed set of Consolidated Financial
Statements requires management to make judgements, estimates and
assumptions that affect the application of accounting policies and
the reported amounts of assets and liabilities, income and expense.
Actual results may differ from these estimates.
In preparing these Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements,
the significant judgements made by management in applying the
Group's accounting policies and the key sources of estimation
uncertainty were the same as those applied to the consolidated
financial statements as at and for the year ended 31 December
2016.
Taxes on income in the interim periods are accrued using the tax
rate that would be applicable to the expected total annual profit
or loss.
Financial risk management and financial instruments
The Group has exposure to the following risks from its use of
financial instruments:
-- Capital risk management
-- Market risk
-- Credit risk
-- Liquidity risk
The Condensed set of Consolidated Financial Statements do not
include all financial risk management information and disclosures
required in the annual financial statements; they should be read in
conjunction with the Group's annual statutory Financial Statements
as at 31 December 2016.
There have been no material changes in the risk management
policies or the principal risks and uncertainties affecting the
business activities since the year end.
3. Business segments
Management has identified reportable segments based on financial
information used by the Executive Directors in allocating resources
and making strategic decisions. We consider the Chief Operating
Decision Maker to be the Executive Directors.
The Group's four identified reporting segments under IFRS 8
Operating Segments are described in the Operational Review. The
operating segments for the year ended 31 December 2016 have been
restated to integrate the results of the previously reported Penton
segment into the relevant Global Exhibitions, Business Intelligence
and Knowledge and Networking segments (see Note 16).
The results of the Group's Global Exhibitions and Knowledge
& Networking Divisions are impacted by the seasonality of
exhibitions and conferences held in each accounting period.
Segment revenue and results
6 months ended 30 June 2017 (unaudited):
AP BI GE K&N Total
GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm
Revenue 238.9 187.6 342.8 146.1 915.4
-------------------------------------------------------------------- ------- ------- ------- ------ -------
Adjusted operating profit before joint ventures and associate 85.5 37.5 144.8 17.1 284.9
Share of adjusted results of joint ventures and associate - - - 0.2 0.2
Adjusted operating profit 85.5 37.5 144.8 17.3 285.1
Intangible asset amortisation (Note 4)(1) (25.2) (12.4) (32.7) (9.1) (79.4)
Impairment of goodwill and intangible assets (Note 4) (2.0) (0.8) - - (2.8)
Acquisition and integration costs (Note 4) (0.2) (1.9) (9.4) (0.6) (12.1)
Restructuring and reorganisation costs
(Note 4) - (4.0) (1.8) (2.8) (8.6)
Operating profit 58.1 18.4 100.9 4.8 182.2
Loss on disposal of businesses (4.7)
Investment income 0.3
Finance costs (29.0)
Profit before tax 148.8
-------------------------------------------------------------------- ------- ------- ------- ------ -------
(1) Excludes software and product development amortisation.
6 months ended 30 June 2016 (unaudited):
AP BI GE K&N Group Total
GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm
--------------------------------------------------------------- ------- ------ ------- ------ ------ -------
Revenue 214.7 134.6 192.9 105.5 - 647.7
--------------------------------------------------------------- ------- ------ ------- ------ ------ -------
Adjusted operating profit before joint ventures and associate 72.9 26.9 88.4 13.9 - 202.1
Share of adjusted results of joint ventures and associate - - (0.1) 0.2 - 0.1
Adjusted operating profit 72.9 26.9 88.3 14.1 - 202.2
Intangible asset amortisation(1) (24.0) (7.9) (15.3) (4.0) - (51.2)
Impairment of goodwill and intangible assets - - (2.3) - - (2.3)
Acquisition and integration costs - - (2.0) - (4.5) (6.5)
Restructuring and reorganisation costs (0.7) (1.1) 0.3 (1.1) - (2.6)
Subsequent re-measurement of contingent consideration - - 2.4 (0.4) - 2.0
--------------------------------------------------------------- ------- ------ ------- ------ ------ -------
Operating profit/(loss) 48.2 17.9 71.4 8.6 (4.5) 141.6
Loss on disposal of businesses (25.3)
Investment income 0.2
Finance costs (17.6)
Profit before tax 98.9
--------------------------------------------------------------- ------- ------ ------- ------ ------ -------
(1) Excludes software and product development amortisation.
Year ended 31 December 2016 (audited):
AP BI GE K&N Total
-------------------------------------------------------
GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm(1)
------------------------------------------------------- ------- ------- ------- ------- --------
Revenue 490.4 302.4 321.1 230.9 1,344.8
------------------------------------------------------- ------- ------- ------- ------- --------
Adjusted operating profit before JVs and associate 187.2 70.5 118.7 38.4 414.8
Share of adjusted results of JVs and associate - - 0.8 - 0.8
------------------------------------------------------- ------- ------- ------- ------- --------
Adjusted operating profit 187.2 70.5 119.5 38.4 415.6
Intangible asset amortisation(2) (48.2) (19.6) (38.0) (10.6) (116.4)
Impairment of goodwill and intangible assets - - (31.1) (36.6) (67.7)
Acquisition and integration costs (0.4) (6.8) (22.9) (3.0) (33.1)
Restructuring and reorganisation costs (3.6) (1.8) (0.1) (1.7) (7.2)
Subsequent re-measurement of contingent consideration - 2.4 5.0 - 7.4
------------------------------------------------------- ------- ------- ------- ------- --------
Operating profit/(loss) 135.0 44.7 32.4 (13.5) 198.6
Loss on disposal of businesses (39.8)
Investment income 59.5
Finance costs (40.2)
------------------------------------------------------- ------- ------- ------- ------- --------
Profit before tax 178.1
------------------------------------------------------- ------- ------- ------- ------- --------
(1) 2016 restated for updates to the fair value of assets
acquired and liabilities assumed for certain acquisitions completed
in 2016 and the reallocation of the former Penton segment to BI, GE
and K&N segments (see Note 16)
(2) Excludes software and product development amortisation.
