TIDMWHR
RNS Number : 6550Z
Warehouse REIT PLC
25 May 2021
25 May 2021
Warehouse REIT plc
(the "Company" or "Warehouse REIT", together with its
subsidiaries, the "Group")
RESULTS FOR THE YEARED 31 MARCH 2021
Robust financial performance with strong valuation uplift
Positioned for growth, with acquisitions and asset management
enhancing exposure to e-commerce and quality of income
Warehouse REIT, the AIM-listed specialist warehouse investor,
today announces its results for the year ended 31 March 2021.
Financial highlights(1)
Year ended 31 March 2021 2020
-------------------------------------------- ------------- -------------
Revenue GBP35.8m GBP30.1m
Operating profit before gains on investment GBP24.8m GBP21.1m
properties
IFRS profit before tax GBP123.1m GBP20.7m
IFRS earnings per share 35.2p 8.6p
EPRA earnings per share 5.3p 6.3p
Adjusted earnings per share(2) 5.3p 6.5p
Dividends per share(3) 6.2p 6.2p
Total accounting return(4) 27.7% 5.4%
Total cost ratio(5) 29.5% 27.1%
-------------------------------------------- ------------- -------------
As at 31 March 2021 31 March 2020
-------------------------------------------- ------------- -------------
Portfolio valuation GBP792.8m GBP450.5m
IFRS net asset value GBP574.1m GBP263.1m
IFRS net asset value per share 135.1p 109.5p
EPRA net tangible assets per share(6) 135.1p 109.5p
LTV ratio 24.6% 40.2%
-------------------------------------------- ------------- -------------
-- Strong rent collection performance, with 98.6% of the rent
due in relation to the year collected as at 24 May 2021
-- Paid or declared dividends of 6.2 pence per share in respect
of the year, in line with target
-- Successfully raised gross proceeds of GBP153.0 million
through an equity issue in July 2020 and a further GBP45.9 million
through a placing in February 2021, with strong support from
existing shareholders and new UK and international investors
-- Total portfolio valued at GBP792.8 million at 31 March 2021,
representing a 18.8% like-for-like increase. Portfolio valuation
comprised GBP751.9 million in relation to the investment portfolio
of completed assets and GBP40.9 million of development property and
land (31 March 2020: GBP433.5 million and GBP17.0 million)
-- EPRA net tangible assets ("NTA") per share increased 23.4% to
135.1 pence (31 March 2020: 109.5 pence), driven primarily by a
revaluation increase of 24.7 pence per share
-- Total accounting return for the period of 27.7% (31 March 2020: 5.4%)
-- Bank debt of GBP222.0 million and cash balances of GBP27.2
million at the year end, resulting in a loan to value ("LTV") ratio
of 24.6% (31 March 2020: 40.2%)
Operational highlights(7)
As at 31 March 2021 31 March 2020
----------------------- ------------- -------------
Contracted rent GBP43.0m GBP29.7m
Passing rent GBP38.6m GBP27.8m
WAULT(8) to expiry 5.8 years 5.2 years
WAULT to first break 4.7 years 4.0 years
EPRA net initial yield 4.7% 5.9%
Occupancy 95.6% 93.4%
----------------------- ------------- -------------
-- Impact of Covid-19 on consumer behaviour has reinforced
existing favourable market trends, with the rapid acceleration of
e-commerce in the last year leading to a further increase in
occupational demand for warehousing, combined with continued
constrained supply
-- Continued to acquire attractive assets focused on e-commerce
in economically relevant locations, while maintaining rigorous
discipline in our investment decisions. In total, the Group
acquired 17 assets, adding 2.5 million sq ft of space, for an
aggregate consideration of GBP246.6 million and at a blended net
initial yield ("NIY") of 6.0% and taking the total portfolio to 8.5
million sq ft
-- Further enhanced the Group's focus on sustainability,
including forming a Board-level Sustainability Committee to drive
its strategy
-- Successfully unlocked further value from the portfolio
through asset management, diversifying the portfolio by geography
and occupier type
o 117 lease events over 1.0 million sq ft, with passing rent
increasing to GBP38.6 million (31 March 2020: GBP27.8 million),
including like-for-like rental growth of 2.9%:
-- Completed 54 lettings of vacant space, generating rent of
GBP1.7 million per annum achieved at 9.2% ahead of estimated rental
value ("ERV"). The ERV across the portfolio has grown by 3.7% on a
like-for-like basis
-- Renewed 63 leases, securing income of GBP4.8 million and
achieved at a 10.2% increase over previously contracted rents
o Disposed of 11 non-core assets for aggregate consideration of
GBP16.5 million, enabling recycling of capital into
higher-returning opportunities
o Investment portfolio capital expenditure of GBP1.9 million (31
March 2020: GBP3.5 million), to drive future rental and capital
value growth
o Occupancy continued to improve to 95.6% (31 March 2020:
93.4%). Effective occupancy, which excludes units undergoing
refurbishment and units under offer to let, was 98.2% (31 March
2020: 96.5%)
o Made further progress with generating value from surplus or
adjacent land, including obtaining planning consent for 803,000 sq
ft of new warehouse space at Radway Green, Cheshire, in conjunction
with the adjoining landowner. Secured the adjoining 60 acres of
greenfield land allocated for employment use.
-- Lengthened WAULT to 5.8 years at the year end, reflecting the
benefits of acquisitions and asset management
Post year end highlights
-- In May 2021, the Group acquired the Cambridge South
Industrial Estate, comprising 68,000 sq ft of newly built multi-let
industrial units and an adjacent development site, located on the
wider Dales Manor Business Park, seven miles south of Cambridge
city centre and within four miles of both the Wellcome Genome Park
and Granta Park. The purchase price of GBP20.2 million reflects a
net initial yield of 4.2% on the apportioned price for the
completed buildings.
Neil Kirton, Chairman of Warehouse REIT, commented:
"This was an important year in the Group's development, during
which we raised nearly GBP200 million through well-supported equity
issues. We have made excellent progress with deploying this
capital, while maintaining our strong capital discipline. We also
continue to add value through active asset management and look
forward to delivering for shareholders and our wider stakeholders
in the coming year."
Andrew Bird, Managing Director of the Investment Advisor,
Tilstone Partners Limited, added:
"The Group's successful rent collection throughout the Covid-19
pandemic demonstrates the resilience of the occupier portfolio and
the economic relevance of the real estate. The pandemic has
reinforced the attractions of the market, in particular by
materially accelerating the growth of e-commerce, which is a key
source of demand for warehouse space. We remain confident in our
ability to add further attractive assets to the portfolio and to
extract additional value from the Group's existing holdings."
Notes
1. The Group presents adjusted earnings per share ("EPS"),
dividends per share, total accounting return, total cost ratio, LTV
ratio and EPRA Best Practices Recommendations as Alternative
Performance Measures ("APMs") to assist stakeholders in assessing
performance alongside the Group's statutory results reported under
IFRS. APMs are among the key performance indicators used by the
Board to assess the Group's performance and are used by research
analysts covering the Group.
EPRA Best Practices Recommendations have been disclosed to
facilitate comparison with the Group's peers through consistent
reporting of key real estate specific performance measures. Certain
other APMs may not be directly comparable with other companies'
adjusted measures and are not intended to be a substitute for, or
superior to, any IFRS measures of performance. EPRA EPS is set out
in note 12. EPRA NTA is set out in note 23. A glossary of terms is
shown at the end of this report.
2. Adjusted earnings per share is based on IFRS earnings
excluding unrealised fair value gains on investment properties and
derivatives, profit on disposal of investment properties and
one-off costs. There were no one-off costs in the year ended 31
March 2021. One-off costs in the year ended 31 March 2020 related
to the accelerated amortisation of loan issue costs following the
debt refinance and the costs of the postponed equity raise.
3. Dividends paid and declared in relation to the year,
including a third interim dividend paid on 1 April 2021 and a
fourth interim dividend to be paid on 30 June 2021. Dividends paid
during the year totalled 4.7 pence per share (year ended 31 March
2020: 6.1 pence per share).
4. Total accounting return based on the increase in EPRA NTA per
share of 135.1 pence plus dividends paid per share of 4.7 pence, as
a percentage of the opening EPRA NTA of 109.5 pence per share.
5. Total cost ratio represents the EPRA cost ratio including
direct vacancy cost but excluding one--off costs.
6. Following the October 2019 update to EPRA's Best Practices
Recommendations Guidelines, the Group has adopted EPRA NTA,
replacing our previously reported EPRA net asset value ("NAV"). A
reconciliation of this change is provided within the supplementary
notes. The 31 March 2020 EPRA NTA per share measure is unchanged
from the previously reported EPRA NAV per share.
7. All references to contracted rent, passing rent, ERV, WAULT,
NIY, net reversionary yield ("NRY"), occupancy and capital
expenditure in this report relate only to the investment portfolio
of completed assets and exclude development property and land.
Development property and land is where the whole or a material part
of an estate is identified as having potential for development.
Such assets are classified as development property and land until
development is completed and they have the potential to be fully
income generating.
8. Weighted average unexpired lease term.
Meeting
A live webcast for investors and analysts will be held at 08:15
today and can be accessed via:
https://webcasting.brrmedia.co.uk/broadcast/607d99460386285386cc96f2
The conference call dial-in for the meeting is: +44 (0)330 336
9126 (Participant Passcode: 9609701)
Enquiries
Warehouse REIT plc via FTI Consulting
Tilstone Partners Limited
Andrew Bird, Peter Greenslade +44 (0) 1244 470 090
G10 Capital Limited (part of the
IQEQ Group), AIFM
Maria Glew +44 (0) 20 3696 1302
Peel Hunt (Financial Adviser, Nominated
Adviser and Broker)
Capel Irwin, Henry Nicholls, Carl
Gough +44 (0) 20 7418 8900
FTI Consulting (Financial PR & IR
Adviser to the Company)
Dido Laurimore, Richard Gotla, Ellie
Perham-Marchant +44 (0) 20 3727 1000
Further information on Warehouse REIT is available on its
website: http://www.warehousereit.co.uk
Notes
Warehouse REIT plc invests in and manages urban and 'last-mile'
industrial warehouse assets that support the continued growth in
e-commerce.
Our purpose is to own and manage warehouses in economically
vibrant urban areas across the UK, providing the space our
occupiers need for their businesses to thrive.
As we grow, our vision is to become the UK's warehouse provider
of choice.
The Company's shares were admitted to trading on AIM in
2017.
Forward-looking Statements
Certain information contained in these half-year results may
constitute forward looking information. This information relates to
future events or occurrences or the Company's future performance.
All information other than information of historical fact is
forward looking information. The use of any of the words
"anticipate", "plan", "continue", "estimate", "expect", "may",
"will", "project", "should", "believe", "predict" and "potential"
and similar expressions are intended to identify forward looking
information. This information involves known and unknown risks,
uncertainties and other factors that may cause actual results or
events to differ materially from those anticipated in such
forward-looking information. No assurance can be given that this
information will prove to be correct and such forward looking
information included in this announcement should not be relied
upon. Forward-looking information speaks only as of the date of
this announcement.
The forward-looking information included in this announcement is
expressly qualified by this cautionary statement and is made as of
the date of this announcement. The Company and its Group does not
undertake any obligation to publicly update or revise any
forward-looking information except as required by applicable
securities laws.
Chairman's statement
For many reasons this has been a year of exceptional focus and
activity for both your Board and for Tilstone, the Company's
Investment Advisor. I would like to begin by thanking all my
colleagues for their dedication to their responsibilities during
the period.
Overview
Looking back, the decisive outcome of the December 2019 election
left many believing that a period of greater stability lay ahead.
As it turned out, there were a number of challenges in 2020,
including the UK's pending exit from the EU and the uncertainties
that brought with it. Without doubt, however, the financial year
has been shaped by the Covid-19 pandemic and its unprecedented
impact on society. Thankfully there appear to be grounds to suggest
a more optimistic outlook, after such a traumatic year.
Throughout this period, we maintained a high level of intensity
in our internal communications between the Board and the Investment
Advisor and in our dialogue with occupiers. The Board worked
closely with Tilstone to ensure that we engaged with our occupiers
with both rigour and sensitivity, where it was required. The
diversity of our occupiers and the strength of our relationships
with them have proved decisive in ensuring the portfolio's
resilience and the successful collection of rent throughout the
year. A combination of reducing the LTV target, weekly cash
collection monitoring and more board meetings during lockdown
helped the business manage the pandemic especially in its early
months.
While the long-term impact of the pandemic is hard to assess,
there is no doubt that it has accelerated some of the key trends
that were apparent prior to 2020. These include the rapid
acceleration of e-commerce, which we believe to be a secular
development, the necessity for resilient supply chains and a
growing desire for manufacturers and suppliers to be close to their
end markets. We comment more on these drivers elsewhere in this
report but we have long held the view that this combination of
factors, together with the relatively tight supply of well-located
assets, will benefit shareholders. Coupled with low starting rents
across many parts of the portfolio, our investment thesis continues
to be relevant.
At a portfolio level, perhaps the most noticeable development
this year has been significant yield compression underpinning the
increased valuation of your portfolio. In September 2017, the
portfolio was valued at GBP108.9 million, reflecting a net initial
yield of 7.0%. Three and a half years later, your assets are valued
at GBP792.8 million, with the investment portfolio reflecting a net
initial yield of 5.4%. I am delighted to say that this yield
compression, in combination with attractive rental growth as a
result of asset management activity and the increased interest in
our sector from institutional funds, gives the Board optimism that
your capital will continue to generate attractive returns.
Shareholders will remember that we were in the advanced stages
of a significant equity fundraising when the UK went into its first
full lockdown in March 2020. The extreme uncertainty in the markets
led us to postpone this fundraising until July, when we announced
an oversubscribed GBP153.0 million raise. Having deployed these
proceeds in line with the timetable we set out at the time, we
returned to the equity markets again in February 2021 and
successfully raised a further GBP45.9 million, which has since been
substantially deployed into assets that are further improving the
quality of our earnings. The two fundraisings increased
international ownership in the Company and brought some significant
family offices and major UK institutions onto the share register,
accelerating the diversification of the nature and style of owners.
We expect this trend to continue following the Company's planned
move to the Main Market of the London Stock Exchange.
I have previously referred to our desire to increase the WAULT
across the portfolio, which at the year end was 5.8 years to
expiry, against 5.2 years at 31 March 2020 and 4.6 years at 31
March 2019. We expect to see further increases in this metric, as
occupiers continue to commit to longer leases.
Sustainability
As we have explained in our recent reports to you, we are
committed to responsible business and take a robust approach to
environmental, social and governance ("ESG") matters. We are in the
early stages of what we believe will be both a rewarding financial
investment for our shareholders and the driver of positive actions
for our broader stakeholder base. The actions we take and the
behaviours we demonstrate have a significant impact on those
stakeholders. A number of these stakeholders are more regularly
seeking information on how we operate and how we measure our
effectiveness in this regard, which we feel is a positive
development. As we continue to elevate these priorities, we have
formed a Sustainability Committee comprising members of the Board
which will be attended by the Investment Advisor, Tilstone.
We have identified the most significant areas where we can have
the greatest positive impact, reduce the footprint of our
operations, support our occupiers and deliver value for our
investors. These areas have been combined to form our strategy,
split into four pillars: creating a resilient portfolio; reducing
our footprint; supporting our occupiers; and embedding responsible
business foundations. Against each pillar, we have defined
long-term objectives supported by a roadmap of actions to guide the
implementation of our strategy in the short to medium term and we
anticipate being in a position to provide an update on progress
when we report our interim results later this year.
Dividends and total accounting return
Our target for the year was to pay a total dividend of 6.2 pence
per share, which we have achieved by declaring four quarterly
dividends of 1.55 pence each. The fourth quarterly dividend was
declared today and will be paid on 30 June 2021 to shareholders on
the register on 4 June 2021. The total dividend for the year was
85.8% covered by adjusted earnings per share, reflecting the
short-term dilution of our earnings due to the timing difference
between raising new equity capital and deploying it in
income-generating assets. For the year ending 31 March 2022, we
continue to target a total dividend of 6.2 pence.
Our total accounting return for the year was 27.7%, which was
well ahead of our target of 10% per annum. This reflected
substantial growth in the underlying value of the portfolio, as
discussed below.
Financial and operational highlights
The EPRA NTA per share at 31 March 2021 was 135.1 pence, up
23.4% from 109.5 pence per share at 31 March 2020. The primary
driver of the increase in the year was the strong valuation uplift,
which reflected like-for-like valuation growth of 18.8%. This was
the result of the yield compression referred to above, the
continued growth in rents and the benefits of asset management.
At the year end, the Group had net debt of GBP194.8 million (31
March 2020: GBP181.0 million), giving an LTV ratio of 24.6%. Our
short-term intention is to have a maximum LTV of around 35%,
compared to a previous target range of up to 40%. This recognises
the need for prudence in uncertain times, although it does reduce
the potential to grow earnings.
As a result of new acquisitions during the period, we now have
over 600 occupiers across more than 8.5 million sq ft of single and
multi-let space. Reflecting the resilience of the occupational
market during the year, the strength of the relationships the
Tilstone team has with our occupiers and their local market
knowledge, 117 lease events were completed during the year. 54 new
leases and 63 lease renewals were agreed, delivering like-for-like
rental growth of 2.9% and an increase in the portfolio occupancy to
over 95%. This would be a strong performance in a normal year, but
when delivered during a period that saw three national lockdowns
and against a backdrop of a near 10% decline in headline gross
domestic product, it is even more impressive.
Governance
The Board continues to review your Company's strategy, to ensure
it remains appropriate as market conditions evolve. During the year
we held our annual strategy day, chaired by my fellow Director
Aimée Pitman, who is a strategy specialist. This confirmed our view
that the investment policy will continue to generate value for
shareholders and reaffirmed our commitment to further developing
our ESG approach.
Your Board continues to work very effectively with Tilstone and
we conduct a formal review every year of the contractual
arrangements with them. On the third anniversary of our Investment
Management Agreement, Aimée Pitman (as Chair of the Management
Engagement Committee) and I undertook a shareholder consultation
exercise. Working with all the relevant stakeholders, we were
delighted to be able to progress the agreement on the basis of a
two-year rolling notice period. The Board's continuing view is that
Tilstone have performed ahead of expectation. Throughout the
relationship they have made good decisions, been open to challenge
and at all times behaved with a commitment to high ethical
standards and the consideration of our wider stakeholder base.
Outlook
We have now completed three and a half years as a public
company. During this financial year just gone, and against the
backdrop of the global pandemic, we have declared or paid 6.2 pence
in dividends to our shareholders and at the year end our share
price was 126.0 pence. The journey, however, is far from over. The
Board members have a strong belief that your chosen asset class
will continue to generate attractive returns, underpinned by
permanent structural and societal shifts. We intend to judiciously
deploy further capital, while successful asset management will
drive both rental growth and meaningful upside opportunities in
underexploited areas of the portfolio. We continue to identify
attractive opportunities to grow the portfolio through acquisition
and asset management and look forward to the year ahead with
confidence.
Neil Kirton
Chairman
24 May 2021
Our objectives and strategy
We aim to create value through a top--down approach to
investment, supported by an appropriate mix of financing, followed
by hands--on asset management with best--in-class processes.
Our objectives
We aim to provide shareholders with an attractive total return,
underpinned by secure income.
Total accounting return
10% per annum Outcome in 2020/21 Plan for 2021/22
Our target is at least Achieved We continue to target
10% per annum, through The total accounting a return of at least
a combination of dividends return for the year 10% per annum.
and growth in NAV was 27.7%
------------------------ -----------------------
Dividends
------------------------ -----------------------
6.2 pence Outcome in 2020/21 Plan for 2021/22
Our target for the Achieved Our target dividend
year was a total dividend We declared total for 2021/22 is at
of 6.2 pence per share dividends of 6.2 pence least 6.2 pence per
per share. share.
------------------------ -----------------------
Our strategy
To achieve our objectives, we follow the strategy set out
below:
Investment During the year Post year end Measured by
strategy we: * acquired 68,000 sq ft of multi-let industrial units Like-for-like
Location * acquired 17 assets for GBP246.6 million, at a NIY of and an adjacent development site, located seven mile valuation
We look for 6.0%; s increase
attractive south of Cambridge city centre and within four miles EPRA NAV
sites, close of both the Wellcome Genome Park and Granta Park. Th Dividend per
to major * added 2.5 million sq ft to the portfolio; e share
transport purchase price of GBP20.2 million reflects a net Risks
links and initial yield of 4.2% on the apportioned price for Poor
large * further diversified the portfolio by size of building the completed buildings. performance
conurbations, and location; and of the
with a high Investment
level Advisor
of occupier * further enhanced the occupier mix, adding strong new Poor returns
demand covenants and increasing exposure to existing major on portfolio
and suitable occupiers. Acquisition
local of
workforce. inappropriate
Optionality assets or
We look for unrecognised
buildings liabilities,
with a range or a breach
of different of
uses and investment
long--term strategy
flexibility,
including the
potential to
change
permitted
use.
