Redcentric
plc
Preliminary results
announcement for the year ended 31 March 2024
Redcentric plc (AIM: RCN)
("Redcentric" or the "Company"), a leading UK IT Managed Services
provider, today announces its preliminary full year results for the
year ended 31 March 2024 ("FY24").
Financial performance
measures
|
Year ended 31 March 2024
("FY24")
|
Year
ended 31 March 2023 ("FY23")
|
Change
|
Total revenue
|
£163.2m
|
£141.7m
|
15.2%
|
Recurring revenue
1
|
£149.1m
|
£128.5m
|
16.1%
|
Recurring revenue
percentage1
|
91.4%
|
90.7%
|
0.7%
|
|
|
|
|
Adjusted
EBITDA1
|
£28.3m
|
£24.5m
|
15.6%
|
Adjusted operating
profit1
|
£9.7m
|
£8.6m
|
11.8%
|
Reported operating
profit/(loss)
|
£0.9m
|
(£8.9m)
|
109.5%
|
Reported loss before
tax
|
(£4.7m)
|
(£12.5m)
|
62.7%
|
|
|
|
|
Adjusted cash generated from
operations1
|
£27.4m
|
£23.1m
|
18.7%
|
Reported cash generated from
operations
|
£23.2m
|
£14.8m
|
56.2%
|
Net debt1
|
(£72.4m)
|
(£73.0m)
|
0.9%
|
Adjusted net debt
1
|
(£42.0m)
|
(£35.6m)
|
(18.0%)
|
|
|
|
|
Adjusted basic earnings per
share1
|
1.99p
|
2.66p
|
(25.1%)
|
Reported basic loss per
share
|
(2.20p)
|
(5.94p)
|
63.1%
|
Percentage change calculated on absolute
values
1 This announcement contains
certain financial measures that are not defined or recognised under
IFRS but are presented to provide readers with additional financial
information that is evaluated by management and investors in
assessing the performance of the Group.
This additional information presented is not uniformly
defined by all companies and may not be comparable with similarly
titled measures and disclosures from other companies. These
measures are unaudited and should not be viewed in isolation or as
an alternative to those measures that are derived in accordance
with IFRS.
For an explanation of the alternative performance measures
used in this announcement and reconciliations to their most
directly related GAAP measure, please refer to Appendix
1.
Key Operational
highlights
· Acquisition
integration programmes materially completed, with the Harrogate
data centre exit completed in line with plan.
· The business is
generating strong organic growth driven by structural events and
effective cross selling.
· Q1 trading is in
line with the board's expectations.
· With these
results Peter Brotherton has announced that he will retire and step
down from his position as CEO as soon as a suitable successor is
appointed.
Key financial
highlights:
· Total revenue
growth of 15.2% to £163.2m (FY23: £141.7m).
· Recurring
revenue grew by 16.1% to £149.1m, with recurring revenue
representing 91.4% of the total revenue (FY23:
£128.5m/90.7%).
· Gross profit has
increased by 17.0% to £118.0m.
· Adjusted EBITDA
of £28.3m is 15.6% ahead of FY23.
· Adjusted
operating profit increased by £1.1m to £9.7m (11.8%
increase).
· Adjusted net
debt as at 31 March 2024 was £42.0m, excluding £30.3m of IFRS16
lease liabilities that were previously classified as operating
leases under IAS17.
· Reported
operating profit increased by £9.8m to £0.9m.
· Reported loss
before tax has reduced by £7.8m to £4.7m (FY23: £12.5m).
Peter Brotherton CEO
commented:
"FY24 was a very productive year with all the original
integration programmes completed, generating cost savings either in
line or slightly ahead of our expectations.
The electricity conservation measures are now yielding very
significant volume savings, which combined with secured lower
electricity prices from 1 April 2024, are expected to reduce
electricity costs by £8.1m in FY25.
The focus for FY25 will be to drive organic revenue, profit
and cash flow growth by cross selling the broadened product and
solution portfolio into the enlarged customer base, whilst also
capitalising on the structural opportunities presented by AI
related demand and the recently awarded VMware Pinnacle partnership
agreement
The business is now in a very different place to when I
joined in November 2016. All of the historical issues have been
overcome and the acquisitions undertaken in FY22 and FY23 have
significantly increased the scale and capability of the
business. Revenues and profits for FY25 are on course to be
double what they were pre the acquisitions and solid foundations
are now in place for sustainable and profitable growth. I
would like to thank my colleagues on the Operating Board and all
Redcentric's employees for their dedication, help and support
during my tenure."
Enquiries:
Redcentric plc
Peter Brotherton, Chief Executive
Officer
David Senior, Chief Financial
Officer
|
+44 (0)800 983 2522
|
|
|
Cavendish Capital Markets Limited - Nominated Advisor and Sole
Broker
Marc Milmo (Corporate
Finance)
Andrew Burdis / Sunila de Silva
(ECM)
|
+44 (0)20 7220 0500
|
Chairman's Statement
Overview and financial results
With all the original integration
programmes materially completed in FY24, the business has a solid
foundation on which to flourish. Following the acquisitions made in
FY22 and FY23 we are now seeing strong organic growth across all
our core service towers of Cloud, Connectivity and
Communication.
The agile culture within the
business has enabled us to move swiftly and take advantage of the
Broadcom acquisition of VMware, gaining several new customers along
with considerable market share gains. It is also pleasing to note
that several cross-sell opportunities are already being discussed
providing further penetration into our broad range of products and
services.
I am delighted to see that the
data centre assets acquired with Sungard are starting to be
recognised by a new larger customer base as a secure home for their
mission critical infrastructure. Our West Yorkshire facility
(previously referred to as Elland) and London West facility
(previously referred to as London Technology Centre) offer the
space, power and security that is in short supply, particularly in
London. We are very optimistic about the future of these data
centres particularly given demand is being driven by Artificial
Intelligence ("AI") processing needs that require high-density,
power-hungry equipment, both of which our primary data centres can
cater for.
Electricity costs have featured
regularly in the company updates since the acquisitions completed
in FY23. The management team have worked tirelessly to implement
efficiency measures that help to reduce our electricity
consumption, with the dual purpose of reducing cost and carbon
emissions. These measures have delivered impressive volume savings
of c.40% in the London West and Woking data centres. This combined
with reduced electricity prices locked in from 1 April 2024 means
that electricity costs are expected to reduce by c.£8m in
FY25.
The focus for FY25 will be to
continue to drive organic growth whilst leveraging the fixed cost
base, driving further productivity and efficiency gains. Whilst
organic growth is the priority, the company continually assesses
M&A opportunities in the market, and with £40m of its £80m
committed bank facility drawn at the date of this announcement the
company has significant firepower should an exceptional opportunity
present itself.
Final dividend
During the year, the board of
Directors of the Company (the "Board") declared an interim dividend
of 1.2 pence per share (FY23: 1.2 pence per share), with £1.9m paid
on 18 April 2024 (FY23: £1.9m).
A final dividend of 2.4p per share
is recommended by the Board and will result in a total dividend for
FY24 of 3.6p per share (financial year ended 31 March 2023 "FY23":
3.6p per share). Subject to approval by shareholders at the
Company's annual general meeting ("AGM"), this is expected to be
paid on 24 January 2025 to shareholders on the register at the
close of business on 13 December 2024 with shares going ex-dividend
on 12 December 2024. The last day for Dividend Reinvestment Plan
elections is 2 January 2025.
Board changes and people
On 24 July 2023, Helena Feltham,
Non-Executive Director, stepped down from the Board. On
behalf of the Board and all at Redcentric I would like to thank
Helena for her significant contribution over the last two years and
wish her all the very best for the future.
On 1 December 2023, Oliver Scott
was appointed as a Non-Executive Director (non-independent). Oliver
is a partner of Kestrel Partners LLP ("Kestrel"), the independent
investment manager, which Oliver co-founded in 2009. Kestrel is
Redcentric's largest shareholder. Oliver brings with him
considerable market knowledge alongside a breadth and depth of
skills and experience.
On 13 February 2024, Michelle
Senecal De Fonseca was appointed as a Non-Executive Director and
Chair of the Remuneration Committee. Michelle is an
experienced executive and Non-Executive Director in the technology
industry.
On 15 August 2024, Peter
Brotherton, Chief Executive Officer, notified the Board of his
intention to retire and step down from the Board. Peter will remain
in post until a suitable replacement is recruited. Peter joined the
group in November 2016 as Chief Financial Officer before taking on
the role of Chief Executive Officer in November 2018. Peter
initially navigated the business through a challenging period and
more latterly has played a key part in Redcentric's growth
strategy. On behalf of the Board and all at Redcentric I would like
to thank Peter for his very significant contribution over the last
eight years and wish him all the very best in his
retirement.
Outlook
The business has entered FY25 with
a significantly enhanced scale, strong organic revenue growth,
significantly reduced electricity costs and some very exciting
sales prospects. Management are now focussed on delivering
profitable growth to drive improved margins and cash generation,
whilst ensuring service levels are maintained to limit customer
cancellation and price erosion risks.
The factors above all lead to the
Board remaining optimistic for the future of the
business.
Nick Bate
Chairman
15 August 2024
Chief Executive's
Review
Strategic execution
FY24
has been marked by significant progress and growth as we continued
to focus on the three operational themes outlined in the interim
results: organic revenue growth, integration of the acquired
businesses and electricity conservation
measures.
The financial results reflect the
benefits of the first full year of trading contribution from the 4D
Data Centres and two Sungard trade and asset acquisitions made in
FY23. They also reflect the slightly delayed implementation of the
new cooling infrastructure at the London West data centre and the
closure costs of the Harrogate data centre.
Organic
Growth
The sales team continue to exploit
the opportunities arising from the acquisitions made over the
previous two financial years, with the enlarged customer base
presenting new cross-sell opportunities and the new product
offerings providing a wider range of services to the existing
customer base.
On a consistent basis recurring
revenues, excluding revenue from Sungard short term contract
cancellations and Harrogate customer cancellations, which we deem
unrelated to normal trading and are discussed further below, grew
by 9.0% over the prior ten-month period (Aug-22 to May-23 vs Jun-23
to Mar-24 with Aug-22 being the first comparable month following
the acquisitions) with net new business gains seen across all
service towers.
Revenues from cancelled Sungard
short term contracts amounted to £1.0m in the 12 months ended 31
March 2024 (12 months to 31 March 2023: £6.2m). Whilst it is
disappointing that we did not retain these customers following our
acquisition, cancelled short term customer contracts were excluded
from the calculation of the final consideration payable, and any
remaining Sungard short term contracts have now been converted into
longer term contracts.
The closure and decommissioning of
the Harrogate data centre was completed at the end of March 2024 in
line with our project plan and expectations. Whilst most of
the customers were successfully migrated to our West Yorkshire data
centre, four of the larger customers unexpectedly decided to cancel
their contracts. The annualised revenue and EBITDA from these
customers totalled £2.6m and £1.3m respectively. Final annual
savings from the closure of the Harrogate data centre were £1.4m,
in line with previous expectations and comprise lease cash cost
savings of £1.0m and operating costs savings of £0.4m, with these
savings effective from FY25. Although most of the cost savings have
been offset by cancelled customer contracts, the closure of the
data centre will reduce future maintenance capital expenditure and
technical debt.
VMware / Market
trends
As the marketplace continually
evolves Redcentric is eager to be at the forefront of any
significant changes. The recent acquisition of VMware by Broadcom
continues to present a substantial opportunity. Redcentric was
selected as one of seven UK Pinnacle partners of VMware, following
which we actively mobilised to acquire a wide base of new end user
clients and historical VM partners. These activities have proven
very successful with a gain of 30 new customers (of which 29 are
service providers) from Q1 FY25. This represents a material market
share gain and importantly represents significant future cross-sell
opportunities.
