BlackRock Frontiers Investment Trust
plc
LEI: 5493003K5E043LHLO706
Annual Report and Financial Statements 30 September 2024
Performance record
The Company’s financial statements are presented in US Dollars. The
Company’s shares are listed on the London Stock Exchange and quoted
in British Pound Sterling. The British Pound Sterling amounts for
performance returns shown below are presented for convenience. The
difference in performance returns measured in US Dollars and in
British Pound Sterling reflects the change in the value of British
Pound Sterling versus the US Dollar over the period.
|
As at
30 September
2024
|
As at
30 September
2023
|
|
US Dollar
|
|
|
|
Net assets (US$’000)1
|
406,243
|
363,598
|
|
Net asset value per ordinary share (cents)
|
214.57
|
192.05
|
|
Ordinary share price (mid-market)2
(cents)
|
194.50
|
175.76
|
|
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
|
British Pound Sterling
|
|
|
|
Net assets (£’000)1,2
|
302,850
|
297,897
|
|
Net asset value per ordinary share2
(pence)
|
159.96
|
157.35
|
|
Ordinary share price (mid-market) (pence)
|
145.00
|
144.00
|
|
Discount3
|
9.4%
|
8.5%
|
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
|
Performance
|
For the year
ended
30 September
2024
%
|
For the year
ended
30 September
2023
%
|
Since
inception4
%
|
US Dollar
|
|
|
|
Net asset value per share (with dividends
reinvested)3
|
+16.5
|
+25.1
|
+132.9
|
Benchmark Index5,6
|
+15.7
|
+5.0
|
+64.4
|
MSCI Frontier Markets Index6
|
+15.1
|
+6.5
|
+52.8
|
MSCI Emerging Markets Index6
|
+26.1
|
+11.7
|
+47.9
|
Ordinary share price (with dividends reinvested)3
|
+15.8
|
+28.8
|
+109.7
|
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
British Pound Sterling
|
|
|
|
Net asset value per share (with dividends
reinvested)3
|
+6.0
|
+14.3
|
+169.8
|
Benchmark Index5,6
|
+5.3
|
-3.9
|
+89.7
|
MSCI Frontier Markets Index6
|
+4.7
|
-2.6
|
+77.6
|
MSCI Emerging Markets Index6
|
+14.7
|
+2.2
|
+71.9
|
Ordinary share price (with dividends reinvested)3
|
+5.4
|
+17.7
|
+142.6
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
=========
|
1 The
change in net assets reflects dividends paid and portfolio
movements during the year.
2 Based
on an exchange rate of US$1.3414 to
£1 at 30 September 2024 and
US$1.2206 to £1 at 30 September 2023.
3 Alternative
Performance Measures, see Glossary
in the Company’s Annual Report for the year ended 30 September 2024.
4 The
Company was incorporated on 15 October
2010 and its shares were admitted to trading on the London
Stock Exchange on 17 December
2010.
5 With
effect from 1 April 2018, the
Benchmark Index changed to the MSCI Emerging Markets Index ex
Selected Countries + MSCI Frontier Markets Index. Prior to
1 April 2018, the Benchmark Index was
the MSCI Frontier Markets Index. The performance returns of the
Benchmark Index since inception have been blended to reflect this
change.
6 Total
return indices calculate the reinvestment of dividends net of
withholding taxes.
Sources: BlackRock and LSEG Datastream.
Chair’s statement
Overview
Over the year to 30 September 2024,
your Company’s Net Asset Value per share produced a total return in
US Dollars of +16.5%, compared to an increase in the Benchmark
Index of +15.7%, resulting in outperformance of
+0.8%1.
This means that your Company’s NAV has risen by +132.9% since
launch, more than double the benchmark return of +64.4%. For
British Pound Sterling based shareholders, the equivalent return
for the year was +6.0%, with the Benchmark Index returning +5.3%,
representing outperformance of +0.7%1.
Since the financial year end and up to close of business on
2 December 2024, the Company’s NAV
has decreased by -2.2% compared with a decrease in the Benchmark
Index of -5.7%, representing an outperformance of +3.5%. For
British Pound Sterling based shareholders, the equivalent return
for the financial year to date is +3.9%, with the Benchmark Index
returning +0.2%, representing outperformance of
3.7%1.
Our portfolio managers provide a detailed description of the key
contributors to and detractors from performance during the period,
insight into the positioning of the portfolio and their views on
the outlook for the forthcoming year in their report, which follows
below.
I am delighted to tell you that the Company won the Investment Week
Investment Company of the Year Award 2024 – Global Emerging Markets
category for the third year in a row. The Company also won the
CityWire Investment Trust Award 2024 - Global Emerging Markets
Equities Trust. I am sure shareholders will join me in
congratulating the investment team on these notable
achievements.
Revenue return and dividends
The Company’s revenue return per share for the year amounted to
9.97 cents (2023: 8.38 cents). The Directors are recommending the
payment of a final dividend of 6.00
cents per ordinary share (2023: 4.90
cents) in respect of the year ended 30 September 2024. Together with the interim
dividend of 3.50 cents per share
(2023: 3.10 cents), this represents a
total of 9.50 cents per share (2023:
8.00 cents) and an increase of 18.8%
over the previous year.
Subject to shareholder approval, this dividend will be paid on
14 February 2025 to shareholders on
the register at close of business on 10
January 2025. The ex-dividend date will be 9 January 2025. The Company does not have a
policy of actively targeting income; nevertheless, this return
represents an attractive yield of 4.9% (please see the Glossary in
the Company’s Annual Report for the year ended 30 September 2024 for the inputs to the yield
calculation).
Fees and charges
Following its outperformance of the Benchmark Index during the
financial year, the Manager generated a performance fee of
US$3.5m for the year ended
30 September 2024. As per best
practice, the performance fee structure is subject to a maximum cap
and a high water mark. This mechanism requires the Manager to catch
up any cumulative underperformance against the Benchmark Index
since launch before a performance fee can be generated.
The Board recently conducted a comprehensive review of the
Company’s investment management and performance fee arrangements,
which included seeking a formal opinion on all aspects of the fee
structure from an independent third party. As a result of this
review, certain changes are being made to the fee arrangements.
With effect from 1 October 2024, the
management fee will be levied on the Company’s net asset value
(previously the fee was levied on the Company’s gross assets,
defined as the aggregate net assets of the long equity and CFD
portfolios of the Company). In practice this will have minimal
impact on the quantum of the fee due to the fact that the
accounting basis for calculating the net asset value of the CFD
portfolios means that gross assets often equate to net assets to
the extent the Company is not leveraged through other means.
However, it aligns the fee structure with broader market practice
and has the benefit of being simpler to understand. In addition, a
tiered fee structure will be introduced with effect from the same
date, such that a fee of 1.1% per annum will be levied on the
Company’s net assets up to US$650
million, reducing to 1% per annum on net assets above this
amount. The Board notes that the US$650
million threshold for tiering is aligned to a British Pound
Sterling equivalent threshold of £500 million, which is comparable
to or lower than the five other trusts in the AIC Global Emerging
Markets sector (the sector in which the Company sits) that have
adopted a tiered fee structure. Following this review, the Board
believes the fee structure is appropriate.
Further details of the Company’s costs and charges can be found in
note 4 below and in the Glossary in the Company’s Annual Report for
the year ended 30 September
2024.
Share capital management
For the year under review, the Company’s ordinary shares traded at
an average discount to NAV of 8.5% and were trading at a discount
of 9.1% on a cum-income basis at 2 December
2024, the latest practicable date prior to the issue of this
report.
The Directors recognise the importance to investors of ensuring
that the Company’s shares do not trade at a significant discount or
premium to NAV. Accordingly, the Directors will consider the issue
of shares at a premium or the repurchase at a discount to help
balance demand and supply in the market. The Company also provides
a five-yearly opportunity for shareholders to realise the value of
their ordinary shares at the prevailing NAV less costs. The next
such opportunity will occur in early 2026.
