MANCHESTER AND LONDON
INVESTMENT TRUST PLC (the “Company”)
ANNUAL
FINANCIAL REPORT FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 JULY
2024
The full
Annual Report and Financial Statements for the year ended
31 July 2024 can be found on the
Company’s website at
www.mlcapman.com/manchester-london-investment-trust-plc.
STRATEGIC
REPORT
Financial
Summary
Total
Return
|
Year
to
31
July
2024
|
Year
to
31
July
2023
|
Percentage
increase/
(decrease)
|
Total
return (£’000)
|
121,160
|
28,754
|
321.4%
|
Return per
Share
|
301.45p
|
71.45p
|
321.9%
|
Total
revenue return per Share
|
1.42p
|
3.67p
|
(61.3)%
|
Dividend
per Share
|
21.00p
|
14.00p
|
50.0%
|
Capital
|
As
at
31
July
2024
|
As
at
31
July
2023
|
Percentage
increase
|
Net assets
attributable to equity Shareholders
(i) (£’000)
|
334,099
|
221,379
|
50.9%
|
Net asset
value (“NAV”) per Share
|
831.24p
|
550.79p
|
50.9%
|
NAV total
return(ii)†
|
55.4%
|
15.3%
|
|
Benchmark
performance - total return basis(iii)
|
13.8%
|
5.1%
|
|
Share
price
|
704.00p
|
451.00p
|
56.1%
|
Share
price (discount)/premium to NAV†
|
(15.3%)
|
(18.1%)
|
|
(i)
NAV as at
31 July 2024 includes a net £nil in
respect of share buybacks (2023: £289,000).
(ii)
Total
return including dividends reinvested, as sourced from
Bloomberg.
(iii)
The
Company’s benchmark is the MSCI UK Investable Market Index
(“MXGBIM” or the
“benchmark”),
as sourced from Bloomberg.
Ongoing
Charges
|
Year
to
31
July
2024
|
Year
to
31
July
2023
|
Ongoing
charges as a percentage of average net assets*†
|
0.47%
|
0.54%
|
* Based on
total expenses, excluding finance costs and certain non-recurring
items for the year and average monthly NAV.
† Alternative
performance measure. Details provided in the Glossary
below.
CHAIRMAN’S
STATEMENT
Introduction
& Performance
This was the year that broke through previous all-time highs and
set new peaks. The performance for this financial year resulted in
a NAV total return per Share of 55.4%*. The Manager’s multi-year
interest in and studying of Artificial Intelligence (“Ai”)
continues to put the fund in a good position to capitalise on the
continuation of the Era of Ai. The conviction of the Manager and
Board remains strong that the growth of Ai is in its infancy. The
year in financial market terms can be summarised as a story of
lowering inflation, slowing economies, geo-political tensions, and
the continuing dominance of mega capitalisation
equities.
Discount
Management, PDMRs & Buy Backs
At the year end, the Shares traded at a 15.3% discount to their NAV
per Share, compared to a discount of 18.1% in 2023. This was
despite the Company buying no shares into Treasury during the year.
The Manager subjectively believes that buying back shares to close
discounts is akin to “Canute commanding the tide” and that the
discount will only close when 10-year Treasury yields are clearly
on a downward path and growth shares are back in vogue. We note
that the other Investment Trust Companies that focus on investing
in Technology are on similar free float adjusted discounts. The
Directors and the Managers bought a net total of 389,272 shares
(with a value of £2.5m) during the financial year.
Board
Composition
We are
committed to attracting the best talent that can lead and challenge
the direction of the Company. The Manager & the Board invite
any interested parties who believe they can add to the diversity of
the Board and have some knowledge of Technology investment or
operations to indicate their interest in becoming a non-executive
director of the Company by emailing them at
ir@mlcapman.com
Annual
General Meeting
Our fifty-second Annual General Meeting (“AGM”) will be held
virtually on 6 November 2024 at 12.00
noon.
We are aware that some shareholders prefer physical AGMs and,
although they are materially more expensive, we do see some
benefits in undertaking a physical/virtual hybrid every three years
or so. If appropriate at the time, we will consider holding a
physical AGM in 2025.
The notice of AGM for 2024 is below and will also be available on
the Company’s website. Detailed explanations on the formal business
and the resolutions to be proposed at the AGM are contained within
the Shareholder Information section of the Annual Report and
Accounts as well as the Notice of AGM.
Environmental,
Social and Governance Matters (“ESG”)
We
continue to keep abreast of ESG developments and the Board assumes
a supervisory role in this regard. The Manager is responsible for
considering ESG factors in the investment process.
We are led
to believe that Nvidia sourced 76% of its energy from renewable
sources in FY24, with a commitment to reaching 100%.
Microsoft
has committed to become carbon negative, water positive and zero
waste by 2030 and has a target to halve its Scope 3 emissions from
2020 to 2030.
The
sources for these commitments can be found at:
https://images.nvidia.com/aem-dam/Solutions/documents/FY2024-NVIDIA-Corporate-Sustainability-Report.pdf
https://query.prod.cms.rt.microsoft.com/cms/api/am/binary/RW1lMjE
We welcome
these initiatives.
The
portfolio does not contain any stocks in the following
sectors:
1.
Energy and Fossil Fuels: The energy
sector, particularly companies involved in fossil fuel extraction
and production, has been criticized for its environmental impact
due to greenhouse gas emissions, oil spills, and other
pollution-related issues.
2.
Mining and Metals: The mining
sector allegedly has significant environmental impacts due to
resource extraction, habitat disruption, and waste generation.
Concerns also arise regarding labour practices and community
displacement in some cases.
3.
Tobacco: The
tobacco industry is often seen as having negative social impacts
due to health risks associated with smoking, marketing practices
targeting vulnerable populations, and legal
controversies.
4.
Heavy Manufacturing: Industries
such as heavy manufacturing and heavy chemicals might have higher
environmental impacts due to emissions, waste production, and
energy consumption.
5.
Utilities: While the
utilities sector is essential for providing energy, the
environmental impact of some energy generation methods (such as
coal) and concerns about emissions can impact the sector’s ESG
performance.
6.
Agriculture: Certain
agricultural practices, such as large-scale monoculture farming and
excessive pesticide use, can have negative environmental
consequences, impacting the agricultural sector’s ESG
factors.
7.
Fast Fashion: The
fashion industry can have social and environmental issues related
to labour practices, waste generation, and resource
consumption.
As at
31 July 2024, the portfolio has a
Sustainalytics Environment score of 81.8% (where 50% is the
median).
Outlook
We look forward with excitement as the Era of Artificial
Intelligence develops. This technology is so powerful it is quite
possible that its growth can continue to overpower a challenging
economic and political backdrop. However, we are of the view that
the geopolitical risks that lie ahead and the stress to global
networks should not be under-estimated.
Daniel
Wright
Chairman
25
September
2024
*Source:
Bloomberg.
See
Glossary
below.
MANAGER’S
REVIEW
Market
Review
H2 2023
and H1 2024 witnessed generally disinflationary data, lower energy
prices, and better-than-expected company earnings which provided
Equity Markets with further relief. Tech-heavy indices moved higher
as the optimists, and also finally the pessimists, saw a
forthcoming reduction in rates.
Technology
Review
2023/4 saw
an ugly unwinding of the performance of Software stocks (to which
we were underweight) as expenditure was seen to be redirected to
Ai.
As we have
written many times in the last year, we had shifted out of “Soft
Tech” names into “Hard Tech” names and repositioned with Ai “Core
& Central” to our portfolio.
As we have
written in earlier Newsletters, we see the Era of Ai developing in
four Stages being:
1.
Infrastructure Build: the build out of the data centers needed for
Ai.
2.
Migration of Data to the Cloud: the migration and management of the
data
required
to train the Ai models.
3. Launch
of Applications using AI: the existing and new applications we will
use to harness the power of Ai.
4. The
Future Use Applications: the new applications that we cannot
envisage a use for now that will become wildly popular in the
future.
2023/24
was very much a period that saw growth focused within Stages 1
& 2.
Portfolio
Review
The
portfolio’s NAV total return per Share of 55.4% represented a 41.6%
outperformance against the benchmark and compared to a 23.9% return
for the Nasdaq Composite (in GBP) and a 21.4% return for the Nasdaq
100 Technology subindex (in GBP).
The 0.2%
increase in the value of Sterling against the US Dollar over the
year was a minor headwind for performance due to the significant
level of US Dollar exposure in the portfolio. Overall, we estimate
that the loss in portfolio performance from Foreign Exchange was
roughly 0.1%.
The Total
Return of the portfolio broken down by sector holdings in local
currency (separating costs and foreign exchange) is shown
below:
Total
return of underlying sector holdings in local currency
(excluding
costs and foreign exchange)
|
2024
|
Information
Technology
|
55.6%
|
Communication
Services
|
1.4%
|
Consumer
Discretionary
|
0.1%
|
Other
investments (including funds, ETFs and beta hedges)
|
(0.1%)
|
Foreign
Exchange, operating costs & financing
|
(1.5%)
|
Total NAV
per Share return
|
55.4%
|
Total
return of underlying sector holdings in local currency
(excluding
costs and foreign exchange)
|
2023
|
Information
Technology
|
28.7%
|
Communication
Services
|
(3.2%)
|
Consumer
Discretionary
|
(3.3%)
|
Other
investments (including funds, ETFs and beta hedges)
|
(0.5%)
|
Foreign
Exchange, operating costs & financing
|
(6.3%)
|
Total NAV
per Share return
|
15.3%
|
Information
Technology
The
Information Technology sector delivered 100.4% of the NAV total
return per Share.
Material
positive performers (>1% contribution to return) included Nvidia
Corp, Microsoft Corp, Arista Networks Inc, Advanced Micro Devices
Inc, ASML Holding NV, Synopsys Inc and Cadence Designs Systems
Inc.
There were
no material negative contributors.
The
portfolio’s weighting to this sector (including options on a MTM
basis) at the year end was 103.2% of the net assets (2023:
97.3%).
Communication
Services
The
Communication Services sector delivered 2.5% of the NAV total
return per share. Material positive performers (>1% contribution
to return) included Alphabet Inc.
There were
no material negative contributors.
The
portfolio’s weighting to this sector (including options on a MTM
basis) at year end was 4.0% of the net assets (2023:
5.1%).
Consumer
Discretionary
The
Consumer discretionary sector delivered 0.2% of the NAV total
return per share. There were no material negative nor material
positive contributors.
The
portfolio’s weighting to this sector (including options on a MTM
basis) at year end was 0.0% of the net assets (2023: 0.3%). Should
this weighting remain materially the same by next year end, we are
likely to show exposure to the Healthcare sector instead next
year.
Other
(including funds, ETFs and beta hedges)
Other
holdings delivered minus 0.2% of the NAV total return per
Share.
There were
no material negative nor material positive contributors.
The
portfolio’s weighting to this sector (including options on a MTM
basis) at year end was 2.8% of the net assets (2023:
7.0%).
Market
Outlook
After more
than 525bps of US rate hikes over the past couple of years, the
range of potential outcomes for the next 12 months now appears
somewhat narrower. Advanced economies are expected to experience
slower growth, inflation is expected to stay reasonably muted, and
interest rate cuts are hoped to be forthcoming which when combined
provide optimism for future stock returns. China remains a global deflation engine. We
see geopolitical risks remaining between the US and China and continuing de-risking of supply
chains.
We do
believe that our portfolio of long duration assets may be more
interest rate sensitive than it is sensitive to a mild recession.
We also believe that if rates fall beyond a certain point (such as
2.75% – 3.00%) we could see investors switch Money Market Fund
holdings for Growth Equities. We have also discussed this Fund Flow
tsunami in our Newsletters throughout the year.
“It
has become appallingly obvious that our technology will exceed our
humanity”.
–
Albert Einstein
Market
Risks
The
primary challenges to equities remain inflation, recession,
regulation, energy prices and war. The Fed’s preferred measure, the
PCE price index, has fallen but history has seen reversals before.
We are hopeful that over time productivity gains from Ai can assist
in further reducing inflation. There is the possibility that
countries that undertake material Ai investment such as the
USA, will be rewarded with a
decade or so of both productivity gains and relatively strong
economic growth. Should that scenario be combined with contained
geopolitical risks, then we could see a period of sustained stock
market returns.
In the
shorter term, recession risk is always a concern when the Fed has
been so active in attempting to slow the economy. Geopolitical
risks, such as the conflict in Ukraine and US-Sino relations, also pose very
material concerns. China,
Iran, N Korea and Russia are all bad actors that can cause
numerous horrific events that could cause material downside for the
markets. The companies in our portfolio have a material exposure to
China and Taiwan, hence we have been active at various
times during the year at laying on hedges against this risk (via
EWT US and MCHI US). We are constantly watching the oil price with
anxiety.
“Humans
are allergic to change. They love to say, ‘We’ve always done it
this way.’ I try to fight that. That’s why I have a clock on my
wall that runs counter-clockwise.”
–
Grace Hopper
Technology
Outlook
IT
spending is expected to increase by ~4% over the next 12 months. By
2028, the value of Ai accelerators used in servers may be more than
$32.8 billion, up from $14 billion in 2023, growing at a CAGR of 18.5%
according to Gartner. The Nasdaq composite is projected to deliver
above-market growth in 2025 with projected revenues and earnings
progress of 10.7% and 17.7% respectively. Our portfolio holdings
are forecast by Bloomberg estimates to see weighted average
projected revenues and earnings progress of ~25.3% and 50.9%
respectively for their next financial year. Forecasts are mainly
useless apart from providing some relative indications, hence the
figures provided purely illustrate that our portfolio could be
considered relatively faster growth. Technology
stocks have seen their valuations more than recover but a lot of
the overhyped stocks from 2021/22 are a long way from fully
recovered in terms of valuations. We see a lot of these names
ultimately being disrupted by Ai and hence they look expensive
“Value Traps” to us.
“I do
not fear computers. I fear the lack of
them.”
–
Isaac
Asimov
AI
Outlook
We see continued spending by enterprises on digital transformation
and cybersecurity, but we guess that the outliers for the next 12
months may continue to be Ai and Cloud Computing. The progress of
Ai is embryonic compared to its immense, era-defining potential. As
we have said many times before, we are investing in the “picks and
shovels ENABLERs of Ai” and especially the hyper-scalers and the
semiconductor designers. The latter is forecast to capture up to
50% of Ai’s associated value and we would guess that Nvidia will
get the lion’s share of that. We have positioned our portfolio so
that a vast majority of our holdings have Ai “core and central” to
their business purpose. If Ai is the era defining technology we
believe it to be, the portfolio may perform very well and, vice
versa.
“The
only constant is change, continuing change, inevitable change, that
is the dominant
factor
in
society
today.
No
sensible
decision
can
be
made
any
longer without
taking
into
account
not
only
the
world
as
it
is,
but
the
world
as it
will be.”
–
Isaac
Asimov
AI
& Technology Risks
Regulatory
challenges and misinformed Luddite braying will continue, mainly
dressed up as ethical concerns, but we expect that Ai’s
transformative capabilities overpower these headwinds.
We have
also repeatedly stated in our Newsletters that we see Quantum
Computing as the next era of technological advancement after
Ai.
Multiple
more general risks exist for our medium-term constructive view on
technology. For example, we may have misunderstood how many
incumbent Software and Technology companies that Ai will disrupt
and we certainly feel some other investors are underestimating this
risk. There may be a new technological change that we have not
foreseen such as the arrival of Quantum Computing sooner than
expected.
China may surpass the USA
in technological advancement rendering the US technology companies
as disrupted. Valuations are also always a concern in Technology
investing. However, contrary to the proclamations of the Bubble
Callers (nearly all of whom missed the recent Ai Enablers’ stock
gains), we do not see the stocks in our portfolio as
overvalued.
Regulation
remains a key risk and as Europe
falls further and further behind in the Ai era then regulation
becomes perversely more likely there. The disrupted and the
establishment will fight very hard to maintain the status quo.
Developing US-Sino relations will continue to negatively impact
supply chains, especially in semiconductors, and Taiwan’s role as
the leading semiconductor producer coupled with China’s territorial
ambitions adds a huge risk to world peace.
“A new
scientific truth does not triumph by convincing its opponents and
making them see the light, but rather because its opponents
eventually die, and a new generation grows up that is familiar with
it.”
–
Max Planck.
Concentration
Risk
We always
seek as diversified a portfolio as we can possibly construct but we
must address the concentration
risk within our portfolio. Our top two holdings – Microsoft, and
Nvidia – represented around 59% of our NAV at the period end and
our top 5 holdings represent about 78% of our portfolio. Sadly, we
do believe the outstanding winners from the Ai era may in time be
counted on the fingers of two hands. So what are we meant to do:
diversify to dilute performance? Punish our
winners for proving they are elite? The logical conclusion to this
risk for shareholders that are Retail Investors is that our Fund
should form part of a diversified portfolio. Please do not
over-concentrate on our Fund if you cannot afford to bear potential
loss. However, it is worth noting that according to two of the
leading ratings agencies MSFT has a better credit rating than US
sovereign debt.
May I
remind you that the limits on portfolio concentration per our
Investment Policy are as follows:
“No
single holding will represent more than 20% of gross assets at the
time of investment. In addition, the Company’s five largest
holdings (by value) will not exceed (at the time of investment)
more than 75% of gross assets.”
We do
prioritize risk reduction in our approach, aiming to partially
hedge specific risks that concern us (but hedging requires luck in
its timing) and, in addition, avoiding any holdings that give us
nagging doubts.
“Three-quarters
of
Warren
Buffett’s
equity
portfolio
are
tied
up
in
just
5
stocks.”
– CNBC
headline August
2023.
Conclusion
The risks
are varied, numerous and material but the Era of Ai is in its
youth. Ai offers investors a first-class ticket to what could be
one of the most exciting investment and economic periods of the
century.
Long
the
Future.
