TIDMPCT
RNS Number : 5860W
Polar Capital Technology Trust PLC
12 December 2019
POLAR CAPITAL TECHNOLOGY TRUST PLC
UNAUDITED RESULTS ANNOUNCEMENT FOR THE SIX MONTHS TO 31 OCTOBER
2019
FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
(Unaudited) (Audited)
As at 31 October As at 30 April
2019 2019 Movement %
-------------------------------- ------------------ ------------------ -----------
Total net assets GBP1,973,858,000 GBP1,935,646,000 2.0
Net assets per ordinary
share 1474.95p 1446.40p 2.0
Price per ordinary share 1416.00p 1354.00p 4.6
Benchmark
Dow Jones World Technology
Index (total return, Sterling
adjusted, with the removal
of relevant withholding
taxes) 2141.9 2045.1 4.7
Discount of ordinary share
price to net asset value
per ordinary share 4.0% 6.4%
Ordinary shares in issue 133,825,000 133,825,000 -
-------------------------------- ------------------ ------------------ -----------
KEY DATA
For the six months to 31
October 2019
-------------------------------- --------------------------------------
Local Currency Sterling Adjusted
% %
Benchmark (see above) 4.0 4.7
Other Indices over the period
(total return)
FTSE World 3.8 4.6
FTSE All-share - 0.4
S&P 500 composite 4.2 5.0
Nikkei 225 4.1 7.5
Eurostoxx 600 3.3 3.5
As at As at
Exchange rates 31 October 30 April 2019
2019
-------------------------------- ------------------ ------------------
US$ to GBP 1.2940 1.3037
Japanese Yen to GBP 139.89 145.19
Euro to GBP 1.1599 1.1632
No interim dividend has been declared for the period ended 31
October 2019, nor were there for periods ended 31 October 2018 or
30 April 2019, and there is no intention to declare a dividend for
the year ending 30 April 2020.
References throughout this document to "the Company" or "the
Trust" relate to Polar Capital Technology Trust PLC while
references to "the portfolio" relate to the assets managed on
behalf of the Company.
For further information please contact:
Tracey Lago - Company Secretary Ed Gascoigne-Pees
Polar Capital Technology Trust Camarco
PLC
Tel: 020 7227 2700 Tel: 020 3757
4984
INVESTMENT MANAGER'S REPORT
Market review
The half year to 31 October 2019 saw global equities make
further progress, the FTSE World index delivering a total return of
4.6%, in sterling terms. The period was dominated by trade war
machinations while associated uncertainty weighed on corporate
confidence, putting downward pressure on economic progress across
the world. However, risk assets added to their remarkable Q1 gains,
supported by the Fed (and other central banks) easing monetary
policy and hopes of a trade war détente. Trade negotiations entered
something of a phoney war with both sides threatening to escalate
tariffs before repeatedly stepping back from the brink. October saw
actual progress with China agreeing to buy $40-50bn of US
agricultural products in exchange for a delay in the tariff
increase planned for 15 October. This was followed by rumours that
a partial phase one deal, which excludes the more intractable
structural reform issues, was close to being concluded.
However, lack of tangible trade progress for most of the period
weighed on global growth. This was most apparent in
export-sensitive economies like Korea and Japan, as well as Europe
where manufacturing PMIs continued to weaken, falling to 45.7 in
September (near seven-year lows), exacerbated by the trade war and
Brexit fears. While the pace of deceleration in China slowed,
manufacturing PMIs remained in contraction territory for five
consecutive months while third-quarter GDP growth came in at 6%
y/y, the weakest figure in 30 years. Although the US economy
remained a relative safe-haven, 10-year US treasury yields fell
below 2% in May, for the first time since 2016, and ended the
period at just 1.74%. This reflected weakening data that in August
recorded the first contraction in the manufacturing sector since
2009, followed a month later by the lowest reading in the US ISM
manufacturing index in more than 10 years. In addition, political
risk remained elevated and weighed on sentiment with investors
having to contend with oil disruption following Iranian attacks on
oil tankers in the Straits of Hormuz and Saudi oil facilities. In
addition, Brexit risk reached fever pitch with Prime Minister Boris
Johnson adopting a more belligerent approach to EU intransigence
and Parliament all but seizing up before a deal was reached and an
election called. In the US, the launch of an impeachment enquiry
into President Trump by the Democrats added to the prevailing
political uncertainty.
As trade tensions remained unresolved and economic data points
deteriorated, markets began pricing in and demanding policy easing
by the world's central banks. Central banks played their part in
ameliorating the softening economic outlook; the Fed went beyond
signalling and delivered its first rate cut since 2008 as it
lowered rates by 25bps in August, followed by two subsequent cuts
in September and October. In Europe, the September ECB meeting saw
measures that included a 10bps cut to headline interest rates (to a
record low -0.5%) and a restart of its quantitative easing ('QE')
programme of bond purchases set at EUR20bn per month. While Fed
Chair Jerome Powell stated that its actions should not be viewed as
a resumption of QE, the Fed also began injecting liquidity into
money markets from September, when a spike in the overnight lending
rate caused concern. The scope of its repo operations was expanded
in October while the Fed also began purchasing Treasury bills at
$60bn/month, expected to continue into Q2 2020 or longer. This
'stealth QE' together with three interest rate cuts successfully
un-inverted the US yield curve.
Technology review
The technology sector modestly outpaced the broader market
during the half year, the Dow Jones World Technology Index
advancing 4.6%, in sterling terms. As in prior years, this
outperformance was aided by the sector's disproportionate exposure
to the US. However, the dollar provided less of a tailwind as
potential light at the end of the Brexit tunnel, in the form of a
UK general election, saw sterling regain its poise, ending the
period little changed against the dollar. The half year began with
a continuation of returns concentrated in the software and payment
subsectors, where growth remained impressive and relatively
sheltered from trade war machinations. However, this trend reversed
abruptly in July with early-cycle stocks responding to the first US
interest rate cut since 2008, a move up in US 10-year treasury
yields and hopes for a trade deal. The outperformance of value and
cyclical groups continued, resulting in semiconductor stocks
delivering the strongest subsector returns over the half year - the
Philadelphia Semiconductor index rising 8.1%, in sterling terms -
while the component and robotics-heavy Japanese market delivered
the best geographic returns (6.5%). This outperformance was
significantly divorced from fundamentals that remained mixed at
best as the semiconductor industry remained mired in a prolonged
downturn with revenues forecast to fall by nearly 13% in 2019.
However, semiconductor (and other cyclical subgroups such as
robotics) stocks shrugged this off as investors instead focused on
pockets of improvement as well as hope for a better 2020 and a
positive trade war outcome.
Fundamental improvement was most apparent where it was least
expected, with Apple and the smartphone supply-chain delivering
some of the best returns. Following earlier news in April that
Qualcomm and Apple had settled all pending litigation between the
two companies (suggesting a 5G iPhone might be released in 2020),
Apple's stock price strength continued before and after the
September launch of the iPhone 11. Against a backdrop of low
expectations, the new smartphone (with a better camera and
noticeably improved battery life) surprised to the upside. In
addition, further progress in services and persistent strength in
wearables (a $16bn run-rate business growing more than 50%
propelled by AirPods) saw Apple (up 26%) again become the world's
most valuable company as it added a remarkable $159bn to its market
capitalisation during the half year. Another relative bright spot
for chipmakers was 5G, despite Huawei-related uncertainty, as
investors (ourselves included) became excited about the size of the
addressable market and the deployment timeline. This was in
contrast to weaker trends elsewhere, particularly in automotive
(where China auto sales fell 12.4% during 1H19) and in data centre
(reflecting slowing cloud capex). The latter weighed heavily on
server, networking and CPU demand while spot DRAM prices fell more
than 30% during the period.
Internet stocks also delivered returns in stark contrast to
fundamentals as the group struggled with regulatory headwinds and
an adverse narrative despite continued growth at most of the key
platforms. In June, the US Federal government announced it was
stepping up scrutiny of big technology companies with the
Department of Justice and the Federal Trade Commission said to have
struck a deal to divide oversight of Facebook, Amazon, Alphabet
(Google) and Apple. In the same month, Senator Elizabeth Warren - a
leading candidate in the race to win the Democrat nomination -
further raised the ante when she announced she would "break up big
tech" if she became President. In addition, Apple lost a Supreme
Court ruling that will allow antitrust lawsuits against the App
Store to proceed, while in August France passed a 3% digital tax on
sales for large internet companies. Despite these adverse
developments and headline risk, fundamentals at the leading
platforms remained strong. Google and Facebook both delivered
impressive top-line growth, while Facebook added two million daily
active users in Q3 in both the US and Europe, once again
confounding engagement concerns. Deceleration at AWS and the
decision to invest in free one-day shipping as the default to all
Prime customers saw Amazon shares trail its peers. We have
significantly reduced our Amazon holding, and in the summer trimmed
our already underweight positions in Alphabet and Facebook on the
regulatory developments. However, we have retained significant but
smaller positions in both as their valuations remain compelling
relative to their growth, which suggests that negative outcomes are
at least partially priced in.