The Directors have been granted the authority by shareholders to
buy back up to 14.99% of the Company’s issued share capital
(excluding any shares held in treasury) and also to issue or sell
from treasury on a non-pre-emptive basis up to 10% of the Company’s
issued share capital. Both authorities expire on the conclusion of
the forthcoming Annual General Meeting (AGM) to be held on
Wednesday, 5 February 2025, at which
time resolutions will be put to shareholders seeking a renewal of
these powers. Further information can be found in the Directors’
Report in the Company’s Annual Report for the year ended
30 September 2024.
As at 30 September 2024, the Company
had 189,325,748 ordinary shares in issue, excluding 52,497,053
shares held in treasury. No shares were bought back during the
year. However, since the year end and up to 2 December 2024, the Company bought 25,000
ordinary shares back at an average price of 149.00p per share for a
total cost of £37,000. All shares have been placed in treasury. No
shares were issued during the year under review or post year end
from 1 October 2024 up to the date of
this report.
The Board monitors the Company’s discount to NAV closely and
receives regular updates from the Manager and our corporate broker,
Winterflood Securities. In the Board’s opinion, it is important to
consider the discount in the context of wider market conditions,
with investor sentiment and discounts being influenced by various
external factors, including the war in Ukraine, the conflict in the Middle East and prolonged higher interest
rates. Against this backdrop, the average discount for the
investment company sector as a whole has recently exceeded 15%. The
Company’s discount compares favourably to this level, as it does to
the average discount of the AIC Global Emerging Markets sector
which stood at 11.15% on 2 December
2024, the latest practicable date prior to the publication
of this report.
The Board believes that the best way to encourage a narrowing of
the discount at which the Company’s shares trade is to continue to
deliver strong investment performance and to communicate the unique
attractions of our investment proposition to both existing and new
shareholders. To this end, the Board has recently initiated a
project to scrutinise investors’ perception of the Company with the
help of an external agency and this will enable us to refine our
marketing strategy over the coming months.
Gearing
One of the advantages of the investment trust structure is that the
Company can use gearing with the objective of increasing portfolio
returns over the longer term. The Company utilised its ability to
gear the portfolio through its CFD exposure during the year. As at
the year end, net gearing stood at 4.0%. This compares with 12.0%
at the start of the financial year, with the decrease reflecting
timing differences on the back of profit taking prior to
reinvesting the proceeds.
Board composition
As announced on 18 January 2024, Mr
Hatem Dowidar was appointed a
non-executive Director of the Company with effect from 7 February 2024. Hatem brings a wealth of
relevant experience in frontier markets, both strengthening and
complementing the skills of the existing Board. Hatem is based in
the Middle East and through his
role as CEO of a major telecommunications company operating in the
region, he possesses in-depth knowledge of these markets. We
welcome him and believe his expertise and on-the-ground market
insight will be of great value to the Board.
As at 30 September 2024, the Board
consisted of five independent non-executive Directors. As part of
its succession planning, the Board regularly considers its
composition to ensure that a suitable balance of skills, knowledge,
experience, independence and diversity is achieved to enable the
Board to discharge its duties most effectively. The Directors
submit themselves for re-election annually and therefore all
Directors will stand for either election or re-election at the
forthcoming AGM.
Further information on the Directors’ backgrounds and experience
can be found in the Company’s Annual Report for the year ended
30 September 2024.
Corporate governance
The Board takes its governance responsibilities very seriously and
follows best practice wherever possible. The UK Code of Corporate
Governance (the UK Code) requires enhanced disclosure setting out
how we, as Directors, have fulfilled our duties, taking into
account the wider interests of stakeholders in promoting the
success of the Company.
As it does each year, and as required by the Corporate Governance
Code, the Company undertook a comprehensive Board evaluation during
the year. The overall conclusion was very positive in terms of the
effectiveness of the Board and the skills, expertise and commitment
of the individual Directors. The combination of a clear succession
plan, structured search and selection process when making new
appointments and thorough annual performance evaluation means that
the Board remains confident that each Director is discharging their
role effectively.
The Board is cognisant of the risk of “overboarding” and has
considered the time commitment required by the Directors’ other
roles, taking into account their nature and complexity. The Board
reviews this information annually, for each Director to ensure that
all Directors have sufficient capacity to carry out their role
effectively. Before recommending a Director for re-election, their
independence, attendance record and ongoing commitment to the
affairs of the Company are also considered.
Board diversity
I am pleased to report that the Board is compliant with the
recommendations of the Parker Review and the FTSE Women Leaders
Review and, at the date of this report, we have a 60:40 female to
male gender ratio. In accordance with the Listing Rules, we have
also disclosed the ethnicity of the Board and our policy on matters
of diversity. The disclosure can be found in the Company’s Annual
Report for the year ended 30 September
2024.
Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG)
considerations
The frontier markets in which the Company can invest are home to
over three billion of the world’s population and through our
investments we bring much needed capital to markets largely
overlooked by developed world investors.
Material ESG issues can present both opportunities and risks to
long-term investment performance. While the Company does not have
an ESG investment objective or exclude investments based only on
ESG criteria, ethical and sustainability issues are considered as
part of the investment process. Your Board is committed to diligent
oversight and, as such, during the year under review, we introduced
measures to improve our understanding of ESG factors within the
portfolio as well as the nature and frequency of engagement with
investee companies.
Further information can be found in the Company’s Annual Report for
the year ended 30 September
2024.
Annual general meeting
This year’s AGM will be held in person at 12:30 p.m. on Wednesday, 5
February 2025 at the offices of BlackRock at 12 Throgmorton
Avenue, London, EC2N 2DL. Details
of the business of the meeting are set out in the Notice of Annual
General Meeting in the Company’s Annual Report for the year ended
30 September 2024.
Prior to the formal business of the meeting, our Investment
Managers will make a presentation to shareholders. This will be
followed by a question and answer session. Shareholders who are
unable to attend the meeting in person but who wish to follow the
AGM proceedings can do so via a live webinar this year. Details on
how to register, together with access details, will be available
shortly on the Company’s website at: www.blackrock.com/uk/brfi. It
is not possible to attend, speak or vote via this medium and it is
solely intended to provide shareholders with the ability to watch
the proceedings.
Additionally, if you are unable to attend you can exercise your
right to vote by proxy or appoint a proxy to attend in your place.
Details of how to do this are included on the AGM Proxy Card
provided to shareholders with the annual report. If you hold your
shares through a platform or nominees, you will need to contact
them and ask them to appoint you as a proxy in respect of your
shares in order to attend, speak and vote at the AGM. Further
information on the business of this year's AGM can be found in the
Notice of the Annual General Meeting in the Company’s Annual Report
for the year ended 30 September
2024.
The Board very much looks forward to meeting shareholders and
answering any questions you may have on the day. We hope you can
attend this year’s AGM.
Shareholder communication
I was delighted to offer my first meetings as Chair to several of
our shareholders during the year. As always, it is invaluable to
share views on the Company as well as the wider sector and I look
forward to staying in regular dialogue going forward.
We appreciate how important access to up to date information is to
our shareholders. To supplement our Company website, we continue to
offer shareholders the ability to sign up to the Trust Matters
newsletter which includes information on the Company as well as
news, views and insights. Further information on how to sign up is
included on the inside cover of the Company’s Annual Report for the
year ended 30 September
2024.
In order to facilitate greater attendance and participation at the
Company’s AGM, I have sought to engage with shareholders who hold
their shares through an intermediary or platform via the provisions
of Section 793 of the Companies Act 2006. The Board encourages all
shareholders to either attend the AGM or exercise your right to
vote by proxy. The Board is also aware that certain execution only
investment platforms are now providing shareholders with the
ability to vote electronically. The Board encourages shareholders
to take advantage of this functionality where it is available to
you.