The successful onboarding of the
service providers has provided a well-formed new route to market
for our wide-ranging portfolio. Proactive engagement with these new
partners is in its initial stages but is already showing positive
outcomes with an initial 10 active opportunities under discussion
across our portfolio including MS licencing, Storage as a Service,
Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS), Co-Location and Contact Centre
solutions.
The continued emergence of AI is
generating considerable demand for high density data centre space
and available electricity. Our London West and West Yorkshire
facilities have the required infrastructure, space, and available
electricity to make us ideally positioned to meet these
requirements.
Our London West data centre is an
Enterprise grade facility that is built to a capacity of 18MW and
has 14MW reserved on the national grid. Given the scarcity of
available power in London in "Tier 3" equivalent data centres,
London West has become an attractive alternative to the larger
scale data centre providers, and we have recently seen a
significant increase in interest from Enterprise customers
requiring high density
infrastructure.
Our West Yorkshire data centre is
situated between Leeds and Manchester and is ideally placed to
serve the "Northern Powerhouse", with 11MW of power available.
There is ample power capacity and physical space to provide high
density infrastructure.
Our organic growth strategy can be
summarised into five key focus areas:
1.
Cross-sell multiple products into the recently acquired customer
bases:
· The majority of the recently acquired
customers take one product only.
2.
Cross-sell of new products into the historic Redcentric customer
base:
· Hyper-cloud, cyber security and
business recovery products have all been added by the recent
acquisitions.
3.
Cross-sell into the new VMware customer wins:
· A significant cross-sell opportunity
has been created by the new customer wins.
4.
Attracting new logos:
· Maximise the exposure opportunities
generated by the new VMware strategic partnership;
and
· Leverage the increased scale and
improved perception to attract new customers.
5.
Leveraging the newly acquired Sungard DCs to attract largescale AI
and Enterprise customer deployments:
· Our London West and West Yorkshire
facilities are ideally placed to meet demand for
AI.
Integration of the acquired
businesses
The integration work undertaken in
FY24 has concentrated on three main areas: closure of the Harrogate
data centre, supplier rationalisation and consolidation of cloud
platforms.
Closure of the Harrogate
data centre
The closure of the Harrogate data
centre was completed at the end of March 2024, with the fully
decommissioned building being handed back to the landlord on the
lease end date of 24 March 2024.
Supplier
rationalisation
During the year, the supplier base
was rationalised with two large Managed Services contracts
insourced and more favourable terms on a third contract achieved by
moving supplier. This has resulted in combined net annual savings
of £1.1m, being supplier savings of £1.7m offset by additional
staff costs of £0.6m.
Consolidation of cloud
platforms
As a result of the acquisitions,
we have acquired numerous cloud and backup platforms which
replicate existing Redcentric platforms. During the year a number
of these platforms were either consolidated or decommissioned
resulting in annualised savings of c.£0.5m. Now that resource has
been freed up from the Harrogate relocation project, which has seen
significant resource and cost drain in FY24, we expect to launch
further and more extensive consolidation programmes which will
result in further annualised savings of at least £0.6m.
As mentioned above, the
acquisition of VMware by Broadcom has created significant sales
opportunities, however, a material increase in the cost of licenses
has also presented a short-term cost challenge to the
business.
The increase in the VMware cost
base came at a time for Redcentric when a programme of platform
rationalisation was in full swing. With this programme progressing
well our VMware license requirements have been dramatically
reduced. This, combined with a large portion of the increased costs
being passed on to customers, has positioned Redcentric well to
effectively manage the impact of Broadcom licensing
changes.
Electricity sourcing & consumption
London West data
centre
An investment of £2.2m has been
made for new cooling infrastructure, significantly upgrading the
plant at the recently acquired site.
Whilst all the planned electricity
conservation measures were completed by the year end, the
installation of the cooling infrastructure at the London West site
was delayed by four-and-a-half-months due to the requirement of the
cooling system water to be decontaminated prior to the installation
of the new plant. The plant was eventually installed in November
2023 and was fully commissioned by the end of January
2024.
The new system is performing well
with non-productive power savings of c.40% to date, slightly higher
than our original expectations.
Based on the current volume
savings and the forward electricity prices secured, we expect to
achieve annualised volume savings of c.£1.5m, resulting in an
impressive payback of eighteen months and considerable savings over
the course of the assets expected fifteen-year life.
Woking data
centre
This is a third-party data centre
where we rent a large data hall rather than actively managing the
site ourselves. Our partners at this site have also recently
completed a major chiller replacement programme with their new
plant being live from 1 September 2023.
This is currently yielding
non-productive power savings of c.40%, in line with our
expectations. Based on the current savings being realised and the
anticipated electricity prices, we expect to achieve annualised
savings of c.£1.1m from this site.
The electricity conservation
measures are expected to generate year on year volume savings of
£2.8m. This, combined with significantly reduced electricity
commodity prices from 1 April 2024, is expected to reduce
electricity charges by £8.1m and will result in FY25 fully
reflecting the benefit of the acquisitions made during FY22 and
FY23.
Our electricity contracts have
recently been renegotiated which now expire at the end of September
2028. This enables us to forward buy power to September 2028
reducing our exposure to commodity price volatility and providing
our customers with a more certain cost base.
Financial results
We are pleased to announce the
following results for FY24:
· Revenues of
£163.2m (FY23: £141.7m);
· Adjusted EBITDA*
of £28.3m (FY23: £24.5m);
· Adjusted
operating profit^ of £9.7m (FY23: £8.6m);
· Reported
operating profit of £0.9m (FY23: loss of £8.9m);
· Reported loss
before tax of £4.7m (FY23: £12.5m);
· Net debt as at
31 March 2024 of £72.4m (31 March 2023: net debt of £73.0m);
and
· Adjusted net
debt as at 31 March 2024 of £42.0m (31 March 2023: adjusted net
debt of £35.6m);
*Adjusted EBITDA is EBITDA excluding exceptional items,
share-based payments and associated National Insurance. Exceptional
items are outlined in Note 2.
^Adjusted operating profit is reported operating profit
excluding amortisation of intangible assets arising on business
combinations, exceptional items and share-based
payments.
The net debt position is after
dividend payments of £1.4m, the payments of contingent
consideration of £0.9m for the acquisitions of Sungard DC's (£0.4m)
and 7 Elements (£0.5m), exceptional items largely relating to
integration and restructuring costs of £4.0m, working capital
inflow of £0.1m and capital expenditure of £10.7m.
Outlook
FY24 was a very productive year
with all the original integration programmes materially completed,
generating cost savings either in line or slightly ahead of our
expectations, albeit with the energy conservation measures
implemented later than anticipated. The business is seeing strong
organic revenue growth and is seizing the potential opportunities
provided by both the Broadcom acquisition of VMware and the
emergence of high-density AI demand.
The Enterprise grade data centre
facilities that were part of the Sungard DC acquisition are proving
to be a key differentiator and are attracting significant interest
from Enterprise clients.
The electricity conservation
measures, combined with a significant proportion of secured lower
electricity prices from 1 April 2024, means that electricity costs
(elevated over the past two financial years as a result of
geopolitical events) are expected to reduce by £8.1m in
FY25.
With both the synergy and energy
efficiency programmes completing during FY24, FY25 will be the
first full year that reflects the full benefit of the
acquisitions.
The focus for FY25 will be to
continue driving organic recurring revenue and EBITDA growth of at
least 5% and 7.5% respectively, whilst leveraging operational
gearing to deliver improved margins and cashflow
performance.
Peter Brotherton
Chief Executive
Officer
15 August 2024
Financial Review
|
Year ended 31 March 2024
("FY24")
|
Year
ended 31 March 2023 ("FY23")
|
Change
|
Total revenue
|
£163.2m
|
£141.7m
|
15.2%
|
Recurring
revenue1
|
£149.1m
|
£128.5m
|
16.1%
|
Recurring revenue
percentage1
|
91.4%
|
90.7%
|
0.7%
|
|
|
|
|
Adjusted
EBITDA1
|
£28.3m
|
£24.5m
|
15.6%
|
Adjusted operating
profit1
|
£9.7m
|
£8.6m
|
11.8%
|
Reported operating
profit/(loss)
|
£0.9m
|
(£8.9m)
|
109.5%
|
Reported loss before
tax
|
(£4.7m)
|
(£12.5m)
|
62.7%
|
|
|
|
|
Adjusted cash generated from
operations1
|
£27.4m
|
£23.1m
|
18.7%
|
Reported cash generated from
operations
|
£23.2m
|
£14.8m
|
56.2%
|
Net debt1
|
(£72.4m)
|
(£73.0m)
|
0.9%
|
Adjusted net debt
1
|
(£42.0m)
|
(£35.6m)
|
(18.0%)
|
|
|
|
|
Adjusted basic earnings per
share1
|
1.99p
|
2.66p
|
(25.1%)
|
Reported basic loss per
share
|
(2.20p)
|
(5.94p)
|
63.1%
|
Percentage changes calculated on absolute
values.
1 For an explanation of the
alternative performance measures used in this report, please refer
to Appendix 1.
Overview
The results for FY24 represent the
first full year of trading of the 4D Data Centres and the two
Sungard acquisitions, with FY23 containing approximately 9 months
trading from both acquisitions. The impact of this, coupled with
organic growth, resulted in improvements in total revenue,
recurring revenue, adjusted EBITDA and adjusted operating profit.
Reported operating profit has been significantly impacted by the
costs of exiting the Harrogate data centre and migrating customers
to other sites, primarily our West Yorkshire data centre. Despite
this, reported operating profit has improved by £10.0m reflecting
significant exceptional costs in the prior year related to the
acquisition and integration activity, coupled with the release of
£2.1m of contingent consideration in FY24 in relation to the
Sungard acquisition following final settlement with the
administrators.
Whilst still recording a reported
loss after tax for the year of £3.5m in FY24, this has
significantly reduced on FY23 by £5.8m representing the improved
trading performance of the Group at adjusted EBITDA coupled with
the materially reduced exceptional costs following the increased
acquisition-related spending in FY23. Net debt has remained broadly
stable at £72.4m (FY23: £73.0m), with adjusted net debt at £42.0m
(FY23: £35.6m), reflecting the capex investment in FY24 to deliver
future energy efficiency gains, coupled with the exceptional costs
associated with exiting the Harrogate data centre.
Key considerations in the
Financial information, but relating principally to the prior year,
include:
1. On 26
April 2022, the Group completed a refinance of its debt facilities
that were due to mature on 30 June 2022. The new debt facilities
consist of an £80m Revolving Credit Facility ("RCF"), £7m Asset
Financing Facility and a £20m uncommitted accordion facility and
are provided by a new four bank group consisting of NatWest,
Barclays, Bank of Ireland, and Silicon Valley Bank (now under the
HSBC group) (the "New Facility"), with the Asset Financing Facility
provided by Lombard. The New Facility had an initial maturity date
of 26 April 2025 with options to extend by a further one or two
years. The borrowing cost of the RCF is determined by the level of
the Company leverage. An arrangement fee of 75 basis points was
payable upfront, in addition to a commitment fee on the undrawn
portion of the new RCF, on equivalent terms to the previous
facility. The New Facility provides the Group with additional
liquidity to be used for working capital purposes and to fund
acquisitions. On 26 March 2024 these debt facilities were extended
at the Group's request, with a new maturity date of 26 April 2026.
As part of this extension of the RCF and Asset Financing Facility
term, there were no material changes to the financial debt
covenants or to other terms and conditions of the
agreements.
2. The acquisition on
7 June 2022 by the Group's trading subsidiary Redcentric Solutions
Limited of the consulting business from Sungard Availability
Services (UK) Limited (in administration) for £4.2m consideration
paid in cash. The business provides services in respect of
business continuity, cloud and infrastructure, cyber resilience,
disaster recovery and hybrid cloud transformation services
alongside the provision and operation of cloud related
services. This acquisition is considered to be a linked
transaction with the DC acquisition as mentioned in note 4
below.