M&L
Capital Management Limited
Manager
25 September 2024
Equity
exposures and portfolio sector analysis
Equity
exposures (longs)
As at
31 July 2024
Company
|
Sector
*
|
Exposure
£’000**
|
% of
net
assets**
|
NVIDA
Corporation**
|
Information
Technology
|
113,863
|
34.1
|
Microsoft
Corporation**
|
Information
Technology
|
83,127
|
24.9
|
ASML
Holding NV**
|
Information
Technology
|
24,221
|
7.2
|
Advanced
Micro Devices Inc
|
Information
Technology
|
22,499
|
6.7
|
Arista
Networks Inc.
|
Information
Technology
|
21,721
|
6.5
|
Synopsys
Inc.
|
Information
Technology
|
19,366
|
5.8
|
Broadcom
Inc.
|
Information
Technology
|
16,452
|
4.9
|
Alphabet
Inc.
|
Communication
Services
|
13,643
|
4.1
|
Micron
Technology Inc.
|
Information
Technology
|
12,980
|
3.9
|
Oracle
Corporation **
|
Information
Technology
|
9,967
|
3.0
|
Cadence
Design Systems Inc.
|
Information
Technology
|
8.,023
|
2.4
|
Intuitive
Surgical Inc.
|
Health
Care
|
6,127
|
1.8
|
iShares
0-3 Month Treasury Bond ETF
|
ETF
|
5,858
|
1.7
|
Dell
Technologies Inc.
|
Information
Technology
|
4,585
|
1.4
|
Motorola
Solutions Inc.
|
Information
Technology
|
4,317
|
1.3
|
Applied
Materials Inc.
|
Information
Technology
|
3,222
|
1.0
|
Western
Digital Corporation
|
Information
Technology
|
2,281
|
0.7
|
Polar
Capital Technology Trust
|
Fund
|
2,187
|
0.7
|
MS AI
Power Basket*
|
Equity
Basket
|
361
|
0.1
|
Novo
Noridks A/S
|
Health
Care
|
174
|
0.1
|
Allianz
Technology Trust PLC
|
Fund
|
10
|
0.1
|
Total
long positions
|
|
374,984
|
112.3
|
|
|
|
|
Other net
assets and liabilities
|
|
(40,885)
|
(12.3)
|
Net
assets
|
|
334,099
|
100.0
|
*GICS –
Global Industry Classification Standard.
**Including
equity swap exposures as detailed in note 13.
Portfolio
sector analysis (excluding options and short equity swap
hedges)
As at
31 July 2024
Sector
|
% of
net
assets
|
Information
Technology
|
103.8
|
Communication
services
|
4.1
|
Equity
Basket
|
0.1
|
Fund
|
0.7
|
Health
Care
|
1.9
|
ETF
|
1.7
|
Cash and
other net assets and liabilities
|
(12.3)
|
Net
assets
|
100.0
|
PRINCIPAL
PORTFOLIO EQUITY HOLDINGS
The
positions described below have an Exposure that aggregates to 99.2%
of Net
Assets.
Microsoft
Corporation (“Microsoft”)
Microsoft
is
a
global
enterprise
software
company
and
a
leader
in
cloud
computing,
business software, operating systems and gaming.
NVIDIA
Corporation (“NVIDIA”)
NVIDIA is
the market leader in GPUs. Whilst originally created for graphics
processing, specialised GPUs are also key in the training and
inference of AI models due to their parallel processing
capabilities. Following the emergence of Chat GPT, which
demonstrated the immense potential of generative AI, NVIDIA has
reported surging demand for its AI chips. NVIDIA currently has a
dominant position in the AI chip hardware market and has also built
a strong position in the wider software ecosystem for AI training
and inference (for example with their CUDA platform). As a result,
NVIDIA has become the preferred partner for many enterprises
seeking to harness the potential of AI.
ASML
Holding NV (“ASML”)
ASML is a
producer of Semiconductor manufacturing equipment, with a near
monopoly in advanced EUV lithography, which is one of the leading
edge production technologies in the industry’s never ending quest
to make smaller and more advanced Semiconductor chips (Integrated
Circuits used in a wide variety of electronic devices).
Advanced
Micro Devices Inc. (“AMD”)
AMD is a
semiconductor company that designs and manufactures a range of
microprocessors, graphics processing units (GPUs), and related
technologies. Established in 1969, AMD has played a crucial role in
the evolution of computing hardware, providing innovative solutions
for both consumer and enterprise markets. Like NVIDIA, AMD has
leveraged its GPU technology to make notable strides in the field
of AI chips and accelerators. AMD’s entrance into the AI chip
market presents a competitive alternative to industry leader NVIDIA
going forward, offering customers more options when selecting
hardware for their AI workloads.
Synopsys
Inc (“Synopsys”)
Synopsys
is an EDA (electronic design automation) company that focuses on
Semiconductor chip design software and verification tools (such as
finding and resolving bugs in Semiconductor chip designs). EDA
software is mission critical to Semiconductor chip design,
particularly as the demands on Semiconductor chip capabilities
continues to increase. The majority of the EDA market is controlled
by three players; Cadence, Synopsys and Siemens.
Unlike the
highly cyclical Semiconductor manufacturers, the EDA software
market has a very high degree of recurring revenue and growth tends
to be more correlated to Semiconductor R&D than Capital or
Operational Expenditure within the industry.
Arista
Networks Inc. (“Arista”)
Arista is
a technology company that specialises in providing networking
solutions for data centres and cloud environments. The company’s
products encompass a range of switches, routers, and
software-defined networking (SDN) solutions, designed to meet the
demands of modern data-intensive applications and the dynamic
requirements of cloud computing. Arista’s solutions often emphasise
low-latency, high-speed data transmission, making it a key player
in the networking industry, particularly for enterprises seeking
advanced infrastructure solutions. As a result, Arista is heavily
exposed to cloud capex from the hyperscale cloud
providers.
Alphabet
Inc. (“Alphabet”)
Alphabet
is a global technology company with products and platforms across a
wide range of technology verticals, including online advertising,
cloud computing, autonomous vehicles, artificial intelligence and
smart phones.
Oracle
Corporation (“Oracle”)
Oracle
Corporation is a multinational technology company that specialises
in providing a wide range of software, hardware, and cloud-based
services to businesses and organisations. Founded in 1977, Oracle
is best known for its robust database management systems, which are
widely used to store, retrieve, and manage large volumes of
structured and unstructured data. The company’s extensive portfolio
includes enterprise software applications for various functions
like customer relationship management (CRM), enterprise resource
planning (ERP), human capital management (HCM), and more. Oracle
also offers cloud services that encompass infrastructure as a
service (IaaS), platform as a service (PaaS), and software as a
service (SaaS), enabling clients to leverage cloud computing for
enhanced scalability, efficiency, and flexibility. With a
significant presence in both hardware and software markets, Oracle
plays a critical role in supporting modern business operations and
digital transformation efforts across industries.
Micron
Technology Inc (“Micron”)
Micron
Technology is a leading global manufacturer of memory and storage
solutions, including DRAM, NAND flash memory, and other
semiconductor components. These products are critical for a wide
range of computing devices, from smartphones and PCs to data
centers and cloud infrastructure. As artificial intelligence (AI)
continues to advance, the demand for high-performance memory is
growing rapidly. AI applications, such as machine learning and deep
learning, require vast amounts of data to be processed and analysed
quickly. This drives the need for more memory capacity and faster
data access speeds, making Micron’s memory solutions increasingly
vital in supporting AI workloads.
Broadcom
Inc (“Broadcom”)
Broadcom
is a global technology leader known for designing and manufacturing
a wide range of semiconductor and infrastructure software products.
One of Broadcom’s key areas of growth is its AI ASIC (Application-Specific Integrated
Circuit) business. These AI ASICs are custom-designed chips
optimised for specific AI workloads, enabling faster and more
efficient processing of complex algorithms used in machine
learning, data analytics, and AI-driven applications. Broadcom’s AI
ASICs are critical in powering high-performance data centers and
cloud environments, where the demand for specialised hardware to
support AI workloads is rapidly increasing.
All
Equity & Debt portfolio holdings
As at
31 July 2024
Stocks
|
Gross
(Underlying
Only) % of NAV
|
Net
Delta
(inc Net
Delta
exposure
of
options) %
of
NAV
|
NVIDIA
Corporation
|
34.1
|
33.8
|
Microsoft
Corporation
|
24.9
|
24.9
|
Advanced
Micro Devices Inc.
|
6.7
|
6.8
|
ASML
Holding NV
|
7.2
|
6.8
|
Arista
Networks Inc.
|
6.5
|
6.1
|
Synopsys
Inc.
|
5.8
|
5.3
|
Broadcom
Inc.
|
4.9
|
5.1
|
Alphabet
Inc.
|
4.1
|
4.1
|
Micron
Technology Inc.
|
3.9
|
4.0
|
Oracle
Corporation
|
3.0
|
2.4
|
Cadence
Design Systems Inc.
|
2.4
|
2.3
|
Intuitive
Surgical Inc.
|
1.8
|
1.8
|
iShares
0-3 Month Treasury Bo
|
1.7
|
1.7
|
Dell
Technologies Inc.
|
1.4
|
1.4
|
Motorola
Solutions Inc.
|
1.3
|
1.3
|
Polar
Capital Technology Trust
|
0.7
|
0.7
|
Western
Digital Corporation
|
0.7
|
0.7
|
Remy
Cointreau SA
|
-
|
0.3
|
Pernod
Ricard SA
|
-
|
0.3
|
MSXXAIPW
|
0.1
|
0.1
|
Novo
Nordisk A/S
|
0.1
|
0.1
|
Liberty
Media Corp-Liberty Formula One
|
-
|
0.1
|
Allianz
Technology Trust PLC
|
0.0
|
0.0
|
iShares
Biotechnology ETF
|
-
|
(0.4)
|
Invesco
QQQ Trust Series 1
|
(0.8)
|
(0.8)
|
iShares
Russell 2000 ETF
|
(0.8)
|
(0.8)
|
Total
|
110.7
|
108.8
|
|
|
|
|
For an
explanation of why we report exposures on a Delta Adjusted basis
please read our FAQ at
https://mlcapman.com/faq/
Investment
record of the last ten years
Year
ended
|
Total
Return
(£’000)
|
Return
per
Share*
(p)
|
Dividend
per
Share
(p)
|
Net assets
(£’000)
|
NAV
per
Share*
(p)
|
31 July
2015
|
2,483
|
11.47
|
6.00
|
63,074
|
293.35
|
31 July
2016
|
13,424
|
62.50
|
13.36
|
75,546
|
350.81
|
31 July
2017
|
20,055
|
92.43
|
9.00
|
94,661
|
429.05
|
31 July
2018
|
26,792
|
115.27
|
12.00
|
130,388
|
532.81
|
31 July
2019
|
15,900
|
58.75
|
14.00
|
166,981
|
568.66
|
31 July
2020
|
24,037
|
74.74
|
14.00
|
225,933
|
625.23
|
31 July
2021
|
22,222
|
57.10
|
14.00
|
269,686
|
665.43
|
31 July
2022
|
(61,162)
|
(151.62)
|
21.00
|
198,546
|
493.04
|
31 July
2023
|
28,754
|
71.45
|
14.00
|
221,379
|
550.79
|
31
July 2024
|
121,160
|
301.45
|
21.00
|
334,099
|
831.244
|
* Basic
and fully diluted.
Business
model
The
Company is an investment company as defined by Section 833 of the
Companies Act 2006 and operates as an investment trust in
accordance with Section 1158 of the Corporation Tax Act
2010.
The
Company is also governed by the Listing Rules and the Disclosure
Guidance and Transparency Rules of the Financial Conduct Authority
(the “FCA”) and is listed on the Closed-ended investment funds
Category of the London Stock Exchange.
A review
of investment activities for the year ended 31 July 2024 is detailed in the Manager’s review
above.
Investment
objective
The
investment
objective
of
the
Company
is
to
achieve
capital
appreciation.
Investment
policy
Asset
allocation
The
Company’s investment objective is sought to be achieved through a
policy of actively investing in a diversified portfolio, comprising
any of global equities and/or fixed interest securities and/or
derivatives.
The
Company may invest in derivatives, money market instruments,
currency instruments, contracts for differences (“CFDs”), futures,
forwards and options for the purposes of (i) holding investments
and (ii) hedging positions against movements in, for example,
equity markets, currencies and interest rates.
The
Company seeks investment exposure to companies whose shares are
listed, quoted or admitted to trading. However, it may invest up to
10% of gross assets (at the time of investment) in the equities
and/or fixed interest securities of companies whose shares are not
listed, quoted or admitted to trading.
Risk
diversification
The
Company intends to maintain a diversified portfolio and it is
expected that the portfolio will have between approximately 20 to
100 holdings. No single holding will represent more than 20% of
gross assets at the time of investment. In addition, the Company’s
five largest holdings (by value) will not exceed (at the time of
investment) more than 75% of gross assets.
Although
there are no restrictions on the constituents of the Company’s
portfolio by geography, industry sector or asset class, it is
intended that the Company will hold investments across a number of
geographies and industry sectors. During periods in which changes
in economic, political or market conditions or other factors so
warrant, the Manager may reduce the Company’s exposure to one or
more asset classes and increase the Company’s position in cash
and/or money market instruments.
The
Company will not invest more than 15% of its total assets in other
listed closed ended investment funds. However, the Company may
invest up to 50% of gross assets (at the time of investment) in an
investment company subsidiary, subject always to the other
restrictions set out in this investment policy and the Listing
Rules.
Gearing
The
Company may borrow to gear the Company’s returns when the Manager
believes it is in Shareholders’ interests to do so. The Company’s
Articles of Association (“Articles”) restrict the level of
borrowings that the Company may incur up to a sum equal to two
times the net asset value of the Company as shown by the then
latest audited balance sheet of the Company.
The effect
of gearing may be achieved without borrowing by investing in a
range of different types of investments including derivatives. Save
with the approval of Shareholders, the Company will not enter into
any investments which have the effect of increasing the Company’s
net gearing beyond the limit on borrowings stated in the
Articles.
General
In
addition to the above, the Company will observe the investment
restrictions imposed from time to time by the Listing Rules which
are applicable to investment companies with shares listed on the
Official List of the FCA.
No
material change will be made to the investment policy without the
approval of Shareholders by ordinary resolution.
In the
event of any breach of the investment restrictions applicable to
the Company, Shareholders will be informed of the remedial actions
to be taken by the Board and the Manager by an announcement issued
through a regulatory information service approved by the
FCA.
Investment
Strategy and Style
The
fund’s
portfolio
is
constructed
with
flexibility
but
is
primarily
focused
on
stocks
that exhibit
the
attributes
of
growth.
Target
Benchmark
The
Company was originally set up by Brian
Sheppard as a vehicle for British retail investors to invest
in with the hope that total returns would exceed the total returns
on the UK equity market. Hence, the benchmark the Company uses to
assess performance is one of the many available UK equity indices
being the MSCI UK Investable Market Index (MXGBIM). The Company has
used this benchmark to assess performance for over five years but
is not set on using this particular UK Equity index forever into
the future and currently uses this particular UK Equity index
because at the current time it is viewed as the most cost
advantageous of the currently available UK Equity indices (which
have a high degree of correlation and hence substitutability).
However, once the Company announces the use of an index, then this
index should be used across all of the Company’s
documentation.
Investments
for the portfolio are not selected from constituents of this index
and hence the investment remit is in no way constrained by the
index, although the Manager’s management fee is varied depending on
performance against the benchmark. It is suggested that
Shareholders review the Company’s Active Share Ratio that is on the
fund factsheets as this illustrates to what degree the holdings in
the portfolio vary from the underlying benchmark.
Environmental,
Social, Community and Governance
The
Company considers that it does not fall within the scope of the
Modern Slavery Act 2015 and it is not, therefore, obliged to make a
slavery and human trafficking statement. In any event, the Company
considers its supply chains to be of low risk as its suppliers are
typically professional advisers.
In its
oversight of the Manager and the Company’s other service providers,
the Board seeks assurances that they have regard to the benefits of
diversity and promote these within their respective organisations.
The Company has given discretionary voting powers to the Manager.
The Manager votes against resolutions they consider may damage
Shareholders’ rights or economic interests and reports their
actions to the Board. The Company believes it is in the
Shareholders’ interests to consider environmental, social,
community and governance factors when selecting and retaining
investments and has asked the Manager to take these issues into
account. The Manager does not exclude companies from their
investment universe purely on the grounds of these factors but
adopts a positive approach towards companies which promote these
factors. The portfolio’s Sustainalytic’s Environmental Percentile
was 81.8% as at 31 July
2024.
The
Company notes the Task Force on Climate-related Financial
Disclosures (‘TCFD’) reporting recommendations. However, as a
listed investment company, the Company is not subject to the
Listing Rule requirement to report against the framework. The
Company fully recognises the impact climate change has on the
environment and society, and information on the Manager’s
endeavours on ESG can be found above. The Manager continues to work
with the investee companies to raise awareness on climate change
risks, carbon emission and energy efficiency.
Stakeholder
Engagement
The Company’s s172 Statement can be found in the Corporate
Governance Statement on pages 43 and 44 of the full Annual Report
and is incorporated into this Strategic Report by
reference.
Dividend
policy
The
Company may declare dividends as justified by funds available for
distribution. The Company
will
not
retain
in
respect
of
any
accounting
period
an
amount
which
is greater
than 15% of net revenue in that period.
Recurring
income
from
dividends
on
underlying
holdings
is
paid
out
as
ordinary
dividends.
Results
and dividends
The
results for the year are set out in the Statement of Comprehensive
Income and in the Statement of Changes in Equity below.
For the
year ended 31 July 2024, the net
revenue return attributable to Shareholders was £570,000 (2023:
£1,479,000) and the net capital return attributable to Shareholders
was £120,590,000 (2023: £27,275,000). Total Shareholders’ funds
increased by 50.9% to £334,099,000 (2023: £221,379,000).
The
dividends paid/proposed by the Board for 2023 and 2024 are set out
below:
|
Year
ended 31 July 2024
(pence
per Share)
|
Year ended
31 July 2023
(pence per
Share)
|
Interim
dividend
|
7.00
|
7.00
|
Special
dividend
|
7.00
|
-
|
Proposed
final dividend
|
7.00
|
7.00
|
|
21.00
|
14.00
|
Subject to
the approval of Shareholders at the forthcoming AGM, the proposed
final ordinary dividend will be payable on 8
November 2024 to Shareholders on the register at the close
of business on 4 October 2024. The
ex-dividend date will be 3 October
2024.
Further
details of the dividends paid in respect of the years ended
31 July 2024 and 31 July 2023 are set out in note 7
below.
Principal
risks and uncertainties
The Board
considers that the following are the principal risks and
uncertainties facing the Company. The actions taken to manage each
of these are set out below. If one or more of these risks
materialised, it could potentially have a significant impact upon
the Company’s ability to achieve its investment objective. These
risks are formalised within the risk matrix maintained by the
Company’s Manager.