4. Adjusting items
Management presents adjusted results and adjusted earnings per
share (Note 9) to provide additional useful information on
performance and trends to Shareholders. These measures are used for
internal performance analysis and incentive compensation
arrangements for employees. The term 'adjusted' is non-GAAP measure
and is not a defined term under IFRS, and may not therefore be
comparable with similarly titled profit measurements reported by
other companies. It is not intended to be a substitute for, or
superior to, IFRS measurements of profit.
The following charges/(credits) are presented as adjusting
items:
6 months ended 6 months ended Year ended
30 June 30 June 31 December
2017 2016 2016(1)
(unaudited) (unaudited) (audited)
GBPm GBPm GBPm
------------------------------------------------------- --- --------------- --------------- ------------
Intangible amortisation and impairment
Intangible asset amortisation 79.4 51.2 116.4
Impairment - goodwill 0.8 0.4 65.8
Impairment - other intangible asset 2.0 1.9 1.9
Acquisition and integration costs 12.1 6.5 33.1
Restructuring and reorganisation costs
Redundancy and reorganisation costs 2.5 2.7 5.6
Vacant property costs 6.1 (0.1) 1.6
Subsequent re-measurement of contingent consideration - (2.0) (7.4)
------------------------------------------------------------ --------------- --------------- ------------
Adjusting items in operating profit 102.9 60.6 217.0
Loss on disposal of subsidiaries and operations 4.7 25.3 39.8
Investment income - - (58.9)
Adjusting items in profit before tax 107.6 85.9 197.9
Tax related to adjusting items (25.7) (24.6) (63.1)
------------------------------------------------------------ --------------- --------------- ------------
Adjusting items in profit for the period 81.9 61.3 134.8
------------------------------------------------------------ --------------- --------------- ------------
(1) Adjusting items for the year ended 31 December 2016 restated
for updates to the valuation of the separately identifiable
intangible assets of certain acquisitions completed in 2016 (see
Note 16).
The principal adjustments made are in respect of:
-- Intangible asset amortisation - the amortisation charge in
respect of intangible assets acquired through business combinations
or the acquisition of trade and assets is excluded from adjusted
results as they do not relate to underlying trading;
-- Impairment - the Group tests for impairment on an annual
basis or more frequently when an indicator exists. Impairment
charges are individually disclosed and are excluded from adjusted
results as they do not relate to underlying trading;
-- Acquisition and integration costs - the costs incurred by the
Group in acquiring and integrating share and asset
acquisitions;
-- Restructuring and reorganisation costs - these costs are
incurred by the Group in business restructuring and changing the
operating model to align with the Group's revised strategy, the
Growth Acceleration Plan;
-- Subsequent re-measurement of contingent consideration is
recognised in the period as a charge or credit to the consolidated
Income Statement unless these qualify as measurement period
adjustments arising within one year from the acquisition date. They
are excluded from adjusted results as they do not relate to
underlying trading;
-- Investment income of GBP58.9m in the year ended 31 December
2016 related to the gain on a financial derivative contract
associated with the Penton acquisition and was disclosed as an
adjusting item as it is non-recurring in nature;
-- Loss on disposal of subsidiaries and operations - the loss on
disposal includes the fair value of consideration less the net
assets/(liabilities) disposed, non-controlling interest and costs
directly attributable with the disposal. In H1 2017 this includes
GBP4.4m from the disposal on 13 June 2017 of the Lloyds List
Australia business; and
-- The tax related to adjusting items is the tax effect of the
items above.
5. investment income
Year
6 months ended 6 months ended ended
30 June 30 June 31 December
2017 2016 2016
(unaudited) (unaudited) (audited)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
GBPm GBPm GBPm
---------------------------------------------------------------------- --------------- --------------- ------------
Investment income:
Interest income on bank deposits 0.3 0.2 0.6
Fair value gain on financial instruments through the income statement - - 58.9
0.3 0.2 59.5
---------------------------------------------------------------------- --------------- --------------- ------------
6. finance costs
Year
6 months ended 6 months ended ended
30 June 30 June 31 December
2017 2016 2016
(unaudited) (unaudited) (audited)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
GBPm GBPm GBPm
---------------------------------------------------------------------- --------------- --------------- ------------
Interest expense on financial liabilities measured at amortised cost 28.3 17.3 39.5
Interest cost on pension scheme liabilities 0.6 0.1 0.2
---------------------------------------------------------------------- --------------- --------------- ------------
Total interest expense 28.9 17.4 39.7
Fair value loss on financial instruments through the income statement 0.1 0.2 0.5
29.0 17.6 40.2
---------------------------------------------------------------------- --------------- --------------- ------------
The finance costs for the period reflect an average interest
rate of 3.7% on borrowings (30 June 2016: 3.3%, 31 December 2016:
4.1%).
7. Taxation
The tax charge comprises:
Year
6 months ended 6 months ended ended
30 June 30 June 31 December
2017 2016 2016
(unaudited) (unaudited) (audited) (1)
---------------------------------------------------
GBPm GBPm GBPm
--------------------------------------------------- --------------- --------------- ---------------
Current tax 26.6 24.0 24.0
Deferred tax 3.6 (15.2) (19.3)
Total tax charge on profit on ordinary activities 30.2 8.8 4.7
--------------------------------------------------- --------------- --------------- ---------------
(1) Current and deferred taxation for the year ended 31 December
2016 restated (see Note 16)
The tax charge has been accrued for the period using the
estimated average annual effective tax rate of 21.8% (30 June 2016:
18.1%, 31 December 2016: 18.1%). This is based on the weighted
average tax rate expected for the year on adjusted profit before
tax.