Next-generation software and payment stocks continued to deliver
exceptional growth, but this was more than offset by an arguably
overdue period of valuation compression, potentially triggered by
limited evidence of macroeconomic uncertainty impacting earnings
progress, while disappointing progress at Uber and the debacle at
WeWork weighed on investor appetite for growth stocks. Having
reduced our software exposure earlier in the year, we exited
several more of our highfliers before beginning to modestly rebuild
our sector exposure towards the end of the half year. A weaker than
normal Q2 from PayPal hindered payment stocks which, like software,
were also hampered by the rotation away from growth. Enterprise
incumbents mostly struggled, as the shift towards the cloud
continued to negatively impact organic growth at legacy vendors
such as IBM and Oracle, as well as a number of IT
services/outsourcing companies, including Cognizant and DXC
Technologies.
Portfolio performance
Our total return performance came in below our benchmark, with
the net asset value per share rising 2% during the first half of
the year versus 4.6% for the sterling-adjusted benchmark. This
largely reflected the underperformance of our US exposure (stock
selection) which was hindered by the relative strength of large-cap
technology (where we remain underweight, as we have for many years)
which outperformed small caps by 8%. In addition, portfolio
performance was negatively impacted by the drag of holding cash in
a rising market and our own NASDAQ puts.
At the stock level, continued share price strength at Apple (up
26%) proved the most significant detractor to relative performance
as our largest underweight position cost 100bps during the half
year. However, in aggregate the rotation from growth/momentum to
value post July proved more expensive still as a number of our
software holdings experienced significant valuation compression,
triggered by evidence of macroeconomic uncertainty creeping into
earnings. At the same time, semiconductor stocks enjoyed one of
their most significant periods of re-rating in recent memory driven
by improvement at Apple, strength in China (as Huawei and others
likely built inventory or established alternative supply chains)
and trade war hopes.
Decelerating growth at Amazon Web Services (AWS) contributed to
weaker performance of Amazon (-7%) while slower cloud capital
spending caught up with both Arista Networks (-21%) and Xilinx
(-23%), although we reduced all three of these positions during the
period. Disappointing progress at Uber (-30%) directly impacted our
own performance but, together with the travails at WeWork, this
cast a shadow over other so-called long duration assets including
Netflix (-22%) which was also impacted by concerns over competition
and the pace of new user growth. There were also a few genuine
disappointments, but these were largely contained to the portfolio
tail with 2U, Forescout and Ubisoft each falling short of
expectations, while Infineon was weak following its thesis-changing
acquisition of Cypress Semiconductor.
In terms of positives, AMD (up 24%) continued to add to returns
as the company delivered on its product roadmap while benefitting
from the general upswing in semiconductor stocks, a dynamic that
also aided our holdings in Tokyo Electron (up 31%) and Advantest
(up 64%). In addition, a select group of software stocks generated
strong relative returns including RingCentral, LivePerson and
Medallia, a recent IPO. The Trust also benefited from the
underperformance of incumbents such as Baidu, Broadcom, Cisco, DXC
Technology and Nokia where we have limited or zero exposure because
we perceive them to be negatively impacted by technology change
and/or market share shifts. Finally, M&A proved a modest
positive following the acquisition of Tableau by Salesforce.com for
a 42% premium in June.
Market outlook
Trade war uncertainty has taken its toll on the global economy
which is now in a "synchronised slowdown" with growth this year
estimated at just 3%, the slowest pace since the financial crisis.
While growth next year is expected to improve to 3.4%, this is
already 0.2% lower than forecast at our year end and considered
"precarious", being dependent on emerging market (EM)
reacceleration. According to the IMF, the negative impact of
US/China trade tensions has cumulatively reduced GDP in 2020 by
0.8%. This has been most keenly felt in manufacturing where
uncertainty, together with disruption in the automotive sector due
to new emission standards, has weighed on capital spending.
Fortunately, the services sector has remained robust, supporting
employment, wage growth and consumption in developed markets. In
addition, the absence of inflationary pressures (core inflation
below target almost everywhere) has allowed policymakers to
significantly ease financial conditions, which should boost GDP by
an estimated 0.5% both this year and next. Despite this, risks to
current growth forecasts appear skewed to the downside due to trade
and geopolitical tensions, Brexit and risks associated with climate
change.
In contrast, equity markets continue to grind higher led by
cyclicals as the return of the Fed put and trade deal hope has
ameliorated economic uncertainty and political risk. Third-quarter
earnings season has also proved better than feared; as of 8
November, 89% of the S&P 500 had reported third-quarter results
and, in aggregate, 75% and 60% have reported EPS and revenues
respectively ahead of estimates. While earnings look likely to fall
by c2.4% y/y (marking the first three straight quarters of y/y
earnings declines since 4Q15-2Q16), this is better than the -4.1%
forecast at the end of September. However, this positive surprise
is insufficient to fully explain the rise in equity markets, which
has largely been driven by multiple expansion; the forward 12-month
P/E on the S&P has increased to 17.4x from 16.8x at our year
end, modestly above both the five (16.6x) and 10-year (14.9x)
averages. As in previous years, international markets appear better
value, but less so on a sector-adjusted basis, with the exception
of the UK which remains a cheap outlier following record
Brexit/Corbyn-related outflows. Equities nonetheless continue to
look attractive relative to bonds and cash with US stocks currently
boasting higher dividend yields than 10-year treasuries.
That more S&P 500 constituents sport dividend yields in
excess of 10-year US treasuries today than during the aftermath of
the financial crisis and following the longest bull market on
record, speaks volumes about the uniqueness of the current
investment backdrop. Equally, it is highly unusual for an economy
with full employment to experience three interest rate cuts in a
calendar year, or for risk assets to stand at all-time highs in
contrast to global PMIs at post-2009 lows based on hopes of a trade
deal between two countries on an obvious and possibly unavoidable
medium-term collision course. At a point when investors ought to be
concerned about central banks being behind the curve, policymakers
are so determined not to repeat their pre-financial crisis
somnolence that around one quarter of the global government and
corporate bond market currently trades with negative yields. The
ECB's actions have enabled Greece to issue its first-ever negative
yielding 13-week bills as investors - incredibly - now pay Athens
for the privilege of lending it cash. Understandably the term
'Japanification' is in the air, capturing the zeitgeist of this new
normal: permanently low growth, low inflation and super-loose
monetary policy.
However, we remain cautiously optimistic that worst-case
outcomes will continue to be avoided and expect a trade deal will
be done, not least because both sides require one before
brinksmanship does lasting damage at a time when limited
conventional policy firepower still exists. President Trump (for
all his many shortcomings) may have played a blinder, pressuring
the Fed to fill the vacuum left by the trade war uncertainty he
instigated before he calls a truce (aka interim deal) timed
perfectly to juice the economy ahead of the 2020 Presidential
election. While some of this is undoubtably already baked into
stock prices (especially cyclical subsectors where strong stock
prices have contrasted with negative earnings revisions), the
overall market trend may still be upwards, particularly as
investors appear conservatively positioned and sentiment remains
muted, if not downright bearish. Obviously in the absence of a
trade deal, or if central banks reverse course as in 1999 (when a
1.4% core personal consumption expenditure index did not prevent
the Fed from raising interest rates three times once the emerging
market crisis had passed) then downside risk is likely to prove
substantial from current levels.
Political risk also remains elevated with impeachment
proceedings making progress in the Democrat-controlled House of
Representatives. However, the removal of the President ahead of the
2020 election remains a tail risk requiring around 20 Republican
senators to vote against him, unlikely given that Republican voters
remain overwhelmingly against impeachment. In the UK, Brexit risk
has been somewhat sidelined as Parliament finally agreed to a
General Election due to be held on 12 December. Despite this new
uncertainty, sterling has held its recent gains as Prime Minister
Johnson is campaigning on the basis of getting his agreed deal done
(ie seemingly reducing the risk of a no-deal outcome) while
currently enjoying a sufficient lead over Labour to obviate the
need for an electoral pact with the Brexit Party. Meanwhile, Jeremy
Corbyn's own personal ratings continue to plumb new depths, the
Labour leader's net approval score of -60 in a recent poll the
worst score recorded since satisfaction ratings began 42 years
ago.
We remain hopeful that equity markets can continue to move
higher during the remainder of our financial year. Valuations that
remain appropriate for the current low inflation environment are
unlikely to expand easily from here given political/trade
uncertainty and the potential for further negative earnings
revisions in the absence of a trade deal. However, given that we
still expect a trade deal to be concluded, downside risk to
valuations should prove modest too, absent deflation or inflation,
the two primary causes of sharply lower P/Es. Rather, we expect a
return of volatility, which partially explains the current elevated
level of cash in the portfolio.
Key risks
As outlined during our latest Annual Report, there are myriad
risks to our sanguine market view. The most critical of these
relates to the loss of policymaker support that has significantly
ameliorated trade-related uncertainty and reversed the recent US
yield curve inversion. The alignment of policymakers and
shareholders that has underpinned risk assets since 2009 depends on
central banks fearing deflation more than inflation, which still
holds today. However, there is no guarantee that this will persist,
particularly given how tight the US labour market is. The Fed could
also resume its rate-tightening path once external conditions
improve and reflexivity risk has passed. Until a trade war
resolution is found, policymaker support is likely to remain
critical given record amounts of debt, the slowdown in the global
economy and increased recession risk. The global economy continues
to lose momentum and although the US remains relatively robust,
recent data suggests that uncertainty is beginning to catch up with
the world's largest economy. As we articulated at year end, clarity
on trade remains essential to restore confidence and return the
global economy to firmer footing. An interim deal will probably
suffice for now, although we remain somewhat sceptical that a grand
bargain is even possible. In addition, there are additional risks
that investors should consider, including the systemic risk posed
by the magnitude of debt in the world, populism (especially Brexit)
and the challenge to nation states posed by terrorism.