Risk
|
How
the risk is managed
|
Investment
Performance Risk
The
performance of the Company may not be in line with its investment
objectives.
|
Investment
performance is monitored and reviewed daily by M&L Capital
Management Limited (“MLCM”) as AIFM through:
•
Intra-day portfolio statistics; and
• Daily
Risk reports.
The
metrics and statistics within these reports may be used (in
combination with other factors) to help inform investment
decisions.
The AIFM
also provides the Board with monthly performance updates, key
portfolio stats (including performance attribution, valuation
metrics, VaR and liquidity analysis) and performance charts of top
portfolio holdings.
It should
be noted that none of the above steps guarantee that Company
performance will meet its stated objectives.
|
Key
Man Risk and Reputational Risk
The
Company may be unable to fulfil its investment objectives following
the departure of key staff at the Manager.
|
The
Manager has a remuneration policy that incentivises key staff to
take a long-term view as variable rewards are spread over a
five-year period. MLCM also has documented policies and procedures,
including a business continuity plan, to ensure continuity of
operations in the unlikely event of a departure.
MLCM has a
comprehensive compliance framework to ensure strict adherence to
relevant governance rules and requirements.
|
Fund
Valuation Risk
The
Company’s valuation is not accurately represented to
investors.
|
NAVs are
produced independently by the Administrator, based on the Company’s
valuation policy.
Valuation
is overseen and reviewed by the AIFM’s valuation committee which
reconciles and checks NAV reports prior to publication.
It should
be noted that the vast majority of the portfolio consists of quoted
equities, whose prices are provided by independent market sources;
hence material input into the valuation process is rarely required
from the valuation committee.
|
Third-Party
Service Providers
Failure of
outsourced service providers in performing their contractual
duties.
|
All
outsourced relationships are subject to an extensive
dual-directional due diligence process and to ongoing monitoring.
Where possible, the Company appoints a diversified pool of
outsourced providers to ensure continuity of operations should a
service provider fail.
The cyber
security of third-party service providers is a key risk that is
monitored on an ongoing basis. The safe custody of the Company’s
assets may be compromised through control failures by the
Depositary or Custodian, including cyber security incidents. To
mitigate this risk, the AIFM receives monthly reports from the
Depositary confirming safe custody of the Company’s assets held by
the Custodian.
|
Regulatory
Risk
A breach
of regulatory rules/ other legislation resulting in the Company not
meeting its objectives or investors’ loss.
|
The AIFM
adopts a series of pre-trade and post-trade controls to minimise
breaches. MLCM uses a fully integrated order management system,
electronic execution system, portfolio management system and risk
system developed by Bloomberg. These systems include automated
compliance checks, both pre- and post-execution, in addition to
manual checks by the investment team. The AIFM undertakes ongoing
compliance monitoring of the portfolio through a system of daily
reporting.
Furthermore,
there is additional oversight from the Depositary, which ensures
that there are three distinct layers of independent
monitoring.
|
Fiduciary
Risk
The
Company may not be managed to the agreed guidelines.
|
The
Company has a clear documented investment policy and risk profile.
The AIFM employs various controls and monitoring processes to
ensure guidelines are adhered to (including pre- and post-
execution checks as mentioned above and monthly Risk meetings).
Additional oversight is also provided by the Company’s
Depositary.
|
Fraud
Risk
Fraudulent
actions may cause loss.
|
The AIFM
has extensive fraud prevention controls and adopts a zero tolerance
approach towards fraudulent behaviour and breaches of protocol
surrounding fraud prevention. The transfer of cash or securities
involve the use of dual authorisation and two-factor authentication
to ensure fraud prevention, such that only authorised personnel are
able to access the core systems and submit transfers. The
Administrator has access to core systems to ensure complete
oversight of all transactions.
|
Portfolio
Concentration
The
Portfolio’s concentration in Nvidia Corp. and Microsoft Corp. could
lead to materially negative performance results for the Company
should one or both of these holdings have declining share
prices.
|
It is
interesting to note that using a sequential selection screen of all
equities on Bloomberg using the hurdles of ROIC, ROE, Operating
Margin and Revenue Growth set at the rates Nvidia currently enjoys,
outputs zero further suggested stocks that are domiciled outside
China.
Whilst
some may like us to diversify our Portfolio more, this analysis may
suggest diversification would lead to the dilution of the
Portfolio’s average financial metrics quality.
The
Manager has a series of alerts set on all Holdings which alert them
to all news on Top Holdings. The Manager watches our larger
holdings very carefully and has visited Nvidia in California in
each of the last 3 financial years.
In
addition, at times the Manager will attempt to directly hedge out
some of the risk of a fall in Technology stocks by selling Call
options on individual holdings. For example, at the year end, we
held a Nvidia Sold Call option position. At times, we also buy Long
Put options on Technology indices or individual stock names.
However, these hedges are most likely to only provide immaterial
comfort should large positions or the general markets
decline.
Again, we
encourage investors to diversify their own portfolios and only hold
shares in Manchester & London as part of a well-diversified
portfolio.
|
In
addition to the above, the Board considers the following to be the
principal financial risks associated with investing in the Company:
market risk, interest rate risk, liquidity risk, currency rate risk
and credit and counterparty risk. An explanation of these risks and
how they are managed along with the Company’s capital management
policies are contained in note 16 of the Financial Statements
below.
The Board,
through the Audit Committee, has undertaken a robust assessment and
review of all the risks stated above and in note 16 of the
Financial Statements, together with a review of any emerging or new
risks which may have arisen during the year, including those that
would threaten the Company’s business model, future performance,
solvency or liquidity. Whilst reviewing the principal risks and
uncertainties, the Board considered the impact of the COVID-19
pandemic and the implications of the Russia conflict on the Company, concluding
that these events did not materially affect the operations of the
business.
In
accordance with guidance issued to directors of listed companies,
the Directors confirm that they have carried out a review of the
effectiveness of the systems of internal financial control during
the year ended 31 July 2024, as set
out on pages 41 and 42 of the full Annual Report. There were no
matters arising from this review that required further
investigation and no significant failings or weaknesses were
identified.
Further
discussion about risk considerations can be found in the Company’s
latest prospectus available at
https://mlcapman.com/manchester-london-investment-
trust-plc/
Year-end
gearing
At the
year end, gross long equity exposure represented 112.3% (2023:
112.4%) of net assets.
Key
performance indicators
The Board
considers the most important key performance indicator to be the
comparison with its benchmark index. This is referred to in the
Financial Summary above.
Other key
measures by which the Board judges the success of the Company are
the Share price, the NAV per Share and the ongoing charges
measure.
Total net
assets at 31 July 2024 amounted to
£334,099,000 compared with £221,379,000 at 31 July 2023, an increase of 50.9%, whilst the
fully diluted NAV per Share increased to 831.24p from 550.79p.
During the year, no Ordinary Shares were bought back and held in
treasury.
Net
revenue return after taxation for the year was a positive £570,000
(2023: positive £1,479,000).
The quoted
Share price during the period under review has ranged from a
discount of 9.08% to 24.65%.
Ongoing
charges, which are set out above, are a measure of the total
expenses (including those charged to capital) expressed as a
percentage of the average net assets over the year. The Board
regularly reviews the ongoing charges measure and monitors Company
expenses.
Future
development
The Board
and the Manager do not currently foresee any material changes to
the business of the Company in the near future. As the majority of
the Company’s equity investments are denominated in US Dollar, any
currency volatility may have an impact (either positive or
negative) on the Company’s NAV per Share, which is denominated in
Sterling.
Management
arrangements
Under the
terms of the management agreement, MLCM manages the Company’s
portfolio in accordance with the investment policy determined by
the Board. The management agreement has a termination period of
three months. In line with the management agreement, the Manager
receives a variable portfolio management fee. Details of the fee
arrangements and the fees paid to the Manager during the year are
disclosed in note 3 to the Financial Statements.
The
Manager is authorised and regulated by the FCA.
M&M
Investment Company Limited (“MMIC”), which is controlled by Mr
Mark Sheppard who forms part of the
Manager’s management team, is the controlling Shareholder of the
Company. Further details regarding this are set out in the
Directors’ Report on page 31 of the full Annual Report.
Alternative
Investment Fund Managers Directive (the
“AIFMD”)
The
Company permanently exceeded the sub-threshold limit under the
AIFMD in 2017 and MLCM was appointed as the Company’s AIFM with
effect from 17 January 2018.
Following their appointment as the AIFM, MLCM receives an annual
risk management and valuation fee of £59,000 to undertake its
duties as the AIFM in addition to the portfolio management fees set
out above.
The AIFMD
requires certain information to be made available to investors
before they invest and requires that material changes to this
information be disclosed in the Annual Report.
Remuneration
In the
year to 31 July 2024, the total
remuneration paid to the employees of the Manager was £460,000
(2023: £420,000), payable to an average employee number throughout
the year of three (2023: three).
The
management of MLCM is undertaken by Mr Mark
Sheppard and Mr Richard
Morgan, to whom a combined total of £421,000 (2023:
£388,000) was paid by the Manager during the year.
The
remuneration policy of the Manager is to pay fixed annual salaries,
with non-guaranteed bonuses, dependent upon performance only. These
bonuses are generally paid in the Company’s Shares, released over a
five-year period.
Leverage
The
leverage policy has been approved by the Company and the AIFM. The
policy limits the leverage ratio that can be deployed by the
Company at any one time to 275% (gross method) and 250% (commitment
method). This includes any gearing created by its investment
policy. This is a maximum figure as required for disclosure by the
AIFMD regulation and not necessarily the amount of leverage that is
actually used. The leverage ratio as at 31
July 2024 measured by the gross method was 122.4% and that
measured by the commitment method was 117.5%.
Leverage
is defined in the Glossary below.
Risk
profile
The risk
profile of the Company as measured through the Summary Risk
Indicator (“SRI”) score, is currently at a 6 on a scale of 1 to 7
as at 31 July 2024 (31 July 2023: 6). This score is calculated on
past performance data using prescribed PRIIPS methodology.
Liquidity, counterparty and currency risks are not captured on the
scale. The Manager will periodically disclose the current risk
profile of the Company to investors. The Company will make this
disclosure on its website at the same time as it makes its Annual
Report and Financial Statements available to investors or more
frequently at its discretion.
For
further information on SRI – including key risk disclaimers –
please read the Fund Key Information Document available at
https://mlcapman.com/manchester-london-investment-trust-plc/
Liquidity
arrangements
The
Company currently holds no assets that are subject to special
arrangements arising from their illiquid nature. If applicable, the
Company would disclose the percentage of its assets subject to such
arrangements on its website at the same time as it makes its Annual
Report and Financial Statements available to investors, or more
frequently at its discretion.
Continuing
appointment of the Manager
The Board
keeps the performance of MLCM, in its capacity as the Company’s
Manager, under continual review. It has noted the good long-term
performance record and commitment, quality and continuity of the
team employed by the Manager. As a result, the Board concluded that
it is in the best interests of the Shareholders as a whole that the
appointment of the Manager on the agreed terms should
continue.
Human
rights, employee, social and community issues
The Board
consists entirely of non-executive Directors. The Company has no
employees and day-to-day management of the business is delegated to
the Manager and other service providers. As an investment trust,
the Company has no direct impact on the community or the
environment, and as such has no human rights or community policies.
In carrying out its investment activities and in relationships with
suppliers, the Company aims to conduct itself responsibly,
ethically and fairly. Further details of the Environmental, Social
and Governance policy can be found in the Statement of Corporate
Governance on pages 42 and 43 of the full Annual Report. Details of
the Company’s Board composition and related diversity
considerations can be found in the Statement of Corporate
Governance on page 38 of the full Annual Report.
Gender
diversity
At
31 July 2024, the Board comprised
four male Directors. As stated in the Statement of Corporate
Governance, the appointment of any new Director is made on the
basis of merit.
Approval
This
Strategic Report has been approved by the Board and signed on its
behalf by:
Daniel Wright
Chairman
25 September 2024
DIRECTORS
The
current Directors of the Company are:
Daniel Wright (Chairman of the Board)
Brett Miller
Sir
James Waterlow
Daren Morris (Chairman of the Audit Committee and Senior
Independent Director)
All the
Directors are non-executive. Mr Morris, Sir James Waterlow and Mr Wright are independent of
the Company’s Manager.
EXTRACTS
FROM THE DIRECTORS’ REPORT
Share
capital
As at
31 July 2024, the Company’s issued
share capital comprised 40,528,238 Shares of 25 pence each, of which 335,220 were held in
Treasury.
At general
meetings of the Company, Shareholders are entitled to one vote on a
show of hands and on a poll, to one vote for every Share held.
Shares held in Treasury do not carry voting rights.
In
circumstances where Chapter 11 of the Listing Rules would require a
proposed transaction to be approved by Shareholders, the
controlling Shareholder (see page 31 of the full Annual Report for
further details) shall not vote its Shares on that resolution. In
addition, any Director of the Company appointed by MMIC, the
controlling Shareholder, shall not vote on any matter where
conflicted and the Directors will act independently from MMIC and
have due regard to their fiduciary duties.
Issue
of Shares
At the
Annual General Meeting held on 1 November
2023, Shareholders approved the Board’s proposal to
authorise the Company to allot Shares up to an aggregate nominal
amount of £2,512,064. In addition, the Directors were authorised to
issue Shares and sell Shares from Treasury up to an aggregate
nominal value of £1,004,826 on a non-pre-emptive basis. This
authority is due to expire at the Company’s forthcoming AGM on
6 November 2024.
There were
no share issues during the year.
As at the
latest practicable date of 20 September
2024, the total voting rights were 40,127,018.
Purchase
of Shares
At the
Annual General Meeting held on 1 November
2023, Shareholders approved the Board’s proposal to
authorise the Company to acquire up to 14.99% of its issued Share
capital (excluding Treasury Shares) amounting to 6,024,933 Shares.
This authority is due to expire at the Company’s forthcoming AGM on
6 November 2024. Since September 2021, the highest price the Company has
paid for shares held in Treasury was 666
pence. The average cost per share of the shares held in
Treasury was 549 pence. As at
31 July 2024, the share price was
704 pence.
During the
year, 0 Shares have been bought back and at 31 July 2024 there were 40,528,238 Shares in
issue of which 335,220 were held in treasury. After the year end,
66,000 shares were bought back into Treasury, at an average price
of 625p, increasing the number of shares held in Treasury to
401,220.
Sale
of Shares from Treasury
At the
Annual General Meeting held on 1 November
2023, Shareholders approved the Board’s proposal to
authorise the Company to waive pre-emption rights in respect of
Treasury Shares up to an aggregate amount of £1,004,826 and to
permit the allotment or sale of Shares from Treasury at a discount
to a price at or above the prevailing NAV. This authority is due to
expire at the Company’s forthcoming AGM on 6
November 2024. No Shares were sold from Treasury during the
year. As at the latest practicable date of 20 September 2024, 401,220 Shares are held in
Treasury.
Going
concern
The
Directors consider that it is appropriate to adopt the going
concern basis in preparing the Financial Statements. After making
enquiries, and considering the nature of the Company’s business and
assets, the Directors consider that the Company has adequate
resources to continue in operational existence for the foreseeable
future. In arriving at this conclusion, the Directors have
considered the liquidity of the portfolio and the Company’s ability
to meet obligations as they fall due for a period of at least 12
months from the date that these Financial Statements were
approved.
Cashflow
projections have been reviewed and provide evidence that the
Company has sufficient funds to meet both its contracted
expenditure and its discretionary cash outflows in the form of the
dividend policy. Additionally, Value at Risk scenario analyses to
demonstrate that the company has sufficient capital headroom to
withstand market volatility are performed periodically.
Viability
statement
The
Directors have assessed the prospects of the Company over a
five-year period. The Directors consider five years to be a
reasonable time horizon to consider the continuing viability of the
Company, however they also consider viability for the longer-term
foreseeable future.
In their
assessment of the viability of the Company, the Directors have
considered each of the Company’s principal risks and uncertainties
as set out in the Strategic Report above and in particular, have
considered the potential impact of a significant fall in global
equity markets on the value of the Company’s investment portfolio
overall. The Directors have also considered the Company’s income
and expenditure projections and the fact that the Company’s
investments mainly comprise readily realisable securities which
could be sold to meet funding requirements if necessary. On that
basis, the Board considers that five years is an appropriate time
period to assess continuing viability of the Company.
In forming
their assessment of viability, the Directors have also
considered:
• internal
processes for monitoring costs;
• expected
levels of investment income;
• the
performance of the Manager;
•
portfolio risk profile;
•
liquidity risk;
• gearing
limits;
•
counterparty exposure; and
•
financial controls and procedures operated by the
Company.
The Board
has reviewed the influence of the COVID-19 pandemic on its service
providers and is satisfied with the ongoing services provided to
the Company.
Based upon
these considerations, the Directors have concluded that there is a
reasonable expectation that the Company will be able to continue in
operation and meet its liabilities as they fall due over the
five-year period.
By order
of the Board
Link
Company Matters Limited
Company
Secretary
25 September 2024
STATEMENT
OF DIRECTORS’ RESPONSIBILITIES IN RELATION TO THE ANNUAL REPORT AND
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
The
Directors are responsible for preparing the Company’s Annual Report
and Financial Statements in accordance with applicable law and
regulations.
Company
law requires the Directors to prepare Financial Statements for each
financial period. Under that law, they have elected to prepare the
Financial Statements in accordance with International Financial
Reporting Standards (“IFRS”) as adopted by the European Union.
Under Company law, the Directors must not approve the Financial
Statements unless they are satisfied that they give a true and fair
view of the state of affairs of the Company and of the profit or
loss of the Company for that period.
In
preparing the Financial Statements, the Directors are required
to:
• select
suitable accounting policies in accordance with IAS 8 ‘Accounting
Policies, Changes in Accounting Estimates and Errors’ and then
apply them consistently;
• present
information, including accounting policies, in a manner that
provides relevant, reliable, comparable and understandable
information;
• provide
additional disclosure when compliance with specific requirements in
IFRS is insufficient to enable users to understand the impact of
particular transactions, other events and conditions on the
Company’s financial position and financial performance;
• state
that the Company has complied with IFRS, subject to any material
departures disclosed and explained in the Financial
Statements;
• make
judgements and estimates that are reasonable and prudent;
and
• prepare
Financial Statements on a going concern basis unless it is
inappropriate to presume that the Company will continue in
business.
The
Directors are responsible for keeping adequate accounting records
that are sufficient to show and explain the Company’s transactions
and disclose with reasonable accuracy, at any time, the financial
position of the Company and to enable them to ensure that the
Financial Statements comply with the Companies Act 2006 and Article
4 of the IAS Regulation. They are also responsible for safeguarding
the assets of the Company and hence for taking reasonable steps for
the prevention and detection of fraud and other
irregularities.