8. Dividends
Year
6 months ended 6 months ended ended
30 June 30 June 31 December
2017 2016 2016
(unaudited) (unaudited) (audited)
GBPm GBPm GBPm
---------------------------------------------------- ---- --------------- --------------- ------------
Amounts recognised as distributions to equity
holders in the period:
Final dividend for 2015 of 12.47p per share (previously
stated 13.55p) - 87.8 87.8
Interim dividend for 2016 of 6.26p per share (previously
stated 6.80p) - - 44.1
Final dividend for 2016 of 13.04p per share 107.4 - -
---------------------------------------------------- ---- --------------- --------------- ------------
107.4 87.8 131.9
---- --------------- --------------- ------------
Proposed (not recognised as a liability at the end
of the period)
Interim dividend for 2016 of 6.26p per share
(previously stated 6.80p) - 44.1 -
Final dividend for 2016 of 13.04p per share - - 107.5
Interim dividend for 2017 of 6.65p per share 54.8 - -
---------------------------------------------------------- --------------- --------------- ------------
As at 30 June 2017 GBP0.8m (30 June 2016: GBP1.1m and 31
December 2016: GBP0.1m) of dividends are still to be paid.
The proposed interim dividend for the six months ended 30 June
2017 of 6.65 pence per share amounting to GBP54.8m has been
approved by the Board and will be paid on 15 September 2017 to
ordinary shareholders registered as at the close of business on 11
August 2017. This has not been included as a liability as at 30
June 2017.
9. Earnings per share (EPS)
Basic EPS
The basic earnings per share (EPS) calculation is based on a
profit attributable to equity Shareholders of the parent of
GBP116.2m (30 June 2016: GBP89.2m and 31 December 2016 restated
amount: GBP171.5m). This profit on ordinary activities after
taxation is divided by the weighted average number of shares in
issue (less those shares held by the Employee Share Trust and
ShareMatch) which is 823,340,602 (30 June 2016: 704,164,514
restated and 31 December 2016: 725,629,255).
Diluted EPS
The diluted EPS calculation is based on the basic EPS
calculation above, except that the weighted average number of
shares includes all potentially dilutive options granted by the
reporting date as if those options had been exercised on the first
day of the accounting period or the date of the grant, if later,
giving a weighted average of 825,989,394 (30 June 2016: 706,294,723
restated and 31 December 2016: 727,826,695).
The table below sets out the adjustment in respect of dilutive
potential Ordinary Shares:
6 months ended 6 months ended Year ended
30 June 30 June 31 December
2017 2016(1) 2016
(unaudited) (unaudited) (audited)
------------------------------------------------------------------- --------------- --------------- ------------
Weighted average number of shares used in basic EPS calculation 823,340,602 704,164,514 725,629,255
Effect of dilutive potential ordinary shares 2,648,792 2,130,209 2,197,440
Weighted average number of shares used in diluted EPS calculation 825,989,394 706,294,723 727,826,695
------------------------------------------------------------------- --------------- --------------- ------------
(1) Restated for bonus element of 2016 rights issue (see Note 16)
9. Earnings per share (EPS) (Continued)
Earnings per share: 6 months ended 6 months ended Year ended
30 June 2017 (unaudited) 30 June 2016 (unaudited) 31 December 2016 (audited)
Earnings Per share amount Earnings Per share amount Earnings Per share amount
GBPm Pence GBPm Pence(1) GBPm(2) Pence
--------------------------- --------- ----------------- --------- ----------------- ---------- -----------------
Profit for the period 118.6 90.1 173.4
Non-controlling interest (2.4) (0.9) (1.9)
--------------------------- --------- ----------------- --------- ----------------- ---------- -----------------
Earnings for the purpose
of statutory basic EPS/
statutory basic EPS (p) 116.2 14.1 89.2 12.7 171.5 23.6
Effect of dilutive
potential ordinary shares - - - (0.1) - -
--------------------------- --------- ----------------- --------- ----------------- ---------- -----------------
Earnings for the purpose
of statutory diluted EPS/
diluted EPS (p) 116.2 14.1 89.2 12.6 171.5 23.6
--------------------------- --------- ----------------- --------- ----------------- ---------- -----------------
(1) Earnings per share for 6 months ended 30 June 2016 restated
for bonus element of 2016 rights issue (see Note 16).
(2) Earnings for the year ended 31 December 2016 restated (see
Note 16)
Adjusted EPS
The basic and diluted adjusted EPS calculations have been made
to provide additional useful information on the underlying
performance. Profits are based on operations attributable to equity
Shareholders and are adjusted to exclude items that in the opinion
of the Directors would distort underlying results, with those items
detailed in Note 4.