The Board takes its responsibilities very seriously and is
committed to exercising the highest standard of corporate
governance. It regularly considers the views of its major
shareholders, offering to meet with them annually, and seeks to
engage with all shareholders where possible. Should shareholders
wish to contact me, you can do so by emailing me at
chairbrfi@blackrock.com or by writing to the Company Secretary at
the address given in the Company’s Annual Report for the year ended
30 September 2024.
Outlook
The Company continues to provide shareholders access to fast
growing and high quality companies operating in a diverse range of
fascinating countries. These more specialist markets are often
under researched and can therefore trade at very low valuations,
providing a rich opportunity set for experienced investors. Our
managers note that most of the key markets in our investment
universe performed well this year, across Asia, the Middle
East and Europe. They also
describe positive political and economic reform in several
countries, presenting them with a more stable and benign
environment for investment. Frontier market central banks are in
many cases further along the easing cycle than the developed
economies and already well into the growth phase of the cycle.
This, combined with an investment universe of countries with
favourable demographics, a growing and more affluent middle-class,
relatively low debt and low stock market valuations, both versus
developed markets and their own history, presents an ever more
compelling investment case for frontier markets. In addition,
alongside capital growth, the Company’s dividend yield remains a
valuable element of our investment proposition.
As we enter the start of our next financial year, our portfolio
managers are enthused by the breadth of the opportunity set, noting
the improving fundamentals of several countries in which they have
not invested for several years such as Egypt, Kenya,
Nigeria, Pakistan and Sri
Lanka. Against this improving macroeconomic backdrop, our
portfolio managers continue to execute their long-established
investment philosophy and process with great expertise and
dedication. We believe they are uniquely placed to navigate the
Company through these interesting and dynamic markets, unearthing
hidden gems and providing investors with unrivaled access to the
best frontier markets can offer.
KATRINA
HART
Chair
4 December 2024
1 All
numbers are stated with dividends reinvested.
Investment Manager’s Report for the year ended 30 September 2024
Market review
2024 marks yet another eventful year
for our universe and emerging markets more broadly, both from a
political and economic perspective. General elections have taken
place across many countries in our universe and we have witnessed
political leaders transition. We have seen the adoption of more
orthodox monetary policies in countries such as Egypt and Turkey in an effort to fight inflationary
pressures. More recently, we also observed the US Federal Reserve
(Fed) embark on its long-awaited rate cutting journey and
China announced an unexpected
policy pivot, introducing stimulus measures to help reflate the
economy. These developments provide a constructive backdrop for
emerging markets broadly and, in particular, smaller emerging
markets continue to reap investments and benefit from increased
geopolitical polarisation. Therefore, we remain optimistic on the
outlook for our investment universe after a positive last twelve
months.
Earlier this year, we communicated how some of the smaller markets
within our universe have implemented various policy reforms to
stabilise their economies and attract investment. One such country
we highlighted was Bangladesh,
where the regulators removed price floor restrictions for most
stocks in January 2024, paving the
way for broader market participation. Since then, political change
has dominated the news. Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina of the
incumbent Awami League was forced to resign in early August 2024 following wide-spread protests.
Muhammad Yunus, the former Nobel
Peace Prize-winner, took over as head of Bangladesh's interim government. Bangladesh is a country with tremendous
potential where a small amount of capital and investment can go a
long way. A clean technocratic government should set the stage for
a renewed investment cycle in Bangladesh.
Elsewhere in South Asia, Pakistani
authorities recently agreed a 37-month Extended Fund Facility with
the International Monetary Fund (IMF) worth about US$7 billion which will support their ongoing
efforts to stabilise the economy. Prior to this agreement, the
government had announced an ambitious budget for fiscal year
2024-25 which targets an increase in tax collection of 40%
year-on-year to reduce the fiscal deficit to 5.9% of Gross Domestic
Product (GDP), a drop from 7.5% in the previous year. Whilst
substantial challenges remain, we are encouraged by the extent of
reform envisaged.
In terms of performance, most of the markets within our universe
have done well. Pakistan was the
best performing market in Asia,
returning +83.0%, helped by the US$3
billion IMF interim programme that was secured in
June 2023 and subsequently upgraded
to a US$7 billion Extended Fund
Facility with strict reform criterion. Malaysia (+35.5%) and the Philippines (+22.7%) also did well.
Bangladesh (-9.5%) lagged on the
back of the significant political turmoil described
above.
In Europe and the Middle East (EMEA), Poland (+45.7%) and Hungary (+36.4%) were the stand-out performers
helped by declining inflation and a buoyant macroeconomy. Declining
interest rates and strong corporate earnings growth have been
supportive. By contrast, Egypt
(-7.3%) and Turkey (+6.8%)
underperformed the rest of the region. While the performance of
Egypt's equity market remains
challenged, we believe that the US$35
billion investment secured from the United Arab Emirates and US$8 billion new agreement with the IMF from
earlier this year will bode well for the economy and the Egyptian
capital markets.
In Latin America, Argentina was once again the stand-out
performer, climbing by +90.6%. The market has been excited about
President Milei's push for economic reforms which, coupled with
easing inflation pressures and rising commodity prices, has helped
support the stock market despite the concerns on the equilibrium
exchange rate; Peru was also among
the top performing markets, climbing by +57.4%, helped by higher
copper prices.
From the road
Over the past 12 months, our team has travelled extensively across
emerging and frontier markets. Travel helps us form differentiated
insights, where we look to understand the entire ecosystem around
companies and countries. We speak to customers, competitors,
suppliers, trade unions, journalists, students, professors, as well
as diplomatic and political entities and individuals to form a
comprehensive view of the top-down and the bottom-up.
These travels often take us away from the well-trodden investment
path to places such as Guyana,
Peru, Egypt, Kenya
and Nigeria. We have also visited
countries such as Bangladesh,
Malaysia, Indonesia, Philippines and Thailand in Asia as well as Kazakhstan, Georgia and Saudia
Arabia during the past 12 months.
Indonesia has seen a smooth
transition to a new government under President Prabowo who has
retained some seasoned cabinet members from President Jokowi’s
administration, most notably Minister of Finance, Sri Mulyani. This
has allayed some market speculation regarding some of the larger
expenditure plans of the new administration and it also ensures
continuity for in-progress reform within the
state-owned-enterprises. Meanwhile, the external accounts of the
country remain healthy with a small current account deficit that
should be funded with foreign direct investment. The consumer
sector has suffered from some of the uncertainty from the election
process as well as higher interest rates. While concerns from the
former are now reduced, the latter is still impacted by movements
in global interest rates post the US presidential election. This
has impacted liquidity conditions in the banking sector in the
country and we are monitoring this closely. In the background, the
Indonesian stock market remains relatively inexpensive given the
country’s prospect of sustainable high single digit nominal growth
and we are cautiously optimistic for the new year.
Saudi Arabia continues to undergo
a significant social and labour force transformation. Both of these
should enable greater productivity and support economic growth in
the kingdom over the long-term. In the current energy pricing
regime, the balance of payments for the country looks manageable,
however, the fiscal account look stretched. For the recently
announced 2025 budget, the break-even oil price (at current
run-rate of production and export) is estimated at approximately
US$90/bl, well above the current
price of circa. US$70/bl. In
addition, the liquidity in the domestic banking system is
constrained with elevated loan-deposit ratios. Therefore, we expect
the government to rationalize its expenditure plans. In particular,
we expect some of the large ticket megaprojects to be revisited and
reprioritized. The initial indications from the Ministry of Finance
confirm the same. Therefore, we are cautious on the economic
outlook for the kingdom for next year and expect more muted markets
as the local economy softens.