Under
applicable law and regulations, the Directors are also responsible
for preparing a Strategic Report, Directors’ Report, Directors’
Remuneration Report and Corporate Governance Statement that comply
with that law and those regulations, and ensuring that the Annual
Report includes information required by the Listing Rules and
Disclosure Guidance and Transparency Rules of the FCA.
The
Financial Statements are published on the Company’s website,
www.mlcapman.com/manchester-london-investment-trust-plc, which is
maintained on behalf of the Company by the Manager. The Manager has
agreed to maintain, host, manage and operate the Company’s website
and to ensure that it is accurate and up-to-date and operated in
accordance with applicable law. The work carried out by the Auditor
does not involve consideration of the maintenance and integrity of
this website and accordingly, the Auditor accepts no responsibility
for any changes that have occurred to the Financial Statements
since they were initially presented on the website. Visitors to the
website need to be aware that legislation in the United Kingdom covering the preparation and
dissemination of the Financial Statements may differ from
legislation in their jurisdiction.
We confirm
that to the best of our knowledge:
i. the
Financial Statements, prepared in accordance with the IFRS, give a
true and fair view of the assets, liabilities, financial position
and profit of the Company; and
ii. the
Annual Report includes a fair review of the development and
performance of the business and position of the Company, together
with a description of the principal risks and uncertainties that it
faces.
The
Directors consider that the Annual Report and Financial Statements,
taken as a whole, are fair, balanced and understandable and provide
the information necessary for Shareholders to assess the Company’s
position and performance, business model and strategy.
On behalf
of the Board
Daniel Wright
Chairman
25 September 2024
NON-STATUTORY
ACCOUNTS
The
financial information set out below does not constitute the
Company’s statutory accounts for the years ended 31 July 2024 and 31 July
2023 but is derived from those accounts. Statutory accounts
for the year ended 31 July 2023 have
been delivered to the Registrar of Companies and statutory accounts
for the year ended 31 July 2024 will
be delivered to the Registrar of Companies in due course. The
Auditor has reported on those accounts; their report was (i)
unqualified, (ii) did not include a reference to any matters to
which the Auditor drew attention by way of emphasis without
qualifying their report and (iii) did not contain a statement under
Section 498 (2) or (3) of the Companies Act 2006. The text of the
Auditor’s report can be found on pages 56 to 67 of the Company’s
full Annual Report at
www.mlcapman.com/manchester-london-investment-trust-plc.
STATEMENT
OF COMPREHENSIVE INCOME
For the
year ended 31 July 2024
|
|
2024
|
|
2023
|
|
Notes
|
Revenue
£’000
|
Capital
£’000
|
Total
£’000
|
|
Revenue
£’000
|
Capital
£’000
|
Total
£’000
|
Gains
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Gains/(losses)
on investments at fair value through profit or loss
|
9
|
357
|
123,556
|
123,913
|
|
296
|
29,284
|
29,580
|
Investment
income
|
2
|
1,092
|
-
|
1,092
|
|
575
|
-
|
575
|
Bank
Interest
|
2
|
1,354
|
-
|
1,354
|
|
1,754
|
-
-
|
1,754
|
Gross
return
|
|
2,803
|
123,556
|
126,359
|
|
2,625
|
2,984
|
31,909
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Expenses
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Management
fee
|
3
|
(1,458)
|
-
|
(1,458)
|
|
(532)
|
-
|
(532)
|
Other
operating expenses
|
4
|
(563)
|
-
|
(563)
|
|
(499)
|
-
|
(499)
|
Total
expenses
|
|
(2,021)
|
-
|
(2,021)
|
|
(1,031)
|
-
|
(1,031)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Return
before finance costs and tax
|
|
782
|
123,556
|
124,338
|
|
(1,594)
|
29,284
|
30,878
|
Finance
costs
|
5
|
(68)
|
(2,966)
|
(3,034)
|
|
(38)
|
(2,009)
|
(2,047)
|
Return
on ordinary activities before tax
|
|
714
|
120,590
|
121,304
|
|
(1,556)
|
27,275
|
28,831
|
Taxation
|
6
|
(144)
|
-
|
(144)
|
|
(77)
|
-
|
(77)
|
Return
on ordinary activities after tax
|
|
570
|
12,590
|
121,160
|
|
1,479
|
27,275
|
28,754
|
Return
per Share
|
|
pence
|
pence
|
pence
|
|
pence
|
pence
|
pence
|
Basic and
fully diluted
|
8
|
1.42
|
300.03
|
301.45
|
|
3.67
|
67.78
|
71.45
|
The total
column of this statement is the Income Statement of the Company
prepared in accordance with international accounting standards in
conformity with the requirements of the Companies Act 2006. The
supplementary revenue return and capital return columns are
presented in accordance with the Statement of Recommended Practice
issued by the Association of Investment Companies (“AIC
SORP”).
All
revenue and capital items in the above statement derive from
continuing operations. No operations were acquired or discontinued
during the year.
There is
no other comprehensive income, and therefore the return for the
year after tax is also the total comprehensive income.
STATEMENT
OF CHANGES IN EQUITY
For the
year ended 31 July 2024
|
Notes
|
Share
capital
£’000
|
Share
premium
£’000
|
Special
reserve**
£’000
|
Capital
reserve*
£’000
|
Retained
earnings**
£’000
|
Total
£’000
|
Balance
at 1 August
2023
|
|
10,132
|
25,888
|
94,338
|
92,021
|
-
|
221,379
|
Changes
in equity for 2024
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Ordinary
shares bought back and held in treasury
|
14
|
-
|
-
|
(289)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Total
comprehensive (loss)
|
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
120,590
|
570
|
121,160
|
Dividends
paid
|
7
|
-
|
-
|
(7,870)
|
-
|
(570)
|
(8,440)
|
Balance
at 31 July 2024
|
|
10,132
|
25,888
|
86,468
|
211,611
|
-
|
334,099
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Balance
at 1 August 2022
|
|
10,132
|
25,888
|
98,780
|
63,746
|
-
|
198,546
|
Changes
in equity for 2023
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Ordinary
shares bought back and held in treasury
|
14
|
-
|
-
|
(289)
|
-
|
-
|
(289)
|
Total
comprehensive income/(loss)
|
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
27,275
|
1,479
|
28,754
|
Dividends
paid
|
7
|
-
|
-
|
(4,153)
|
-
|
(1,479)
|
(5,632)
|
Balance
at 31 July 2023
|
|
10,132
|
25,888
|
94,338
|
91,021
|
-
|
221,379
|
* Within
the balance of the capital reserve, £50,175,000 relates to realised
gains (2023: £33,340,000). Realised gains are distributable by way
of a dividend. The remaining £161,436,000 relates to unrealised
gains on financial instruments (2023: £57,681,000) and is
non-distributable.
** Fully
distributable
STATEMENT
OF FINANCIAL POSITION
As at
31
July 2024
|
|
|
|
2024
|
|
2023
|
|
Notes
|
|
|
£’000
|
|
£’000
|
Non-current
assets
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Investments
at fair value through profit or loss
|
9
|
|
|
309,002
|
|
188,264
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Current
assets
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Unrealised
derivative assets
|
13
|
|
|
4,866
|
|
5,680
|
Trade and
other receivables
|
10
|
|
|
419
|
|
147
|
Cash and
cash equivalents
|
11
|
|
|
7,187
|
|
17,049
|
Cash
collateral receivable from brokers
|
13
|
|
|
16,371
|
|
12,186
|
|
|
|
|
28,843
|
|
35,062
|
Creditors
– amounts falling due within one year
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Unrealised
derivative liabilities
|
13
|
|
|
(3,248)
|
|
(1,411)
|
Trade and
other payables
|
12
|
|
|
(498)
|
|
(277)
|
Cash
collateral payable to brokers
|
13
|
|
|
-
|
|
(259)
|
|
|
|
|
(3,746)
|
|
(1,947)
|
Net
current assets
|
|
|
|
25,097
|
|
33,115
|
Net
assets
|
|
|
|
334,099
|
|
221,379
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Capital
and reserves
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Ordinary
Share Capital
|
14
|
|
|
10,132
|
|
10,132
|
Share
premium
|
|
|
|
25,888
|
|
25,888
|
Special
Reserves
|
|
|
|
86,468
|
|
94,338
|
Capital
reserve
|
|
|
|
221,611
|
|
91,021
|
Retained
earnings
|
|
|
|
-
|
|
-
|
Total
equity
|
|
|
|
334,099
|
|
221,379
|
Basic
and fully diluted NAV per Share
|
15
|
|
|
831.24p
|
|
550.79p
|
Number
of Shares in issue excluding treasury
|
14
|
|
|
40,193,018
|
|
40,193,018
|
The
Financial Statements on pages 68 to 89 of the full Annual Report
were approved by the Board of Directors and authorised for issue on
25 September 2024 and are signed on
its behalf by:
Daniel Wright
Chairman
Manchester and London Investment Trust Public Limited
Company
Company
Number: 01009550
STATEMENT
OF CASH FLOWS
For the
year ended 31 July 2024
|
2024
£’000
|
|
2023
£’000
|
Cash
flow from operating activities
|
|
|
|
Return on
operating activities before tax
|
121,304
|
|
28,831
|
Interest
expense
|
3,034
|
|
2,047
|
Gains on
investments held at fair value through profit or loss
|
(123,533)
|
|
(27,810)
|
Increase
in receivables
|
(34)
|
|
(116)
|
Increase
in payables
|
163
|
|
26
|
Exchange
gains on Currency Balances
|
(23)
|
|
(1,473)
|
Tax
|
(144)
|
|
(77)
|
Net
cash generated from/(used in) operating
activities
|
767
|
|
1,428
|
Cash
flow from investing activities
|
|
|
|
Purchases
of investments
|
(79,749)
|
|
(116,934)
|
Sales
proceeds
|
65,875
|
|
73,120
|
Derivative
instrument cashflows
|
14,638
|
|
17,023
|
Net
cash (outflow)/inflow from investing activities
|
764
|
|
(26,791)
|
Cash
flow from financing activities
|
|
|
|
Ordinary
shares bought back and held in treasury
|
-
|
|
(289)
|
Equity
dividends paid
|
(8,440)
|
|
(5,632)
|
Interest
paid
|
(2,976)
|
|
(1,980)
|
Net
cash generated in financing activities
|
(11,416)
|
|
(7,901)
|
Net
decrease in cash and cash equivalents
|
(9,885)
|
|
(33,264)
|
Exchange
gains on Currency Balances
|
23
|
|
1,473
|
Cash and
cash equivalents at beginning of year
|
17,049
|
|
48,840
|
Cash
and cash equivalents at end of year
|
7,187
|
|
17,049
|
The notes
below form part of these Financial Statements.
NOTES
FORMING PART OF THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
For the
year ended 31 July 2024
1.
General information and accounting policies
Manchester and London Investment Trust plc is a public
limited company incorporated in the UK and registered in
England and Wales. The principal activity of the Company
is that of an investment trust company within the meaning of
Sections 1158/1159 of the Corporation Tax Act 2010 and its
investment approach is detailed in the Strategic Report.
The
Company’s Financial Statements have been prepared in accordance
with United Kingdom adopted
international accounting standards in conformity with the
requirements of the Companies Act 2006. The Financial Statements
have also been prepared in accordance with the AIC SORP for the
financial statements of investment trust companies and venture
capital trusts.
Basis
of preparation
In order
to better reflect the activities of an investment trust company and
in accordance with the AIC SORP, supplementary information which
analyses the Statement of Comprehensive Income between items of
revenue and capital nature has been prepared alongside the
Statement of Comprehensive Income.
The
Financial Statements are presented in Sterling, which is the
Company’s functional currency as the UK is the primary environment
in which it operates, rounded to the nearest £’000, except where
otherwise indicated.
Going
concern
The
financial statements have been prepared on a going concern basis
and on the basis that approval as an investment trust company will
continue to be met.
The
Directors have made an assessment of the Company’s ability to
continue as a going concern and are satisfied that the Company has
adequate resources to continue in operational existence for a
period of at least 12 months from the date when these financial
statements were approved.
In making
the assessment, the Directors of the Company have considered the
likely impacts of international and economic uncertainties on the
Company, operations and the investment portfolio. These include,
but are not limited to, the impact of another pandemic, the war in
Ukraine, political instability
across Europe, supply shortages
and inflationary pressures.
The
Directors noted that the Company, with the current cash balance and
holding a portfolio of listed investments, is able to meet the
obligations of the Company as they fall due. The current cash
balance, enables the Company to meet any funding requirements and
finance future additional investments. The Company is a closed-end
fund, where assets are not required to be liquidated to meet day to
day redemptions.
The
Directors have completed stress tests assessing the impact of
changes in market value and income with associated cash flows. In
making this assessment, they have considered plausible downside
scenarios. These tests were driven by the possible effects of
continuation of the COVID-19 pandemic but, as an arithmetic
exercise, apply equally to any other set of circumstances in which
asset value and income are significantly impaired. The conclusion
was that in a plausible downside scenario the Company could
continue to meet its liabilities. Whilst the economic future is
uncertain, and the Directors believe that it is possible the
Company could experience further reductions in income and/or market
value, the opinion of the Directors is that this should not be to a
level which would threaten the Company’s ability to continue as a
going concern.
The
Directors, the Manager and other service providers have put in
place contingency plans to minimise disruption. Furthermore, the
Directors are not aware of any material uncertainties that may cast
significant doubt on the Company’s ability to continue as a going
concern, having taken into account the liquidity of the Company’s
investment portfolio and the Company’s financial position in
respect of its cash flows, borrowing facilities and investment
commitments (of which there are none of significance). Therefore,
the financial statements have been prepared on the going concern
basis.
Segmental
reporting
The
Directors are of the opinion that the Company is engaged in a
single segment of business, being investment business. The Company
primarily invests in companies listed on recognised international
exchanges.
Accounting
developments
In the
year under review, the Company has applied amendments to IFRS
issued by the IASB adopted in conformity with UK adopted
international accounting standards. These include annual
improvements to IFRS, changes in standards, legislative and
regulatory amendments, changes in disclosure and presentation
requirements. This incorporated:
•
Disclosure of Accounting Policies (Amendments to IAS 1 and IFRS
Practice Statement 2);
•
Definition of Accounting Estimates (Amendments to IAS
8);
• Deferred
Tax Related to Assets and Liabilities Arising from a Single
Transaction – Amendments to IAS 12 Income Taxes; and
The
adoption of the changes to accounting standards has had no material
impact on these or prior years’ financial statements. There are
amendments to IAS/IFRS that will apply from 1 August 2024 as follows:
•
Classification of liabilities as current or non-current (Amendments
to IAS 1);
•
Non-current liabilities with Covenants (Amendments to
IAS1;
• Supplier
Finance Arrangements – Amendments to IAS7 and IFRS7; and
• Annual
improvements to IFRS Standards.
The
Directors do not anticipate the adoption of these will have a
material impact on the financial statements.
Critical
accounting judgements and key sources of estimation
uncertainty
The
preparation of financial statements in conformity with IFRS
requires management to make judgements, estimates and assumptions
that affect the application of policies and the reported amounts in
the financial statements. The estimates and associated assumptions
are based on historical experience and various other factors that
are believed to be reasonable under the circumstances, the results
of which form the basis of making judgements about carrying values
of assets and liabilities that are not readily apparent from other
sources. Actual results may differ from these estimates.
There were
no significant accounting estimates or critical accounting
judgements in the year.
Investments
Investments
are measured initially, and at subsequent reporting dates, at fair
value through profit and loss, and derecognised at trade date where
a purchase or sale is under a contract whose terms require delivery
within the timeframe of the relevant market. For listed equity
investments, this is deemed to be closing prices.
Changes in
fair value of investments are recognised in the Statement of
Comprehensive Income as a capital item. On disposal, realised gains
and losses are also recognised in the Statement of Comprehensive
Income as capital items.
All
investments for which fair value is measured or disclosed in the
Financial Statements are categorised within the fair value
hierarchy in note 9.
Financial
instruments
The
Company may use a variety of derivative instruments, including
equity swaps (also referred to as contracts for differences),
futures, forwards and options under master agreements with the
Company’s derivative counterparties to enable the Company to gain
long and short exposure on individual securities.
The
Company recognises financial assets and financial liabilities when
it becomes a party to the contractual provisions of the instrument.
Listed options and futures contracts are recognised at fair value
through profit or loss valued by reference to the underlying market
value of the corresponding security, traded prices and/or third
party information.
Notional
dividend income arising on long positions is recognised in the
Statement of Comprehensive Income as revenue. Interest expenses on
open long positions are allocated to capital. All remaining
interest or financing charges on derivative contracts are allocated
to the revenue account.
Unrealised
changes to the value of securities in relation to derivatives are
recognised in the Statement of Comprehensive Income as capital
items.
Foreign
currency
Transactions
denominated in foreign currencies are converted to Sterling at the
actual exchange rate as at the date of the transaction. Monetary
assets and liabilities and non-monetary assets held at fair value
denominated in foreign currencies at the year end are translated at
the Statement of Financial Position date. Any gain or loss arising
from a change in exchange rate subsequent to the date of the
transaction is included as an exchange gain or loss in the capital
reserve or the revenue account depending on whether the gain or
loss is capital or revenue in nature.
Cash
and cash equivalents
Cash
comprises cash in hand and overdrafts. Cash equivalents are
short-term, highly liquid investments that are readily convertible
to known amounts of cash and which are subject to insignificant
risk of changes in value.
For the
purposes of the Statement of Financial Position and the Statement
of Cash Flows, cash and cash equivalents consist of cash and cash
equivalents as defined above, net of outstanding bank overdrafts
when applicable.
Cash held
in margin/collateral accounts at the Company’s brokers is presented
as Cash collateral receivable from brokers in the financial
statements. Any cash collateral owed back to the brokers on marked
to market gains of Equity Swaps is shown in the financial
statements as Cash collateral payable to brokers.
Trade
receivables, trade payables and short-term
borrowings
Trade
receivables, trade payables and short-term borrowings are measured
at amortised cost.
Revenue
recognition
Revenue is
recognised when it is probable that economic benefits associated
with a transaction will flow to the Company and the revenue can be
reliably measured.
Dividends
from overseas companies are shown gross of any non-recoverable
withholding taxes which are disclosed separately in the Statement
of Comprehensive Income.