Buildings
We look for
buildings
that match
occupiers'
current and
future
needs.
Multi--let
estates spread
risk and offer
more asset
management
opportunities
than
single-let
assets. Rental
increases can
also be
reflected
across the
estate.
We generally
target
buildings
of less than
100,000 sq ft
and have an
average
size of 10,000
sq ft.
Asset During the year Post year end Measured by
management we: * completed 8 new lettings, at rents 5.1% ahead of ERV; Occupancy
strategy * despite local lockdown restrictions, invested GBP1.9 and Like-for-like
We budget to million or 0.2% of GAV in capital expenditure; rental income
spend 0.75% of growth
our gross * completed 17 lease renewals, with a 10.8% increase in Rental
asset * completed 54 new lettings, at rents 9.2% ahead of headline rents. increases
value ("GAV") ERV; agreed versus
on capital valuer's ERV
expenditure Risks
each year, * completed 63 lease renewals, with a 10.2% increase in Poor
with headline rents; performance
a target of the
return Investment
of at least * disposed of 11 assets for a total of GBP16.5 million, Advisor
10%. realising a GBP0.5 million loss on sale; and
We also target
a vacancy
level * progressed our development projects at Queenslie
of 5-7%, since Industrial Estate, Glasgow, and Radway Green, Crewe.
vacant
properties
allow us to
carry
out asset
management
activities.
Improving the
sustainability
performance of
our assets,
for
example by
improving
their energy
efficiency, is
an important
part of
maintaining
property
values
and occupier
appeal.
------------------------------------------------------------ ------------------------------------------------------------- --------------
Financial During the year Post year end Measured by
strategy we: * acquisition of multi-let estate near Cambridge, Loan to value
We fund the * raised GBP153.0 million of new equity in July 2020; increased LTV, closer to the target range. ratio
business Risks
through Significant
shareholders' * raised a further GBP45.9 million of new equity in volatility
equity, bank February 2021; and in interest
debt and any rates
disposal Inability to
proceeds * raised disposal proceeds of GBP16.5 million (see attract
we generate. above). investors
We look to Breach of
raise borrowing
equity at policy or
times loan
when we can covenants
make
investments
that
are accretive
to
shareholders.
Our strategy
for debt
financing
is to maintain
a prudent
level
of debt, with
a LTV range of
30-40% in the
longer term.
We look to
hedge
the interest
on a
proportion
of our debt,
to provide
certainty
over our
financing
costs.
------------------------------------------------------------ ------------------------------------------------------------- --------------
Key performance indicators
We use the following key performance indicators ("KPIs") to
monitor our performance and strategic progress.
Occupancy
2018: 93.1%
2019: 92.0%
2020: 93.4%
2021: 95.6%
Description
Total open market rental value of the units leased divided by
total open market rental value, excluding development property and
land, and equivalent to one minus the EPRA vacancy rate.
Why is this important?
Shows our ability to retain occupiers at renewal and to let
vacant space, which in turn underpins our income and dividend
payments.
How we performed
The increase in occupancy reflects the success of our asset
management initiatives. Effective occupancy (excluding units being
refurbished or under offer) was 98.2% (31 March 2020: 96.5%).
Like-for-like rental income growth
2019: 2.1%
2020: 2.0%
2021: 2.9%
Description
The increase in contracted rent of units owned throughout the
period, expressed as a percentage of the contracted rent at the
start of the period, excluding development property and land and
units undergoing refurbishment.
Why is this important?
Shows our ability to identify and acquire attractive properties
and grow average rents over time.
How we performed
We continued to deliver good rental growth from the portfolio,
with a 2.9% like-for-like uplift, showing the benefits of asset
management and continued favourable market conditions.
Rental increases agreed versus valuer's ERV
2018: 7.3%
2019: 10.0%
2020: 5.1%
2021: 4.3%
Description
The difference between the rent achieved on new lettings and
renewals and the ERV assessed by the external valuer, expressed as
a percentage above the ERV at the start of the period.
Why is this important?
Shows our ability to achieve superior rental growth through
asset management and the attractiveness of our assets to potential
occupiers.
How we performed
We maintained our track record of achieving rental levels ahead
of ERV.
Like-for-like valuation increase
2019: 4.3%
2020: 2.5%
2021: 18.8%
Description
The increase in the valuation of properties owned throughout the
period under review, expressed as a percentage of the valuation at
the start of the period, and net of capital expenditure.
Why is this important?
Shows our ability to acquire the right quality of assets at
attractive valuations, add value through asset management and drive
increased capital values by capturing rental growth.
How we performed
The valuation of the portfolio continued to increase during the
year, reflecting market yield compression and the benefits of asset
management.
Total cost ratio
2018: 34.5%
2019: 29.4%
2020: 27.1%
2021: 29.5%
Description
EPRA cost ratio including direct vacancy costs but excluding
one-off costs. The EPRA cost ratio is the sum of property expenses
and administration expenses, as a percentage of gross rental
income.
Why is this important?
Shows our ability to effectively control our cost base, which in
turn supports dividend payments to shareholders.
How we performed
The total cost ratio increased due to the timing difference
between raising cash and capital deployment. We expect this ratio
to decline in the year ending 31 March 2022, as we receive a full
year of income from assets acquired in the current year.
EPRA NTA
2018: 102.1p
2019: 109.7p
2020: 109.5p
2021: 135.1p
Description
This net asset value measure assumes entities buy and sell
assets, thereby crystallising certain levels of deferred tax
liability.
Why is this important?
Shows our ability to acquire well and to increase capital values
through active asset management.
How we performed
The EPRA NTA increased by 23.4% during the year, largely due to
the increase in the portfolio's valuation.
Dividends per share
2018: 2.5p
2019: 6.0p
2020: 6.2p
2021: 6.2p
Description
The total amount of dividends paid or declared in respect of the
financial year divided by the number of shares in issue in the
period.
Why is this important?
Shows our ability to construct a portfolio that delivers a
secure and growing income, which underpins dividend payments to
shareholders.
How we performed
We achieved our dividend target for the year of 6.2 pence per
share.
Loan to value ratio
2018: 40.5%
2019: 39.7%
2020: 40.2%
2021: 24.6%
Description
Gross debt less cash, short-term deposits and liquid
investments, divided by the aggregate value of properties and
investments.
Why is this important?
Shows our ability to balance the additional portfolio
diversification and returns that come from using debt, with the
need to manage risk through prudent financing.
How we performed
After engagement with our shareholders, we took the decision to
maintain debt levels below our target of 35%
Investment Advisor's report
Introduction
This was a highly active year for the Group, against the
backdrop of the Covid-19 pandemic and growing investor interest in
the secure income offered by the sector. The Company raised gross
proceeds of nearly GBP200 million through equity issues and
invested a total of GBP246.6 million in high-quality assets, with a
blended net initial yield of 6.0%.
The strong occupier relationships we have developed contributed
to highly successful rent collection during the year, despite the
numerous challenges caused by the pandemic. This also reflected the
resilience of the portfolio and the well-diversified base of
occupiers, who range from local businesses to the largest
multinational companies, across many different sectors.
In addition, the Group has continued to develop its approach to
sustainable business.
Acquisitions
The Group continued to add attractive assets to its portfolio
throughout the year. These acquisitions targeted space for
e-commerce-related operations in economically relevant locations
and further improved the quality of income. The acquisitions in the
year were a mix of multi-let assets, of the type the Group has
primarily purchased since IPO, as well as further single-let
assets. The Group has been able to increase the number of
single-let assets it holds, which typically offer both longer-dated
and more secure income, as the portfolio's expansion in recent
years means it now has in-built diversification. As a result of the
acquisitions in the year, Amazon is the Group's largest occupier,
making up 8.7% of the contracted rent roll at the year end.
First quarter acquisitions
The Group acquired Knowsley Business Park, which is located
opposite its existing Nexus estate. The asset comprises five modern
purpose-built units totalling 116,000 sq ft, which are fully let to
two strong covenants. The purchase price of GBP7.9 million,
reflected a NIY of 7.1%. The business park offers both near term
and longer-term asset management opportunities, including the
potential for lease extensions.
Second quarter acquisitions
The Group acquired two single-let warehouse assets for a total
consideration of GBP82.3 million, reflecting a blended NIY of 5.4%
and a combined WAULT of nine years:
-- A prime 501,000 sq ft fulfilment centre in Chesterfield, for
GBP57.3 million. The asset is let to Amazon UK Limited on a full
repairing and insuring lease, with over 13 years remaining on
acquisition. The lease benefits from five-yearly upward-only rent
reviews, with no breaks, and a low passing rent.
-- A 374,000 sq ft single-let warehouse in Middlewich, Cheshire,
for GBP25.0 million. The asset is occupied by Wincanton Holdings
Limited and offers both short and long-term asset management
opportunities. The lease had 3.5 years remaining on acquisition and
a low passing rent of approximately GBP5 per sq ft. Following this
and subsequent acquisitions, the Group now has holdings totalling
over 560,000 sq ft at Middlewich.
Third quarter acquisitions
The Group purchased a 574,000 sq ft warehouse portfolio for
GBP43.6 million, reflecting a blended NIY of 6.7%. On acquisition,
the portfolio was 90% let and generated contracted annual rent of
GBP2.95 million with a WAULT of 5.5 years.
The individual assets are:
-- Gateway Park, a 28-unit industrial estate totalling 220,000
sq ft, close to Birmingham Airport and the M42. The park is let to
a high-quality occupier mix including FedEx, Circle Express and
Swissport.
-- A 50,000 sq ft unit on Viables Business Park in Basingstoke,
serving as the European headquarters for TaylorMade on a lease
expiring in 2026 and guaranteed by Adidas. The property is let off
a low passing rent of below GBP9 per sq ft and is ideally located
for the town centre and M3 motorway.
-- Chittening Industrial Estate in Avonmouth, near Bristol and
the M49. This 200,000 sq ft, ten-unit scheme is let to a diverse
range of occupiers including Palletways UK, Encon Insulation and DS
Smith.
-- A three-unit warehouse property on Newport Road, Cardiff, totalling 50,000 sq ft.
-- A 54,000 sq ft warehouse in Ebbw Vale, South Wales, leased to
DHL on an eight-year term, off a low rent of GBP3.31 per sq ft.
In Milton Keynes, the Group purchased Granby Trade Park for
GBP17.5 million, at a NIY of 5.7%. The estate comprises 24 urban
logistics and trade counter units across 147,000 sq ft and has
excellent transport connectivity. There is potential to increase
the rental tone through refurbishments and to enhance the occupier
mix. On acquisition, the estate generated GBP1.1 million of income
from 16 occupiers across 19 of the units, with a low average rent
of GBP7.20 per sq ft. Almost half the space is secured for over
eight years.
Towards the end of the quarter, the Group bought a portfolio of
four single-let and multi-let distribution warehouse assets for
GBP18.6 million, at a blended NIY of 6.1%. The assets total 200,000
sq ft and are situated in strategic last-mile distribution hubs in
the North West and West Midlands. On acquisition, the portfolio was
100% occupied and generated income of GBP1.22 million per annum.
The average rent of GBP6.1 per sq ft is reversionary and offers
good potential for rental growth. The portfolio had a WAULT of
approximately five years, with opportunities to increase the
longevity of income in the short term.
Fourth quarter acquisitions
The Group acquired two adjacent distribution warehouses in
Harlow for GBP13.9 million including costs, reflecting a NIY of
8.6%. The 115,000 sq ft unit is the UK distribution hub for a
global beauty and cosmetics company, with over four years remaining
on the lease. The 62,000 sq ft unit is let to a specialist in shop
fittings and supplies on a short-term lease. The assets have
significant potential to capture rental growth, as well as
longer-term asset management opportunities.
In Speke, Liverpool, the Group acquired four modern warehouse
units ranging from 74,000 sq ft to 163,000 sq ft and totalling
390,000 sq ft. The purchase price of GBP35.0 million reflected a
NIY of 5.5%. Boulevard Industry Park is one of Liverpool's most
successful and popular business locations. The properties are let
to three occupiers in the automotive and pharmaceutical sectors,
generate a net rental income of GBP2.1 million per annum, equating
to a low average rent of GBP5.31 per sq ft, and provide a WAULT of
over seven years.
At Glasgow Airport Business Park, the Group purchased three
units totalling 55,600 sq ft for GBP5.3 million, reflecting a net
initial yield of 6.3%. The units are occupied by two global
transport, logistics and delivery companies and a craft beer
distributor. On acquisition, the average passing rent was low
(GBP6.40 per sq ft) and the WAULT was more than four years to
expiry.
Pipeline
We continue to screen a substantial amount of stock on the
Group's behalf, enabling us to identify attractive opportunities to
acquire e-commerce-focused assets that will be accretive to
shareholder value. While the significant attractions of the sector
mean yields have compressed during the year, we remain highly
selective and will not compromise on asset quality in exchange for
higher yields.
Asset management
Working with occupiers
Maintaining strong relationships with the Group's occupiers has
always been central to the business model. The Covid-19 pandemic
has reinforced the importance of this approach, which supported the
Group's ability to maintain a high level of rent collection
throughout the year. During the first half of the financial year in
particular we were in regular contact with occupiers, so we could
understand the impact of the pandemic on their businesses and
provide appropriate support where needed. This included allowing
some occupiers to temporarily pay rent on a monthly basis rather
than quarterly. Some occupiers have also required additional space
to cope with higher demand.
The Group's rent collection performance demonstrates the
strength of its occupier relationships. As at 24 May 2021, the
Group had collected 98.6% of the total rent due for the year.
While a few of the Group's smaller occupiers did cease trading
this year, the level of bad debts remains low (see the financial
review for more information). The Group has been successful in
reletting the affected units at higher rents.
We continue to carry out analysis that allows us to assign the
equivalent of a bond rating to occupiers, so we can assess the
spread of credit risk across the portfolio. This enables us to
strategically target specific occupiers or units from an asset
management perspective. More generally, we see occupiers using
warehouse space more efficiently, allowing them to increase the
revenue they generate using the Group's assets. This in turn makes
their rental payments a smaller proportion of their revenue,
further increasing the security of the Group's income and the
prospects for rental growth.
To support our ability to effectively manage the Group's
portfolio and maintain strong occupier relationships, we have added
a further two members to the asset management team and expect to
continue to add resource in the coming months.
Disposals
The Group's asset management strategy includes an ongoing
programme of disposing of mature, lower--yielding or non-core
assets, so it can recycle the capital to generate further income
growth and higher total returns.
The Group disposed of a further 11 assets in the year, for gross
proceeds of GBP16.5 million. These assets included retail
warehouses, offices and some smaller warehouse units that we
assessed as being non-core. The portfolio remains under constant
review to identify further opportunities to increase efficiency and
dispose of any assets that are considered ex-growth or
non-core.
Capital expenditure
Carefully targeted capital expenditure is key to enhancing the
quality of the Group's assets. It enables us to attract occupiers,
increase rental levels and capital values, and support occupiers'
growth plans, through value-enhancing improvements or extensions to
units, in exchange for higher rents or extended leases. The Group
therefore aims to invest around 0.75% of its gross asset value
("GAV") in capital expenditure each year. This excludes investment
in development projects and is calculated based on GAV excluding
developments.
Total capital expenditure in the year amounted to GBP2.6 million
(31 March 2020: GBP3.7 million) despite local lockdown
restrictions, continuing the strategy of refurbishing vacant units,
resulting in strong occupier interest, growth in ERV and enhanced
capital value in these properties during the year to 31 March 2021.
At the year end, approximately 1.5% of the portfolio's ERV was
under refurbishment (31 March 2020: 2.1%).
Leasing activity
We have continued to successfully let vacant space and renew
leases on the Group's behalf, reflecting the quality of the Group's
assets and strong occupier demand for space. The Group has
maintained its record of leasing outperformance, with new lettings
consistently achieving rents ahead of ERV and lease renewals also
driving strong rental growth.
Lease lengths continue to increase, with an average length for
new leases and renewals of 7.5 years. This reflects both our
occupiers' confidence in their businesses and the shortage of
available space in key locations.
New leases
The Group secured 54 new leases on 270,000 sq ft of space during
the year. These will generate annual rent of GBP1.7 million,
achieved at 9.2% ahead of the ERV. The level of incentives remains
steady.
Key examples of new lettings in the year included:
-- a new ten-year lease with a break at year three, for a 17,600
sq ft unit at Air Cargo Centre in Glasgow, to a large distribution
business. The rent of GBP105,540 per annum represents a 9.1%
premium to the 31 March 2020 ERV and confirms the rental tone for
the estate;
-- a new five-year lease with a break at year three, for a
20,600 sq ft unit at Farthing Road Industrial Estate, Ipswich to an
e-commerce furniture retailer. The rent of GBP103,120 per annum
represents a 19.9% premium to the 31 March 2020 ERV and further
establishes the rental tone for the estate;
-- a new ten-year lease with a break at year five, for a 16,700
sq ft unit at Delta Drive, Tewkesbury, to the UK distribution
company of an international engineering components group. The rent
of GBP109,500 per annum represents a 49.5% premium to the 31 March
2020 ERV and further supports the rental tone for the estate;
-- a new five-year lease, for a 21,000 sq ft unit at Witan Park,
Witney, Oxfordshire, to an international motor sport company. The
rent of GBP157,740 per annum represents a 2.7% premium to the 31
March 2020 ERV and marks a significant letting following the
recently completed comprehensive refurbishment of the units,
setting a new tone 15% higher than the previous highest rent
achieved on the estate.
Lease renewals
The Group continues to retain the majority of its occupiers,
with 73% remaining in occupation at lease expiry and 69% with a
break arising in the year.
In total, there were 63 lease renewals on 778,400 sq ft of space
during the year. The renewals resulted in an average uplift of
10.2% above the previous passing rent and 2.6% above the ERV.
Examples of notable lease renewals included:
-- a ten-year lease renewal, with no breaks, with Iron Mountain,
at 1 Stretton Road, Warrington. The agreement reflects a 26.2%
uplift to the previous rent paid, with a headline rent of
GBP615,000 per annum or GBP5.80 per sq ft;
-- a combined ten-year lease renewal on two units (along with
simultaneously taking a third unit on a new lease), with a year
five break, at North Seaton Industrial Estate, Ashington to a
clothing company looking to expand and sell more online. The
renewals reflect a 28% uplift to the previous rent paid and an
increase of 14.5% ahead of the 31 March 2020 ERV;
-- a five-year lease extension on 319,400 sq ft with John Lewis
at Brackmills, Northampton, taking the unexpired term certain to
eight years. The agreement includes a minimum uplift at the next
rent review which would show a 4.3% uplift on the current passing
rent; and
-- a five-year lease extension on 49,200 sq ft with a major car
retailer at Meridian Business Park, Leicester taking the unexpired
term certain to over ten years. The agreement includes a settlement
of the forthcoming rent review at a 24% increase on the previous
rent.
Development activity
We look to extract value from unused or underutilised land,
either on or adjacent to the Group's estates. In doing so, our aim
is to obtain new assets for the portfolio at a yield ahead of
acquiring a similar standing investment, therefore extracting value
for the Group. The Group will not build new accommodation without
first achieving a pre-let on at least some of the proposed space.
The Company's investment policy limits investment in development
activity to 15% of GAV at the time of purchase. Development also
provides an opportunity to accelerate the ongoing improvements in
the sustainability characteristics of the portfolio.
In March 2021, we were pleased to secure planning approval in
respect of Radway Green, the Group's 25-acre multi-let industrial
estate in Crewe, Cheshire. The application was submitted in
collaboration with the adjoining landowner, for a combined 803,000
sq ft across six new high-bay warehouse units, ranging from 22,000
sq ft to 340,000 sq ft. We applied for and received detailed
consent on two of the units and outline consent on the remainder.
The planned development retains some existing space which is
currently income producing, while utilising the estate's
undeveloped areas. We intend to implement the scheme in a number of
phases, to both maximise retained income and meet occupier demand.
In the near term, we will look to invest in the site's
infrastructure to prepare it for pre-lets, with initial
occupational demand being encouraging.
We have also secured the adjoining 60 acres of existing
greenfield land which has been allocated in the local plan for
employment use, with potential for over 1.0 million sq ft of
warehouse space. The enlarged scheme has the potential to create a
multi-let scheme of regional significance.
We continued to make good progress with the planned development
at Queenslie Industrial Estate, Glasgow. Substantial progress has
been made to clear the planning conditions, in anticipation of
placing certain plots under offer by way of pre-lets. Securing
these pre-lets would enable work to start on site in the near
term.