Technology outlook
Twenty-five years ago, a new genre of fiction - cyberpunk -
epitomised by William Gibson's Neuromancer, envisaged a dystopian
future where real and virtual worlds collide. Around the same time,
TCP/IP was introduced - the protocols used to interconnect devices
on the internet, a network that now connects 4.4 billion people who
on average spend six hours and 42 minutes online every day.
Everywhere we look, the collision of real and virtual is happening
as the internet delivers on its promise as a so-called
general-purpose technology around which nearly everything is being
reordered. Today, 14% of retail sales are captured online as the
likes of Amazon and Alibaba forever change the behaviour and
expectations of consumers across the globe. Massive social media
platforms like Facebook - boasting more than 30% of the world's
population as customers - allow information to travel at a velocity
previously thought impossible, enabled by billions of smartphones,
arguably the most empowering and democratising technology of all
time. Nowhere is the collision of virtual and real worlds more
apparent today than in our selection of life partners with c40% of
people meeting online today as data and artificial intelligence
(AI) disintermediate friendship.
The pace of internet-fuelled disruption has been so furious that
is easy to forget that (The) Facebook was only launched in 2004,
that the first Google search happened just over 20 years ago or
that Tim Berners-Lee invented the World Wide Web in 1989. It was
only 50 years ago that the first online message was sent when two
academics used the ARPANET (the precursor of the internet) to
communicate. At the time, only four universities in the world had
computers which were room-sized and required underfloor air
conditioning. Leonard Kleinrock had intended to send the word
'login' but the system crashed as he typed in the second letter and
'lo' -a biblical word used as an expression of surprise -
appropriately became the first online message and "served as a
premonition of what was to become". Last year, 65 billion messages
were sent daily on WhatsApp alone.
A little more than two decades after the birth of the commercial
internet, we are beginning to witness the first real efforts
designed to slow its inexorable progress. In the aftermath of the
Cambridge Analytica scandal, data privacy has become a hot topic
with the EU adopting the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)
in 2016 to replace a directive that was adopted in 1995 when the
internet was in its infancy. The idea that a more innocent,
decentralised internet has been transformed into one increasingly
dominated by a handful of big technology companies has moved into
the political mainstream with countries including France and
Germany looking to introduce digital taxes. Cities are fighting
back against the likes of Airbnb (apparently responsible for
soaring long-term rents, rather than, say, soaring property prices
and negative interest rates) and Uber has become a cause celebre
with cities such as San Francisco looking to protect drivers rights
that many appear comfortable waiving in order to be able to operate
in the gig economy.
Senator Elizabeth Warren has significantly upped the ante with a
progressive platform that includes the promise to "break up big
tech" because "a handful of monopolists" should not "dominate our
economy and our democracy". Her plan leans heavily on historical
parallels with the Gilded Age and the monopolies associated with
Carnegie, Ford, JP Morgan and Rockerfeller. Instead of robber
barons, we are told that today's existential threat is posed by
would-be data barons who have used people's private information for
profit. As long-term investors in each of the internet winners
"needing to be broken up" we would politely remind Senator Warren
that at no point was the success of these platforms assured.
Google's IPO was downsized, while arch-rival Yahoo! might have been
a more formidable competitor had it accepted Microsoft's $45bn bid
in 2008. Likewise, Facebook fell well below its IPO price once the
risk associated with moving advertising from desktop to mobile
became clear. While both Google and Facebook made some important
acquisitions that have extended their reach and relevance, these
transactions were considered controversial and expensive at the
time. We will never know how much of the subsequent success of
YouTube, Instagram or WhatsApp would have happened had they
remained standalone companies.
Amazon's dominance of US e-commerce has also been hard won,
requiring years of losses and the deep pockets of Jeff Bezos as the
company built out 150 million square feet of space across more than
175 fulfilment centres across the world. While it is true that
Amazon employs fewer people per revenue dollar than Walmart did
when Sam Walton was crowned America's richest person in 1985,
Amazon relies extensively on third-party parcel carriers and agency
workers; UPS alone has added 100,000 jobs in the past 16 years.
Amazon's success has also spawned AWS, the leading public cloud
company today which has not only transformed Amazon's financials
but has enabled much of the disruption witnessed this cycle by
providing cheap and flexible computing and storage to the likes of
Lyft, Netflix, Pinterest and Slack, to name a few. Apple - a poster
child for American technology if ever there was one - also falls
foul of Senator Warren who insists that it should not operate a
marketplace and compete in it at the same time, turning a blind eye
to how supermarkets sell private label alternatives to branded
goods in their own stores. For the record, Apple had paid out
$100bn to developers as of June 2018 while apps like Netflix,
Spotify and Uber would have struggled to become ubiquitous without
Apple (and Google) distribution. Even the 30% take-rate - an
understandable focal point for the likes of Spotify - is only in
line with what software companies have typically paid
distributors.
The second Gilded Age argument is beguiling but ultimately
fallacious; it is simply too easy to compare Google with 89% search
market share with Standard Oil which enjoyed c90% of US refineries
and pipelines in the early 1880s. The idea of breaking up the tech
giants harks back to the Sherman Antitrust Act of 1890 which
outlawed trusts - monopolies and cartels - and demonstrated that
the age of unbridled corporate excess was coming to an end.
However, this all-too-easy historical parallel makes no distinction
between monopolistic practices and natural monopolies, nor does it
consider the value being delivered to customers and society as a
whole. Jimmy Wales (a co-founder of Wikipedia) is said to have
dreamt of "a world in which every single person on the planet is
given free access to the sum of all human knowledge". Well, today
billions of people ask more than one trillion questions of Google
every year, of which 15% have never been asked before, while more
than half of YouTube users rely on the video service to learn how
to do things they have never done before.
Rather than the robber barons, it is to another 19th century
group - the Luddites - that we should instead turn as a guide. Used
today as a derogatory term to describe people opposed to new
technology, the Luddites were a radical faction of English textile
workers which destroyed textile machinery as a form of protest. The
movement emerged from the harsh economic climate of the Napoleonic
Wars, which at least rhymes with the post-financial crisis
experience and the present climate of machine mania and stagnating
incomes. After six years of protest, the Luddites were suppressed,
leading some to conclude that the movement had little to no global
significance on technological progress. However, there are better
conclusions to be drawn. Contrary to popular belief, the Luddites
were not opposed to the new technology but wanted a more gradual
take-up of the machinery to give them time to learn new trades. Put
differently, they were objecting to transformative change with no
regard for the consequences and the fact that the new technology
enabled less-skilled, lower-wage labourers.
After two furious decades that have seen the internet radically
rewiring how our societies work we may be overdue a period of
consolidation and some recalibration. This is likely to take the
form of greater regulatory oversight, increased costs associated
with taking responsibility for content and localising global
networks, the right to be forgotten and, probably, higher taxes. We
continue to believe that breaking up big tech remains highly
unlikely, not least because the US internet giants represent the
vanguard of American efforts to stay ahead of the Chinese in
critical domains such as cloud computing, AI and even quantum
computing. In time, the stocking frame (a popular Luddite target)
helped the British textile industry grow and created many more jobs
while their protests marked the beginning, rather than the end of
what Thomas Carlyle later called "a mechanical age".
As we embark on the second half of our financial year and look
to 2020, there is much to be excited about. The technology sector
remains uniquely positioned as both source of and solution to
disruption - the zeitgeist of this cycle - which continues to
create an appropriate sense of urgency across myriad industries for
companies to reinvent themselves to avoid disintermediation,
obsolescence and/or irrelevance. We believe we are still in the
early to middle stages of this process with $1.7trn of enterprise
IT spending up for grabs with much of it being reallocated to
modern cloud software and AI. This view was once again reinforced
by my annual trip to the Gartner Symposium in Barcelona (along with
7,500 other people) where the pace of technology disruption remains
palpable. According to one Gartner survey, the most important CEO
priority today after revenue growth, is improving business agility
- critical at a time when technology change is resulting in
heightened corporate obsolescence.
Earlier this month, venerable Mothercare announced it would
close all its UK stores. While many will point to price
transparency facilitated by the internet and the role played by
Amazon, retail disruption is far more embedded than being simply
due to pricing or fulfilment. An estimated 70% of new mums now turn
to YouTube for help while 'mommy bloggers' are the first people
that brands go to when they want to launch new products - both
roles once enjoyed by Mothercare. This disruption is fast becoming
the norm; 83% of Board directors expect their respective industries
to be disrupted significantly by the web giants over the next five
years. Business agility is one way to guard against unforeseen
disruption but requires companies to rethink how they operate,
where they compute and to embrace hyper-automation, a term used by
Gartner to describe the need to automate anything that can be
automated.
Meanwhile, the tide continues to move ever further from
enterprise compute and legacy technologies. Dampened IT budgets are
expected to grow just 0.6% in 2019 (before recovering to 3.7% next
year) and this has been felt disproportionately by incumbents. Even
in the cloud, hopes for so-called hybrid computing (the combination
of public and private clouds) are already giving way to the
'distributed cloud' where, according to Gartner, public cloud
companies provide the on-premise compute and storage too. This has
made it even less likely that we will invest in hybrid-cloud and
infrastructure companies as workloads continue to gravitate towards
the public cloud which today accounts for c20% of overall compute
and storage. In contrast, our investments in the largest public
clouds (Microsoft, Amazon, Google and Alibaba) are approaching a
quarter of assets.