3. The
acquisition on 27 June 2022 by Redcentric Solutions Limited for
100% of the share capital of 4D Data Centres Limited ("4D") for
£10.1m consideration paid in cash. The business provides
colocation, cloud and connectivity services to mid-market
customers. The primary purpose of the business combination is
to scale the Group's existing revenues in this area with
significant synergies expected as the acquisition is integrated
into the Group. On 28 February 2023, the trade, assets and
liabilities of 4D were hived into Redcentric Solutions
Limited.
4. The
acquisition on 6 July 2022 by Redcentric Solutions Limited of
certain business and assets relating to three data centres "DCs"
from Sungard Availability Services (UK) Limited (in administration)
for initial consideration of £10.1m paid in cash and a cash
prepayment of £3.4m, with contingent consideration at a maximum
potential value of £19.0m depending on customer retention and
certain performance criteria in the 12-month period
post-acquisition. During FY24 the contingent consideration was
finalised and £0.4m was paid.
The key financial highlights are
as follows:
· Total revenue growth of 15.2% to £163.2m (FY23:
£141.7m).
· Recurring revenue grew by 16.1% to £149.1m, with recurring
revenue representing 91.4% of the total revenue (FY23:
£128.5m/90.7%).
· Gross profit has increased by 17.0% to £118.0m.
· Adjusted EBITDA of £28.3m is 15.6% ahead of FY23.
· Adjusted operating profit increased by £1.1m to £9.7m (11.8%
increase).
· Adjusted net
debt as at 31 March 2024 was £42.0m, excluding £30.3m of IFRS16
lease liabilities that were previously classified as operating
leases under IAS17.
· Reported operating profit increased by £9.8m to
£0.9m.
· Reported loss before tax has reduced by £7.8m to £4.7m (FY23:
£12.5m).
Revenue
Revenue for FY24 was generated
wholly from the UK and is analysed as follows:
|
Year ended
31 March
2024
|
Year
ended
31
March
2023
|
|
Change
|
Change
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
|
£'000
|
%
|
Recurring
revenue1
|
149,091
|
128,461
|
|
20,630
|
16.1
|
Product revenue
|
5,507
|
7,144
|
|
(1,637)
|
(22.9)
|
Services revenue
|
8,552
|
6,069
|
|
2,483
|
40.9
|
Total revenue
|
163,150
|
141,674
|
|
21,476
|
15.2
|
1 For an explanation of the
alternative performance measures used in this report, please refer
to Appendix 1.
Total revenue increased by £21.5m
compared to FY23, impacted by the first full year of revenue
generated from FY23 acquisitions of 4D Data Centres and Sungard
(FY23 had approximately 9 months of trading of both
acquisitions).
Revenue is analysed into the
following categories:
· Recurring revenue has increased 16.1% to £149.1m (FY23:
£128.5m) reflecting a full year of revenue generated from FY23 acquisitions of Sungard and 4D Data
Centres (FY23 had approximately 9 months of trading of both
acquisitions), coupled with organic revenue growth.
· Non-recurring product revenue has decreased £1.6m to £5.5m
(FY23: £7.1m), with sales activity focused on higher margin
services revenue (see below).
· Non-recurring services revenue increased to £8.6m (FY23:
£6.1m), reflecting a shift in focus from lower margin product
revenue.
Gross profit
|
Year ended
31 March
2024
£'000
|
Year
ended
31
March
2023
£'000
|
|
Change
£'000
|
Change
%
|
Gross Profit
|
118,035
|
100,911
|
|
17,124
|
17.0
|
Gross Margin
|
72.3%
|
71.2%
|
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Gross profit increased by 17.0%
(£17.1m) reflecting the Group's increased revenue and contribution
from the full year of trading from 4D Data Centres and Sungard
Consulting acquisitions. Gross Margin % has increased partly due to
higher gross margin recurring revenue from colocation contracts
within the 4D Data Centres and Sungard acquisitions, coupled with
the impact of a shift in non-recurring revenues away from product
sales to higher margin services revenue.
Adjusted operating
costs1
The Group's adjusted operating
costs (operating expenditure excluding depreciation, amortisation,
exceptional items, other operating income and share-based payments)
are set out in the table below:
|
Year ended
31 March
2024
|
Year
ended
31
March
2023
|
|
Change
|
Change
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
|
£'000
|
%
|
UK employee costs
|
39,202
|
34,482
|
|
4,720
|
13.7
|
Office and data centre
costs
|
30,702
|
25,335
|
|
5,367
|
21.2
|
Network and equipment
costs
|
14,319
|
11,824
|
|
2,495
|
21.1
|
Other sales, general and
administration costs
|
4,273
|
3,364
|
|
909
|
27.0
|
Offshore costs
|
1,223
|
1,414
|
|
(191)
|
(13.5)
|
Total adjusted operating costs
|
89,719
|
76,419
|
|
13,300
|
17.4
|
1For an explanation of the
alternative performance measures used in this report, please refer
to Appendix 1.
Total adjusted operating costs for
FY24 were 17.4% (£13.3m) higher than prior year,
reflecting:
· Employee costs increased £4.7m (13.7%) primarily due to a
first full year of headcount acquired through the 4D Data Centres
and Sungard acquisitions;
· Office and data centre costs increased by £5.4m (21.2%),
primarily due to the impact of increased electricity costs as
several electricity supply contract renewals fell due during the UK
energy crisis, and the increase in the number of data centres
through the 4D Data Centres and Sungard acquisitions;
and
· Network and equipment costs increased by £2.5m (21.1%), and
other sales, general and administration costs are up £0.9m (27.0%),
both primarily due to the first full year of trading from the 4D
Data Centres and Sungard acquisitions.
Employees
|
Year ended
31 March
2024
(Number)
|
Year
ended
31 March
2023 (Number)
|
Variance
(Number)
|
Year-end headcount
|
|
|
|
UK
|
562
|
540
|
22
|
India
|
97
|
98
|
(1)
|
Total employees
|
659
|
638
|
21
|
Average headcount
|
|
|
|
UK
|
561
|
491
|
70
|
India
|
98
|
97
|
1
|
Total employees
|
659
|
588
|
71
|
|
|
|
| |
Adjusted
EBITDA1
Adjusted EBITDA is EBITDA
excluding exceptional items (as set out in
Note 2), share-based payments and associated National Insurance
costs. The same adjustments are also made in determining the
adjusted EBITDA margin.
|
Year ended 31 March
2024
|
Year
ended
31
March
2023
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Reported operating
profit/(loss)
|
852
|
(8,939)
|
Amortisation of intangible assets
arising on business combinations
|
5,229
|
8,183
|
Amortisation of other intangible
assets
|
781
|
590
|
Depreciation of property, plant
and equipment
|
6,089
|
4,636
|
Depreciation of right-of-use
assets
|
11,777
|
10,617
|
EBITDA
|
24,728
|
15,087
|
Exceptional income
|
(2,100)
|
-
|
Exceptional costs (comprised
of):
all items:
|
4,550
|
8,149
|
Acquisition fees
|
350
|
695
|
Integration costs
|
3,467
|
5,965
|
Restructuring costs
|
733
|
-
|
Costs relating to the settlement of an historical supplier
dispute
|
-
|
809
|
Cloud computing costs
|
-
|
680
|
Share-based payments and
associated National Insurance
|
1,138
|
1,256
|
Adjusted EBITDA1
|
28,316
|
24,492
|
1 For an explanation of the
alternative performance measures used in this report, please refer
to Appendix 1.
Adjusted EBITDA increased by 15.6%
to £28.3m, £3.8m higher than the prior year. FY24 includes a
full year of contribution from the Sungard and 4D Data Centres
acquisitions (FY23: approximately 9 months of
contribution).
Taxation, interest and
dividends
The tax charge for the year was a
credit of £1.2m (FY23: a credit of £3.2m), comprising an income tax
charge of £0.2m (FY23: a charge of £0.1m), and a deferred tax
credit of £1.4m (FY23: a credit of £3.3m).
Net finance costs for the year
were £5.5m (FY23: £3.5m), including £1.3m (FY23: £1.2m) of interest
payable on leases of which £1.3m (FY23: £1.2m) related to leases
previously recognised as operating leases under IAS17.
The Group paid a final dividend in
respect of the year to 31 March 2023 of 2.4p per ordinary share,
with a total payment value of £3.8m. This was made up of £1.4m cash
with the remainder in dividend shares.
During the year, the Group paid an
interim dividend for FY24 of 1.2p per share, totalling £1.9m (FY23:
1.2p per share).
A final dividend payment of 2.4p
per share will be paid on 24 January 2025, subject to approval at
the Company's AGM, to shareholders on the
register at the close of business on 13 December 2024 with shares
going ex-dividend on 12 December 2024. The last day for Dividend
Reinvestment Plan elections is 2 January 2025.
Net debt
During the year, net debt decreased from £73.0m to £72.4m as at 31 March 2024,
with the movements shown in the tables below:
|
Year ended
31
|
Year
ended 31
|
|
March 2024
|
March
2023
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Operating profit/(loss)
|
852
|
(8,939)
|
Depreciation and
amortisation
|
23,876
|
24,026
|
Exceptional costs
|
4,550
|
8,149
|
Exceptional income
|
(2,100)
|
-
|
Share based payments
|
1,138
|
1,256
|
Adjusted
EBITDA1
|
28,316
|
24,492
|
Profit on disposal of fixed
assets
|
(53)
|
-
|
Working capital
movements
|
114
|
(1,410)
|
Movement on provisions
|
(978)
|
-
|
Adjusted cash generated from operations
|
27,399
|
23,082
|
Cash conversion
|
96.8%
|
94.2%
|
|
|
|
Capital expenditure - cash
purchases
|
(9,259)
|
(6,374)
|
Capital expenditure - finance
lease purchases
|
(1,485)
|
-
|
Asset financing
proceeds
|
2,419
|
966
|
Net capital expenditure
|
(8,325)
|
(5,408)
|
|
|
|
Corporation tax paid
|
(174)
|
(670)
|
Interest paid
|
(3,615)
|
(1,795)
|
Loan arrangement fees/fee
amortisation
|
(209)
|
(291)
|
Finance lease interest
|
(1,328)
|
(1,248)
|
Effect of exchange
rates
|
(109)
|
(101)
|
Other movements in net debt
|
(5,435)
|
(4,105)
|
Normalised net debt movement1
|
13,639
|
13,569
|
|
|
|
Cash cost of exceptional
items
|
(4,240)
|
(8,258)
|
Acquisition of subsidiaries (net
of cash acquired)
|
(890)
|
(26,606)
|
IFRS 16 lease additions
|
(4,237)
|
(28,314)
|
IFRS 16 lease additions on
acquisition
|
-
|
(1,976)
|
Drawdown on Asset Financing
Facility
|
(2,419)
|
-
|
Remeasurement relating to lease
modification
|
-
|
629
|
Dividends paid in cash
|
(1,369)
|
(5,593)
|
Disposal of treasury shares on
exercise of share options
|
116
|
229
|
|
(13,039)
|
(69,889)
|
Decrease/(increase) in net debt
|
600
|
(56,320)
|
|
|
|
Net debt at the beginning of the
period
|
(72,965)
|
(16,645)
|
Net debt at the end of the period
|
(72,365)
|
(72,965)
|
1For an explanation of the
alternative performance measures used in this report, please refer
to Appendix 1. Exceptional items are outlined in Note
2.
|
As at 31
March 2022
|
Net
cash
flow
|
Net
non-
cash
flow
|
As at 31
March 2023
|
Net cash
flow
|
Net non- cash
flow
|
As at 31 March
2024
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Cash
|
1,804
|
(335)
|
(103)
|
1,366
|
1,873
|
(109)
|
3,130
|
RCF
|
-
|
(31,537)
|
(2,094)
|
(33,631)
|
(2,712)
|
(3,542)
|
(39,885)
|
Term Loan
|
(1,004)
|
533
|
(24)
|
(495)
|
474
|
-
|
(21)
|
Asset Financing
Facility
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(1,517)
|
(2,092)
|
(3,609)
|
Lease Liabilities
|
(17,445)
|
(21,543)
|
(1,217)
|
(40,205)
|
7,728
|
497
|
(31,980)
|
|
(16,645)
|
(52,882)
|
(3,438)
|
(72,965)
|
5,846
|
(5,246)
|
(72,365)
|
Included in lease liabilities at
31 March 2024 are £30.3m (FY23: £36.9m) of IFRS 16 lease
liabilities that were previously classified as operating leases
under IAS17.