Dividends
receivable on quoted equity shares are taken to revenue on an
ex-dividend basis. Dividends receivable on equity shares where no
ex-dividend date is quoted are brought into account when the
Company’s right to receive payment is established.
All other
income is accounted for on a time-apportioned basis and recognised
in the Statement of Comprehensive Income.
Expenses
All
expenses are accounted for on an accruals basis and are charged to
revenue. All other administrative expenses are charged through the
revenue column in the Statement of Comprehensive Income.
Finance
costs
Finance
costs are accounted for on an accruals basis.
Financing
charged by the Prime Brokers on open long positions are allocated
to capital, with other finance costs being allocated to
revenue.
Taxation
The charge
for taxation is based on the net revenue for the year and any
deferred tax.
Deferred
tax is provided using the liability method on temporary differences
between the tax bases of assets and liabilities and their carrying
amount for financial reporting purposes at the reporting date.
Deferred tax assets are only recognised if it is considered more
likely than not that there will be suitable profits from which the
future reversal of timing differences can be deducted. In line with
recommendations of the AIC SORP, the allocation method used to
calculate the tax relief on expenses charged to capital is the
“marginal” basis. Under this basis, if taxable income is capable of
being offset entirely by expenses charged through the revenue
account, then no tax relief is transferred to the capital
account.
No
taxation liability arises on gains from sales of investments by the
Company by virtue of its investment trust status. However, the net
revenue (excluding investment income) accruing to the Company is
liable to corporation tax at prevailing rates.
Dividends
payable to Shareholders
Dividends
to Shareholders are recognised as a liability in the period in
which they are approved and are taken to the Statement of Changes
in Equity. Dividends declared and approved by the Company after the
Statement of Financial Position date have not been recognised as a
liability of the Company at the Statement of Financial Position
date.
Share
capital
The share
capital is the nominal value of issued ordinary shares and is not
distributable.
Share
premium
The Share
premium account represents the accumulated premium paid for Shares
issued in previous periods above their nominal value less issue
expenses. This is a reserve forming part of the non-distributable
reserves. The following items are taken to this reserve:
-
costs
associated with the issue of equity;
-
premium on
the issue of Shares; and
-
premium on
the sales of Shares held in Treasury over the market
value.
Special
Reserve
The
special reserve was created by a cancellation of the share premium
account increasing the distributable reserves of the Company. The
special reserve is distributable, and the following items are taken
to this reserve:
-
costs of
share buy-backs, including related stamp duty and transaction
costs; and
-
dividends.
Capital
reserve
The
following are taken to capital reserve:
-
gains and
losses on the realisation of investments;
-
increases
and decreases in the valuation of the investments held at the year
end;
-
cost of
share buy backs;
-
exchange
differences of a capital nature; and
-
expenses,
together with the related taxation effect, allocated to this
reserve in accordance with the above policies.
Retained
earnings
The
revenue reserve represents accumulated revenue account profits and
losses. The surplus accumulated profits are distributable by way of
dividends.
2.
Income
|
2024
£’000
|
|
2023
£’000
|
Dividends
from listed investments
|
1,092
|
|
575
|
Bank
interest
|
1,354
|
|
1,754
|
|
2,446
|
|
2,329
|
3.
Management fee
|
2024
|
|
2023
|
|
£’000
|
|
£’000
|
Base
fee
|
1,399
|
|
473
|
Risk
management and valuation fee
|
59
|
|
59
|
|
1,458
|
|
532
|
The
Management Fee payable to the Manager is equal to 0.5% per annum of
the Company’s NAV (the “Base Fee”), calculated as at the last
business day of each calendar month (the “Calculation Date”), and
is paid monthly arrears. An uplift of 0.25% of the NAV will be
applied to the fee, should the performance of the Company over the
36-month period to the Calculation Date be above that of the
Company’s benchmark. Should the performance of the Company over the
36-month period to the Calculation Date be below that of the
Company’s benchmark, a downward adjustment of 0.25% of the NAV will
be applied to the fee.
It was
announced on 2 September 2024, that
with effect 1 September 2024, the
Board agreed with the Manager a new tiered management fee replacing
the current fee arrangements.
Tiered
Management Fee:
• 0.7% per
annum of the NAV up to and including £750 million;
• 0.5% per
annum of the NAV between £750 million and £1.5 billion;
and
• 0.3% per
annum of the NAV above £1.5 billion.
There will
be no performance fee payable to the Manager.
Risk
Management and Valuation fee:
There will
be no change to the Risk Management and Valuation fee, however, the
fee will be adjusted annually in January by the UK Consumer Prices
Index (“CPI”) with the first increase being in January 2026 on the basis of the January 2026 CPI (percentage change over 12
months) figure.
The Board
believes that the new fee structure offers a simpler and more
predictable arrangement, removes the unnecessary volatility in
ongoing charges for shareholders and allows the Manager to better
plan for the future and broaden the expertise of the management
team supporting the Company. It also addresses concerns raised by
proxy advisors and compliance departments over the variability of
the fee arrangements.
Also, the
Board believes that the changes have the potential to generate cost
savings for shareholders in both the short and long-term, in
particular, if the Company were to see a material increase in
NAV.
In
addition, a Risk Management and Valuation fee equating to £59,000
on an annualised basis is charged by the AIFM. The Manager is also
reimbursed any expenses incurred by it on behalf of the
Company.
4.
Other operating expenses
|
2024
£’000
|
2023
£’000
|
Directors’
fees
|
102
|
95
|
Auditors’
remuneration
|
37
|
35
|
Registrar
fees
|
32
|
27
|
Depositary
fees
|
101
|
69
|
Other
expenses
|
291
|
273
|
|
563
|
499
|
Other
operating expenses include irrecoverable VAT where appropriate,
excluding the Auditors’ and Directors’ remuneration which have been
shown net of VAT.
No
non-audit services were provided by Deloitte LLP in the year to
31 July 2024.
5.
Finance costs
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
£’000
|
£’000
|
Charged to
revenue
|
68
|
38
|
Charged to
capital
|
2,966
|
2,009
|
|
3,034
|
2,047
|
6.
Taxation
a)
Analysis of charge in year
|
Year
to 31 July 2024
|
Year to 31
July 2023
|
|
Revenue
£’000
|
Capital
£’000
|
Total
£’000
|
Revenue
£’000
|
Capital
£’000
|
Total
£’000
|
Current
tax:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Overseas
tax not recoverable
|
144
|
-
|
144
|
77
|
-
|
77
|
|
144
|
-
|
144
|
77
|
-
|
77
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
b) The
current taxation charge for the year is lower than the standard
rate of Corporation Tax in the UK of 25% (2023: 25%).
The
differences are explained below:
|
Net return
before taxation
|
714
|
120,590
|
121,304
|
1,566
|
27,275
|
28,831
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Theoretical
tax at UK corporation tax rate of 25% (2023: 21%)*
|
178
|
30,147
|
30,325
|
327
|
5,728
|
6,055
|
Effects
of:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
UK
dividends that are not taxable
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(6)
|
-
|
(6)
|
Foreign
dividends that are not taxable
|
(208)
|
-
|
(208)
|
(115)
|
-
|
(115)
|
Non-taxable
investment (gains)/losses
|
-
|
(30,889)
|
(30,889)
|
-
|
(6,150)
|
(6,150)
|
Offshore
income gains
|
63
|
-
|
63
|
|
-
|
|
Irrecoverable
overseas tax
|
144
|
-
|
144
|
77
|
-
|
77
|
Unrelieved
excess expenses
|
(33)
|
742
|
709
|
(206)
|
422
|
(216)
|
Total tax
charge
|
144
|
-
|
144
|
77
|
-
|
77
|
*The
theoretical tax rate is calculated using a blended tax rate over
the year.
c) Factors
that may affect future tax charges.
At
31 July 2024, there is an
unrecognised deferred tax asset, measured at the latest enacted tax
rate of 25%, of £4,775,000 (2023: £4,070,000). This deferred tax
asset relates to surplus management expenses and non trade loan
relationship debits. It is unlikely that the company will generate
sufficient taxable profits in the foreseeable future to recover
these amounts and therefore the asset has not been recognised in
the year, or in prior years.
As at
31 July 2024, the company has
unrelieved capital losses of £9,329,000 (2023: £9,329,000). There
is therefore, a related unrecognised deferred tax asset, measured
at the latest enacted rate of 25%, of £2,332,000 (2023:
£2,332,000). These capital losses can only be utilised to the
extent that the company does not qualify as an investment trust in
the future and, as such, the asset has not been
recognised.
7.
Dividends
Amounts
recognised as distributions to equity holders in the
year:
|
2024
£’000
|
2023
£’000
|
Final
ordinary dividend for the year ended 31 July 2023 of 7.0p (2022:
7.0p) per share
|
2,813
|
2,819
|
Interim
ordinary dividend for the year ended 31 July 2024 of 7.0p (2023:
7.0p) per share
|
2,813
|
2,813
|
Special
dividend for the year ended 31 July 2024 of Nil (2023:7.0p) per
share
|
2,814
|
-
|
|
8,440
|
5,632
|
The
Directors are proposing a final dividend of 7.0p for the financial
year 2024.
These
proposed dividends have been excluded as a liability in these
Financial Statements in accordance with IFRS.
We also
set out below the total dividend payable in respect of the
financial year, which is the basis on which the requirements of
Section 1158 of the Corporation Tax Act 2010 are
considered.
Included
in the dividend distributions to equity holders in the year is
£7,870,000 (2023: £4,153,000) paid from special reserve.
|
2023
£’000
|
2022
£’000
|
Interim
ordinary dividend for the year ended 31 July 2024 of 7.0p (2023:
7.0p) per Share
|
2,813
|
2,813
|
Special
dividend for the year ended 31 July 2024 of Nil (2023: 7.0p) per
share
|
2,814
|
-
|
Proposed
final ordinary dividend* for the year ended 31 July 2024 of 7.0p
(2023: 7.0p) per Share
|
2,814*
|
2,813
|
|
8,441
|
5,626
|
*Based
on Shares in circulation on 31 July
2024 (excluding Shares held in treasury).
8.
Return per Share
|
|
2024
|
|
|
2023
|
|
|
Net
Return
£’000
|
Weighted
Average Shares
|
Total
(p)
|
Net
Return
£’000
|
Weighted
Average Shares
|
Total
(p)
|
Basic
and fully diluted return:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Net
revenue return after taxation
|
570
|
40,193,018
|
1.42
|
1,479
|
40,242,768
|
3.67
|
Net
capital return after taxation
|
120,590
|
40,193,018
|
300.03
|
27,275
|
40,242,768
|
67.78
|
Total
|
121,160
|
40,193,018
|
301.45
|
28,574
|
40,242,768
|
71.45
|
Basic
revenue, capital and total return per Share is based on the net
revenue, capital and total return for the period and on the
weighted average number of Shares in issue of 40,193,018 (2023:
40,242,768).
9.
Investments at fair value through profit or
loss
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
Total
£’000
|
Total
£’000
|
Analysis
of investment portfolio movements
|
|
|
Opening
cost at 1 August
|
136,155
|
80,500
|
Opening
unrealised appreciation at
1
August
|
52,109
|
45,611
|
Opening
fair value at 1 August
|
188,264
|
128,111
|
|
|
|
Movements
in the year
|
|
|
Purchases
at cost
|
79,749
|
116,009
|
Sales of
Investments
|
(66,024)
|
(73,432)
|
Realised
profit on sales
|
2,006
|
11,078
|
Increase
in unrealised appreciation
|
105,007
|
6,498
|
Closing
fair value at 31 July
|
309,002
|
188,264
|
|
|
|
Closing
cost at 31 July
|
151,886
|
136,155
|
Closing
unrealised appreciation at
31
July
|
157,116
|
52,109
|
Closing
fair value at 31 July
|
309,002
|
188,264
|
Fair
value hierarchy
Financial
assets of the Company are carried in the Statement of Financial
Position at fair value. The fair value is the amount at which the
asset could be sold or the liability transferred in an orderly
transaction between market participants, at the measurement date,
other than a forced or liquidation sale. The Company measures fair
values using the following hierarchy that reflects the significance
of the inputs used in making the measurements.
Categorisation
within the hierarchy has been determined on the basis of the lowest
level input that is significant to the fair value measurement of
the relevant assets as follows:
-
Level 1 –
valued using quoted prices unadjusted in an active
market.
-
Level 2 –
valued by reference to valuation techniques using observable inputs
for the asset or liability other than quoted prices included in
Level 1.
-
Level 3 –
valued by reference to valuation techniques using inputs that are
not based on observable market data for the asset or liability.The
tables below set out fair value measurements of financial
instruments as at the year end, by their category in the fair value
hierarchy into which the fair value measurement is
categorised.
Financial
assets/liabilities at fair value through profit or loss at
31 July 2024
|
Level
1
|
Level
2
|
Total
|
|
£’000
|
£’000
|
£’000
|
Investments
|
309,002
|
-
|
309,002
|
Unrealised
Derivative Assets
|
-
|
4,866
|
4,866
|
Unrealised
Derivative Liability
|
-
|
(3,248)
|
(3,248)
|
Total
|
309,002
|
1,618
|
310,620
|
Financial
assets/liabilities at fair value through profit or loss at
31 July 2023
|
Level
1
|
Level
2
|
Total
|
|
£’000
|
£’000
|
£’000
|
Investments
|
188,264
|
-
|
188,264
|
Unrealised
Derivative Assets
|
-
|
5,680
|
5,680
|
Unrealised
Derivative Liability
|
-
|
(1,411)
|
(1,411)
|
Total
|
188,264
|
4,269
|
192,533
|
There have
been no transfers during the year between Level 1 and 2 fair value
measurements.
Transaction
costs
During the
year, the Company incurred transaction costs of £154,000 (2023:
£176,000) on the purchase and disposal of investments.
Analysis
of capital gains and losses
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
£’000
|
£’000
|
Gains on
sales of investments
|
2,006
|
11,078
|
Investment
holding (losses)/gains
|
1005,007
|
6,498
|
Realised
gains /(losses) on derivatives
|
17,684
|
7,238
|
Unrealised
gains/(losses) on derivatives
|
(1,252)
|
3,309
|
|
123,445
|
28,123
|
Realised
gains/(losses) on currency balances and trade
settlements
|
111
|
1,161
|
Dividend
income in respect of contracts for difference
|
357
|
296
|
|
123,913
|
29,580
|
10.
Trade and other receivables
|
2024
£’000
|
2023
£’000
|
Dividends
receivable
|
52
|
6
|
Due from
brokers
|
237
|
-
|
Interest
receivable
|
95
|
105
|
Prepayments
|
35
|
36
|
|
419
|
147
|
11.
Cash and cash equivalents
|
2024
£’000
|
2023
£’000
|
Cash and
cash equivalents
|
7,187
|
17,049
|
|
7,187
|
17,049
|
As at the
balance sheet date, the Company held shares valued at £11,000
(2023: £3,852,000) in the Morgan Stanley Sterling Liquidity fund,
which has been classified as a Cash equivalent (see Note
1).
12.
Trade and other payables
|
2024
£’000
|
2023
£’000
|
Due to
Brokers
|
6
|
-
|
Accruals
|
492
|
277
|
|
498
|
277
|
13.
Derivatives
The
Company may use a variety of derivative contracts under master
agreements with the Company’s derivative counterparties to enable
it to gain long and short exposure, including Options and Equity
Swaps (which are synthetic equities), and are valued by reference
to the market values of the investments’ underlying
securities.
The
sources of the return under the Equity Swap contracts (e.g.
notional dividends, financing costs, interest returns and realised
and unrealised gains and losses) are allocated to the revenue and
capital accounts in alignment with the nature of the underlying
source of income.
-
Notional
dividend income or expense arising on long or short positions is
apportioned wholly to the revenue account.
-
Notional
interest or financing charges on open long positions are
apportioned wholly to the capital account. All remaining interest
or financing charges on derivative contracts are allocated to the
revenue account.
-
Changes in
value relating to underlying price movements of securities in
relation to Equity Swap exposures are allocated to
capital.
The fair
values of derivative financial assets are set out in the table
below:
|
2024
Original
£’000
|
2023
£’000
|
Unrealised
derivative assets
|
4,866
|
5,680
|
Cash
collateral receivable from brokers
|
16,371
|
12,186
|
Unrealised
derivative liabilities
|
(3,248)
|
(1,411)
|
Cash
collateral payable to brokers
|
-
|
(259)
|
The
corresponding gross exposure on long equity swaps as at
31 July 2024 was £65,982,000 (2023:
£60,756,000) and the total gross exposure of short equity swaps was
£5,272,000 (2023: £5,203,000). The net marked-to-market futures and
options total value as at 31 July
2024 was negative £1,697,000 (2023: negative
£1,064,000).
As at
31 July 2024, the Company held cash
and cash equivalent balances of £7,187,000 (2023: £17,049,000). The
Company also pledged cash of £16,371,000 (2023: £12,186,000) on
collateral accounts with counterparty brokers specifically for
derivatives (including exchange traded derivatives positions and
non-exchange traded swap positions). This cash represents
collateral posted to broker deposit accounts in relation to amounts
due to brokers in order to maintain open positions and constitute a
number of types of margin required (such as initial, marked to
market variation etc).
The nature
of the Company’s portfolio means that the Company gains significant
exposure to a number of markets through Equity Swaps. The Company
may use Equity Swaps to manage gearing. However, to the extent the
Manager has elected not to be geared, the Company will generally
hold a level of cash (or equivalent holding in the Cash Fund) on
its balance sheet representative of the difference between the cost
of purchasing investments directly and the lower initial cost of
making a margin payment on an Equity Swap contract.
As at
31 July 2024, the Company also owed
£nil (2023: £259,000) to brokers in respect of cash collateral
received relating to amounts owed by these brokers to cover
unrealised gains on open Equity Swaps on the Statement of Financial
Position. To the extent there are unrealised losses on Equity Swap
contracts uncovered by balances held at the broker, the Company
will transfer deposit monies across to these broker margin deposit
accounts. The Manager monitors margin positions on a daily basis to
ensure any margin deposit balances are as expected and any amounts
owed to the Company are transferred on a timely basis. In the event
of default, a proportion of the monies held in the collateral
accounts resides with the counterparty broker.
14.