In addition, the software sector remains a firm favourite of
ours as companies adopt next-generation software in order to
transform themselves, improve the customer journey and automate
decision-making. The cloud software market - worth $122bn in 2018 -
is forecast to reach $550bn by 2025 which would see it grow 24%
annually or 2x the broader software industry. However, this
remarkable growth profile and heightened M&A activity led to a
material re-rating of software assets and this has begun to unwind
since July, driven by the growth-to-value rotation in the broader
market as well as some macroeconomic-related uncertainty at the
margin at a time when stretched valuations could least afford it.
This has presaged a significant and painful derating process with
many individual names falling more than 30% from recent highs (and
some more). While we have drifted money back into selected
positions (many of which we reduced earlier on valuation grounds),
we continue to tread carefully as growth stocks continue to act
poorly, evidenced by asymmetric reactions to good and bad results
thus far during earnings season.
In contrast, semiconductor stocks have taken on the baton as
investors better position themselves for the uptick in global
growth expected once a trade deal is agreed. Having steadily
increased our semiconductor weighting (primarily via preferred 5G
beneficiaries) we are reluctant to chase them further from here,
particularly when current strength beyond Apple and 5G may be
partially explained by Huawei and other Chinese companies building
inventory or, more likely, establishing secondary supply chains
designed to reduce their reliance on US chips. As such, and
unwilling to embrace value, we will continue to look for further
opportunities to add to our favoured names and perhaps add a few
new ones that have eluded us thus far. Until then, we are likely to
retain above-average levels of cash (augmented by a small amount of
out of the money NDX puts) designed to reduce the natural excess
beta of our portfolio.
With the US IPO market on track this year to surpass the
issuance record set in 2000 (at the height of dotcom mania), it is
worth recalling that while technology valuations have expanded,
they remain far from anything resembling a bubble. Today, the
S&P technology sector trades at c20.6x forward earnings as
compared to 18.9x at the start of our fiscal year, the c20% premium
to the broader market (ignoring the sector's superior collective
balance sheet) looking more than justified. We should also point
out that our own portfolio remains highly liquid. According to
internal risk team calculations, 95% of the combined portfolio of
all three technology vehicles managed by Polar Capital could be
liquidated in less than three days, assuming one third of daily
traded volume. This is not a reaction to recent adverse industry
developments; rather, we have long felt that the remarkable pace of
technology change and associated obsolescence risk demanded
sufficient liquidity to recalibrate the portfolio when necessary.
While this may preclude us from investing in private companies, we
are more than happy to trade a slightly smaller investment universe
today (noting that most private companies will eventually come
public) for best in class liquidity, particularly given the
duration of this bull market.
Near term, the growth versus value debate is likely to be driven
by the direction of risk-free rates and hopes of a trade deal.
However, we remain hopeful that the current rotation is likely to
prove a tremor rather than a seismic shift in investment style,
particularly if the Japanese experience proves a useful guide. We
certainly hope so as the past few months have been challenging for
our investment approach and we have no desire to dust off our value
playbook, nor hunt for value in washed-out enterprise tech, IT
services companies and would-be turnarounds.
Ben Rogoff & Team
11 December 2019
PORTFOLIO BREAKDOWN
Market Capitalisation of underlying investments
as at 31 October 2019
Less than
% of invested assets $1bn $1bn-$10bn Over $10bn
-------------------------- ----------- ------------ -----------
as at 31 October 2019 1.5 15.6 82.9
as at 30 April 2019 1.2 21.2 77.6
% of Net Assets % of Net Assets
Breakdown of Investments by Geographic as at 31 October as at 30 April
Region* 2019 2019
----------------------------------------- ------------------ ----------------
North America 68.4 68.7
Asia Pacific (ex-Japan) 13.0 12.5
Japan 5.8 5.5
Europe 5.1 4.9
United Kingdom 1.3 1.4
Latin America 0.4 -
Middle East & Africa 0.1 0.2
* % of Net Assets, excluding other net assets
Classification of Investments as at 31 October 2019*
North Asia
America Pacific
(inc. (inc. Total Total
Latin Middle 31 October 30 April
America) Europe East) 2019 2019
% % % % %
----------- --------- ---------- ------------- -----------
Software 25.4 1.5 0.4 27.3 27.7
Semiconductors & Semiconductor
Equipment 9.3 2.7 5.0 17.0 15.9
Interactive Media & Services 13.7 - 2.2 15.9 16.9
Technology Hardware, Storage
& Peripherals 7.3 0.1 3.6 11.0 7.9
Electronic Equipment, Instruments
& Components 2.0 - 3.3 5.3 3.8
IT Services 4.5 0.1 0.1 4.7 5.6
Internet & Direct Marketing
Retail 1.6 0.3 2.8 4.7 6.9
Entertainment 1.9 1.0 - 2.9 2.3
Machinery - - 1.4 1.4 1.0
Communications Equipment 0.9 - - 0.9 1.5
Healthcare Equipment &
Supplies 0.5 - - 0.5 0.9
Aerospace & Defense 0.5 - - 0.5 0.7
Electrical Equipment - 0.4 - 0.4 -
Auto Components - 0.3 - 0.3 0.2
Life Sciences Tools & Services 0.3 - - 0.3 0.4
Road & Rail 0.3 - - 0.3 0.2
Diversified Consumer Services 0.3 - - 0.3 0.5
Diversified Telecommunication
Services 0.2 - - 0.2 -
Professional Services 0.1 - - 0.1 -
Building Products - - 0.1 0.1 -
Healthcare Technology - - - - 0.8
Total investments (GBP1,858,077,000) 68.8 6.4 18.9 94.1 93.2
Other net assets (excluding
loans) 6.6 - 2.1 8.7 9.6
Loans (0.9) - (1.9) (2.8) (2.8)
Grand total (net assets
of GBP1,973,858,000) 74.5 6.4 19.1 100.0 -
----------- --------- ---------- ------------- -----------
At 30 April 2019 (net assets
of GBP1,935,646,000) 74.7 6.4 18.9 - 100.0
----------- --------- ---------- ------------- -----------
* Classifications derived from Benchmark Index as far as
possible. The categorisation of each investment is shown in the
portfolio available on the Company's website. Not all sectors of
the Benchmark are shown, only those in which the Company has an
investment at the period end or in the comparative period.
PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS
Value of holding % of net assets
31 30 31 30
October April October April
Ranking 2019 2019 2019 2019
------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
31 30
Oct Apr
2019 2019 Stock Sector Region* GBP'000 GBP'000 % %
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
North
1 (1) Microsoft Software America 186,445 170,736 9.4 8.8
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Interactive North
2 (2) Alphabet Media & Services America 157,958 149,210 8.0 7.7
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Technology
Hardware,
Storage & North
3 (4) Apple Peripherals America 140,772 85,862 7.1 4.4
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Interactive North
4 (3) Facebook Media & Services America 82,509 91,458 4.2 4.7
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Technology
Hardware,
Samsung Storage & Asia
5 (8) Electronics Peripherals Pacific 71,992 52,421 3.6 2.7
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Internet & Direct Asia
6 (5) Alibaba Marketing Retail Pacific 55,576 64,772 2.8 3.3
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Semiconductors
Taiwan & Semiconductor Asia
7 (9) Semiconductor Equipment Pacific 52,460 42,654 2.7 2.2
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Interactive Asia
8 (6) Tencent Media & Services Pacific 42,891 55,788 2.2 2.9
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Semiconductors
Advanced & Semiconductor North
9 (13) Micro Devices Equipment America 38,513 28,936 2.0 1.5
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
North
10 (12) Salesforce.com Software America 37,604 29,987 1.9 1.6
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Top 10 investments 866,720 43.9
------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Internet & Direct North
11 (7) Amazon.com Marketing Retail America 31,652 54,350 1.6 2.8
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Semiconductors
& Semiconductor North
12 (28) Qualcomm Equipment America 31,416 15,645 1.6 0.8
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
North
13 (14) PayPal IT Services America 28,081 28,133 1.4 1.5
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Semiconductors
& Semiconductor North
14 (18) Analog Devices Equipment America 27,438 20,943 1.4 1.1
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
North
15 (11) Adobe Software America 24,110 37,303 1.2 1.9
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Semiconductors
Applied & Semiconductor North
16 (-) Materials Equipment America 24,018 - 1.2 -
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Semiconductors
& Semiconductor North
17 (30) Nvidia Equipment America 23,869 15,165 1.2 0.8
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Semiconductors
& Semiconductor Asia
18 (19) Toyko Electron Equipment Pacific 23,810 20,269 1.2 1.0
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Semiconductors
& Semiconductor
19 (17) ASML Equipment Europe 22,550 22,787 1.2 1.2
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Semiconductors
ST & Semiconductor
20 (62) Microelectronics Equipment Europe 22,466 7,922 1.1 0.4
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Top 20 investments 1,126,130 57.0
------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
North
21 (10) ServiceNow Software America 21,984 37,452 1.1 2.0
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
North
22 (-) Workday Software America 21,345 - 1.1 -
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
North
23 (15) Zendesk Software America 19,884 26,100 1.1 1.3
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
North
24 (25) Visa IT Services America 16,743 16,460 0.9 0.9
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
North
25 (21) Mastercard IT Services America 16,242 18,298 0.8 0.9
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
North
26 (35) Ansys Software America 15,904 12,928 0.8 0.7
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Interactive North
27 (23) IAC Interactive Media & Services America 14,794 17,427 0.7 0.9
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
North
28 (42) Proofpoint Software America 14,663 11,313 0.7 0.6
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
North
29 (27) Synopsys Software America 14,313 16,009 0.7 0.8
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Semiconductors
& Semiconductor North
30 (16) Texas Instruments Equipment America 14,086 23,814 0.7 1.2
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Top 30 investments 1,296,088 65.6
------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
North
31 (46) HubSpot Software America 13,917 10,358 0.7 0.5
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Semiconductors