Portfolio analysis
The acquisitions and asset management activity during the year
contributed to the portfolio valuation of GBP792.8 million at the
year end (31 March 2020: GBP450.5 million), across a total of 8.5
million sq ft of space (31 March 2020: 6.2 million sq ft).
The table below analyses the portfolio as at 31 March 2021:
Net Net Average
Initial Reversionary Lease Lease rent Average
Yield Yield length length GBP capital
to to per value GBP
Warehouse Valuation expiry break sq per sq
Location GBP'm Occupancy Years Years ft ft
Southern
England 247.4 95.9% 6.0% 6.6% 5.5 4.4 6.17 89.41
Northern
England 234.6 97.0% 4.6% 4.9% 5.5 4.3 5.05 99.88
Midlands 200.7 95.8% 5.2% 5.7% 6.6 6.0 5.41 91.41
Rest of UK 69.2 91.4% 6.3% 7.3% 5.7 3.7 5.04 64.06
------------------ ---------- ------------ ------------- -------- -------- -------- --------
Total 751.9 95.6% 5.4% 5.9% 5.8 4.7 5.51 89.60
Development
Land 40.9
------------------ ---------- ------------ ------------- -------- -------- -------- --------
Total 792.8
At the year end, the contracted rent roll for the Group's
investment portfolio, which comprises the completed buildings and
excludes development property and land, was GBP43.0 million,
compared with the ERV of GBP47.2 million. In addition, the Group
had contracted rent of GBP0.6 million from development property.
Contracted rents increased by 2.9% on a like-for-like basis,
showing the benefits of asset management and the underlying rental
growth in the market.
The NIY of the investment portfolio was 5.4% at 31 March 2021,
with a reversionary yield of 5.9%. The ERV typically assumes that a
unit is re-let in its current condition and does not take account
of the potential to increase rents through refurbishment,
repositioning or change in permitted planning use. As noted above,
the Group's asset management programme is unlocking the portfolio's
reversionary potential.
The WAULT for the investment portfolio stood at 5.8 years at 31
March 2021 (31 March 2020: 5.2 years). This reflects the benefits
of the acquisitions and asset management in the year, offsetting
the natural reduction in WAULT over time. Occupancy across the
investment portfolio increased to 95.6% at the year end (31 March
2020: 93.4%), reflecting the strength of occupier demand and the
quality of the Group's assets. Effective occupancy across the
investment portfolio, which excludes units under offer to let or
undergoing refurbishment, was 98.2% at the year end (31 March 2020:
96.5%), with 1.1% of the investment portfolio under offer to let
and a further 1.5% undergoing refurbishment at that date.
The changes to the portfolio over the last three years, in terms
of both acquisitions and disposals, have resulted in a marked
increase in the size and quality of the Group's assets. At 31 March
2018, the Group owned 881 units across 92 assets, with an average
unit size of c.5,000 sq ft and average value per asset of GBP3.2
million. At 31 March 2021, the number of units had reduced to 838
across 101 assets, reflecting the ongoing disposal of estates with
larger numbers of small units. The average unit size had doubled to
c.10,000 sq ft, with an average value per asset of GBP7.8
million.
Financial review
Performance
Rental income rose 20.0% to GBP34.2 million (year ended 31 March
2020: GBP28.5 million), primarily as a result of asset acquisitions
in the year, a full year of revenue from assets purchased during
the prior year and rental growth captured through asset management.
EPRA like-for-like rental income increased by 0.7%.
Total revenue, which includes insurance recharges, dilapidation
income and any surrender premiums, was GBP35.8 million. (Total
revenue in the year ended 31 March 2020 was GBP30.1 million,
including a GBP0.8 million surrender premium and dilapidations
payment in respect of units taken back at Witney.)
The Group's operating costs include its running costs (primarily
the management, audit, company secretarial, other professional and
Directors' fees), and property-related costs (including legal
expenses, void costs and repairs). Total operating costs for the
year were GBP10.9 million (year ended 31 March 2020: GBP9.0
million, including GBP0.4 million of one-off costs related to an
equity raise that was postponed until the current year). The
Investment Advisor fee for the year increased by GBP1.6 million,
primarily as a result of the increase in net assets following the
completion of the equity raise in the first half (see equity
financing below) and the like-for-like increase in the portfolio
valuation of 18.8%. Despite the economic impact of the Covid-19
pandemic, the net movement in the loss allowance only increased
GBP0.4 million (year ended 31 March 2020: GBP0.1 million),
reflecting the quality and diversity of the Group's occupier base
and the strength of its relationships with them.
We continue to exercise tight control of the Group's costs. The
total cost ratio, which is the EPRA cost ratio including direct
vacancy costs, was 29.5% (year ended 31 March 2020: 27.1% excluding
one-off costs). We expect this to reduce during the year ending 31
March 2022, as a number of the Group's costs are fixed or
semi-fixed and the Group will benefit from a full year of income
from recently acquired assets. The ongoing charges ratio,
representing the costs of running the REIT as a percentage of NAV,
was 1.4% (year ended 31 March 2020: 1.9%, excluding one-off
costs).
The Group completed the sale of 11 assets during the year,
generating proceeds of GBP16.5 million (year ended 31 March 2020:
12 assets for proceeds of GBP16.7 million). This resulted in a
modest loss on disposal of GBP0.5 million (year ended 31 March
2020: profit of GBP0.9 million).
At 31 March 2021, the Group recognised a gain of GBP105.0
million on the revaluation of its investment properties (year ended
31 March 2020: gain of GBP5.1 million).
Net financing costs, which include the interest costs associated
with the Group's revolving credit facility ("RCF") and term loan
(see debt financing and hedging), totalled GBP6.2 million (year
ended 31 March 2020: GBP6.5 million). The charge in the prior year
included a one--off cost of GBP0.4 million, relating to the
accelerated amortisation of loan issue costs following the
refinancing of the Group's debt facilities during the year ended 31
March 2020.
Statutory profit before tax for the year was GBP123.1 million
(year ended 31 March 2020: GBP20.7 million).
As a REIT, the Group's profits and capital gains from its
property investment business are exempt from corporation tax. The
corporation tax charge for the period was therefore GBPnil (year
ended 31 March 2020: GBPnil).
Earnings per share ("EPS") under IFRS was 35.2 pence (year ended
31 March 2020: 8.6 pence). EPRA EPS was 5.3 pence (year ended 31
March 2020: 6.3 pence, or 6.5 pence excluding one--off costs). Both
EPS measures reflect the short-term dilutive impact of the equity
issues, which increased the weighted average number of shares in
issue ahead of the full deployment of funds in accretive
acquisitions.
Dividends
The table below sets out the interim dividends declared in
respect of the year ended 31 March 2021:
Quarter to Declared Paid Amount (pence)
30 Jun 2020 30 July 2020 2 Oct 2020 1.55
30 Sep 2020 3 Nov 2020 31 Dec 2020 1.55
31 Dec 2020 26 Jan 2021 1 Apr 2021 1.55
31 Mar 2021 24 May 2021 30 June 2021 1.55
Total 6.20
The total dividend for the year of 6.2 pence per share was in
line with target. All four interim dividends were paid in full as
property income distributions.
The total dividend was 85.8% covered by EPRA EPS, reflecting the
short-term dilutive impact of the equity raises, as noted
above.
The cash cost of the total dividend paid during the year was
GBP15.6 million (year ended 31 March 2020: GBP14.7 million),
reflecting the increase in the number of shares in issue.
Valuation and net asset value
The portfolio was independently valued by CBRE as at 31 March
2021, in accordance with the internationally accepted RICS
Valuation - Professional Standards January 2020 (incorporating the
International Valuation Standards).
The portfolio valuation of GBP792.8 million (31 March 2020:
GBP450.5 million) represented a 18.8% like-for-like increase in the
valuation, taking into account the capital expenditure in the year
of GBP2.6 million. The like-for-like valuation increase was
primarily driven by yield compression, as well as benefiting from
income growth. The EPRA NIY was 4.7% (31 March 2020: 5.9%).
The valuation resulted in an EPRA NTA of 135.1 pence per share
at the year end (31 March 2020: 109.5 pence per share). This
primarily reflects the revaluation gain noted above, equivalent to
24.7 pence per share.
Equity financing
On 18 June 2020, the Company announced a proposed equity raise
through a firm placing, placing, open offer and offer for
subscription and intermediaries offer, at 110.0 pence per share,
representing a premium of 0.5 pence per share to the EPRA NTA as at
31 March 2020.
On 6 July 2020, the Company announced that it had received valid
applications and commitments in respect of 139,090,908 shares. The
gross proceeds of the issue were therefore approximately GBP153.0
million, with net proceeds of GBP149.3 million after expenses of
GBP3.7 million.
On 5 February 2021, the Company raised gross proceeds of
approximately GBP45.9 million through the placing of 37,934,400 new
shares at 121.0 pence per share. This represented a premium of 2.2%
to the EPRA NTA of 118.4 pence at 30 September 2020.
Debt financing and hedging
The Group has a debt facility with a club of four banks: HSBC,
Bank of Ireland, Royal Bank of Canada and Barclays. The facility
runs for five years from January 2020 and comprises an RCF of
GBP63.0 million and a term loan, which increased from GBP157.0
million to GBP182.0 million during the second half of the year, as
the Group drew on GBP25.0 million of the GBP80.0 million accordion
included with the facility. The facility has an option to extend
for a further two years, and a remaining accordion of a further
GBP55.0 million.
The term loan was fully drawn at the year end, while GBP40.0
million was drawn against the RCF. Total debt at the year end was
therefore GBP222.0 million (31 March 2020: GBP186.5 million), with
the Group also holding cash balances of GBP27.2 million (31 March
2020: GBP5.5 million). The LTV ratio at 31 March 2021 was therefore
24.6% (31 March 2020: 40.2%).
The Group has two interest rate caps of GBP30.0 million each.
They run until November 2022 and November 2023 and have respective
rates of 1.50% and 1.75%, excluding lending margin. At the period
end, the Group had therefore hedged the interest costs on 27.0% of
its debt. There were no changes to the Group's interest rate
hedging arrangements during the year.
Post year end activity
On 18 May 2021, the Group acquired the Cambridge South
Industrial Estate, comprising 68,000 sq ft of newly built multi-let
industrial units and an adjacent development site, located on the
wider Dales Manor Business Park, seven miles south of Cambridge
city centre and within four miles of both the Wellcome Genome Park
and Granta Park. The purchase price of GBP20.2 million reflects a
net initial yield of 4.2% on the apportioned price for the
completed buildings.
Compliance with the investment policy
The Group's investment policy is summarised below. The Group
continued to comply in full with this policy throughout the
year.
Investment policy Status Performance
The Group will only invest in warehouse ü All of the Group's
assets in the UK. assets are UK-based
urban warehouses.
------- -----------------------------
No individual warehouse will represent ü The largest individual
more than 20% of the Group's last warehouse represents
published gross asset value ("GAV"), 9.0% of GAV.
at the time it invests.
------- -----------------------------
The Group will target a portfolio ü The largest occupier
with no one occupier accounting for accounts for 8.7%
more than 15% of its gross contracted of gross contracted
rents at the time of purchase. No rents and 12.4% of
more than 20% of its gross assets gross assets.
will be exposed to the creditworthiness
of a single occupier at the time of
purchase.
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The Group will diversify the portfolio ü The portfolio is
across the UK, with a focus on areas well-balanced across
with strong underlying investment the UK.
fundamentals.
------- -----------------------------
The Group can invest no more than ü The Group held no
10% of gross assets in other listed investments in other
closed-ended investment funds. funds during the
year.
------- -----------------------------
The Group will not speculatively develop ü Other than refurbishing
properties, except for refurbishing vacant units, the
or extending existing assets. Speculative Group did not undertake
developments are those which have any speculative development
not been at least partially leased, in the period.
pre-leased or de-risked in a similar
way.
------- -----------------------------
The Group may invest directly, or ü The Group made no
through forward funding agreements investments or financial
or commitments, in developments (including commitments to pure
pre-developed land), where: speculative developments
* the structure provides us with investment risk rather in the period.
than development risk;
* the development is at least partially pre-let, sold
or de-risked in a similar way; and
* we intend to hold the completed development as an
investment asset.
The Group's exposure to these developments
cannot exceed 15% of gross assets
at the time of purchase.
------- -----------------------------
The Group views an LTV of between ü The LTV at 31 March
30% and 40% as optimal over the longer 2021 was 24.6%.
term but can temporarily increase
gearing up to a maximum LTV of 50%
at the time of an arrangement, to
finance value enhancing opportunities.
------- -----------------------------
Investment Manager
The Company is an alternative investment fund for the purposes
of the Alternative Investment Fund Managers Directive ("AIFMD")
and, as such, is required to have an Investment Manager who is duly
authorised to undertake that role. G10 Capital Limited ("G10") is
the Company's AIFM and Investment Manager, with Tilstone providing
advisory services to both G10 and the Company.
Tilstone Partners Limited
Investment Advisor
24 May 2021
RISK MANAGEMENT AND PRINCIPAL RISKS
Our framework and approach
Overall responsibility for managing risk rests with the Board,
whose approach is set out in a formal risk management framework.
Recognising and assessing risk and opportunity is at the heart of
the Group's decision making, and the steps set out in the risk
framework to enable this are as follows:
-- Capture - Regular, formal review and recording of risks
-- Evaluate - Assessment of the risk, against a standardised
scale of likelihood and impact. We assess both the inherent and
current risk, to understand where we rely most heavily on the
controls and risk mitigations in place
-- Manage and mitigate - Identification and considerations of
the controls in place, and agreement of any additional actions
required
-- Monitor - Regular review of risks, to ensure the information
captured remains relevant, accurate and current. Conditions for
risks may change from time to time, including the emergence of
additional causes or impacts resulting in a requirement for further
management. The status of additional risks is tracked.
The information gathered through these steps enables the Board
to consider its corporate risks, understand and agree its principal
risks, and assess the effectiveness of the controls put in place to
mitigate them.
The Audit Committee has considered the effectiveness of the risk
management process, and reviewed the corporate risks and those
risks which the Board considers to be principal risks. The
Committee has also reviewed information relating to actions taken
and the effectiveness of mitigating controls, prior to advising the
Board.
The Board has carried out its own robust assessment and agreed
the list of principal risks, taking into account the risks that
could threaten our business model, future performance, solvency or
liquidity, as well as our strategic objectives. To gain a
comprehensive understanding of the risks facing the business, the
Board and Audit Committee also receive presentations from the
Investment Manager and Investment Advisor, as well as other
external advisors.
There were no significant weaknesses identified in the risk
management process during the year, and no changes were made to the
framework by either the Investment Advisor's senior management team
or the Audit Committee.
Alongside the Board and Audit Committee, the Investment Manager
and Investment Advisor have primary roles in risk management. They
assist with the understanding of the risk framework; its
translation into operational risk management and measurement
activities; and compliance with those activities to ensure that
risks remain within a level which is acceptable to the Board.
The Management Engagement Committee is responsible for reviewing
the performance of third parties, which include the Investment
Manager and Investment Advisor. The Committee considers the
effectiveness of risk management processes as part of its
performance evaluation.
Our appetite for risk
The Board determines the level of risk it will accept in
achieving our business objectives, and this has not changed during
the year. Our overall risk tolerance is low and this, alongside our
culture, ensures that potential problems, risks or issues are
identified quickly, to enable consideration and appropriate action
to be taken.
We have no appetite for risk in relation to regulatory
compliance, or in relation to the health, safety and welfare of our
occupiers, the staff of our contractors and service providers, or
the wider community who are connected to, or impacted by, our
activities. We do, however, have a moderate appetite for risk in
relation to activities which drive revenues and increase financial
returns for our investors.
Our risk categories
We categorise our risks into groups, as although we recognise
that they are all closely linked, in most cases these categories
determine the allocation of responsibility for control, monitoring
and reporting.
Our reputation is important to us, and we consider the potential
for reputational damage in the assessment of all our risks. We do
not include reputational risk as a category, as it underpins our
approach to all risk evaluation and mitigation.
-- Business risks - relating to the delivery of our business,
including strategy, market, systems and processes and
stakeholders.
-- Operational risks - which focus on the Group's core business
and include the composition of our portfolio, valuation and tenancy
management.
-- Compliance risks - which cover every aspect of our business,
from the listing rules, to the environment rules, and the FCA's
requirements, as well as general business regulations such as
health and safety, taxation and modern slavery. The regulatory
environment in which we operate continues to develop and drive
higher standards and expectations for the Group.
-- Financial risks - arising from our strategy for funding our
business operations, including investors, joint ventures, debt and
cash management, and including market, credit and liquidity
risk.
Emerging risk
A significant element of our risk management process is
identifying and considering potential emerging risks and assessing
their ability to impact our business. Emerging risks are considered
during the regular risk reviews and would also be specifically
debated and evaluated as they arise during the year. Consideration
of emerging risks includes:
-- whether the risk is relevant to the Group's business;
-- how significant the impact would be, if the risk crystallises;
-- the assumptions we make in considering the risk;
-- our potential strategies for managing and mitigating the risk; and
-- whether this is a risk that we should continue to pro-actively monitor.
Clearly, the impact of the coronavirus pandemic, and the
associated lockdowns, created a significant challenge throughout
the year ended 31 March 2021. Whilst we had previously included
this in our principal risks, we widened our consideration during
the year to include the implications and challenges of a return to
more normal working and commercial arrangements, as lockdown
measures start, and hopefully continue, to lift during the 2021
calendar year.
Although our risk reviews during the year have resulted in the
addition of new risks in the corporate risk register, we have added
only one new principal risk, which is related to our work on our
ESG agenda. Further information is included in the climate change
section below.
Climate Change
We have committed to understanding our ESG risks and have
incorporated them within the risk management process in a number of
different ways. We have considered whether our ESG programme and
roadmap is appropriate in terms of timescales and content, and
whether we are communicating our intentions appropriately to our
stakeholders. These risks and associated mitigation plans have been
incorporated within the overall risk register.
We have included one specific principal risk relating to the
impact of climate change, which we consider could have an
increasing impact across the business. Potential issues
include:
Direct
- Adverse weather events impacting properties;
- Increasing costs of suppliers or disruption to supplies for maintenance and development;
- Increasing cost of utilities;
- Additional regulatory burden and an increasing risk of
non-compliance, because of the complexity and volume of regulation
arising;
- Properties not meeting occupier requirements relating to
energy efficiency or logistics; and
- Impact on property values/rents, if assets are not developed
or maintained to appropriate modern standards.
Indirect
- Impact on investor interest and our reputation compared to our peers; and
- Inability to access cheaper funding through green bonds and similar.
We have placed significant focus on ESG, and climate change risk
in particular, during the year, bringing in external specialists to
provide support in understanding issues and developing our plans
for the mitigation of risks. We have a robust framework in place,
including:
- a clear ESG strategy and action plan, linked to our overall business strategies and plans;
- regular Board oversight and monitoring of progress on our ESG roadmap;
- creation of a Sustainability Committee, which will be attended by our Investment Advisor;
- integrating a sustainability budget into our financial modelling processes; and
- development of a specific ESG risk register.
The Board has also reviewed and agreed a programme of activities
and targets for the next financial year, to support and drive our
ambitions in this area. This includes:
- targeted surveys of occupiers, to include alignment with
sustainability targets and reporting on energy performance;
- review of reporting relating to TCFD; and
- implementation of EPRA reporting during the year ending 31 March 2022.
During the year we will continue to research and evaluate our
exposure to climate-related risks, building on the foundations put
in place during the year ended 31 March 2021. We will reassess our
approach and plans as additional technologies and techniques are
identified and disseminated into the commercial marketplace. This
will enable us to challenge ourselves and our occupiers, to ensure
that we are taking effective actions to manage our impact on the
environment and to capture any potential commercial opportunities,
following the best practice recommendations of the TCFD.
Our Principal Risks
A principal risk is one that is considered material to the
Group's development, performance, position or future prospects. Our
principal risks are captured in the corporate risk register and are
reviewed by the Board and Audit Committee during their regular
meetings. This includes considering:
-- any substantial changes to principal risks, including new or emerging risks;
-- material changes to control frameworks in place;
-- changes in risk scores;
-- changes in tolerance to risk;
-- any significant risk incidents arising; and
-- progress with any additional mitigating actions which have been agreed.
Changes to Principal Risks
The Board has regularly reviewed the principal risks during the
year, each time reflecting on external and commercial pressures and
any changes arising from business activities and operations.
As referred to in the emerging risk section, we have added one
principal risk, relating to the impact of climate change.
One further risk, reflecting our ability to attract investors,
has been removed from the schedule of principal risks. It remains
on our corporate risk register, but we consider that the Group's
maturity, stability, reputation and performance have put us in a
position where this is no longer one of our principal risks.