Trade receivables and trade
payables
In the year, focus remained on
maintaining a strong ageing profile with a low level of aged debt.
At the year end, 87% of gross trade debt was current or less than
30 days overdue (FY23: 96%).
|
|
Year ended
31 March
2024
|
Year
ended
31
March
2023
|
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Current
|
|
14,008
|
18,450
|
1 to 30 days overdue
|
|
2,928
|
2,212
|
31 to 60 days overdue
|
|
1,794
|
557
|
61 to 90 days overdue
|
|
383
|
283
|
91 to 180 days overdue
|
|
320
|
194
|
> 180 days overdue
|
|
(43)
|
(240)
|
Gross trade debtors
|
|
19,390
|
21,456
|
Provisions
|
|
(1,200)
|
(1,251)
|
Net trade debtors
|
|
18,190
|
20,205
|
Trade debtor days were 36 at 31
March 2024 compared to 46 at 31 March 2023. Trade debtor days are
calculated as gross trade debtors divided by revenue (incl. VAT)
multiplied by 365.
Trade payable days were 36 at 31
March 2024 compared to 42 as at 31 March 2023. Trade payable days
are calculated as trade payables divided by total purchases (cost
of sales and operating expenditure) multiplied by 365.
Financing
|
31 March
2024
|
31 March
2023
|
|
|
Available
|
Drawn
|
Undrawn
|
Available
|
Drawn
|
Undrawn
|
|
|
£'000s
|
£'000s
|
£'000s
|
£'000s
|
£'000s
|
£'000s
|
|
Committed
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
- Revolving Credit Facility
|
80,000
|
40,000
|
40,000
|
80,000
|
34,000
|
46,000
|
|
- Term Loans
|
21
|
21
|
-
|
496
|
496
|
-
|
|
- Leases
|
35,588
|
35,588
|
-
|
40,204
|
40,204
|
-
|
|
- Asset Financing
Facility
|
7,000
|
3,625
|
3,375
|
7,000
|
2,309
|
4,691
|
|
122,609
|
79,234
|
43,375
|
127,700
|
77,009
|
50,691
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Uncommitted
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
- Accordion Facility
|
20,000
|
-
|
20,000
|
20,000
|
-
|
20,000
|
|
|
20,000
|
-
|
20,000
|
20,000
|
-
|
20,000
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total borrowing facilities
|
142,609
|
79,234
|
63,375
|
147,700
|
77,009
|
70,691
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
Uncommitted facilities represent
facilities available to the Group, but which can be withdrawn by
the lender and hence are not within the Group's control.
As at 31 March 2024, the Group was
party to £87.0m of committed banking facilities, comprising a
Revolving Credit Facility of £80.0m (net £40.0m utilised at 31
March 2024) and a £7.0m Asset Financing Facility (£3.6m utilised at
31 March 2024). As at 31 March 2024, these facilities are due
to expire on 25 April 2026.
The borrowing cost of the RCF is
determined by the Group's leverage and has a borrowing cost of 235
basis points over SONIA at the Group's current leverage
levels. A commitment fee is payable on the undrawn portion of
the RCF at 94 basis points, being 40% of the borrowing
cost.
David Senior
Chief Financial Officer
15 August 2024
Consolidated Statement of
Comprehensive Income for the year ended 31
March 2024
|
|
|
Year ended 31 March
2024
|
Year
ended
31
March
2023
|
|
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Revenue
|
|
|
163,150
|
141,674
|
Cost of sales
|
|
|
(45,115)
|
(40,763)
|
Gross profit
|
|
|
118,035
|
100,911
|
Operating costs
|
|
|
(119,283)
|
(109,938)
|
Other operating income
|
|
|
-
|
88
|
Gain on settlement of contingent
consideration
|
|
|
2,100
|
-
|
|
|
|
|
|
Adjusted EBITDA1
|
|
|
28,316
|
24,492
|
Depreciation of property, plant
and equipment
|
|
|
(6,089)
|
(4,636)
|
Amortisation of
intangibles
|
|
|
(6,010)
|
(8,773)
|
Depreciation of right-of-use
assets
|
|
|
(11,777)
|
(10,617)
|
Exceptional costs
|
|
|
(4,550)
|
(8,149)
|
Exceptional income
|
|
|
2,100
|
-
|
Share-based
payments
|
|
|
(1,138)
|
(1,256)
|
|
|
|
|
|
Operating profit/(loss)
|
|
|
852
|
(8,939)
|
|
|
|
|
|
Finance costs
|
|
|
(5,502)
|
(3,530)
|
Loss before taxation
|
|
|
(4,650)
|
(12,469)
|
Income tax credit
|
|
|
1,209
|
3,219
|
Loss for the period attributable to owners of the
parent
|
|
|
(3,441)
|
(9,250)
|
|
|
|
|
|
Other comprehensive income
|
|
|
|
|
Items that may be reclassified subsequently to profit or
loss:
|
|
|
|
|
Currency translation
differences
|
|
|
(117)
|
(97)
|
Deferred tax movement on share
options
|
|
|
-
|
47
|
Total comprehensive loss for the period
|
|
|
(3,558)
|
(9,300)
|
|
|
|
|
|
Earnings per share
|
|
|
|
|
Basic loss per share
|
|
|
(2.20p)
|
(5.94p)
|
Diluted loss per share
|
|
|
(2.20p)
|
(5.94p)
|
1 For an explanation and
reconciliation of the alternative performance measures used in this
report, please refer to Appendix 1.
The accompanying Notes form
an integral part of this financial information.
Consolidated Statement of
Financial Position as at 31 March
2024
|
|
|
31 March
2024
|
31 March
2023
|
|
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Non-Current Assets
|
|
|
|
|
Intangible assets
|
|
|
78,883
|
83,217
|
Property, plant and
equipment
|
|
|
21,422
|
17,131
|
Right-of-use assets
|
|
|
37,478
|
46,282
|
Trade and other
receivables
|
|
|
3,307
|
-
|
Deferred tax asset
|
|
|
2,503
|
1,076
|
|
|
|
143,593
|
147,706
|
Current Assets
|
|
|
|
|
Inventories
|
|
|
4,187
|
3,716
|
Trade and other
receivables
|
|
|
33,543
|
39,254
|
Corporation tax
receivable
|
|
|
53
|
48
|
Cash and cash
equivalents
|
|
|
3,130
|
1,366
|
|
|
|
40,913
|
44,384
|
Total Assets
|
|
|
184,506
|
192,090
|
|
|
|
|
|
Current Liabilities
|
|
|
|
|
Trade and other
payables
|
|
|
42,154
|
43,578
|
Bank loans and asset
financing
|
|
|
1,149
|
475
|
Lease liabilities
|
|
|
8,903
|
10,804
|
Provisions
|
|
|
892
|
1,841
|
Contingent
consideration
|
|
|
-
|
2,990
|
|
|
|
53,098
|
59,688
|
Non-Current Liabilities
|
|
|
|
|
Bank loans and asset
financing
|
|
|
42,366
|
33,651
|
Lease liabilities
|
|
|
23,077
|
29,400
|
Provisions
|
|
|
11,482
|
11,160
|
|
|
|
76,925
|
74,211
|
Total Liabilities
|
|
|
130,023
|
133,899
|
|
|
|
|
|
Net Assets
|
|
|
54,483
|
58,191
|
|
|
|
|
|
Equity
|
|
|
|
|
Called up share capital
|
|
|
159
|
157
|
Share premium account
|
|
|
75,649
|
73,267
|
Common control reserve
|
|
|
(9,454)
|
(9,454)
|
Own shares held in
treasury
|
|
|
(779)
|
(898)
|
Retained earnings
|
|
|
(11,092)
|
(4,881)
|
Total Equity
|
|
|
54,483
|
58,191
|
|
|
|
|
|
The accompanying Notes form an
integral part of this financial information.
Consolidated Cash Flow
Statement for the year ended 31 March
2024
|
|
|
Year ended 31 March
2024
|
Year
ended
31 March
2023
|
|
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Loss before taxation
|
|
|
(4,650)
|
(12,469)
|
Finance costs
|
|
|
5,502
|
3,530
|
Operating profit/(loss)
|
|
|
852
|
(8,939)
|
Adjustment for non-cash items
|
|
|
|
|
Depreciation and
amortisation
|
|
|
23,876
|
24,026
|
Profit on disposal of property,
plant and equipment
|
|
|
(53)
|
-
|
Exceptional income
|
|
|
(2,100)
|
-
|
Exceptional costs
|
|
|
4,550
|
8,149
|
Share-based payments
|
|
|
1,138
|
1,256
|
Operating cash flow before
exceptional items and movements in working capital
|
|
|
28,263
|
24,492
|
Cash costs of exceptional
items
|
|
|
(4,240)
|
(8,258)
|
Cash costs of
provisions
|
|
|
(978)
|
-
|
Operating cash flow before changes
in working capital
|
|
|
23,045
|
16,234
|
Changes in working capital
|
|
|
|
|
Increase in inventories
|
|
|
(471)
|
(2,324)
|
Decrease/(increase) in trade and
other receivables
|
|
|
2,411
|
(15,463)
|
(Decrease)/increase in trade and
other payables
|
|
|
(1,826)
|
16,377
|
Cash generated from operations
|
|
|
23,159
|
14,824
|
|
|
|
|
|
Tax paid
|
|
|
(174)
|
(670)
|
Net cash generated from operating
activities
|
|
|
22,985
|
14,154
|
|
|
|
|
|
Cash flows from investing activities
|
|
|
|
|
Purchase of property, plant and
equipment
|
|
|
(9,265)
|
(5,505)
|
Acquisition of subsidiaries (net
of cash acquired)
|
|
|
(890)
|
(26,606)
|
Purchase of intangible
assets
|
|
|
(1,479)
|
(869)
|
Net cash used in investing activities
|
|
|
(11,634)
|
(32,980)
|
|
|
|
|
|
Cash flows from financing activities
|
|
|
|
|
Dividends paid
|
|
|
(1,369)
|
(5,593)
|
Disposal of treasury shares on
exercise of share options
|
|
|
116
|
229
|
Financing of property, plant and
equipment
|
|
|
2,419
|
966
|
Interest paid on bank loans, term
loans and asset financing
|
|
|
(3,569)
|
(1,771)
|
Interest paid on leases
|
|
|
(1,328)
|
(1,218)
|
Repayment of leases
|
|
|
(10,638)
|
(6,901)
|
Repayment of asset financing
liabilities
|
|
|
(635)
|
-
|
Repayment of term loans
|
|
|
(474)
|
(508)
|
Drawdown of bank loans
|
|
|
16,500
|
55,500
|
Repayment of bank loans
|
|
|
(10,500)
|
(21,500)
|
Payment of loan arrangement
fees
|
|
|
-
|
(713)
|
Net cash used in financing activities
|
|
|
(9,478)
|
18,491
|
|
|
|
|
|
Net increase/(decrease) in cash and cash
equivalents
|
|
|
1,873
|
(335)
|
Cash and cash equivalents at
beginning of period
|
|
|
1,366
|
1,804
|
Effect of exchange
rates
|
|
|
(109)
|
(103)
|
Cash and cash equivalents at end of the
period
|
|
|
3,130
|
1,366
|
The accompanying Notes form an
integral part of this financial information.