Marvell & Semiconductor North
32 (-) Technology Equipment America 13,525 - 0.7 -
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
North
33 (-) Intuit Software America 13,258 - 0.7 -
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
North
34 (64) Alteryx Software America 13,251 7,562 0.7 0.4
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Spotify
35 (40) Technology Entertainment Europe 13,140 12,633 0.7 0.7
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
North
36 (54) Everbridge Software America 13,062 9,369 0.7 0.5
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
37 (-) SAP Software Europe 12,765 - 0.7 -
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Electronic
Equipment,
Instruments Asia
38 (66) Keyence & Components Pacific 12,727 7,425 0.6 0.4
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
North
39 (70) LivePerson Software America 12,445 7,140 0.6 0.3
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
North
40 (37) Twilio IT Services America 12,262 12,814 0.6 0.7
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Top 40 investments 1,426,440 72.3
------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
North
41 (65) Splunk Software America 12,038 7,434 0.6 0.4
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Electronic
Equipment,
Dolby Instruments North
42 (60) Laboratories & Components America 12,007 8,538 0.6 0.4
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Electronic
Equipment,
Keysight Instruments North
43 (-) Technologies & Components America 11,941 - 0.6 -
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Activision North
44 (-) Blizzard Entertainment America 11,873 - 0.6 -
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
North
45 (45) 8X8 Software America 11,543 10,806 0.6 0.6
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
North
46 (26) Autodesk Software America 11,387 16,329 0.6 0.8
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Electronic
Equipment,
Instruments North
47 (73) Cognex & Components America 11,313 6,828 0.6 0.4
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
48 (33) Mimecast Software Europe 11,307 13,510 0.6 0.7
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Harmonic Asia
49 (61) Drive Systems Machinery Pacific 11,095 8,297 0.6 0.4
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Interactive North
50 (41) Pinterest Media & Services America 10,943 12,390 0.5 0.6
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Top 50 investments 1,541,887 78.2
------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Electronic
Equipment,
Yaskawa Instruments Asia
51 (59) Electric & Components Pacific 10,502 8,725 0.5 0.4
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
North
52 (32) Five9 Software America 10,214 14,024 0.5 0.7
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Healthcare
Intuitive Equipment North
53 (76) Surgical & Supplies America 10,166 6,366 0.5 0.3
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Fuji Machine Asia
54 (57) Manufacturing Machinery Pacific 9,967 8,835 0.5 0.5
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
North
55 (52) RingCentral Software America 9,625 9,636 0.5 0.5
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Electronic
Equipment,
Instruments Asia
56 (78) TDK & Components Pacific 9,568 6,014 0.5 0.3
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Communications North
57 (20) Arista Networks Equipment America 9,532 19,368 0.5 1.0
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Semiconductors
& Semiconductor North
58 (22) Xilinx Equipment America 9,407 17,572 0.5 0.9
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Electronic
Equipment,
Samsung Instruments Asia
59 (-) Electro-Mechanics & Components Pacific 9,329 - 0.5 -
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Aerospace & North
60 (31) Axon Enterprise Defense America 9,169 14,774 0.5 0.7
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Top 60 investments 1,639,366 83.2
------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Semiconductors
& Semiconductor
61 (43) Aixtron Equipment Europe 8,841 11,200 0.4 0.6
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
North
62 (69) Square IT Services America 8,595 7,280 0.4 0.4
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
PagSeguro North
63 (-) Digital IT Services America 8,326 - 0.4 -
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
North
64 (-) Medallia Software America 8,142 - 0.4 -
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Electronic North
65 (55) Arts Entertainment America 8,017 9,343 0.4 0.5
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
North
66 (87) Coupa Software Software America 7,748 5,027 0.4 0.3
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Electronic
Equipment,
Instruments Asia
67 (71) Shimadzu & Components Pacific 7,231 7,103 0.4 0.4
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Semiconductors
& Semiconductor Asia
68 (36) Advantest Equipment Pacific 7,119 12,845 0.3 0.7
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Asia
69 (-) Atlassian Software Pacific 6,828 - 0.3 -
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
70 (95) Aptiv Auto Components Europe 6,676 3,839 0.3 0.2
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Top 70 investments 1,716,889 86.9
------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Interactive North
71 (-) Match Group Media & Services America 6,493 - 0.3 -
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Life Sciences North
72 (74) Illumina Tools & Services America 6,172 6,824 0.3 0.4
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
North
73 (89) NetFlix Entertainment America 6,032 4,830 0.3 0.2
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
74 (75) CD Projeckt Entertainment Europe 6,017 6,768 0.3 0.3
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Internet & Direct
75 (84) Ocado Marketing Retail Europe 5,796 5,495 0.3 0.3
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
North
76 (-) Zynga Entertainment America 5,427 - 0.3 -
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
North
77 (-) Uber Technologies Road & Rail America 5,389 - 0.3 -
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Take-Two
Interactive North
78 (82) Software Entertainment America 5,345 5,813 0.3 0.3
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Asia
79 (108) CKD Corporation Machinery Pacific 5,323 1,331 0.3 0.1
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Semiconductors
& Semiconductor Asia
80 (93) PixArt Imaging Equipment Pacific 5,164 4,237 0.3 0.2
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Top 80 investments 1,774,047 89.9
------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Semiconductors
& Semiconductor Asia
81 (-) MediaTek Equipment Pacific 5,152 - 0.3 -
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Communications North
82 (-) F5 Networks Equipment America 5,018 - 0.3 -
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Diversified North
83 (51) Chegg Consumer Services America 4,975 9,775 0.3 0.5
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Electronic
Equipment,
Instruments Asia
84 (-) HORIBA & Components Pacific 4,742 - 0.2 -
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Technology
Hardware,
Storage & North
85 (38) Pure Storage Peripherals America 4,419 12,791 0.2 0.7
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
North
86 (-) Yext Software America 4,350 - 0.2 -
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Electronic
Equipment,
Universal Instruments North
87 (68) Display & Components America 4,274 7,304 0.2 0.4
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Electronic
Equipment,
Instruments Asia
88 (-) Taiyo Yuden & Components Pacific 3,996 - 0.2 -
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Dassault
89 (80) Systemes Software Europe 3,905 5,894 0.2 0.3
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
North
90 (39) Aspen Technology Software America 3,854 12,684 0.2 0.7
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Top 90 investments 1,818,732 92.2
------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Electrical
91 (-) Varta Equipment Europe 3,801 - 0.2 -
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Electrical
92 (-) NEL Equipment Europe 3,556 - 0.2 -
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Electronic
Equipment,
Instruments Asia
93 (-) Hirose Electric & Components Pacific 3,518 - 0.2 -
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Semiconductors
eMemory & Semiconductor Asia
94 (94) Technology Equipment Pacific 3,439 3,842 0.2 0.2
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Diversified
Telecommunication North
95 (-) Bandwidth Services America 3,305 - 0.2 -
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Professional North
96 (-) Upwork Services America 3,298 - 0.1 -
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Asia
97 (105) Zuken IT Services Pacific 2,589 1,649 0.1 0.1
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Asia
98 (98) MiX Telematics Software Pacific 2,562 2,990 0.1 0.2
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Electronic
Equipment,
Instruments Asia
99 (107) Seeing Machines & Components Pacific 2,338 1,540 0.1 0.1
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Technology
Hardware,
Storage &
100 (104) Tobii Peripherals Europe 2,092 1,858 0.1 0.1
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Top 100 investments 1,849,230 93.7
------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Communications North
101 (103) KVH Industries Equipment America 1,993 1,897 0.1 0.1
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Asia
102 (-) Nitto Boseki Building Products Pacific 1,855 - 0.1 -
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
103 (101) First Derivatives IT Services Europe 1,700 2,384 0.1 0.1
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Electronic
Equipment,
Instruments Asia
104 (92) E Ink & Components Pacific 1,033 4,350 0.1 0.2
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
North
105 (91) Anaplan Software America 922 4,703 - 0.2
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Interactive North
106 (-) Twitter Media & Services America 787 - - -
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Asia
107 (-) MEC Chemicals Pacific 491 - - -
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Herald Ventures
Limited
108 (111) Partnership Other Europe 66 55 - -
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Total equities 1,858,077 94.1
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Other net
assets 115,781 5.9
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
Total net
assets 1,973,858 100.0
------ ------------------ ------------------ -------- ---------- --------- -------- -------------------
*Notes:
North America includes Latin America.
Asia Pacific includes Middle East.
CORPORATE MATTERS
The Board
There have been no changes to the membership of the Board in the
six months ended 31 October 2019. The Directors' biographical
details are available on the Company's website and are provided in
the Annual Report.
Auditors
KPMG LLP were re-appointed as the Company's external auditor at
the AGM held on 4 September 2019.