Guyana’s GDP has grown by approximately 300% over the last four
years, driven by its substantial oil reserves. There, we met with a
range of stakeholders, including US diplomats, to better understand
the investment opportunities on the ground in this fast-growing
economy. Our goal is to be at the forefront and act as first movers
when significant opportunities arise, for which our travels serve
as a key tool. Peru is a country
where we have been running an underweight position for most of this
year, due to political and economic uncertainty on the ground. Our
visit there reinforced our view of the challenging political
landscape where both the congress and the president have record low
approval ratings. Despite this, the economy is relatively stable,
with inflation at 2.4% and the best trade balance in a decade. It
is also a country that is benefitting from increased geopolitical
fragmentation, exemplified by COSCO Shipping Lines’, the Chinese
state-owned conglomerate, US$3.5
billion investment in the Chancay port in Peru.
The team visited Malaysia in
July 2024, and this is yet another
example of a market benefitting from increased geopolitical
fragmentation, as well as the spill-over for power demand from
Singapore. We saw evidence of
re-shoring across various sectors, particularly in parts of the
semi-conductor supply chain as both Chinese and US companies take
advantage of the existing ecosystem in Malaysia and the availability of affordable
land, power capacity and skilled labour. We maintain exposure to
the semi-conductor supply chain in Malaysia and continue to search for new
bottom-up opportunities to take advantage of the spill-over from
Singapore.
We visited Thailand recently which
was timely given the shift in the political backdrop there. The
election of Paetongtarn Shinawatra as Thailand's prime minister represents a return
of her family's political dynasty following the previous ousting of
her father (Thaksin Shinawatra) and aunt (Yingluck Shinawatra).
Given some political stability with the Move Forward party
sidelined, there have been announcements of stimulus (handouts) to
offset weak tourism revenues, high leverage at households, and
persistent asset quality problems in the banking sector. While such
fiscal measures by the government may offer short-term respite, we
maintain our view that the country remains in a tough spot
structurally.
Portfolio review
In the 12 months to 30 September
2024, the Company’s NAV and share price returned 16.5% and
15.8% respectively, (on a US Dollar basis with dividends
reinvested), outperforming the Benchmark Index (the MSCI Frontier +
Emerging Markets ex Selected Countries Index) which returned 15.7%.
Over the same period the MSCI Emerging Markets Index returned 26.1%
and MSCI Frontier Markets Index returned 15.1%. Since inception in
December 2010, the Company’s NAV and
share price have returned 132.9% and 109.7%, respectively, compared
with 64.4% on the Benchmark Index. For reference, the MSCI Frontier
Markets Index and the MSCI Emerging Markets Index have returned
52.8% and 47.9%, respectively (all percentages in US Dollar terms
with dividends reinvested).
Several stocks selected across a wide variety of markets did well.
Turkish gold mine operator,
Eldorado Gold
(+94.4%), was the best performing stock over the period, helped by
soaring gold prices. The price of the precious metal has rallied
this year in response to increasing geopolitical tensions,
particularly in the Middle East,
and in anticipation of lower real interest rates from the Fed.
European financials exposure through
PKO Bank Polski
(+68.1%) and
National Bank of Greece
(NBG) (+67.4%) also did well. NBG reported impressive first half
results for 2024, showing a 27.0% increase in core profits compared
to the same period last year.
In Argentina, our off-benchmark
position in energy company,
Vista Energy
(+46.5%) was again among the top contributors at the company level,
having success in developing the Vaca Muerta shale site in
Argentina. Within the
region,
Bancolombia
(+30.0%), was another strong performer.
Strong stock selection within Asia
was also additive to returns over the period. The largest Islamic
bank in Indonesia,
Bank Syariah
(+88.7%), was among the top performers in the region, after the
company delivered strong profit growth in the first half of 2024
and demonstrated significant runway to gain share. More recently,
the stock also gained momentum as concerns about the fiscal
trajectory of the new government were mitigated by clarifications
from the economic transition team. Another bank that did well
was
Metrobank
(+55.3%) in the Philippines.
Vietnamese technology services provider
FPT
(+68.1%), was another strong performer. The stock rallied on the
news of a co-investment with Nvidia in a factory in Vietnam and has benefitted from artificial
intelligence (AI) and the technology sector momentum more broadly.
This is a business that is predominantly offering higher value add
services such as digital transformation and cloud migration, and we
recognise FPT’s unique position as the only major technology
outsourcing business in Vietnam.
Another positive contributor was our holding in
Sea Ltd
(+52.2%), a Singapore based global
consumer internet company, which rose on the back of strong second
quarter results.
On the flipside, exposure to technology services company,
EPAM Systems
(-22.2%), weighed on performance amid weaker full year guidance.
The company has indicated that it will take time for AI to impact
its revenues. We continue to hold the stock as we believe the
company should benefit from a potential resolution of the war in
Ukraine, with a significant number
of its employees in the region. Another detractor was the Hungarian
low-cost carrier
Wizz Air Holdings
(-17.0%). The stock fell after cutting its earnings guidance. The
company has been impacted by engine issues at its supplier Pratt
& Whitney, resulting in grounded planes and higher leasing
costs, as well as a weaker outlook for fares in the EMEA region.
Philippines based resort and
casino operator
Bloomberry
(-19.2%) also hurt performance. The stock traded down despite
meaningful earnings improvement as its new property continues to
ramp up.
Investment activity
We have reduced our overall exposure to Latin America. In Chile, we exited pulp and paper company
Empresas CMPC
on the back of relative performance. Pulp prices went up on supply
disruptions and we believe the overall market will become
increasingly oversupplied going forward. We also exited lithium
producer
SQM
given concerns of over-supply in the lithium market. In
Argentina, we became sceptical of
President Milei’s ability to successfully push through reforms and
the monetary policies implemented seemed conflicted, therefore, we
exited both
Vista Energy
and oil company
YPF.
The former has been a longstanding holding in the Company and had
done exceptionally well. We continue to watch Argentina macro-economic reform as it unfolds
and may revisit stocks depending on our findings.
We have added exposure to some of the smaller markets within our
universe, including Bangladesh and
Pakistan. In Bangladesh, we initiated a position in a
commercial bank,
BRAC Bank,
reflecting our positive macro view on the country post the
government change. We are also positive on the outlook for
Pakistan more broadly and believe
that the economy has likely bottomed out. As such, we initiated a
position in
Lucky Cement,
which is one of Pakistan’s largest conglomerates and lowest cost
cement producer trading on x3 price-earnings multiple.
We have added to Turkey and
initiated a position in Turkish commercial bank
Türkiye İş Bankası
on the view that disinflation is finally coming through. More
recently, we also increased our exposure to Hungary by topping up our holding in
OTP Bank
as we believe the country should benefit from a resolution to the
war between Russia and
Ukraine.
Outlook
As higher global interest rates continue to feed through into the
real economy, we expect some moderation of demand in developed
markets. The commencement of the Fed's easing cycle should be a net
positive for emerging market assets, particularly amid reassurance
that the September 50 basis points rate cut was to preemptively
manage slowing growth and labour dynamics in the US. We continue to
see improving activity levels in some frontier and smaller emerging
markets. With inflation falling across many countries within our
universe, rate cuts have started to materialise. This is a good set
up for domestically oriented economies to see a cyclical pick
up.
We have initiated small positions in a number of countries where we
have not been invested for some time, including Bangladesh, Egypt, Kenya
and Pakistan. With a combination
of COVID-19, inflation and high global interest rates, the past few
years have been difficult for smaller countries that are reliant on
borrowing externally to fund their growth. However, we believe that
these countries, having been through a recession already, unlike
the West, are now likely at the point where they start to see
economic growth pick up. As per our macro process, we think that
capturing these turning points can be very lucrative for
investors.
Given this backdrop, we remain positive on the outlook for smaller
emerging and frontier markets relative to developed markets and
believe that the commencement of the Fed’s easing cycle will allow
for central banks within our universe to continue easing, which
should be supportive of domestic activity levels. We find
significant value in currencies and equity markets across our
investment opportunity set, and we are particularly excited about
the many opportunities we are seeing in some of the smaller
markets. Our investment universe, in absolute and relative terms,
also remains under-researched and we believe this should present
compelling alpha opportunities.