Share capital
|
2024
|
|
2023
|
Share
capital
|
Number
of Shares
|
Nominal
value £’000
|
|
Number of
Shares
|
Nominal
value £’000
|
Shares
of 25p each issued and fully paid
|
|
|
|
|
|
Balance as
at 1 August
|
40,528,238
|
10,132
|
|
40,528,238
|
10,132
|
Shares
issued
|
-
|
-
|
|
-
|
-
|
Balance as
at 31 July
|
40,528,238
|
10,132
|
|
40,528,238
|
10,132
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Treasury
shares
|
|
|
|
|
|
Balance as
at 1 August
|
335,220
|
|
|
258,183
|
|
Buyback of
Ordinary Shares into Treasury
|
-
|
|
|
77,037
|
|
Balance at
end of year
|
335,220
|
|
|
335,220
|
|
Total
Ordinary Share capital excluding
Treasury
shares
|
40,193,018
|
|
|
40,193,018
|
|
No shares
were issued during the year (2023: nil).
During the
year, nil Ordinary Shares (2023: 77,037) were bought back and held
in treasury for total
cost of
£nil.
15.
NAV per Share
|
NAV
per Share
|
Net
assets
attributable
|
|
2024
(p)
|
2023
(p)
|
2024
£’000
|
2023
£’000
|
Shares:
basic and fully diluted
|
831,24
|
550,79
|
334,099
|
221,379
|
The basic
NAV per Share is based on net assets at the year end and 40,193,018
(2023: 40,193,018) Shares in issue, adjusted for any Shares held in
Treasury.
16.
Risks – investments, financial instruments and other
risks
Investment
objective and policy
The
Company’s investment objective and policy are detailed
above.
The
investing activities in pursuit of its investment objective involve
certain inherent risks.
The
Company’s financial instruments can comprise:
-
shares and
debt securities held in accordance with the Company’s investment
objective and policy;
-
derivative
instruments for trading, hedging and investment
purposes;
-
cash,
liquid resources and short-term debtors and creditors that arise
from its operations; and
-
current
asset investments and trading.
Risks
The risks
identified arising from the Company’s financial instruments are
market risk (which comprises market price risk and interest rate
risk), liquidity risk and credit and counterparty risk. The Company
may enter into derivative contracts to manage risk. The Board
reviews and agrees policies for managing each of these risks, which
are summarised below.
These
policies remained unchanged since the beginning of the accounting
period.
Market
risk
Market
risk arises mainly from uncertainty about future prices of
financial instruments used in the Company’s business. It represents
the potential loss the Company might suffer through holding market
positions by way of price movements, interest rate movements and
exchange rate movements. The Company assesses the exposure to
market risk when making each investment decision and these risks
are monitored by the Manager on a regular basis and the Board at
quarterly meetings with the Manager.
Details of
the long equity exposures held at 31 July
2024 are shown above.
If the
price of these investments and equity swaps had increased by 5% at
the reporting date with all other variables remaining constant, the
capital return in the Statement of Comprehensive Income and the net
assets attributable to equity holders of the Company would increase
by £18,486,000 (2023: £12,191,000).
A 5%
decrease in share prices would have resulted in an equal and
opposite effect of £18,486,000 (2023: £12,191,000), on the basis
that all other variables remain constant. This level of change is
considered to be reasonable based on observation of current market
conditions.
At the
year end, the Company’s direct equity exposure to market risk was
as follows:
|
Company
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
£’000
|
£’000
|
Equity
long exposures
|
|
|
Investments
held in equity form
|
309,002
|
188,264
|
Long
exposure held in equity swap hedges
|
65,982
|
60,756
|
|
374,984
|
249,020
|
Short
exposure held in equity swap hedges
|
(5,272)
|
(5,203)
|
|
369,712
|
243,817
|
Interest
rate risk
Interest
rate risk arises from uncertainty over the interest rates charged
by financial institutions. It represents the potential increased
costs of financing for the Company. The Manager actively monitors
interest rates and the Company’s ability to meet its financing
requirements throughout the year and reports to the Board. No
sensitivity analysis is presented because, as at the financial year
end, the Company held zero balances invested in bonds or fixed
interest securities. The Company is charged interest on its Equity
Swap positions but these charges are not currently material once
netted with interest received on cash, collateral and cash
equivalent balances.
Liquidity
risk
Liquidity
risk reflects the risk that the Company will have insufficient
funds to meet its financial obligations as they fall due. The
Directors have minimised liquidity risk by investing in a portfolio
of quoted companies that are readily realisable.
The
Company’s uninvested funds are held almost entirely with the Prime
Brokers or on deposits with UK banking institutions.
As at
31
July 2024, the financial liabilities comprised:
|
Company
|
|
2024
£’000
|
2023
£’000
|
Unrealised
derivative liabilities
|
2,959
|
1,411
|
Trade
payables and accruals
|
498
|
277
|
Cash
collateral payable to brokers
|
-
|
259
|
|
3,457
|
1,947
|
The above
liabilities are stated at amortised cost or fair value.
The
Company manages liquidity risk through constant monitoring of the
Company’s gearing position to ensure the Company is able to satisfy
any and all debts within the agreed credit terms.
Currency
rate risk
Currency
risk is the risk that the fair value of future cash flows of a
financial instrument will fluctuate because of changes in foreign
exchange rates. If Sterling had strengthened by 5% against all
other currencies at the reporting date, with all other variables
remaining constant, the total return in the Statement of
Comprehensive Income and the net assets attributable to equity
holders of the Company, assuming the Company held no balances in
Sterling, would have decreased by £16,704,000 (2023: £11,069,000).
If Sterling had weakened by 5% against all currencies, there would
have been an equal and opposite effect. This level of change is
considered to be reasonable based on observation of current market
conditions.
The
Company’s material foreign currency exposures are laid out
below.
|
|
As
at 31 July 2024
|
|
|
|
Sterling
|
US
Dollar
|
Euro
|
Total
|
|
£’000
|
£’000
|
£’000
|
£’000
|
|
|
|
|
|
Investments
|
2,197
|
306,805
|
-
|
309,002
|
Unrealised
derivative assets
|
-
|
4,866
|
-
|
4,866
|
Cash and
cash equivalents
|
479
|
7,585
|
(877)
|
7,187
|
Cash
collateral receivable from brokers
|
8,457
|
7,111
|
803
|
16,371
|
Unrealised
derivative liabilities
|
-
|
(2,535)
|
(713)
|
(3,248)
|
Other net
liabilities
|
(79)
|
-
|
-
|
(79)
|
|
11,054
|
323,832
|
(787)
|
334,099
|
The
Company constantly monitors currency rate risk to ensure balances,
wherever possible, are translated at rates favourable to the
Company.
|
|
As
at 31 July 2023
|
|
|
|
Sterling
|
US
Dollar
|
Euro
|
Total
|
|
£’000
|
£’000
|
£’000
|
£’000
|
|
|
|
|
|
Investments
|
1,641
|
186,623
|
-
|
188,264
|
Unrealised
derivative assets
|
-
|
4,522
|
1,158
|
5,680
|
Cash and
cash equivalents
|
6,450
|
10,865
|
(266)
|
17,049
|
Cash
collateral receivable from brokers
|
6,746
|
5,214
|
226
|
12,186
|
Unrealised
derivative liabilities
|
-
|
(1,232)
|
(179)
|
(1,411)
|
Cash
collateral payable to brokers
|
(259)
|
|
|
(259)
|
Other net
liabilities
|
(130)
|
-
|
-
|
(130)
|
|
14,448
|
205,992
|
939
|
221,379
|
The
Company constantly monitors currency rate risk to ensure balances,
wherever possible, are translated at rates favourable to the
Company.
Credit
and counterparty risk
Credit
risk is the risk of financial loss to the Company if the
contractual party to a financial instrument fails to meet its
contractual obligations.
The
maximum exposure to credit risk as at 31
July 2024 was £28,843,000 (2023: £35,062,000). The
calculation is based on the Company’s credit risk exposure as at
31 July 2023 and this may not be
representative for the whole year.
The
Company’s quoted investments are held on its behalf by the Prime
Brokers. Bankruptcy or insolvency of the Prime Brokers may cause
the Company’s rights with respect to securities held by the Prime
Brokers to be delayed. The Manager and the Board monitor the
Company’s risk and exposures.
Where the
Manager makes an investment in a bond, corporate or otherwise, the
credit worthiness of the issuer is taken into account so as to
minimise the risk to the Company of default. The credit standing
and other associated risks are reviewed by the Manager.
Investment
transactions are carried out with a number of brokers where
creditworthiness is reviewed by the Manager.
Cash is
only held at banks that have been identified by the Board as
reputable and of high credit quality. The Manager reviews these on
a continual basis with regular updates to the Board.
Capital
management policies
The
structure of the Company’s capital is noted in the Statement of
Changes in Equity and managed in accordance with the investment
objective and policy set out in the Strategic Report.
The
Company’s capital management objectives are to maximise the return
to Shareholders while maintaining a capital base to allow the
Company to operate effectively and meet obligations as they fall
due.
The Board,
with the assistance of the Manager, monitors and reviews the
capital on an ongoing basis.
The
Company is subject to externally imposed capital
requirements:
-
as a
public company, the Company is required to have a minimum Share
capital of £50,000; and
-
in
accordance with the provisions of Sections 832 and 833 of the
Companies Act 2006, the Company, as an investment company:
- is only
able to make a dividend distribution to the extent that the assets
of the Company are equal to at least one and a half times its
liabilities after the dividend payment has been made;
and
-
is
required to make a dividend distribution each year such that it
does not retain more than 15% of the income that it derives from
shares and securities.
These
requirements are unchanged since last year and the Company has
complied with them at all times.
A
sensitivity analysis has not been prepared for interest risk, as
the Company is not materially exposed to interest rates.
17.
Related party transactions
MLCM, a
company controlled by Mr Mark
Sheppard, is the Manager and AIFM of the Company. Mr
Sheppard is also a director of MMIC, which is the controlling
Shareholder of the Company.
The
Manager receives a monthly management fee for these services which
in the year under review amounted to a total of £1,458,000 (2023:
£532,000) excluding VAT. The balance owing to the Manager as at
31 July 2024 was £218,000 (2023:
£52,000).
Details
relating to the Directors’ emoluments are found in the Directors’
Remuneration Report on
page 48 of
the full Annual Report.
18.
Ultimate control
The
ultimate controlling Shareholder throughout the year and the
previous year was MMIC, a company incorporated in the UK and
registered in England and
Wales. This company was controlled
throughout the year and the previous year by Mr Mark Sheppard and his immediate
family.
A copy of
the financial statements of MMIC can be obtained from the Company’s
website:
www.mlcapman.com/manchester-london-investment-trust-plc.
19.
Post Statement of Financial Position events
There are
no post balance sheet events to report.
GLOSSARY
Active
share
Active
share is a measure of the percentage of stock holdings in a
manager’s portfolio that differ from the comparative benchmark
index. It is calculated by summing the absolute differences between
benchmark and portfolio holdings’ weights, then dividing by two (to
eliminate double counting). An active share of 100 indicates no
overlap with the index and an active share of zero indicates a
portfolio that tracks the index (when using leverage, maximum
active share levels can exceed 100%).
Alternative
Performance Measure (‘APM’)
An APM is
a numerical measure of the Company’s current, historical or future
financial performance, financial position or cash flows, other than
a financial measure defined or specified in the applicable
financial framework. In selecting these Alternative Performance
Measures, the Directors considered the key objectives and
expectations of typical investors in an investment trust such as
the Company.
Delta
Delta
measures the degree to which an option is exposed to shifts in the
price of the underlying asset (i.e. stock) or commodity (i.e.
futures contract). Values range from 1.0 to –1.0 (or 100 to –100,
depending on the convention employed). See website link for further
details: https://mlcapman.com/faq/
Delta
Adjusted Exposure
Delta
times the underlying security’s notional exposure for options. For
all other instruments, the notional exposure of the security. At
the sector and portfolio levels, this is the sum of the individual
security delta adjusted exposures. See website link for further
details: https://mlcapman.com/faq/
Discount/premium
If the
Share price is lower than the NAV per Share it is said to be
trading at a discount. The size of the discount is calculated by
subtracting the Share price from the NAV per Share and is usually
expressed as a percentage of the NAV per Share. If the Share price
is higher than the NAV per Share, this situation is called a
premium.
Gearing
Gearing
refers to the level of the Company’s debt to its equity capital.
The Company may borrow money to invest in additional investments
for its portfolio. If the Company’s assets grow, the Shareholders’
assets grow proportionately more because the debt remains the same.
But if the value of the Company’s assets falls, the situation is
reversed. Gearing can therefore enhance performance in rising
markets but can adversely impact performance in falling
markets.
Gearing
represents borrowings at par less cash and cash equivalents
(including any outstanding trade or foreign exchange settlements)
expressed as a percentage of Shareholders’ funds.
Potential
gearing is the Company’s borrowings expressed as a percentage of
Shareholders’ funds.
Leverage
Under the
AIFMD it is necessary for AIFs to disclose their leverage in
accordance with the prescribed calculations of the Directive.
Leverage is often used as another term for gearing which is
included within the Strategic Report. Under the AIFMD there are two
types of leverage that the AIF is required to set limits for,
monitor and periodically disclose to investors. The two types of
leverage calculations defined are the gross and commitment methods.
These methods summarily express leverage as a ratio of the exposure
of debt, non-sterling currency, equity or currency hedging and
derivatives exposure against the net asset value. The difference
between the two methods is that the commitment method nets off
derivative instruments and the gross method aggregates
them.
Net
asset value (“NAV”)
The NAV is
Shareholders’ funds expressed as an amount per individual Share.
Shareholders’ funds are the total value of all the Company’s
assets, at a current market value, having deducted all liabilities
and prior charges at their par value (or at their asset value). The
total NAV per Share is calculated by dividing the NAV by the number
of Shares in issue excluding Treasury Shares.
Prime
Broker
Prime
brokerage is the bundling of services by investment banks enabling
the Company to borrow securities and cash in order to be able to
invest on a netted basis and achieve an absolute return. The Prime
Broker provides custody and a centralised securities clearing
facility for the Company so the Company’s collateral requirements
are netted across all deals handled by the Prime Broker.
Ongoing
charges ratio
As
recommended by the AIC, ongoing charges are the Company’s
annualised expenses including (excluding finance costs, variable
management fee and certain non-recurring items) expressed as a
percentage of the average monthly net assets of £281,638,000. The
ongoing charges ratio is 0.47%.
Total
assets
Total
assets include investments, cash, current assets and all other
assets. An asset is an economic resource, being anything tangible
or intangible that can be owned or controlled to produce value and
to produce positive economic value. Assets represent the value of
ownership that can be converted into cash. The total assets less
all liabilities will be equivalent to total Shareholders’
funds.
Total
return
Total
return statistics enable the investor to make performance
comparisons between investment trusts with different dividend
policies. The total return measures the combined effect of any
dividends paid, together with the rise or fall in the Share price
or NAV. This is calculated by the movement in the NAV or Share
price plus dividend income reinvested by the Company at the
prevailing NAV or Share price.
NAV
Total Return
|
Page**
|
31
July 2024
|
31
July
2023
|
|
Closing
NAV per Share (p)
|
3
|
831.24
|
550.79
|
|
Total
dividends paid in the year ended 31 July 2024 (2023) (p)
|
|
21.00
|
14.00
|
|
Adjusted
closing NAV (p)
|
|
852.24
|
564.79
|
a
|
Opening
NAV per Share (p)
|
3
|
550.79
|
493.04
|
b
|
NAV
total return unadjusted
(c=((a-b)/b))
(%)
|
|
54.73
|
14.55
|
c
|
NAV total
return adjusted (%)*
|
3/4
|
55.44
|
15.34
|
|
*Based on
NAV price movements and dividends reinvested at the relevant cum
dividend NAV value during the period. Where the dividend is
invested and the NAV value falls this will further reduce the
return or, if it rises, any increase will be greater. The source is
Bloomberg who have calculated the return on an industry comparative
basis.
**Page
numbers refer to the full Annual Report.
ANNUAL
GENERAL MEETING
Notice is
hereby given that the Annual General Meeting of Manchester and London Investment Trust plc
will be held on Wednesday 6 November
2024 at 12.00 noon. Please note that the Annual General
Meeting will be held virtually.
The notice
of this meeting will also be available at
www.mlcapman.com/manchester-london-investment-trust-plc.
NOTICE
OF ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING
Letter
from the Chairman
Dear
Shareholder,
Notice
of the Annual General Meeting
I am
pleased to advise that the fiftieth Annual General Meeting (“AGM”)
of the Company will be held by means of an Electronic Facility on
Wednesday, 6 November 2024 at 12.00
noon.
Meeting
and Voting Arrangements
The
Company understands and respects the importance of the AGM to
shareholders and the Company will offer shareholders the option to
ask questions in advance of the meeting. The 2024 AGM will be a
fully virtual meeting by means of an electronic facility and
Shareholders are invited to participate in the AGM electronically
via Microsoft Teams. Further details are set out below. Please
contact the Manager who will provide further information.
Shareholders are asked to exercise their votes by submitting their
proxy electronically in advance of the meeting and to appoint the
Chairman of the meeting as their proxy with their voting
instructions. Further details of how you can vote are set out
below.
Business
of the Meeting
The formal
Notice of the AGM, which follows this letter, sets out the business
to be considered at the meeting. Shareholders are being asked to
vote on various items of business, being: the receipt and
acceptance of the Annual Report and the Financial Statements for
the year ended 31 July 2024; the
approval of the Directors’ Remuneration Report, the approval of the
Remuneration Policy; the approval of the final ordinary dividend;
the election and re-election of Directors; the re-appointment of
Deloitte LLP as Auditor; the authorisation of the Directors to
determine the remuneration of the Auditor; the authorisation of the
Directors to offer scrip dividends; the authorisation of the
Directors to allot Ordinary Shares and disapply statutory
pre-emption rights for certain issues of Ordinary Shares; the
authorisation of the Company to make market purchases of Ordinary
Shares; the authorisation for the sale of Treasury Shares at a
discount to Net Asset Value (”NAV”); and the holding of general
meetings (other than annual general meetings) on not less than 14
clear days’ notice.
Resolutions
1 to 12 will be proposed as ordinary resolutions and resolutions 13
to 16 will be proposed as special resolutions.
RESOLUTION
1 – Annual Report and Financial Statements for the year ended
31 July 2024
The
Directors are required to present to the meeting the Company’s
Strategic Report, Directors’ Report, Auditor’s Report and the
audited financial statements for the financial year ended
31 July 2024 (the “Annual Report and
Financial Statements”). These are contained in the Annual Report of
the Company for such period.
