POLAR CAPITAL GLOBAL FINANCIALS TRUST PLC
Legal Entity Identifier:
549300G5SWN8EP2P4U41
AUDITED ANNUAL RESULTS ANNOUNCEMENT FOR THE YEAR
ENDED
30 NOVEMBER 2024
PERFORMANCE HIGHLIGHTS FOR THE YEAR ENDED 30 NOVEMBER
2024
Performance (Sterling total return)
|
For the year ended
30 November 2024 %
|
Since Inception
%
|
Net asset value (NAV) per ordinary
share*(1)
|
34.8
|
199.2
|
Ordinary share
price*(2)
|
45.4
|
173.1
|
Ordinary share price including
subscription share value*(3)
|
-
|
174.9
|
Benchmark (Sterling total return) (4)
MSCI ACWI Financials
|
36.1
|
204.8
|
Other Indices and peer group (Sterling total
return)
|
|
|
MSCI World Index
|
26.8
|
285.7
|
FTSE All Share Index
|
15.8
|
104.3
|
Lipper Financial Sector
(5)
|
37.1
|
161.8
|
|
|
|
Performance since Reconstruction on 22 April 2020 (Sterling
total return)
|
Since Reconstruction %
|
NAV per ordinary share*
(6)
|
|
129.9
|
Benchmark (4)
|
|
128.1
|
|
|
|
Financials
|
As at
30 November
2024
|
As at
30 November
2023
|
%
Change
|
Total net assets
|
£629,678,000
|
£488,198,000
|
+29.0
|
NAV per ordinary share
|
207.7p
|
158.1p
|
+31.4
|
Ordinary share price
|
196.2p
|
138.8p
|
+41.4
|
Discount per ordinary
share*
|
(5.5%)
|
(12.2%)
|
|
Net gearing*
|
5.1%
|
6.5%
|
|
Earnings per Ordinary share (7)
|
For the year ended
30
November 2024
|
For the year ended
30
November 2023
|
|
Revenue Return
|
5.31p
|
4.97p
|
|
Capital Return
|
48.62p
|
(9.84p)
|
|
Total
|
53.93p
|
(4.87p)
|
|
Expenses*
|
|
|
|
Ongoing Charges
|
0.85%
|
0.86%
|
|
Ongoing charges including
performance fee (8)
|
0.85%
|
0.86%
|
|
Dividends~
The Company has paid or declared
the following dividends relating to the financial year ended 30
November 2024:
Pay date
|
Amount per Ordinary Share
|
Ordinary Shares
In
issue
|
Record Date
|
Ex-Date
|
Declared Date
|
First
interim:
30 August
2024
|
2.50p
|
304,272,705
|
2 August 2024
|
1 August 2024
|
27 June 2024
|
Second
interim:
28
February 2025
|
2.20p
|
303,219,365
|
7 February 2025
|
6 February 2025
|
20 January 2025
|
Total (2023: 4.55p)
|
4.70p
|
|
|
|
|
Note
1
The total return NAV performance for the period is calculated
by reinvesting the dividends in the assets of the Company from the
relevant ex-dividend date. Performance since inception has been
calculated using the initial NAV of 98p and the NAV on 30 November
2024. Dividends are deemed to be reinvested on the ex-dividend date
as this is the protocol used by the Company's benchmark and other
indices.
Note
2
The total return share price performance is calculated by
reinvesting the dividends in the shares of the Company from the
relevant ex-dividend date. Performance since inception has been
calculated using the launch price of 100p to the closing price on
30 November 2024.
Note
3
The total return share price performance since inception
includes the value of the subscription shares issued free of
payment at launch on the basis of one for every five Ordinary
shares and assumes such were held throughout the period from launch
to the final conversion date of 31 July 2017. Performance is
calculated by reinvesting the dividends in the shares of the
Company from the relevant ex-dividend date and uses the launch
price of 100p per Ordinary share and the closing price per Ordinary
share on 30 November 2024.
Note
4
Effective from 1 June 2024, the Board agreed to remove the
chain linked benchmark which had historically been provided as a
point of reference for information purposes only. The chain linked
benchmark was a combination of 3 benchmarks which were in operation
during the life of the Company. From inception until 31 August
2016, the Company's benchmark was the MSCI World Financials Index
Net Total Return Index, which included Real Estate as a constituent
until its removal that year. From 1 September 2016 to 23 April 2020
the benchmark was the MSCI World Financials + Real Estate Net Total
Return Index. From 23 April 2020, the benchmark changed to MSCI
ACWI Financials Net Total Return Index due to the Company's
exposure to emerging market equities and its limited exposure to
real estate equities. Performance and any associated calculations
that include the Benchmark, which is now the MSCI ACWI Financials
Net Total Return Index, as a reference point, remain
unchanged.
Note
5
Dynamic average of open-ended funds in the Lipper Financial
Sector Universe which comprised 59 open ended funds in the year
under review.
Note
6
The total return NAV performance since Reconstruction is
calculated by reinvesting the dividends in the assets of the
Company from the relevant ex-dividend date. The new performance fee
period runs from the date of the Reconstruction. The opening NAV
for the performance fee of 102.8p is the closing NAV the night
before the tender offer was completed.
Note 7
Refer to Note 11 below for more details.
Note 8
There was no performance fee provision in the current or prior
year.
*
Alternative Performance Measure, see below for further
explanations.
~
Refer to Note 12 below for more
details.
Data sourced by HSBC Securities Services Limited and Polar
Capital
LLP.
Status of
Announcement
The figures and financial information contained in this
announcement are extracted from the draft unaudited financial
results for the year ended 30 November 2024 and do not constitute
statutory accounts for that year. Once finalised, the Annual Report
and Financial Statements will include the Report of the Independent
Auditors which is expected to be unqualified and not expected to
contain a statement under either section 498(2) or Section 498(3)
of the Companies Act 2006. The Annual Report and Financial
Statements for the year ended 30 November 2023 have not yet been
delivered to the Registrar of Companies.
The figures and financial information for the year ended 30
November 2023 have been extracted from the published Annual Report
and Financial Statements for the year ended 30 November 2023 and do
not constitute the statutory accounts for that year. The Annual
Report and Financial Statements for the year ended 30 November 2023
have been delivered to the Registrar of Companies and included the
Report of the Independent Auditors which was unqualified and did
not contain a statement under either section 498(2) or Section
498(3) of the Companies Act 2006.
The Directors' Remuneration Report and
certain other helpful shareholder information have not
been included in this announcement but will form part of
the finalised Annual Report which will be available
on the Company's website and will be sent to shareholders in
February 2025.
National Storage
Mechanism
A
copy of the Annual Report once published will be submitted to the
National Storage Mechanism ('NSM') and will then be available for
inspection
at https://data.fca.org.uk/#/nsm/nationalstoragemechanism.
Neither the contents of the Company's website nor the contents
of any website accessible from the hyperlinks on the Company's
website (or any other website) are incorporated into or form part
of this announcement.
CHAIR'S STATEMENT
Dear Shareholders,
On behalf of myself and the Board I
am pleased to provide to you the Annual Report of the Company for
the year to 30 November 2024.
The Company was able to take
advantage of the strength of the financials markets over the
period, returning a net asset value per share of 34.8%, the best
annual investment performance in the Company's history. Moreover,
the Company's share price discount to NAV narrowed during the
financial year, ending at 5.5% compared to the prior year of 12.2%.
This strong investment performance and the narrowing of the
discount resulted in a total share price return for the year of
45.4%.
The investment return was
marginally behind the Benchmark which rose 36.1% during the period.
About 6.5% of the Company's portfolio is invested in fixed income
securities which returned 12%. Excluding the fixed income portfolio
the investment return would have exceeded the Benchmark which
includes only equities. Longer term investment performance remains
good with NAV total return measured from the Company's
reconstruction in April 2020 to the year ending 30 November 2024 at
129.9% versus the Benchmark of 128.1%. The share price total return
for the same period was 128.3%.
Investment Performance
Headline performance figures
disguise the ebb and flow of the market: markets do not tend to
progress evenly, there are many twists and turns and global events
that influence investor sentiment over any period. The financial
year under review in this set of report and accounts is no
exception. Our managers have been active with the portfolio,
adjusting by country or region and by sector as they deem
appropriate. They have made some very good calls (being overweight
alternative asset managers for example) which have benefitted the
Trust but, as is typical of any active manager, not everything went
their way.
The last few months of the period
under review were particularly challenging. The knife-edge US
election, more muted reductions in interest rates and the potential
for slower economic growth across many regions led to a more
defensive positioning of our portfolio. Being underweight large cap
US banks meant we slightly underperformed as Trump was voted in for
a second term as US President. Overall, the Manager navigated these
bouts of volatility extremely well and delivered a good investment
performance.
As in previous years, the Manager
has provided a detailed account of the team's activity and their
views and outlook. I encourage Shareholders to read this to gain a
fuller understanding of the investment environment in which the
managers operate and how they evolved the portfolio throughout the
year. The Manager's report is provided in the Annual
Report.
2025 Tender Offer
The Company was launched in July
2013 with a fixed seven-year life. Shareholders approved changes to
the Company's Articles of Association to make regular tender offers
to all Shareholders and to extend the Company's life indefinitely
at the Company's General Meeting held on 7 April 2020. The Articles
of Association require the Company to make tender offers for up to
100 per cent of the shares held by each Shareholder at five-yearly
intervals, with the first to commence on or before 30 June 2025
(the "2025 Tender Offer").
Shareholders who wish to realise
their investment in the Company (in whole or in part) pursuant to
the 2025 Tender Offer will be offered the opportunity to tender
their shares for sale at the prevailing NAV per ordinary share less
costs and other appropriate adjustments. A further announcement
setting out the full details, timetable of events and terms of the
2025 Tender Offer will be published in due course.
NAV Discount Management
The Company continued to pursue a
substantial share buyback policy during the year which was positive
for the NAV and helped support liquidity in the shares. The Company
bought back a total of 5,642,322 ordinary shares, equivalent to
1.7% of the shares in issue at the start of the period, at an
average discount of 8.9%. These buybacks had an accretive effect on
the NAV of 0.26p per share. No ordinary shares were bought back
following the year end.
The Board issues a delegated
authority to the Manager and the Corporate Broker to buy shares
under defined parameters. These are designed to ensure that the
Company does not displace any market demand for shares but provides
liquidity, if required, once market demand has been satisfied. The
Board has reconfirmed its authority to the Manager to continue the
policy of share repurchases under appropriate parameters to ensure
liquidity for Shareholders and reduce the discount at which the
Company's shares trade. The Company's share price traded in a
discount range of 4.7% to 12.4%, ending at a discount of
5.5%.
Dividends
The Company currently adopts a
progressive dividend policy, whereby dividends may increase on an
annual basis (the Existing Policy). There is no guarantee, however,
that such increases will be achieved. The aim is to pay two interim
dividends each year, in February and August however these interim
dividends will not necessarily be of equal amounts as dividends
from the Company's underlying investments arrive irregularly
throughout the financial year.
The Board continually monitors the
dividend outlook from its equity holdings, interest income from
cash and from fixed income securities. In August 2024 the Company
paid an interim dividend of 2.50p per ordinary share. The Board has
declared a further interim dividend of 2.20p per ordinary share
payable to Shareholders on the register as at 7 February 2025. This
will bring the total dividend paid for the financial year under
review to 4.70p per ordinary share, an increase of 3.3% on the
previous financial year.
Following feedback from
shareholders and engagement with our advisors and the manager, the
Board is mindful that many investors now seek investments that
offer a regular and attractive dividend. As such, the Board is
proposing the adoption of an "enhanced dividend" policy under which
it will aim to pay, in the absence of unforeseen circumstances, a
regular dividend equivalent to approximately 4% of the Company's
NAV in a given year. It is proposed that dividends will be paid
quarterly at a level of 1% of the Company's NAV, calculated on the
last business day of each prior financial quarter. Under this
proposal, Dividends will be paid from available revenue and topped
up, if necessary, from distributable capital reserves. Further
details in respect of the payment of dividends from distributable
capital reserves can be found in Notes 22 and 23 in the financial
statements. The ability to use other distributable capital
reserves to help smooth the level of dividend payments over the
longer term is a distinguishing feature of investment trusts. Any
dividend distributions by the Company will result in a decrease in
NAV.
Shareholders will have the
opportunity to vote on the proposed dividend policy at the Annual
General Meeting taking place on 10 April 2025. Should there be
sufficient support, and the new dividend policy be approved, it
will be effective for the financial year commencing 1 December
2025. In the absence of unforeseen circumstances and if approved,
the first dividend payable on the new basis will be calculated by
reference to the Company's NAV for the quarter ending 27 February
2026. It is anticipated that the dividend will be announced in
mid-March 2026 and subsequently paid in April 2026. Subsequent
dividends will follow a similar pattern.
Should the proposed new dividend
policy not be approved by Shareholders at the AGM, the Board will
maintain the Existing Policy as outlined above until a dividend
policy is proposed to shareholders again at the AGM to be held in
2026.
Cancellation of Share Premium Account
The Companies Act 2006 permits the
Company (subject to the approval of Shareholders and the consent of
the Court) to cancel its share premium account and credit the
balance to the Company's distributable reserves. The "share premium
account" has accumulated over time as the result of the Company
issuing shares at a premium to their nominal value. The net
proceeds are apportioned to the Company's share premium account,
which is a non-distributable reserve that the Company is unable to
use for the purpose of making distributions to
Shareholders.
By cancelling the share premium
account, the Company further increases its flexibility to meet
tender requests under the 2025 Tender Offer, apply such reserves
for the return of capital to Shareholders and for any other general
corporate purposes. The Company is seeking to cancel the entire
amount of its share premium account, being £311,369,000 as at 30
November 2024, in order to benefit from this flexibility and
primarily to create a surplus of distributable reserves to permit
future distributions to Shareholders.
The cancellation of the share
premium account requires the passing of a special resolution at the
AGM and subsequent approval of the Court. Shareholder approval will
be sought for a special resolution to cancel the Company's share
premium account at the AGM taking place on 10 April 2025. The
cancellation will not be effective until the order of the Court
confirming the cancellation has been registered with the registrar
of companies.
Share Capital
As at 30 November 2024, the Company
had 331,750,000 ordinary shares of 5 pence each in issue, of which
28,530,635 shares (this represents 8.6% of the issued share
capital) were held in treasury (2023: 331,750,000 ordinary shares
of 5 pence each in issue of which 22,888,313 were held in
treasury).
No ordinary shares were bought back
or issued following the year end.
The Board
As referenced in my statement to
Shareholders last year, the Board is aware of the FCA's Diversity
and Inclusion Policy and notes that its current composition meets
two of the three 'comply or explain' targets with three of the four
members being female and one of the two senior positions being
occupied by a female. Whilst we do not meet the recommended
ethnicity requirements, the Board has put in place a succession
plan based on the recommended nine-year tenure of Directors. A key
objective for the Board is to have an appropriate blend of skills
and diversity of experience and thought around the table. When the
Board next embarks upon a director search it will set criteria that
ensures candidates are sourced from a broad pool such that the
Board can consider candidates with minority ethnic backgrounds.
Further information on this can be found in the Corporate
Governance Report in the Annual Report.
As reported in the last interim
report, we have been joined by a board apprentice, Ada Okpe. The
Board Apprentice program is an initiative designed to develop
aspiring board members and boost diversity in boardrooms. Ada is
spending around 12 months with the Board to gain experience which
we hope he will be able to use in his executive career and in
future director roles. See the Annual Report for an interview with
Ada on his experience as a board apprentice.
There have been no other changes to
the membership of the Board during the year under review. The
Directors' biographical details are available on the Company's
website and are provided in the Annual Report.
Cost Disclosures
The Board notes the Government's
stated intention to reform UK retail disclosure rules.
The Board has engaged with the
Manager to understand the potential implications to retail
disclosure rules following the publication of the FCA's
consultation paper on the new product information framework for
Consumer Composite Investments ("CCIs") in December 2024. The final
rules under the new CCI framework are expected to be published
later in 2025.
Annual General Meeting
The Company's Annual General
Meeting ("AGM") will be held at 16 Palace Street at 2:00pm on
Thursday, 10 April 2025. The notice of AGM has been provided to
Shareholders and will be available on the Company's website.
Detailed explanations of the formal business and the resolutions
proposed at the AGM are contained within the Shareholder
Information section in the Annual Report and in the Notice of AGM.
We will upload a copy of the Manager's Investment Presentation to
the Company's website ahead of the AGM and will hold only the
formal business of the meeting in person. We have provided a zoom
link in the Notice of AGM which will enable interested parties to
view the formal business and ask questions via the on-line chat
function.
The Manager will be available to
answer questions and meet Shareholders present. All formal business
resolutions will be voted on by a poll and we therefore encourage
Shareholders to submit their votes ahead of the meeting by proxy
card which is provided with the Notice of Meeting. Shareholders who
hold shares via an online stockbroker or platform are encouraged to
exercise their vote through their respective platforms and where
possible attend the AGM proceedings. Further information can be
found on the AIC's website and in the Shareholder information
section in the Annual Report.
We are conscious of the importance
of Shareholder engagement and encourage Shareholders to engage with
the Board and the Investment Manager. As such, the Board invites
Shareholders to submit questions in writing to which we will
respond, as far as possible, ahead of the AGM date. Please send
your questions to cosec@polarcapital.co.uk on or before 7
April 2025 with the subject heading PCFT AGM.
Outlook
We are enthusiastic about the
outlook for the global financial sector; this is a large and
diverse sector which has been overlooked by investors for many
years and where large sections of the market still trade at very
attractive valuations. We have started to see a positive change in
sentiment with an improvement in fundamentals that should drive a
re-rating. Interest rates are normalising; personal and corporate
balance sheets are in good shape; and earnings are recovering.
Whether these developments are a result of lighter touch
regulation, net interest margins, insurance rates picking up or
increased fee income for asset managers, all of these factors
should lead to investors increasing their exposure to this exciting
part of the investment universe. While we will be offering
Shareholders an opportunity to tender their shares during 2025, we
anticipate that most will wish to continue investing with us and
retain their exposure at what may be a pivotal point in
time.
Simon Cordery
Chair
19 February 2025
INVESTMENT MANAGER'S REPORT
Investment Review
Performance
The Trust delivered excellent
returns in the year to 30 November 2024, with its net asset value
rising by 34.8% after adding back dividends. Excluding the fixed
income positions, the equity portfolio returned 36.4% before fees.
This compares to the wider equity markets as measured by the MSCI
ACWI index which rose 25.6% over the same period, but was slightly
behind our equity benchmark return of 36.1%, reflecting our
allocation to fixed income and our more defensive positioning in
the US in the run-up to the US election.
Financials was the best performing
sector of the global equity markets in the period, beating
information technology into second place. Following the more dovish
commentary by US Federal Reserve (the "Fed") Chair, Jerome Powell,
in December 2023, markets priced in the expectation of much lower
interest rates in 2024. While the speed and number of interest rate
cuts has been slower and fewer than expected, it has been on the
back of largely stronger economic data.