SAM VECHT, EMILY FLETCHER
AND SUDAIF NIAZ
BLACKROCK INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT (UK)
LIMITED
4 December 2024
Ten largest investments1
as at 30 September
2024
Together, the Company’s ten largest investments represented
35.0% of the Company’s portfolio as at 30
September 2024 (2023: 32.2%).
1
=
Bank Central
Asia
(2023: 1st)
Financials (Indonesia)
Portfolio value: US$20,220,000
Percentage of net assets: 5.0% (2023:
4.6%)
Bank Central Asia is an Indonesian
commercial bank headquartered in Jakarta. It is the largest private bank in the
country, offering commercial banking and other financial
services.
2
+
Emaar Properties
(2023: 6th)
Real Estate (United Arab
Emirates)
Portfolio value: US$17,927,000
Percentage of net assets: 4.4% (2023:
2.9%)
Emaar Properties is an Emirati real estate developer. The company
is involved in property investment, development, shopping malls,
retail centres, hospitality and property management services, and
serves customers in the UAE.
3
-
Saudi National Bank Corporation2
(2023: 2nd)
Financials (Saudi
Arabia)
Portfolio value: US$16,088,000
Percentage of net assets: 4.0% (2023:
4.2%)
Saudi National Bank Corporation is a commercial bank based in
Saudi Arabia. The bank offers
current, savings, time, and other deposit accounts, auto leases,
home financing, corporate loans, currency exchange, money transfer,
asset management, share brokerage, initial public offering
subscription, and private banking services.
4
+
OTP Bank
(2023: 26th)
Financials (Hungary)
Portfolio value: US$14,477,000
Percentage of net assets: 3.6% (2023:
2.0%)
OTP Bank is the leading financial institution in Hungary, providing a wide range of retail,
private, and commercial banking services. The bank offers savings
and current accounts, personal and corporate loans, credit and
debit cards, and investment products. OTP Bank is known for its
innovative digital banking solutions and extensive network of
branches and ATMs across Hungary.
5
+
FPT2
(2023: 7th)
Information Technology (Vietnam)
Portfolio value: US$13,598,000
Percentage of net assets: 3.3% (2023:
2.8%)
FPT is Vietnam’s largest information technology services company.
The core business focuses on consulting, providing and deploying
technology and telecommunications services and
solutions.
6
+
CP All
(2023: 8th)
Consumer Staples (Thailand)
Portfolio value: US$12,673,000
Percentage of net assets: 3.1% (2023:
2.8%)
CP All is a convenience store operator based in Thailand. It also operates wholesale business,
retail business and mall, payment centres and related supporting
services. The convenience stores are operated under the 7-Eleven
trademark.
7
+
Etihad Etisalat2
(2023: n/a)
Communication Services (Saudi
Arabia)
Portfolio value: US$12,558,000
Percentage of net assets: 3.1% (2023:
nil%)
Also known as Mobily, this is a Saudi
Arabia-based telecommunications operator. The company
manages, installs, and operates telephone networks, terminals, and
telecommunication unit systems, as well as sells and maintains
mobile phones and telecommunication units in Saudi Arabia.
8
-
JSC Kaspi
(2023: 3rd)
Financials (Kazakhstan)
Portfolio value: US$12,443,000
Percentage of net assets: 3.1% (2023:
3.2%)
JSC Kaspi is the largest payments, marketplace and fintech
ecosystem in Kazakhstan. The
company has seen strong growth particularly in its marketplace and
payments verticals. The company began as a bank but expanded into
peer-to-peer payments and online marketplaces, particularly proving
vital for businesses during the lockdowns of 2020. The company is
working on expanding into other markets in Central Asia.
9
+
Bank Negara Indonesia
(2023: n/a)
Financials (Indonesia)
Portfolio value: US$11,659,000
Percentage of net assets: 2.9% (2023:
nil%)
Bank Negara Indonesia (BNI) is an Indonesian state-owned bank
established in 1946. It provides a variety of financial services,
including consumer banking, corporate banking, credit cards,
investment banking, and mortgage loans. BNI has a significant
presence in Indonesia and operates
branches in several international locations, including London, New
York, and Tokyo.
10
+
Eldorado Gold
(2023: 23rd)
Materials (Turkey)
Portfolio value: US$10,021,000
Percentage of net assets: 2.5% (2023:
2.0%)
Eldorado Gold is a Canadian mid-tier gold and base metals producer
with over 30 years of experience in building and operating mines.
The company has mining, development, and exploration operations in
Turkey, Canada, and Greece.
1 Gross
market exposure as a % of net assets.
2 Exposure
gained via contracts for difference (CFDs) only.
Percentages shown are the share of net assets.
The market value shown is the gross exposure to the shares through
equity investments and long derivative positions. For equity
investments, the market value is the fair value of the shares. For
long derivative positions, it is the market value of the underlying
shares to which the portfolio is exposed via the
contract.
Percentages in brackets represent the portfolio holding as at
30 September 2023.
Symbols (+, - and
=)
indicate the change in the relative ranking of the position in the
portfolio compared to its ranking as at 30
September 2023.
Portfolio analysis as at 31 March
2024
Country allocation: Absolute weights (Gross market exposure
as a % of net assets)1
Indonesia
|
15.5
|
Saudi Arabia
|
14.3
|
Philippines
|
8.6
|
United Arab Emirates
|
8.3
|
Thailand
|
7.3
|
Hungary
|
6.7
|
Kazakhstan
|
6.0
|
Poland
|
5.7
|
Turkey
|
4.8
|
Pakistan
|
4.1
|
Kenya
|
3.5
|
Vietnam
|
3.3
|
Bangladesh
|
3.2
|
Czech Republic
|
2.5
|
Singapore
|
2.4
|
Greece
|
2.3
|
Georgia
|
2.0
|
Egypt
|
1.8
|
Multi-International
|
1.8
|
Malaysia
|
1.8
|
Chile
|
1.6
|
Qatar
|
1.4
|
Cambodia
|
0.9
|
Argentina
|
0.7
|
Romania
|
0.7
|
Colombia
|
0.6
|
Country allocation relative to the Benchmark Index
(%)1
Indonesia
|
5.4
|
Hungary
|
5.3
|
Kazakhstan
|
5.2
|
Philippines
|
5.2
|
Pakistan
|
3.7
|
Kenya
|
3.2
|
Bangladesh
|
3.0
|
Singapore
|
2.4
|
Georgia
|
2.0
|
Multi-International
|
1.8
|
Czech Republic
|
1.7
|
Egypt
|
1.4
|
United Arab Emirates
|
1.2
|
Cambodia
|
0.9
|
Turkey
|
0.9
|
Vietnam
|
0.9
|
Argentina
|
0.7
|
Poland
|
0.4
|
Colombia
|
0.0
|
Cyprus
|
0.0
|
Serbia
|
0.0
|
Lithuania
|
0.0
|
Luxembourg
|
-0.1
|
Estonia
|
-0.1
|
Sri Lanka
|
-0.1
|
Tunisia
|
-0.1
|
Mauritius
|
-0.2
|
Jordan
|
-0.2
|
Bahrain
|
-0.2
|
Croatia
|
-0.3
|
Oman
|
-0.4
|
Romania
|
-0.5
|
Greece
|
-0.5
|
Slovenia
|
-0.5
|
Other
|
-0.8
|
Chile
|
-0.9
|
Morocco
|
-1.1
|
Peru
|
-1.8
|
Thailand
|
-1.9
|
Qatar
|
-3.4
|
Kuwait
|
-4.1
|
Malaysia
|
-7.4
|
Saudi
Arabia
|
-8.9
|
1
Includes exposure gained through equity positions and long and
short CFD positions
Sources: BlackRock and LSEG Datastream.