RESOLUTION
2 – Directors’ Remuneration Report
The
Directors’ Remuneration Report for the year ended 31 July 2024 is set out on pages 48 to 51 of the
full Annual Report and Financial Statements. In accordance with
Companies Act 2006 (the “Act”), this vote to approve the
Remuneration Report is advisory only and the Directors’ entitlement
to receive remuneration is not conditional on it. The resolution
and vote are a means of providing Shareholder feedback to the
Board.
RESOLUTION
3 – Directors’ Remuneration Policy
The
Directors’ Remuneration Policy is set out on page 52 of the full
Annual Report and Accounts. The Policy is unchanged since it was
presented at the AGM of the Company held on 1 November 2023. This resolution is binding in
nature and, if approved, will take effect from the conclusion of
the AGM. Renewal of the policy is required to be sought at
intervals of at least three years, or earlier if there are any
changes to the Policy, and the Policy will next be submitted to
Shareholders for approval no later than the 2027 AGM.
Notwithstanding this, the Board wishes to put the Policy to
Shareholders for approval annually.
RESOLUTION
4 – Final Dividend
The final
ordinary dividend for the year ended 31 July
2024, as recommended by the Directors, is 7 pence per Share. If approved by Shareholders at
the forthcoming AGM, this final dividend will be paid on
8 November 2024 to Shareholders on
the register at the close of business on 4
October 2024. The ex-dividend date will be 4 October 2024.
RESOLUTIONS
5 to 8 – Election and Re-election of Directors
In line
with the UK Corporate Governance Code (the “UK Code”), the Board
has agreed a policy whereby all Directors will seek annual
re-election at the Company’s AGMs. In line with this policy,
Daniel Wright, Brett Miller, Daren
Morris and James Waterlow
will stand for re-election.
Mr Wright
has no previous relationship with the Company other than his
position as an independent non-executive Director, nor with the
controlling Shareholder of the Company or any associate of the
controlling Shareholder of the Company within the meaning of
Listing Rule 10.6.16 R. In addition
to being satisfied that Mr Wright is independent of the controlling
Shareholder, the other Directors have also determined that he
satisfies all the other independence criteria in the UK
Code.
Mr Miller
is head of compliance, governance and risk oversight, holds the
SMF16 and SMF17 roles under the Senior Managers and Certification
Regime and sits on the risk management committee of M&L Capital
Management Limited, the Company’s Manager. He is therefore not
deemed to be independent of the Manager.
Neither Mr
Morris, nor Sir James have previous relationships with the Company
other than their position as independent non-executive Directors,
and Mr Morris as Audit Committee Chair. Sir James and Mr Morris
have no connections with the controlling Shareholder of the Company
or any associate of the controlling Shareholder of the Company
within the meaning of Listing Rule 10.6.16 R.
M&M
Investment Company Limited, which is controlled by Mark Sheppard who forms part of the investment
management team at M&L Capital Management Limited, is the
controlling Shareholder of the Company (further details can be
found on page 31 of the full Annual Report). The Listing Rules
require independent non-executive directors of Main Market listed
companies that have a controlling shareholder to be re-elected by a
majority of the votes cast by the independent Shareholders of the
Company, as well as by a majority of the votes cast by all the
Shareholders. In the case of the Company, ‘independent
Shareholders’ mean all the Shareholders of the Company other than
M&M Investment Company Limited.
Accordingly,
the votes cast by the independent Shareholders and by all the
Shareholders for the resolutions for the re-election of Mr Wright,
Mr Morris and Sir James (Resolutions 5, 6, 7 and 8) will be
calculated separately. Such a resolution will be passed only if a
majority of the votes cast by the independent Shareholders are in
favour, in addition to a majority of the votes cast by all the
Shareholders being in favour. If the resolution to approve the
re-election of Mr Wright, Mr Morris or Sir James is passed, but
separate approval by the independent Shareholders is not given, the
Listing Rules permit the Director to remain in office pending a
further resolution to be approved by all Shareholders, at a meeting
which must be held more than 90 days, but within 120 days, of the
first votes.
The
Chairman and the Board confirm that, following formal performance
evaluations, the performance of each of the Directors continues to
be effective and demonstrates commitment to the role and having
considered the Directors’ other time commitments and board
positions, are satisfied that each Director has the capacity to be
fully engaged with the Company’s business. The Chairman and the
Board therefore believe that it is in the interests of Shareholders
that each of the Directors standing for re-election and election
are elected. Directors’ biographical details can be found in the
full Annual Report on page 28.
RESOLUTIONS
9 and 10 – Re-appointment of Auditor and to authorise the Directors
to determine the Remuneration of the Company’s
Auditor
Auditors
must be appointed at each general meeting at which the Annual
Report and Financial Statements are presented to Shareholders. An
assessment of the independence and objectivity of Deloitte LLP has
been undertaken by the Audit Committee; it has recommended to the
Board that a resolution for the re-appointment of Deloitte LLP as
the Company’s Auditor be put to Shareholders at the forthcoming
AGM. Further details about the performance of the Auditor can be
found on page 47 of the full Annual Report. Resolution 10, if
passed, would authorise the Directors to determine the level of
Auditor’s remuneration.
RESOLUTION
11 – Authority to offer Scrip Dividends
The
Directors are proposing to obtain the authority to offer an
optional scrip dividend to Shareholders
in future
periods. Scrip dividends are subject to Shareholder approval and
Resolution 11 is being proposed at the AGM to obtain that approval.
The authority contained in Resolution 11 is to expire at the
conclusion of the annual general meeting of the Company to be held
in 2025.
Unless
circumstances change, the Directors would expect to renew this
authority annually at the annual general meetings of the Company.
Details of how any scrip dividend scheme would operate will be
released to Shareholders if such an option is actually offered in
the future.
RESOLUTION
12 – Authority to allot Shares
Resolution
12, an ordinary resolution, as set out in the notice of meeting, if
passed, will renew the Directors’ authority to issue up to an
aggregate nominal value of £2,507,938, representing 10,031,754
Ordinary Shares (being approximately one-quarter of the issued
share capital (excluding Treasury Shares) as at 20 September 2024), in accordance with statutory
pre-emption rights. The authority, if given, will lapse at the
conclusion of the next annual general meeting of the Company after
the passing of this resolution (which must be held no later than
31 January 2026). The authority will
be used where Directors consider it to be in the best interests of
Shareholders. The Directors will only issue new Ordinary Shares at
a price at or above the prevailing net asset value per Ordinary
Share.
As at
20 September 2024, 401,220 Shares
were held in Treasury.
RESOLUTION
13 – Waiver of Pre-emption Rights
Resolution
13, a special resolution, if passed, will renew the Directors’
authority to disapply the statutory pre-emption rights of existing
Shareholders in relation to the issue of Ordinary Shares for cash
or the sale of Ordinary Shares out of Treasury up to an aggregate
nominal amount of £1,003,175 (being approximately 10% of the issued
share capital (excluding Treasury Shares) as at 20 September 2024). This authority, if given,
will expire at the next annual general meeting, when a resolution
for its renewal will be proposed. The authority will be used where
Directors consider it to be in the best interests of Shareholders.
Any Ordinary Shares issued on a non-pre-emptive basis under this
authority will be issued at a price at or above the prevailing NAV
per Ordinary Share. The passing of Resolution 13 is subject to the
passing of Resolution 12.
RESOLUTION
14 – Authority to allot or sell Treasury Shares at a discount to
NAV
Subject to
the passing of Resolution 13, Resolution 14 will renew the
Company’s authority to sell Shares from Treasury at a discount to
NAV. Treasury Shares may only be sold at a discount to NAV per
Share if that discount does not exceed the weighted average
discount to NAV per Share at which the Shares were purchased and
provided that any Shares sold from Treasury for cash are sold at
higher prices (including expenses) than the weighted average price
at which those Shares were bought into Treasury.
RESOLUTION
15 – Authority to make market purchases of the Company’s own
Shares
At the
annual general meeting held on 1 November
2023, the Company was granted authority to purchase up to
14.99% of the Company’s Ordinary Shares in issue (excluding
Treasury Shares) amounting to 6,024,933 Ordinary Shares. Since
September 2021, the highest price the
Company has paid for shares held in Treasury was 666 pence. The average cost per share of the
shares held in Treasury was 549
pence. As at 31 July 2024, the
share price was 704 pence. As at
20 September 2024, 66,000 Shares have
been bought back under this authority.
Resolution
15, which will be proposed as a special resolution, seeks to renew
the authority granted at last year’s annual general meeting and
gives the Company authority to buy back its own Shares in the
market. The authority limits the number of Ordinary Shares that
could be purchased to a maximum of 6,015,040 (representing 14.99%
of the issued Ordinary Share capital of the Company (excluding
Treasury Shares) as at the close of business on 20 September). The
authority sets out the minimum and maximum prices. This authority
will expire at the conclusion of the next annual general meeting of
the Company.
Whilst the
Directors have no present intention of using this authority, the
Directors would use this authority in order to address any
imbalance between the supply and demand for the Ordinary Shares and
to manage the discount to NAV at which the Ordinary Shares trade.
When proposing this resolution the Directors have considered the
following: the Company does not capitalize any operational
(non-Equity Swap Finance) costs, the Manager’s fee structure is
viewed as competitive when compared to similarly invested, actively
managed, investment trust companies, and the Directors believe that
the discount is a function of the size of the Company, the
liquidity of its shares, and the Ten Year US Treasury
yield.
Any
purchases of Shares would be by means of market purchases through
the London Stock Exchange or other available exchanges. Any Shares
purchased pursuant to this authority may either be held as Treasury
Shares or cancelled by the Company, as determined by the Directors
at the time of purchase. The authority will only be used after
careful consideration, taking into account market conditions
prevailing at the time, other investment opportunities, appropriate
gearing levels and the overall financial position of the
Company.
RESOLUTION
16 – Notice of General Meetings
Under the
Act, the notice period required for all general meetings of a
company is 21 days. Annual general meetings will always be held on
at least 21 clear days’ notice but Shareholders can approve a
shorter notice period for other general meetings, provided this is
not less than 14 clear days. Such a notice period provides
flexibility and, if approved, will remain effective until the next
annual general meeting of the Company, when it is intended that a
similar resolution will be proposed. The Directors will only call
general meetings on 14 clear days’ notice where they consider it in
the best interests of Shareholders to do so and the relevant matter
requires to be dealt with expediently.
Action
to be taken now
Shareholders
are permitted to attend the AGM virtually. The Board recognises
that the AGM represents an important forum for Shareholders to ask
questions and virtual annual general meetings allow a methodology
for more shareholders to attend the meeting (up to 1,000) for a
lower cost (including travel costs and carbon footprint) and hence
the Board believes virtual meetings are more inclusive than
physical meetings. The Teams platform is a product of Microsoft
Corp., which is the Company’s largest investment holding, so this
will be a great opportunity for Shareholders to get first-hand
experience of a Microsoft product.
You are
encouraged to appoint a proxy online via www.signalshares.com.
Alternatively, if you hold your shares in CREST, you may appoint a
proxy via the CREST system. Notice of your appointment of a proxy
should reach the Company’s Registrar, Link Group by 12.00 noon on
Monday, 4 November 2024. If you hold
your shares through a nominee service, please contact the nominee
service provider regarding the process for appointing a proxy and
encourage them to vote electronically without delay.
If you
would like to attend the AGM virtually, please email (with Subject
Line: Request to Join vAGM) your details to ir@mlcapman.com with
proof that you are a Shareholder or you have a Letter of Authority
from the nominee company that you hold shares with. You will
receive a personal email with the Teams Invite for the
meeting.
On
the day
You can
join via Teams in the 15 minutes before the AGM from any device,
whether or not you have a Teams account. If you don’t have an
account, follow these steps to join as a guest.
-
Go to the
meeting invite and select Join Microsoft Teams Meeting.
2. That
will open a web page, where you will see two choices: Download the
Windows app and Join on the web instead. If you join on the web,
you can use either Microsoft Edge or Google Chrome. Your browser
may ask if it is okay for Teams to use your mic and camera. Be sure
to allow it so you will be seen and heard at the AGM.
3. Enter
your name and choose your audio and video settings. If the meeting
room (or another device that is connected to the meeting) is
nearby, choose Audio off to avoid disrupting. Select Phone audio if
you want to listen to the meeting on your mobile phone.
4. When
you are ready, hit Join now.
5. This
will bring you into the meeting lobby. Teams then notifies the
Manager that you are there, and then you can be
admitted.
If you
have a family member who is already a subscriber to Teams why not
have a practice run with your own family meeting with
them?
How
will the virtual AGM work?
When the
AGM opens at the appointed time, you will be able to see and hear
the Chairman. The Chairman will open the AGM and address all
questions that have been submitted in advance. There will be a
short opportunity to ask any further questions. Then the Chairman
will ask if anyone wishes to vote using the Poll Card (please do
not elect to do so if you have already voted by Proxy and do not
wish to change your vote). If anyone does wish to vote by Poll
Card, the process of how and when to vote using a Poll Card will be
explained and Poll Card votes will be accepted throughout the AGM
and the following 30 minutes after the AGM.
The
Chairman will then formally put each resolution to the AGM and
advise of the proxy votes already received in advance.
The
Manager will then say a few words about the Portfolio and the
Financial markets. A further opportunity will then be provided to
ask the Manager questions.
The AGM
will then formally close.
The
results of the AGM will be announced by an RNS and posted to the
Company’s website:
https://mlcapman.com/manchester-london-investment-trust-plc/
How
to vote, speak and ask a question at the virtual
AGM
There will
be an opportunity to download, complete, sign and submit poll cards
at the Virtual meeting but the Board encourages Shareholders to
vote electronically and to appoint the Chairman of the meeting as
their proxy with their voting instructions. You will find
instructions in the notes to the notice to enable you to vote
electronically via www.signalshares.com and how to register to do
so. All valid proxy votes will be included in the voting. The
ability to vote by Poll Card will close 30 minutes after the close
of the AGM.
Shareholders
are also invited to ask questions at the AGM. The Board invites
Shareholders to submit any questions they may have for the virtual
AGM by email (with Subject Line: Question for vAGM) to
ir@mlcapman.com. The Manager will endeavor to answer your question
or get an answer to your question and provide that to you
personally before the AGM but the Chairman will also post your
question at the AGM, identify you as the person who formed the
question and any reply provided to you. If you do have a specific
question whilst the AGM is in progress then use the “Raise Hand”
function in the “Reactions” menu on the Teams Meeting platform or
by typing the question through the Chat function on the Teams
platform. You will be kept on mute by the AGM host until you are
invited to speak/ask your question(s).
Recommendation
The Board
considers all the resolutions to be proposed at the AGM to be in
the best interests of Shareholders and the Company as a whole.
Accordingly, the Directors unanimously recommend that all
Shareholders vote in favour of the resolutions, as they intend to
do in respect of their own shareholdings.
Keeping
in touch
If you
have not already done so we suggest you provide your email to the
Registrars investor relations site by logging on to
www.signalshares.com AND providing your email to the Manager at
ir@mlcapman.com if you wish to receive the Fund Factsheet
monthly.
Yours
faithfully,
Daniel Wright
Chairman
25 September 2024
NOTICE
OF THE ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING 2024
Notice is
hereby given that the Annual General Meeting (the “AGM”) of
Manchester and London Investment
Trust plc (the “Company”) will be held virtually on Wednesday,
6 November 2024 at 12.00
noon.
Resolutions
1 to 12 (inclusive) will be proposed as ordinary resolutions, which
means that for each of these to be passed, more than 50% of the
votes cast must be in favour of the resolution. Resolutions 13 to
16 will be proposed as special resolutions, meaning that for each
of these to be passed, at least 75% of the votes cast must be in
favour.
Each of
the resolutions to be considered at the AGM will be voted on by way
of a poll. This ensures that, if shareholders are unable to attend
the AGM but have appointed proxies, their votes are taken into
account. The results of the polls will be announced to the London
Stock Exchange and published on the Company’s website as soon as
possible after the conclusion of the AGM.
Business
of the Meeting
Ordinary
Resolutions
1. To
receive and accept the Company’s Annual Report and Financial
Statements for the year ended 31 July
2024.
2. To
receive and approve the Directors’ Remuneration Report for the year
ended 31 July 2024.
3. To
approve the Directors’ Remuneration Policy.
4. To
declare a final ordinary dividend of 7
pence per Ordinary Share for the year ended 31 July 2024.
5. To
re-elect Daniel Wright as a
Director.
6. To
re-elect Brett Miller as a
Director.
7. To
re-elect Daren Morris as a
Director.
8. To
re-elect James Waterlow as a
Director.
9. To
re-appoint Deloitte LLP as Auditor of the Company to hold office
from the conclusion of this meeting until the conclusion of the
next annual general meeting of the Company at which the Annual
Report and Financial Statements are laid.
10. To
authorise the Directors to determine the Auditor’s
remuneration.
11. THAT,
the Directors of the Company be and are hereby authorised to offer
holders of the Ordinary Shares of 25
pence each in the capital of the Company (“Ordinary Shares”)
the right to elect to receive newly issued Ordinary Shares, which
are credited as fully paid up, instead of cash in respect of the
whole (or part at the Directors’ discretion) of any dividend
declared from time to time in respect of which the Directors
determine that such election should apply, such authority to expire
at the conclusion of the annual general meeting of the Company to
be held in 2025.
12. THAT,
the Directors of the Company be and are hereby generally and
unconditionally authorised, in addition to any existing
authorities, pursuant to and in accordance with Section 551 of the
Companies Act 2006 (the “Act”) to exercise all the powers of the
Company to allot Ordinary Shares of 25
pence each in the capital of the Company (“Ordinary
Shares”), up to an aggregate nominal amount of £2,507,938,
representing 10,031,754 Ordinary Shares (being approximately
one-quarter of the issued share capital (excluding Treasury Shares)
as at 20 September 2024), such
authority to expire at the next annual general meeting of the
Company after the passing of this resolution (unless previously
revoked or varied by the Company in a general meeting), save that
the Company may, at any time prior to the expiry of such authority,
make an offer or enter into an agreement which would or might
require Ordinary Shares to be allotted and the Directors may allot
Ordinary Shares in pursuance of such an offer or agreement as if
the authority conferred hereby had not expired.