Adjusted earnings per share: 6 months ended 6 months ended Year ended
30 June 2017 30 June 2016(1) 31 December 2016(1)
(unaudited) (unaudited) (audited)
Per share Per share Per share
Earnings amount Earnings amount Earnings(2) amount
GBPm Pence GBPm Pence GBPm Pence
-------------------------------- --------- --------------- --------- --------------- ------------ --------------
Earnings for the purpose of
basic EPS/ statutory basic EPS
(p) 116.2 14.1 89.2 12.7 171.5 23.6
Adjusting items:
Restructuring and
reorganisation costs 8.6 1.0 2.6 0.4 7.2 1.0
Acquisition and integration
costs 12.1 1.5 6.5 0.9 33.1 4.6
Intangible amortisation and
impairment 82.2 10.0 53.5 7.6 184.1 25.4
Subsequent re-measurement of
contingent consideration - - (2.0) (0.3) (7.4) (1.0)
Loss on disposal and other
adjusting items 4.7 0.6 25.3 3.6 39.8 5.4
Investment income - - - (58.9) (8.1)
Add back tax on adjusting items (25.7) (3.1) (24.6) (3.5) (63.1) (8.7)
-------------------------------- --------- --------------- --------- --------------- ------------ --------------
Earnings for the purpose of
adjusted basic EPS/ adjusted
basic EPS (p) 198.1 24.1 150.5 21.4 306.3 42.2
Effect of dilutive potential
ordinary shares - (0.1) - (0.1) - (0.1)
-------------------------------- --------- --------------- --------- --------------- ------------ --------------
Earnings for the purpose of
adjusted diluted EPS/ adjusted
diluted EPS (p) 198.1 24.0 150.5 21.3 306.3 42.1
-------------------------------- --------- --------------- --------- --------------- ------------ --------------
(1) Earnings per share for 6 months ended 30 June 2016 restated
for bonus element of 2016 rights issue (see Note 16).
(2) Earnings for the year ended 31 December 2016 restated (see
Note 16)
10. Capital and reserves
Share capital as at 30 June 2017 amounted to GBP0.8m (30 June
2016: GBP0.6m; 31 December 2016: GBP0.8m).
6 months ended 6 months ended Year ended
30 June 30 June 31 December
2017 2016 2016
(unaudited) (unaudited) (audited)
---------------------------------------------------------------------- --------------- --------------- ------------
At 1 January 824,005,051 648,941,249 648,941,249
Issue of new shares related to the Rights Issue - - 162,234,656
Issue of new shares related to consideration for the Penton
acquisition - - 12,829,146
At 30 June / 31 December 824,005,051 648,941,249 824,005,051
---------------------------------------------------------------------- --------------- --------------- ------------
As at 30 June 2017 the Informa Employee Share Trust held 407,126
(30 June 2016: 547,236; 31 December 2016: 616,187) ordinary shares
in the Company at a cost of GBP407 (30 June 201: GBP547; 31
December 2016: GBP616) and a market value of GBP2.7m (30 June 2016:
GBP4.0m, 31 December 2016: GBP4.2m). As at 30 June 2017 the
ShareMatch scheme held 206,228 (30 June 2016: 110,898; 31 December
2016: 179,089) ordinary shares in the Company at a market value of
GBP1.4m (30 June 2016: GBP0.7m, 31 December 2016: GBP1.2m).
At 30 June 2017 the Group held 0.1% (30 June 2016: 0.0%; 31
December 2016: 0.1%) of its own called up share capital.
11. Notes to the Cash Flow Statement
6 months ended 6 months ended Year ended
30 June 30 June 31 December
2017 2016 Restated 2016
(unaudited) (unaudited) (audited)
GBPm GBPm GBPm
----------------------------------------------------------- --------------- --------------- --------------
Profit before tax 148.8 98.9 178.1
Adjustments for:
Depreciation of property and equipment 4.7 3.0 6.5
Amortisation of other intangible assets 90.5 57.3 130.6
Impairment - goodwill 0.8 1.9 65.8
Impairment - other intangible assets 2.0 0.4 1.9
Share-based payment 2.4 1.3 3.9
Subsequent re-measurement of contingent consideration (2.0) (7.4)
Loss on disposal of businesses 4.7 25.3 39.8
Investment income (0.3) (0.2) (59.5)
Finance costs 29.0 17.6 40.2
Share of adjusted results of joint ventures and associate (0.2) (0.1) (0.8)
----------------------------------------------------------- --------------- --------------- --------------
Operating cash inflow before movements in working capital 282.4 203.4 399.1
----------------------------------------------------------- --------------- --------------- --------------
Increase in inventories (1.1) (6.2) (6.8)
Increase in receivables (32.8) (49.6) (64.2)
(Decrease)/increase in payables (64.4) (9.9) 87.1
----------------------------------------------------------- --------------- --------------- --------------
Movements in working capital (98.3) (65.7) 16.1
----------------------------------------------------------- --------------- --------------- --------------
Cash generated by operations 184.1 137.7 415.2
----------------------------------------------------------- --------------- --------------- --------------
11. Notes to the Cash Flow Statement (continued)
Analysis of movement in net debt (unaudited)
At 1 January 2017 Non-cash items Cash flow Exchange movement At 30 June 2017
GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm
------------------------------- ------------------ --------------- ---------- ------------------ ----------------
Cash at bank and in hand 49.6 - (4.0) (2.1) 43.5
Bank overdraft (9.4) - 4.2 0.2 (5.0)
------------------------------- ------------------ --------------- ---------- ------------------ ----------------
Cash and cash equivalents 40.2 - 0.2 (1.9) 38.5
Other loan receivable 0.2 - (0.2) - -
Bank loans due in less than
one year - - (321.6) 13.8 (307.8)
Private placement loan notes
due in less than one year (165.7) - - 3.3 (162.4)
Bank loans due in more than
one year (848.8) - 573.3 9.7 (265.8)
Private placement loan notes
due in more than one year (516.5) - (406.4) 49.1 (873.8)
Bank loan fees 3.7 (0.9) - - 2.8
Private placement fees 1.5 (0.3) 0.9 - 2.1
Net debt (1,485.4) (1.2) (153.8) 74.0 (1,566.4)
------------------------------- ------------------ --------------- ---------- ------------------ ----------------
At 1 January 2016 Non-cash items Cash flow Exchange movement At 30 June 2016
GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm
------------------------------- ------------------ --------------- ---------- ------------------ ----------------
Cash at bank and in hand 34.3 - 11.7 5.4 51.4
Bank overdraft (2.0) - 0.3 (0.3) (2.0)
------------------------------- ------------------ --------------- ---------- ------------------ ----------------
Cash and cash equivalents 32.3 - 12.0 5.1 49.4
Other loan receivable 0.3 - - 0.1 0.4
Bank loans due in more than
one year (359.1) - (85.7) (35.5) (480.3)
Private placement loan notes
due in more than one year (574.6) - - (54.8) (629.4)
Bank loan fees 4.2 (0.6) - - 3.6
Private placement fees 1.6 (0.2) - - 1.4
------------------------------- ------------------ --------------- ---------- ------------------ ----------------
Net debt (895.3) (0.8) (73.7) (85.1) (1,054.9)
------------------------------- ------------------ --------------- ---------- ------------------ ----------------
Analysis of movement in net debt (audited)
At 31 December
At 1 January 2016 Non-cash items Cash flow Exchange movement 2016
GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm
-------------------------------- ------------------ --------------- ---------- ------------------ ---------------
Cash at bank and in hand 34.3 - (3.6) 18.9 49.6
Bank overdraft (2.0) - (6.7) (0.7) (9.4)
-------------------------------- ------------------ --------------- ---------- ------------------ ---------------
Cash and cash equivalents 32.3 - (10.3) 18.2 40.2
Other loan receivable 0.3 - (0.2) 0.1 0.2
Private placement loan notes
due in less than one year - (165.7) - - (165.7)
Bank loans due in more than one
year (359.1) - (433.0) (56.7) (848.8)
Private placement loan notes
due in more than one year (574.6) 165.7 - (107.6) (516.5)
Bank loan fees 4.2 (2.2) 1.7 - 3.7
Private placement fees 1.6 (0.5) 0.4 - 1.5
-------------------------------- ------------------ --------------- ---------- ------------------ ---------------
Net debt (895.3) (2.7) (441.4) (146.0) (1,485.4)
-------------------------------- ------------------ --------------- ---------- ------------------ ---------------
Included within the cash outflow of GBP153.8m is GBP154.7m of
net loan draw-downs (6 months ended 30 June 2016: GBP85.7m net
draw-downs, year ended 31 December 2016: GBP433.0m net
drawdowns).
The movement on non-cash items arises from amortisation of bank
facility fees of GBP1.2m (6 months ended 30 June 2016: GBP0.8m,
year ended 31 December 2016: GBP2.7m).
12. Borrowings
The Group had GBP2.4bn of committed facilities at 30 June 2017
(GBP1.5bn at 30 2016 and GBP2.3bn at 31 December 2016), see Finance
Review for further details.
The total borrowings are as follows:
At At
30 June 30 June At 31 December
2017 2016 2016
(unaudited) (unaudited) (audited)
----------------------------------------------------------------
GBPm GBPm GBPm
---------------------------------------------------------------- ------------- ------------- ---------------
Current
Bank overdraft 5.0 2.0 9.4
Bank borrowings ($400.0m) - due March 2018 307.8 - -
Bank borrowings - current 312.8 2.0 9.4
---------------------------------------------------------------- ------------- ------------- ---------------
Private placement loan note ($102.0m) - due December 2017 78.5 - 82.9
Private placement loan note (EUR50.0m) - due December 2017 43.9 - 42.8
Private placement loan note (GBP40.0m) - due December 2017 40.0 - 40.0
Private placement fees (0.1) - (0.2)
---------------------------------------------------------------- ------------- ------------- ---------------
Private placement - current 162.3 - 165.5
---------------------------------------------------------------- ------------- ------------- ---------------
Total current borrowings 475.1 2.0 174.9
---------------------------------------------------------------- ------------- ------------- ---------------
Non-current
Bank borrowings - revolving credit facility - due October 2020 265.8 480.3 300.2
Acquisition facility - due March 2018 - - 548.6
Bank borrowing fees (2.8) (3.6) (3.7)
---------------------------------------------------------------- ------------- ------------- ---------------
Bank borrowings - non-current 263.0 476.7 845.1
---------------------------------------------------------------- ------------- ------------- ---------------
Private placement loan note ($102.0m) - due December 2017 - 75.8 -
Private placement loan note (EUR50.0m) - due December 2017 - 41.3 -
Private placement loan note (GBP40.0m) - due December 2017 - 40.0 -
Private placement loan note ($385.5m) - due December 2020 296.7 286.5 313.3
Private placement loan note ($120.0m) - due October 2022 92.3 89.2 97.5
Private placement loan note ($55.0m) - due January 2023 42.3 - -
Private placement loan note ($80.0m) - due January 2025 61.6 - -
Private placement loan note ($130.0m) - due October 2025 100.0 96.6 105.7
Private placement loan note ($365.0m) - due January 2027 280.9 - -
Private placement fees (2.0) (1.4) (1.3)
---------------------------------------------------------------- ------------- ------------- ---------------
Private placement - non-current 871.8 628.0 515.2
---------------------------------------------------------------- ------------- ------------- ---------------
Total non-current borrowings 1,134.8 1,104.7 1,360.3
---------------------------------------------------------------- ------------- ------------- ---------------
Total borrowings 1,609.9 1,106.7 1,535.2
---------------------------------------------------------------- ------------- ------------- ---------------
The principal financial covenant ratios under the private
placement loan notes and revolving credit facility are maximum net
debt to EBITDA of 3.5 times and minimum EBITDA interest cover of
4.0 times, tested semi-annually. During the period there were no
breaches to covenants under the Group's bank facilities and private
placement loan notes. The revolving credit facility bank loans and
the private placement loan notes are guaranteed by material
subsidiaries of the Group.