Sector allocation: Absolute weights (Gross market exposure
as a % of net assets)1
|
%
|
Financials
|
45.8
|
Industrials
|
11.9
|
Real Estate
|
10.4
|
Communication Services
|
8.7
|
Consumer Staples
|
8.6
|
Materials
|
8.4
|
Consumer Discretionary
|
5.5
|
Information Technology
|
5.1
|
Energy
|
4.6
|
Utilities
|
1.4
|
Health Care
|
1.4
|
Sector allocation relative to the Benchmark Index
(%)1
|
%
|
Real
Estate
|
6.3
|
Industrials
|
5.4
|
Information Technology
|
3.5
|
Consumer Staples
|
2.8
|
Consumer Discretionary
|
1.5
|
Financials
|
1.2
|
Communication Services
|
0.5
|
Materials
|
-1.1
|
Health Care
|
-1.9
|
Energy
|
-2.4
|
Utilities
|
-4.0
|
1
Includes exposure gained through equity positions and long and
short CFD positions
Sources: BlackRock and LSEG Datastream.
Investments as at 30 September
2024
Equity portfolio by country of exposure
Company
|
Principal
country of
operation
|
Sector
|
Fair value1
US$’000
|
Gross market
exposure as a
% of net assets3
|
Bank Central Asia
|
Indonesia
|
Financials
|
20,220
|
5.0
|
Bank Negara Indonesia
|
Indonesia
|
Financials
|
11,659
|
2.9
|
Ciputra Development
|
Indonesia
|
Real Estate
|
9,805
|
2.4
|
Astra International
|
Indonesia
|
Industrials
|
9,266
|
2.3
|
Bank Syariah
|
Indonesia
|
Financials
|
6,709
|
1.6
|
Mitra Adiperkasa
|
Indonesia
|
Consumer Discretionary
|
5,389
|
1.3
|
|
|
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
|
|
|
63,048
|
15.5
|
|
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
Ayala Land
|
Philippines
|
Real Estate
|
9,426
|
2.3
|
Metrobank
|
Philippines
|
Financials
|
9,096
|
2.2
|
Bloomberry
|
Philippines
|
Consumer Discretionary
|
8,337
|
2.1
|
International Container Terminal Services
|
Philippines
|
Industrials
|
6,756
|
1.7
|
DigiPlus Interactive Corp
|
Philippines
|
Consumer Discretionary
|
1,393
|
0.3
|
|
|
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
|
|
|
35,008
|
8.6
|
|
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
Emaar Properties
|
United Arab Emirates
|
Real Estate
|
17,927
|
4.4
|
Air Arabia
|
United Arab Emirates
|
Industrials
|
6,474
|
1.6
|
Aldar Properties
|
United Arab Emirates
|
Real Estate
|
2,804
|
0.7
|
|
|
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
|
|
|
27,205
|
6.7
|
|
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
OTP Bank
|
Hungary
|
Financials
|
14,477
|
3.6
|
Wizz Air Holdings
|
Hungary
|
Industrials
|
7,177
|
1.7
|
MOL Group
|
Hungary
|
Energy
|
3,591
|
0.9
|
|
|
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
|
|
|
25,245
|
6.2
|
|
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
CP All
|
Thailand
|
Consumer Staples
|
12,673
|
3.1
|
Advanced Info Service
|
Thailand
|
Communication Services
|
9,802
|
2.4
|
AMATA Corporation
|
Thailand
|
Real Estate
|
2,105
|
0.6
|
|
|
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
|
|
|
24,580
|
6.1
|
|
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
JSC Kaspi
|
Kazakhstan
|
Financials
|
12,443
|
3.1
|
Kazatomprom
|
Kazakhstan
|
Energy
|
7,026
|
1.7
|
Halyk Savings Bank
|
Kazakhstan
|
Financials
|
4,769
|
1.2
|
|
|
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
|
|
|
24,238
|
6.0
|
|
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
Eldorado Gold
|
Turkey
|
Materials
|
10,021
|
2.5
|
Türkiye İş Bankası
|
Turkey
|
Financials
|
9,467
|
2.3
|
|
|
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
|
|
|
19,488
|
4.8
|
|
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
MCB Bank
|
Pakistan
|
Financials
|
8,392
|
2.1
|
Lucky Cement
|
Pakistan
|
Materials
|
8,223
|
2.0
|
|
|
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
|
|
|
16,615
|
4.1
|
|
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
Equity Group
|
Kenya
|
Financials
|
5,994
|
1.5
|
Kenya Commercial Bank
|
Kenya
|
Financials
|
5,067
|
1.2
|
Safaricom
|
Kenya
|
Communication Services
|
3,095
|
0.8
|
|
|
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
|
|
|
14,156
|
3.5
|
|
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
PZU
|
Poland
|
Financials
|
9,181
|
2.3
|
LPP
|
Poland
|
Consumer Discretionary
|
3,877
|
0.9
|
|
|
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
|
|
|
13,058
|
3.2
|
|
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
BRAC Bank
|
Bangladesh
|
Financials
|
7,443
|
1.8
|
Square Pharmaceuticals
|
Bangladesh
|
Health Care
|
5,567
|
1.4
|
|
|
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
|
|
|
13,010
|
3.2
|
|
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
Sea Ltd
|
Singapore
|
Communication Services
|
9,697
|
2.4
|
|
|
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
|
|
|
9,697
|
2.4
|
|
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
Athens International Airport
|
Greece
|
Industrials
|
9,428
|
2.3
|
|
|
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
|
|
|
9,428
|
2.3
|
|
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
Bank of Georgia
|
Georgia
|
Financials
|
8,302
|
2.0
|
|
|
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
|
|
|
8,302
|
2.0
|
|
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
Moneta Money Bank
|
Czech Republic
|
Financials
|
7,744
|
1.9
|
|
|
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
|
|
|
7,744
|
1.9
|
|
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
EPAM Systems
|
Multi-International
|
Information Technology
|
7,304
|
1.8
|
|
|
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
|
|
|
7,304
|
1.8
|
|
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
Frontken Corp
|
Malaysia
|
Industrials
|
7,161
|
1.8
|
|
|
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
|
|
|
7,161
|
1.8
|
|
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
Cervecerias Unidas
|
Chile
|
Consumer Staples
|
6,624
|
1.6
|
|
|
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
|
|
|
6,624
|
1.6
|
|
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
NagaCorp
|
Cambodia
|
Consumer Discretionary
|
3,770
|
0.9
|
|
|
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
|
|
|
3,770
|
0.9
|
|
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
Banca Transilvania
|
Romania
|
Financials
|
2,981
|
0.7
|
|
|
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
|
|
|
2,981
|
0.7
|
|
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
Commercial International Bank
|
Egypt
|
Financials
|
2,841
|
0.7
|
|
|
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
|
|
|
2,841
|
0.7
|
|
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
Bancolombia
|
Colombia
|
Financials
|
2,246
|
0.6
|
|
|
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
|
|
|
2,246
|
0.6
|
|
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
Equity investments
|
|
|
343,749
|
84.6
|
|
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
BlackRock’s Institutional Cash Series plc – US Dollar Liquid
Environmentally Aware Fund (Cash Fund)1
|
|
|
68,559
|
16.9
|
|
|
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
Total equity investments (including Cash
Fund)
|
|
|
412,308
|
101.5
|
|
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
1 See
note 1 below.