The election of Donald Trump in
November with the Republicans taking control of both houses of
Congress led to US equities significantly outperforming wider
equity markets as the prospect of less regulation, lower taxes and
concern about the impact of tariffs on countries reliant on exports
to the US, led to a rotation into US equities out of non-US
equities. Consequently, US financials have erased the balance of
their underperformance from 2022 and 2023.
Credit markets were buoyant as
investors took advantage of the more positive outlook for risk and
the higher yields offered by corporate bonds relative to government
bonds. Consequently, the subordinated debt[1] of banks and insurance companies returned 11.6%
over the 12 months as credit spreads contracted. As the cost of
issuing debt fell there was a sharp increase in bond issuance in
the period as companies looked to take advantage of the better
environment.
A significant driver of investment
activity over the year was aimed at taking advantage of the
potential ramifications of the US Federal Reserve signalling that
interest rates had peaked. Against that background, we took the
opportunity to significantly increase the Trust's exposure to those
companies we believed would benefit the most from the increased
likelihood of a soft landing for the US economy and a better
background for financial markets.
The Trust was more defensively
positioned than the index in the second half, with allocations to
fixed income and some specific stocks which resulted in a modest
underperformance overall. However, our stock selections helped us
outperform the subsector indices in most cases. At the subsector
level, the Trust benefited from overweight positions in, for
example, alternative asset managers and US banks. However, against
the risk-on background for financial markets, our overweight
exposure to the more defensive payment and insurance companies and
a small underweight in investment banks dragged on performance. Our
fixed income holdings generated returns of 12.1% and unsurprisingly
lagged the very strong performance of equity markets although
outperformed the relevant credit markets.
Historical sub-sector
weightings
On a geographical basis, while the
US and Japan were the strongest performing regions over the year,
the Trust's allocation to US insurance stocks was a relative drag
on our US performance. In Asia, the relative underperformance was
due to underweights in Australia and China, both of which delivered
better than expected performance. We were cautious on Australia due
to high valuations while on China we had no exposure when the
market rallied sharply on hopes of a significant stimulus program
by the Chinese government.
At the single stock level, holdings
in Interactive Brokers Group a US retail broker, Rakuten Bank a
Japanese bank, and Barclays were the largest single contributors to
performance. The first was a beneficiary of interest rates not
being cut as had been expected and a continued increase in retail
trading. Rakuten benefited from the higher outlook for interest
rates in Japan, while Barclays rallied from depressed levels as it
benefited from higher earnings expectations in both its retail and
investment banking arms.
The largest individual detractors
were Sabre Insurance Group, a UK motor insurer, BFF Bank, an
Italian bank, and Wells Fargo, a US bank. Sabre is one of the
smallest UK motor insurers but one of the most profitable due to
its focus on underwriting higher risk drivers. However, increased
competition led to a fall in customers, and this weighed on its
share price. A holding in BFF Bank was bought following a sharp
fall in its share price on the back of an intervention from the
Bank of Italy but lack of clarity on a resolution led to its shares
treading water. The decision to sell Wells Fargo was a relative
drag as the stock continued to perform well on the expectation that
the incoming Trump administration would lift restrictions on the
bank, first imposed back in 2015.
We discuss performance and
investment activity by subsector below:
Diversified financials
Diversified financials is a broad
category comprising alternative asset managers, consumer finance
companies, stock exchanges, investment banks, retail brokers,
payment companies, holding companies and information services
companies. As a subsector, diversified financial stocks was the
best performing category, generating portfolio returns of 40.2%
against 39.2% for the index with most of its constituents
benefitting from the "risk on" sentiment. Alternative asset
managers, consumer finance companies, investment banks and retail
brokers saw the biggest rise in share prices.
We were overweight alternative
asset managers which was a strong contributor to performance. They
continued to benefit from fund inflows increasing management fees,
and expectations of a pick-up in M&A activity, which would
increase performance fees. Also, a number of them have been added
to the S&P 500 Index - KKR & Co joined in June 2024 and
Apollo after the financial year end.
At the start of the year our
largest holdings were Ares Management and Intermediate Capital
Group as they were both focused on private credit where we felt
rising interest rates and bond yields would provide a tailwind to
demand. However, with the more positive outlook for financial
markets, we felt private equity-focused alternative asset managers
would begin to perform better.
As a result, we bought holdings in
EQT and Antin Infrastructure Partners then rotated into new
positions in KKR and Blue Owl Capital on the back of a sharp move
in the share prices of the former. KKR is one of the largest
alternative asset managers globally. A new holding was also
purchased in CVC Capital Partners when it listed on the Amsterdam
Stock Exchange on its third attempt. Later in the period, we sold
Blue Owl Capital in favour of a holding in Blackstone which we saw
as having greater upside.
We also purchased a holding in
BlackRock. BlackRock is the largest asset manager in the world with
over $11.5trn in assets under management. It is possibly best known
for the passive iShares ETF (Exchanged Traded Funds) business it
acquired from Barclays during the global financial crisis, albeit
it is a very large active manager of equity and fixed income funds.
In the past year, it has made several large acquisitions, notably
Global Infrastructure Partners (GIP), an infrastructure-focused
asset manager, Preqin, one of the largest data businesses in the
alternative asset industry, and HPS, a private credit asset
manager.
Payment companies, exchanges and
information services companies saw strong returns but lagged the
subsector reflecting their more defensive characteristics and lower
sensitivity to financial markets. Payment companies are large
constituents of the sector, notably Visa and MasterCard. We have
long liked them for their high level of profitability, low-risk
business model and growth prospects from e-commerce spending and
the shift from cash to cards. Nevertheless, we reduced our holdings
in both during the period and purchased a holding in Fidelity
National Information Services which is best known for providing
core banking software for many banks.
Information services companies such
as Moody's and S&P Global, the two largest credit rating
agencies, trade on some of the highest multiples in the sector
reflecting their oligopolistic characteristics and while a pickup
in bond issuance was supportive for both companies, on average they
lagged the sector. Holdings in both MSCI and S&P Global were
sold during the year, due to these high valuations as we saw them
as vulnerable to any disappointment on growth.
On exchanges, we added to our
holding in Intercontinental Exchange, the largest exchange holding
in the portfolio. Its 2022 purchase of Black Knight, a mortgage
software, data and analytics company, had weighed on its share
price but with interest rates predicted to fall we expected to see
an improvement in the outlook for the business. Also a new holding
was purchased in Nasdaq, which operates a number of stock exchanges
in the US and Europe. Similarly, an acquisition, in this instance,
of Adenza, a software company, in 2023, had been an overhang on its
share price.
Consumer finance companies
performed well as employment data reduced concerns around
delinquencies on credit card loans while the incoming Trump
administration was viewed as favourable to changes in late payment
fees. Our main exposure to the subsector had been to American
Express, and we added a new holding in Discover following the
election, in the expectation that its acquisition by Capital One
would be approved and would be very accretive.
Banks
The Trust's portfolio generated an
39.3% return from its banks' exposure compared with 36.6% for the
index. Bank share prices were strong as the reduced tail risk of an
economic downturn resulted in most banks performing well. US banks
saw the largest gains over the period as markets anticipated an
easing in capital requirements, higher fee income from a pick-up in
M&A activity helping investment banking revenues and an
improving outlook for net interest income, further fuelled by the
election of Donald Trump.
Banks' performance by Region
North America
|
|
US banks
|
66.7%
|
US regional banks
|
46.0%
|
Canadian banks
|
29.8%
|
Latin American banks
|
-12.4%
|
Europe
|
|
UK banks
|
45.2%
|
Eurozone banks
|
23.4%
|
Asia
|
|
Australian banks
|
51.7%
|
Japanese banks
|
41.0%
|
Chinese banks
|
32.2%
|
Indian banks
|
15.6%
|
Source: Bloomberg, 30 November
2024
Note: The figures are in sterling
total return terms. Past performance is not
a reliable guide to future performance.
At the beginning of the period, the
portfolio was marginally overweight US banks against the Benchmark
and, while we had a cautious outlook, we felt valuations more than
discounted the risks. We therefore increased our exposure, adding
to holdings in US Bancorp, Citizens Financial Group and East West
Bancorp and also started a new holding in Citigroup where we saw
significant upside if management could hit financial
targets.
Following a sharp rally, we
remained overweight large US banks given their much stronger
balance sheets and the likely benefit of any watering down of
proposed new regulatory requirements, but reduced our holdings in
US regional banks, due to concerns around the US office commercial
real estate market.
We saw good opportunities in UK and
European banks where rising interest rates have led to a
substantial increase in profitability. UK banks performed extremely
well over the year, mostly as a result of a sharp rerating in
valuations, while sentiment on the subsector was supported by a
relatively resilient outlook versus European peers. This reflects
the outlook for relatively higher interest rates in the UK versus
other European economies, and a greater contribution from interest
rate hedges which offset a lot of the impact of declining interest
rates on earnings.
We purchased a new holding in
Barclays which has performed very poorly over the past 10+ years
due to legacy issues and structurally low profitability in parts of
its core businesses. With its valuation at the low end of its
historical range and low expectations for management to hit targets
it was felt there was an attractive risk/reward payoff with the
added benefit of a pickup in activity in its investment banking
businesses.
In Europe our largest holdings
included Unicredit, Italy's second largest bank, Erste Group, one
of Austria's largest banks and AIB Group, Ireland's second largest
bank. European banks saw very strong performance in the first half
of the reporting period but lagged their peers in the second half
over weakness in the outlook for the Eurozone economy and worries
about the impact of lower interest rates. This led us to sell our
holdings in AIB Group and Banco Santander and reduce a holding in
Bank of Cyprus.
Europe saw a pickup in bank M&A
activity. BBVA, Spain's second largest bank, made an offer for
Banco Sabadell, a smaller peer while Unicredit, took a significant
stake in Commerzbank, a German bank, publicly stating its interest
in acquiring it before making an offer for Banco BPM, the fourth
largest Italian bank. After the financial year end Credit Agricole,
one of France's largest banks, with operations in Italy, announced
it was looking to increase its stake in Banco BPM.
We added to the Trust's exposure to
Mexican banks in the first half, by adding to an existing position
in Grupo Financiero Banorte and starting a new holding in Gentera,
a smaller bank that offers loans to lower-income customers. We saw
Mexico as continuing to benefit from so-called 'friendshoring' as
multinational companies look to build more manufacturing operations
there to circumvent increasing trade barriers between the US and
China. Later in the period, we sold our exposure due to concerns
around upcoming elections in the US and Mexico. While Mexico should
continue to be a net beneficiary of rising trade friction between
the US and China, that sentiment could change quickly.
We started new holdings in two
South Korean banks which, as with Japanese and southern European
banks, have traded for some time at the lowest valuations of the
banking sector and below our estimate of fair value. We had
remained cautious due to an interventionist regulator and no
obvious catalysts for a rerating. However, a push for corporate
reform in South Korea around transparency and capital return, which
has had reasonable support across the political spectrum, has
resulted in more interest from investors. Following good
performance, we reduced our exposure and sold our remaining holding
at a profit after the period end due to the political crisis in
South Korea.
Indian banks have consistently been
one of the best performing banking sectors globally due to their
strong profitability and good growth. However we reduced our
exposure due to the outlook being less favourable around a tighter
liquidity environment and a more interventionist regulator.
Consequently, we sold the Trust's holding in HDFC Bank, India's
largest private bank, which had underperformed following its merger
with parent HDFC. While the merger offers long-term synergies, a
requirement to raise deposits is a headwind to growth and
profitability in the short to medium term.
Insurance
The Trust's insurance portfolio
returned 26.4% compared to 29.1% for the subsector. Insurance
stocks performed well, outperforming wider equity markets over the
period, but were held back by their defensive characteristics in
the "risk on" market environment. While there has been some concern
around the strength of liability reserves and the worsening outlook
for property catastrophe rates, US insurers still benefited from
the twin drivers of rising investment income and improved
underwriting returns.
At the beginning of the period we
made some small reductions to our insurance holdings. The most
significant change was
to reduce our exposure to China and
Hong Kong by selling holdings in AIA Group and Prudential, both of
which had been significant detractors from performance over
2023.
Large European reinsurance
companies performed well, but in contrast, Lloyds of London and
Bermudan reinsurers saw more mixed performance. US insurers, with
large car and home insurance businesses, where we have holdings in
Progressive Corp and Allstate, performed well, but UK motor
insurers performed poorly. UK car insurance premiums, having risen
significantly in recent years to counter the rising cost of claims,
fell and even though there were two bids for Direct Line Group the
first from Ageas, a Belgian insurer, and then by Aviva, which looks
likely to succeed, they still underperformed the wider insurance
sector.
We purchased a new holding in
Munich Re Group as we saw it as one of the best positioned to
continue to benefit from the strong reinsurance market due to the
strength of its balance sheet. We later switched the holding into
Hannover Rueck,
a smaller peer, and less exposed to
large catastrophe events.
2024 was expected to see a much
larger number of hurricanes in the Atlantic make landfall and with
it, the risk of large losses.
During the year we added a number
of holdings where there has been a regulatory intervention or a
short report has been published, so-called as the research firm
involved believes the shares are overvalued and should be sold or
shorted. Short reports can vary from the salacious to dogged hard
work. Not surprisingly, this leads to shares of the companies
falling, often quite sharply. Assuming that the issues raised are
overstated or of a temporary nature the publication of a short
report can be an excellent opportunity to buy. Globe Life, a US
life assurance company, and Steadfast Group, an Australian
insurance broker, fell into this category as we believe they are
two high quality businesses now trading below what we see as fair
value.
Fixed-income and unquoted holdings
Our fixed income exposure reduced
slightly over the period from 9.4% to 6.3%, as we took profits on a
number of the positions we had bought in 2023 and prior. We still
see attractive risk/reward from holding a selective mixture of
senior and subordinated bonds of European financials but yields
generally no longer look as compelling as they did so returns going
forward will be much more modest.
The Trust has two holdings in
unquoted companies, of which the largest is Moneybox, a UK savings
and wealth platform. Founded in 2015, Moneybox, has performed very
well, surpassing £10bn in assets under administration and more than
a million customers. Consequently, due to a secondary share sale
that brought in new investors, including Amundi, one of the largest
European asset managers, the holding was written up to reflect the
price at which shares were sold.
Outlook
We remain confident on the outlook
for the financials sector. It is the second largest sector globally
and highly varied across banks, insurance companies and diversified
financials with companies that have significant moats to their
business models.
We continue to believe the
investment background has fundamentally changed from the challenges
of the last decade. Interest rates are 'normalising' and there is
demand for significant investment in reshoring, defence and
decarbonisation. We believe the sector will be a key beneficiary of
these trends and is underpinned by household and corporate balance
sheets being in healthy shape.
The playbook from Trump 1.0
following the 2016 US election was a significant rally in
financials but also broader equity markets which lasted around 18
months. The starting point for valuations is higher this time and
much higher for wider equity markets which may temper the size of
any sustained rally from Trump 2.0. There is concern that Trump
will double-down on tariffs, negatively impacting non-US markets.
Understandably, US equities have benefited already from being seen
as more defensive versus other regional markets with significant
inflows into US-focused ETFs.
In November 2016, US equity markets
outperformed non-US equity markets by 'only' 5.9%, compared to 7.2%
this time, but a year after the election US equities had given back
that outperformance, albeit still rising by a very credible 24.3%.
Will US equities give back the outperformance we have seen in 2024?
US financials did not give back their relative performance in 2017
but the permutations this time, exacerbated by ongoing wars in
Ukraine and the Middle East, and a president who has unfinished
business, are bigger so will likely make 2025 a more volatile year
for financial markets than 2024.
Against this background, the Fed is
pushing back further on the number of interest rate cuts amid
concerns that inflation is stickier than central banks' forecasts.
This will require us to be pro-active in positioning the Trust's
portfolio to benefit from the sector's tailwinds and to navigate
the risks. Nevertheless, it is worthwhile reminding ourselves that
high quality financial companies continue to compound earnings
and/or book value despite the significant economic and geopolitical
noise.
Over the last year we have
consciously reduced the portfolio's exposure to banks. The reasons
for this are two-fold: while we believe many banks have huge
incumbency advantages so are well positioned looking forward, in
the shorter-term we have seen more attractive opportunities in
diversified financials. We have to be conscious that the share
prices of banks are also prone to sharp corrections, when sentiment
for outlook deteriorates.
Banks have not grown their loan
books materially over recent years so it would take a significant
economic downturn to generate losses that could justify the lowly
current multiples that some of them trade on. Equally they are not
risk-free and not immune from a downturn. As a UK banks analyst
from KBW, a research firm summed it up succinctly in a recent note
(and the analogy can be extrapolated to other banking markets), "In
recent years UK banks have survived a fall in GDP of 10%, interest
rates rising by 5% and inflation peaking at more than 11% with zero
credit problems." Consequently, we continue to believe the market
is not giving banks the credit they deserve for that reduction in
risk.
The Trust's largest geographical
exposure is to US financials which should be beneficiaries of a
lighter regulatory regime and a more favourable environment for
M&A. Lighter regulation has its risks but the increased
regulation of the past 15 years has weighed heavily on economic
activity and often increased costs for little or no economic
benefit. The proposals in 2023 for a substantial increase in US
bank capital requirements would have resulted in JP Morgan
requiring a 25% increase in capital despite its performance during
the global financial crisis and the recent rise in interest
rates.
These regulations have been watered
down already and are expected to see further revision.
One of our largest overweight
positions has been to alternative asset managers. The successful
ones have a business model where good investment performance leads
to inflows into their funds which are multi-year in nature. Unlike
traditional asset managers, capital entrusted to them is locked up
in funds that rarely offer short-term liquidity to investors and so
their assets under management offer a steady stream of income with
the possibility of performance fees on top. Also, they do not
suffer from competition and fee pressure from passive investments
and ETFs.
Payment companies continue to offer
an attractive counterbalance to the more cyclical parts of the
portfolio, reflecting their much lower economic sensitivity. They
do not take balance sheet risks like banks or insurance companies;
the switch from cash to cards and growth in e-commerce continues to
drive revenues and profits over and above what would be expected
from the cyclical growth in spending.
We continue to like the insurance
sector, in particular reinsurance companies, which remain the
Trust's largest overweight against the Benchmark. While close to or
at peak profitability, which we expect to decline, valuations imply
that profitability will fall rapidly, which we think will be proved
wrong. Furthermore, we like the defensive nature of the insurance
businesses to market volatility. For insurance companies, claims
are largely the result of accidents and weather, not the economic
cycle. Furthermore, the float that insurance companies hold to pay
claims is mostly invested in cash and short-term bonds, therefore
large losses are unlikely should equity markets fall
sharply.
Unsurprisingly, there has been an
increase in M&A activity during 2024; we had a holding in
Anima, an Italian asset manager, that was in receipt of a bid from
Banco BPM. We expect the M&A trend to continue and note that
even large financial companies are susceptible to bids as evidenced
by Unicredit's approaches to Commerzbank and Banco BPM. The 'Danish
Compromise' that allows banks to hold less capital against their
insurance subsidiaries could be a catalyst for further bids in the
sector. This was key to the bids by Banco BPM for Anima and BNP
Paribas's acquisition of AXA Investment Managers through BNP's
insurance subsidiary.