13. Business combinations
Business combinations made in 6 months ended 30 June 2017
The provisional amounts recognised in respect of the estimated
fair value of identifiable assets and liabilities in respect of
acquisitions made in the 6 months ended 30 June 2017 and payments
made relating to prior year acquisitions was:
Net assets/(liabilities) at acquisition date:
Other payments/
receipts relating to prior year
YPI Other acquisitions acquisitions Total
GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm
--------------------------------------- ------- ------------------- -------------------------------------- -------
Intangible assets 60.8 23.4 - 84.2
Property and equipment 3.3 - - 3.3
Trade and other receivables 2.4 1.3 (4.9) (1.2)
Cash and cash equivalents 0.6 2.0 - 2.6
Trade, other payables and provisions (4.1) (0.7) 10.4 5.6
Deferred income (3.5) (3.0) - (6.5)
Deferred tax liabilities (10.6) - - (10.6)
Identifiable net assets acquired 48.9 23.0 5.5 77.4
Non-controlling interest - 0.3 0.3
Goodwill 62.9 - - 62.9
--------------------------------------- ------- ------------------- -------------------------------------- -------
Total consideration 111.8 23.3 5.5 140.6
--------------------------------------- ------- ------------------- -------------------------------------- -------
Satisfied by:
Cash consideration 111.8 13.2 - 125.0
Deferred and contingent consideration
paid - - 10.4 10.4
Deferred closing price adjustment
received - - (4.9) (4.9)
Deferred and contingent consideration - 10.1 - 10.1
Total consideration 111.8 23.3 5.5 140.6
--------------------------------------- ------- ------------------- --------------------------------------
Net cash outflow arising on
acquisitions:
Cash consideration 111.8 13.2 - 125.0
Deferred and contingent consideration
net paid - - 5.5 5.5
Less: net cash acquired (0.6) (2.0) - (2.6)
--------------------------------------- ------- ------------------- -------------------------------------- -------
Net cash outflow arising on
acquisitions 111.2 11.2 5.5 127.9
--------------------------------------- ------- ------------------- -------------------------------------- -------
Yachting Promotions, Inc.
On 14 March 2017, the group acquired 100% of the issued share
capital of Yachting Promotions, Inc. (YPI) the operator of some of
the largest yachting and boat shows in the US. The Company will
form part of the Global Exhibitions segment.
Total consideration, including payment for working capital, was
GBP111.8m ($139.0m), of which GBP111.2m ($138.3m) was paid in cash,
net of cash acquired of GBP0.6m ($0.7m).
13. Business combinations (continued)
The business contributed GBP0.2m of profit after tax and GBP7.1m
of revenue for the period between the date of acquisition and 30
June 2017. If the acquisition had completed on the first day of the
financial period, it would have contributed GBP1.2m of profit after
tax and GBP15.3m to the revenue of the Group for the 6-month period
to 30 June 2017. Acquisition costs (included in adjusting items in
the Consolidated Income Statement) amounted to GBP1.2m.
Goodwill of GBP62.9m arising from the acquisition reflects the
increased scale YPI brings to the Global Exhibitions Division,
bringing together some of the largest yachting and boat shows in
the US to complement our existing ownership of the Monaco Yacht
Show.
The disclosure below provides the fair value of acquired
identifiable assets and liabilities assumed of YPI and are
provisional pending receipt of final valuations.
Book value Fair value
adjustments Fair value
GBPm GBPm GBPm
Intangible assets - 60.8 60.8
Property and equipment 3.3 - 3.3
Trade and other receivables 2.4 - 2.4
Cash at bank and on hand 0.6 - 0.6
Trade and other payables (4.1) - (4.1)
Deferred income (3.5) - (3.5)
Deferred tax asset/(liabilities) 12.3 (22.9) (10.6)
Identifiable net assets acquired 11.0 37.9 48.9
Provisional goodwill 62.9
Total consideration 111.8
Update to 2016 acquisition fair value of Penton Information
Services
On 2 November 2016, the Group acquired 100% of the issued share
capital of Penton Information Services, a leading independent
US-based exhibitions and professional information services
business. The provisional amounts recognised in respect of the
estimated fair value of the identifiable assets acquired and
liabilities assumed were disclosed in the 2016 Annual Report.
Updates to the provisional amounts as at 30 June 2017 are as
follows:
Previously reported Fair value adjustments Updated Fair value
GBPm GBPm GBPm
Intangible assets 648.2 47.0 695.2
Property and equipment 7.9 - 7.9
Investments 0.2 (0.2) -
Trade and other receivable 41.2 - 41.2
Cash and cash equivalents 21.4 - 21.4
Trade, other payables and provisions (24.9) - (24.9)
Deferred income (59.5) (0.6) (60.1)
Deferred tax liabilities (114.7) (19.1) (133.8)
Retirement benefit obligation (19.6) - (19.6)
Identifiable net assets acquired 500.2 27.1 527.3
Goodwill 833.8 (25.4) 808.4
Total consideration 1,334.0 1.7 1,335.7
13. Business combinations (continued)
The updated provisional estimated fair value adjustment amounts
include updated estimates of the fair value of acquisition
intangibles and related deferred tax adjustments and a GBP1.7m
increase to consideration for the finalisation of working capital.
The estimated fair value of all identifiable net assets acquired
and liabilities assumed will be finalised within the 12-month
measurement period permitted by IFRS 3, and disclosed in the Annual
Report for the year ended 31 December 2017.