Principal Risks and Uncertainties
The Directors consider that the principal risks and
uncertainties faced by the Company for the remaining six months of
the financial year, which could have a material impact on
performance, remain consistent with those outlined in the Annual
Report for the year ended 30 April 2019.
We continue to consider the risks arising from the uncertainties
around Brexit. The vast majority of our assets are not denominated
in Sterling and therefore sharp currency movements in either
direction will have an impact on the NAV. This is consistent with
our risk profile as stated within the last Annual Report. As also
stated in the last Annual Report, the Board had discussed the
diversification of cash held within the portfolio with the
Investment Manager. Accordingly, an automatic cash sweep into money
market funds has been implemented, further information is available
in Note 8 to the Financial Statements.
The Company has a risk management framework that provides a
structured process for identifying, assessing and managing the
risks associated with the Company's business. The investment
portfolio is diversified by geography which mitigates risk but is
focused on the technology sector and has a high proportion of
non-Sterling investments.
Gearing
As at 31 October 2019, the Company had drawn down two, two-year
fixed rate, term loans of JPY 5.2bn and USD 23.3m from ING Bank
N.V. Both loans fall due for repayment on 2 October 2020. The JPY
loan has been fixed at an all-in rate of 0.80% pa and the USD loan
has been fixed at an all-in rate of 4.2% pa. As these loans are due
for repayment within 12 months of the half year end, they are
classified as current liabilities. The Company's one-year revolving
credit facility of USD46.6m with ING Bank N.V., expired on 2
October 2019 and has not been renewed.
Related Party Transactions
In accordance with DTR 4.2.8R there have been no new related
party transactions during the six-month period to 31 October 2019
and therefore nothing to report on any material effect by such
transactions on the financial position or performance of the
Company during that period.
There have therefore been no changes in any related party
transaction described in the last Annual Report that could have a
material effect on the financial position or performance of the
Company in the first six months of the current financial year or to
the date of this report.
GOING CONCERN
The Directors believe it is appropriate to adopt the going
concern basis in preparing the financial statements. The assets of
the Company comprise mainly of securities that are readily
realisable and accordingly, the Company has adequate financial
resources to meet its liabilities as and when they fall due and to
continue in operational existence for the foreseeable future.
Further, and in accordance with the AIC SORP, it is reasonable to
believe that if good performance is achieved over the period until
the next continuation vote in 2020 Shareholders will vote in favour
of continuation.
STATEMENT OF DIRECTORS' RESPONSIBILITIES
The Directors of Polar Capital Technology Trust plc, which are
listed in the Directors and Contacts Section, confirm to the best
of their knowledge:
-- The condensed set of financial statements has been prepared
in accordance with IAS34 Interim Financial Reporting as adopted by
the European Union;
-- The Interim Management Report includes a fair review of the
information required by:
(a) DTR 4.2.7R of the Disclosure Guidance and Transparency
Rules, being an indication of important events that have occurred
during the first six months of the financial year and their impact
on the condensed set of financial statements; and a description of
the principal risks and uncertainties for the remaining six months
of the year; and
(b) DTR 4.2.8R of the Disclosure Guidance and Transparency
Rules, being related party transactions that have taken place in
the first six months of the current financial year and that have
materially affected the financial position or performance of the
entity during that period; and any changes in the related party
transactions described in the last annual report that could do
so.
The Half Year Report for the six-month period to 31 October 2019
has not been audited or reviewed by the Auditors. The Half Year
Report for the six-month period to 31 October 2019 was approved by
the Board on 11 December 2019.
On behalf of the Board
Sarah Bates
Chair
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
STATEMENT OF COMPREHENSIVE INCOME
for the six months ended 31 October 2019
(Unaudited) (Audited)
----------------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------
Six months ended Six months ended Year ended
31 October 2019 31 October 2018 30 April 2019
---------------------------- ----------------------------- ------------------------------
Note Revenue Capital Total Revenue Capital Total Revenue Capital Total
Return Return Return Return Return Return Return Return Return
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
------------------- ----- -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- --------- --------- -------- ---------
Investment
income 2 8,475 - 8,475 6,683 - 6,683 11,965 - 11,965
Other operating
income 2 776 - 776 421 - 421 1,105 - 1,105
Gains on
investments
held at fair
value 3 - 43,751 43,751 - 126,483 126,483 - 393,226 393,226
Net(losses)/gains
on derivatives 4 - (6,556) (6,556) - 4,604 4,604 - 1,470 1,470
Other currency
gains 5 - 2,710 2,710 - 4,710 4,710 - 1,913 1,913
------------------- ----- -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- --------- --------- -------- ---------
Total income 9,251 39,905 49,156 7,104 135,797 142,901 13,070 396,609 409,679
------------------- ----- -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- --------- --------- -------- ---------
Expenses
Investment
management
fee 6 (9,009) - (9,009) (7,588) - (7,588) (15,341) - (15,341)
Performance
fee 6 - - - - (1,903) (1,903) - (6,644) (6,644)
Other
administrative
expenses 7 (464) - (464) (920) - (920) (1,140) - (1,140)
Total expenses (9,473) - (9,473) (8,508) (1,903) (10,411) (16,481) (6,644) (23,125)
------------------- ----- -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- --------- --------- -------- ---------
(Loss)/profit
before finance
costs and
tax (222) 39,905 39,683 (1,404) 133,894 132,490 (3,411) 389,965 386,554
Finance costs (648) - (648) (404) - (404) (1,090) - (1,090)
(Loss)/profit
before tax (870) 39,905 39,035 (1,808) 133,894 132,086 (4,501) 389,965 385,464
Tax (823) - (823) (1,030) - (1,030) (1,827) - (1,827)
------------------- ----- -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- --------- --------- -------- ---------
Net (loss)/profit
for the period
and total
comprehensive
(expense)/income (1,693) 39,905 38,212 (2,838) 133,894 131,056 (6,328) 389,965 383,637
------------------- ----- -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- --------- --------- -------- ---------
(Losses)/earnings
per ordinary
share (basic)
(pence) 9 (1.27) 29.82 28.55 (2.12) 100.06 97.94 (4.73) 291.41 286.68
------------------- ----- -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- --------- --------- -------- ---------
The total column of this statement represents the Company's
Statement of Comprehensive Income, prepared in accordance with IFRS
as adopted by the European Union.
The revenue return and capital return columns are supplementary
to this and are prepared under guidance published by the
Association of Investment Companies.
All items in the above statement derive from continuing
operations.
The Company does not have any other comprehensive income.
BALANCE SHEET
as at 31 October 2019
(Unaudited) (Unaudited) (Audited)
31 October 2019 31 October 2018 30 April 2019
Note GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
--------------------------- ----- ------------------- ----------------- ---------------------
Non-current assets
Investments held
at fair value
through profit
or loss 1,858,077 1,601,029 1,803,242
--------------------------- ----- ------------------- ----------------- ---------------------
Current assets
Derivative financial
instruments 925 2,881 150
Receivables 24,191 8,839 36,494
Overseas tax recoverable 374 39 69
Cash and cash
equivalents 8 163,462 153,910 194,544
--------------------------- ----- ------------------- ----------------- ---------------------
188,952 165,669 231,257
--------------------------- ----- ------------------- ----------------- ---------------------
Total assets 2,047,029 1,766,698 2,034,499
--------------------------- ----- ------------------- ----------------- ---------------------
Current liabilities
Payables (14,759) (29,337) (44,775)
Bank loans* (55,179) (54,296) -
Bank overdraft 8 (3,233) - (391)
--------------------------- ----- ------------------- ----------------- ---------------------
(73,171) (83,633) (45,166)
--------------------------- ----- ------------------- ----------------- ---------------------
Non-current liabilities
Bank loans* - - (53,687)
--------------------------- ----- ------------------- ----------------- ---------------------
Net assets 1,973,858 1,683,065 1,935,646
--------------------------- ----- ------------------- ----------------- ---------------------
Equity attributable
to equity shareholders
Share capital 10 33,456 33,456 33,456
Capital redemption
reserve 12,802 12,802 12,802
Share premium 157,868 157,868 157,868
Special non-distributable
reserve 7,536 7,536 7,536
Capital reserves 1,858,100 1,562,124 1,818,195
Revenue reserve (95,904) (90,721) (94,211)
--------------------------- ----- ------------------- ----------------- ---------------------
Total equity 1,973,858 1,683,065 1,935,646
--------------------------- ----- ------------------- ----------------- ---------------------
Net asset value
per ordinary share
(pence) 11 1474.95 1257.66 1446.40
--------------------------- ----- ------------------- ----------------- ---------------------
*As detailed within the Corporate Matters Section.
STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN EQUITY
for the six months ended 31 October 2019
(Unaudited) Six months ended 31 October 2019
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Special
Capital non-
Share redemption Share distributable Capital Revenue
capital reserve premium reserve reserves reserve Total
Note GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
----------------------- ----- --------- ------------ --------- --------------- ---------- --------- ----------
Total equity at
30 April 2019 33,456 12,802 157,868 7,536 1,818,195 (94,211) 1,935,646
Total comprehensive
income/(expense):
Profit/(loss) for
the period to
31 October 2019 9 - - - - 39,905 (1,693) 38,212
----------------------- ----- --------- ------------ --------- --------------- ---------- --------- ----------
Total equity at
31 October 2019 33,456 12,802 157,868 7,536 1,858,100 (95,904) 1,973,858
----------------------- ----- --------- ------------ --------- --------------- ---------- --------- ----------
(Unaudited) Six months ended 31 October 2018
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Special
Capital non-
Share redemption Share distributable Capital Revenue
capital reserve premium reserve reserves reserve Total
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
----------------------- ----- --------- ------------ --------- --------------- ---------- --------- ----------
Total equity at
30 April 2018 33,449 12,802 157,477 7,536 1,428,230 (87,883) 1,551,611
Total comprehensive
income/(expense):
Profit/(loss) for
the period to 31
October 2018 9 - - - - 133,894 (2,838) 131,056
Transactions with
owners, recorded
directly to equity:
Issue of ordinary
shares 10 7 - 391 - - - 398
----------------------- ----- --------- ------------ --------- --------------- ---------- --------- ----------
Total equity at
31 October 2018 33,456 12,802 157,868 7,536 1,562,124 (90,721) 1,683,065
----------------------- ----- --------- ------------ --------- --------------- ---------- --------- ----------
(Audited) Year ended 30 April 2019
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Special
Capital non-
Share redemption Share distributable Capital Revenue
capital reserve premium reserve reserves reserve Total
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
----------------------- ----- --------- ------------ --------- --------------- ---------- --------- ----------
Total equity at
30 April 2018 33,449 12,802 157,477 7,536 1,428,230 (87,883) 1,551,611
Total comprehensive
income(/expense):
Profit/(loss) for
the year to 30 April
2019 9 - - - - 389,965 (6,328) 383,637
Transactions with
owners, recorded
directly to equity:
Issue of ordinary
shares 10 7 - 391 - - - 398
----------------------- ----- --------- ------------ --------- --------------- ---------- --------- ----------
Total equity at
30 April 2019 33,456 12,802 157,868 7,536 1,818,195 (94,211) 1,935,646
----------------------- ----- --------- ------------ --------- --------------- ---------- --------- ----------
Note - Share capital, Capital redemption reserve, Share premium
and Special non-distributable reserve are all non-distributable.
Capital reserves and revenue reserve are distributable.
CASH FLOW STATEMENT
for the six months ended 31 October 2019
(Unaudited) (Audited)
-------------------------- ---------------
Six months Six months
ended ended
31 October 31 October Year ended
2019 2018 30 April 2019
Note GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
------------------------------- ----- ------------ ------------ ---------------
Cash flows from operating
activities
Profit before tax 39,035 132,086 385,464
Adjustment:
Gains on investments
held at fair value through
profit or loss 3 (43,751) (126,483) (393,226)
Losses/(gains) on derivative
financial instruments 4 6,556 (4,604) (1,470)
Proceeds of disposal
on investments 725,483 601,385 1,228,104
Purchases of investments (743,883) (563,021) (1,145,393)
Proceeds on disposal
of derivative financial
instruments - 18,303 23,134
Purchases of derivative
financial instruments (7,331) (14,211) (19,445)
Decrease/(increase)
in receivables 176 86 (329)
Decrease in payables (10,573) (9,154) (773)
Overseas tax (1,128) (1,050) (1,877)
Foreign exchange gains 5 (2,710) (4,710) (1,913)
------------------------------- ----- ------------ ------------ ---------------
Net cash(used in)/ generated
from operating activities (38,126) 28,627 72,276
Cash flows from financing
activities
Loans repaid - (30,621) (36,471)
Loans drawn - 52,847 52,847
Issue of ordinary shares 10 - 398 398
------------------------------- ----- ------------ ------------ ---------------
Net cash generated from
financing activities - 22,624 16,774
------------------------------- ----- ------------ ------------ ---------------
Net (decrease)/increase
in cash and cash equivalents (38,126) 51,251 89,050
Cash and cash equivalents
at the beginning of
the period 194,153 101,156 101,156
Effect of foreign exchange
rate changes 4,202 1,503 3,947
------------------------------- ----- ------------ ------------ ---------------
Cash and cash equivalents
at the end of the period 160,229 153,910 194,153
------------------------------- ----- ------------ ------------ ---------------
Reconciliation of cash
and cash equivalents
to the Balance Sheet
is as follows:
------------------------------- ----- ------------ ------------ ---------------
Cash at bank 103,417 153,910 194,153
BlackRock's Institutional
Cash Series plc (US
Treasury Fund), money
market fund 56,812 - -
------------------------------- ----- ------------ ------------ ---------------
Cash and cash equivalents 8 160,229 153,910 194,153
------------------------------- ----- ------------ ------------ ---------------
NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
for the six months ended 31 October 2019
1. GENERAL INFORMATION
The financial statements comprise the unaudited results for
Polar Capital Technology Trust Plc for the six-month period to 31
October 2019.
The unaudited financial statements to 31 October 2019 have been
prepared in accordance with International Accounting Standard 34
"Interim Financial Reporting" and the accounting policies set out
in the statutory annual financial statements of the Company for the
year ended 30 April 2019. These accounting policies are based on
International Financial Reporting Standards ("IFRS"), which
comprise standards and interpretations approved by the
International Accounting Standards Board ("IASB") and the
International Accounting Standards Committee ("IASC"), as adopted
by the European Union.
Where presentational guidance set out in the Statement of
Recommend Practice ("the SORP") for investment trusts issued by the
Association of Investment Companies in October 2019 is consistent
with the requirements of International Financial Reporting
Standards, the financial statements have been prepared on a basis
compliant with the recommendations of the SORP.
The financial information in this Half Year Report does not
constitute statutory accounts as defined in section 434 of the
Companies Act 2006. The financial information for the six-month
periods ended 31 October 2019 and 31 October 2018 has not been
audited. The figures and financial information for the year ended
30 April 2019 are an extract from the latest published financial
statements and do not constitute statutory accounts for that year.
Full statutory accounts for the year ended 30 April 2019, prepared
under IFRS, including the report of the auditors which was
unqualified, did not draw attention to any matters by way of
emphasis and did not contain a statement under section 498 of the
Companies Act 2006, have been delivered to the Registrar of
Companies.
The accounting policies have not varied from those described in
the Annual Report for the year ended 30 April 2019.
The following new IFRS became effective for annual periods
beginning on or after 1 January 2019. The adoption of these
standards and interpretations have not had a material impact on the
financial statements of the Company:
IFRS 16 Leases
As the Company neither holds, trades nor has any lease
obligations of any type, the provisions of this standard are not
expected to have a material impact on the financial statements.
IFRS 9 (Amended) Prepayment Features with Negative
Compensation
Negative compensation arises where the contractual terms permit
a borrower to prepay the instrument before its contractual
maturity, but the prepayment amount could be less than unpaid
amounts of principal and interest. The Company has no such terms in
any of its loan agreements in place and the amendment are not
expected to have any impact on the financial statements.
IFRIC 23 Uncertainty over Income Tax Treatments
The interpretation provides guidance on considering uncertain
tax treatments in relation to taxable profit or loss and does not
add any new disclosures. The Company complies with all relevant tax
laws where applicable and the provisions of this interpretation are
not expected to have a material impact on the financial
statements.
IAS 19 (amended) Employee Benefits
As the Company has no employees, the amendment to this standard
are not expected to have any impact on the financial
statements.
IAS 28 (amended) Investments in Associates and Joint
Ventures
As the Company has no investment in associates or joint
ventures, the amendment to this standard are not expected to have
any impact on the financial statements.
Annual Improvement Cycles 2015-2017 (Amendments)
This makes narrow-scope amendments to four IFRS Standards: IFRS
3 Business Combinations, IFRS 11 Joint Arrangements, IAS 12 Incomes
Taxes and IAS 23 Borrowing costs. These limited amendments are not
expected to have any impact on the financial statements.
At the date of authorisation of the Company's financial
statements, the following new IFRSs that potentially impact the
Company are in issue but are not yet effective and have not been
applied in these financial statements:
Effective for periods commencing on or after 1 January 2020:
IFRS 3 Business combinations (amended)
IAS 1 and IAS 8 Definition of Material (amended)
IAS 1 IAS 8 Definition of Material (amended)
References to the conceptual Framework in IFRS Standards
(amended)
Effective for periods commencing on or after 1 January 2021:
IFRS 17 Insurance Contracts (issued on 18 May 2017)
The financial statements are presented in Pounds Sterling and
all values are rounded to the nearest thousand pounds (GBP'000),
except where otherwise stated.
The majority of the Company's investments are in US Dollars, the
level of which varies from time to time. The Board considers the
functional currency to be Sterling. In arriving at this conclusion,
the Board considered that Sterling is the most relevant to the
majority of the Company's shareholders and creditors and the
currency in which the majority of the Company's operating expense
are paid.