Small-cap financials have
materially derated over the past 10 years against their larger
peers. As a result, we see a great deal of value in some of the
Trust's smaller company holdings. These have been a modest drag on
relative
performance to date but ultimately
we believe valuations will mean revert as either strategic or
private equity investors look to take advantage of this
disconnect.
Finally, a key attraction of the
sector overall is its value characteristics. Financial companies on
average have nearly always traded on lower price-to-book ratios,
lower price-to- earnings ratios and higher dividend yields than the
wider equity market and consequently are the largest constituent of
value indices. The discount at which the sector has traded widened
materially in the lead up to the pandemic reaching its peak of
around 45% in October 2020. Today the discount has reduced to just
under 30%, where it was trading pre- pandemic, versus around 15% in
July 2013 when the Trust was launched, albeit today profitability
is higher than where it was at the end of 2019 and in
2013.
Against this background, financials
have delivered a compound return of around 9.5%pa since launch in
2013 and 20.0%pa since the last tender offer in 2020. With
valuations for global equity markets at the high end of historical
averages and highly concentrated around a small number of US
technology companies, returns from the wider market are likely to
be lower going forward, all things being equal. In contrast, the
lower valuations at which the financials sector trades offer some
downside protection, should markets sell-off, and is also a likely
beneficiary of any rotation from growth to value
strategies.
Nick Brind, George Barrow and Tom Dorner
Co-Managers
Polar Capital Global Financials Team
19 February 2025
Note
We would draw shareholders
attention to www.polarcapitalglobalfinancialstrust.com
for regular monthly portfolio updates and
commentary.
Full Investment
Portfolio
As at 30 November 2024
Ranking
|
|
|
|
Market
Value
£'000
|
% of total net
assets
|
2024
|
2023
|
Stock
|
Sector
|
Country
|
2024
|
2023
|
2024
|
2023
|
1
|
(1)
|
JP Morgan
Chase
|
Banks
|
North
America
|
45,025
|
31,432
|
7.1%
|
6.4%
|
2
|
(2)
|
Mastercard
|
Financial
Services
|
North
America
|
28,254
|
27,136
|
4.5%
|
5.6%
|
3
|
(7)
|
Bank of
America
|
Banks
|
North
America
|
25,594
|
13,002
|
4.1%
|
2.7%
|
4
|
(3)
|
Visa
|
Financial
Services
|
North
America
|
23,130
|
21,140
|
3.7%
|
4.3%
|
5
|
(5)
|
Berkshire
Hathaway
|
Financial
Services
|
North
America
|
17,466
|
16,764
|
2.8%
|
3.4%
|
6
|
(-)
|
Goldman
Sachs Group
|
Financial
Services
|
North
America
|
16,785
|
-
|
2.7%
|
-
|
7
|
(-)
|
NASDAQ
Group
|
Financial
Services
|
North
America
|
15,329
|
-
|
2.4%
|
-
|
8
|
(-)
|
Citigroup
|
Banks
|
North
America
|
13,914
|
-
|
2.2%
|
-
|
9
|
(-)
|
Barclays
|
Banks
|
United
Kingdom
|
13,689
|
-
|
2.2%
|
-
|
10
|
(44)
|
Sumitomo
Mitsui Financial
|
Banks
|
Japan
|
13,526
|
4,329
|
2.1%
|
0.9%
|
Top 10
investments
|
|
|
212,712
|
|
33.8%
|
|
11
|
(-)
|
Fidelity
National Information Services
|
Financial
Services
|
North
America
|
13,458
|
-
|
2.1%
|
-
|
12
|
(-)
|
Globe
Life
|
Insurance
|
North
America
|
12,845
|
-
|
2.0%
|
-
|
13
|
(-)
|
Progressive Corp
|
Insurance
|
North
America
|
12,744
|
-
|
2.0%
|
-
|
14
|
(43)
|
ICICI
Bank
|
Banks
|
Asia
(ex-Japan)
|
12,617
|
4,363
|
2.0%
|
0.9%
|
15
|
(-)
|
Erste
Bank
|
Banks
|
Europe
|
12,214
|
-
|
2.0%
|
-
|
16
|
(-)
|
Axis
Capital Holding
|
Insurance
|
North
America
|
12,136
|
-
|
1.9%
|
-
|
17
|
(-)
|
BlackRock
|
Financial
Services
|
North
America
|
11,821
|
-
|
1.9%
|
-
|
18
|
(-)
|
Allstate
Corp
|
Insurance
|
North
America
|
11,677
|
-
|
1.9%
|
-
|
19
|
(10)
|
RenaissanceRe Holdings
|
Insurance
|
North
America
|
11,508
|
11,237
|
1.8%
|
2.3%
|
20
|
(-)
|
NatWest
Group
|
Banks
|
United
Kingdom
|
11,060
|
-
|
1.8%
|
-
|
Top 20
investments
|
|
|
334,792
|
|
53.2%
|
|
21
|
(39)
|
Intact
Financial Corporation
|
Insurance
|
North
America
|
10,911
|
4,871
|
1.7%
|
1.0%
|
22
|
(59)
|
IG
Group
|
Financial
Services
|
United
Kingdom
|
10,876
|
2,940
|
1.7%
|
0.6%
|
23
|
(23)
|
Beazley
|
Insurance
|
United
Kingdom
|
10,844
|
7,422
|
1.7%
|
1.5%
|
24
|
(32)
|
Ares
Management Corporation
|
Financial
Services
|
North
America
|
10,828
|
5,932
|
1.7%
|
1.2%
|
25
|
(30)
|
Intermediate Capital Group
|
Financial
Services
|
United
Kingdom
|
10,786
|
6,676
|
1.7%
|
1.4%
|
26
|
(-)
|
BFF
Bank
|
Financial
Services
|
Europe
|
10,782
|
-
|
1.7%
|
-
|
27
|
(25)
|
Intercontinental Exchange
|
Financial
Services
|
North
America
|
10,766
|
7,271
|
1.7%
|
1.5%
|
28
|
(-)
|
Interactive Brokers Group
|
Financial
Services
|
North
America
|
10,714
|
-
|
1.7%
|
-
|
29
|
(13)
|
U.S.
Bancorp
|
Banks
|
North
America
|
10,618
|
8,845
|
1.7%
|
1.8%
|
30
|
(-)
|
Allfunds
Group
|
Financial
Services
|
Europe
|
10,140
|
-
|
1.7%
|
-
|
Top 30
investments
|
|
|
442,057
|
|
70.2%
|
|
31
|
(9)
|
Arch
Capital
|
Insurance
|
North
America
|
9,956
|
11,356
|
1.5%
|
2.3%
|
32
|
(-)
|
Hannover
Rueck
|
Insurance
|
Europe
|
9,261
|
-
|
1.5%
|
-
|
33
|
(-)
|
UniCredit
|
Banks
|
Europe
|
8,940
|
-
|
1.4%
|
-
|
34
|
(-)
|
Tryg
|
Insurance
|
Europe
|
8,790
|
-
|
1.4%
|
-
|
35
|
(-)
|
Deutsche
Boerse
|
Financial
Services
|
Europe
|
8,704
|
-
|
1.4%
|
-
|
36
|
(-)
|
BlackStone
Group
|
Financial
Services
|
North
America
|
8,220
|
-
|
1.3%
|
-
|
37
|
(-)
|
Steadfast
Group
|
Insurance
|
Asia
(ex-Japan)
|
7,410
|
-
|
1.2%
|
-
|
38
|
(-)
|
Equitable
Holdings
|
Financial
Services
|
North
America
|
7,370
|
-
|
1.2%
|
-
|
39
|
(19)
|
American
Express
|
Financial
Services
|
North
America
|
7,286
|
7,987
|
1.2%
|
1.6%
|
40
|
(-)
|
Rakuten
Bank
|
Banks
|
Japan
|
7,076
|
-
|
1.1%
|
-
|
Top 40
investments
|
|
|
525,070
|
|
83.4%
|
|
41
|
(-)
|
Discover
Financial Services
|
Financial
Services
|
North
America
|
6,724
|
-
|
1.1%
|
-
|
42
|
(-)
|
Regions
Financial
|
Banks
|
North
America
|
6,444
|
-
|
1.0%
|
-
|
43
|
(-)
|
KB
Financial Group
|
Banks
|
Asia
(ex-Japan)
|
6,197
|
-
|
1.0%
|
-
|
44
|
(-)
|
First
Horizon National
|
Banks
|
North
America
|
6,154
|
-
|
1.0%
|
-
|
45
|
(-)
|
Mercadolibre
|
Financial
Services
|
Latin
America
|
6,086
|
-
|
0.9%
|
-
|
46
|
(-)
|
Zions
Bancorp
|
Banks
|
North
America
|
5,859
|
-
|
0.9%
|
-
|
47
|
(-)
|
Bank of
Cyprus Holdings
|
Banks
|
Europe
|
5,609
|
-
|
0.9%
|
-
|
48
|
(-)
|
Sabre
Insurance Group
|
Insurance
|
United
Kingdom
|
5,584
|
-
|
0.9%
|
-
|
49
|
(-)
|
Hong Leong
Bank
|
Banks
|
Asia
(ex-Japan)
|
5,539
|
-
|
0.9%
|
-
|
50
|
(-)
|
BDO
Unibank
|
Banks
|
Asia
(ex-Japan)
|
5,467
|
-
|
0.9%
|
-
|
Top 50
investments
|
|
|
584,733
|
|
92.9%
|
|
51
|
(49)
|
Moneybox
(unquoted)
|
Financial
Services
|
United
Kingdom
|
5,418
|
3,773
|
0.9%
|
0.8%
|
52
|
(-)
|
CVC
Capital Partners
|
Financial
Services
|
Europe
|
5,414
|
-
|
0.9%
|
-
|
53
|
(37)
|
Bank
Central Asia Indonesia
|
Banks
|
Asia
(ex-Japan)
|
5,370
|
4,946
|
0.8%
|
1.0%
|
54
|
(48)
|
Macquarie
Group
|
Financial
Services
|
Asia
(ex-Japan)
|
5,202
|
4,125
|
0.8%
|
0.8%
|
55
|
(-)
|
Irish
Residential Properties REIT
|
Equity
Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs)
|
Europe
|
4,412
|
-
|
0.7%
|
-
|
56
|
(-)
|
International Personal Finance 10.75% 2029 Bond
|
Fixed
Income
|
Fixed
Income
|
4,328
|
-
|
0.6%
|
-
|
57
|
(60)
|
Lancashire
5.625% 2041 Bond
|
Fixed
Income
|
Fixed
Income
|
3,167
|
2,820
|
0.5%
|
0.6%
|
58
|
(62)
|
Rothesay
Life 4.875% Perp Bond
|
Fixed
Income
|
Fixed
Income
|
2,987
|
2,487
|
0.5%
|
0.5%
|
59
|
(63)
|
Pension
Insurance 7.375% Perp Bond
|
Fixed
Income
|
Fixed
Income
|
2,696
|
2,480
|
0.4%
|
0.5%
|
60
|
(-)
|
Deutsche
Beteiligungs 5.5% 2030 Convertible Bond
|
Fixed
Income
|
Fixed
Income
|
2,373
|
-
|
0.4%
|
-
|
Top 60
investments
|
|
|
626,100
|
|
99.4%
|
|
61
|
(78)
|
VEF
|
Financial
Services
|
Europe
|
2,372
|
1,526
|
0.4%
|
0.3%
|
62
|
(71)
|
Aviva
6.875% Perp Bond
|
Fixed
Income
|
Fixed
Income
|
2,203
|
2,008
|
0.4%
|
0.4%
|
63
|
(79)
|
Investec
preference
|
Fixed
Income
|
Fixed
Income
|
2,181
|
1,391
|
0.3%
|
0.3%
|
64
|
(-)
|
Atom Bank
11.5% 2035 Bond
|
Fixed
Income
|
Fixed
Income
|
2,103
|
-
|
0.3%
|
-
|
65
|
(90)
|
Litigation
Capital Management
|
Financial
Services
|
Asia
(ex-Japan)
|
1,898
|
1,049
|
0.3%
|
0.2%
|
66
|
(75)
|
Rothesay
Life 6.875% Perp Bond
|
Fixed
Income
|
Fixed
Income
|
1,853
|
1,672
|
0.3%
|
0.3%
|
67
|
(74)
|
CaixaBank
8.25% Perp Bond
|
Fixed
Income
|
Fixed
Income
|
1,821
|
1,747
|
0.3%
|
0.4%
|
68
|
(72)
|
Riverstone
Credit Opportunities
|
Fixed
Income
|
Fixed
Income
|
1,761
|
1,939
|
0.3%
|
0.4%
|
69
|
(80)
|
Rothesay
Life 5% Perp Bond
|
Fixed
Income
|
Fixed
Income
|
1,624
|
1,386
|
0.3%
|
0.3%
|
70
|
(-)
|
Jackson
Financial
|
Insurance
|
North
America
|
1,572
|
-
|
0.2%
|
-
|
Top 70
Investments
|
|
|
645,488
|
|
102.5%
|
|
71
|
(77)
|
Vanquis
Banking
Group 8.875% 2032
Bond
|
Fixed
Income
|
Fixed
Income
|
1,424
|
1,535
|
0.2%
|
0.3%
|
72
|
(83)
|
Nationwide
Building Society 5.75% Perp Bond
|
Fixed
Income
|
Fixed
Income
|
1,377
|
1,258
|
0.2%
|
0.3%
|
73
|
(96)
|
Permanent
TSB Group 13.25% Perp Bond
|
Fixed
Income
|
Fixed
Income
|
1,375
|
195
|
0.2%
|
0.0%
|
74
|
(84)
|
Shawbrook
Group 9% 2030 Bond
|
Fixed
Income
|
Fixed
Income
|
1,313
|
1,246
|
0.2%
|
0.3%
|
75
|
(92)
|
Personal
Group
|
Insurance
|
United
Kingdom
|
1,302
|
566
|
0.2%
|
0.1%
|
76
|
(87)
|
Shawbrook
Group 12.25% 2034 Bond
|
Fixed
Income
|
Fixed
Income
|
1,284
|
1,194
|
0.2%
|
0.2%
|
77
|
(82)
|
Atom Bank
(unquoted)
|
Banks
|
United
Kingdom
|
1,281
|
1,281
|
0.2%
|
0.3%
|
78
|
(89)
|
Chesnara
4.75% 2032 Bond
|
Fixed
Income
|
Fixed
Income
|
1,222
|
1,049
|
0.2%
|
0.2%
|
79
|
(88)
|
Hellenic
Bank 10.25% 2033 Bond
|
Fixed
Income
|
Fixed
Income
|
1,134
|
1,065
|
0.2%
|
0.2%
|
80
|
(-)
|
Coventry
Building Society 8.75% Perp Bond
|
Fixed
Income
|
Fixed
Income
|
1,029
|
-
|
0.2%
|
-
|
Top 80
Investments
|
|
|
658,229
|
|
104.5%
|
|
81
|
(70)
|
VPC
Specialty Lending Investments
|
Fixed
Income
|
Fixed
Income
|
1,014
|
2,014
|
0.2%
|
0.4%
|
82
|
(-)
|
National
Westminster 9% Pref Share
|
Fixed
Income
|
Fixed
Income
|
700
|
-
|
0.1%
|
-
|
Total
Investments
|
|
|
659,943
|
|
104.8%
|
|
Other net
liabilities
|
|
|
(30,265)
|
|
(4.8%)
|
|
Total net
assets
|
|
|
629,678
|
|
100.0%
|
|
Note: Figures in brackets denote
comparative rankings as at 30 November 2023.
Portfolio Review
As at 30 November
2024
Geographical Exposure*
|
Benchmark weighting
as
at 30 November 2024**
|
30
November 2024
|
30
November 2023
|
North
America
|
58.9%
|
61.0%
|
52.2%
|
Europe
|
12.6%
|
14.0%
|
16.2%
|
United
Kingdom
|
4.0%
|
11.3%
|
11.6%
|
Asia
(ex-Japan)
|
15.4%
|
7.9%
|
13.3%
|
Fixed
Income
|
-
|
6.5%
|
9.7%
|
Japan
|
4.5%
|
3.2%
|
1.7%
|
Latin
America
|
0.9%
|
0.9%
|
1.4%
|
Other net
liabilities
|
-
|
(4.8%)
|
(6.1%)
|
Total
|
|
100.0%
|
100.0%
|
Sector Exposure*
|
Benchmark weighting
as
at 30 November 2024**
|
30
November 2024
|
30
November 2023
|
Financial services
|
39.5%
|
42.4%
|
31.2%
|
Banks
|
41.3%
|
35.3%
|
43.3%
|
Insurance
|
18.7%
|
19.9%
|
21.9%
|
Fixed Income
|
-
|
6.5%
|
9.7%
|
Equity Real Estate Investment
Trusts (REITs)
|
-
|
0.7%
|
-
|
Other net liabilities
|
-
|
(4.8%)
|
(6.1%)
|
Total
|
|
100.0%
|
100.0%
|
Market Capitalisation*~
|
Benchmark weighting
as
at 30 November 2024**
|
30
November 2024
|
30
November 2023
|
Mega Cap
|
39.7%
|
33.5%
|
37.8%
|
Large Cap
|
34.2%
|
24.5%
|
32.5%
|
Mid Cap
|
17.5%
|
12.8%
|
10.8%
|
Small Cap
|
7.5%
|
15.6%
|
7.6%
|
Smallest Cap
|
0.7%
|
11.9%
|
7.7%
|
Fixed Income
|
-
|
6.5%
|
9.7%
|
Other net liabilities
|
-
|
(4.8%)
|
(6.1%)
|
Total
|
|
100.0%
|
100.0%
|
* Based on the net assets as at 30
November 2024 of £629.7m (2023: £488.2m)
**The classifications are derived
from the Benchmark as far as possible. Not all geographical areas
or sectors of the Benchmark are shown, only those in which the
Company had an investment at the year end.
~ With effect from January 2024,
the market capitalisation bandings were changed to "dynamic" and
are therefore subject to change. The dynamic market capitalisation
is determined based on the percentiles of the total index market
capitalisation. The mega caps correspond to the 40th percentile,
large caps to the 70th percentile, mid caps to the 90th percentile,
and small caps to the 99th percentile. The year ended 30 November
2023 data has been re-presented based on the dynamic market
capitalisation.
STRATEGIC REPORT
The Strategic Report section of
this Annual Report comprises the Chair's Statement, the Investment
Manager's Report, including information on the portfolio, and this
Strategic Report. This Report has been prepared to provide
information to Shareholders on the Company's strategy and the
potential for this strategy to succeed, including a fair review of
the Company's performance during the year ended 30 November 2024,
the position of the Company at the year end and a description of
the principal risks and uncertainties, including both economic and
business risk factors, underlying any such forward-looking
information.
Business Model and Regulatory Arrangements
The Company's business model
follows that of an externally managed investment trust providing
Shareholders with access to a portfolio of mostly listed or quoted
securities issued by companies in the financial sector. Its shares
are listed on the main market of the London Stock
Exchange.