In most cases, the business's exposure to the agreed principal
risks has reduced during the year. The potential impact of the
Covid-19 pandemic was difficult to predict in early 2020, and we
had taken a prudent approach and increased the exposure of some of
our key financial and operational risks. In the event, our
performance has been better than anticipated, and we have not seen
the more significant business impacts that could have arisen. We
therefore revised our assessment of risk as the year
progressed.
However, we remain cautious, as the outcome and cessation of the
pandemic control measures are not yet certain. Our enhanced control
and monitoring routines, put in place by the Investment Advisor to
support occupiers and provide clear visibility of the position and
trends over time, therefore remain in place.
Risk Potential impact Mitigation
---------------------------- ---------------------------------- ---------------------------------------
1 In addition to the immediate The underlying strength of the
Commercial health and social care business is the diverse occupier
impact of the risks, the potential impact base, with more than 600 occupiers
Coronavirus of the pandemic could still across the portfolio. We do
pandemic be significant, particularly not have significant proportions
if the planned move out of our business from any one
Business Risk of lockdown does not progress organisation or sector.
as planned. A range of enhanced controls
Impacts include: and mitigations were put in
- Commercial - potential place, and where appropriate,
loss of occupiers, increase these remain.
in bad debts, and increase The working arrangements for
in void rates and costs both the Investment Advisor's
- Financial - impact on asset managers and the outsourced
banking covenants, asset Property Managers are designed
values, returns and potentially to maintain regular contact
dividends and dialogue with occupiers,
- Reduced quality of services to provide the Board with clear
and support from key professional visibility of significant issues
advisors and risks arising.
The Board constantly assesses
the position, with additional
mitigations possible. For example,
there is the ability to flex
expenditure, such as capital
expenditure, refurbishments
and some discretionary costs.
---------------------------- ---------------------------------- ---------------------------------------
Change
in year:
â
------------------------- ---------------------------------- ---------------------------------------
2 A significant loss of rental We have a large and diverse
Significant income through bad debts occupier portfolio, which means
rent arrears could have a material impact we do not have a high level
and irrecoverable on our ability to meet of exposure to any specific
debt our financial forecasts. sector or organisation. We undertake
Our rent collection performance robust due diligence on occupiers,
Financial Risk has remained positive and which is subsequently supported
consistent, despite the by effective credit control
pandemic, and this risk processes.
has therefore reduced. The Investment Advisor continually
monitors our exposure to larger
occupiers, and the Board receives
analysis of portfolio risk by
sector and customer. We also
take rent deposits and rent
guarantees, where appropriate,
and rents are predominantly
paid in advance.
We frequently monitor debtors
to ensure that we have the most
up-to-date view of the position,
and the Investment Advisor's
Asset Managers and the Property
Managers maintain regular contact
and relationships with occupiers.
----------------------------
Change
in year:
â
3 We have engaged external advisors
Impact of climate to assist us with developing
change a pro-active ESG strategy and
action plan.
Business Risk The Board's strategy review
included detailed focus on ESG
issues and the Board has oversight
of the agreed ESG roadmap. A
sustainability budget has been
integrated into our financial
modelling processes.
We have set up a Sustainability
Committee, which includes input
from the Investment Advisor
and the Board, and there is
a separate ESG risk register,
which enables us to continually
monitor progress in key risk
areas.
A number of specific actions
are planned for the year ending
31 March 2022, including occupier
surveys, a review of TCFD reporting,
and the roll out of EPRA reporting.
----------------------------
Change Climate change will have
in year: an impact across all businesses
NEW and sectors. We have considered
the potential risks for
the Group and have identified
both direct and indirect
impacts.
These impacts include increasing
costs, an increasing regulatory
burden, reluctance of occupiers
to take leases on buildings
which are not efficient
in design or for their
operations, and a potential
reduction in asset values.
In turn, this may impact
our ability to attract
and retain investors, and
to access the most cost-effective
funding.
4 Inappropriate acquisitions We have a clearly defined investment
Acquisition could reduce our returns strategy, with processes and
of inappropriate and increase risk. controls designed to ensure
assets or unrecognised that we only make compliant
liabilities, acquisitions.
or a breach Our acquisition and disposal
of investment protocols set out robust and
strategy documented due diligence processes
for all key areas of consideration,
including portfolio mix, property
type and quality, legal issues,
Operational environmental requirements,
Risk and the sector and quality of
occupier. Where appropriate,
we seek external expertise,
for example on environmental
issues and property valuations.
All potential acquisitions are
measured against our agreed
investment strategy by the Investment
Advisor and approved by G10,
the Investment Manager. Significant
acquisition decisions must also
be approved by the Board.
---------------------------- ---------------------------------- ---------------------------------------
Change
in year:
----------------------- --- ---------------------------------- ---------------------------------------
5 If our strategy is not The Board uses its expertise
Poor returns delivered effectively, and experience to set our investment
on portfolio it would be challenging strategy and seeks external
to produce the target returns advice to underpin its decisions,
Business Risk set out in the Company's for example through independent
prospectus. asset valuations.
We consider our exposure There are robust controls and
to this risk has reduced detailed due diligence arrangements
during the year, as the in place around the acquisition
market for industrial and of assets, designed to ensure
logistics property is positive, that investments will produce
which is enhancing pricing the expected results.
and returns overall. Significant changes in the portfolio,
both acquisitions and disposals,
require specific Board approval.
The Board regularly reviews
performance statistics against
forecasts and targets.
---------------------------- ---------------------------------- ---------------------------------------
Change
in year:
â
------------------------- ---------------------------------- ---------------------------------------
6 If we breach REIT or AIM We have a comprehensive governance
Loss of REIT rules, there would be a framework, including the Board
status significant impact on investors. and Audit Committee, and clearly
allocated responsibilities,
Compliance Risk set out through the matters
reserved for the Board, terms
of reference for Board Committees,
and contracts with the Investment
Advisor and other key service
providers.
We seek external advice on governance
and compliance with rules. Peel
Hunt is our Nominated Advisor
and is responsible for advising
and guiding us on our responsibilities
under the AIM rules. Deloitte
advise, monitor and file all
corporate tax compliance matters
on behalf of the Group.
The position against key requirements
of the REIT legislation is reviewed
by the Investment Advisor each
month and by Link quarterly,
and is reported to the Board.
Similarly, cash and earnings
cover for dividends is continuously
monitored.
----------------------------
Change
in year:
7 Breaching borrowing policies The Investment Advisor continually
Breach of borrowing and/or loan covenants may monitors our debt covenants
policy or loan affect our ability to obtain and reports on them to the Board.
covenants additional funding, either Performance and forecasts are
through investment or financing. reported to the Board on a quarterly
Financial Risk The reduction in exposure basis and considered against
is linked to the positive the approved treasury strategy.
market and asset values, We prepare a quarterly compliance
which, when coupled with letter for our lenders, which
the Group's positive cash confirms our position over the
position, make it unlikely period.
that compliance with the Loan to value ratios are reviewed
borrowing policy or loan regularly and investment decisions
covenant could be put at take these into account.
risk.
----------------------------
Change
in year:
â
8 If the Investment Advisor The Board and the Investment
Poor performance does not perform as anticipated, Advisor work closely together,
of the Investment there is potentially a with frequent liaison supporting
Advisor significant risk to our the regular Board meetings and
success. comprehensive formal reporting
Business Risk that has been put in place.
Individuals within the Investment
Advisor have significant shareholdings
in the Company, which significantly
reduces the risk that the Investment
Advisor will not fulfil its
responsibilities.
The activities of the Investment
Advisor are also subject to
the oversight of the Investment
Manager, G10, which reviews
and approves all major transactions,
including the acquisition and
disposal of assets.
The Investment Advisor has invested
significantly in additional
resources during the year, building
its strength and depth.
The Management Engagement Committee
carries out an annual formal
service review of the Investment
Advisor.
---------------------------- ---------------------------------- ---------------------------------------
Change
in year:
------------------------- ---------------------------------- ---------------------------------------
9 Changes in interest rates We actively manage our debt
Interest rate could affect our ability position. We have a funding
changes to fund and deliver our arrangement with a consortium,
strategy. Interest rate which provides a five-year facility
Financial Risk changes may also affect with significant headroom, at
overall market stability. commercially attractive rates.
We have interest rate caps in
place, to reduce the impact
of any significant volatility,
and review hedging requirements
quarterly.
The Investment Advisor maintains
detailed forecasts of the property
portfolio, subject to regular
scenario testing, and reports
regularly to the Board. This
enables us to be pro-active
in our response to changes in
economic conditions.
---------------------------- ---------------------------------- ---------------------------------------
Change
in year:
------------------------- ---------------------------------- ---------------------------------------
GOING CONCERN AND VIABILITY STATEMENT
Going concern
The Board monitors the Group's ability to continue as a going
concern. Specifically, at quarterly Board meetings, the Board
reviews summaries of the Group's liquidity position and compliance
with loan covenants, as well as forecast financial performance and
cash flows. Throughout the year, the Board had been meeting
frequently, in conjunction with the Investment Advisor, to review
the current uncertainties created by the Covid-19 pandemic,
specifically rent collection, cash resources, loan facility
headroom and covenant compliance, acquisitions and disposals of
investment properties, discretionary and committed capital
expenditure and dividend distributions.
The Group ended the year with GBP21.3 million of unrestricted
cash and GBP23.0 million of headroom readily available under the
facilities. The Group is operating significantly within its
covenants and a sensitivity analysis has been performed to identify
the decrease in valuations and rental income that would result in a
breach of the LTV, market value covenants or interest cover
covenants. Valuations would need to fall by 49.1% or rents by
70.0%, when compared with 31 March 2021, before these covenants
would be breached, which, based on available market data, is
considered highly unlikely.
As at 24 May 2021, 95.8% of rents invoiced in March 2021 in
relation to the quarter to June 2021 were received.
As part of the going concern assessment, and taking the above
into consideration, the Directors reviewed a number of scenarios
which included extreme downside sensitivities in relation to rental
cash collection, making no acquisitions or discretionary capital
expenditure, and minimum dividend distributions under the REIT
rules.
Based on this information, and in light of mitigating actions
available, the Directors have a reasonable expectation that the
Group and the Company have adequate resources to continue in
business for a period of at least 12 months from the date of
approval of the Annual Report and Financial Statements. The
Directors are also not aware of any material uncertainties that may
cast significant doubt upon the Group's ability to continue as a
going concern. They therefore have adopted the going concern basis
in the preparation of the Annual Report and Financial
Statements.
Assessment of viability
In accordance with the AIC Code of Corporate Governance, the
Directors have assessed the Group's prospects over a period greater
than the 12 months considered by the going concern provision.
The Directors have conducted their assessment over a three-year
period to May 2024, allowing a reasonable level of accuracy given
typical lease terms and the cyclical nature of the UK property
market.
The principal risks detailed previously summarise the matters
that could prevent the Group from delivering its strategy. The
Board seeks to ensure that risks are kept to a minimum at all times
and, where appropriate, the potential impact of such risks is
modelled within its viability assessment.
The nature of the Group's business as the owner of a diverse
portfolio of UK warehouses, principally located close to urban
centres or major highways and let to a wide variety of occupiers,
reduces the impact of adverse changes in the general economic
environment or market conditions, particularly as the properties
are typically flexible spaces, adaptable to changes in occupational
demands.
The Directors' assessment takes into account forecast cash
flows, debt maturity and renewal prospects, forecast covenant
compliance, dividend cover and REIT compliance. The model is then
stress tested for severe but plausible scenarios (including
potential impacts arising as a result of the response to the
Covid-19 pandemic), individually and in aggregate, along with
consideration of potential mitigating factors. The key
sensitivities applied to the model are a downturn in economic
outlook and restricted availability of finance, specifically:
-- increased occupier churn;
-- increased void periods following break or expiry;
-- decreased rental income; and
-- increased interest rates.
Current debt and associated covenants are summarised in note 17,
with no covenant breaches during the period. The sensitivity
analysis identifies the decrease in valuations and rental income
that would result in a breach of the LTV, market value covenants or
interest cover covenants.
Taking into account mitigating actions, the results of the
sensitivity analysis and stress testing demonstrated that the Group
would have sufficient liquidity to meet its ongoing liabilities as
they fall due, maintain compliance with banking covenants and
maintain compliance with the REIT regime over the period of the
assessment.
Furthermore, the Board, in conjunction with the Audit Committee,
carried out a robust assessment of the principal risks and
uncertainties facing the Group, including those that would threaten
its business model, strategy, future performance, solvency or
liquidity over the three-year period. The risk review process
provided the Board with assurance that the mitigations and
management systems are operating as intended. The Board believes
that the Group is well positioned to manage its principal risks and
uncertainties successfully, taking into account the current
Covid-19 risk and the economic and political environment.
The Board's expectation is further supported by regular
briefings provided by the Investment Advisor. These briefings
consider market conditions, opportunities, changes in the
regulatory landscape and the current economic and political risks
and uncertainties. Additionally, the trend for increased warehouse
space driven by online sales and the shortage of supply nationally
is seen as mitigation. These risks, and other potential risks which
may arise, continue to be closely monitored by the Board.
Viability statement
Having considered the forecast cash flows, covenant compliance
and the impact of sensitivities in combination, the Directors
confirm that, taking account of the Group's current position, the
principal risks set out in the strategic report and in light of the
current economic uncertainty resulting from the impact of Covid-19,
they have a reasonable expectation that the Group will be able to
continue in operation and meet its liabilities as they fall due
over the three-year period of their assessment.
On behalf of the Board
Neil Kirton
Chairman
24 May 2021
STATEMENT OF DIRECTORS' RESPONSIBILITIES IN RESPECT OF THE
ANNUAL REPORT AND FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
The Directors are responsible for preparing the Annual Report
and Financial Statements in accordance with applicable UK law and
International Financial Reporting Standards ("IFRS") and in
conformity with the requirements of the Companies Act 2006.
Company law requires the Directors to prepare financial
statements for each financial year. Under that law, the Directors
have elected to prepare the financial statements of the Group in
accordance with IFRS. Under company law, the Directors must not
approve the financial statements unless they are satisfied that
they present fairly the financial position, financial performance
and cash flows of the Group for that year.
In preparing the financial statements, the Directors are
required to:
-- select suitable accounting policies in accordance with IAS 8
Accounting Policies, Changes in Accounting Estimates and Errors and
apply them consistently;
-- present information, including accounting policies, in a
manner that provides relevant, reliable, comparable and
understandable information;
-- provide additional disclosures when compliance with specific
requirements in IFRS is insufficient to enable users to understand
the impact of particular transactions, other events and conditions
on the Group's financial position and financial performance;
-- state that the Group has complied with IFRS, subject to any
material departures disclosed and explained in the financial
statements; and
-- make judgements and estimates that are reasonable and prudent.
The Directors are responsible for keeping adequate accounting
records that are sufficient to show and explain the Company's
transactions and disclose with reasonable accuracy at any time the
financial position of the Group and enable them to ensure that the
financial statements comply with the Companies Act 2006 and Article
4 of the IAS Regulation. They are also responsible for safeguarding
the assets of the Group and hence for taking reasonable steps for
the prevention and detection of fraud and other irregularities.
Under applicable law and regulations, the Directors are also
responsible for preparing a strategic report, Directors' report,
Directors' remuneration report and corporate governance statement
that comply with that law and those regulations, and for ensuring
that the Annual Report includes information required by the AIM
Rules and (where applicable) the Disclosure Guidance and
Transparency Rules of the FCA.
The Directors are responsible for the maintenance and integrity
of the corporate and financial information included on the
Company's website. The work carried out by the Auditor does not
involve consideration of the maintenance and integrity of this
website and, accordingly, the Auditor accepts no responsibility for
any changes that have occurred to the financial statements since
they were initially presented on the website. Visitors to the
website need to be aware that legislation in the UK covering the
preparation and dissemination of the financial statements may
differ from legislation in their jurisdiction.
We confirm that to the best of our knowledge:
-- the financial statements, prepared in accordance with IFRS
and in conformity with the requirements of the Companies Act 2006,
give a true and fair view of the assets, liabilities, financial
position and profit of the Company (and Group as a whole); and
-- the Chairman's Statement and Investment Advisor's Report
include a fair review of the development and performance of the
business and the position of the Company (and Group as a whole),
together with a description of the principal risks and
uncertainties that it faces.
The Directors consider that the Chairman's Statement and
Investment Advisor's Report and Financial Statements, taken as a
whole, are fair, balanced and understandable and provide the
information necessary for shareholders to assess the Company's
position and performance, business model and strategy.
On behalf of the Board
Neil Kirton
Chairman
24 May 2021
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF COMPREHENSIVE INCOME
For the year ended 31 March 2021
Year ended Year ended
------------------------------------------------------------ -----
31 March 31 March
2021 2020
Continuing operations Notes GBP'000 GBP'000
------------------------------------------------------------ ----- ---------- ----------
Revenue 3 35,758 30,053
Property operating expenses 4 (4,612) (3,930)
------------------------------------------------------------ ----- ---------- ----------
Gross profit 31,146 26,123
Administration expenses 4 (6,324) (5,032)
Operating profit before gains on investment properties 24,822 21,091
Fair value gains on investment properties 13 105,023 5,104
Realised (loss)/profit on disposal of investment properties 13 (504) 934
------------------------------------------------------------ ----- ---------- ----------
Operating profit 129,341 27,129
Finance income 7 26 30
Finance expenses 8 (6,257) (6,483)
Profit before tax 123,110 20,676
Taxation 9 - -
------------------------------------------------------------ ----- ---------- ----------
Total comprehensive income for the period 123,110 20,676
------------------------------------------------------------ ----- ---------- ----------
Earnings per share (basic and diluted) (pence) 12 35.2 8.6
------------------------------------------------------------ ----- ---------- ----------
All items in the above statement derive from continuing
operations. No operations were acquired or discontinued during the
year.
There is no other comprehensive income and therefore the profit
for the year after tax is also the total comprehensive income.
The accompanying notes form an integral part of these financial
statements.
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF FINANCIAL POSITION
As at 31 March 2021
31 March 31 March
2021 2020
Notes GBP'000 GBP'000
------------------------------------------------------ ----- --------- ---------
Assets
Non-current assets
Investment property 13 807,063 459,088
Interest rate derivatives 16 16 22
------------------------------------------------------ ----- --------- ---------
807,079 459,110
------------------------------------------------------ ----- --------- ---------
Current assets
Cash and cash equivalents 14 27,185 5,483
Trade and other receivables 15 5,977 6,408
------------------------------------------------------ ----- --------- ---------
33,162 11,891
------------------------------------------------------ ----- --------- ---------
Total assets 840,241 471,001
------------------------------------------------------ ----- --------- ---------
Liabilities
Non-current liabilities
Interest-bearing loans and borrowings 17 (219,099) (183,190)
Other payables and accrued expenses 19 (17,050) (4,500)
Head lease liability 18 (14,259) (8,319)
------------------------------------------------------ ----- --------- ---------
(250,408) (196,009)
------------------------------------------------------ ----- --------- ---------
Current liabilities
Other payables and accrued expenses 19 (7,573) (6,497)
Deferred income 19 (7,531) (4,888)
Head lease liability 18 (638) (488)
------------------------------------------------------ ----- --------- ---------
(15,742) (11,873)
------------------------------------------------------ ----- --------- ---------
Total liabilities (266,150) (207,882)
------------------------------------------------------ ----- --------- ---------
Net assets 574,091 263,119
------------------------------------------------------ ----- --------- ---------
Equity
Share capital 20 4,249 2,403
Share premium 21 275,648 74,028
Capital reduction reserve 22 161,149 161,149
Retained earnings 22 133,045 25,539
------------------------------------------------------ ----- --------- ---------
Total equity 574,091 263,119
------------------------------------------------------ ----- --------- ---------
Number of shares in issue (thousands) 424,862 240,254
Net asset value per share (basic and diluted) (pence) 23 135.1 109.5
------------------------------------------------------ ----- --------- ---------
These financial statements were approved by the Board of
Directors of Warehouse REIT plc on 24 May 2021 and signed on its
behalf by:
Neil Kirton
Company number: 10880317
The accompanying notes form an integral part of these financial
statements.