CFD portfolio by country of exposure
Company
|
Principal
country of
operation
|
Sector
|
Fair value1
US$’000
|
Gross market
exposure3
US$’000
|
Gross market
exposure as a
% of net assets3
|
Long positions
|
|
|
|
|
|
Saudi National Bank Corporation
|
Saudi Arabia
|
Financials
|
|
16,088
|
4.0
|
Etihad Etisalat
|
Saudi Arabia
|
Communication Services
|
|
12,558
|
3.1
|
Yanbu National Petrochemical
|
Saudi Arabia
|
Materials
|
|
9,346
|
2.3
|
Al Rajhi Bank
|
Saudi Arabia
|
Financials
|
|
8,719
|
2.1
|
Abdullah Al Othaim Markets
|
Saudi Arabia
|
Consumer Staples
|
|
5,666
|
1.4
|
|
|
|
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
|
|
|
|
52,377
|
12.9
|
|
|
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
FPT
|
Vietnam
|
Information Technology
|
|
13,598
|
3.3
|
|
|
|
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
|
|
|
|
13,598
|
3.3
|
|
|
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
Jeronimo Martins
|
Poland
|
Consumer Staples
|
|
9,931
|
2.5
|
|
|
|
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
|
|
|
|
9,931
|
2.5
|
|
|
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
Borouge
|
United Arab Emirates
|
Materials
|
|
6,671
|
1.6
|
|
|
|
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
|
|
|
|
6,671
|
1.6
|
|
|
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
Gulf International Services
|
Qatar
|
Energy
|
|
5,629
|
1.4
|
|
|
|
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
|
|
|
|
5,629
|
1.4
|
|
|
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
Commercial International Bank
|
Egypt
|
Financials
|
|
4,387
|
1.1
|
|
|
|
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
|
|
|
|
4,387
|
1.1
|
|
|
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
Wizz Air Holdings
|
Hungary
|
Industrials
|
|
2,022
|
0.5
|
|
|
|
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
|
|
|
|
2,022
|
0.5
|
|
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
=========
|
Total long CFD positions
|
|
|
2,174
|
94,615
|
23.3
|
|
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
=========
|
Total short CFD positions
|
|
|
(979)
|
(15,916)
|
(3.9)
|
|
|
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
Total CFD portfolio
|
|
|
1,195
|
78,699
|
19.4
|
|
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
=========
|
Fair value and gross market exposure of investments as at
30 September 2024
Portfolio
|
Fair value3
US$’000
|
Gross market
exposure4,5
US$’000
|
Gross market exposure as
a % of net assets5
|
2024
|
2023
|
Long equity investment positions (excluding BlackRock’s
Institutional Cash Series plc – US Dollar Liquid Environmentally
Aware Fund)
|
343,749
|
343,749
|
84.6
|
85.2
|
Long CFD positions
|
2,174
|
94,615
|
23.3
|
29.8
|
Short CFD positions
|
(979)
|
(15,916)
|
(3.9)
|
(3.0)
|
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
Subtotal of long and short investment
positions
|
344,944
|
422,448
|
104.0
|
112.0
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
=========
|
=========
|
Cash Fund
|
68,559
|
68,559
|
16.9
|
17.8
|
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
Total investment and derivatives
|
413,503
|
491,007
|
120.9
|
129.8
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
=========
|
=========
|
Cash and cash equivalents
|
2,284
|
(75,220)
|
(18.6)
|
(25.9)
|
Other net current liabilities
|
(9,525)
|
(9,525)
|
(2.3)
|
(3.9)
|
Non-current liabilities
|
(19)
|
(19)
|
0.0
|
0.0
|
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
Net assets
|
406,243
|
406,243
|
100.0
|
100.0
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
=========
|
=========
|
1 The
nature of the Company’s portfolio and the fact the Company gains
significant exposure to a number of markets through long and short
CFDs means that the Company will aim to hold a level of cash (or an
equivalent holding in a Cash Fund) on its balance sheet
representing the difference between the notional cost of purchasing
or selling the investments directly and the lower initial cost of
making a collateral payment on the long or short CFD
contract.
2 The
Company was geared through the use of long and short CFD positions
and gross and net gearing as at 30 September
2024 was 11.8% and 4.0% respectively (30 September 2023: 17.9% and 12.0% respectively).
Gross and net gearing are Alternative Performance Measures, see
Glossary in the Company’s Annual Report for the year ended
30 September 2024.
3 Fair
value is determined as follows:
– Long
equity investment positions are valued at bid prices where
available, otherwise at latest market traded quoted
prices.
– The
exposure to securities held through long CFD positions directly in
the market would have amounted to US$92,441,000 at the time of purchase, and
subsequent movement in market prices have resulted in unrealised
gains on the long CFD positions of US$2,174,000 resulting in the value of the total
long CFD market exposure to the underlying securities increasing to
US$94,615,000 as at 30 September 2024. If the long positions had been
closed on 30 September 2024, this
would have resulted in a gain of US$2,174,000 for the Company.
– The
notional exposure of selling the securities gained via the short
CFD positions would have been US$14,937,000 at the time of entering into the
contract, and subsequent movement in market prices have resulted in
unrealised losses on the short CFD positions of US$979,000 resulting in the value of the total
short CFD market exposure of these investments increasing to
US$15,916,000 at 30 September 2024. If the short positions had
been closed on 30 September 2024,
this would have resulted in a loss of US$979,000 for the Company.
4 The
gross market exposure column for cash and cash equivalents has been
adjusted to assume the Company traded direct holdings rather than
exposure being gained through long and short CFDs.
5 Gross
market exposure for equity investments is the same as fair value;
bid prices are used where available and, if unavailable, latest
market traded quoted prices are used. For both long and short CFD
positions, the gross market exposure is the market value of the
underlying shares to which the portfolio is exposed via the
contract.
Strategic report
The Directors present the Strategic Report of the Company for the
year ended 30 September
2024.
Principal activity
The Company carries on business as an investment trust and its
principal activity is portfolio investment.
Investment objective
The Company’s investment objective is to achieve long-term capital
growth by investing in companies domiciled or listed in or
exercising the predominant part of their economic activity in, less
developed countries. These countries (the “Frontiers Universe”) are
any country which is neither part of the MSCI World Index of
developed markets, nor one of the eight largest countries by market
capitalisation in the MSCI Emerging Markets Index: being
Brazil, China, India,
South Korea, Mexico, Russia, South
Africa and Taiwan (the
“Selected Countries”).
Strategy, business model and investment
policy
Strategy
To achieve its objective, the Company invests globally in the
securities of companies domiciled or listed in or exercising the
predominant part of their economic activity in, the Frontiers
Universe.
Business model
The Company’s business model follows that of an externally managed
investment trust; therefore the Company does not have any employees
and outsources its activities to third party service providers,
including BlackRock Fund Managers Ltd (BlackRock or BFM) (‘the
Manager’) which is the principal service provider.
The management of the investment portfolio and the administration
of the Company have been contractually delegated to the Manager.
The Manager has delegated certain investment management and other
ancillary services to BlackRock Investment Management (UK) Limited
(BIM (UK)) (‘the Investment
Manager’). The contractual arrangements with, and assessment of,
the Manager are summarised in the Company’s Annual Report for the
year ended 30 September 2024. The
Investment Manager, operating under guidelines determined by the
Board, has direct responsibility for the decisions relating to the
day-to-day running of the Company and is accountable to the Board
for the investment, financial and operating performance of the
Company. Other service providers include the Depositary and the
Fund Accountant, The Bank of New York Mellon (International)
Limited (BNY), and the Registrar, Computershare Investor Services
PLC (Computershare). Details of the contractual terms with third
party service providers are set out in the Directors’
Report.
Investment policy
The Company will seek to maximise total return and will invest
globally in the securities of companies domiciled or listed in or
exercising the predominant part of their economic activity in, the
Frontiers Universe. Performance is measured against the Company’s
Benchmark Index, which is a composite of the MSCI Emerging Markets
Index ex Selected Countries + MSCI Frontier Markets Index (net
total return, USD). The Investment Manager is not constrained by
the geographical weightings of the Benchmark Index and the
Company’s portfolio may frequently be overweight or underweight any
particular country relative to the Benchmark Index. The Company
will exit any investment as soon as reasonably practicable
following the relevant company ceasing to be domiciled or listed in
or exercising the predominant part of its economic activity in, the
Frontiers Universe.
In order to achieve the Company’s investment objective, the
Investment Manager selects investments through a process of
fundamental and geopolitical analysis, seeking long-term
appreciation from mispriced value or growth. The Investment Manager
employs both a top-down and bottom-up approach to investing. It is
expected that the Company will have exposure to between 35 to 65
holdings.