The Company is designated an
Alternative Investment Fund ('AIF') under the Alternative
Investment Fund Management Directive ('AIFMD') and, as required by
the Directive, has contracted with Polar Capital LLP to act as the
Alternative Investment Fund Manager ('AIFM') and HSBC Bank Plc to
act as the Depositary.
Both the AIFM and the Depositary
have responsibilities under AIFMD for ensuring that the assets of
the Company are managed in accordance with the investment policy
and are held in safe custody. The Board remains responsible for
setting the investment strategy and operational guidelines as well
as meeting the requirements of the Financial Conduct Authority
('FCA') Listing Rules and the Companies Act 2006.
The AIFMD requires certain
information to be made available to investors in AIFs before they
invest and requires that material changes to this information be
disclosed in the Annual Report of each AIF. Investor Disclosure
Documents, which set out information on the Company's investment
strategy and policies, gearing, risk, liquidity, administration,
management, fees, conflicts of interest and other Shareholder
information are available on the Company's website.
There have been no material changes
to the information requiring disclosure. Any information requiring
immediate disclosure pursuant to the AIFMD will be disclosed to the
London Stock Exchange. Statements from the Depositary and the AIFM
can be found on the Company's website.
Investment Objective and Policy
The Company's investment objective
is to generate for investors a growing dividend income together
with capital appreciation. The Company seeks to achieve its
objective by investing in a global portfolio primarily consisting
of listed or quoted securities issued by companies in the financial
sector operating in banking, insurance, property and other
subsectors. The portfolio is diversified by geography, industry
subsectors and stock market capitalisation.
The Company may have a small
exposure to unlisted and unquoted companies, but in aggregate, this
is not expected to exceed 10% of total assets at the time of
investment. The Company will not invest more than 10% of total
assets, at the time of investment, in other listed closed-ended
investment companies and no single investment will account for more
than 10% of the portfolio at the time of investment.
The Company may employ levels of
borrowing from time to time with the aim of enhancing returns. This
is currently subject to an overall maximum of 20% (increased from
15% at the time of the reconstruction in April 2020) of net assets
at the time the relevant borrowing is taken out. Actual levels of
borrowing may change from time to time based on the Manager's
assessment of risk and reward. The Company may invest through
equities, index-linked and other debt securities, cash deposits,
money market instruments, foreign currency exchange transactions,
forward transactions, index options and other instruments including
derivatives. Forward transactions, derivatives (including put and
call options on individual positions or indices) and participation
notes may be used to gain exposure to the securities of companies
falling within the Company's investment policy or to seek to
generate income from the Company's position in such securities, as
well as for efficient portfolio management. Any use of derivatives
for investment purposes is made based on the same principles of
risk spreading and diversification that apply to the Company's
direct investments. The Company may hedge exposure to foreign
currencies if considered appropriate for efficient portfolio
management.
Strategy and Investment Approach
The Manager's investment process is
primarily driven by a bottom-up fundamental analysis of individual
companies, with macroeconomic inputs. The Manager uses both
quantitative and qualitative screens to rank companies on a
risk-adjusted basis using a number of variables such as
profitability, risk, growth and ESG metrics which is in addition to
more detailed stock or sector-specific research. The Portfolio
Managers undertake trips to the US, Europe and Asia to meet
companies as well as regularly meeting companies at various
conferences and at the Polar offices.
The portfolio is primarily invested
in companies with a market capitalisation greater than US$5bn.
There are no limits on the exposure of the investment portfolio to
either small or mid-cap companies where the Managers take positions
on an opportunistically basis. The Manager has discretion to invest
up to 10% of the portfolio in debt securities.
The investment portfolio is
invested in a variety of companies that offer both income and
capital growth. This is balanced in order to meet the Company's
objective of growing dividends to Shareholders over time. The
Board, together with the Manager will continue to assess the likely
income capability of the portfolio to determine the appropriate
longer-term distribution level. Please refer to the Chair's
Statement for information on the proposed changes to the Company's
future Dividend Policy.
Service Providers
Polar Capital LLP has been
appointed to act as the Investment Manager and AIFM as well as to
provide or procure company secretarial, marketing and
administrative services, including accounting and portfolio
valuation which it has arranged to deliver through HSBC Securities
Services ("HSS").
The Company also contracts
directly, on terms agreed periodically, with several third parties
for the provision of specialist services:
· HSBC
Securities Services as Custodian and Depositary;
· Stifel
Nicolaus Europe Limited as Corporate Broker;
· Equiniti Limited as Share Registrars;
· PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP as Independent Auditors;
· RD:IR
for Investor Relations and Shareholder Analysis;
· Marten
& Co as third-party research providers;
· Camarco as PR advisors;
· Perivan as Designers and Printers for shareholder
communications; and
· Huguenot Limited as Website Designers and internet hosting
services.
Benchmark
The Company measures the Manager's
performance against the MSCI ACWI Financials Net Total Return Index
('the Benchmark'). This has been used to measure the performance of
the Company since 23 April 2020. The Manager does not seek to
replicate the index in constructing the Company's portfolio. The
portfolio may, therefore, diverge substantially from the
constituents of the Benchmark.
Although the Company evaluates its
performance against the Benchmark, this is neither a target nor a
determinant of investment strategy. The purpose of the Benchmark is
to set out a reasonable measure of performance for Shareholders and
an appropriate base which, together with an additional hurdle,
forms the level above which the Manager earns a performance
fee.
Investment Management Company and Management of the
Portfolio
As the Company is an investment
vehicle for Shareholders, the Directors have sought to ensure that
the business of the Company is managed by a leading specialist
investment management team and that the investment strategy is
attractive to Shareholders. The Directors believe that a strong
working relationship with the Manager will achieve the optimum
return for Shareholders. As such, the Board and Manager operate in
a supportive, co-operative and open environment.
The Investment Manager is Polar
Capital LLP ("Polar Capital") which is authorised and regulated by
the Financial Conduct Authority, to act as Investment Manager and
AIFM of the Company with sole responsibility for the discretionary
management of the Company's assets (including uninvested cash) and
sole responsibility for decisions as to the purchase and sale of
individual investments. The Manager also has responsibility for
asset allocation within the limits of the investment policy and
guidelines established and regularly reviewed by the Board, all
subject to the overall control and supervision of the Board. Polar
Capital provides a team of five financial specialists with the
portfolio jointly managed by Nick Brind, George Barrow and Tom
Dorner. The Manager has other investment resources which support
the investment team and has experience in administering and
managing other investment companies.
Fee Arrangements
Management Fee
Under the terms of the IMA, the
Manager is entitled to a management fee together with reimbursement
of reasonable expenses incurred by it in the performance of its
duties. The Management fee is payable monthly in arrears and, with
effect from 7 April 2020, is charged at a rate of 0.70% per annum
of the Company's NAV. In accordance with the Directors' policy on
the allocation of expenses between income and capital, in each
financial year 80% of the management fee payable is charged to
capital and the remaining 20% to revenue.
Performance Fee
The Manager may be entitled to a
performance fee equal to 10% of the excess of the performance fee
hurdle and payable at the end of each five-year period, the first
period being from 23 April 2020 to 30 June 2025 and at five yearly
intervals thereafter.
For the purpose of calculating the
performance fee, the Company's NAV (adjusted to reflect dividends
paid, and any performance impact caused by the issue or buyback of
ordinary shares) at 30 June 2025, being the end of the relevant
Performance Period, will be used. No performance fee has been paid
or accrued as at 30 November 2024. Where a performance fee becomes
payable it will be charged 100% to capital.
Termination Arrangements
The IMA may be terminated by either
party giving 12 months' notice. The IMA may be terminated earlier
by the Company with immediate effect on the occurrence of certain
events, including: (i) if an order has been made or an effective
resolution passed for the liquidation of the Manager; (ii) if the
Manager ceases or threatens to cease to carry on its business;
(iii) where the Company is required to do so by a relevant
regulatory authority; (iv) on the liquidation of the Company; or
(v) subject to certain conditions, where the Manager commits a
material breach of the IMA. In the event the IMA is terminated by
the Company, except in the event of termination by the Company for
certain specified causes, the base fee and the performance fee will
be calculated pro rata for the period up to and including the date
of termination.
Performance and Key Performance Objectives
The Board appraises the performance
of the Company and the Manager as the key supplier of services to
the Company against
key performance indicators
('KPIs'). The objectives of the KPIs comprise both specific
financial and Shareholder related measures.
These KPIs have not differed from
the prior year.
KPI
|
Control
process
|
Outcome
|
The provision of investment returns
to Shareholders measured by long-term NAV total return relative to
the Benchmark and a comparator group.
|
The Board reviews at each meeting
the performance of the portfolio and considers the views of the
Manager and the value delivered to Shareholders through NAV growth
and dividends paid.
The Board also receives monthly
reports on performance against both the Benchmark and a comparator
group of open-ended investment funds.
|
The Company's NAV total return,
over the year ended 30 November 2024, was 34.8%* while the
Benchmark delivered 36.1% over the same period. Since inception the
NAV total return was 199.2%* compared to 204.8% for the Benchmark
and 161.8% for a comparator group.
As at 30 November 2024 the Company
ranks 9 out of a comparator group of 31 open ended funds within the
Lipper Financial Sector universe since inception and 4 out of 6
within a smaller comparable group of funds regularly considered by
the Board.
|
The achievement of a progressive
dividend policy.~
|
Financial forecasts are reviewed to
track income and Distributions.
|
A total of two interim dividends
amounting to 4.70p (2023: 4.55p) per ordinary share have been paid
or declared in respect of the financial year ended 30 November
2024. While the aim to achieve dividend growth remains there is no
guarantee that this can be achieved.
|
Monitoring and reacting to issues
created by the discount or premium of the ordinary share price to
the NAV per ordinary share with the aim of reducing volatility for
Shareholders.
|
The Board receives regular
information on the composition of the share register including
trading patterns and discount/premium levels of the Company's
ordinary shares. The Board discusses and authorises the issue or
buy back of shares when appropriate.
The Board is aware of the
vulnerability of a sector specialist investment trust to a change
in investor sentiment towards that sector. While there is no formal
policy the Board discusses the market factors giving rise to any
discount or premium, the long or short-term nature of those factors
and the overall benefit to Shareholders of any mitigating actions.
The market liquidity is also considered when authorising the issue
or buy back of shares when appropriate market conditions
prevail.
A daily NAV per share, calculated
in accordance with the AIC guidelines is issued to the London Stock
exchange.
|
The discount of the ordinary share
price to the NAV per ordinary share at the year-end was 5.5%*
compared with a discount of 12.2% at the year ended 30 November
2023. The average discount
for the investment trust sector at
30 November 2024 was 15.6%.
During the year under review, the
Company bought back 5,642,322 ordinary shares at an average
discount of 8.9%. No ordinary shares were bought back
following the year end. All shares bought back have been placed
into treasury for reissue to the market under the appropriate
conditions.
|
To qualify and continue to meet the
requirements for Sections 1158 and 1159 of the Corporation Tax Act
2010 ('investment trust status').
|
The Board receives regular
financial information which discloses the current and projected
financial position of the Company against each of the tests set out
in Sections 1158 and 1159.
|
The Company has been granted
investment trust status annually since its launch on 1 July 2013
and is deemed to be granted such status for each subsequent year
subject to the Company continuing to satisfy the conditions of
Section 1158 of the Corporation Tax Act 2010 and other associated
ongoing requirements. The Directors believe that the tests have
been met in the financial year ended 30 November 2024 and will
continue to be met.
|
Efficient operation of the Company
with appropriate investment management resources and services from
third party suppliers within a stable and risk controlled
environment.
|
Annually the Board considers
the services provided by the Manager, both investment and
administrative, and reviews the provision of services from third
parties including the costs of their services.
The annual operating expenses are
reviewed and any non-recurring project related expenditure approved
by the Board.
|
The Board, through the Audit
Committee has received and considered satisfactory the internal
controls report of the Manager and other key suppliers including
contingency arrangements to facilitate the ongoing operations of
the Company in the event of withdrawal or failure of
services.
The ongoing charges for the year
ended 30 November 2024 excluding the performance fee were 0.85% of
net assets (2023: 0.86%)*. The ongoing charges including the
performance fee payable were 0.85% (2023: 0.86%)*.
|
* Alternative Performance Measures,
see below for further explanations.
~ Please refer to the Chair's
Statement for information on the proposed changes to the Company's
future Dividend Policy.
PRINCIPAL RISKS AND
UNCERTAINTIES
The Board is responsible for the
management of risks faced by the Company. Through delegation to the
Audit Committee, it has established procedures to manage risk,
oversee the internal control framework and determine the nature and
extent of the principal risks the Company is willing to take to
achieve its long-term strategic objectives.
The established risk management
process the Company follows identifies and assesses various risks,
their likelihood, and possible severity of impact, considering both
internal and external controls and factors that could provide
mitigation.
A post mitigation risk impact score
is then determined for each principal risk.
The Audit Committee carries out, at
least annually, a robust assessment of the principal risks and
uncertainties. With the assistance of the Manager, it monitors
identified risks and meets to discuss both long-term and emerging
risks.
During the year the Audit
Committee, in conjunction with the Board and the Manager, undertook
a full review of the Company's Risk Map including the mitigating
factors and controls to reduce the impact of the risks. The
Committee continues to closely monitor these risks along with any
other emerging risks as they develop and implements mitigating
actions as necessary.
The Committee is mindful of the
geopolitical political landscape, specifically the ongoing military
activity in Ukraine and the Middle East. Geopolitical events such
as these can have a significant impact on global financial markets,
and hence on the Company's portfolio performance. Further
information on how the Committee has assessed the Company's ability
to operate as a going concern and the Company's longer-term
viability can be found in the Report of the Audit Committee in the
Annual Report.
The principal risks are detailed on
the following pages along with a high-level summary of their
management through mitigation over the past financial
year.
Investor
Manager Performance
|
Principal Business Risks and Uncertainties
|
Management of Risks through Mitigation &
Controls
|
Failure to achieve investment
objective, investment performance below agreed benchmark objective
or market/ industry average.
|
The Board seeks to manage the
impact of such risks through regular reporting and monitoring of
investment performance against a comparator group of open-ended
funds, the Benchmark and other agreed indicators of relative
performance. In months when the Board is not scheduled to meet, it
receives a monthly report containing financial information on the
Company including gearing and cash balances.
Performance and strategy are
reviewed throughout the year at regular Board meetings where the
Board can challenge the Manager. The Board also receives a monthly
commentary from the Manager in the form of factsheets for all the
specialist financial sector funds managed by Polar
Capital.
The Board is committed to a clear
communication programme to ensure Shareholders understand the
investment strategy. This is maintained using monthly factsheets
which have a market commentary from the Manager as well as
portfolio data, an informative website as well as annual and half
year reports. The Management Engagement Committee considers the
suitability of the Manager based on performance and other services
provided.
|
Loss of portfolio manager or other
key staff.
|
The strength and depth of
investment team provides comfort that there is not over-reliance on
one person with alternative portfolio managers available to act if
needed. For each key business process roles, responsibilities and
reporting lines are clear and unambiguous. Key personnel are
incentivised by equity participation in the investment management
company.
|
The ability to continue the
dividend policy* may be compromised due to lower income because of
changes in underlying companies' policies or changes in the
portfolio construction, regulatory intervention, local taxes
because of the currency exposure underlying the portfolio. This
could result in a lower level of dividend being paid than intended
or previously paid
|
The Board monitors the level of
investment income through monthly
management accounts and discussion. In the event of there being
insufficient income during the financial year, the Company has
built up revenue reserves on which to draw to pay dividends.
Equally, in the event of the revenue reserves being fully utilised
the Company may use other distributable reserves.
The Board and the Manager will
continue to assess the income capability of the portfolio and
determine the appropriate longer-term dividend level based on how
economies and businesses perform.
|
Risk of regular five yearly tenders
being taken up at a level which leaves size of the Company
unviable.
|
Under the Articles of Association,
the Company is required to make tender offers at five-yearly
intervals, with the first to commence
on or before 30 June 2025. There is a risk that the size of the
Company following the tender offer may not meet the minimum size
condition to continue in existence.
The Board, Investment Manager and
Corporate Broker maintain a close relationship with Shareholders.
Regular reports are provided to the Board on communications with
Shareholders and feedback received is discussed at Board meetings.
Ahead of the tender, further engagement will be held with
Shareholders and an assessment will be undertaken to determine
Shareholders likely to remain invested in the Company post
tender.
|
Market, Economic and
Political Risk
|
Principal Business Risks and Uncertainties
|
Management of Risks through Mitigation &
Controls
|
While the portfolio is diversified
across a number of stock markets worldwide, the investment mandate
is focused on financials and thus the portfolio is more sensitive
to investor sentiment and the commercial acceptance of the sector
than a general investment portfolio.
The Company's portfolio is exposed
to risks such as market price, credit, liquidity, foreign currency
and interest rates. The portfolio is actively managed. The
Manager's style focuses primarily on the investment opportunity of
individual stocks and, accordingly, may not follow the makeup of
the Benchmark. This may result in returns which are not in line
with the Benchmark.
The degree of risk which the
Manager incurs in order to generate the investment returns and the
effect of gearing on the portfolio by borrowed funds can magnify
the portfolio returns per share positively or
negatively.
|
The Board has set appropriate
investment limits against which it monitors the position of the
portfolio. They include guidelines on exposures to certain
investment markets and sectors. The Board discusses with the
Manager at each Board meeting its views on the sector.
At each Board meeting the
composition and diversification of the portfolio by geographies,
sectors and capitalisations are considered along with sales and
purchases of investments. Individual investments are discussed with
the Manager as well as the Manager's general views on the various
investment markets and the financials sector.
Analytical performance data and
attribution analysis is presented by the Manager.
The policies for managing the risks
posed by exposure to market prices, interest rates, foreign
currency exchange rates, credit and liquidity are set out in the
financial statements. Shareholders have sight of the entire
portfolio and geographic exposure of investments.
|
There is significant exposure to
the economic cycles of the markets in which the underlying
investments conduct their business operations as well as the
economic impact on investment markets where such investments are
listed.
The fluctuations of exchange rates
can also have a material impact on Shareholder returns.
|
The Board regularly discusses
global geopolitical issues and general economic conditions and
developments.
The impact on the portfolio from
other geopolitical changes and the overall economic and
geopolitical environment in which the Company operates is monitored
through existing control systems and discussed regularly by the
Board.
Note 27 in the Annual Report
describes the risks posed by changes in foreign exchange rates. The
Manager can hedge foreign currency if it is thought appropriate at
the time.
|
Operational and Regulatory
Risk
|
Principal Business Risks and Uncertainties
|
Management of Risks through Mitigation &
Controls
|
There are risks from the failure
of, or disruption to, operational and accounting systems and
processes provided by the Manager including any subcontractors to
which the Manager has delegated a task as well as directly
appointed suppliers.
The mis-valuation of investments or
the loss of assets from the custodian or sub custodians could
affect the NAV per share or lead to a loss of Shareholder
value.