Consolidated Statement of Changes
in Equity for the year ended 31 March
2024
|
Share
capital
|
Share
premium
|
Common control
reserve
|
Own shares held in
treasury
|
Retained
earnings
|
Total
equity
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
At 1 April 2022
|
157
|
73,267
|
(9,454)
|
(2,673)
|
10,551
|
71,848
|
Loss for the period
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(9,250)
|
(9,250)
|
Transactions with owners
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Share-based payments
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
1,044
|
1,044
|
Dividends paid
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(5,593)
|
(5,593)
|
Share option exercises
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
1,775
|
(1,546)
|
229
|
Deferred tax relating to prior
periods
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(37)
|
(37)
|
Other comprehensive income
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Deferred tax movement on share
options
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
47
|
47
|
Currency translation
differences
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(97)
|
(97)
|
At 31 March 2023
|
157
|
73,267
|
(9,454)
|
(898)
|
(4,881)
|
58,191
|
Loss for the period
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(3,441)
|
(3,441)
|
Transactions with owners
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Share-based payments
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
1,053
|
1,053
|
Issue of new shares
|
2
|
2,382
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
2,384
|
Dividends paid
|
|
|
|
|
(3,752)
|
(3,752)
|
Share option exercises
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
119
|
(3)
|
116
|
Deferred tax movement on share
options
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
78
|
78
|
Deferred tax relating to prior
periods
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(29)
|
(29)
|
Other comprehensive income
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Currency translation
differences
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(117)
|
(117)
|
At 31 March 2024
|
159
|
75,649
|
(9,454)
|
(779)
|
(11,092)
|
54,483
|
The accompanying Notes form an
integral part of this financial information.
Notes to the Financial
information for the year ended 31 March
2024
1
Summary of significant accounting policies
Redcentric plc is a public limited
company incorporated and domiciled in England and Wales, whose
shares are publicly traded on the AIM division of the London Stock
Exchange. Redcentric plc was incorporated on 11 February 2013 and
admitted to AIM on 24 April 2013.
The Group Financial Statements
have been prepared and approved by the Directors in accordance
UK-adopted international accounting standards ("UK-adopted
IFRS").
The principal accounting policies
applied in the preparation of those Financial Statements are set
out below. These policies have been applied consistently in the
current and prior period.
This Financial Information is
presented in pound sterling, being the currency of the primary
economic environment in which the Group operates. All amounts
have been rounded to the nearest thousand (£'000), unless otherwise
indicated.
The Financial information is
prepared on the historical cost basis except that contingent
consideration is measured at fair value.
Basis of preparation
While the financial information
included in this preliminary announcement has been prepared in
accordance with the recognition and measurement criteria of
International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRSs), this
announcement does not itself contain sufficient information to
comply with IFRSs.
The financial information set out
above does not constitute the Company's statutory accounts for the
years ended 31 March 2024 or 2023 but is derived from those
accounts. Statutory accounts for 2023 have been delivered to the
registrar of companies, and those for 2024 will be delivered in due
course. The auditor has reported on those accounts; their reports
were (i) unqualified, (ii) did not include a reference to any
matters to which the auditor drew attention by way of emphasis
without qualifying their report and (iii) did not contain a
statement under section 498 (2) or (3) of the Companies Act
2006.
The Financial Statements are
prepared on a going concern basis which the Directors believe to be
appropriate for the following reasons.
The Group and Company meets their
day to day working capital requirements from the Group's
operational cash flows, a Revolving Credit Facility, Asset
Financing Facility and leasing arrangements. The Revolving
Credit Facility is an £80.0m facility (net £40.0m utilised at 31
March 2024), while the Asset Financing Facility is a £7.0m facility
(increased to £10.0m in August 2024). £3.6m of the Asset Financing
Facility was utilised at 31 March 2024. In March 2024 the Revolving
Credit Facility and Asset Financing Facility were extended at the
Group's request, with a new maturity date of 26 April
2026.
The Directors have prepared cash
flow forecasts for a period of at least 12 months from the date of
approval of these Financial Statements (the "going concern
assessment period") which indicate that, taking account of
reasonably possible downsides on the operations and its financial
resources, the Group and the Company will have sufficient funds to
meet their liabilities as they fall due for that period, and will
comply with debt covenants over that period.
The Group is required to comply
with financial debt covenants for adjusted leverage (net debt to
adjusted EBITDA), cashflow cover (adjusted cashflow to debt
service, where adjusted cashflow is defined as adjusted EBITDA less
tax paid, dividend payments, IFRS16 lease repayments and cash
capital expenditure) and provisions relating to guarantor coverage
such that guarantors must exceed a prescribed threshold of the
Group's gross assets, revenue and adjusted EBITDA. The guarantors
are Redcentric plc and Redcentric Solutions Limited. Covenants are
tested quarterly each year.
During FY24 the Group has
continued to invest heavily in integration and efficiency
programmes which are expected to deliver significant benefits to
the business from FY25 onward. In addition, a significant
proportion of the Group's focus has been on the Harrogate data
centre relocation in favour of delivering other projects including
the further consolidation of cloud platforms. In anticipation of
the effect of these factors on continued covenant compliance,
particularly as the covenant tests are on a rolling 12-month basis,
in June 2024 the Directors reached agreement with the banking
syndicate to apply less stringent debt covenant requirements for
the quarters ended June and September 2024, despite not
anticipating a breach at these quarters. The purpose of this
amendment was to provide additional headroom on covenants in the
event of a severe but plausible downside scenario, and to provide
additional flexibility around the timing and financing of capital
expenditure for new customer projects. There were no other
material changes to the terms and conditions of the borrowings
because of this amendment. All requirements within the borrowings
facility agreement and subsequent amendments have been adhered to
in the respective quarters, with the banking syndicate further
agreeing not to apply a clause relating to the retrospective
inclusion of the January 2024 dividend into the December 2023
covenant calculation. This clause is no longer applicable from
April 2024 onwards.
The Directors' forecasts in
respect of the going concern assessment period have been built from
the detailed Board approved budget for the year ending 31 March
2025, and a forecast for the year ending 31 March 2026, and the
going concern assessment takes account of the debt covenant
requirements.
The forecasts include several
assumptions in relation to order intake, renewal and churn rates,
EBITDA margin improvements, the full year impact of energy
efficiency investment and improved electricity pricing (a
significant proportion of which is locked in through FY25 at
forward rates favourable to those achieved in FY24). Revenue
assumptions reflect levels achieved in FY24 plus organic growth and
have been adjusted for the enlarged customer base and additional
products following the acquisitions made in FY23.
Whilst the Group's trading and
cash flow forecasts have been prepared using current trading
assumptions, the operating environment continues to present several
challenges which could negatively impact the actual performance
achieved. These risks include, but are not limited to,
achieving forecast levels of new order intake, the impact on
customer confidence as a result of general economic conditions,
inflationary cost pressures including unexpected one-off cost
impacts, and the efficacy of energy efficiency measures under a
prolonged period of hot weather. In making their going concern
assessment in light of these risks, the Directors have also
modelled a combined severe but plausible downside scenario when
preparing the forecasts.
The downside scenario assumes
significant economic downturn over FY25 and into FY26, primarily
impacting recurring new order intake and non-recurring product and
services revenues as the Directors note the uncertainties
surrounding the timing and extent of non-recurring revenue from
quarter to quarter. In this scenario, recurring monthly order
intake is forecast to reduce by 30% compared to base case budget
and product and services non-recurring revenues reduce by 20%
compared to base case budget incorporating potential supply chain
issues, reduced investment from our existing customer base and
failure to expand market share as planned. In addition, the
downside scenario also assumes the new business obtained does not
achieve the gross margin planned, with a 10% reduction to the
planned gross margin achievement across all new recurring revenue
modelled.
An additional factor that can
impact the revenue and gross margin assumptions in the going
concern assessment period is the level of customer cancellations
(of an individual service or product). Whilst known, near-term
customer cancellations have been modelled, coupled with an
underlying level of customer cancellations based on historic
trends, there remains a risk that unexpected, medium to large
customer cancellations could occur in the near-term. The Group is
protected contractually largely with notice periods and
cancellation clauses, however a residual risk remains. An
additional level of customer cancellations has therefore been
modelled each quarter in the downside scenario to reflect this
risk.
Following the energy efficiency
measures delivered in FY24, electricity volumes are significantly
more predictable than they have been historically. In addition,
power prices are 90% fixed (at current volumes) through to
September 2025. However, there remains a risk that periods of
sustained higher summer temperatures, considering the impacts of
wider climate-related factors, could increase energy usage at sites
where new efficiency measures have been introduced, but not tested,
at these prolonged higher temperatures. A 5% increase in forecasted
usage has been modelled across a period of three months over the
summer to reflect this risk.
With respect to the remaining
operating cost base, whilst the Board approved forecast contains
detailed, itemised cost forecasts (including inflation), there
remains a risk inherent within the industry related to the complex
cost base and significant volumes of services procured that
unexpected costs and/or unexpected cost increases can at times
occur. In the severe but plausible downside scenario, an additional
quarterly cost shock has been modelled to reflect this risk. In
preparing the cash flow forecasts and analysis relating to debt
covenant compliance through the going concern assessment period,
the Directors have considered the nature of exceptional items and
are satisfied that such items meet the Group's accounting policy
and borrowings facility agreement definition of exceptional
items.
Given external market analysis
indicates an expectation that interest rates have stabilised, no
sensitivity on interest rates has been included in the plausible
downside scenario. Both the base case and severe but
plausible downside forecast scenarios continue to model the payment
of dividends, including a final FY24 dividend payment in January
2025. The Directors will continue to monitor the impact and timing
of dividend payments in the normal course of their quarterly
liquidity and debt covenant compliance monitoring.
In addition to the base case and
severe but plausible downside forecasts, the Directors have
modelled an overlay scenario in anticipation of an EBITDA
enhancing, significant new customer contract. This contract would
necessitate certain upfront capital expenditure, with revenues
following later in the forecast period when services commence. As a
result, in August 2024 agreement was reached with the Group's
lenders to increase the Asset Financing Facility limit to £10.0m.
The overlay scenario models the impacts of this potential new
contract into the base case and severe but plausible downside
forecasts, including the timing and financing of related capital
expenditure, and the resulting impacts on debt covenant
compliance.
Under the downside scenario
modelled, and including the new customer contract overlay, the
forecasts demonstrate that the Group is expected to maintain
sufficient liquidity and will continue to comply with the relevant
debt covenants without management taking mitigating actions. While
not modelled, mitigating actions which are within the Group's
control would also be available in the event of a severe downside.
Such actions include, but are not limited to, the rephasing of
discretionary capital expenditure, and further management of
discretionary cost areas such as marketing, training and
travel.
The Directors therefore remain
confident that the Group and Company have adequate resources to
continue to meet their liabilities as and when they fall due within
the period of at least 12 months from the date of this
Report.
Changes in accounting policy and
disclosure
The amendment to IAS 12 Income
Taxes for assets and liabilities arising from a single transaction
has been recognised in the current year with the prior year
comparative restated. There is no requirement for a full
retrospective application.
Adopted IFRS not yet
applied
There are no new standards,
amendments to existing standards or interpretations that are not
yet effective that are expected to have a material impact on the
Group. Such developments are routinely reviewed by the Group and
its financial reporting systems are adapted as
appropriate.
