The
information contained in this release was correct as at
30 November 2024.
Information on
the Company’s up to date net asset values can be found on the
London Stock Exchange Website at:
https://www.londonstockexchange.com/exchange/news/market-news/market-news-home.html.
BLACKROCK THROGMORTON TRUST PLC (LEI:
5493003B7ETS1JEDPF59)
All
information is at
30 November
2024 and
unaudited.
Performance
at month end is calculated on a cum income
basis
|
One
Month
%
|
Three
months
%
|
One
year
%
|
Three
years
%
|
Five
years
%
|
Net
asset value
|
1.5
|
-3.5
|
16.3
|
-21.7
|
17.1
|
Share
price
|
0.3
|
-6.6
|
5.0
|
-32.8
|
0.9
|
Benchmark*
|
0.7
|
-3.5
|
14.1
|
-11.5
|
14.5
|
Sources:
BlackRock and Deutsche Numis
*With
effect from 15 January 2024 the Numis
Smaller Companies plus AIM (excluding Investment Companies) Index
to Deutsche Numis Smaller Companies plus AIM (excluding Investment
Companies).
At month
end
|
Net
asset value capital only:
|
667.19p
|
Net
asset value incl. income:
|
682.83p
|
Share
price
|
593.00p
|
Discount to cum
income NAV
|
13.2%
|
Net
yield1:
|
2.6%
|
Total
Gross assets2:
|
£595.9m
|
Net
market exposure as a % of net asset value3:
|
108.5%
|
Ordinary shares
in issue4:
|
87,271,864
|
2023
ongoing charges (excluding performance fees)5,6:
|
0.54%
|
2023
ongoing charges ratio (including performance
fees)5,6,7:
|
0.87%
|
1.
Calculated using the Final Dividend declared on 05 February 2024 paid on 28 March 2024, together with the Interim Dividend
declared on 24 July 2024 paid on
21 August 2024.
2.
Includes current year revenue and excludes gross exposure through
contracts for difference.
3.
Long exposure less short exposure as a percentage of net asset
value.
4.
Excluding 15,938,000 shares held in treasury.
5.
The Company’s ongoing charges are calculated as a percentage of
average daily net assets and using the management fee and all other
operating expenses, excluding performance fees, finance costs,
direct transaction charges, VAT recovered, taxation and certain
other non-recurring items for the year ended 30 November 2023.
6.
With effect from 1 August 2017 the
base management fee was reduced from 0.70% to 0.35% of gross assets
per annum. The Company’s ongoing charges are calculated as a
percentage of average daily net assets and using the management fee
and all other operating expenses, including performance fees, but
excluding finance costs, direct transaction charges, VAT recovered,
taxation and certain other non-recurring items for the year ended
30 November 2023.
7.
Effective 1st December 2017 the
annual performance fee is calculated using performance data on an
annualised rolling two-year basis (previously, one year) and the
maximum annual performance fee payable is effectively reduced to
0.90% of two year rolling average month end gross assets (from 1%
of average annual gross assets over one year). Additionally, the
Company now accrues this fee at a rate of 15% of outperformance
(previously 10%). The maximum annual total management fees
(comprising the base management fee of 0.35% and a potential
performance fee of 0.90%) are therefore 1.25% of average month end
gross assets on a two-year rolling basis (from 1.70% of average
annual gross assets).