2. INCOME
(Unaudited) (Unaudited)
For the For the (Audited)
six months six months For the
ended ended Year ended
31 October 31 October 30 April
2019 2018 2019
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
-------------------------------------- ------------ ------------ ------------
Income from investments held at fair
value through profit or loss
Franked dividend 15 54 76
Unfranked dividends 8,460 6,629 11,889
-------------------------------------- ------------ ------------ ------------
8,475 6,683 11,965
-------------------------------------- ------------ ------------ ------------
Other operating income
Bank interest 686 421 1,099
Money Market Fund interest 90 - -
Other income - - 6
-------------------------------------- ------------ ------------ ------------
776 421 1,105
-------------------------------------- ------------ ------------ ------------
Total income 9,251 7,104 13,070
-------------------------------------- ------------ ------------ ------------
3. GAINS ON INVESTMENT HELD AT FAIR VALUE
(Unaudited) (Unaudited)
For the For the (Audited)
six months six months For the
ended ended Year ended
31 October 31 October 30 April
2019 2018 2019
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
--------------------------------------- ------------ ------------ ------------
Net gains on disposal of investments
at historic cost 141,028 174,592 291,338
Transfer on disposal of investments (149,309) (107,739) (197,726)
--------------------------------------- ------------ ------------ ------------
(Losses)/gains based on carrying
value at previous balance sheet date (8,281) 66,853 93,612
Valuation gains on investments held
during the period 52,032 59,630 299,614
--------------------------------------- ------------ ------------ ------------
43,751 126,483 393,226
--------------------------------------- ------------ ------------ ------------
4. (LOSSES)/GAINS ON DERIVATIVES
(Unaudited) (Unaudited)
For the For the (Audited)
six months six months For the
ended ended Year ended
31 October 31 October 30 April
2019 2018 2019
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
------------------------------------------- ------------ ------------ ------------
(Losses)/gains on disposal of derivatives
held (4,236) 4,593 2,361
(Losses)/gains on revaluation of
derivatives held (2,320) 11 (891)
------------------------------------------- ------------ ------------ ------------
(6,556) 4,604 1,470
------------------------------------------- ------------ ------------ ------------
The derivative financial instruments represent the call and put
options, which are used for the purpose of efficient portfolio
management. As at 31 October 2019, the Company held NASDAQ 100
Stock Index put options and the market value of the open put option
position was GBP925,000 (31 October 2018: Powershares QQQ with a
market value of GBP 2,344,000, 30 April 2019: NASDAQ 100 Stock
Index with a market value of GBP150,000). As at 31 October 2019,
the Company did not hold any open call options (31 October 2018:
Advanced Micro Devices and Facebook with market value of GBP11,000
and GBP526,000 respectively, 30 April 2019: nil).
5. OTHER CURRENCY GAINS/(LOSSES)
(Unaudited) (Unaudited)
For the For the (Audited)
six months six months For the
ended ended Year ended
31 October 31 October 30 April
2019 2018 2019
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
---------------------------------------- ------------ ------------ ------------
Exchange gains on currency balances 4,202 7,352 3,947
Exchange losses on settlement of
loan balances - (5,849) (5,850)
Exchange (losses)/gains on translation
of loan balances (1,492) 3,207 3,816
---------------------------------------- ------------ ------------ ------------
2,710 4,710 1,913
---------------------------------------- ------------ ------------ ------------
6. INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT AND PERFORMANCE FEES
INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT FEE
The investment management fee, which is paid by the Company
quarterly in arrears to the Investment Manager, is calculated on
the Net Asset Value ("NAV") on a per share basis as follows:
-- Tier 1: 1 per cent. for such of the NAV that exceeds GBP0 but
is less than or equal to GBP800 million;
-- Tier 2: 0.85 per cent. for such of the NAV that exceeds
GBP800 million but is less than or equal to GBP1.6 billion;
-- Tier 3: 0.80 per cent. for such of the NAV that exceeds
GBP1.6 billion but is less than or equal to GBP2 billion; and
-- Tier 4: 0.70 per cent. for such of the NAV that exceeds GBP2 billion.
Any investments in funds managed by Polar Capital are excluded
from the investment management fee calculation.
PERFORMANCE FEE
The Investment Manager is entitled to a performance fee based on
the level of outperformance of the Company's net asset value per
share over its benchmark, the Dow Jones World Technology Index
(total return, Sterling adjusted, with the removal of relevant
withholding taxes) during the relevant performance period. A fuller
explanation of the performance and management fee arrangements is
given in the Annual Report.
At 31 October 2019, there was no accrued performance fee (31
October 2018: GBP1,903,000 and 30 April 2019: GBP6,644,000). The
quantum of any performance fee will be based on the audited net
asset value at the year- end on 30 April 2020.
7. OTHER ADMINISTRATIVE EXPENSES
At 31 October 2019, the Company's other administrative expenses,
were GBP464,000 (31 October 2018: GBP557,000, 30 April 2019:
GBP902,000). From 1 January 2019, all research costs are payable by
Polar Capital. The Company's other administrative expenses
including research costs previously payable by the Company were
GBP920,000 for the six months to 31 October 2018 and GBP1,140,000
for the year ended 30 April 2019 respectively.
8. CASH AND CASH EQUIVALENTS
(Unaudited) (Unaudited)
For the For the (Audited)
six months six months For the
ended ended Year ended
31 October 31 October 30 April
2019 2018 2019
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
-------------------------- ------------ ------------ ------------
Cash at bank 106,650 153,910 194,544
Money Market Funds 56,812 - -
-------------------------- ------------ ------------ ------------
Cash and cash equivalent 163,462 153,910 194,544
Bank overdraft (3,233) - (391)
-------------------------- ------------ ------------ ------------
Total 160,229 153,910 194,153
-------------------------- ------------ ------------ ------------
As at 31 October 2019, the Company held BlackRock's
Institutional Cash Series plc - US Treasury Fund with a market
value of GBP56,812,000 (31 October 2018 and 30 April 2019: nil),
which is managed as part of the Company's cash and cash equivalents
as defined under IAS 7.
9. (LOSSES)/EARNINGS PER ORDINARY SHARE
(Unaudited) (Unaudited)
For the For the (Audited)
six months six months For the
ended ended Year ended
31 October 31 October 30 April
2019 2018 2019
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
----------------------------------- ------------ ------------ ------------
Net (loss)/profit for the period:
Revenue (1,693) (2,838) (6,328)
Capital 39,905 133,894 389,965
----------------------------------- ------------ ------------ ------------
Total 38,212 131,056 383,637
----------------------------------- ------------ ------------ ------------
Weighted average number of shares
in issue during the period 133,825,000 133,817,826 133,821,384
Revenue (1.27)p (2.12)p (4.73)p
Capital 29.82p 100.06p 291.41p
----------------------------------- ------------ ------------ ------------
Total 28.55p 97.94p 286.68p
----------------------------------- ------------ ------------ ------------
10. SHARE CAPITAL
At 31 October 2019 there were 133,825,000 Ordinary Shares in
issue (31 October 2018 and 30 April 2019: 133,825,000). During the
six months ended 31 October 2019, the Company issued no Ordinary
Shares into the market (31 October 2018 and 30 April 2019: 30,000
Ordinary Shares were issued at a price of 1330.0p per share, for
total consideration of GBP398,000). During the same period the
Company bought back no Ordinary Shares (31 October 2018 and 30
April 2019: nil).
11. NET ASSET VALUE PER ORDINARY SHARE
(Unaudited) (Unaudited) (Audited)
31 October 31 October 30 April
2019 2018 2019
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
------------------------------------- ------------ ------------ ------------
Undiluted:
Net assets attributable to ordinary
shareholders (GBP'000) 1,973,858 1,683,065 1,935,646
Ordinary shares in issue at end of
period 133,825,000 133,825,000 133,825,000
Net asset value per ordinary share 1474.95p 1257.66p 1446.40p
------------------------------------- ------------ ------------ ------------
12. DIVIDEND
No interim dividend has been declared for the period ended 31
October 2019 nor the periods ended 31 October 2018 or 30 April
2019.
13. RELATED PARTY TRANSACTIONS
There have been no related party transactions that have
materially affected the financial position or the performance of
the Company during the six-month period to 31 October 2019.
14. 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.
DIRECTORS AND CONTACTS
Directors (all independent Non-executive)
Sarah C Bates (Chair)
Charlotta Ginman (Audit Committee Chair)
Peter J Hames (Senior Independent Director)
Tim Cruttenden
Charles Park
Stephen White
Investment Manager and AIFM
Polar Capital LLP
Authorised and regulated by the Financial Services Authority
Portfolio Manager
Ben Rogoff
Company Secretary
Polar Capital Secretarial Services Limited
represented by Tracey Lago, FCG
Registered Office and address for contacting the Directors
16 Palace Street, London SW1E 5JD
020 7227 2700
Corporate Broker
Stifel Nicolaus Europe Limited
150 Cheapside
London EC2V 6ET
Depositary, Bankers and Custodian
HSBC Bank Plc, 8 Canada Square, London E14 5HQ
Registered Number
Incorporated in England and Wales with company number 3224867
and registered as an investment company under section 833 of the
Companies Act 2006
Forward Looking Statements
Certain statements included in this report and financial
statements 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 on pages 44
to 46 of the Annual Report. No part of these results constitutes,
or shall be taken to constitute, an invitation or inducement to
invest in Polar Capital Technology 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.
Half Year Report
The Company has opted not to post half year reports to
shareholders. Copies of the Half Year Report will be available from
the Secretary at the Registered Office, 16 Palace Street, London
SW1E 5JD and from the Company's website at
www.polarcapitaltechnologytrust.co.uk
National Storage Mechanism
A copy of the Half Year Report has been submitted to the
National Storage Mechanism ('NSM') and will shortly be available
for inspection at www.morningstar.co.uk/uk/NSM.
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) is incorporated into or forms part
of this announcement.
This information is provided by RNS, the news service of the
London Stock Exchange. RNS is approved by the Financial Conduct
Authority to act as a Primary Information Provider in the United
Kingdom. Terms and conditions relating to the use and distribution
of this information may apply. For further information, please
contact rns@lseg.com or visit www.rns.com.
END
IR DFLFFKLFEFBX
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