Basis of consolidation
The Group Financial Statements
consolidate those of the Company and of its subsidiary undertakings
drawn up to 31 March 2024.
Subsidiaries are all entities over
which the Group has control. The Group controls an entity when the
Group is exposed to, or has rights to, variable returns from its
involvement with the entity and has the ability to affect those
returns through its power over the entity. Subsidiaries are fully
Consolidated from the date on which control is transferred to the
Group. They are deconsolidated from the date that control
ceases.
Intra-group transactions, balances
and unrealised gains and losses on transactions between group
companies are eliminated on consolidation.
Critical accounting judgements,
key sources of estimation uncertainty and other areas of
estimation
In the application of the Group's
accounting policies, which are described in Note 1, the Board are
required to make judgements, estimates and assumptions about the
carrying amounts of assets and liabilities, without clear direction
from other sources. The estimates and associated assumptions
are based on historical experience and other factors that are
considered to be relevant. Actual results may differ from
these estimates.
The estimates and underlying
assumptions are reviewed on an ongoing basis and are consistent
with the Group's risk management and climate-related commitments
where appropriate. Revisions to accounting estimates are
recognised in the period in which the estimate is revised if the
revision only affects that period, or in the period of the revision
and future periods if the revision affects both current and future
periods.
Judgements
The Group has identified the
following items as a critical accounting judgement which would have
a significant impact to the amounts recognised in the Financial
Statements for the year ended 31 March 2024.
Exceptionals items
The Group presents separately, on
the face of the Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive Income,
material items of income and expenses, which, because of their
nature and expected infrequency of events giving rise to them,
merit separate presentation to allow shareholders to understand
better the elements of the Company's underlying financial
performance. An element of management judgment is required in
identifying these exceptional items. Additional information
is included in Note 2.
Going concern
Management have prepared reports
and financial models on the going concern assumptions when
considering the FY24 results and the Group's financial performance
and compliance with banking covenants for a period of at least 12
months from the date of approval of the Financial Statements.
In addition, internal financial projections including stress
testing have been prepared, with management applying severe but
plausible downside scenarios. An element of judgement is involved
in determining that there is no material uncertainty over the Group
continuing as a going concern. Additional information is included
in the basis of preparation section.
Estimates
There are no major sources of
estimation uncertainty at the end of the reporting period, that
have a significant risk of resulting in a material adjustment to
the carrying amounts of assets and liabilities within the next
financial year.
2
Exceptional items
|
|
Year ended
|
Year
ended
|
|
|
31 March
|
31
March
|
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Included within operating costs:
|
|
|
Acquisition related professional
and legal fees
|
|
350
|
695
|
Integration costs
|
|
3,467
|
5,965
|
Restructuring costs
|
|
733
|
-
|
Costs relating to the settlement
of a historical supplier dispute
|
|
-
|
809
|
Cloud computing costs
|
|
-
|
680
|
Total exceptional costs
|
|
4,550
|
8,149
|
Presented separately in the Consolidated Statement of
Comprehensive Income:
|
|
|
|
Gain on settlement of contingent
consideration
|
|
(2,100)
|
-
|
Total exceptional
income
|
|
(2,100)
|
-
|
Current
year
Exceptional costs
Acquisition related professional
and legal fees of £0.4m (FY23: £0.7m) are for professional services
linked to the significant acquisitions of certain business and
assets relating to three data centres from Sungard Availability
Services (UK) Limited ("Sungard"), the consulting business from
Sungard and 100% of the issued share capital of 4D Data Centres
Limited during the previous year. These costs, though incurred in
FY24, relate to the acquisition projects and include valuation
services in respect of establishing the fair value of acquired
assets and other associated professional fees. Cash costs were
£0.4m (FY23: £0.7m)
Integration costs of £3.5m (FY23:
£6.0m) principally relate to the exit of the Harrogate data centre
and relocation of both customer and internal platforms to our West
Yorkshire data centre in Elland, which accounted for £2.6m of the
integration costs. This activity was intrinsically linked to the
integration of the Sungard and 4D Data Centre acquisitions, which
left the Group with significant data centre capacity that required
consolidation. Following a period of assessment of which data
centres would best serve the Group going forward, it was determined
the Harrogate data centre and adjoining office space would be
exited at the end of the current lease on the 24 March
2024.
The relocation of the Harrogate
data centre was a significant undertaking for the Group, involving
dedicated resource for up to 12 months, including staff that were
seconded to the project, and diverted away from other value-adding
activities, for most or all of their time before returning to their
existing roles following the project's completion. It is expected
that £0.7m of cost allocated to integration costs in FY24 in
respect of this move relates to staff costs which would have been
included within adjusted operating profit in the prior year. In
total, £1.4m of third-party expenditure across contract resource
and other directly associated spend and £1.2m of staff salaries,
bonuses and associated taxes were spent on the move to migrate
activities to the West Yorkshire data centre. In addition, £1.0m of
cost was incurred to restore the Harrogate site to its original
condition following the customer migration. These costs,
where they relate to restoration and dilapidations activity, are
shown as a utilisation of the existing dilapidations provision for
this site (Note 3).
The remaining £0.9m of integration
costs presented within exceptional costs include £0.7m incurred to
decommission presences in two third-party data centres inherited
from acquisitions as part of the ongoing strategy to consolidate
the estate and £0.2m related to staff costs performing other
integration work to migrate legacy platforms.
Cash costs relating to exceptional
integration costs in the year were £3.1m (FY23: £6.0m).
Restructuring costs include £0.5m
of staff costs associated with a management restructure for staff
who have subsequently left the business, and £0.2m of related legal
fees. Cash costs were also £0.7m.
Exceptional income
During FY24, the consideration for
the Sungard acquisition was finalised. £2.5m of contingent
consideration was recognised as a liability in the prior year based
on the expectations at prior year balance sheet date. The final
position has now been crystallised on the anniversary of date of
the acquisition, in line with the purchase agreement. During FY24,
the final settlement totalled £0.4m, and therefore an exceptional
£2.1m credit has been recognised as a gain on settlement of
contingent consideration in line with the prior year subsequent
events disclosure. This is presented separately on the face
of the Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive Income.
Prior year
Exceptional costs
Acquisition related professional
and legal fees of £0.7m in FY23 were for professional services
linked to the three acquisitions in the prior year, as explained
above. Cash costs were £0.7m.
The integration costs in FY23
relate to costs incurred in integrating the three businesses
(Sungard data centres, Sungard Consulting and 4D Data Centres) into
the Group during FY23 and include costs relating to the TSA
(Transition Service Agreement) (£1.4m), migrating customers (£1.2m)
and employee restructuring relating to employees who had
subsequently left the business (£3.3m). There was also £0.1m of
professional fees directly relating to the incremental financial
statement audit procedures completed on the acquisition
accounting.
In the prior year, costs relating
to the settlement of a historical supplier dispute totalled £0.6m
for the crystallisation of the settlement and £0.2m charged by the
Group's legal advisors in respect of this matter. Cash costs
were £0.8m.
Cloud computing costs of £0.7m in
the prior year related to expenditure to achieve the original
implementation scope of the Group's major ERP implementation
programme, and the continued remediation of the Group's ERP system
(Microsoft Dynamics 365) to resolve a number of implementation
related process and system deficiencies that required correcting
post initial implementation. Cash costs were
£0.7m.
3
Provisions
|
|
Dilapidation
provision
|
|
|
£'000
|
At 1 April 2022
|
|
3,883
|
Additional provisions created
during the period
|
|
8,426
|
Provisions acquired from business combination
|
|
692
|
At 31 March 2023
|
|
13,001
|
Additional provisions created
during the period
|
|
351
|
Utilised during the
period
|
|
(978)
|
At 31 March 2024
|
|
12,374
|
|
|
|
FY24 Analysed
as:
|
|
|
Current
|
|
892
|
Non-current
|
|
11,482
|
|
|
12,374
|
FY23 Analysed as:
|
|
|
Current
|
|
1,841
|
Non-current
|
|
11,160
|
|
|
13,001
|
The dilapidations provision
represents the estimated costs associated with returning certain
leasehold properties to the original condition upon exiting the
lease. Given there is estimation in determining the quantum of
provisions to be recognised a third-party expert was engaged to
determine appropriate estimates. This is not considered to be a
critical estimate as it is not expected to be subject to material
reversal in future periods given the specialist input used to
inform the estimate, and the nature of the
estimate.
Dilapidation provisions have
maturity dates from 2024 to 2040 and are therefore discounted to
present value using a risk-free interest rate (UK Government Bond
rates) at the year end, depending on the length of the related
lease. The discount rates used to calculate the initial
provision ranges from 1.85% to 2.63%. After initial measurement, any subsequent adjustments to the
dilapidations provision will be recorded against the original
amount included in right-of-use assets with a corresponding
adjustment to future depreciation charges. The utilisation of
the dilapidations provision will be in line with the end of the
leasehold properties lease terms to which the provisions
relate. The increase of £0.4m through additional provisions
created has resulted from the net financing movement in the
year.
4
Intangible assets
|
Goodwill
|
Customer
contracts and related relationships
|
Trademarks and brands
|
Software
and licences
|
Total
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Cost
|
|
|
|
|
|
At 1 April 2022
|
52,416
|
65,030
|
449
|
5,570
|
123,465
|
Additions
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
869
|
869
|
Additions on
acquisition
|
8,224
|
15,100
|
200
|
-
|
23,524
|
Disposals
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(135)
|
(135)
|
Exchange differences
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(1)
|
(1)
|
At 31 March 2023
|
60,640
|
80,130
|
649
|
6,303
|
147,722
|
Additions
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
1,479
|
1,479
|
Disposals
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(393)
|
(393)
|
Transfers from property, plant and
equipment
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
261
|
261
|
At 31 March 2024
|
60,640
|
80,130
|
649
|
7,650
|
149,069
|
Accumulated amortisation and impairment
|
|
|
|
|
|
At 1 April 2022
|
-
|
50,893
|
449
|
4,397
|
55,739
|
Charged in year
|
-
|
7,983
|
200
|
590
|
8,773
|
Disposals
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(7)
|
(7)
|
At 31 March 2023
|
-
|
58,876
|
649
|
4,980
|
64,505
|
Charged in year
|
-
|
5,229
|
-
|
781
|
6,010
|
Disposals
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(393)
|
(393)
|
Transfers from property, plant and
equipment
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
64
|
64
|
At 31 March 2024
|
-
|
64,105
|
649
|
5,432
|
70,186
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
At 31 March 2024
|
60,640
|
16,025
|
-
|
2,218
|
78,883
|
At 31 March 2023
|
60,640
|
21,254
|
-
|
1,323
|
83,217
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Amortisation of customer contracts
has decreased by £2.8m to £5.2m in FY24. This is because one
large customer contract was fully amortised at the end of FY23,
while a second was fully amortised during FY24.
Customer contracts have a weighted
average remaining amortisation period of 8 years and 9 months
(FY23: 8 years and 6 months). There are no indicators of
impairment at 31 March 2024.
Software and licences include
£1.3m (FY23: £0.6m) of additions in relation to customer capital
expenditure.
Included within software and
licences is £0.5m (FY23: £nil) of assets financed under the Group's
Asset Financing Facility. The Directors have exercised
judgement in determining that there has been no sale of these
assets under IFRS15 and therefore the assets are financed rather
than representing a sale and leaseback arrangement.
Goodwill has been allocated to one
cash-generating unit (CGU) at 31 March 2024 whereas in the prior
year goodwill was allocated to two CGUs being IT Managed Services
and Security Services. During FY24 the Security Services
business, being the 7 Elements acquisition, was further integrated
into Redcentric infrastructure and operations. At the
year-end management no longer believe it capable of generating
independent cash flows from the Group.