There is taxation risk that the
Company may fail to continue as an investment trust and suffer
capital gains tax or fail to recover as fully as possible
withholding taxes on overseas investments.
The legal and regulatory risks
include failure to comply with the FCA's Prospectus Rules, Listing
Rules and Disclosure Guidance and Transparency Rules; not meeting
the provisions of the Companies Act 2006 and other UK and overseas
legislation affecting UK companies and not complying with
accounting standards. Further risks arise from not keeping abreast
of changes in legislation and regulations which have in recent
years been substantial.
|
At each Board meeting the Board
receives an administration report that provides details on general
corporate matters including legislative and regulatory developments
and changes.
The Board conducts an annual review
of suppliers and their internal control reports, which includes the
disaster recovery procedures of the Manager.
Regular reporting from the
Depositary on the safe custody of the Company's assets and the
operation of control systems related to the portfolio
reconciliation is monitored. Specialist advice is sought on
taxation issues as and when required. The Audit Committee has
oversight of such work.
Information and guidance on legal
and regulatory risks is managed by using the Manager or
professional advisers where necessary and the submission of reports
to the Board for discussion and, if required, any remedial action
or changes considered necessary. The Board monitors new
developments and changes in the regulatory environment. Whilst it
has no control over such changes, the Board seeks to ensure that
their impact on the Company is understood and complied
with.
|
Cyber-attack causing disruption to
or failure of operational and accounting systems and processes
provided by the Investment Manager creating an unexpected event
and/or adverse impact on personnel or the portfolio.
|
The number, severity and success
rate of cyber-attacks have increased considerably over recent
years. Detailed controls are in place and the Board proactively
seeks to keep abreast of developments through updates with
representatives of the Investment Manager who undertakes meetings
with relevant service providers.
|
Investor Relations and
Stewardship
|
Principal Business Risks and Uncertainties
|
Management of Risks through Mitigation &
Controls
|
Persistent excessive share price
premium/discount to NAV.
|
In consultation with its advisors,
including the corporate broker, the Board regularly considers the
level of the share price premium/discount to the NAV and the Board
reviews ways to enhance Shareholder value including share issuance
and buy backs.
|
Failure to communicate effectively
and timeously with investors or the issuance of erroneous or
misleading information.
|
Polar Capital Sales Team and the
Corporate Broker provide periodic reports to the Board on
communications with shareholders and feedback received.
The Investment Manager also has
regular interaction with clients, Shareholders and investors. This
is through a combination of channels including one to one meetings,
presentations at retail, professional events or at Polar's Annual
Investor conference.
The Board is committed to a clear
communication programme to ensure Shareholders understand the
investment strategy. This is maintained using monthly factsheets
which have market commentary from the Investment Manager portfolio
data, an informative website and annual and half year reports.
Contact details and how to contact the Board are provided in
regulatory announcements and the Board will be present at the AGM
to speak to Shareholders.
|
* Please refer to the Chair's
Statement for information on the proposed changes to the Company's
future Dividend Policy.
SECTION 172 OF THE COMPANIES ACT 2006
The statutory duties of the
Directors are listed in s171-177 of the Companies Act 2006. Under
s172, Directors have a duty to promote the success of the Company
for the benefit of its members (its Shareholders) as a whole and in
doing so have regard to the consequences of any decision in the
long term, as well as having regard to the Company's wider
stakeholders amongst other considerations. The fulfilment of this
duty not only helps the Company achieve its Investment Objective
but ensures decisions are made in a responsible and sustainable way
for Shareholders.
To ensure that the Directors are
aware of, and understand, their duties, they are provided with an
induction when they first join the Board, including details of all
relevant regulatory and legal duties as a director and continue to
receive regular and ongoing updates on relevant legislative and
regulatory developments. They have continued access to the advice
and services of the Company Secretary and, when deemed necessary,
the Directors can seek independent professional advice. The
Schedule of Matters Reserved for the Board, and the Terms of
Reference of its committees, are reviewed annually and further
describe Directors' responsibilities and obligations and include
any statutory and regulatory duties.
The Board seeks to understand the
needs and priorities of the Company's stakeholders and these are
taken into account during discussions and as part of the
decision-making process. As an externally managed investment
company, the Company does not have any employees or customers,
however the key stakeholders and a summary of the Board's
consideration and actions where possible in relation to each group
of stakeholders are described in the table below.
Stakeholder Group
|
How we engage with them
|
Shareholders
|
The Directors have considered this
duty when making the strategic decisions during the year that
affect Shareholders, including the continued appointment of the
Investment Manager and the recommendation that Shareholders vote in
favour of the resolutions for the Company to continue and to renew
the allotment and buy back authorities at the AGM. The Directors
have also engaged with and taken account of Shareholders' interests
during the year.
The Company's AGM will be held at
2:00pm on Thursday 10 April 2025 at the offices of Polar Capital,
16 Palace Street, London SW1E 5JD. The Board recognises that the
AGM is an important event for Shareholders and the Company and is
keen to ensure that Shareholders can exercise their right to vote
and participate. Any changes to these arrangements will be
communicated through the Company's website and via a Regulatory
Information Service announcement.
The Board believes that Shareholder
engagement remains important and is keen that the AGM be a
participative event for all. Shareholders will have the opportunity
to hear a pre-recorded presentation from the Manager, reviewing the
Company's performance in the year and the outlook for 2024-2025 in
advance of the AGM. The presentation will be uploaded to the
Company's website ahead of the AGM. In addition, Shareholders will
be able to watch the proceedings of the AGM live via Zoom
Conference. Details of how to access the online link are provided
in the Notice of AGM. The AGM in-person meeting will comprise the
formal business and questions only. All formal business resolutions
will be voted on by a poll and we therefore encourage Shareholders
to submit their votes ahead of the meeting by proxy card which is
provided with the Notice of Meeting. Shareholders who hold their
shares via an online stockbroker or platform are encouraged to
exercise their vote in advance of the meeting through their
respective platforms. Further information can be found on the
AIC's website and in the Shareholder
information section in the Annual Report.
Shareholders are encouraged to send
any questions (on or before 7 April 2025) ahead of the AGM to the
Board via the Company Secretary at cosec@polarcapital.co.uk stating
the subject matter as PCFT-AGM. The Chair of the Board and of the
Committees, along with the Managers, will attend the AGM and will
be available to respond to questions and concerns from
Shareholders.
Should any significant votes be
cast against a resolution, the Board will engage with Shareholders
and explain in its announcement of the results of the AGM the
actions it intends to take to consult Shareholders to understand
the reasons behind the votes against. Following the consultation,
an update will be published no later than six months after the AGM
and the Annual Report will detail the impact the Shareholder
feedback has had on any decisions the Board has taken and any
actions or resolutions proposed.
Relations with Shareholders
The Board and the Manager consider
maintaining good communications and engaging with Shareholders
through meetings and presentations a key priority. The Board
regularly considers the share register of the Company and receives
regular reports from the Manager and the Corporate Broker on
meetings attended with Shareholders and any concerns that are
raised in those meetings. The Board reviews any correspondence from
Shareholders and members of the Board attend Manager presentations
to investors.
Shareholders are kept informed by
the publication of annual and half year reports, monthly fact
sheets, access to commentary from the Manager via the Company's
website and attendance at events at which the Manager
presents.
Shareholders can raise any concerns
directly with the Chair or the Board without intervention of the
Manager or Company Secretary. They may do this either in person at
the AGM or at other events, or in writing either via the registered
office of the Company or to the Chair's specific email
address Chair.PCFT@polarcapital.co.uk.
The Company, through the sales and
marketing efforts of the Manager, encourages retail investment
platforms to engage with underlying Shareholders in relation to
Company communications and enable those Shareholders to cast their
votes on Shareholder resolutions; the Company however has no
responsibility over such platforms. The Board therefore encourages
Shareholders invested via platforms to regularly visit the
Company's website or to contact the Company directly to obtain
copies of Shareholder communications.
The Company has made arrangements
with its registrar for Shareholders who own their shares directly
rather than through a nominee or share scheme to view their account
online at www.shareview.co.uk. Other services are available via
this website.
Outcomes and strategic
decisions during the year
2025 Tender
Offer
Ahead of
the Tender Offer to be made to Shareholders in 2025, Directors
continue to engage with the Manager, Polar Sales and the Company's
Brokers to understand Shareholder views and the proposed mechanisms
and timetable for the Tender.
Buybacks
Further to Shareholder authority
being granted, the Company has the facility to conduct share buy
backs when, in normal market conditions, it is in the best
interests of Shareholders to do so. The Company bought back a total
of 5,642,322 shares during the year under review. No ordinary
shares were bought back following the year end.
AGM
To enable more Shareholders the
opportunity to hear the Investment Manager's AGM presentation, the
Board has opted to pre-record and upload this to the website ahead
of the voting deadline and in-person formal business AGM. In
addition, Shareholders can watch the proceedings of the AGM live
via Zoom Conference. Details of how to access the online link are
provided in the Notice of AGM.
|
Manager
|
Through the Board meeting cycle,
regular updates and the work of the Management Engagement Committee
in reviewing the services of the Manager annually, the Board is
able to safeguard Shareholder interests by:
• Ensuring excessive risk is
not undertaken in the pursuit of investment performance;
•
Ensuring adherence to the Investment Policy;
• Ensuring adherence
to the Investment Management Agreement and reviewing the agreed
management and performance fees;
• Ensuring compliance with
statutory legal requirements, regulations and other advisory
guidance such as consumer duty and aspects of operational
resilience; and
• Reviewing the Manager's
decision making and consistency of its investment
process.
Maintaining a close and
constructive working relationship with the Manager is crucial as
the Board and the Manager both aim to continue to deliver
consistent, long-term returns in line with the Investment
Objective. The culture which the Board maintains to achieve this
involves encouraging open discussion with the Manager, ensuring
that the interests of Shareholders and the Manager are aligned,
providing constructive challenge and making Directors' experience
available to support the Manager. This culture is aligned with the
collegiate and meritocratic culture which Polar Capital has
developed and maintains.
Outcomes and strategic decisions during the
year
ESG
The Board continued to engage with
the Investment Manager to oversee how ESG has been integrated into
the overall house methodology as well as the bespoke financials
team investment approach, engagement and decision making. The Board
also receives information on how ESG affects Polar Capital as a
business and the financials team.
Consumer Duty
The Board has worked with the
Investment Manager to ensure the obligations of the new Consumer
Duty regulations are appropriately applied to the Company. In light
of the obligations, all communications including the website, fact
sheets and other published documentation, have been reviewed to
ensure they are appropriate for all end users. A 'value for money'
assessment has also been undertaken and is made available to
distributors on request for their due diligence
processes.
Cost Disclosure
The Board has engaged with the
Manager to understand the implications of the FCA's forbearance
statement and explore any changes that could be applied to key
documentation to take advantage of the exemption from PRIIPs and
the cost disclosure aspects of MiFID. The Board has reviewed the
changes to the Company's Key Information Document and Factsheet,
both of which have been updated in line with industry
guidance.
Management
On the recommendation of the
Management Engagement Committee the Board has resolved to the
continue the appointment of the Manager on the terms agreed within
the Investment Management Agreement.
|
Investee Companies
|
The Board has instructed the
Manager to consider the published corporate governance policies of
the companies in which they invest.
The Board has also considered the
Investment Manager's Stewardship Code and Proxy Voting Policy. The
Voting Policy is for the Investment Manager to vote at all general
meetings of companies in favour of resolutions proposed by the
management where it believes that the proposals are in the
interests of shareholders. However, in exceptional cases, where the
Investment Manager believes that a resolution would be detrimental
to the interests of shareholders or the financial performance of
the Company, appropriate notification will be given and abstentions
or a vote against will be lodged.
The Manager voted at 68 company
meetings over the year ended 30 November 2024, with 37% of meetings
having at least one vote against, withheld or abstained. The
Manager reports to the Board, when requested, on the application of
the Stewardship Code and Voting Policy. The Manager's Stewardship
Code and Voting Policy can be found on the Manager's website in the
Corporate Governance section (www.polarcapital.co.uk). Further
information on how the Manager considers ESG in its engagement with
investee companies can be found in the ESG Report in the Annual
Report.
Outcomes and strategic decisions during the
year
The Board receives information on
the ratings of investee companies and can use this as a tool to
inform discussions with the Manager during Board
meetings.
|
Service Providers
|
The Directors oversee the Company's
service providers through the annual cycle of reporting and due
diligence meetings or site visits undertaken by the Manager. This
engagement is undertaken with the aim of having effective oversight
of delegated services, seeking to improve the processes for the
benefit of the Company and to understand the needs and views of the
Company's service providers, as stakeholders in the Company.
Further information on the Board's engagement with service
providers is included in the Corporate Governance Statement and the
Report of the Audit Committee. During the year under review, due
diligence meetings have been undertaken by the Investment Manager
and where possible, service providers have joined meetings to
present their reports directly to the Board or the Audit Committee
as appropriate.
Outcomes and strategic decisions during the
year
The reviews of the Company's
service providers have been positive and the Directors believe
their continued appointment is in the best interests of
Shareholders. The accounting and administration services of HSBC
Securities Services (HSS) are contracted through Polar Capital and
provided to the Company under the terms of the IMA. However, the
Board continues to conduct due diligence service reviews in
conjunction with the Company Secretary and is satisfied that the
services received continue to be of a satisfactory
standard.
|
Proxy Advisors
|
The support of the major
institutional investors and proxy adviser agencies is important to
the Directors, as the Company seeks to retain a reputation for high
standards of corporate governance, which the Directors believe
contributes to the long-term sustainable success of the Company.
The Directors consider the recommendations of these various proxy
voting agencies when contemplating decisions that will affect
Shareholders and when reporting to Shareholders through the Half
Year and Annual Reports.
Recognising the principles of
stewardship, as promoted by the UK Stewardship Code, the Board
welcomes engagement with all its investors. The Board recognises
that the views, questions from, and recommendations of many
institutional investors and proxy adviser agencies provide a
valuable feedback mechanism and play a part in highlighting
evolving shareholders' expectations and concerns.
Outcomes and strategic decisions during the
year
Where possible the Chair and other
representatives of the Company have engaged with the stewardship
teams of some larger investors to understand and address their
expectations in terms of board governance, recruitment and
diversity. Prior to AGMs, the Company engages with these agencies
to fact check their advisory reports and clarify any areas or
topics contained within the report. This ensures that whilst the
proxy advisory reports provided to shareholders are objective and
independent, the Company's actions and intentions are represented
as clearly as possible to assist with shareholders' decision making
when considering the resolutions proposed at the AGM.
|
AIC
|
The Company is a member of the AIC
and has supported various lobbying activities. Representatives of
the Manager sit on a variety of forums run by the AIC which aids
development and understanding of new policies and procedures. The
Directors may cast votes in the AIC Board Elections each year and
regularly attend AIC events.
|
Approved by the Board on 19
February 2025.
By order of the Board
Jumoke Kupoluyi, ACG
Polar Capital Secretarial Services
Limited
Company Secretary
STATEMENT OF DIRECTORS'
RESPONSIBILITIES
The Directors are responsible for
preparing the Annual Report and the financial statements in
accordance with applicable law and regulations.
Company law requires the Directors
to prepare Financial Statements for each financial year. Under that
law the Directors have prepared the Financial Statements in
accordance with the UK-adopted International Accounting Standards
(UK-adopted IAS) and applicable law. Additionally, the Financial
Conduct Authority's Disclosure Guidance and Transparency Rules
require the directors to prepare the Financial Statements in
accordance with UK-adopted IAS.
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 and then apply them
consistently;
· state
whether they have been prepared in accordance with UK-adopted IAS,
subject to any material departures disclosed and explained in the
Financial Statements;
· make
judgements and accounting estimates that are reasonable and
prudent; and
· prepare the Financial Statements on the 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
enable them to ensure that the Financial Statements and the
Directors' Remuneration Report comply with the Companies Act 2006.
They are responsible for such internal controls as they determine
is necessary to enable the preparation of Financial Statements that
are free from material misstatement, whether due to fraud or error,
and have general responsibility for taking such steps as are
reasonably open to them to safeguard the assets of the Company and
to prevent and detect 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.
The Directors are responsible for
the maintenance and integrity of the corporate and financial
information included on the Company's website. Legislation in the
UK governing the preparation and dissemination of Financial
Statements may differ from legislation in other
jurisdictions.
Directors' confirmations
The Directors consider that the
annual report and financial statements taken as a whole, is fair,
balanced and understandable and provides the information necessary
for shareholders to assess the Company's position and performance,
business model and strategy.
Each of the Directors, whose names
and functions are listed in the Strategic Report, confirm that, to
the best of their knowledge:
·
the Company's Financial
Statements, which have been prepared in accordance with applicable
accounting standards give a true and fair view of the assets,
liabilities, financial position and profit/loss of the Company;
and
· the
Strategic Report includes a fair review of the development and
performance of the business and the position of the Company,
together with a description of the principal risks and
uncertainties that it faces.
In the case of each Director in
office at the date the Directors' Report is approved:
·
so far as the Director is aware,
there is no relevant audit information of which the Company's
auditors are unaware; and
· they
have taken all the steps that they ought to have taken as a
Director in order to make themselves aware of any relevant audit
information and to establish that the Company's auditors are aware
of that information.
Simon Cordery
Chair
19 February 2025
Statement of Comprehensive
Income
For the year ended 30 November
2024
|
Notes
|
Year ended 30 November
2024
|
Year ended 30 November
2023
|
Revenue
return
£'000
|
Capital
return
£'000
|
Total
return
£'000
|
Revenue
return
£'000
|
Capital
return
£'000
|
Total
return
£'000
|
Investment
income
|
3
|
19,067
|
-
|
19,067
|
19,143
|
-
|
19,143
|
Other
operating income
|
4
|
1,505
|
-
|
1,505
|
916
|
-
|
916
|
Gains/(losses) on investments held at fair value
|
5
|
-
|
156,916
|
156,916
|
-
|
(25,777)
|
(25,777)
|
Losses on
derivatives
|
|
-
|
(251)
|
(251)
|
-
|
(442)
|
(442)
|
Other
currency losses
|
6
|
-
|
(2,312)
|
(2,312)
|
-
|
(152)
|
(152)
|
Total
income/(expense)
|
|
20,572
|
154,353
|
174,925
|
20,059
|
(26,371)
|
(6,312)
|
Expenses
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Investment
management fee
|
7
|
(772)
|
(3,088)
|
(3,860)
|
(704)
|
(2,815)
|
(3,519)
|
Other
administrative expenses
|
8
|
(798)
|
(46)
|
(844)
|
(774)
|
(20)
|
(794)
|
Total
expenses
|
|
(1,570)
|
(3,134)
|
(4,704)
|
(1,478)
|
(2,835)
|
(4,313)
|
Profit/(loss) before finance costs and tax
|
|
19,002
|
151,219
|
170,221
|
18,581
|
(29,206)
|
(10,625)
|
Finance
costs
|
9
|
(799)
|
(3,196)
|
(3,995)
|
(722)
|
(2,887)
|
(3,609)
|
Profit/(loss) before
tax
|
|
18,203
|
148,023
|
166,226
|
17,859
|
(32,093)
|
(14,234)
|
Tax
|
10
|
(1,988)
|
337
|
(1,651)
|
(1,986)
|
695
|
(1,291)
|
Net profit/(loss) for the
year and total comprehensive income/(expense)
|
|
16,215
|
148,360
|
164,575
|
15,873
|
(31,398)
|
(15,525)
|
Earnings/(losses) per
ordinary share (pence)
|
11
|
5.31
|
48.62
|
53.93
|
4.97
|
(9.84)
|
(4.87)
|
The total column of this statement
represents the Company's Statement of Comprehensive Income,
prepared in accordance with UK-adopted International Accounting
Standards.