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN EQUITY
For the year ended 31 March 2021
Capital
Share Share Retained reduction
capital premium earnings reserve Total
Notes GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
--------------------------- ------ ------- ------- -------- --------- --------
Balance at 31 March 2019 1,660 - 19,518 161,149 182,327
Total comprehensive income - - 20,676 - 20,676
Ordinary shares issued 20, 21 743 75,739 - - 76,482
Share issue costs 21 - (1,711) - - (1,711)
Dividends paid 11 - - (14,655) - (14,655)
--------------------------- ------ ------- ------- -------- --------- --------
Balance at 31 March 2020 2,403 74,028 25,539 161,149 263,119
Total comprehensive income - - 123,110 - 123,110
Ordinary shares issued 20, 21 1,846 205,965 - - 207,811
Share issue costs 21 - (4,345) - - (4,345)
Dividends paid 11 - - (15,604) - (15,604)
--------------------------- ------ ------- ------- -------- --------- --------
Balance at 31 March 2021 4,249 275,648 133,045 161,149 574,091
--------------------------- ------ ------- ------- -------- --------- --------
The accompanying notes form an integral part of these financial
statements.
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS
For the year ended 31 March 2021
Year ended Year ended
31 March 31 March
2021 2020
Notes GBP'000 GBP'000
------------------------------------------------------------------ ----- ---------- ----------
Cash flows from operating activities
Operating profit 129,341 27,129
Adjustments to reconcile profit for the period to net cash flows:
Gains from change in fair value of investment properties 13 (105,023) (5,104)
Realised loss/(gain) on disposal of investment properties 13 504 (934)
Head lease asset depreciation 4 134 110
Operating cash flows before movements in working capital 24,956 21,201
Increase in other receivables and prepayments (4,173) (2,410)
Increase in other payables and accrued expenses 3,415 3,365
Movement in property and acquisition provision - (1,434)
Net cash flow generated from operating activities 24,198 20,722
------------------------------------------------------------------ ----- ---------- ----------
Cash flows from investing activities
Acquisition of investment properties (224,803) (144,700)
Capital expenditure (1,041) (3,378)
Development expenditure (1,368) (236)
Disposal of investment properties 15,945 16,355
------------------------------------------------------------------ ----- ---------- ----------
Net cash used in investing activities (211,267) (131,959)
------------------------------------------------------------------ ----- ---------- ----------
Cash flows from financing activities
Proceeds from issue of ordinary shares 20,21 198,834 76,482
Share issuance costs paid 21 (4,345) (1,711)
Bank loans drawn down 17 73,300 320,000
Bank loans repaid 17 (37,800) (260,500)
Interest received 7 26 30
Loan interest and other finance expenses paid (4,577) (4,524)
Loan issue costs paid (315) (2,761)
Head lease payments (748) (507)
Dividends paid in the period 11 (15,604) (14,655)
Net cash flow generated from financing activities 208,771 111,854
------------------------------------------------------------------ ----- ---------- ----------
Net increase in cash and cash equivalents 21,702 617
Cash and cash equivalents at start of the period 5,483 4,866
------------------------------------------------------------------ ----- ---------- ----------
Cash and cash equivalents at end of the period 14 27,185 5,483
------------------------------------------------------------------ ----- ---------- ----------
The accompanying notes form an integral part of these financial
statements.
NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
For the year ended 31 March 2021
1. General information
Warehouse REIT plc is a closed-ended Real Estate Investment
Trust ("REIT") incorporated in England and Wales on 24 July 2017.
The Company began trading on 20 September 2017. The registered
office of the Company is located at Beaufort House, 51 New North
Road, Exeter EX4 4EP. The Company's shares are admitted to trading
on AIM, a market operated by the London Stock Exchange.
The Group's consolidated financial statements for the year ended
31 March 2021 comprise the results of the Company and its
subsidiaries (together constituting the "Group") and were approved
by the Board and authorised for issue on 24 May 2021.
2. Basis of preparation
The financial information set out in these financial statements
does not constitute the Company's statutory accounts for the year
ended 31 March 2021, but is derived from those accounts. Statutory
accounts for the year ended 31 March 2021 will be delivered to the
Registrar of Companies following the Company's Annual General
Meeting. The auditor has reported on those accounts; their report
was unqualified, did not draw to attention any matters by way of
emphasis of matter without qualifying their report and did not
contain statements under s498(2) or (3) of the Companies Act 2006.
The text of the Auditor's Report can be found in the full Annual
Report.
These financial statements are prepared in accordance with IFRS
issued by the International Accounting Standards Board ("IASB") and
in conformity with the requirements of the Companies Act 2006. The
financial statements have been prepared under the historical cost
convention, except for the revaluation of investment properties and
financial instruments that are measured at revalued amounts or fair
values at the end of each reporting period, as explained in the
accounting policies below. Historical cost is generally based on
the fair value of the consideration given in exchange for goods and
services. The audited financial statements are presented in Pound
Sterling and all values are rounded to the nearest thousand pounds
(GBP'000), except when otherwise indicated.
The Directors have made an assessment of the Group's ability to
continue as a going concern. They carefully considered areas of
potential financial risk and reviewed cash flow forecasts,
evaluating a number of scenarios which included extreme downside
sensitivities in relation to rental cash collection, making no
acquisitions or discretionary capital expenditure and minimum
dividend distributions under the REIT rules. A range of scenarios
have been applied (including potential impacts arising as a result
of the response to the Covid-19 pandemic). Further effects of the
Covid-19 outbreak are documented in the risk management and
principal risks above. The Directors are satisfied that the Group
has the resources to continue in business for the foreseeable
future, for a period of not less than 12 months from the date of
this report. Furthermore, the Directors are not aware of any
material uncertainties that may cast significant doubt upon the
Group's ability to continue as a going concern. Therefore, the
financial statements have been prepared on the going concern
basis.
1.1 Changes to accounting standards and interpretations
There were a number of new standards and amendments to existing
standards which are required for the Group's accounting period
beginning on 1 April 2020, which have been considered and applied
as follows:
Amendments to IFRS 3: Definition of a Business
The amendment to IFRS 3 Business Combinations clarifies that to
be considered a business, an integrated set of activities and
assets must include, at a minimum, an input and a substantive
process that, together, significantly contribute to the ability to
create output. Furthermore, it clarifies that a business can exist
without including all of the inputs and processes needed to create
outputs. Careful consideration is given to the accounting treatment
for each acquisition. Most acquisitions made by the Group are
treated as the acquisition of a group of assets, so the amendments
to this standard have not had any impact on the financial
statements.
Amendments to IFRS 16: Covid-19 Related Rent Concessions
The amendments provide relief to lessees from applying IFRS 16
guidance on lease modification accounting for rent concessions
arising as a direct consequence of the Covid-19 pandemic. The Group
has not received any concessions for its ground rent costs and
therefore the accounting treatment has not been affected.
The adoption of these amendments has not led to any changes to
the Group's accounting policies or had any material impact on the
financial position or performance of the Group.
The following have been considered, but have had no impact on
the Group for the reporting period:
Amendments to IAS 1 and IAS 8: Definition of Material
The amendments provide a new definition of material; the
amendments clarify that materiality will depend on the nature or
magnitude of information, either individually or in combination
with other information, in the context of the financial statements.
A misstatement of information is material if it could reasonably be
expected to influence decisions made by the primary users. These
amendments had no significant impact on the consolidated financial
statements of, nor is there expected to be any signification impact
to the Group in the future.
Conceptual Framework for Financial Reporting
The Conceptual Framework is not a standard, and none of the
concepts contained therein override the concepts or requirements in
any standard. The revised Conceptual Framework includes some new
concepts, updated definitions and recognition criteria for assets
and liabilities and clarifies some important concepts. These
amendments had no impact on the consolidated financial statements
of the Group.
There are a number of new standards and amendments to existing
standards which have been published and are mandatory for the
Group's accounting periods beginning on or after 1 April 2021 or
later. The Group is not adopting these standards early. The
following are the most relevant to the Group:
Interest Rate Benchmark Reform-Phase 2 (Amendments to various
standards: IFRS 9 Financial Instruments, IAS 39 Financial
Instruments; Recognition and Measurement, IFRS 7 Financial
Instruments: Disclosures, IFRS 4 Insurance Contracts and IFRS 16
Leases) The amendments address issues that might affect financial
reporting when an existing interest rate benchmark is replaced with
an alternative benchmark interest rate. The Group's borrowings will
be transitioning from the London Interbank Offer Rate ("LIBOR")
benchmark to the Sterling Overnight Index Average ("SONIA")
benchmark in due course. There is expected to be negligible cost
involved in the borrowing facility transition and the respective
hedge instrument amendments. The Directors are currently assessing
the impact of the changes in accounting standards but as the Group
does not apply hedge accounting, it is anticipated that the
accounting standard amendments will not have a significant impact
on the preparation of the financial statements.
Amendments to IAS 1 Presentation of Financial Statements
(effective 1 January 2022) - clarifies that liabilities are
classified as either current or non-current, depending on the
rights that exist at the end of the reporting period and not
expectations of or actual events after the reporting date. The
amendments also give clarification to the definition of settlement
of a liability. The amendments are not expected to have a
significant impact on the preparation of the financial
statements.
Amendments to IFRS 3 Business Combinations (effective 1 January
2022) - gives clarification on the recognition of contingent
liabilities at acquisition and clarifies that contingent assets
should not be recognised at the acquisition date. The amendments
are not expected to have a significant impact on the preparation of
the financial statements.
2.2 Significant accounting judgements and estimates
The preparation of these financial statements in accordance with
IFRS requires the Directors of the Company to make judgements,
estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amounts
recognised in the financial statements. However, uncertainty about
these assumptions and estimates could result in outcomes that
require a material adjustment to the carrying amount of the asset
or liability in the future.
Judgements
In the course of preparing the financial statements, no
judgements have been made in the process of applying the Group's
accounting policies, other than those involving estimations, that
have had a significant effect on the amounts recognised in the
financial statements.
Estimates
In the process of applying the Group's accounting policies, the
Investment Advisor has made the following estimates which have the
most significant risk of material change to the carrying value of
assets recognised in the consolidated financial statements:
Valuation of property
The valuations of the Group's investment property are at fair
value as determined by the external valuer on the basis of market
value in accordance with the internationally accepted RICS
Valuation - Professional Standards January 2020 (incorporating the
International Valuation Standards) and in accordance with IFRS 13.
The key estimates made by the valuer are the ERV and equivalent
yields of each investment property. See notes 13 and 24 for further
details.
2.3 Summary of significant accounting policies
The principal accounting policies applied in the preparation of
these financial statements are stated in the notes to the financial
statements.
a) Basis of consolidation
The Company does not meet the definition of an investment entity
and therefore does not qualify for the consolidation exemption
under IFRS 10. The consolidated financial statements comprise the
financial statements of the Group and its subsidiaries as at 31
March 2021. Subsidiaries are consolidated from the date of
acquisition, being the date on which the Group obtained control,
and will continue to be consolidated until the date that such
control ceases. An investor controls an investee when the investor
is exposed, or has rights, to variable returns from its involvement
with the investee and has the ability to affect those returns
through its power over the investee. In preparing these financial
statements, intra-group balances, transactions and unrealised gains
or losses have been eliminated in full. All subsidiaries have the
same year end as the Company. Uniform accounting policies are
adopted in the financial statements for like transactions and
events in similar circumstances.
b) Functional and presentation currency
The overall objective of the Group is to generate returns in
Pound Sterling and the Group's performance is evaluated in Pound
Sterling. Therefore, the Directors consider Pound Sterling as the
currency that most faithfully represents the economic effects of
the underlying transactions, events and conditions and have
therefore adopted it as the functional and presentation
currency.
c) Segmental reporting
The Directors are of the opinion that the Group is engaged in a
single segment of business, being the investment and provision of
UK urban warehouses.
3. Revenue
Year ended Year ended
31 March 31 March
2021 2020
GBP'000 GBP'000
-------------------- ---------- ----------
Rental income 34,225 28,513
Insurance recharged 930 663
Dilapidation income 603 877
-------------------- ---------- ----------
Total 35,758 30,053
-------------------- ---------- ----------
Accounting policy
Rental income arising from operating leases on investment
property is accounted for on a straight-line basis over the lease
term and is included in gross rental income in the Group statement
of comprehensive income. Initial direct costs incurred in
negotiating and arranging an operating lease are recognised as an
expense over the lease term on the same basis as the lease income.
Rental income is invoiced in advance and for all rental income that
relates to a future period, this is deferred and appears with
current liabilities on the Group statement of financial
position.
For leases which contain fixed or minimum uplifts, the rental
income arising from such uplifts is recognised on a straight-line
basis over the lease term.
Tenant lease incentives are recognised as an adjustment of
rental revenue on a straight-line basis over the term of the lease.
The lease term is the non-cancellable period of the lease together
with any further term for which the tenant has the option to
continue the lease where, at the inception of the lease, the
Directors are reasonably certain that the tenant will exercise that
option.
Insurance income is recognised in the accounting period in which
the services are rendered.
Amounts received from occupiers to terminate leases or to
compensate for dilapidations are recognised in the Group statement
of comprehensive income when the right to receive them arises.
4. Property operating and administration expenses
Year ended Year ended
31 March 31 March
2021 2020
GBP'000 GBP'000
------------------------------------ ---------- ----------
Premises expenses 2,691 2,446
Insurance 1,047 818
Rates 339 376
Utilities 136 170
Loss allowance on trade receivables 399 120
Property operating expenses 4,612 3,930
Investment Advisor fees 4,393 2,812
Directors' remuneration 150 150
Head lease asset depreciation 134 110
Other administration expenses 1,647 1,584
Costs of postponed equity raise - 376
------------------------------------ ---------- ----------
Administration expenses 6,324 5,032
------------------------------------ ---------- ----------
Total 10,936 8,962
------------------------------------ ---------- ----------
Accounting policy
All property operating expenses and administration expenses are
charged to the consolidated statement of comprehensive income and
are accounted for on an accruals basis.
5. Directors' remuneration
Year ended Year ended
31 March 31 March
2021 2020
GBP'000 GBP'000
------------------ ---------- ----------
Neil Kirton 45 45
Lynette Lackey 35 35
Martin Meech 35 35
Aimée Pitman 35 35
Total 150 150
------------------ ---------- ----------
A summary of the Directors' emoluments, including the
disclosures required by the Companies Act 2006, is set out in the
Directors' remuneration report. The Group had no employees in
either period.
6. Auditor's remuneration
Year ended Year ended
31 March 31 March
2021 2020
GBP'000 GBP'000
---------- ---------- ----------
Audit fee 152 135
---------- ---------- ----------
Total 152 135
---------- ---------- ----------
The Group reviews the scope and nature of all proposed non-audit
services before engagement, to ensure that the independence and
objectivity of the Auditor are safeguarded. Audit fees are
comprised of the following items:
Year ended Year ended
31 March 31 March
2021 2020
GBP'000 GBP'000
------------------------------------------------------ ---------- ----------
Group year-end Annual Report and Financial Statements 122 105
Subsidiary accounts 30 30
------------------------------------------------------ ---------- ----------
Total 152 135
------------------------------------------------------ ---------- ----------
Non-audit fees are comprised of the following:
Year ended Year ended
31 March 31 March
2021 2020
GBP'000 GBP'000
------------------------------------------------------- ---------- ----------
Services in respect of an acquisition - 60
Tax advice 163 231
Services provided as reporting accountant on equity
raise 45 95
Services provided as reporting accountant on postponed
equity raise 13 83
------------------------------------------------------- ---------- ----------
Total 221 469
------------------------------------------------------- ---------- ----------
7. Finance income
Year ended Year ended
31 March 31 March
2021 2020
GBP'000 GBP'000
----------------------------------------- ---------- ----------
Income from cash and short-term deposits 26 30
----------------------------------------- ---------- ----------
Total 26 30
----------------------------------------- ---------- ----------
Accounting policy
Interest income is recognised on an effective interest rate
basis and shown within the Group statement of comprehensive income
as finance income.
8. Finance expenses
Year ended Year ended
31 March 31 March
2021 2020
GBP'000 GBP'000
-------------------------------------------------- ---------- ----------
Loan interest 4,512 4,717
Head lease interest 1,016 597
Loan arrangement fees amortised 721 941
Bank charges 2 1
-------------------------------------------------- ---------- ----------
6,251 6,256
Change in fair value of interest rate derivatives 6 227
-------------------------------------------------- ---------- ----------
Total 6,257 6,483
-------------------------------------------------- ---------- ----------
Accounting policy
Any finance costs that are separately identifiable and directly
attributable to a liability which takes a period of time to
complete are amortised as part of the cost of the liability. All
other finance costs are expensed in the period in which they occur.
Finance costs consist of interest and other costs that an entity
incurs in connection with bank and other borrowings. Fair value
movements on derivatives are recorded in finance expenses.
9. Taxation
Corporation tax has arisen as follows:
Year ended Year ended
31 March 31 March
2021 2020
GBP'000 GBP'000
---------------------------------- ---------- ----------
Corporation tax on residual income - -
---------------------------------- ---------- ----------
Total - -
---------------------------------- ---------- ----------
Reconciliation of tax charge to profit before tax:
Year ended Year ended
31 March 31 March
2021 2020
GBP'000 GBP'000
----------------------------------------- ---------- ----------
Profit before tax 123,110 20,676
Corporation tax at 19.0% (2020: 19.0%) 23,392 3,928
Change in value of investment properties (19,860) (1,147)
Tax-exempt property rental business (3,532) (2,781)
Total - -
----------------------------------------- ---------- ----------
Accounting policy
Corporation tax is recognised in the consolidated statement of
comprehensive income except where in certain circumstances
corporation tax may be recognised in other comprehensive
income.
As a REIT, the Group is exempt from corporation tax on the
profits and gains from its property rental business, provided it
continues to meet certain conditions as per the REIT
regulations.
Non-qualifying profits and gains of the Group continue to be
subject to corporation tax. Therefore, current tax is the expected
tax payable on the non-qualifying taxable income for the period, if
applicable, using tax rates enacted or substantively enacted at the
balance sheet date.
10. Operating leases
Operating lease commitments - as lessor
The Group has entered into commercial property leases on its
investment property portfolio. These non-cancellable leases have a
remaining term of up to 15 years.
Future minimum rentals receivable under non-cancellable
operating leases as at 31 March 2021 are as follows:
31 March 31 March
2021 2020
GBP'000 GBP'000
--------------------------- -------- --------
Within one year 40,530 27,868
Between one and five years 102,912 63,500
More than five years 62,818 31,528
--------------------------- -------- --------
Total 206,260 122,896
--------------------------- -------- --------
11. Dividends
Pence
For the year ended 31 March 2021 per share GBP'000
----------------------------------------------------- --------- --------------------
Fourth interim dividend for year ended 31 March 2020
paid on 3 July 2020 1.60 3,844
First interim dividend for year ended 31 March 2021
paid on 2 October 2020 1.55 5,880
Second interim dividend for year ended 31 March 2021
paid on 31 December 2020 1.55 5,880
Total dividends paid during the year 4.70 15,604
----------------------------------------------------- --------- --------------------
Paid as:
Property income distributions 4.70 15,604
Non-property income distributions - -
----------------------------------------------------- --------- --------------------
Total 4.70 15,604
----------------------------------------------------- --------- --------------------
Pence
For the year ended 31 March 2020 per share GBP'000
------------------------------------------------------------------------------ --------- --------------------
Fourth interim dividend for year ended 31 March 2019 paid on 28 June 2019 1.50 3,604
First interim dividend for year ended 31 March 2020 paid on 27 September 2019 1.50 3,604
Second interim dividend for year ended 31 March 2020 paid on 27 December 2019 1.50 3,604
Third interim dividend for year ended 31 March 2020 paid on 31 March 2020 1.60 3,843
Total dividends paid during the year 6.10 14,655
------------------------------------------------------------------------------ --------- --------------------
Paid as:
Property income distributions 6.10 14,655
Non-property income distributions - -
------------------------------------------------------------------------------ --------- --------------------
Total 6.10 14,655
------------------------------------------------------------------------------ --------- --------------------
As a REIT, the Group is required to pay PIDs equal to at least
90% of the property rental business profits of the Group.
A third interim property income dividend for the year ended 31
March 2021 of 1.55 pence per share was declared on 26 January 2021
and paid on 1 April 2021.
Accounting policy
Dividends due to the Company's shareholders are recognised when
they become payable.
12. Earnings per share
Basic EPS is calculated by dividing profit for the period
attributable to ordinary shareholders of the Company by the
weighted average number of ordinary shares during the period. As
there are no dilutive instruments in issue, basic and diluted EPS
are identical.