Goodwill is tested annually for
impairment and, to confirm whether an impairment of the goodwill is
necessary, management compares the carrying value to the value in
use. Other intangible assets are tested for impairment
whenever events or a change in circumstances indicate carrying
values may no longer be recoverable. Consideration for any
impacts of climate-related risks to impairment is not deemed to
affect the overall conclusions in the medium to
long-term.
The value in use has been
calculated using a Board approved five-year forecast cash flow
projections to the period of 31 March 2029 comprising the detailed
Group budget for FY25 and latest detailed forecast for FY26, with
higher level assumptions applied for the outer years. A terminal
value based on a perpetuity calculation using a 2.0% real growth
rate was then added (FY23: 2.0% growth).
The key assumptions used in the
impairment testing were as follows:
· New
order intake consistent with that achieved in H2-FY24;
· Price increases in line with CPI;
· Overall gross margin percentage of c. 70% in line with
historic trends;
· Electricity costs driven by near-term contracted prices and
medium-term 3rd party price forecasts for
energy;
· Operating costs
(depending on nature) to increase in line with either revenue
growth or CPI, factoring in any near-term licence
inflation;
· Pre-tax discount rate of 10.87% (FY23: 11.2%) (post tax rate
of 10.51% (FY23: 10.84%)) estimated using a weighted average cost
of capital, adjusted to reflect current market assessments of the
time value of money and the risks specific to the Group;
and
· Terminal growth rate percentage is consistent with the market
the entity operates in for real growth.
The Group has also considered that
any cost implications of achieving net zero would not have a
material impact on the assessment period.
A reasonably possible adverse
movement to any of the above key assumptions made would not give
rise to impairment.
5
Property, plant and equipment
|
Leasehold improvements
|
Office
fixtures
and
fittings
|
Vehicles
and computer equipment
|
Assets
under construction
|
Total
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Cost
|
|
|
|
|
|
At 1 April 2022
|
8,341
|
1,182
|
23,264
|
-
|
32,787
|
Additions
|
700
|
1,787
|
2,838
|
180
|
5,505
|
Additions on
acquisition
|
3,330
|
6,725
|
1,665
|
-
|
11,720
|
Disposals
|
-
|
-
|
(909)
|
-
|
(909)
|
Exchange differences
|
-
|
4
|
4
|
-
|
8
|
At 31 March 2023
|
12,371
|
9,698
|
26,862
|
180
|
49,111
|
Additions
|
4,952
|
95
|
4,271
|
-
|
9,318
|
Disposals
|
(1,201)
|
(447)
|
(8,367)
|
-
|
(10,015)
|
Transfer to intangible
assets
|
-
|
(261)
|
-
|
-
|
(261)
|
Transfer from right-of-use
assets
|
-
|
-
|
1,618
|
-
|
1,618
|
Reclassification
|
180
|
-
|
-
|
(180)
|
-
|
Exchange differences
|
(8)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(8)
|
At 31 March 2024
|
16,294
|
9,085
|
24,384
|
-
|
49,763
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Accumulated depreciation
|
|
|
|
|
|
At 1 April 2022
|
5,449
|
622
|
21,344
|
-
|
27,415
|
Charged in year
|
1,107
|
1,450
|
2,079
|
-
|
4,636
|
On disposals
|
-
|
-
|
(71)
|
-
|
(71)
|
At 31 March 2023
|
6,556
|
2,072
|
23,352
|
-
|
31,980
|
Charged in year
|
1,715
|
2,051
|
2,323
|
-
|
6,089
|
On disposals
|
(1,201)
|
(447)
|
(8,365)
|
-
|
(10,013)
|
Transfer to intangible
assets
|
-
|
(64)
|
-
|
-
|
(64)
|
Transfer from right-of-use
assets
|
-
|
-
|
351
|
-
|
351
|
Exchange differences
|
-
|
(2)
|
-
|
-
|
(2)
|
At 31 March 2024
|
7,070
|
3,610
|
17,661
|
-
|
28,341
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Net book value
|
|
|
|
|
|
At 31 March 2024
|
9,224
|
5,475
|
6,723
|
-
|
21,422
|
At 31 March 2023
|
5,815
|
7,626
|
3,510
|
180
|
17,131
|
Vehicles and computer equipment
includes additions of £2.8m (FY23: £2.6m) relating to customer
capital expenditure.
Included within property, plant
and equipment additions is £3.1m (FY23: £nil) of assets financed
under the Group's Asset Financing Facility. The Directors
have exercised judgement in determining that there has been no sale
of these assets under IFRS15 and therefore the assets are financed
rather than representing a sale and leaseback
arrangement.
Similar arrangements previously
accounted for as a sale and leaseback arrangement in the prior
periods have been adjusted accordingly in the current year.
Included within vehicles and computer equipment is a
reclassification of £1.6m relating to financed assets that were
incorrectly included in Note 6 as a right-of-use asset on the prior
period Statement of Financial Position. A corresponding asset
financing liability has also been recognised following a
reclassification from a lease liability in the current period. As
the Directors do not consider the effect on the prior period
Financial information to be material, this has been corrected in
the current period.
6
Right-of-use assets
Most of the Group's right-of-use
assets are associated with our leased property
portfolio.
|
|
Land and
buildings
|
Vehicles
& computer equipment
|
Total
|
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Cost
|
|
|
|
|
At 1 April 2022
|
|
26,974
|
11,936
|
38,910
|
Additions
|
|
36,189
|
391
|
36,580
|
Additions on
acquisition
|
|
3,911
|
-
|
3,911
|
Disposals
|
|
(629)
|
-
|
(629)
|
Exchange differences
|
|
(1)
|
-
|
(1)
|
At 31 March 2023
|
|
66,444
|
12,327
|
78,771
|
Additions
|
|
699
|
3,541
|
4,240
|
Transfer to property, plant and
equipment
|
|
-
|
(1,618)
|
(1,618)
|
At 31 March 2024
|
|
67,143
|
14,250
|
81,393
|
|
|
|
|
|
Accumulated depreciation
|
|
|
|
|
At 1 April 2022
|
|
13,620
|
8,252
|
21,872
|
Charged in year
|
|
8,676
|
1,941
|
10,617
|
At 31 March 2023
|
|
22,296
|
10,193
|
32,489
|
Charged in year
|
|
10,231
|
1,546
|
11,777
|
Transfer to property, plant and
equipment
|
|
-
|
(351)
|
(351)
|
At 31 March 2024
|
|
32,527
|
11,388
|
43,915
|
|
|
|
|
|
Net book value
|
|
|
|
|
At 31 March 2024
|
|
34,616
|
2,862
|
37,478
|
At 31 March 2023
|
|
44,148
|
2,134
|
46,282
|
|
|
|
|
|
Of the £4.2m right-of-use assets
acquired in the year, £nil was funded using leases that would have
previously been classified as finance leases under IAS17
(FY23: £nil).
Included in the net book value of
land and buildings at 31 March 2024 is £8.2m right-of-use assets
for dilapidations (FY23: £9.8m).
7
Business combinations in prior period
4D Data Centres
On 27 June 2022, the Group's
trading subsidiary Redcentric Solutions Limited acquired 100% of
the share capital of 4D Data Centres Limited ("4D") for £10.1m
consideration paid in cash. The business provides colocation,
cloud and connectivity services to mid-market customers. The
primary purpose of the business combination was to scale the
Group's existing revenues in this area with significant synergies
expected as the acquisition was integrated into the Group.
Management considered signing of the share purchase agreement (SPA)
on the 27 June 2022 as the change of control and therefore,
acquisition date for the transaction.
The following table summarises the
acquisition date fair value of each major class of consideration
transferred:
|
£'000
|
Cash
|
9,842
|
Deferred
consideration1
|
162
|
True up payment
(deferred)2
|
119
|
|
10,123
|
1 The deferred consideration
was a delayed R&D claim refund due from HMRC which was to be
paid to the Shareholders on receipt.
2 The true up payment was the
additional amount due following the update to fair values at the
time of completion, when the original cash transfer was based on
estimates.
The Group incurred acquisition
related costs of £0.2m on legal fees, due diligence costs and
direct integration costs in FY23. These costs have been
included in exceptional items within the prior year column in Note
2.
The following table summarises the
recognised amounts of assets and liabilities assumed as at the date
of acquisition:
|
|
|
|
Fair value
£'000
|
Property, plant and
equipment
|
|
|
|
2,089
|
Customer relationships
|
|
|
|
6,300
|
Brand
|
|
|
|
200
|
Right-of-use assets
|
|
|
|
1,287
|
Trade and other
receivables
|
|
|
|
920
|
Cash and cash
equivalents
|
|
|
|
1,053
|
Deferred tax
|
|
|
|
(1,787)
|
Trade and other
payables
|
|
|
|
(1,647)
|
Deferred income
|
|
|
|
(764)
|
IFRS 16 leases
|
|
|
|
(1,976)
|
Provisions
|
|
|
|
(692)
|
Corporation tax
receivable
|
|
|
|
186
|
Total identifiable net assets acquired
|
|
|
|
5,169
|
Goodwill
|
|
|
|
4,954
|
Total consideration
|
|
|
|
10,123
|
The goodwill arising on
acquisition represented the future income from new customers, the
potential to cross-sell existing Group products to the existing 4D
customer base, as well as the assembled workforce which was
expected to increase the Group's competence in key growth areas of
the Security Services sector.
The fair value of the acquired
customer relationships was £6.3m. To estimate the fair value
of the customer relationships intangible asset, a multi-period
excess earnings "MEEM" approach was adopted. This approach
considered the present value of cash flows expected to be generated by the customer relationships,
excluding any cash flows related to contributory assets.
On 28 February 2023, the trade,
assets and liabilities of 4D were hived into the Group's trading
subsidiary Redcentric Solutions Limited. For the 8 months
ended 28 February 2023, 4D contributed revenue of £5.3m and
profits, before allocation of group overheads, share based payments
and tax, of £1.1m to the Group's results in FY23.
Sungard
Consulting
On 7 June 2022, the Group's
trading subsidiary Redcentric Solutions Limited acquired the
consulting business from Sungard Availability Services (UK) Limited
(in administration) for £4.2m consideration paid in cash. The
business provides services in respect of business continuity, cloud
and infrastructure, cyber resilience, disaster recovery and hybrid
cloud transformation services alongside the provision and operation
of cloud related services. Management considered signing of
the Agreement for the sale of assets as the change of control and
therefore, acquisition date for the transaction. No assets were
acquired, or liabilities assumed from the Consulting business
transaction.
Data Centres
On 6 July 2022, the Group's
trading subsidiary Redcentric Solutions Limited acquired certain
business and assets relating to three data centres "DCs" from
Sungard Availability Services (UK) Limited (in administration) for
initial consideration of £10.1m paid in cash and a cash prepayment
of £3.4m for a payment made to the administrators in advance for a
license to occupy on the three DCs, and contingent consideration
with a maximum potential value of £19.0m depending on customer
retention and certain performance criteria.
The DCs and Consulting
acquisitions were treated as a single transaction. The
resulting change due to this treatment as a single transaction was
that the goodwill from the acquisitions was considered in aggregate
rather than separately.
The following table summarises the
acquisition date fair value of each major class of consideration
transferred for the combined transaction:
|
£'000
|
Cash
|
14,320
|
Prepayment (paid in
cash)
|
3,369
|
Contingent
consideration3
|
2,540
|
|
20,229
|
3 The contingent
consideration was an additional amount based on an agreed sliding
scale threshold of customers committing to long-term contracts with
the business post-acquisition, determined by the recurring monthly
revenue value by customer and by each of the three data
centres. This amount was the Board's best estimate as at the
acquisition date of the amount due as contingent consideration,
discounted to present value.