The revenue return and capital
return columns are supplementary to this and are prepared under
guidance published by the Association of Investment
Companies.
The amounts dealt with in the
Statement of Comprehensive Income are all derived from continuing
activities.
The notes to follow form part of
these financial statements.
Statement of Changes in
Equity
For the year ended 30 November
2024
|
Notes
|
Year
ended 30 November 2024
|
Called up share capital
£'000
|
Capital redemption
reserve
£'000
|
Share premium reserve
£'000
|
Special distributable
reserve
£'000
|
Capital reserves
£'000
|
Revenue reserve
£'000
|
Total equity
£'000
|
Total equity at 1 December
2023
|
|
16,588
|
251
|
311,369
|
105,117
|
43,507
|
11,366
|
488,198
|
Total comprehensive
income:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Profit for
the year ended 30 November 2024
|
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
148,360
|
16,215
|
164,575
|
Transactions with owners,
recorded directly to equity:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Shares
bought back and held in treasury
|
15
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(9,038)
|
-
|
-
|
(9,038)
|
Equity
dividends paid
|
12
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(14,057)
|
(14,057)
|
Total equity at 30 November
2023
|
|
16,588
|
251
|
311,369
|
96,079
|
191,867
|
13,524
|
629,678
|
|
Notes
|
Year
ended 30 November 2023
|
Called up share capital
£'000
|
Capital redemption
reserve
£'000
|
Share premium reserve
£'000
|
Special distributable
reserve
£'000
|
Capital reserves
£'000
|
Revenue reserve
£'000
|
Total equity
£'000
|
Total equity at 1 December
2022
|
|
16,588
|
251
|
311,380
|
128,256
|
74,905
|
9,892
|
541,272
|
Total comprehensive
(expense)/income:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(Loss)/profit for the year ended 30 November 2023
|
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(31,398)
|
15,873
|
(15,525)
|
Transactions with owners,
recorded directly to equity:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Issue
costs relating to prior year share placings
|
|
-
|
-
|
(11)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(11)
|
Shares
bought back and held in treasury
|
15
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(23,139)
|
-
|
-
|
(23,139)
|
Equity
dividends paid
|
12
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(14,399)
|
(14,399)
|
Total equity at 30 November
2023
|
|
16,588
|
251
|
311,369
|
105,117
|
43,507
|
11,366
|
488,198
|
The notes
to follow form part of these financial statements.
Balance
Sheet
As at 30 November 2024
|
Notes
|
30 November 2024
£'000
|
30 November 2023
£'000
|
Non-current assets
|
|
|
|
Investments held at fair value
through profit or loss
|
13
|
659,943
|
518,124
|
Current assets
|
|
|
|
Cash and
cash equivalents
|
14
|
28,178
|
37,262
|
Fair value
of open derivative contracts
|
13
|
728
|
506
|
Receivables
|
|
22,873
|
8,419
|
|
|
51,779
|
46,187
|
Total assets
|
|
711,722
|
564,311
|
Current liabilities
|
|
|
|
Bank overdraft
|
14
|
-
|
(1)
|
Fair value of open derivative
contracts
|
13
|
(378)
|
(316)
|
Payables
|
|
(2,335)
|
(6,502)
|
Bank loan
|
|
(78,935)
|
-
|
|
|
(81,648)
|
(6,819)
|
Non-current liabilities
|
|
|
|
Bank loan
|
|
-
|
(69,031)
|
Indian capital gains tax
provision
|
|
(396)
|
(263)
|
|
|
(396)
|
(69,294)
|
Net assets
|
|
629,678
|
488,198
|
Equity attributable to equity shareholders
|
|
|
|
Called up share capital
|
15
|
16,588
|
16,588
|
Capital redemption
reserve
|
|
251
|
251
|
Share premium reserve
|
|
311,369
|
311,369
|
Special distributable
reserve
|
|
96,079
|
105,117
|
Capital reserves
|
|
191,867
|
43,507
|
Revenue reserve
|
|
13,524
|
11,366
|
Total equity
|
|
629,678
|
488,198
|
Net asset value per ordinary share
(pence)
|
16
|
207.66
|
158.06
|
The notes to follow form part of
these financial statements.
Cash Flow
Statement
For the year ended 30 November
2024
|
Notes
|
Year ended
30
November 2024
£'000
|
Year ended
30
November 2023
£'000
|
Cash flows from operating activities
|
|
|
|
Profit/(loss) before tax
|
|
166,226
|
(14,234)
|
Adjustment for non-cash
items:
|
|
|
|
(Profit)/losses on investments held
at fair value through profit or loss
|
|
(156,916)
|
25,777
|
Losses on derivative
investments
|
|
251
|
442
|
Amortisation on fixed interest
securities
|
|
(141)
|
(186)
|
Adjusted profit before
tax
|
|
9,420
|
11,799
|
Adjustments for:
|
|
|
|
Purchases of investments, including
transaction costs
|
|
(670,314)
|
(284,542)
|
Sales of investments, including
transaction costs
|
|
667,632
|
311,263
|
Purchases of derivative financial
instruments
|
|
(3,621)
|
(1,794)
|
Proceeds on disposal of derivative
financial instruments
|
|
3,210
|
1,168
|
Increase in receivables
|
|
(548)
|
(549)
|
Increase in payables
|
|
167
|
479
|
(Decrease)/increase in Indian
capital gain tax
|
|
(199)
|
114
|
Overseas tax deducted at
source
|
|
(1,450)
|
(1,596)
|
Net cash generated from operating activities
|
|
4,297
|
36,342
|
Cash flows from financing activities
|
|
|
|
Shares repurchased into
treasury
|
|
(9,227)
|
(22,988)
|
Issue cost paid
|
|
-
|
(11)
|
Loan drawn
|
|
10,000
|
9,891
|
Exchange gains on the loan
facility
|
|
(96)
|
(1,367)
|
Equity dividends paid
|
|
(14,057)
|
(14,399)
|
Net cash used in financing activities
|
|
(13,380)
|
(28,874)
|
Net (decrease)/increase in cash and cash
equivalents
|
|
(9,083)
|
7,468
|
Cash and cash equivalents at the beginning of the
year
|
|
37,261
|
29,793
|
Cash and cash equivalents at the end of the
year
|
15
|
28,178
|
37,261
|
The notes to follow form part of
these financial statements.
Notes to the Financial
Statements
For the year ended 30 November
2024
1
General
Information
Polar Capital Global Financials
Trust plc is a public limited company registered in England and
Wales whose shares are traded on the London Stock
Exchange.
The principal activity of the
Company is that of an investment trust company within the meaning
of Section 1158/1159 of the Corporation Tax Act 2010 and its
investment approach is detailed in the Strategic Report.
The Board has determined that
Sterling is the Company's functional currency and the
presentational currency of the financial statements because it is
the currency which is most relevant to the majority of the
Company's Shareholders and creditors and is the currency in which
the majority of the Company's operating expenses are paid. All
figures are rounded to the nearest thousand pounds (£'000) except
as otherwise stated.
2
Accounting
Policies
The material principal accounting
policies, which have been applied consistently for all years
presented, are set out below:
(a) Basis of Preparation
The Group and Company's Financial
Statements have been prepared and approved by the Directors in
accordance with UK-adopted international accounting standards
("UK-adopted IAS") and with the requirements of the Companies Act
2006 as applicable to companies reporting under those
standards.
The financial statements have been
prepared on a going concern basis under the historical cost
convention, as modified by the revaluation of investments and
derivative financial instruments at fair value through profit or
loss.
Where presentational guidance set
out in the Statement of Recommended Practice (SORP) for investment
trusts issued by the Association of Investment Companies (AIC) in
July 2022 is consistent with the requirements of UK-adopted IAS,
the Directors have sought to prepare the financial statements on a
basis compliant with the recommendations of the SORP.
The financial position of the
Company as at 30 November 2024 is shown in the balance sheet on
page above. As at 30 November 2024 the Company's total assets
exceeded its total liabilities by a multiple of over 8.7. The
assets of the Company consist mainly of securities that are held in
accordance with the Company's Investment Policy and these
securities are readily realisable.
The Directors have considered a
detailed assessment of the Company's ability to meet its
liabilities as they fall due. The assessment took account of the
Company's current financial position, its cash flows and its
liquidity position. In addition to the assessment, the Company also
considered its loan repayment obligations in July 2025 and carried
out stress testing which used a variety of falling parameters to
demonstrate the effects on the Company's share price and net asset
value. Should the loan facilities not be renewed in July 2025, the
Board is satisfied that the Company could fund the repayment and
ongoing cash flow requirements through the sale of a portion of the
portfolio of listed securities in all severe but plausible downside
scenarios considered. In light of the results of these tests, the
Company's cash balances, and the liquidity position, the Directors
consider that the Company has adequate financial resources to
enable it to continue in operational existence for at least 12
months from the date of issuance of these Financial Statements. As
part of this assessment, the Board also considered the tender offer
taking place on or before 30 June 2025. If the resultant size of
the Company following the 2025 tender offer does not meet a size at
which its business model remains viable, the Board may consider
putting forward liquidation proposals. However, based on extensive
discussions with its advisors and the long term relative and
absolute performance of the Company, the Board believes that there
is sufficient support to indicate that the 2025 Tender Offer will
not result in the Company failing to reach an adequate minimum
size. Accordingly, the Directors believe that it is appropriate to
continue to adopt the going concern basis in preparing the
Company's Financial Statements.
(b) Presentation of the Statement of Comprehensive
Income
In order to better reflect the
activities of an investment trust company and in accordance with
the guidance set out by the AIC, supplementary information which
analyses the Statement of Comprehensive Income between items of a
revenue and capital nature has been presented alongside the
Statement of Comprehensive Income. The result presented in the
revenue return column is the measure the Directors believe
appropriate in assessing the Company's compliance with certain
requirements set out in Section 1158 of the Corporation Tax Act
2010.
(c) Income
Dividends receivable from equity
shares are taken to the revenue return column of the Statement of
Comprehensive Income on an ex-dividend basis.
Special dividends are recognised on
an ex-dividend basis and may be considered to be either revenue or
capital items. The facts and circumstances are considered on a
case-by-case basis before a conclusion on appropriate allocation is
reached.
Where the Company has received
dividends in the form of additional shares rather than in cash, the
amount of the cash dividend foregone is recognised in the revenue
return column of the Statement of Comprehensive Income. Any excess
in value of shares received over the amount of cash dividend
foregone is recognised in the capital return column of the
Statement of Comprehensive Income.
The fixed returns on debt
securities and non-equity shares are recognised under the effective
interest rate method.
Bank interest is accounted for on
an accrual basis. Interest outstanding at the year end is
calculated on a time apportionment basis using market rates of
interest.
(d) Written Options
The Company may write
exchange-traded options with a view to generating income. This
involves writing short-dated covered call options and put options.
The use of financial derivatives is governed by the Company's
policies, as approved by the Board.
These options are recorded
initially at fair value, based on the premium income received, and
are then measured at subsequent reporting dates at fair value.
Changes in the fair value of the options are recognised in the
capital return for the year.
The option premiums are recognised
evenly over the life of the option and shown in the revenue return,
with an appropriate amount shown in the capital return to ensure
the total return reflects the overall change in the fair value of
the options.
Where an option is exercised, any
balance of the premium is recognised immediately in the revenue
return with a corresponding adjustment in the capital return based
on the amount of the loss arising on exercise of the
option.
(e) Expenses and Finance Costs
All expenses, including the
management fee, are accounted for on an accrual basis.
Expenses are allocated wholly to
the revenue column of the Statement of Comprehensive Income except
as follows:
Expenses are charged to the capital
column of the Statement of Comprehensive Income where a connection
with the maintenance or enhancement of the value of investments can
be demonstrated. In this respect the investment management fees
have been charged to the Statement of Comprehensive Income in line
with the Board's expected long-term split of returns, in the form
of capital gains and income from the Company's portfolio. As a
result, 20% of the investment management fees are charged to the
revenue account and 80% charged to the capital account of the
Statement of Comprehensive Income.
Finance costs are calculated using
the effective interest rate method and are accounted for on an
accruals basis and, in line with the management fee expense, are
charged 20% to the revenue account and 80% to the capital account
of the Statement of Comprehensive Income.
Any performance fee accrued is
charged entirely to capital as the fee is based on the
outperformance of the Benchmark and is expected to be attributable
largely, if not wholly, to capital performance. A provision will be
recognised when outperformance has been achieved in accordance with
the calculations detailed in the Annual Report.
The research costs relate solely to
specialist financial research and are accounted for on an accrual
basis. They are allocated 20% to revenue and 80% to capital in line
with the expected long-term split of revenue and capital return
from the Company's investment portfolio.
(f) Tax
The tax expense represents the sum
of the overseas withholding tax deducted from investment income,
tax currently payable and deferred tax.
The tax currently payable is based
on the taxable profits for the year ended 30 November 2024. Taxable
profit differs from net profit as reported in the Statement of
Comprehensive Income because it excludes items of income or expense
that are taxable or deductible in other years and it further
excludes items that are never taxable or deductible. The Company's
liability for current tax is calculated using tax rates that have
been enacted or substantively enacted at the balance sheet
date.
In line with the recommendations of
the SORP, the allocation method used to calculate tax relief on
expenses presented against capital returns in the supplementary
information in the Statement of Comprehensive Income is the
"marginal basis". Under this basis, if taxable income is capable of
being offset entirely by expenses presented in the revenue return
column of the Statement of Comprehensive Income, then no tax relief
is transferred to the capital return column.
Deferred tax is the tax expected to
be payable or recoverable on temporary differences between the
carrying amounts of assets and liabilities in the financial
statements and the corresponding tax bases used in the computation
of taxable profit, and is accounted for using the balance sheet
liability method. Deferred tax liabilities are recognised for all
taxable temporary differences and deferred tax assets are
recognised to the extent that it is probable that taxable profits
will be available against which deductible temporary differences
can be utilised.
Investment trusts which have
approval as such under Section 1158 of the Corporation Tax Act 2010
are not liable for taxation on UK capital gains.
The Company is liable to Indian
capital gains tax under Section 115 AD of the Indian Income Tax Act
1961. The Indian capital gains tax provision represents an estimate
of the amount of tax payable by the Company. Tax amounts payable
may differ from this provision depending on when the Company
disposes of its investments. The current provision for Indian
capital gains tax is calculated based on the long term (securities
held more than one year) or short term (securities held less than
one year) nature of the investments and the applicable tax rate at
the year end. With effect from 23 July 2024, the short-term tax
rate is 20% (previously 15%) and the long-term tax rate is 12.5%
(previously 10%). The estimated tax charge is subject to regular
review including a consideration of the likely period of ownership,
tax rates and market valuation movements. The provision at the year
end is recognised in the Balance Sheet and the year-on-year
movement in the provision is recognised in the Statement of
Comprehensive Income.
The carrying amount of deferred tax
assets is reviewed at each balance sheet date and reduced to the
extent that it is no longer probable that sufficient taxable
profits will be available to allow all or part of the asset to be
recovered.
Deferred tax is calculated at the
tax rates that are expected to apply in the period when the
liability is settled or when the asset is realised based on tax
rates that have been enacted or substantively enacted at the
balance sheet date.
Deferred tax is charged or credited
in the Statement of Comprehensive Income, except when it relates to
items charged or credited directly to equity, in which case the
deferred tax is also dealt with in equity.
(g) Investments Held at Fair Value Through Profit
or Loss
When a purchase or sale is made
under contract, the terms of which require delivery within the
timeframe of the relevant market, the investments concerned are
recognised or derecognised on the trade date and are initially
measured at fair value.
On initial recognition the Company
has designated all of its investments as held at fair value through
profit or loss as defined by UK-adopted IAS. All investments are
measured at subsequent reporting dates at fair value, which is
either the bid price or the last traded price, depending on the
convention of the exchange on which the investment is
quoted.
Written and purchased options are
valued at fair value using quoted bid prices.
Index futures are valued at the
difference between exchange settlement prices and inception
prices.
All investments, classified as fair
value through profit or loss, are further categorised into the fair
value hierarchy in the Annual Report.
Changes in fair value of all
investments and derivatives held at fair value are recognised in
the capital return column of the Statement of Comprehensive Income.
Gains or losses on derivative financial instruments are treated as
capital or revenue depending on the motive and circumstances of the
transaction. Where positions are undertaken to protect or enhance
capital, the returns are capital and where they are generating or
protecting revenue, the returns are revenue.
In respect of unquoted investments,
or where the market for a financial instrument is not active, fair
value is established by using various valuation techniques, in
accordance with the International Private Equity and Venture
Capital ("IPEVC") Valuation Guidelines - Edition December 2022.
These may include using reference to recent arm's length market
transactions between knowledgeable, willing parties, if available,
reference to recent rounds of re-financing undertaken by investee
companies involving knowledgeable parties, reference to the current
fair value of another instrument that is substantially the same or
a relevant comparable.
(h) Receivables
Receivables are initially
recognised at fair value and subsequently measured at amortised
cost. Receivables do not carry any interest and are short-term in
nature and are accordingly stated at their nominal value (amortised
cost) as reduced by appropriate allowances for estimated
irrecoverable amounts.
(i) Cash and Cash
Equivalents
Cash comprises cash on hand and
demand deposits. Cash equivalents are short-term, maturity of three
months or less, highly liquid investments that are readily
convertible to known amounts of cash.
(j) Dividends Payable
Interim dividends payable to
Shareholders are recognised in the financial statements in the
period in which they are paid.
(k) Payables
Payables are not interest-bearing
and are initially valued at fair value and subsequently stated at
their nominal value (amortised cost).
(l) Bank Loans
Interest-bearing bank loans are
initially recognised at cost, being the proceeds received net of
direct issue costs, and subsequently at amortised cost. The amounts
falling due for repayment within one year are included under
current liabilities and more than one year under non-current
liabilities in the Balance Sheet.
(m) Foreign Currency Translation
Transactions in foreign currencies
are translated into Sterling at the rate of exchange ruling on the
date of each transaction. Monetary assets, monetary liabilities and
equity investments in foreign currencies at the balance sheet date
are translated into Sterling at the rates of exchange ruling on
that date.
Realised profits or losses on
exchange, together with differences arising on the translation of
foreign currency assets or liabilities, are taken to the capital
return column of the Statement of Comprehensive Income.
Foreign exchange gains and losses
arising on investments held at fair value are included within
changes in fair value.