Other business combinations made in 2017
There were 7 other acquisitions completed in the 6 months ended
30 June 2017 for a total consideration of GBP23.3m, of which
GBP11.2m was paid in cash, net of cash acquired, and there are
GBP10.1m of contingent and deferred amounts payable.
Update on deferred and contingent consideration paid in 2017
relating to business combinations completed in prior years.
In the 6 months ended 30 June 2017 there were contingent and
deferred net cash payments of GBP5.5m relating to acquisitions
completed in prior years.
14. Related party transactions
Transactions between the Company and its subsidiaries, which are
related parties, have been eliminated on consolidation and are not
disclosed in this note. The transactions between the Group and its
Joint Ventures are disclosed below.
The following transactions and arrangements are those which are
considered to have had a material effect on the financial
performance and position of the Group for the period.
Transactions with Directors
There were no material transactions with Directors of the
Company during the year, except for those relating to remuneration
and shareholdings.
For the purposes of IAS 24 Related Party Disclosures, Executives
below the level of the Company's Board are not regarded as related
parties.
Transactions with joint ventures and associates
During the period the Group received no dividends from its joint
ventures and associate.
Other related party disclosures
At 30 June 2017, the Group has guaranteed the defined benefit
pension scheme liability of the sponsoring Group UK companies. The
net pension deficit at 30 June 2017 was GBP27.6m (30 June 2016:
GBP15.6m, 31 December 2016: GBP38.0m).
15. Events after the balance sheet date
In July 2017 the Group agreed the sale of the majority ownership
of Euroforum, the Knowledge and Networking Division's domestic
conference business in Germany and Switzerland, valuing the entire
business at EUR15m before adjustments for working capital.
Completion is expected in October 2017.
16. Restatement
Restatement of balance sheet as at 30 June 2016
The balance sheet as at 30 June 2016 has been restated for the
finalisation of the valuation of the separately identifiable
tangible and intangible assets and liabilities of the acquisition
of Finovate Group, Inc. that completed on 25 April 2016. This
resulted in the Consolidated Balance Sheet at 30 June 2016 being
adjusted for the recognition of additional goodwill of GBP2.0m and
GBP2.0m increase in the deferred tax liability. The Consolidated
Income Statement for the 6 months ended 30 June 2016 was not
affected by this restatement.
16. Restatement (continued)
Consolidated Balance Sheet as at 30 June 2016
As at 30 June 2016 (Unaudited)
Previously reported Finovate Adjustments Restated
GBPm GBPm GBPm
Goodwill 1,837.2 2.0 1,839.2
Other non-current assets 1,076.2 - 1,076.2
--------------------
Non-current assets 2,913.4 2.0 2,915.4
Current assets 393.3 - 393.3
--------------------
Total assets 3,306.7 2.0 3,308.7
--------------------
Current liabilities (650.4) - (650.4)
--------------------
Deferred tax non-current liabilities (184.4) (2.0) (186.4)
Other non-current liabilities (1,136.4) - (1,136.4)
--------------------
Non-current liabilities (1,320.8) (2.0) (1,322.8)
--------------------
Total liabilities (1,971.2) (2.0) (1,973.2)
--------------------
Net assets 1,335.5 - 1,335.5
Restatement of Earnings per share and Dividends per share for 6
months ended 30 June 2016
Earnings per share and dividends per share have been restated to
reflect the adjustment required for the bonus element of the 2016
rights issue associated with the Penton acquisition that completed
on 2 November 2016. This resulted in basic earnings per share being
restated from 13.8p per share to 12.7p per share and diluted
adjusted earnings per share being restated from 13.8p to 12.6p.
Adjusted diluted earnings per share was restated from 23.1p to
21.3p. Refer to Note 8 for the impact of the restatement on
Dividends per share.
Restatement of balance sheet as at 31 December 2016 and income
statement for the year ended 31 December 2016
The results for the year ended 31 December 2016 have been
restated for updates to provisional amounts recognised in respect
of the fair value of assets acquired and liabilities assumed
related to the Penton Information Services acquisition that
completed on 2 November 2016 and finalisation of fair values
related to the Light Reading LLC acquisition that completed on 13
July 2016.
The Penton adjustments to the Consolidated Income Statement for
the year ended 31 December 2016 resulted in the following
adjustments to adjusted results: a reduction in revenue of GBP0.9m,
a reduction in net operating expenses of GBP0.4m and a related
reduction in the adjusted tax charge of GBP0.2m. Adjusting items
were restated to reflect reduced amortisation of intangible assets
of GBP0.3m and increased tax on adjusting items of GBP0.1m.
The Penton adjustments to the Consolidated Balance Sheet at 31
December 2016 reflected the balance sheet impact of the above
income statement adjustments, together with updates to the fair
value of the acquisition balance sheet shown in Note 13 and foreign
exchange movements on these adjustments from acquisition date on 2
November 2016 to 31 December 2016. The adjustments include a
GBP25.1m reduction to goodwill, a GBP47.1m increase in intangibles
arising from a GBP49.9m increase in acquisition intangibles and a
GBP2.8m reduction in other intangibles. There was also a GBP19.1m
increase in the deferred tax liability mainly associated with the
increase in the value of acquisition intangibles.
The Light Reading fair value finalisation resulted in the
Consolidated Balance Sheet at 31 December 2016 being adjusted for
the recognition of an additional GBP0.2m accounts receivable
provision and a corresponding increase of GBP0.2m in goodwill. The
Consolidated Income Statement for the year ended 31 December 2017
was not affected by this restatement.