The Group incurred acquisition
related costs of £0.3m on legal fees, due diligence costs and
direct integration costs in FY23. These costs have been
included in exceptional items within the prior year column in Note
2.
During
FY24, the contingent consideration was
finalised, and
the final settlement totalling £0.4m was paid. Consequently, a £2.1m
credit has been recognised as a fair value adjustment to contingent
consideration in exceptional items (Note
2).
The following table summarises the
recognised amounts of assets and liabilities assumed as at the date
of acquisition:
|
|
|
|
Fair value
£'000
|
Property, plant and
equipment
|
|
|
|
9,630
|
Customer relationships
|
|
|
|
8,800
|
Right-of-use assets
|
|
|
|
2,624
|
Prepayments
|
|
|
|
745
|
Deferred tax
|
|
|
|
(4,362)
|
Accruals
|
|
|
|
(185)
|
Other creditors
|
|
|
|
(293)
|
Total identifiable net assets acquired
|
|
|
|
16,959
|
Goodwill
|
|
|
|
3,270
|
Total consideration
|
|
|
|
20,229
|
The goodwill arising on
acquisition represented the future income from new customers and
the potential to cross-sell existing Group products to the existing
Sungard customer base, which was expected to increase the Group's
competence in key growth areas of the Security Services
sector.
The fair value of the acquired
customer relationships was £8.8m. To estimate fair value of
the customer relationships intangible asset, a multi-period excess earnings "MEEM" approach was
adopted, and this approach considered the present value of cash
flows expected to be generated by the customer relationships,
excluding any cash flows related to contributory assets.
The DCs earned revenue of £36.3m
and profits, before allocation of group overheads, share based
payments and tax, of £2.5m in the period since acquisition in
FY23.
The consulting business earned revenue of £0.6m and profits, before allocation of group overheads,
share-based payments and tax, of £0.2m in the period since
acquisition in FY23.
The net cash flow for the
acquisitions were as follows:
|
|
£'000
|
Cash paid for 4D
|
|
10,123
|
Cash paid for Sungard, including
prepayment
|
|
17,689
|
Less: cash acquired
|
|
(1,053)
|
Less: Piksel deferred
consideration
|
|
(153)
|
|
|
26,606
|
8 Earnings per
share
|
|
Year ended
31 March
2024
|
Year
ended
31
March
2023
|
Earnings
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Statutory loss
|
|
(3,441)
|
(9,250)
|
Tax credit
|
|
(1,209)
|
(3,219)
|
Amortisation of acquired
intangibles
|
|
5,229
|
8,183
|
Share-based payments
|
|
1,138
|
1,256
|
Exceptional costs
|
|
4,550
|
8,149
|
Exceptional income
|
|
(2,100)
|
-
|
Adjusted earnings before
tax
|
|
4,167
|
5,119
|
Notional tax charge
|
|
(1,042)
|
(973)
|
Adjusted earnings
|
|
3,125
|
4,146
|
|
|
|
|
Weighted average number of ordinary shares
|
|
Number
'000
|
Number
'000
|
In issue
|
|
157,371
|
156,992
|
Held in treasury
|
|
(693)
|
(1,391)
|
For basic EPS
calculations
|
|
156,678
|
155,601
|
Effect of potentially dilutive
share options
|
|
5,129
|
3,678
|
For diluted EPS
calculations
|
|
161,807
|
159,279
|
|
|
|
|
EPS
|
|
Pence
|
Pence
|
Basic
|
|
(2.20p)
|
(5.94p)
|
Adjusted
|
|
1.99p
|
2.66p
|
Basic diluted
|
|
(2.20p)
|
(5.94p)
|
Adjusted diluted
|
|
1.93p
|
2.60p
|
In line with the Group's policy,
the notional tax charge above is calculated at a standard rate of
25% (FY23: 19%).
9
Subsequent events
On the 14 August 2024 a
modification to the bank facilities was agreed to increase the
Asset Financing Facility to £10.0m to ensure adequate credit
availability for future investment relating to new customer
contracts. All other elements of the facility remained the
same.
Appendix 1 - Alternative
Performance Measures
This announcement contains certain
financial measures that are not defined or recognised under IFRS
but are presented to provide readers with additional financial
information that is evaluated by management and investors in
assessing the performance of the Group.
This additional information
presented is not uniformly defined by all companies and may not be
comparable with similarly titled measures and disclosures by other
companies. These measures are unaudited and should not be viewed in
isolation or as an alternative to those measures that are derived
in accordance with IFRS.
Recurring revenue
Recurring revenue is the revenue that annually repeats either under
contractual arrangement or by predictable customer habit. It
highlights how much of the Group's total revenue is secured and
anticipated to repeat in future periods, providing a measure of the
financial strength of the business. It is a measure that is well
understood by the Group's investor and analyst community and is
used for internal performance reporting.
|
Year ended 31 March
2024
|
Year
ended 31 March 2023
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Reported revenue
|
163,150
|
141,674
|
Non-recurring revenue
|
(14,059)
|
(13,213)
|
Recurring revenue
|
149,091
|
128,461
|
Recurring revenue percentage is the
percentage of recurring revenue as a proportion of total
revenue.
Recurring revenue makes up 91.4% of
total revenue in FY24, an increase of 0.7ppts from prior year
(FY23: 90.7%).
Maintenance capital
expenditure
Maintenance capital expenditure is the capital expenditure
that is incurred in support of the Group's underlying
infrastructure rather than in support of specific customer
contracts. This metric shows the level of internal investment the
Group is making through capital expenditure. As the measure
explains and analyses routine capital expenditure, land and
buildings (including any associated assets relating to dilapidation
provisions) and asset financing additions are excluded due to the
infrequency of this expenditure occurring. Customer capital
expenditure relates to assets utilised by the Group in delivering
Managed Services to our customers.
|
Year ended 31 March
2024
|
Year
ended
31
March
2023
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Property plant and equipment
additions - excluding additions on acquisition
|
9,318
|
5,505
|
Intangible additions - excluding
additions on acquisition
|
1,479
|
869
|
Right-of-use asset additions -
lease liabilities that would have been
classified as finance leases under IAS 17, excluding asset financing
|
1,033
|
391
|
Reported capital expenditure
incurred
|
11,830
|
6,765
|
Customer capital expenditure
incurred
|
(4,099)
|
(3,234)
|
Maintenance capital expenditure incurred
|
7,731
|
3,531
|
Maintenance capital expenditure of
£7.7m has increased by £4.2m (FY23: £3.5m) driven by additions to
PPE for efficiency measures in the data centres, primarily at
London West. Customer capital expenditure has increased to £4.1m
(FY23: £3.2m) to support revenue growth. We will continue to
monitor the Group's capital requirements and invest in the business
when appropriate.
EBITDA and Adjusted
EBITDA
Adjusted EBITDA is EBITDA excluding exceptional items (as set out in Note 2), share-based payments and
associated National Insurance. The same adjustments are also made
in determining the adjusted EBITDA margin. Items are only
classified as exceptional due to their nature or size.
The Board considers that this
metric provides a useful measure of assessing trading performance
of the Group as it excludes items which impact financial
performance such as exceptional costs and the amortisation of
acquired intangibles arising from business combinations, which
varies year on year dependent on the timing and size of any
acquisitions.
|
Year ended 31 March
2024
|
Year
ended
31
March
2023
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Reported operating
profit/(loss)
|
852
|
(8,939)
|
Amortisation of intangible assets
arising on business combinations
|
5,229
|
8,183
|
Amortisation of other intangible
assets
|
781
|
590
|
Depreciation of property, plant
and equipment
|
6,089
|
4,636
|
Depreciation of right-of-use
assets
|
11,777
|
10,617
|
EBITDA
|
24,728
|
15,087
|
Exceptional income
|
(2,100)
|
-
|
Exceptional costs (comprised
of):
|
4,550
|
8,149
|
Acquisition fees
|
350
|
695
|
Integration costs
|
3,467
|
5,965
|
Restructuring costs
|
733
|
-
|
Costs relating to the settlement of an historical supplier
dispute
|
-
|
809
|
Cloud computing costs
|
-
|
680
|
Share-based payments and
associated National Insurance
|
1,138
|
1,256
|
Adjusted EBITDA
|
28,316
|
24,492
|
Adjusted EBITDA increased to
£28.3m, £3.8m higher than prior year, with adjusted EBITDA margin
of 17.4% (up from 17.3%).
Adjusted operating profit
Adjusted operating profit is operating profit excluding
amortisation on acquired intangibles, exceptional items and
share-based payments. The same adjustments are also made in
determining the adjusted operating profit margin and in determining
adjusted earnings per share ("EPS").
|
Year ended 31 March
2024
|
Year
ended
31
March
2023
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Reported operating
profit/(loss)
|
852
|
(8,939)
|
Amortisation of intangible assets
arising on business combinations
|
5,229
|
8,183
|
Exceptional costs
|
4,550
|
8,149
|
Exceptional income
|
(2,100)
|
-
|
Share-based payments and
associated National Insurance
|
1,138
|
1,256
|
Adjusted operating profit
|
9,669
|
8,649
|
The EPS calculation further
adjusts for the tax impact of the operating profit adjustments.
This metric is used within the Group's dividend policy and is
therefore relevant for our shareholders. Share-based payments
are removed for adjusted operating profit as they are not
reflective of trading.
Adjusted operating costs
Adjusted operating costs are
operating costs less depreciation, amortisation, exceptional items,
share-based payments and foreign exchange. This metric shows the
day-to-day trading operating expenditure of the Group, excluding
non-trading and non-recurring items (items of a nature that the
Group does not expect to incur every financial year) which impact
financial performance. These are controllable operating costs which
provide investors with useful information about how the Group is
managing its expenditure.
|
Year ended 31 March
2024
|
Year
ended
31
March
2023
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Reported operating
expenditure
|
119,283
|
109,938
|
Depreciation of right-of-use
assets
|
(11,777)
|
(10,617)
|
Depreciation of property, plant
and equipment
|
(6,089)
|
(4,636)
|
Amortisation of intangibles
arising on business combinations
|
(5,229)
|
(8,183)
|
Amortisation of other intangible
assets
|
(781)
|
(590)
|
Exceptional costs
|
(4,550)
|
(8,149)
|
Other operating income
|
-
|
(88)
|
Share-based payments and
associated national insurance
|
(1,138)
|
(1,256)
|
Adjusted operating expenditure
|
89,719
|
76,419
|
Adjusted cash generated from
operations
Adjusted cash generated from
operations is reported cash generated from operations plus the cash
cost of exceptional items. As the Group has been involved in
acquisitions and has had other significant, non-repeatable cash
impacting items, this measure allows investors to see the cash
generated from operations excluding these items which are one-off
by nature therefore will not repeat in future years.
|
Year ended 31 March
2024
|
Year
ended
31
March
2023
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Reported cash generated from
operations
|
23,159
|
14,824
|
Cash costs of exceptional
items
|
4,240
|
8,258
|
Adjusted cash generated from operations
|
27,399
|
23,082
|
Adjusted net debt
Adjusted net debt is reported net
debt (borrowings net of cash) less supplier loans and less lease
liabilities that would have been classified as operating leases
under IAS17 and is a measure reviewed by the Group's banking
syndicate as part of covenant compliance.
|
Year ended 31 March
2024
|
Year
ended
31
March
2023
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Reported net debt
|
(72,365)
|
(72,965)
|
Term loans
|
21
|
495
|
Lease liabilities that would have
been classified as operating leases under IAS 17
|
30,346
|
36,891
|
Adjusted net debt
|
(41,998)
|
(35,579)
|
Normalised net debt movement
The normalised net debt movement,
as summarised in the net debt table, details the movement in net
debt before one-off (exceptional) amounts and is therefore a useful
indicator to the potential movement in net debt in FY25.