(n) Share Capital
Ordinary shares are classified as
equity. Incremental costs directly attributable to the issue of new
ordinary shares or options are shown in equity, as a deduction, net
of tax, from the proceeds.
(o) Capital Reserves
Capital reserve arising on
investments sold includes:
- gains/losses on disposal of
investments;
- exchange differences on currency
balances; and
- other capital charges and credits
charged to this account in accordance with the accounting policies
above.
Capital reserve arising on
investments held includes:
- increases and decreases in the
valuation of investments held at the balance sheet date.
All of the above are accounted for
in the Statement of Comprehensive Income.
When making a distribution to
Shareholders, the Directors determine the profits available for
distribution by reference to the 'Guidance on realised and
distributable profits under the Companies Act 2006' issued by the
Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales and the
Institute of Chartered Accountants of Scotland in April 2017. The
availability of distributable reserves in the Company is dependent
on those dividends meeting the definition of qualifying
consideration within the guidance and on the available cash
resources of the Company and other accessible sources of funds. The
distributable reserves are therefore subject to any future
restrictions or limitations at the time such distribution is
made.
(p) Repurchase of Ordinary Shares (including those
held in treasury)
Where applicable, the costs of
repurchasing Ordinary Shares including related stamp duty and
transaction costs are taken directly to equity and reported through
the Statement of Changes in Equity as a charge on the special
distributable reserve. Share repurchase transactions are accounted
for on a trade date basis.
The nominal value of ordinary share
capital repurchased and cancelled is transferred out of called up
share capital and into the capital redemption reserve.
Where shares are repurchased and
held in treasury, the transfer to capital redemption reserve is
made if and when such shares are subsequently cancelled.
Where the shares held in treasury
are reissued, the amount of the sales proceed up to the repurchased
cost of those shares is transferred back into special distributable
reserve, the excess of the sales proceeds over the repurchased cost
is transferred to share premium.
(q) Share Issue Costs
Where applicable, costs incurred
directly in relation to the issue of new shares together with
additional share listing costs have been deducted from the share
premium reserve.
(r) Segmental
Reporting
Under IFRS 8 Operating Segments,
operating segments are considered to be the components of an entity
about which separate financial information is available that is
evaluated regularly by the chief operating decision maker in
deciding how to allocate resources and in assessing performance.
The chief operating decision maker has been identified as the
Investment Manager (with oversight from the Board).
The Directors are of the opinion
that the Company has only one operating segment and as such no
distinct segmental reporting is required.
(s) Key Estimates and Judgements
The preparation of financial
statements in conformity with UK-adopted IAS requires management to
make judgements, estimates and assumptions that affect the
application of policies and reported amounts of assets,
liabilities, income and expenses. Estimates and assumptions used in
preparing the financial statements are reviewed on an ongoing basis
and are based on historical experience and various other factors
that are believed to be reasonable under the circumstances. The
results of these estimates and assumptions form the basis of making
judgements about carrying values of assets and liabilities that are
not readily apparent from other sources.
The key judgements and sources of
estimation uncertainty that have a significant risk of causing
material adjustment to the carrying amounts of assets and
liabilities and expenses in future periods are as
follows:
Valuation of Level 3 Investments
Investments valued using valuation
techniques include unlisted financial investments, which by their
nature, do not have an externally quoted price based on regular
trades.
The valuation techniques used may
include the techniques described in note 2(g). When determining the
inputs into the valuation techniques used, priority is given to
publicly available prices from independent sources when available,
but overall the source of pricing is chosen with the objective of
arriving at a fair value measurement that reflects the price at
which an orderly transaction would take place between market
participants at the balance sheet date.
(t) New and revised accounting Standards
There were no new UK-adopted IAS or
amendments to UK-adopted IAS applicable to the current year which
had any significant impact on the Company's financial
statements.
i) The following new or amended
standards became effective for the current annual reporting period
and the adoption of the standards and interpretations have not had
a material impact on the Financial Statements of the
Company.
Standards
& Interpretations
|
|
Effective for periods commencing on
or after
|
Disclosure
of Accounting Policies (Amendments to IAS 1 and IFRS Practice
Statement 2)
|
Requirement amended to disclose
material accounting policies instead of significant accounting
policies and provided guidance in making materiality judgements to
accounting policy disclosure.
|
1 January 2023
|
Definition
of Accounting Estimates (amendments to IAS 8)
|
Introduced the definition of
accounting estimates and included other amendments to IAS 8 to help
entities distinguish changes in accounting estimates from changes
in accounting policy.
|
1 January 2023
|
International Tax Reform - Pillar Two Model Rules (Amendments
to IAS 12)
|
A mandatory temporary exception to
the accounting for deferred taxes arising from the jurisdictional
implementation of the Pillar Two model rules; and disclosure
requirements for affected entities to help users of the Financial
Statements to better understand an entity's exposure to Pillar Two
income taxes arising from that legislation, particularly before its
effective date.
|
1 January 2023
|
ii) At the date of authorisation of
the Company's Financial Statements, the following relevant
standards that potentially impact the Company are in issue but are
not yet effective and have not been applied in the Financial
Statements:
Standards &
Interpretations
|
|
Effective for periods commencing on
or after
|
Amendments
to IAS 1 Presentation of Financial Statements
- Non-current liabilities with Covenants
- Deferral of Effective Date Amendment (published 15 July 2020)
Classification of Liabilities as Current or Non-Current (Amendments
to IAS 1) (publicised 23 January 2020)
|
The
amendments clarify that only covenants with which an entity must
comply on or before the reporting date will affect a liability's
classification as current or non-current and the disclosure
requirement in the Financial Statements for the risk that
non-current liabilities with covenant could become repayable within
twelve months.
|
1 January 2024
|
Supplier
Finance Arrangements (Amendments to IAS 7 and IFRS 7)
|
The amendments address the
disclosure requirements to enhance the transparency of supplier
finance arrangements and their effects on a company's liabilities,
cash flows and exposure to liquidity risk.
|
1 January 2024
|
The Directors expect that the
adoption of the standards listed above will have either no impact
or that any impact will not be material on the financial statements
of the Company in future
periods.
3
Investment
Income
|
Year ended
30
November 2024
£'000
|
Year ended
30
November 2023
£'000
|
Revenue:
|
|
|
UK dividends
|
2,933
|
2,391
|
Overseas dividends
|
13,182
|
13,313
|
Interest on debt
securities
|
2,952
|
3,439
|
Total investment income
|
19,067
|
19,143
|
Included within income from
investments is £1,460,000 (2023: £623,000) of special dividends
classified as revenue in nature in accordance with note 2 (c). No
special dividends have been recognised in capital (2023:
nil).
4
Other Operating Income
|
Year ended
30
November 2024
£'000
|
Year ended
30
November 2023
£'000
|
Bank interest
|
1,505
|
916
|
Total other operating income
|
1,505
|
916
|
5
Gains/(losses) on Investments Held at Fair
Value
|
Year ended
30
November 2024
£'000
|
Year ended
30
November 2023
£'000
|
Net gains/(losses) on disposal of
investments at historic cost
|
68,405
|
(1,274)
|
Less fair value adjustments in
earlier years
|
(21,042)
|
(26,371)
|
Gains/(losses) based on carrying value at previous balance
sheet date
|
47,363
|
(27,645)
|
Valuation gains on investments held
during the year
|
109,553
|
1,868
|
|
156,916
|
(25,777)
|
6
Other Currency
Losses
|
Year ended
30
November 2024
£'000
|
Year ended
30
November 2023
£'000
|
Exchange losses on currency
balances
|
(2,408)
|
(1,519)
|
Exchange gains on the loan
facility
|
96
|
1,367
|
|
(2,312)
|
(152)
|
7
Investment Management and Performance
Fee
|
|
Year ended
30
November 2024
£'000
|
Year ended
30
November 2023
£'000
|
|
|
Management fee
|
|
|
|
|
- charged to revenue
|
772
|
704
|
|
|
- charged to capital
|
3,088
|
2,815
|
|
|
Investment management fee payable to Polar Capital
LLP
|
3,860
|
3,519
|
|
Management
fees are allocated 20% to revenue and 80% to capital. Details of
the investment management and performance fees are set out in the
Strategic Report in the Annual Report.
|
|
|
|
| |
8
Other Administrative Expenses (including VAT
where appropriate)
|
|
Year ended
30
November 2024
£'000
|
Year ended
30
November 2023
£'000
|
Directors'
fees1
|
|
142
|
145
|
Directors' NIC
|
|
15
|
15
|
Auditors' remuneration - for audit
of the Financial Statements2
|
54
|
50
|
Depositary
fee3
|
|
37
|
34
|
HSBC administration
fee3
|
|
206
|
205
|
Registrar fee
|
|
38
|
39
|
Custody and other bank
charges4
|
|
77
|
87
|
UKLA and LSE listing
fees
|
|
57
|
49
|
Legal & professional
fees
|
|
3
|
(3)
|
AIC fees
|
21
|
21
|
Directors' and officers' liability
insurance
|
|
19
|
19
|
Corporate broker's
fee5
|
|
16
|
16
|
Marketing
expenses6
|
|
72
|
72
|
Research costs - allocated to
revenue7
|
|
11
|
5
|
Shareholder
communications
|
|
22
|
17
|
Other expenses
|
|
8
|
3
|
Total other administrative expenses
allocated to revenue
|
|
798
|
774
|
Research costs - allocated to
capital7
|
|
46
|
20
|
Total other administrative expenses
|
|
844
|
794
|
1
Full disclosure is given in the Directors'
Remuneration Report within the Annual Report.
2
The base audit fee for the statutory audit in the
current year was £53,500 (2023: £49,480).
3
Fees are determined on the pre-approved rate card
with HSBC.
4 Fee is based on the value of the assets and geographical
activity and determined on the pre-approved rate card with
HSBC.
5 Corporate Broker fee is reduced by the commission received on
the share buybacks during the year.
6
Includes bespoke marketing budget of £50,000
(2023:
£50,000).
7 Research costs
(which applied from 3 January 2018) payable by the Company relate
solely to specialist financial research. The budget for the year is
$75,000 (2023:
$40,000).
Ongoing charges represents the
total expenses of the Company, excluding finance costs and tax,
expressed as a percentage of the average daily net asset value, in
accordance with AIC guidance issued in July 2022.
The ongoing charges ratio excluding
performance fee for the year ended 30 November 2024 was 0.85%
(2023: 0.86%). See Alternative Performance Measures below.
9 Finance Costs
|
Year ended 30
November 2024
|
Year ended 30 November
2023
|
Revenue
£'000
|
Capital
£'000
|
Total
£'000
|
Revenue
£'000
|
Capital
£'000
|
Total
£'000
|
Interest on loans and
overdrafts
|
781
|
3,123
|
3,904
|
699
|
2,795
|
3,494
|
Loan arrangement fees
|
18
|
73
|
91
|
23
|
92
|
115
|
|
799
|
3,196
|
3,995
|
722
|
2,887
|
3,609
|
Finance costs are allocated 20% to
revenue and 80% to capital.
10
Tax
a)
Analysis of tax charge/(credit) for the year:
|
Year ended 30 November
2024
|
Year ended 30 November
2023
|
Revenue
return
£'000
|
Capital
return
£'000
|
Total
return
£'000
|
Revenue
return
£'000
|
Capital
return
£'000
|
Total
return
£'000
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Overseas tax
|
1,319
|
-
|
1,319
|
1,438
|
-
|
1,438
|
Tax relief in capital
|
669
|
(669)
|
-
|
693
|
(693)
|
-
|
Withholding tax
recovered
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(145)
|
-
|
(145)
|
Indian capital gains tax
|
-
|
332
|
332
|
-
|
(2)
|
(2)
|
Total tax charge/(credit) for the year (see note
10b)
|
1,988
|
(337)
|
1,651
|
1,986
|
(695)
|
1,291
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
b)
Factors affecting tax charge/(credit) for the
year:
The charge/(credit) for the year
can be reconciled to the profit/(loss) before tax per the Statement
of Comprehensive Income as follows:
|
|
Year ended 30 November
2024
|
Year ended 30 November
2023
|
|
Revenue return
£'000
|
Capital return
£'000
|
Total return
£'000
|
Revenue return
£'000
|
Capital return
£'000
|
Total return
£'000
|
Profit/(loss) before tax
|
17,859
|
(32,093)
|
(14,234)
|
15,773
|
(9,220)
|
6,553
|
Tax at the UK corporation tax rate
of 25% (2023: effective tax rate of 23%)
|
4,551
|
37,006
|
41,557
|
4,108
|
(7,381)
|
(3,273)
|
Tax effect of non-taxable
dividends
|
(3,871)
|
-
|
(3,871)
|
(3,382)
|
-
|
(3,382)
|
Capital (gains)/losses that are not
taxable
|
-
|
(38,589)
|
(38,589)
|
-
|
6,065
|
6,065
|
Overseas tax suffered
|
1,319
|
-
|
1,319
|
1,438
|
-
|
1,438
|
Indian capital gains tax
|
-
|
332
|
332
|
-
|
(2)
|
(2)
|
Unrelieved current period expenses
and deficits
|
-
|
914
|
914
|
-
|
623
|
623
|
Withholding tax
recovered
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(145)
|
-
|
(145)
|
Tax relief on overseas tax
suffered
|
(11)
|
-
|
(11)
|
(33)
|
-
|
(33)
|
Total tax charge/(credit)for the year (see note
10a)
|
1,988
|
(337)
|
1,651
|
1,986
|
(695)
|
1,291
|
c)
Factors that may affect future tax charges:
The Company has an unrecognised
deferred tax asset of £3,524,000 (2023: £2,618,000). The deferred
tax asset is based on the current corporation tax rate of 25%
(2023:
25%).
It is
unlikely that the Company will generate sufficient taxable profits
in the future to utilise these expenses and deficits and therefore
no deferred tax asset has been recognised.
Due to
the Company's tax status as an investment trust and the intention
to continue meeting the conditions required to obtain approval of
such status in the foreseeable future, the Company has not provided
UK tax on any capital gains arising on the revaluation or disposal
of investments held by the Company.
The Company is liable to Indian
capital gains tax under Section 115 AD of the Indian Income Tax Act
1961. A tax provision on Indian capital gains is calculated based
on the long term (securities held more than one year) or short term
(securities held less than one year) nature of the investments and
the applicable tax rate at the year end. The current rates from 23
July 2024 of short-term tax rates are 20% (previously 15%) and the
long term tax rates are 12.5% (previously 10%) respectively.
At the year ended 30 November 2024, the Company has a deferred tax
liability of £396,000 (2023: £263,000) on capital gains which may
arise if Indian investments are sold.
.
11
Earnings/(Losses) Per Ordinary
Share
|
Year ended 30 November
2024
|
Year ended 30 November
2023
|
Revenue
return
|
Capital
return
|
Total
return
|
Revenue
return
|
Capital
return
|
Total
return
|
The
calculation of basic earnings/(losses) per share is based on the
following data:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Net
profit/(loss) for the year (£'000)
|
16,215
|
148,360
|
164,575
|
15,873
|
(31,398)
|
(15,525)
|
Weighted
average number of ordinary shares in issue during the
year
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
in issue
during the year
|
305,146,436
|
305,146,436
|
305,146,436
|
319,065,538
|
319,065,538
|
319,065,538
|
Basic -
ordinary shares (pence)
|
5.31
|
48.62
|
53.93
|
4.97
|
(9.84)
|
(4.87)
|
As at 30 November 2024 there were
no potentially dilutive shares in issue (2023: nil).
12
Amounts Recognised as Distributions to Ordinary Shareholders
in the Year
Dividends paid in
the year ended 30 November 2024
Payment date
|
No. of shares
|
Amount per share
|
Year ended
30
November 2024
£'000
|
29 February 2024
|
307,160,405
|
2.10p
|
6,450
|
30 August 2024
|
304,272,705
|
2.50p
|
7,607
|
|
|
|
14,057
|
The revenue available for
distribution by way of dividend for the year is £16,215,000 (2023:
£15,837,000).
The total dividends payable in
respect of the financial year ended 30 November 2024, which is the
basis on which the requirements of section 1158 Corporation Tax Act
2010 are considered, are set out below:
Payment date
|
No. of shares
|
Amount per share
|
Year ended
30
November 2024
£'000
|
30 August 2024
|
304,272,705
|
2.50p
|
7,607
|
28 February 2025
|
303,219,365
|
2.20p
|
6,671
|
|
|
|
14,278
|
The total dividends payable in
respect of the financial year ended 30 November 2023, which is the
basis on which the requirements of section 1158 Corporation Tax Act
2010 are considered, are set out below:
Payment date
|
No. of shares
|
Amount per share
|
Year ended
30
November 2023
£'000
|
31 August 2023
|
315,955,329
|
2.45p
|
7,741
|
29 February 2024
|
307,160,405
|
2.10p
|
6,450
|
|
|
|
14,191
|
All dividends are paid as interim
dividends, and all have been charged to revenue, where necessary
utilising the revenue reserve and in exceptional circumstances
utilising the special distributable reserve.
13
Investments Held at Fair Value Through Profit or
Loss
a) Investments held at fair value through profit or
loss
|
30
November 2024 £'000
|
30
November 2023
£'000
|
Opening book cost
|
476,645
|
506,766
|
Opening investment holding
gains
|
41,479
|
65,982
|
Opening fair value
|
518,124
|
572,748
|
Analysis of transactions made during the
year
|
|
|
Purchases at cost
|
666,169
|
286,636
|
Sales proceeds received
|
(681,407)
|
(315,669)
|
Gains/(losses) on investments held
at fair value
|
156,916
|
(25,777)
|
Amortisation on fixed interest
securities
|
141
|
186
|
Closing fair value
|
659,943
|
518,124
|
|
|
|
Closing book cost
|
529,953
|
476,645
|
Closing investment holding
gains
|
129,990
|
41,479
|
Closing fair value
|
659,943
|
518,124
|
The Company received £681,407,000
(2023: £315,669,000) from disposal of investments in the year. The
book cost of these investments when they were purchased were
£613,002,000 (2023: £316,943,000). These investments have been
revalued over time and until they were sold any unrealised
gains/losses were included in the fair value of the
investments.
The following transaction costs,
including stamp duty and broker commissions, were incurred during
the year:
|
30
November 2024 £'000
|
30
November 2023 £'000
|
On acquisitions
|
924
|
473
|
On disposals
|
561
|
246
|
|
1,485
|
719
|
b)
Changes in Derivative Financial Instruments
(i) Futures
|
30
November 2024 £'000
|
30
November 2023 £'000
|
Valuation at 1 December
|
(288)
|
6
|
Additions at cost
|
1,816
|
683
|
Proceeds of disposal
|
(984)
|
(386)
|
Losses on disposal
|
(832)
|
(297)
|
Valuation gains/
(losses)
|
638
|
(294)
|
Valuation at 30 November
|
350
|
(288)
|
The Company invested in currency
and index futures during the year for the purposes of efficient
portfolio management. As at 30 November 2024, the Company held a
short position of 80 CME British pound/ Japanese Yen December 2024
contracts and a short position of 250 CME Euro December 2024
contracts with a market value gain of £350,000. (2023: Long
position of 80 CME Japanese Yen December 2023 contracts, a short
position of 250 CME British Pound December 2023 contracts and a
short position of 20 CME British Pound/Japanese Yen December 2023
contracts with a market value loss of
£288,000).