Year ended Year ended
31 March 31 March
2021 2020
GBP'000 GBP'000
--------------------------------------------------- ---------- ----------
IFRS earnings 123,110 20,676
--------------------------------------------------- ---------- ----------
EPRA earnings adjustments:
Loss/(profit) on disposal of investment properties 504 (934)
Fair value gains on investment properties (105,023) (5,104)
Changes in fair value of interest rate derivatives 6 227
Accelerated amortisation of loan issue costs - 375
EPRA earnings 18,597 15,240
--------------------------------------------------- ---------- ----------
Group-specific earnings adjustments:
Costs of postponed equity raise - 376
Adjusted earnings 18,597 15,616
--------------------------------------------------- ---------- ----------
Year ended Year ended
31 March 31 March
2021 2020
Pence Pence
Basic IFRS EPS 35.2 8.6
----------------- ---------- ----------
Diluted IFRS EPS 35.2 8.6
----------------- ---------- ----------
EPRA EPS 5.3 6.3
----------------- ---------- ----------
Adjusted EPS 5.3 6.5
----------------- ---------- ----------
Year ended Year ended
31 March 31 March
2021 2020
Number Number
of shares of shares
------------------------------------------------------- ---------- ----------
Weighted average number of shares in issue (thousands) 349,648 240,051
------------------------------------------------------- ---------- ----------
13. UK investment property
Completed investment Development Total investment
property property property
and land
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
--------------------------------------- -------------------- ----------- ----------------
Investment property valuation brought
forward as at 1 April 2020 433,550 16,970 450,520
Acquisition of properties 229,272 17,293 246,565
Capital expenditure 1,938 625 2,563
Disposal of properties (16,455) - (16,455)
Rent incentives 4,584 - 4,584
Fair value gains on revaluation
of investment property 99,041 5,982 105,023
--------------------------------------- -------------------- ----------- ----------------
Total portfolio valuation per valuer's
report 751,930 40,870 792,800
Adjustment for head lease obligations 14,263 - 14,263
--------------------------------------- -------------------- ----------- ----------------
Carrying value at 31 March 2021 766,193 40,870 807,063
--------------------------------------- -------------------- ----------- ----------------
Completed Development Total investment
investment property property
property and land
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
---------------------------------------------- ----------- ----------- ----------------
Investment property valuation brought forward
as at 1 April 2019 304,185 3,200 307,385
Transfer to development property and land (11,700) 11,700 -
Acquisition of properties 149,665 - 149,665
Capital expenditure 3,549 238 3,787
Disposal of properties (15,421) - (15,421)
Fair value gains on revaluation of investment
property 3,272 1,832 5,104
---------------------------------------------- ----------- ----------- ----------------
Total portfolio valuation per valuer's
report 433,550 16,970 450,520
Adjustment for head lease obligations 8,568 - 8,568
---------------------------------------------- ----------- ----------- ----------------
Carrying value at 31 March 2020 442,118 16,970 459,088
---------------------------------------------- ----------- ----------- ----------------
All investment properties are charged as collateral on the
Group's borrowings. One asset is also subject to a second ranking
charge in relation to deferred consideration outstanding. See note
19 for further details.
Realised (loss)/profit on disposal of investment
properties
31 March 31 March
2021 2020
GBP'000 GBP'000
--------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Net proceeds from disposals of investment property
during the year 15,951 16,355
Carrying value of disposals (16,455) (15,421)
--------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Realised (loss)/profit on disposal of investment
properties (504) 934
--------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Accounting policy
Investment property comprises property held to earn rental
income or for capital appreciation, or both. Investment property is
measured initially at cost including transaction costs. Transaction
costs include transfer taxes and professional fees to bring the
property to the condition necessary for it to be capable of
operating. The carrying amount also includes the cost of replacing
part of an existing investment property at the time that cost is
incurred, if the recognition criteria are met.
Development property and land is where the whole or a material
part of an estate is identified as having potential for
development. Assets are classified as such until development is
completed and they have the potential to be fully income
generating. Development property and land is measured at fair value
if the fair value is considered to be reliably determinable. Where
the fair value cannot be determined reliably but where it is
expected that the fair value of the property will be reliably
determined when construction is completed, the property is measured
at cost less any impairment until the fair value becomes reliably
determinable or construction is completed, whichever is earlier. It
is the Group's policy not to capitalise overheads or operating
expenses and no such costs were capitalised in either the year
ended 31 March 2021 or the year ended 31 March 2020.
Subsequent to initial recognition, investment property is stated
at fair value (see note 24). Gains or losses arising from changes
in the fair values are included in the consolidated statement of
comprehensive income in the period in which they arise under IAS 40
Investment Property.
Investment properties cease to be recognised when they have been
disposed of or withdrawn permanently from use and no future
economic benefit is expected. Gains or losses on the disposal of
investment property are determined as the difference between net
disposal proceeds and the carrying value of the asset.
14. Cash and cash equivalents
31 March 31 March
2021 2020
GBP'000 GBP'000
--------------------------------------- -------- --------
Unrestricted cash and cash equivalents 21,260 5,483
Restricted cash and cash equivalents 5,925 -
--------------------------------------- -------- --------
Total 27,185 5,483
--------------------------------------- -------- --------
Restricted cash comprises GBP5,925,000 of cash held by the
Registrar in advance of the payment of the third interim
dividend.
Accounting policy
Cash and cash equivalents comprise cash at bank and short-term
deposits with banks and other financial institutions, with an
initial maturity of three months or less.
15. Trade and other receivables
31 March 31 March
2021 2020
GBP'000 GBP'000
------------------------------- -------- --------
Rent and insurance receivables 4,193 3,075
Tenant deposits 593 88
Prepayments 193 229
Other receivables 998 3,016
------------------------------- -------- --------
Total 5,977 6,408
------------------------------- -------- --------
The rent and insurance receivables balance represents gross
receivables of GBP 5,084,000 (31 March 2020: GBP3,650,000), net of
a provision for doubtful debts of GBP891,000 (31 March 2020:
GBP575,000). None (31 March 2020: GBP190,000) of the provision is
in relation to rents invoiced in advance and therefore netted off
the deferred income balance.
Accounting policy
Rent and other receivables are recognised at their original
invoiced value and become due based on the terms of the underlying
lease or at the date of invoice.
The Group carries out an assessment of expected credit losses at
each period end, using the simplified approach, where a lifetime
expected loss allowance is recognised over the expected life of the
financial instrument. Adjustments are recognised in the income
statement as an impairment gain or loss.
16. Interest rate derivatives
31 March 31 March
2021 2020
GBP'000 GBP'000
--------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
At the start of the period 22 249
Changes in fair value of interest rate derivatives (6) (227)
--------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Balance at the end of the period 16 22
--------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
To mitigate the interest rate risk that arises as a result of
entering into variable rate linked loans, the Group entered into
interest rate derivatives. The instruments have a combined notional
value of GBP60.0 million with GBP30.0 million at a strike rate of
1.50% and a termination date of 21 November 2022 and GBP30.0
million at a strike rate of 1.75% and a termination date of 21
November 2023.
Accounting policy
Derivative financial instruments, comprising interest rate
derivatives for mitigating interest rate risks, are initially
recognised at fair value and are subsequently measured at fair
value, being the estimated amount that the Group would receive or
pay to terminate the agreement at the period end date, taking into
account current interest rate expectations and the current credit
rating of the Group and its counterparties. Premiums payable under
such arrangements are initially capitalised into the statement of
financial position.
The Group uses valuation techniques that are appropriate in the
circumstances and for which sufficient data is available to measure
fair value, maximising the use of relevant observable inputs and
minimising the use of unobservable inputs significant to the fair
value measurement as a whole. Changes in fair value of interest
rate derivatives are recognised within finance expenses in profit
or loss in the period in which they occur.
17. Interest-bearing loans and borrowings
31 March 31 March
2021 2020
GBP'000 GBP'000
---------------------------------------------------- -------- ---------
At the beginning of the year 186,500 127,000
Drawn in the year 73,300 320,000
Repaid in the year (37,800) (260,500)
---------------------------------------------------- -------- ---------
Interest-bearing loans and borrowings 222,000 186,500
Unamortised fees at the beginning of the year (3,310) (1,490)
Loan arrangement fees paid in the year (363) (2,761)
Amortisation charge for the year 772 941
---------------------------------------------------- -------- ---------
Unamortised loan arrangement fees (2,901) (3,310)
---------------------------------------------------- -------- ---------
Loan balance less unamortised loan arrangement fees 219,099 183,190
---------------------------------------------------- -------- ---------
The Group has a debt facility with a club of four banks: HSBC,
Bank of Ireland, Royal Bank of Canada and Barclays. The facility
runs for five years from January 2020 and comprises an RCF of
GBP63.0 million and a term loan, which increased from GBP157.0
million to GBP182.0 million during the second half of the year, as
the Group drew on GBP25.0 million of the GBP80.0 million accordion
included with the facility. The facility is at a margin of 2.0% -
2.2% per annum above LIBOR and will expire on 22 January 2025 with
an option to extend the duration by a further two years, subject to
lender consent. The facilities are secured on all properties within
the portfolio. As at 31 March 2021, there is GBP23.0 million (31
March 2020: GBP33.5 million) available to draw.
The debt facility includes LTV, interest cover and market value
covenants that are measured at a Group level. The Group has
complied with all covenants throughout the financial period.
In line with recent announcements from the Bank of England and
the FCA, UK borrowings will be transitioning from the LIBOR
benchmark to the SONIA benchmark in due course. There is expected
to be negligible cost involved in the borrowing facility
transition.
Accounting policy
Loans and borrowings are initially recognised at the proceeds
received net of directly attributable transaction costs. Loans and
borrowings are subsequently measured at amortised cost with
interest charged to the consolidated statement of comprehensive
income at the effective interest rate, and shown within finance
costs. Transaction costs are spread over the term of the loan.
18. Head lease obligations
The following table analyses the present value of minimum lease
payments under non-cancellable head leases using an average
discount rate of 6.91% for each of the following periods:
31 March 31 March
2021 2020
GBP'000 GBP'000
-------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Current liabilities
Within one year 638 488
Non-current liabilities
After one year but not more than five years 3,268 1,892
Later than five years 10,991 6,427
-------------------------------------------- -------- --------
14,259 8,319
Total head lease obligations 14,897 8,807
-------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Year ended Year ended
31 March 31 March
2021 GBP'000 2020 GBP'000
----------------------------------------- ------------- -------------
Head lease liability - opening balance 8,807 4,454
Cash flows
Non-cash movements (748) (507)
Interest 1,016 597
Additions 6,037 4,274
Disposals (242) -
Head lease accrual 27 (11)
----------------------------------------- ------------- -------------
Head lease obligations - closing balance 14,897 8,807
----------------------------------------- ------------- -------------
The following table analyses the minimum undiscounted lease
payments under non-cancellable head leases for each of the
following periods:
31 March 31 March
2021 2020
GBP'000 GBP'000
-------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Current liabilities
Within one year 1,031 634
Non-current liabilities
After one year but not more than five years 4,211 2,534
Later than five years 86,578 52,523
-------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Total 91,820 55,691
-------------------------------------------- -------- --------
The fair value of the Group's lease obligations is estimated to
be equal to its carrying value.
Accounting policy
At the commencement date, head lease obligations are recognised
at the present value of future lease payments using the discount
rate implicit in the lease, if determinable, or, if not, the
Group's incremental borrowing rate.
19. Other liabilities - other payables and accrued expenses,
provisions and deferred income
31 March 31 March
2021 2020
GBP'000 GBP'000
---------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Capital expenses payable 2,363 377
Administration expenses payable 1,979 2,404
Property operating expenses payable 1,580 1,500
Loan interest payable 915 980
Other expenses payable 736 1,236
---------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Total other payables and accrued expenses - current 7,573 6,497
---------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
31 March 31 March
2021 2020
GBP'000 GBP'000
-------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Capital expenses payable 17,050 4,500
Total other payables and accrued expenses - non-current 17,050 4,500
-------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
At the balance sheet date, the Group had exchanged contracts to
acquire land for GBP15.0 million; the first instalment was made on
17 February 2021 for GBP1.4 million, with a total of GBP1.5 million
paid to 31 March 2021. The remaining GBP13.6 million will be paid
over five instalments on fixed dates, with the final payment due on
1 September 2024.
In addition, capital expenses payable includes deferred
consideration of GBP4.5 million in relation to a property acquired
during the year ended 31 March 2020. The deferred consideration is
due in September 2023, or earlier if the property is sold before
that date. The consideration is secured on a second ranking charge
over the asset.
31 March 31 March
2021 2020
GBP'000 GBP'000
---------------------- -------- --------
Total deferred income 7,531 4,888
---------------------- -------- --------
Accounting policy
Other payables and accrued expenses are initially recognised at
fair value and subsequently held at amortised cost.
Deferred income is rental income received in advance during the
accounting period. The income is deferred and is unwound to revenue
on a straight-line basis over the period in which it is earned.
20. Share capital
Share capital is the nominal amount of the Company's ordinary
shares in issue.
31 March 31 March
2021 2020
Ordinary shares of GBP0.01 Number GBP'000 Number GBP'000
each
----------------------------- ----------- -------- ----------- --------
Authorised, issued and fully
paid:
At the start of the period 240,254,043 2,403 166,000,000 1,660
Shares issued 177,025,308 1,770 74,254,043 743
In specie share issue 7,582,299 76 - -
----------------------------- ----------- -------- ----------- --------
Balance at the end of the
period 424,861,650 4,249 240,254,043 2,403
----------------------------- ----------- -------- ----------- --------
The share capital comprises one class of ordinary shares. At
general meetings of the Company, ordinary shareholders are entitled
to one vote on a show of hands and on a poll, to one vote for every
share held. There are no restrictions on the size of a shareholding
or the transfer of shares, except for the UK REIT restrictions.
On 8 July 2020, the Company raised gross proceeds of GBP153.0
million through a firm placing, placing, open offer and offer for
subscription and intermediaries offer. In total, the Company issued
139,090,908 new ordinary shares at 110.0 pence each.
On 9 December 2020, as a part of the consideration of the
Greenstone Property Holdings Limited ("Greenstone") property
portfolio acquisition, 7,582,299 new ordinary shares were issued at
118.4 pence per share. Further details of the Greenstone
acquisition are detailed in note 28.
On 5 February 2021, the Company raised gross proceeds of GBP45.9
million through an institutional placing.
In total, the Company issued 37,934,400 new ordinary shares at
121.0 pence each.
21. Share premium
Share premium comprises the following amounts:
31 March 31 March
2021 2020
GBP'000 GBP'000
--------------------------- -------- --------
At the start of the period 74,028 -
Shares issued 197,064 75,739
In specie share issue 8,901 -
Share issue costs (4,345) (1,711)
--------------------------- -------- --------
Share premium 275,648 74,028
--------------------------- -------- --------
Share premium represents the excess over nominal value of the
fair value of the consideration received for equity shares net of
direct issue costs.
22. Other capital and reserves
Capital reduction reserve
Capital reduction reserve comprises the following amounts:
31 March 31 March
2021 2020
GBP'000 GBP'000
--------------------------- -------- --------
At the start of the period 161,149 161,149
Movement in the period - -
--------------------------- -------- --------
Capital reduction reserve 161,149 161,149
--------------------------- -------- --------
The capital reduction reserve is a distributable reserve
established upon cancellation of the share premium of the Company
on 17 November 2017.
Retained earnings
Retained earnings comprise the following cumulative amounts:
31 March 31 March
2021 2020
GBP'000 GBP'000
------------------------------------------------ -------- --------
Total unrealised gains on investment properties 125,693 20,671
Total unrealised loss on interest rate caps (125) (119)
Total realised profits 49,356 31,262
Dividends paid from revenue profits (41,879) (26,275)
------------------------------------------------ -------- --------
Retained earnings 133,045 25,539
------------------------------------------------ -------- --------
Retained earnings represent the profits of the Group less
dividends paid from revenue profits to date. Unrealised gains on
the revaluation of investment properties contained within this
reserve are not distributable until any gains crystallise on the
sale of the investment property.
As at 31 March 2021, the Company had distributable reserves
available of GBP168,626,000 (31 March 2020: GBP166,136,000).
23. Net asset value per share
Basic NAV per share amounts are calculated by dividing net
assets attributable to ordinary equity holders of the Company in
the statement of financial position by the number of ordinary
shares outstanding at the end of the period. As there are no
dilutive instruments in issue, basic and diluted NAV per share are
identical.
31 March 31 March
2021 2020
GBP'000 GBP'000
------------------------------------------------------ -------- --------
IFRS net assets attributable to ordinary shareholders 574,091 263,119
IFRS net assets for calculation of NAV 574,091 263,119
------------------------------------------------------ -------- --------
Adjustment to net assets:
Fair value of interest rate derivatives (see note 16) (16) (22)
------------------------------------------------------ -------- --------
EPRA NTA 574,075 263,097
------------------------------------------------------ -------- --------
31 March 31 March
2021 2020
Pence Pence
IFRS basic and diluted NAV per share (pence) 135.1 109.5
--------------------------------------------- -------- --------
EPRA NTA per share (pence) 135.1 109.5
--------------------------------------------- -------- --------
31 March 31 March
2021 2020
Number Number
of shares of shares
-------------------------------------- --------- ---------
Number of shares in issue (thousands) 424,862 240,254
-------------------------------------- --------- ---------
24. Fair value
IFRS 13 defines fair value as the price that would be received
to sell an asset or paid to transfer a liability in an orderly
transaction between market participants at the measurement date.
The following methods and assumptions were used to estimate the
fair values.
The fair value of cash and short-term deposits, trade
receivables, trade payables and other current liabilities
approximate their carrying amounts due to the short-term maturities
of these instruments.
Interest-bearing loans and borrowings are disclosed at amortised
cost. The carrying value of the loans and borrowings approximate
their fair value due to the contractual terms and conditions of the
loan. The loans are at variable interest rates of 2.0% - 2.2% above
LIBOR.
Six-monthly valuations of investment property are performed by
CBRE, accredited external valuers with recognised and relevant
professional qualifications and recent experience of the location
and category of the investment property being valued, on a fixed
fee basis. The valuations are the ultimate responsibility of the
Directors however, who appraise these every six months.
The valuation of the Group's investment property at fair value
is determined by the external valuer on the basis of market value
in accordance with the internationally accepted RICS Valuation -
Professional Standards January 2020 (incorporating the
International Valuation Standards).
Completed investment properties are valued by adopting the
'income capitalisation' method of valuation. This approach involves
applying capitalisation yields to current and future rental
streams, net of income voids arising from vacancies or rent-free
periods and associated running costs. These capitalisation yields
and future rental values are based on comparable property and
leasing transactions in the market using the valuer's professional
judgement and market observations. Other factors taken into account
in the valuations include the tenure of the property, tenancy
details and ground and structural conditions.
Development property and land has been valued by adopting the
'comparable method' of valuation and where appropriate supported by
a 'residual development appraisal'. The comparable method involves
applying a sales rate per acre to relevant sites supported by
comparable land sales. Residual development appraisals have been
completed where there is sufficient clarity regarding planning and
an identified or indicative scheme. In a similar manner to 'income
capitalisation', development inputs include the capitalisation of
future rental streams with an appropriate yield to ascertain a
gross development value. The costs associated with bringing a
scheme to the market are then deducted, including construction
costs, professional fees, finance and developer's profit, to
provide a residual site value.
The fair value of the interest rate contracts is recorded in the
statement of financial position and is determined by forming an
expectation that interest rates will exceed strike rates and
discounting these future cash flows at the prevailing market rates
as at the year end.
The following tables show an analysis of the fair values of
investment properties and interest rate derivatives recognised in
the statement of financial position by level of the fair value
hierarchy(1) :
31 March 2021
----------------------------------
Level 1 Level 2 Level 3 Total
Assets and liabilities measured at fair value GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
---------------------------------------------- ------- ------- ------- -------
Investment properties - - 792,800 792,800
Interest rate derivatives - 16 - 16
---------------------------------------------- ------- ------- ------- -------
Total - 16 792,800 792,816
---------------------------------------------- ------- ------- ------- -------
31 March 2020
----------------------------------
Level 1 Level 2 Level 3 Total
Assets and liabilities measured at fair value GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
---------------------------------------------- ------- ------- ------- -------
Investment properties - - 450,520 450,520
Interest rate derivatives - 22 - 22
---------------------------------------------- ------- ------- ------- -------
Total - 22 450,520 452,542
---------------------------------------------- ------- ------- ------- -------
1.
Explanation of the fair value hierarchy:
-- Level 1 - quoted prices (unadjusted) in active markets for
identical assets or liabilities that the entity can access at the
measurement date;
-- Level 2 - use of a model with inputs (other than quoted
prices included in Level 1) that are directly or indirectly
observable market data; and
-- Level 3 - use of a model with inputs that are not based on observable market data.
Sensitivity analysis to significant changes in unobservable
inputs within the valuation of investment properties
The following table analyses:
-- the fair value measurements at the end of the reporting period;
-- a description of the valuation techniques applied;
-- the inputs used in the fair value measurement, including the
ranges of rent charged to different units within the same building;
and
-- for Level 3 fair value measurements, quantitative information
about significant unobservable inputs used in the fair value
measurement.