Sector Weightings
|
% of Total Assets
|
|
|
Industrials
|
32.9
|
Financials
|
17.9
|
Consumer
Discretionary
|
15.8
|
Basic
Materials
|
7.6
|
Technology
|
7.1
|
Real
Estate
|
3.8
|
Telecommunications
|
3.6
|
Consumer
Staples
|
1.9
|
Health
Care
|
1.5
|
Communication
Services
|
1.2
|
Energy
|
0.5
|
|
|
Net
Current Assets
|
6.2
|
|
-----
|
Total
|
100.0
|
|
=====
|
|
|
Country Weightings
|
% of Total Assets
|
|
|
United
Kingdom
|
92.2
|
United
States
|
3.0
|
Ireland
|
2.5
|
Australia
|
1.2
|
France
|
0.5
|
Canada
|
0.5
|
Switzerland
|
0.4
|
Sweden
|
(0.3)
|
|
-----
|
Total
|
100.0
|
|
=====
|
Market Exposure (Quarterly)
|
|
|
29.02.24
%
|
31.05.24
%
|
31.08.24
%
|
30.11.24
%
|
Long
|
117.9
|
114.9
|
111.7
|
111.9
|
Short
|
3.2
|
2.3
|
2.7
|
3.4
|
Gross
exposure
|
121.1
|
117.2
|
114.4
|
115.3
|
Net
exposure
|
114.7
|
112.6
|
109.0
|
108.5
|
Ten Largest Investments
|
|
Company
|
% of Total Gross Assets
|
|
|
Breedon
|
3.3
|
IntegraFin
|
3.1
|
Tatton Asset
Management
|
2.8
|
Rotork
|
2.8
|
Grafton
Group
|
2.7
|
Hill
& Smith Holdings
|
2.7
|
Gamma
Communications
|
2.6
|
GPE
|
2.6
|
Workspace
Group
|
2.5
|
Oxford
Instruments
|
2.4
|
Commenting
on the markets, Dan Whitestone,
representing the Investment Manager noted:
The
Company returned 1.5% in November, outperforming its benchmark, the
Deutsche Numis Smaller Companies +AIM (excluding Investment
Companies) Index, which returned 0.7%.1
The
UK market moved higher during November as bond yields and swap
rates retreated. Weaker Sterling is helping the FTSE 100 Index and
mid-cap Industrials from a translational perspective, while some UK
domestics may now have to contend with increased costs of imported
raw materials whilst mitigating increases in staff costs from the
Budget. However, UK indices (large and small) all moved higher
amidst another period of frenzied M&A activity reminding
investors that significant value remains in the UK.
The
largest positive contributor during the month was
Rotork.
The shares moved higher in response to a positive trading update
which showed positive momentum in order intake, which was up 8%
year-on-year, with all three key divisions (Water & Power, Oil
& Gas, and CPI) seeing healthy progress.
The
second largest contributor was a short in
a UK pet retailer which issued a
profit warning in response to a softer market backdrop. Our
concerns are more than transient consumer softness, due to
prolonged operational issues at a distribution centre, falling
customer engagement and poor online reviews indicate a more company
specific problem that management are reticent to acknowledge. The
third largest contributor was electronics components
manufacturer, TT
Electronics, which rose
after receiving two bids during the month.
Several of the
weaker long positions were UK domestic exposed businesses in areas
like housebuilding and RMI (Repair, Maintenance and Improvement)
spend as he market waits to see what impact the Budget has on
consumption and consumer confidence. The largest detractors were
housebuilder Bellway
and
building materials distributor Grafton,
which both fell along with other UK rate sensitives in the
aftermath of the Budget. Shares in WH
Smith continued to
drift lower during the month despite reporting resilient
preliminary full-year results.
November marks
the end of what has felt like an extremely challenging financial
year. But we are pleased to report that the portfolio was able to
generate a positive return of 16.3%, outperforming the benchmark by
+2.2%.
The
Budget didn’t prove to be the clearing event we hoped. Alas, the
building momentum in UK evidence through the first half of 2024 has
been completely upended, with growth, consumer confidence and
business confidence all taking a significant hit. Whilst swap rates
and bond yields have eased after the initial spike, it is clear
from many of our interactions in recent company meetings is that
these additional employer NI costs (specifically the lowering of
the threshold to bring so many more transient workers into the
catchment) will have direct consequences which are likely to be
felt more through cost savings (job losses) than price increases.
As one UK Industrial said to us “our customers don’t care about a
specific UK tax increase being passed on to them, and we can’t
undermine our competitive position versus US and Asian
competitors”. As for obvious sectors like leisure, retail and
hospitality, the competition may well be domestic but there is a
limit on the ability to pass on prices due to the softening
consumer backdrop and competitive backdrop. This is an area we have
moderated long exposure and have added shorts, particularly those
that have the additional headwind of raw materials costs that need
to be imported which will be negatively impacted by weaker
sterling. As for housebuilders and RMI exposed names, we didn’t buy
the immediate sell-off but have just started adding to some of the
market leaders in these areas, where we see compelling long-term
value despite a cloudier backdrop.
Reflecting the
greater risks to the UK outlook both in terms of growth and
inflation, the gross exposure remains lower than normal levels at
around 110%, whilst the net of the portfolio is around
105%.
We
thank shareholders for your ongoing support and look forward to
updating you all in the New Year.
1Source: BlackRock
as at 30 November 2024
20 December 2024
ENDS
Latest
information is available by typing www.blackrock.com/uk/thrg on the
internet, "BLRKINDEX" on Reuters, "BLRK" on Bloomberg or "8800" on
Topic 3 (ICV terminal).
Neither the
contents of the Manager’s website nor the contents of any website
accessible from hyperlinks on the Manager’s website (or any other
website) is incorporated into, or forms part of,
this
announcement.