Special
Resolutions
13. THAT,
subject to the passing of Resolution 12 above, in addition to any
existing authorities, the Directors be and are hereby empowered,
pursuant to Sections 570 to 573 of the Act to allot Ordinary Shares
for cash and to sell Ordinary Shares from Treasury for cash
pursuant to the authority referred to in Resolution 12 above as if
Section 561 of the Act did not apply to any such allotment or sale
provided that this authority: (i) shall be limited to the allotment
of Ordinary Shares and the sale of Ordinary Shares from Treasury
for cash up to an aggregate nominal amount of £1,003,175
(representing approximately 10% of the issued Share capital
(excluding Treasury Shares) of the Company as at 20 September 2024); and (ii) shall expire at the
conclusion of the next annual general meeting of the Company after
the passing of this resolution (unless previously revoked or varied
by the Company in general meeting), save that the Company may, at
any time prior to the expiry of such power, make an offer or enter
into an agreement which would or might require Ordinary Shares to
be allotted or sold from Treasury after the expiry of such power,
and the Directors may allot Ordinary Shares or sell Ordinary Shares
from Treasury in pursuance of such an offer or agreement as if such
power had not expired.
14. THAT,
subject to the passing of Resolution 13, to generally and
unconditionally authorise and empower the Directors in compliance
with the Listing Rules to sell, transfer and allot Shares held by
the Company in Treasury (whether or not those Shares are held in
Treasury at the date this Resolution is passed or repurchased
pursuant to the authority sought under Resolution 15 below) for
cash and that such Shares may be allotted or sold or transferred
for a price which represents a discount to the most recently
published NAV per Share as at the date of such allotment or sale
provided that such discount does not exceed the weighted average
discount to NAV per Share at which the Shares were purchased and
provided that any Shares sold from Treasury for cash are sold at
higher prices (including expenses) than the weighted average price
at which those Shares were bought into Treasury. The authority
hereby granted shall require renewal from Shareholders and expire
at the conclusion of the next annual general meeting of the Company
after the passing of this Resolution, save that the Company may
before such expiry enter into offers or agreements which would or
might require Shares held in Treasury to be sold or allotted after
such expiry and the Company may sell or allot Shares pursuant to
any such offer or agreement as if the authority hereby granted had
not expired.
15. THAT,
in substitution of all existing authorities, to unconditionally and
generally authorise the Company, pursuant to section 701 of the
Act, to make one or more market purchases (within the meaning of
section 693 of the Act) of any of its own Ordinary Shares of
25 pence provided that:
a. the
maximum number of Ordinary Shares hereby authorised to be so
purchased shall be 6,015,040 (or, if less, 14.99% of the number of
Ordinary Shares in issue (excluding Treasury Shares) immediately
following the passing of this Resolution);
b. the
minimum price, exclusive of expenses, which may be paid for such
Shares shall be 25 pence
each;
c. the
maximum price, exclusive of expenses, which may be paid for a Share
contracted to be purchased on any day shall be an amount not more
than the highest of (i) 105% of the average of the Last Price per
Bloomberg (or the closing price of the London Stock Exchange Daily
Official List) of the Company’s Ordinary Shares for the five
business days immediately preceding the day on which such Share is
contracted to be purchased and (ii) the higher of the price of the
last independent trade, and the highest current independent bid
price for a share of the Company on the trading venues where the
market purchases by the Company pursuant to the authority conferred
by this Resolution 14 will be carried out;
d. the
authority hereby conferred shall expire at the conclusion of the
next annual general meeting of the Company, unless previously
renewed, varied or revoked by the Company in a general meeting;
and
e. the
Company may make a contract or contracts to purchase its own shares
under the authority hereby conferred prior to the expiry of such
authority which will or might be executed wholly or partly after
the expiration of such authority and may make a purchase of its own
Shares in pursuance of any such contract(s).
16. THAT,
a general meeting, other than an annual general meeting, may be
called on not less than 14 clear days’ notice.
By order
of the Board
Daniel Wright
Chairman
25 September 2024
NOTES
TO THE NOTICE OF THE ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING
1. To be
entitled to vote at the Meeting (and for the purpose of the
determination by the Company of the number of votes they may cast),
Shareholders must be registered in the Register of Members of the
Company at close of trading on Monday, 4
November 2024. Changes to the Register of Members after the
relevant deadline shall be disregarded in determining the rights of
any person to attend and vote at the Meeting.
2.
Shareholders are entitled to appoint another person as a proxy to
exercise all or part of their rights to attend and to speak and
vote on their behalf at the Meeting. A Shareholder may appoint more
than one proxy in relation to the Meeting provided that each proxy
is appointed to exercise the rights attached to a different
Ordinary Share or Ordinary Shares held by that Shareholder. A proxy
need not be a Shareholder of the Company however the Board
recommends that you only appoint the Chairman of the meeting as
your proxy.
3. In the
case of joint holders, where more than one of the joint holders
purports to appoint a proxy, only the appointment submitted by the
most senior holder will be accepted. Seniority is determined by the
order in which the names of the joint holders appear in the
Company’s Register of Members in respect of the joint holding (the
first named being the most senior).
4. A vote
withheld is not a vote in law, which means that the vote will not
be counted in the calculation of votes for or against the
resolution. If no voting indication is given, your proxy will vote
or abstain from voting at his or her discretion. Your proxy will
vote (or abstain from voting) as he or she thinks fit in relation
to any other matter which is put before the Meeting.
5.
You
can vote either:
a.
By
logging on to www.signalshares.com and following the
instructions.
b.
You may request a hard copy form of proxy directly from the
registrars, Link Group via email to
shareholderenquiries@linkgroup.co.uk or by calling 0371 664 0300.
Calls cost 12p per minute plus your phone company’s access charge.
Calls outside the United Kingdom
will be charged at the applicable international rate. Lines are
open between 09:00 – 17:30, Monday to Friday excluding public
holidays in England and
Wales.
c.
In
the case of CREST members, by utilising the CREST electronic proxy
appointment service in accordance with the procedures set out
below.
In
order for a proxy appointment to be valid a form of proxy must be
completed. In each case the form of proxy must be received by Link
Group at Central Square, 29 Wellington Street, Leeds LS1 4DL by 12.00 noon on Monday,
4 November 2024.
6. If you
return more than one proxy appointment, either by paper or
electronic communication, the appointment received last by the
Registrar before the latest time for the receipt of proxies will
take precedence. You are advised to read the terms and conditions
of use carefully. Electronic communication facilities are open to
all Shareholders.
7. The
return of a completed form of proxy, electronic filing or any CREST
Proxy Instruction (as described in note 11 below) will in itself
not prevent a Shareholder from attending the virtual Meeting and
voting in person if he/she wishes to do so.
8. CREST
members who wish to appoint a proxy or proxies through the CREST
electronic proxy appointment service may do so for the Meeting (and
any adjournment of the Meeting) by using the procedures described
in the CREST Manual (available from www.euroclear.com. CREST
Personal Members or other CREST sponsored members, and those CREST
members who have appointed a service provider(s), should refer to
their CREST sponsor or voting service provider(s), who will be able
to take the appropriate action on their behalf.
9. In
order for a proxy appointment or instruction made by means of CREST
to be valid, the appropriate CREST message (a ‘CREST Proxy
Instruction’) must be properly authenticated in accordance with
Euroclear UK & International Limited’s specifications and must
contain the information required for such instructions, as
described in the CREST Manual. The message must be transmitted so
as to be received by the issuer’s agent (ID RA10) by 12.00 noon on
Monday, 4 November 2024. For this
purpose, the time of receipt will be taken to mean the time (as
determined by the timestamp applied to the message by the CREST
application host) from which the issuer’s agent is able to retrieve
the message by enquiry to CREST in the manner prescribed by CREST.
After this time, any change of instructions to proxies appointed
through CREST should be communicated to the appointee through other
means.
10. CREST
members and, where applicable, their CREST sponsors or voting
service providers should note that Euroclear UK & International
Limited does not make available special procedures in CREST for any
particular message. Normal system timings and limitations will,
therefore, apply in relation to the input of CREST Proxy
Instructions. It is the responsibility of the CREST member
concerned to take (or, if the CREST member is a CREST personal
member, or sponsored member, or has appointed a voting service
provider(s), to procure that his CREST sponsor or voting service
provider(s) take(s)) such action as shall be necessary to ensure
that a message is transmitted by means of the CREST system by any
particular time. In this connection, CREST members and, where
applicable, their CREST sponsors or voting system providers are
referred, in particular, to those sections of the CREST Manual
concerning practical limitations of the CREST system and timings.
The Company may treat as invalid a CREST Proxy Instruction in the
circumstances set out in Regulation 35(5)(a) of the Uncertificated
Securities Regulations 2001.
11.
Any
corporation which is a Shareholder can appoint one or more
corporate representatives who may exercise on its behalf all of its
powers as a Shareholder provided that no more than one corporate
representative exercises powers in relation to the same shares. So
if your shares are held in Nominee you will need the Nominee to
appoint you as a corporate representative and they will need to
provide us a letter setting out the details of your appointment AND
of your shareholding. If we do not have such a letter, or the
Registrar has not been provided such a letter, or your letter is
not complete then you will be denied access to the
meeting.
12. As at
20 September 2024 (being the latest
practicable business day prior to the publication of this Notice),
the Company’s ordinary issued share capital consists of 40,528,238
Ordinary Shares, carrying one vote each. As at 20 September 2024, 401,220 Shares are held in
treasury. Therefore, the total voting rights in the Company as at
20 September 2024 are
40,127,018.
13. Under
Section 527 of the Companies Act 2006, Shareholders meeting the
threshold requirements set out in that section have the right to
require the Company to publish on a website a statement setting out
any matter relating to: (i) the audit of the Company’s financial
statements (including the Auditor’s Report and the conduct of the
audit) that are to be laid before the Meeting; or (ii) any
circumstances connected with an auditor of the Company ceasing to
hold office since the previous meeting at which annual financial
statements and reports were laid in accordance with Section 437 of
the Companies Act 2006 (in each case) that the Shareholders propose
to raise at the relevant meeting. The Company may not require the
Shareholders requesting any such website publication to pay its
expenses in complying with Sections 527 or 528 of the Companies Act
2006. Where the Company is required to place a statement on a
website under Section 527 of the Companies Act 2006, it must
forward the statement to the Company’s auditor not later than the
time when it makes the statement available on the website. The
business which may be dealt with at the Meeting for the relevant
financial year includes any statement that the Company has been
required under Section 527 of the Companies Act 2006 to publish on
a website.
14. Any
Shareholder have the right to attend the Meeting has the right to
ask questions. The Company must cause to be answered any such
question relating to the business being dealt with at the Meeting
but no
such answer need be given if: (a) to do so would interfere unduly
with the preparation for the Meeting or involve the disclosure of
confidential information; (b) the answer has already been given on
a website in the form of an answer to a question; or (c) it is
undesirable in the interests of the Company or the good order of
the Meeting that the question be answered.
Should you
have any questions regarding the business of the meeting, please
email the Board or Manager on
ir@mlcapman.com.
15. Copies
of the Directors’ letters of appointment or service contracts are
available for inspection on the Company’s website and during normal
business hours at the registered office of the Company on any
business day from the date of this Notice until the conclusion of
the Meeting.
16. A
person to whom this notice is sent who is a person nominated under
Section 146 of the Companies Act 2006 to enjoy information rights
(a “Nominated Person”) may, under an agreement between him/her and
the Shareholder by whom he/she was nominated, have a right to be
appointed (or to have someone else appointed) as a proxy for the
AGM. If a Nominated Person has no such proxy appointment right or
does not wish to exercise it, he/she may, under any such agreement,
have a right to give instructions to the Shareholder as to the
exercise of voting rights.
The
statements of the rights of members in relation to the appointment
of proxies in note 2 above do not apply to a Nominated Person. The
rights described in this note can only be exercised by registered
members of the Company.
17. You
may not use any electronic address (within the meaning of Section
333(4) of the Companies Act 2006) provided in either this Notice or
any related documents (including the form of proxy) to communicate
with the Company for any purposes other than those expressly
stated.
18. A copy
of this Notice, and other information required by Section 311A of
the Companies Act 2006, can be found on the Company’s website
at
www.mlcapman.com/manchester-london- investment-trust-plc.
APPENDIX
1 – Biographies of the Directors
Daniel
Wright
Mr Wright
was appointed to the Board on 29 October 2018, so he has served on
the Board as an independent non-executive director for six years.
Mr Wright was appointed as Chairman of the Board on 26 November
2021.
Principal
External Appointments:
Director
of SolasCure Limited.
Executive
Chairman of Science in Sport Plc.
Non-Executive
Chairman of Uinsure Group Holdings.
Mr Wright
was previously the founding partner, chief operating officer and
head of portfolio at NorthEdge Capital, executive chairman of
Accrol Group Holdings Plc and Chairman of Vision Support Services
Group Limited, a private company that he founded and grew to become
Europe’s leading distributor of textiles to the hospitality
sector.
He has
also held previous roles at Cable Partners LLC, Deutsche Morgan
Grenfell Private Equity and The Royal Bank of Scotland.
Bio
Mr Wright
graduated from the University of Cambridge and qualified as a
chartered accountant with Arthur Andersen in 1996.
What
we value: Experienced
Chairman with deep understanding of how companies work, Accounting
knowledge, Interest in International affairs and geo-politics. Dan
has an interest in 149,542 (95,086 of which held by PCAs) shares in
the company.
Daren
Morris
Mr Morris
was appointed to the Board of the Company and as Chairman of the
Audit Committee on 10 December 2021. He is also the Company’s
Senior Independent Director.
Principal
External Appointments:
CFO of Big
Technologies PLC, a company listed on AIM and active in the
provision of advanced technology for the electronic monitoring of
individuals. Previously CFO of Volex PLC from 2015 to 2020. Spent
the first 18 years of his career in investment banking and
accountancy and was a Managing Director at both UBS Investment Bank
and Morgan Stanley. Mr Morris’s other public company board
experience includes Big Technologies plc, Volex plc, Easynet plc
and Nexen Tech Corporation.
Bio
Mr Morris
is a qualified chartered accountant (ICAEW ACA 1997) and graduated
in Physics from Trinity College, Oxford.
What
we value: Mr Morris
has done an excellent job as Chairman of the Audit Committee. He
has a highly impressive CV of public company and City experience.
He has an interest in 38,000 shares in the company.
Brett
Miller
Mr Miller
was appointed to the Board on 30 August 2013, so he has served on
the Board for 11 years.
Mr Miller
is not a member of the Audit Committee.
Principal
External Appointments:
Director
of Ecofin US Renewables Infrastructure Trust plc.
Director
of SLF Realisation Fund Limited.
Bio
Mr Miller
graduated from the University of the Witwatersrand (South Africa)
with a Bachelors degree majoring in law and economics and
additionally holds a law degree from the London School of
Economics. He qualified as a solicitor and practised until 1997. Mr
Miller is head of compliance, governance and risk oversight, holds
the SMF16 and SMF17 roles under the Senior Managers and
Certification Regime and also sits on the risk management committee
of MLCM, the Company’s Manager.
What
we value: Long
service with deep knowledge of the last decade of the Company’s
history, Legal knowledge, Extensive public company knowledge. Mr
Miller has an interest of 1,734 shares in the company.
Sir
James Waterlow
Sir James
Waterlow was appointed to the Board on 17 August 2020. Sir James
Waterlow is a member of the Audit Committee.
Bio
Specialised
in investment trusts for thirty years, for the past fifteen as a
partner on the Investment Funds team at Singer Capital Markets.
During his career he has advised approximately 30 investment trust
boards and worked on a significant number of transactions, raising
over £5 billion for new and existing funds.
Sir James
graduated from the University of Exeter.
What
we value: Very
useful understanding of the Investment Trust Company sector as it
develops in context to both regulatory and market events. Extensive
contacts with Investors in Investment Funds. Sir James has an
interest in 15,000 shares in the company.
The
Directors are shareholders like you. They are hardworking and
dedicated and we ask you for your support in their
re-appointment.
APPENDIX
2 – Technical help for the Virtual AGM
-
Now:
Email ir@mlcapman.com requesting a Microsoft Teams Meeting invite.
Subject Line: Request to Join vAGM
-
Now:
Please vote for the resolutions:
·
By
logging on to www.signalshares.com and following the
instructions;
·
You
may request a hard copy form of proxy directly from the registrars,
Link Group, on Tel: 0371 664 0300. Calls cost 12p per minute plus
your phone company’s access charge. Calls outside the United
Kingdom will be charged at the applicable international rate. Lines
are open between 09:00 – 17:30, Monday to Friday excluding public
holidays in England and Wales.
·
In
the case of CREST members, by utilising the CREST electronic proxy
appointment service in accordance with the procedures set out
below.
·
In order
for a proxy appointment to be valid a form of proxy must be
completed. In each case the form of proxy must be received by Link
Group at Central Square, 29 Wellington Street, Leeds LS1 4DL by
12.00 noon on Monday 4 November 2024.
-
Now:
Please email your questions to ir@mlcapman.com. Subject Line:
Question for vAGM.
-
On the day:
Please vote Go to the meeting invite and select Join Microsoft
Teams Meeting.
·
That will
open a web page, where you will see two choices: Download the
Windows app and Join on the web instead. If you join on the web,
you can use either Microsoft Edge or Google Chrome. Your browser
may ask if it’s okay for Teams to use your mic and camera. Be sure
to allow it so you’ll be seen and heard in your meeting.
·
Enter your
name and choose your audio and video settings. If the meeting room
(or another device that’s connected to the meeting) is nearby,
choose Audio off to avoid disrupting. Select Phone audio if you
want to listen to the meeting on your mobile phone.
·
When
you’re ready, hit Join now.
·
This will
bring you into the meeting lobby. Teams then notifies the Manager
that you’re there, and then you can be admitted.
-
At the Virtual AGM:
If you want to vote by Poll Card at the meeting (and you have not
voted by Proxy before OR you have voted by Proxy before but wish to
change your vote) then please now download (they will be posted on
the Team platform), complete, sign and submit by email to ir@
mlcapman or via the “Chat” function on Teams your completed poll
cards at the Virtual meeting
-
At the Virtual AGM:
If you do have a specific question whilst the AGM is in progress
then use the “Raise Hand” function in the “Reactions” menu on the
Teams Meeting platform or by typing the question through the Chat
function on the Teams platform.
NATIONAL
STORAGE MECHANISM
A copy of
the Annual Report and Financial Statements including the Notice of
Annual General Meeting will be submitted shortly to the National
Storage Mechanism (“NSM”) and will be available for inspection at
the NSM, which is situated at
https://data.fca.org.uk/#/nsm/nationalstoragemechanism.
LEI:
213800HMBZXULR2EEO10
ENDS
Neither
the contents of the Company’s website nor the contents of any
website accessible from hyperlinks on this announcement (or any
other website) is incorporated into, or forms part of, this
announcement.