Key
Valuation unobservable
Fair value technique inputs Range
GBP'000
-------------------- ---------- ----------------------- ------------ --------------------------
31 March 2021
Completed GBP751,930 Income capitalisation ERV GBP42,300 - GBP1,533,937
per annum
investment Equivalent 4.1% - 15.0%
property yield
Development GBP40,870 Comparable method/ Various
property and residual method
land
-------------------- ---------- ----------------------- ------------ --------------------------
GBP792,800
-------------------- ---------- ----------------------- ------------ --------------------------
31 March 2020
Completed GBP433,550 Income capitalisation ERV GBP22,000 - GBP1,880,000
per annum
investment property Equivalent 5.1% - 12.9%
yield
-------------------- ---------- ----------------------- ------------ --------------------------
Development property GBP16,970 Comparable method/ Various
and land residual method
-------------------- ---------- ----------------------- ------------ --------------------------
GBP450,520
-------------------- ---------- ----------------------- ------------ --------------------------
Significant increases/decreases in the ERV (per sq ft per annum)
and rental growth per annum in isolation would result in a
significantly higher/lower fair value measurement. Significant
increases/decreases in the long-term vacancy rate and discount rate
(and exit yield) in isolation would result in a significantly
higher/lower fair value measurement.
Generally, a change in the assumption made for the ERV (per sq
ft per annum) is accompanied by:
-- a similar change in the rent growth per annum and discount rate (and exit yield); and
-- an opposite change in the long-term vacancy rate.
The table below sets out a sensitivity analysis for each of the
key sources of estimation uncertainty with the resulting
increase/(decrease) in the fair value of completed investment
property:
As at 31 March 2021
Increase Decrease
in sensitivity in sensitivity
GBP'000 GBP'000
--------------------------------------------------- --------------- ----------------
Change in ERV of 5% 31,963 (42,684)
Change in net equivalent yields of 25 basis points (37,655) 30,232
--------------------------------------------------- --------------- ----------------
As at 31 March 2020
Increase Decrease
in sensitivity in sensitivity
GBP'000 GBP'000
--------------------------------------------------- --------------- ----------------
Change in ERV of 5% 21,668 (21,668)
Change in net equivalent yields of 25 basis points (15,093) 16,260
--------------------------------------------------- --------------- ----------------
Gains and losses recorded in profit or loss for recurring fair
value measurements categorised within Level 3 of the fair value
hierarchy amount to GBP105,023,000 (31 March 2020: GBP5,104,000)
and are presented in the consolidated statement of comprehensive
income in line item 'fair value gains on investment
properties'.
All gains and losses recorded in profit or loss for recurring
fair value measurements categorised within Level 3 of the fair
value hierarchy are attributable to changes in unrealised gains or
losses relating to investment property held at the end of the
reporting period.
The carrying amount of the Group's assets and liabilities is
considered to be the same as their fair value.
25. Financial risk management objectives and policies
The Group's principal financial liabilities are loans and
borrowings. The main purpose of the Group's loans and borrowings is
to finance the acquisition of the Group's property portfolio. The
Group has trade and other receivables, trade and other payables and
cash and short-term deposits that arise directly from its
operations.
The Group is exposed to market risk, interest rate risk, credit
risk and liquidity risk. The Board of Directors reviews and agrees
policies for managing each of these risks, which are summarised
below.
Market risk
Market risk is the risk that future values of investments in
property and related investments will fluctuate due to changes in
market prices. The total exposure at the statement of financial
position date is GBP792.8 million and, to manage this risk, the
Group diversifies its portfolio across a number of assets. The
Group's investment policy is to invest in UK-located warehouse
assets. The Group will invest and manage its portfolio with an
objective of spreading risk and, in doing so, will maintain the
following investment restrictions:
-- the Group will only invest, directly or indirectly, in warehouse assets located in the UK;
-- no individual warehouse property will represent more than 20%
of the last published GAV of the Group at the time of
investment;
-- the Group will target a portfolio with no one tenant
accounting for more than 15% of the gross contracted rents of the
Group at the time of purchase. In any event, no more than 20% of
the gross assets of the Group will be exposed to the
creditworthiness of any one tenant at the time of purchase;
-- the portfolio will be diversified by location across the UK
with a focus on areas with strong underlying investment
fundamentals; and
-- the Group will not invest more than 10% of its gross assets
in other listed closed-ended investment funds.
Interest rate risk
Interest rate risk is the risk that future cash flows of a
financial instrument will fluctuate because of changes in market
interest rates. The Group's exposure to the risk of changes in
market interest rates relates to its variable rate bank loans. In
order to address interest rate risk, the Group has entered into
interest rate cap instruments, details of which are set out in note
16.
Credit risk
Credit risk is the risk that a counterparty or tenant will cause
a financial loss to the Group by failing to meet a commitment it
has entered into with the Group.
All cash deposits are placed with approved counterparties,
currently HSBC Bank plc. In respect of property investments, in the
event of a default by a tenant, the Group will suffer a shortfall
and additional costs concerning re-letting of the property. The
Investment Manager monitors the tenant arrears in order to
anticipate and minimise the impact of defaults by occupational
occupiers.
The following table analyses the Group's exposure to credit
risk:
31 March 31 March
2021 2020
GBP'000 GBP'000
------------------------------- -------- --------
Cash and cash equivalents 21,260 5,483
Restricted cash 5,925 -
Trade and other receivables(1) 5,784 3,910
------------------------------- -------- --------
Total 32,969 9,393
------------------------------- -------- --------
(1)Excludes prepayments.
Liquidity risk
Liquidity risk is defined as the risk that the Group will
encounter difficulty in meeting obligations associated with
financial liabilities that are settled by delivering cash or
another financial asset. Exposure to liquidity risk arises because
of the possibility that the Group could be required to pay its
liabilities earlier than expected. The Group's objective is to
maintain a balance between continuity of funding and flexibility
through the use of bank deposits and loans.
Set out below is a comparison by class of the carrying amounts
and fair value of the Group's financial instruments that are
carried in the financial statements:
2021 2020
----------- ----------------------- -----------------------
Fair value Carrying Carrying
hierarchy value Fair value value Fair value
-------------------------------- ----------- ---------- ----------- ---------- -----------
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
Held at amortised
cost
Cash and cash equivalents n/a 21,260 21,260 5,483 5,483
Restricted cash n/a 5,925 5,925 - -
Trade and other receivables(1) n/a 5,784 5,784 3,910 3,910
Other payables and
accrued expenses(2) n/a (31,802) (31,802) (10,157) (10,157)
Head lease liabilities n/a (14,897) (14,897) (8,807) (8,807)
Interest-bearing loans
and borrowings n/a (219,099) (219,099) (183,190) (183,190)
Held at fair value
Interest rate derivatives
(assets) 2 16 16 22 22
--------------------------------- ----------- ---------- ----------- ---------- -----------
(1)Excludes prepayments.
(2)Excludes VAT liability.
The table below summarises the maturity profile of the Group's
financial liabilities based on contractual undiscounted
payments:
Less Three
than three to 12 One to Two to More than
months months two years five years five years Total
Year ended 31 March
2021 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
----------------------- ---------- ------- --------- ---------- ---------- -------
Interest-bearing loans
and borrowings - 3,440 4,565 231,418 - 239,423
Other payables and
accrued expenses 6,573 1,000 500 16,550 - 24,623
Head lease obligations - 638 1,708 1,560 10,991 14,897
----------------------- ---------- ------- --------- ---------- ---------- -------
Total 6,573 5,078 6,773 249,528 10,991 278,943
----------------------- ---------- ------- --------- ---------- ---------- -------
Less Three
than three to 12 One to Two to More than
months months two years five years five years Total
Year ended 31 March
2020 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
----------------------- ---------- ------- --------- ---------- ---------- -------
Interest-bearing loans
and borrowings - 3,777 5,013 201,538 - 210,328
Other payables and
accrued expenses 5,758 739 - 4,500 - 10,997
Head lease obligations - 532 1,012 915 6,348 8,807
----------------------- ---------- ------- --------- ---------- ---------- -------
Total 5,758 5,048 6,025 206,953 6,348 230,132
----------------------- ---------- ------- --------- ---------- ---------- -------
26. Subsidiaries
Country Number and class
of
incorporation of share held Group
Company and operation by the Group holding
------------------------------ --- -------------- -------------------- -------
63,872 ordinary
Tilstone Holdings Limited(2) UK shares 100%
Tilstone Warehouse 94,400 ordinary
Holdco Limited(2) UK shares 100%
Tilstone Property Holdings 9,102 ordinary
Limited(2) UK shares 100%
Tilstone Industrial 23,600 ordinary
Warehouse Limited(1,2) UK shares 100%
Tilstone Retail Warehouse 20,000 ordinary
Limited(1,2) UK shares 100%
Tilstone Industrial 20,000 ordinary
Limited(1,2) UK shares 100%
Tilstone Retail Limited(1,2) UK 200 ordinary shares 100%
20,004 ordinary
Tilstone Trade Limited(1,2) UK shares 100%
Tilstone Basingstoke 1,000 ordinary
Limited(1,2) UK shares 100%
Tilstone Glasgow Limited(1,2) UK 1 ordinary share 100%
Tilstone Radway Limited(1,2) UK 100 ordinary shares 100%
1,000 ordinary
Tilstone Oxford Limited(1,2) UK shares 100%
Tilstone Liverpool
Limited(1) (previously
Warehouse 18 Limited)
(1,2) UK 100 ordinary shares 100%
Warehouse 1234 Limited(1,2) UK 100 ordinary shares 100%
Tilstone Chesterfield 15,000,001 ordinary
Limited(1,2) UK shares 100%
7,545,347 ordinary
Chip (One) Limited(1,3) IOM shares 100%
Chip (Four) Limited(1,3) IOM 10 ordinary shares 100%
8,461,919 ordinary
Chip (Five) Limited(1,3) IOM shares 100%
Chip (Ipswich) One
Limited(1,3) IOM 2 ordinary shares 100%
Chip (Ipswich) Two
Limited(1,3) IOM 2 ordinary shares 100%
1,780,801 ordinary
Glashen Services Limited(1,4) IOM shares 100%
------------------------------------ -------------- ------------------- -------
1. Indirect subsidiaries.
2. Registered office: Beaufort House, 51 New North Road, Exeter EX4 4EP.
3. Registered office: 55 Athol Street, Douglas, Isle of Man, IM1 1LA.
4. Registered office: St Mary's Court, 20 Hill Street, Douglas, Isle of Man, IM1 1EU.
The principal activity of all the subsidiaries relates to
property investment.
Accounting policy
Where property is acquired, via corporate acquisitions or
otherwise, management considers the substance of the assets and
activities of the acquired entity in determining whether the
acquisition represents the acquisition of a business.
Where such acquisitions are not judged to be an acquisition of a
business, they are not treated as business combinations. Rather,
the cost to acquire the corporate entity is allocated between the
identifiable assets and liabilities of the entity based on their
relative fair values at the acquisition date. Accordingly, no
goodwill or additional deferred taxation arises. Otherwise,
acquisitions are accounted for as business combinations.
Business combinations are accounted for using the acquisition
method. The cost of an acquisition is measured as the aggregate of
the consideration transferred, measured at acquisition date fair
value, and the amount of any non-controlling interest in the
acquiree.
For each business combination, the acquirer measures the
non-controlling interest in the acquiree at fair value of the
proportionate share of the acquiree's identifiable net assets.
Acquisition costs (except for costs of issue of debt or equity) are
expensed in accordance with IFRS 3 Business Combinations.
When the Group acquires a business, it assesses the financial
assets and liabilities assumed for appropriate classification and
designation in accordance with the contractual terms, economic
circumstances and pertinent conditions as at the acquisition
date.
Contingent consideration is deemed to be equity or a liability
in accordance with IAS 32. If the contingent consideration is
classified as equity, it is not re-measured and its subsequent
settlement shall be accounted for within equity. If the contingent
consideration is classified as a liability, subsequent changes to
the fair value are recognised either in profit or loss or as a
change to other comprehensive income.
27. Capital management
The Group's capital is represented by share capital, reserves
and borrowings.
The primary objective of the Group's capital management is to
ensure that it remains within its quantitative banking covenants
and maintains a strong credit rating. The Group's capital policies
are as follows:
-- the Group will keep sufficient cash for working capital
purposes with excess cash, should there be any, deposited at the
best interest rate available whilst maintaining flexibility to fund
the Group's investment programme;
-- borrowings will be managed in accordance with the loan
agreements and covenants will be tested quarterly and reported to
the Directors. Additionally, quarterly lender reporting will be
undertaken in line with the loan agreement; and
-- new borrowings are subject to Director approval. Such
borrowings will support the Group's investment programme but be
subject to a maximum 50% LTV. The intention is to maintain
borrowings at an LTV of between 30% and 40%.
During the period, the Group did not breach any of its loan
covenants, nor did it default on any other of its obligations under
its loan agreement.
28. Related party transactions
Directors
The Directors (all Non-Executive Directors) of the Company and
its subsidiaries are considered to be the key management personnel
of the Group. Directors' remuneration for the period totalled
GBP150,000 (31 March 2020: GBP150,000) and at 31 March 2021, a
balance of GBPnil (31 March 2020: GBPnil) was outstanding. Further
information is given in note 5 and in the Directors' remuneration
report.
Investment Advisor
The Company is party to an Investment Management Agreement with
the Investment Manager, pursuant to which the Investment Manager
has appointed the Investment Advisor to provide investment advisory
services relating to the respective assets on a day-to-day basis in
accordance with their respective investment objectives and
policies, subject to the overall supervision and direction by the
Investment Manager and the Board of Directors.
For its services to the Company, the Investment Advisor receives
an annual fee at the rate of 1.1% of the NAV of the Company up to
GBP500 million, then at a higher rate of 0.9% of the Company NAV
once the Company NAV exceeds GBP500 million. Refer to the
Directors' report for further information.
During the year, the Group incurred GBP4,393,000 (31 March 2020:
GBP2,812,000) in respect of investment management fees. As at 31
March 2021, GBP1,319,000 (31 March 2020: GBP810,230) was
outstanding.
Subsidiaries
As at 31 March 2021, the Company owned a 100% controlling stake
in Tilstone Holdings Limited, Tilstone Warehouse Holdco Limited,
Tilstone Property Holdings Limited, Tilstone Industrial Warehouse
Limited, Tilstone Retail Warehouse Limited, Tilstone Industrial
Limited, Tilstone Retail Limited, Tilstone Trade Limited, Tilstone
Basingstoke Limited, Tilstone Glasgow Limited, Tilstone Radway
Limited, Tilstone Oxford Limited, Tilstone Liverpool Limited
(previously Warehouse 18 Limited), Warehouse 1234 Limited, Tilstone
Chesterfield Limited, CHIP (One) Limited, CHIP (Four) Limited, CHIP
(Five) Limited, CHIP (Ipswich) One Limited, CHIP (Ipswich) Two
Limited, and Glashen Services Limited.
Greenstone Property Holdings Limited ("Greenstone") now Tilstone
Oxford Limited
On 16 November 2020, the Group acquired a portfolio of five
single-let and multi-let warehouse assets located across the UK,
through the acquisition of a holding and property company previous
controlled by a related party.
The purchase price was GBP41.2 million.
Consideration was GBP31.9 million in cash for shares which
reflected just under 80% of the value of the entities on a cash
free, debt free basis, and was used for the immediate repayment of
GBP31.6 million of third-party indebtedness. The remaining 20% of
the subscription was settled via the issuance of shares in
Warehouse REIT plc, approved at a General Meeting held on 4
December 2020.
The consideration of approximately GBP8.9 million is based on
the same pro rata value as the subscription and was satisfied by
the allotment and issue of 7.6 million ordinary shares to the
vendors at 118.4 pence per share, being the EPRA NTA per share as
at 30 September 2020.
A further GBP0.4m was settled in cash upon agreement of the
portfolio's balance sheet on 19 March 2021.
16 November 4 December 19 March 2021 Total
2020 2020
---------- ----------------------- --------------- -------------- -----
Consideration
Ordinary shares issued 8.9 8.9
Cash 31.9 0.4 32.3
---------- ----------------------- --------------- -------------- -----
Total consideration transferred 41.2
Recognised amounts of identifiable assets acquired and liabilities
assumed
Investment property 43.6
Net working capital (2.4)
----------------------------------- --------------- -------------- -----
Total identified net assets at fair value 41.2
---------------------------------------------------- -------------- -----
The fair value at the date of acquisition reflects the fair
value of the investment property and net working capital and is
equal to the consideration paid. No intangible assets were
recognised on the asset acquisition in accordance with IFRS 3.
As part of the purchase agreement, contingent consideration
receivable of GBP0.9m was paid into escrow and will be used to
top-up the rent that would have been otherwise received in respect
of vacant units until September 2021 and has been reflected in the
fair value of the properties.
Following the acquisition, GBP2.7 million of shareholder loans
were repaid to the vendor.
29. Ultimate controlling party
It is the view of the Directors that there is no ultimate
controlling party.
30. Post balance sheet event
A fourth interim dividend in respect of the year ended 31 March
2021 of 1.55 pence per share will be payable on 30 June 2021 to
shareholders on the register on 4 June 2021. The ex-dividend date
will be 3 June 2021.
UNAUDITED SUPPLEMENTARY NOTES NOT PART OF THE CONSOLIDATED
FINANCIAL INFORMATION
For the year ended 31 March 2021
The Group is a member of the European Public Real Estate
Association ("EPRA"). EPRA has developed and defined the following
performance measures to give transparency, comparability and
relevance of financial reporting across entities which may use
different accounting standards. The following measures are
calculated in accordance with EPRA guidance.
Table 1: EPRA performance measures summary
Notes 2021 2020
------------------------------------------------------ ----------------------
EPRA EPS (pence) Table 2 5.3 6.3
EPRA cost ratio (including direct vacancy
cost) Table 6 29.5% 28.4%
EPRA cost ratio (excluding direct vacancy
cost) Table 6 26.6% 23.8%
-------------------------------------------- -------- ---------- ----------
EPRA NDV per share (pence) Table 3 135.1 109.5
EPRA NRV per share (pence) Table 3 147.8 122.3
EPRA NTA per share (pence) Table 3 135.1 109.5
EPRA NIY Table 4 4.7% 5.9%
EPRA 'topped-up' net initial yield Table 4 5.2% 6.3%
EPRA vacancy rate Table 5 4.4% 6.6%
-------------------------------------------- -------- ---------- ----------
Table 2: EPRA income statement
Year ended Year ended
31 March 31 March
2021 2020
GBP'000 GBP'000
-------------------------------------------- -------- ---------- ----------
Revenue 35,758 30,053
Less: dilapidation income (603) (877)
Less: insurance recharged (930) (663)
------------------------------------------------------ ---------- ----------
Rental income 34,225 28,513
Property operating expenses (4,612) (3,930)
Add back: dilapidation income 603 877
Add back insurance recharged 930 663
Gross profit 31,146 26,123
Administration expenses (6,324) (5,032)
Add back costs of postponed equity raise - 376
------------------------------------------------------ ---------- ----------
Adjusted operating profit before interest
and tax 24,822 21,467
Finance income 26 30
Finance expenses (6,257) (6,483)
Less change in fair value of interest rate
derivatives 6 227
Less accelerated amortisation of loan issue
costs - 375
------------------------------------------------------ ---------- ----------
Adjusted profit before tax 18,597 15,616
Tax on adjusted profit - -
-------------------------------------------- -------- ---------- ----------
Adjusted earnings 18,597 15,616
------------------------------------------------------ ---------- ----------
Weighted average number of shares in issue
(thousands) 349,648 240,051
------------------------------------------------------ ---------- ----------
Adjusted EPS (pence) 5.3 6.5
------------------------------------------------------ ---------- ----------
Year ended Year ended
31 March 31 March
2021 2020
GBP'000 GBP'000
-------------------------------------------- -------- ---------- ----------
Adjusted earnings 18,597 15,616
Costs of postponed equity raise - (376)
EPRA earnings 18,597 15,240
------------------------------------------------------ ---------- ----------
Weighted average number of shares in issue
(thousands) 349,648 240,051
------------------------------------------------------ ---------- ----------
EPRA EPS (pence) 5.3 6.3
------------------------------------------------------ ---------- ----------
EPRA earnings represents earnings from operational activities.
It is a key measure of the Group's underlying operational results
and an indication of the extent to which current payments are
supported by earnings.
Table 3: EPRA balance sheet and net asset value performance measures
In October 2019, the European Public Real Estate Association ("EPRA")
published new Best Practice Recommendations ("BPR") for financial
disclosures by public real estate companies. The BPR introduced
three new measures of net asset value: EPRA net disposal value ("NDV"),
EPRA net reinstatement value ("NRV") and EPRA net tangible assets
("NTA"). EPRA NTA is considered to be the most relevant measure
for Warehouse REIT's operating activities. A reconciliation of the
three new EPRA NAV metrics from IFRS NAV is shown in the table below.