16. Restatement (continued)
Consolidated Balance Sheet as at 31 December 2016 -
restatement
As Previously reported Penton adjustments Light Reading adjustments As restated
(audited)
GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm
Non-current assets
Goodwill 2,724.4 (25.1) 0.2 2,699.5
Other intangible assets 1,755.0 47.1 - 1,802.1
Property and equipment 24.1 - - 24.1
Investments in joint
ventures and Associate 1.5 - - 1.5
Investments 1.8 (0.2) - 1.6
Deferred tax assets 13.0 - - 13.0
Other receivables 0.5 - - 0.5
4,520.3 21.8 0.2 4,542.3
Current assets
Inventory 52.4 - - 52.4
Trade and other receivables 358.1 (1.7) (0.2) 356.2
Current tax asset 31.1 - - 31.1
Cash at bank and in hand 49.6 - - 49.6
491.2 (1.7) (0.2) 489.3
Total assets 5,011.5 20.1 - 5,031.6
Current liabilities
Borrowings (174.9) - - (174.9)
Current tax liabilities (30.3) 0.3 - (30.0)
Provisions (34.4) - - (34.4)
Trade and other payables (246.5) - - (246.5)
Deferred income (561.5) (1.5) - (563.0)
(1,047.6) (1.2) - (1,048.8)
Non-current liabilities
Borrowings (1,360.3) - - (1,360.3)
Deferred tax liabilities (329.9) (19.1) - (349.0)
Retirement benefit
obligation (38.0) - - (38.0)
Provisions (11.8) - - (11.8)
Non-current tax liabilities (8.3) - - (8.3)
Trade and other payables (27.6) - - (27.6)
(1,775.9) (19.1) - (1,795.0)
Total liabilities (2,823.5) (20.3) - (2,843.8)
Net assets 2,188.0 (0.2) - 2,187.8
Equity
Share capital 0.8 - - 0.8
Share premium account 905.3 - - 905.3
Translation reserve 74.1 (0.1) - 74.0
Other reserves (1,570.8) - - (1,570.8)
Retained earnings 2,777.4 (0.1) - 2,777.3
Equity attributable to
equity holders of the
parent 2,186.8 (0.2) - 2,186.6
Non-controlling interest 1.2 - - 1.2
Total equity 2,188.0 (0.2) - 2,187.8
16. Restatement (continued)
Consolidated Income statement for the Year ended 31 December 2016 - restatement
Previously reported Restated
Adjusted Adjusting Penton Adjusted Adjusting
Results items Statutory Adjustments Results items Statutory
2016 2016 2016 2016 2016 2016 2016
GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm
-------------- -------------- ----------
Revenue 1,345.7 - 1,345.7 (0.9) 1,344.8 - 1,344.8
Net operating
expenses (930.4) (217.3) (1,147.7) 0.7 (930.0) (217.0) (1,147.0)
-------------- ----------
Operating
profit/(loss)
before joint
ventures and
associate 415.3 (217.3) 198.0 (0.2) 414.8 (217.0) 197.8
Share of
results of
joint ventures
and associates 0.8 - 0.8 - 0.8 - 0.8
-------------- ----------
Operating
profit/(loss) 416.1 (217.3) 198.8 (0.2) 415.6 (217.0) 198.6
Loss on
disposal of
subsidiaries
and operations - (39.8) (39.8) - - (39.8) (39.8)
Investment
income 0.6 58.9 59.5 - 0.6 58.9 59.5
Finance costs (40.2) - (40.2) - (40.2) - (40.2)
-------------- ----------
Profit/(loss)
before tax 376.5 (198.2) 178.3 (0.2) 376.0 (197.9) 178.1
Tax (charge) /
credit (68.0) 63.2 (4.8) 0.1 (67.8) 63.1 (4.7)
-------------- ----------
Profit/(loss)
for the period 308.5 (135.0) 173.5 (0.1) 308.2 (134.8) 173.4
-------------- ----------
Earnings per share
- Basic (p) 42.2 23.6 42.2 23.6
- Diluted (p) 42.1 23.6 42.1 23.6
---------------- -------------- ----------
16. Restatement (continued)
Impact of restatements on business segments disclosures for the
year ended 31 December 2016
The Annual Report for the year ended 31 December 2016 presented
Penton as a separate segment. In 2017 the segment results of the
Penton business lines have been allocated into the business
segments of Business Intelligence, Global Exhibitions and Knowledge
& Networking. The tables below set out the previously reported
amounts and restated amounts for each segment for the year ended 31
December 2016:
AP BI GE K&N Penton Total
Revenue GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm
Previously reported 490.4 290.0 306.9 224.4 34.0 1,345.7
Penton restatement - 12.4 14.2 6.5 (34.0) (0.9)
Restated 490.4 302.4 321.1 230.9 - 1,344.8
Adjusted operating profit
Previously reported 187.2 65.7 119.0 37.4 6.8 416.1
Penton restatement - 4.8 0.5 1.0 (6.8) (0.5)
Restated 187.2 70.5 119.5 38.4 - 415.6
Intangible asset amortisation(1)
Previously reported (48.2) (18.0) (33.9) (9.8) (6.8) (116.7)
Penton restatement - (1.6) (4.1) (0.8) 6.8 0.3
Restated (48.2) (19.6) (38.0) (10.6) - (116.4)
(1) Excludes software and product development amortisation.
Acquisition and integration costs
Previously reported (0.4) (0.1) (3.0) (1.0) (28.6) (33.1)
Penton restatement - (6.7) (19.9) (2.0) 28.6 -
Restated (0.4) (6.8) (22.9) (3.0) - (33.1)
This information is provided by RNS
The company news service from the London Stock Exchange
END
IR EANXLAAKXEFF
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