(ii) Options
|
30
November 2024 £'000
|
30
November 2023 £'000
|
Valuation at 1 December
|
478
|
-
|
Additions at cost
|
1,805
|
1,111
|
Proceeds of disposal
|
(2,226)
|
(782)
|
(Losses)/gains on
disposal
|
(201)
|
293
|
Valuation gains/
(losses)
|
144
|
(144)
|
Valuation at 30 November
|
-
|
478
|
The Company invested in purchased
call and put options during the year for the purposes of efficient
portfolio management. As at 30 November 2024, the company had sold
out of all options. (2023: £478,000 - SPDR S&P Regional Banking
ETF call
option).
(c) Fair Value of Open Derivative Contracts
|
30
November 2024 £'000
|
30
November 2023 £'000
|
CME Japanese Yen December 2023
Futures
|
-
|
28
|
SPDR S&P Regional Banking ETF
Call Options
|
-
|
478
|
CME Euro December 2024
Futures
|
728
|
-
|
|
728
|
506
|
CME British Pound December 2023
Futures
|
-
|
(231)
|
CME British Pound/Japanese Yen
December 2024 Futures
|
(378)
|
(85)
|
|
(378)
|
(316)
|
Total
|
350
|
190
|
(d) Fair value hierarchy
The Company's financial instruments
within the scope of IFRS 7 that are held at fair value comprise its
investment portfolio and derivative financial
instruments.
They are categorised into a
hierarchy consisting of the following three
levels:
Level 1 -
valued using quoted prices in active markets for identical assets
or liabilities.
Level 2 - valued by reference to
valuation techniques using observable inputs other than quoted
market prices
included within Level
1.
Level 3 -
valued by reference to valuation techniques using inputs that are
not based on observable market data.
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
asset'.
Details of the valuation techniques
used by the Company are given in note
2(g).
The following tables set out the
fair value measurements using the IFRS 7 hierarchy at 30 November
2024 and
2023:
|
30 November
2024
|
Level 1
£'000
|
Level 2
£'000
|
Level 3
£'000
|
Total
£'000
|
Equity Investments and derivative
financial instruments
|
612,625
|
-
|
6,699
|
619,324
|
Interest bearing
securities
|
40,969
|
-
|
-
|
40,969
|
Total
|
653,594
|
-
|
6,699
|
660,293
|
The Level
3 investment relates to the shares in Atom Bank and
Moneybox.
|
|
30 November
2023
|
Level 1
£'000
|
Level 2
£'000
|
Level 3
£'000
|
Total
£'000
|
Equity Investments and derivative
financial instruments
|
464,999
|
478
|
5,054
|
470,531
|
Interest bearing
securities
|
47,783
|
-
|
-
|
47,783
|
Total
|
512,782
|
478
|
5,054
|
518,314
|
The Level 2 investment relates to
the SPDR S&P Regional Banking ETF Call Options.
The Level 3 investment relates to
the shares in Atom Bank and Moneybox.
There have been no transfers during
the year between Levels 1 and 2. A reconciliation of fair value
measurements in Level 3 is set out below.
Level 3 investments at fair value through profit or
loss
|
30
November 2024 £'000
|
30
November 2023 £'000
|
Opening balance
|
5,054
|
4,551
|
Total gains included in the
Statement of Comprehensive Income - on assets held at the year
end.
|
1,645
|
503
|
|
|
|
Closing balance
|
6,699
|
5,054
|
Level 3
Investments are recognised at fair value through profit or loss on
a recurring basis.
Level 3 investments are valued in
accordance with the accounting policy in Note 2(g) above.
A +/- 10% change in the price used
to value the investment in the level 3 investments at the year end
would result in a +/- £670,000 (2023: £505,000) impact on the gains
or losses on investments held at fair value in the Statement of
Comprehensive Income.
.
e) Unquoted
investments
The value of the unquoted
investments as at 30 November 2024 was £6,699,000 (2023: £5,04,000)
and the portfolio comprised the following holdings:
|
30
November 2024
£'000
|
30
November 2023
£'000
|
Atom Bank
|
1,281
|
1,281
|
Moneybox
|
5,418
|
3,773
|
|
6,699
|
5,054
|
Atom Bank
is a UK digital bank founded in 2014 and based in Durham. It
currently offers fixed rate and instant access savings products,
business banking loans and retail mortgages.
At 31 March 2024 (Atom Bank's
financial year end), Atom Bank announced that it had made a pre-tax
profit of £6,700,000 (2023: losses £10,097,000) and had net assets
attributable to Shareholders of £402,400,000 (2023:
£283,134,000).
The valuation of Atom Bank was
reviewed by the Investment Manager and the Board during both the
half year and full year
financial results process. The
valuation of Atom Bank at the year end is supported by the
secondary transaction announced by the
company in November 2024. To factor in any uncertainty surrounding
the current price, if the fair value of the investment
at the reporting date has been stressed by +/- 10%
(2023: +/- 10%) the fair value would increase/decrease by £128,000
(2023:£128,000).
Moneybox is an on-line UK savings
and wealth platform and provides mobile applications which enable
customers to make regular savings into tax efficient products, such
as ISAs, or a personal pension, as well as various savings
accounts.
At 31 May 2024 (Moneybox's
financial year end), Moneybox announced that it had made pre-tax
profit of £26,542,000 (2023:losses
£4,141,000) and had net assets attributable to Shareholders of
£87,173,000 (2023: £62,569,000).
The valuation of Moneybox was
reviewed by the Investment Manager and the Board during both the
half year and full year financial results process. During the year,
the valuation of Moneybox was increased following the announcement
of the company's completion of a secondary share sale bringing in
new investors. The valuation for the current year has been
calculated using the price of this recent arms length transaction.
To factor in any uncertainty surrounding the current price, if the
fair value of the investment at the reporting date has been
stressed by +/- 10% the fair value would increase/decrease by
£542,000.
In the prior year the valuation of
Moneybox was calculated by calculating the average enterprise value
to sales ratio of a peer group of listed companies and then
applying a discount to reflect the smaller size and narrower focus
of Moneybox. This was cross checked using a discounted cash flow
analysis. An increase/decrease in the discount used of 5% would
decrease/increase the fair value by
£290,000 and an increase/decrease of the multiple of sales of the
peer group used of 0.5x would increase/decrease
the fair value by £295,000.
See Note
13(d) for further details
14
Receivables
|
30
November 2024
£'000
|
30
November 2023
£'000
|
Securities sold awaiting
settlement
|
18,708
|
4,933
|
Dividends and interest
receivable
|
2,480
|
1,930
|
VAT recoverable
|
32
|
36
|
Overseas tax recoverable
|
1,618
|
1,487
|
Prepayments
|
35
|
33
|
|
22,873
|
8,419
|
15
Cash and Cash
Equivalents
|
30
November 2024
£'000
|
30
November 2023
£'000
|
Cash at bank
|
26,436
|
36,406
|
Cash held at derivative clearing
houses
|
1,742
|
856
|
Cash and Cash Equivalents
|
28,178
|
37,262
|
Bank overdraft
|
-
|
(1)
|
|
28,178
|
37,261
|
16 Called Up Share
Capital
|
30
November 2024
£'000
|
November 2023
£'000
|
Allotted, Called up and Fully
paid:
|
|
|
Ordinary shares of 5p
each:
|
|
|
Opening balance of 308,861,687*
(2023: 325,394,000)
|
15,443
|
16,270
|
Repurchase
of 5,642,322 (2023: 16,532,313) ordinary shares into
treasury
|
(282)
|
(827)
|
Allotted, Called up and Fully paid: 303,219,365 (2023:
308,861,687) ordinary shares of
5p
|
15,161
|
15,443
|
28,530,635 (2023: 22,888,313)
ordinary shares held in treasury
|
1,427
|
1,145
|
At
30 November 2024
|
16,588
|
16,588
|
*Excluding shares held in
Treasury
During
the year, there were 5,642,322 ordinary shares repurchased into
treasury (2023: 16,532,313) for a total consideration
£9,038,000 (2023: £23,139,000). No ordinary shares were issued
during the year (2023: nil).
The ordinary shares held in
treasury have no voting rights and are not entitled to
dividends.
16. Net Asset
Value Per Ordinary
Share
|
30
November 2024
|
30
November 2023
|
Net assets attributable to ordinary
Shareholders (£'000)
|
629,678
|
488,198
|
Ordinary shares in issue at end of
year (excluding shares held in treasury)
|
303,219,365
|
308,861,687
|
Net asset value per ordinary share (pence)
|
207.66
|
158.06
|
As at 30 November 2024, there were
no potentially dilutive shares in issue (2023: nil).
17. Transactions with the Investment Manager and Related Party
Transactions
a)
Transactions with the manager
Under the terms of an agreement
dated 11 June 2013 the Company has appointed Polar Capital LLP
("Polar Capital") to provide investment management, accounting,
secretarial and administrative services. Details of the fee
arrangement for these services are given in the Strategic Report.
The total fees, paid under this agreement to Polar Capital in
respect of the year ended 30 November 2024 were £3,860,000 (2023:
£3,519,000) of which £350,000 (2023: £278,000) was outstanding at
the year
end.
A
performance fee based on cumulative relative performance since 23
April 2020, amounting to £nil (2023: £nil) has been accrued at the
year end. Any accrued performance fee is payable at the end of each
five-year tender period, the next being in 2025. See Strategic
Report in the Annual Report for more details.
In
addition, the total research costs in respect of the year from 1
December 2023 to the year ended 30 November 2024 were £57,000
(2023: £25,000) of which £19,000 (2023: £8,000) was outstanding.
b)
Related party
transactions
The
Company has no employees and therefore no key management personnel
other than the Directors. The Company paid £142,000 (2023:
£145,000) to the Directors of which £35,000 (2023: £23,000)
was outstanding at the year end. The Remuneration Report is set out
in the Annual Report. When dividends are paid by the Company these
are received by the Directors who own shares at the same rates and
terms as by all other Shareholders.
18. Post Balance Sheet Events
There are no significant events
that have occurred after the end of the reporting period to the
date of this report which
require disclosure.
Alternative Performance Measures (APMs)
In assessing the performance of the
Company, the Investment Manager and the Directors use the following
APMs which are not defined in accounting standards or law but are
considered to be known industry metrics:
NAV Total Return
The NAV total return shows how the
net asset value per share has performed over a period of time
taking into account both capital returns and dividends paid to
Shareholders. The NAV total return performance for the period is
calculated by reinvesting the
dividends in the assets of the Company from the relevant
ex-dividend date.
|
|
Year ended
30
November 2024
|
Year ended
30
November 2023
|
Opening NAV per share
|
a
|
158.1p
|
166.3p
|
|
|
|
|
Closing NAV per share
|
b
|
207.7p
|
158.1p
|
Dividend reinvestment
factor
|
c
|
1.025875
|
1.022930
|
Adjusted closing NAV per
share
|
d = b*c
|
213.1p
|
161.7p
|
NAV total return for the year
|
(d / a)-1
|
34.8%
|
-2.8%
|
NAV Total Return Since Inception
NAV total return since inception is
calculated as the change in NAV from the initial NAV of 98p,
assuming that dividends paid to Shareholders are reinvested on the
ex-dividend date in ordinary shares at their net asset
value.
|
|
Year ended
30
November 2024
|
Year ended
30
November 2023
|
NAV per share at
inception
|
a
|
98.0p
|
98.0p
|
|
|
|
|
Closing NAV per share
|
b
|
207.7p
|
158.1p
|
Dividend reinvestment
factor
|
c
|
1.411532
|
1.361991
|
Adjusted closing NAV per
share
|
d = b*c
|
293.2p
|
215.3p
|
NAV total return since inception
|
(d / a)-1
|
199.2%
|
119.7%
|
NAV Total Return Since Reconstruction
NAV total
return since reconstruction is calculated as the change in NAV from
the NAV of 102.8p, which was the closing NAV the day before the
tender offer on 22 April 2020, assuming that dividends paid to
Shareholders are reinvested on the ex-dividend date in ordinary
shares at their net asset value.
|
|
Year ended
30
November 2024
|
Year ended
30
November 2023
|
Rebased NAV per share at
reconstruction
|
a
|
102.8p
|
102.8p
|
|
|
|
|
Closing NAV per share
|
b
|
207.7p
|
158.1p
|
Dividend reinvestment
factor
|
c
|
1.137893
|
1.097861
|
Adjusted closing NAV per
share
|
d = b*c
|
236.3p
|
173.6p
|
NAV total return since reconstruction
|
(d / a)-1
|
129.9%
|
68.8%
|
Share Price Total Return
Share price total return shows how
the share price has performed over a period of time. It assumes
that dividends paid to Shareholders are reinvested in the shares at
the time the shares are quoted
ex-dividend.
|
|
Year ended
30
November 2024
|
Year ended
30
November 2023
|
Opening share price
|
a
|
138.8p
|
154.6p
|
|
|
|
|
Closing share price
|
b
|
196.2p
|
138.8p
|
Dividend reinvestment
factor
|
c
|
1.028511
|
1.030408
|
Adjusted closing share
price
|
d = b*c
|
201.8p
|
143.0p
|
Share price total return for the year
|
(d / a)-1
|
45.4%
|
-7.5%
|
Share Price Total Return Since Inception
Share price total return since
inception is calculated as the change in share price from the
launch price of 100p, assuming that dividends paid to Shareholders
are reinvested on the ex-dividend
date.
|
|
Year ended
30
November 2024
|
Year ended
30
November 2023
|
Share price at inception
|
a
|
100.0p
|
100.0p
|
|
|
|
|
Closing share price
|
b
|
196.2p
|
138.8p
|
Dividend reinvestment
factor
|
c
|
1.391998
|
1.353458
|
Adjusted closing share
price
|
d = b*c
|
273.1p
|
187.9p
|
Share price total return since inception
|
(d / a)-1
|
173.1%
|
87.9%
|
Share Price Total Return Including Subscription Share
Value
The share price total return
including subscription share value performance since inception
includes the value of the subscription shares issued free of payment at launch on the basis of
one-for-five ordinary shares and assumes such were held throughout
the period from launch to the conversion
date of 31 July 2017. Performance is calculated by reinvesting the
dividends in the shares of the Company
from the relevant ex-dividend date and uses the launch price of
100p per ordinary
share.
|
|
Year ended
30
November 2024
|
Year ended
30
November 2023
|
Share price at inception
|
a
|
100.0p
|
100.0p
|
|
|
|
|
Closing share price
|
b
|
196.2p
|
138.8p
|
Dividend reinvestment
factor
|
c
|
1.401121
|
1.381556
|
Adjusted closing share
price
|
d = b*c
|
274.9p
|
191.8p
|
Share price total return including subscription share value
since inception
|
(d / a)-1
|
174.9%
|
91.8%
|
(Discount)/Premium
A
description of the difference between the share price and the net
asset value per share usually expressed as a percentage
(%) of the net asset value per share.
If the share price is higher than the NAV per share the result is a
premium. If the share price is lower than
the NAV per share, the shares are trading at a discount.
|
|
30
November 2024
|
30
November 2023
|
Closing share price
|
a
|
196.2p
|
154.6p
|
Closing NAV per share
|
b
|
207.7p
|
166.3p
|
Discount per ordinary share
|
(a / b)-1
|
-5.5%
|
-7.0%
|
Ongoing Charges
Ongoing charges are calculated in
accordance with AIC guidance by taking the Company's annual ongoing
charges, excluding performance fees and exceptional items, if any,
and expressing them as a percentage of the average daily net asset
value of the Company over the
year.
Ongoing charges include all regular
operating expenses of the Company. Transaction costs, interest
payments, tax and non-recurring expenses are excluded from the
calculation as are the costs incurred in relation to share issues
and share buybacks.
Where a
performance fee is paid or is payable, a second ongoing charge is
provided, calculated on the same basis as the
above but incorporating the movement
in the performance fee provision.
|
|
Year ended
30
November 2024
|
Year ended
30
November 2023
|
Investment Management Fee (Note 7
above)
|
|
£3,860,000
|
£3,519,000
|
Other Administrative Expenses (Note
8 above)
|
|
£844,000
|
£794,000
|
|
a
|
£4,704,000
|
£4,313,000
|
Average daily net assets
value
|
b
|
£552,193,000
|
£502,339,000
|
Ongoing Charges excluding performance fee
|
a / b
|
0.85%
|
0.86%
|
|
|
|
|
Performance fee (Note 7
above)
|
c
|
-
|
-
|
|
d = a+c
|
£4,704,000
|
£4,313,000
|
Ongoing charges including performance fee
|
d / b
|
0.85%
|
0.86%
|
Net Gearing
Gearing is calculated in line with
AIC guidelines and represents net gearing. This is defined as total
assets less cash and cash equivalents divided by net assets. The
total assets are calculated by adding back the bank loan. Cash and
cash equivalents are cash and purchases and sales for future
settlement outstanding at the year
end.
|
|
30
November 2024
|
30
November 2023
|
Net assets
|
a
|
£629,678,000
|
£488,198,000
|
Bank loan
|
b
|
£78,935,000
|
£69,031,000
|
Total assets
|
c = (a+b)
|
£708,613,000
|
£557,229,000
|
Cash and cash equivalents
(including amounts awaiting settlement)
|
d
|
£46,510,000
|
£37,484,000
|
Net gearing
|
(c-d)/a-1
|
5.1%
|
6.5%
|
AGM
The Annual Report and separate
Notice of Annual General Meeting will be posted to Shareholders in
February 2025 and will be available from the Company Secretary at
the Company's Registered Office, (16 Palace Street London SW1E 5JD)
and on the Company's website. The AGM will
be held at the Company's Registered Office at 2:00pm on Thursday 10
April 2025.
Forward Looking Statements
Certain statements included above
contain forward-looking information concerning the Company's
strategy, operations, financial performance or condition, outlook,
growth opportunities or circumstances in the countries, sectors or
markets in which the Company operates. By their nature,
forward-looking statements involve uncertainty because they depend
on future circumstances, and relate to events, not all of which are
within the Company's control or can be predicted by the Company.
Although the Company believes that the expectations reflected in
such forward-looking statements are reasonable, no assurance can be
given that such expectations will prove to have been correct.
Actual results could differ materially from those set out in the
forward-looking statements. For a detailed analysis of the factors
that may affect our business, financial performance or results of
operations, we urge you to look at the principal risks and
uncertainties included in the Strategic Report Section of the
Annual Report and Financial Statements.
No part of these preliminary
results constitutes, or shall be taken to constitute, an invitation
or inducement to invest in Polar Capital Global Financials Trust
plc or any other entity and must not be relied upon in any way in
connection with any investment decision. The Company undertakes no
obligation to update any forward-looking statements. Neither the
contents of the Company's website nor the contents of any website
accessible from hyperlinks on the Company's website (or any other
website) is incorporated into, or forms part of, this
announcement.