The previously reported EPRA NAV and EPRA NNNAV have also been included
for comparative purposes. Total accounting return will now be calculated
based on EPRA NTA.
Previously reported
New measures measures
--------- ------------ --------- ---------------------
EPRA NDV EPRA NRV EPRA NTA EPRA NAV EPRA NNNAV
As at 31 March 2021 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
--------------------------- --------- ------------ --------- --------- ----------
Total properties(1) 792,800 792,800 792,800 792,800 792,800
Net borrowings(2) (194,815) (194,815) (194,815) (194,815) (194,815)
Other net liabilities (23,894) (23,894) (23,894) (23,894) (23,894)
--------------------------- --------- ------------ --------- --------- ----------
IFRS NAV 574,091 574,091 574,091 574,091 574,091
--------------------------- --------- ------------ --------- --------- ----------
Exclude: fair value of
interest rate derivatives - (16) (16) (16) -
Include: real estate
transfer
tax(3) - 53,910 - - -
--------------------------- --------- ------------ --------- --------- ----------
NAV used in per share
calculations 574,091 627,985 574,075 574,075 574,091
--------------------------- --------- ------------ --------- --------- ----------
Number of shares in issue
(thousands) 424,862 424,862 424,862 424,862 424,862
--------------------------- --------- ------------ --------- --------- ----------
NAV per share (pence) 135.1 147.8 135.1 135.1 135.1
--------------------------- --------- ------------ --------- --------- ----------
Loan to value ratio(4) 24.6%
--------------------------- --------- ------------ --------- --------- ----------
Previously reported
New measures measures
--------- ------------ --------- ---------------------
EPRA NDV EPRA NRV EPRA NTA EPRA NAV EPRA NNNAV
As at 31 March 2020 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
--------------------------- --------- ------------ --------- --------- ----------
Total properties(1) 450,520 450,520 450,520 450,520 450,520
Net borrowings(2) (181,017) (181,017) (181,017) (181,017) (181,017)
Other net liabilities (6,384) (6,384) (6,384) (6,384) (6,384)
--------------------------- --------- ------------ --------- --------- ----------
IFRS NAV 263,119 263,119 263,119 263,119 263,119
--------------------------- --------- ------------ --------- --------- ----------
Exclude: fair value of
interest rate derivatives - (22) (22) (22) -
Include: real estate
transfer
tax(3) - 30,635 - - -
--------------------------- --------- ------------ --------- --------- ----------
NAV used in per share
calculations 263,119 293,732 263,097 263,097 263,119
--------------------------- --------- ------------ --------- --------- ----------
Number of shares in issue
(thousands) 240,254 240,254 240,254 240,254 240,254
--------------------------- --------- ------------ --------- --------- ----------
NAV per share (pence) 109.5 122.3 109.5 109.5 109.5
--------------------------- --------- ------------ --------- --------- ----------
Loan to value ratio(4) 40.2%
--------------------------- --------- ------------ --------- --------- ----------
1. Professional valuation of investment property.
2. Comprising interest-bearing loans and borrowings (excluding unamortised
loan arrangement fees) of GBP222,000,000 (31 March 2020: GBP186,500,000)
net of cash of GBP27,185,000 (31 March 2020: GBP5,483,000).
3. EPRA NTA and EPRA NDV reflect IFRS values which are net of real
estate transfer tax. Real estate transfer tax is added back when
calculating EPRA NRV.
4. Net borrowings divided by the aggregate fair value of properties.
EPRA NDV details the full extent of liabilities and resulting shareholder
value if company assets are sold and/or if liabilities are not held
until maturity. Deferred tax and financial instruments are calculated
as to the full extent of their liability, including tax exposure
not reflected in the statement of financial position, net of any
resulting tax.
EPRA NTA assumes entities buy and sell assets, thereby crystallising
certain levels of deferred tax liability.
EPRA NRV highlights the value of net assets on a long-term basis
and reflects what would be needed to recreate the company through
the investment markets based on its current capital and financing
structure. Assets and liabilities that are not expected to crystallise
in normal circumstances, such as the fair value movements on financial
derivatives and deferred taxes on property valuation surpluses,
are excluded. Costs such as real estate transfer taxes are included.
Table 4: EPRA net initial yield
31 March 31 March
2021 2020
GBP'000 GBP'000
------------------------------------------------------------------ --- ------------- -------------
Total properties per external valuers' report 792,800 450,520
Less development property and land (40,870) (16,970)
----------------------------------------------------------------------- ------------- -------------
Net valuation of completed properties 751,930 433,550
Add estimated purchasers' costs (5) 51,131 29,481
----------------------------------------------------------------------- ------------- -------------
Gross valuation of completed properties including
estimated purchasers' costs (A) 803,061 463,031
------------------------------------------------------------------- ------------- -------------
Gross passing rents (5) (annualised) 38,574 27,829
Less irrecoverable property costs (6) (1,121) (742)
----------------------------------------------------------------------- ------------- -------------
Net annualised rents (B) 37,453 27,087
----------------------------------------------------------------------- ------------- -------------
Add notional rent on expiry of rent-free
periods or other lease incentives (7) 4,454 1,875
----------------------------------------------------------------------- ------------- -------------
'Topped-up' net annualised rents (C) 41,907 28,962
----------------------------------------------------------------------- ------------- -------------
EPRA NIY (B/A) 4.7% 5.9%
----------------------------------------------------------------------- ------------- -------------
EPRA 'topped-up' net initial yield (C/A) 5.2% 6.3%
----------------------------------------------------------------------- ------------- -------------
(5) Estimated purchasers' costs estimated
at 6.8%.
(6) Gross passing rents and irrecoverable property costs assessed
as at the balance sheet date for completed investment properties
excluding development property and land.
(7) Adjustment for unexpired lease incentives such as rent-free
periods, discounted rent period and step rents. The adjustment includes
the annualised cash rent that will apply at the expiry of the lease
incentive. Rent-frees expire over a weighted average period of three
months.
EPRA NIY represents annualised rental income based on the cash rents
passing at the balance sheet date, less non-recoverable property
operating expenses, divided by the market value of the property,
increased with (estimated) purchasers' costs. It is a comparable
measure for portfolio valuations designed to make it easier for
investors to judge themselves how the valuation of portfolio X compares
with portfolio Y.
EPRA 'topped-up' NIY incorporates an adjustment to the EPRA NIY
in respect of the expiration of rent-free periods (or other unexpired
lease incentives such as discounted rent periods and step rents).
NIY as stated in the Investment Advisor's report calculates net
initial yield on topped-up annualised rents but does not deduct
non-recoverable property costs.
Table 5: EPRA vacancy rate
31 March 31 March
2021 2020
GBP'000 GBP'000
------------------------------------------------------------------ --- ------------- -------------
Annualised ERV of vacant premises (D) 2,054 2,201
Annualised ERV for the investment portfolio
(E) 47,151 33,141
----------------------------------------------------------------------- ------------- -------------
EPRA vacancy rate (D/E) 4.4% 6.6%
----------------------------------------------------------------------- ------------- -------------
EPRA vacancy rate represents ERV of vacant space divided by ERV
of the completed investment portfolio, excluding development property
and land. It is a pure measure of investment property space that
is vacant, based on ERV.
Table 6: Total cost ratio/EPRA cost ratio
Year ended Year ended
31 March 31 March
2021 2020
GBP'000 GBP'000
------------------------------------------------------------------ --- ------------- -------------
Property operating expenses 4,612 3,930
Add back insurance recharged (930) (663)
----------------------------------------------------------------------- ------------- -------------
Net property operating expenses 3,682 3,267
Administration expenses 6,324 5,032
Less cost of postponed equity raise - (376)
Less ground rents (8) (134) (110)
----------------------------------------------------------------------- ------------- -------------
Total cost including direct vacancy cost
(F) 9,872 7,813
Direct vacancy cost (980) (1,320)
----------------------------------------------------------------------- ------------- -------------
Total cost excluding direct vacancy cost
(G) 8,892 6,493
----------------------------------------------------------------------- ------------- -------------
Rental income (9) 34,225 29,390
Less ground rents paid (748) (507)
----------------------------------------------------------------------- ------------- -------------
Gross rental income (H) 33,477 28,883
----------------------------------------------------------------------- ------------- -------------
Less direct vacancy cost (980) (1,320)
----------------------------------------------------------------------- ------------- -------------
Net rental income 32,497 27,563
Total cost ratio including direct vacancy
cost (F/H) 29.5% 27.1%
----------------------------------------------------------------------- ------------- -------------
Total cost ratio excluding direct vacancy
cost (G/H) 26.6% 22.5%
----------------------------------------------------------------------- ------------- -------------
Year ended Year ended
31 March 31 March
2021 2020
GBP'000 GBP'000
------------------------------------------------------------------ --- ------------- -------------
Total cost including direct vacancy cost
(F) 9,872 7,813
Cost of postponed equity raise - 376
----------------------------------------------------------------------- ------------- -------------
EPRA total cost (I) 9,872 8,189
Direct vacancy cost (980) (1,320)
----------------------------------------------------------------------- ------------- -------------
EPRA total cost excluding direct vacancy
cost (J) 8,892 6,869
----------------------------------------------------------------------- ------------- -------------
EPRA cost ratio including direct vacancy
cost (I/H) 29.5% 28.4%
----------------------------------------------------------------------- ------------- -------------
EPRA cost ratio excluding direct vacancy
cost (J/H) 26.6% 23.8%
----------------------------------------------------------------------- ------------- -------------
(8) Ground rent expenses included within administration expenses
such as depreciation of head lease assets.
(9) Prior period rental income includes dilapidation income for
the purposes of the total cost ratio and EPRA cost ratio
calculations.
EPRA cost ratios represent administrative and operating costs
(including and excluding costs of direct vacancy) divided by gross
rental income. They are a key measure to enable meaningful
measurement of the changes in the Group's operating costs.
It is the Group's policy not to capitalise overheads or
operating expenses and no such costs were capitalised in either the
year ended 31 March 2021 or the year ended 31 March 2020.
Table 7: Lease
data
Year Years Head rents
Year 1 2 3-5 Year 5+ payable Total
As at 31 March GBP'000
2021 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
--------------- -------------- -------------- -------------- -------------- ---------- -------------
Passing rent of
leases
expiring in: 5,327 2,450 26,064 5,859 (1,126) 38,574
--------------- -------------- -------------- -------------- -------------- ---------- -------------
ERV of leases
expiring
in: 7,754 2,597 31,115 6,876 (1,191) 47,151
--------------- -------------- -------------- -------------- -------------- ---------- -------------
Passing rent
subject
to review in: 7,036 4,664 23,496 4,504 (1,126) 38,574
--------------- -------------- -------------- -------------- -------------- ---------- -------------
ERV subject to
review
in: 9,467 5,066 28,507 5,302 (1,191) 47,151
--------------- -------------- -------------- -------------- -------------- ---------- -------------
WAULT to expiry is 5.8 years and to break is 4.7 years.
Year Years Head rents
Year 1 2 3-5 Year 5+ payable Total
As at 31 March GBP'000
2020 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
--------------- -------------- -------------- -------------- -------------- ---------- -------------
Passing rent of
leases
expiring in: 2,876 3,098 11,127 11,310 (582) 27,829
--------------- -------------- -------------- -------------- -------------- ---------- -------------
ERV of leases
expiring
in: 5,662 3,135 12,173 12,833 (662) 33,141
--------------- -------------- -------------- -------------- -------------- ---------- -------------
Passing rent
subject
to review in: 9,820 5,619 11,797 1,175 (582) 27,829
--------------- -------------- -------------- -------------- -------------- ---------- -------------
ERV subject to
review
in: 13,178 5,660 13,754 1,211 (662) 33,141
--------------- -------------- -------------- -------------- -------------- ---------- -------------
WAULT to expiry is 5.2 years and to break is 4.0 years.
Table 8: Capital expenditure
Year ended Year ended
31 March 31 March
2021 2020
GBP'000 GBP'000
------------------------------------- ---------- ----------
Acquisitions(10) 246,565 149,665
Development spend(11) 625 238
Completed investment properties:(12)
No incremental lettable space
- like-for-like portfolio 1,493 2,942
No incremental lettable space
- other 82 107
Tenant incentives 363 500
Total capital expenditure 249,128 153,452
Conversion from accruals to cash
basis (21,916) (5,138)
Total capital expenditure on
a cash basis 227,212 148,314
--------------------------------------- ---------- ----------
(10) Acquisitions include GBP229,272 completed investment
property and GBP17,293 development property and land (2019:
GBP149,665 and GBPnil respectively)
(11) Expenditure on development property and land
(12) Expenditure on completed investment properties
Table 9: Like-for-like net rental income
Year ended Year ended
31 March 31 March
2021 2020
GBP'000 GBP'000 % Change
------------------------------------ ---------- ---------- --------
Like-for-like net rental income(13) 18,497 18,367 0.7%
Other(14) - 1,135
-------------------------------------- ---------- ---------- --------
Adjusted like-for-like net rental
income 18,497 19,502 (5.1%)
Development lettings 591 595
Properties acquired 14,550 6,087
Properties sold 587 2,329
-------------------------------------- ---------- ---------- --------
Rental income 34,225 28,513
Dilapidation income 603 877
Insurance recharge 930 663
Revenue 35,758 30,053
-------------------------------------- ---------- ---------- --------
(13) Like-for-like portfolio valuation as at 31 March 2021:
GBP518,775,000 (31 March 2020: 434,065,000)
(14) Includes rent surrender premiums, back rent and other
items
GLOSSARY
Adjusted earnings per share ("Adjusted EPS")
EPRA EPS adjusted to exclude one-off costs, divided by the
weighted average number of shares in issue during the year
Admission
The admission of Warehouse REIT plc onto the AIM of the London
Stock Exchange on 20 September 2017
AGM
Annual General Meeting
AIC
The Association of Investment Companies
AIFM
Alternative Investment Fund Manager
AIFMD
Alternative Investment Fund Managers Directive
AIM
A market operated by the London Stock Exchange
Contracted rent
Gross annual rental income currently receivable on a property
plus rent contracted from expiry of rent-free periods and uplifts
agreed at the balance sheet date less any ground rents payable
under head leases
Development property and land
Whole or a material part of an estate identified as having
potential for development. Such assets are classified as
development property and land until development is completed and
they have the potential to be fully income generating
Effective occupancy
Total open market rental value of the units leased divided by
total open market rental value excluding assets under development,
units undergoing refurbishment and units under offer to let
EPRA
The European Public Real Estate Association, the industry body
for European REITs
EPRA cost ratio
The sum of property expenses and administration expenses as a
percentage of gross rental income calculated both including and
excluding direct vacancy cost
EPRA earnings
IFRS profit after tax excluding movements relating to changes in
fair value of investment properties, gains/losses on property
disposals, changes in fair value of financial instruments and the
related tax effects
EPRA earnings per share ("EPRA EPS")
A measure of EPS on EPRA earnings designed to present underlying
earnings from core operating activities based on the weighted
average number of shares in issue during the year
EPRA guidelines
The EPRA Best Practices Recommendations Guidelines October
2019
EPRA like-for-like rental income growth
The growth in rental income on properties owned throughout the
current and previous year under review. This growth rate includes
revenue recognition and lease accounting adjustments but excludes
development property and land in either year and properties
acquired or disposed of in either year
EPRA NAV/ EPRA NDV/ EPRA NNNAV/ EPRA NRV/ EPRA NTA per share
The EPRA net asset value measures figures divided by the number
of shares outstanding at the balance sheet date
EPRA net asset value ("EPRA NAV")
The value of net assets, adjusted to include properties and
other investment interests at fair value and to exclude items not
expected to be realised in a long-term property business, such as
the fair value of any financial derivatives and deferred taxes on
property valuation surpluses (only applicable to previous financial
periods)
EPRA net disposal value ("EPRA NDV")
The net asset value measure detailing the full extent of
liabilities and resulting shareholder value if company assets are
sold and/or if liabilities are not held until maturity. Deferred
tax and financial instruments are calculated as to the full extent
of their liability, including tax exposure not reflected in the
statement of financial position, net of any resulting tax
EPRA net initial yield ("EPRA NIY")
The annualised passing rent generated by the portfolio, less
estimated non-recoverable property operating expenses, expressed as
a percentage of the portfolio valuation (adding notional
purchasers' costs), excluding development property and land
EPRA net reinstatement value ("EPRA NRV")
The net asset value measure to highlight the value of net assets
on a long-term basis and reflect what would be needed to recreate
the company through the investment markets based on its current
capital and financing structure. Assets and liabilities that are
not expected to crystallise in normal circumstances, such as the
fair value movements on financial derivatives and deferred taxes on
property valuation surpluses, are excluded. Costs such as real
estate transfer taxes are included
EPRA net tangible assets ("EPRA NTA")
The net asset value measure assuming entities buy and sell
assets, thereby crystallising certain levels of deferred tax
liability
EPRA 'topped-up' net initial yield
The annualised passing rent generated by the portfolio, topped
up for contracted uplifts, less estimated non--recoverable property
operating expenses, expressed as a percentage of the portfolio
valuation (adding notional purchasers' costs), excluding
development property and land
EPRA vacancy rate
Total open market rental value of vacant units divided by total
open market rental value of the portfolio excluding development
property and land
EPS
Earnings per share
Equivalent yield
The weighted average rental income return expressed as a
percentage of the investment property valuation, plus purchasers'
costs, excluding development property and land
ERV
The estimated annual open market rental value of lettable space
as assessed by the external valuer
FCA
Financial Conduct Authority
GAV
Gross asset value
Group
Warehouse REIT plc and its subsidiaries
IASB
International Accounting Standards Board
IFRS
International Financial Reporting Standards adopted by the
European Union
IFRS earnings per share ("EPS")
IFRS earnings after tax for the year divided by the weighted
average number of shares in issue during the year
IFRS NAV per share
IFRS net asset value divided by the number of shares outstanding
at the balance sheet date
Investment portfolio
Completed buildings and excluding development property and
land
Interest Cover
Adjusted operating profit before gains on investment properties,
interest and tax divided by the underlying net interest expense
IPO
Initial public offering
LIBOR
The basic rate of interest used in lending between banks on the
London interbank market and also used as a reference for setting
the interest rate on other loans
Like-for-like rental income growth
The increase in contracted rent of properties owned throughout
the period under review, expressed as a percentage of the
contracted rent at the start of the period, excluding development
property and land and units undergoing refurbishment
Like-for-like valuation increase
The increase in the valuation of properties owned throughout the
period under review, expressed as a percentage of the valuation at
the start of the period, net of capital expenditure
Loan to value ratio ("LTV")
Gross debt less cash, short-term deposits and liquid
investments, divided by the aggregate value of properties and
investments
NAV
Net asset value
Net initial yield ("NIY")
Contracted rent at the balance sheet date, expressed as a
percentage of the investment property valuation, plus purchasers'
costs, excluding development property and land
Net rental income
Gross annual rental income receivable after deduction of ground
rents and other net property outgoings including void costs and net
service charge expenses
Net reversionary yield ("NRY")
The anticipated yield to which the net initial yield will rise
(or fall) once the rent reaches the ERV
Occupancy
Total open market rental value of the units leased divided by
total open market rental value excluding development property and
land, equivalent to one minus the EPRA vacancy rate
Passing rent
Gross annual rental income currently receivable on a property as
at the balance sheet date less any ground rents payable under head
leases
Property income distribution ("PID")
Profits distributed to shareholders which are subject to tax in
the hands of the shareholders as property income. PIDs are usually
paid net of withholding tax (except for certain types of tax-exempt
shareholders). REITs also pay out normal dividends called
non-PIDs
RCF
Revolving credit facility
Real Estate Investment Trust ("REIT")
A listed property company which qualifies for, and has elected
into, a tax regime which is exempt from corporation tax on profits
from property rental income and UK capital gains on the sale of
investment properties
RPI
Retail price index
SONIA
Sterling Overnight Index Average
Total accounting return
The movement in EPRA NTA over a period plus dividends paid in
the period, expressed as a percentage of the EPRA NTA at the start
of the period
Total cost ratio
EPRA cost ratio excluding one-off costs calculated both
including and excluding vacant property costs
Weighted average unexpired lease term ("WAULT")
Average unexpired lease term to first break or expiry weighted
by contracted rent across the portfolio, excluding development
property and land
The Annual Report can be accessed via the Company's website at
www.warehousereit.co.uk.
Neither the contents of Warehouse REIT plc's website nor the
contents of any website accessible from hyperlinks on the website
(or any website) is incorporated into, or forms part of this
announcement.
ENDS
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of any website accessible from hyperlinks on this announcement (or
any other website) is incorporated into, or forms part of, this
announcement.
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