Where possible, investment will generally be made directly in the
stock markets of the Frontiers Universe. Where the Investment
Manager determines it appropriate, investment may be made through
collective investment schemes, although such investments are not
likely to be significant. Investment in other closed-ended
investment funds admitted to the Official List will not exceed more
than 10%, in aggregate, of the value of the Gross Assets
(calculated at the time of any relevant investment). It is intended
that the Company will generally be invested in equity investments;
however, the Investment Manager has the ability to invest in
equity-related investments, such as derivatives or convertibles,
and, to a lesser extent, in bonds or other fixed-income securities,
including high risk debt securities. These securities may be below
investment grade.
Due to national and/or international regulation, excessive
operational risk, prohibitive costs and/or the time period involved
in establishing trading and custody accounts in certain countries
in the Frontiers Universe, the Company may be unable to invest
(whether directly or through nominees) in companies in certain
countries in the Frontiers Universe or, in the opinion of the
Company and/or the Investment Manager, it may not be advisable to
do so. In such circumstances, or in countries where acceptable
custodial and other arrangements are not in place to safeguard the
Company’s investments, the Company intends to gain economic
exposure to companies in such countries by investing indirectly
through derivatives. Derivatives are financial instruments linked
to the performance of another asset or security, such as promissory
notes, contracts for difference, futures or traded options. Save as
provided below, there is no restriction on the Company investing in
derivatives in such circumstances or for efficient portfolio
management purposes.
The Company may be geared through borrowings and/or by entering
into derivative transactions (taking both long and short positions)
that have the effect of gearing the Company’s portfolio to enhance
performance. The Company may also use borrowings for the settlement
of transactions, to facilitate share repurchases (where applicable)
and to meet on-going expenses.
The respective limits on gearing (whether through the use of
derivatives, borrowings or a combination of both) are set out
below:
- Maximum
gearing through the use of derivatives or borrowings to gain
exposure to long positions in securities: 140% of net
assets
- Maximum
exposure to short positions (for shorting purposes the Company may
use indices or individual stocks): 10% of net assets
- Maximum
gross exposure (total long exposure plus total short exposure):
150% of net assets
- Maximum
net exposure (total long exposure minus total short exposure): 130%
of net assets
In normal circumstances, the Company will typically have net
exposure of between 95% and 120% of net assets.
When investing via derivatives, the Company will seek to mitigate
and/or spread its counterparty risk exposure by collateralisation
and/or contracting with a potential range of counterparty banks, as
appropriate, each of which shall, at the time of entering into such
derivatives, have a Standard & Poor’s credit rating of at least
A- on its long-term senior unsecured debt.
The Company may invest up to 5% of its Gross Assets (at the time of
such investment) in unquoted securities. The Company will invest so
as not to hold more than 15% of its Gross Assets in any one stock
or derivative position at the time of investment (excluding cash
management activities).
No material change will be made to the investment policy without
the approval of shareholders by ordinary resolution.
A detailed analysis of the Company’s portfolio has been provided
above.
Investment approach and process
Portfolio construction is a continuous process, with the Investment
Manager analysing constantly the impact of new ideas and
information on the portfolio as a whole. The approach is flexible,
varying through market and economic cycles to create a portfolio
appropriate to the focused and unconstrained strategy of the
Company. The macro environment is factored into all portfolio
decisions. In general, macro analysis is a more dominant factor in
investment decision-making when the outlook is negative. The macro
process is comprised of three parts: political assessment,
macroeconomic analysis and appraisal of the valuation of a
country’s market, which can only take place with thorough analysis
of stock specific opportunities.
The Investment Manager’s research team generates ideas from a
diverse range of sources. When permitted, these include frequent
travel to the markets in which the Company invests and regular
conversations with contacts that allow the Frontiers team to assess
the entire eco system around a company, namely competitors,
suppliers, financiers, customers and regulators. The team leverages
the internal research network, sharing information between
BlackRock’s investment teams using a proprietary research
application and database and develops insights from macroeconomic
analysis. The Board believes that BlackRock’s research platform is
a significant competitive advantage, both in terms of information
specific to emerging and frontier market equities and through its
global insights across asset classes. Access to companies is
extremely good given BlackRock’s market presence, which makes it
possible to develop a detailed knowledge of a company and its
management.
The research process focuses on cash flow and future earnings
growth, as the investment team believes that this is ultimately the
driver of share prices over time. The process is designed with the
aim of identifying companies that can translate top line revenue
growth to free cash flow and investing in these companies when the
analysis suggests that the cash flow stream is undervalued.
Financial models are developed focusing on company financials,
particularly cash flow statements, rather than relying on third
party research.
Performance
Details of the Company’s performance for the year are given in the
Chair’s Statement above. The Investment Manager’s Report above
includes a review of the main developments during the period,
together with information on investment activity within the
Company’s portfolio.
Results and dividends
The results for the Company are set out in the Statement of
Comprehensive Income below. The total profit for the year, after
taxation, was US$58,548,000 (2023:
US$74,856,000) of which the revenue
return amounted to US$18,884,000
(2023: US$15,872,000) and the capital
profit amounted to US$39,664,000
(2023: US$58,984,000).
The Directors are recommending the payment of a final dividend of
6.00 cents per ordinary share in
respect of the year ended 30 September
2024 (2023: final dividend of 4.90
cents) as set out in the Chair’s Statement above.
Future prospects
The Board’s main focus is on the achievement of capital growth and
the future of the Company is dependent upon the success of the
investment strategy. The outlook for the Company is discussed in
both the Chair’s Statement and in the Investment Manager’s Report
above.
Social, community and human rights
issues
As an investment trust, the Company has no direct social or
community responsibilities or impact on the environment and the
Company has not adopted an ESG investment strategy. However, the
Company believes that it is in shareholders’ interests to consider
environmental, social and governance factors and human rights
issues when selecting and retaining investments. Details of the
Company’s approach to ESG integration and socially responsible
investment is set out in the Company’s Annual Report for the year
ended 30 September 2024.
Modern slavery
As an investment vehicle the Company does not provide goods or
services in the normal course of business and does not have
customers. Accordingly, the Directors consider that the Company is
not required to make any slavery or human trafficking statement
under the Modern Slavery Act 2015. In any event, the Board
considers the Company’s supply chain, dealing predominantly with
professional advisers and service providers in the financial
services industry, to be low risk in relation to this
matter.
Directors, gender representation and
employees
The Directors of the Company on 30 September
2024 are set out in the Directors’ biographies section in
the Company’s Annual Report for the year ended 30 September 2024. As at 4
December 2024, the Board consisted of two men and three
women constituting 60% female Board representation. The Company
does not have any employees.
Key performance indicators
The Directors consider a number of performance measures to assess
the Company’s success in achieving its objectives. The key
performance indicators (KPIs) used to measure the progress and
performance of the Company over time and which are comparable to
those reported by other investment trusts are set out
below.
Performance
At each meeting the Board reviews the performance of the portfolio
as well as the net asset value and share price for the Company and
compares this to the return of the Company’s benchmark. The Board
considers this to be an important key performance indicator and has
determined that it should also be used to calculate whether a
performance fee is payable to BlackRock. The Company’s absolute and
relative performance is set out in the performance record table the
Company’s Annual Report for the year ended 30 September 2024.
The Board regularly reviews a number of indices and ratios to
understand the impact on the Company’s relative performance of the
various components such as asset allocation and stock selection.
The Board also reviews the performance of the Company against a
peer group of frontier market focused open and closed-ended
funds.
Share rating and discount/premium
The Directors recognise the importance to investors that the
Company’s share price should not trade at a significant discount or
premium to NAV. Accordingly, the Directors monitor the share rating
closely and will consider share repurchases in the market if the
discount widens significantly, or the issue of shares to the market
to meet demand to the extent that the Company’s shares are trading
at a premium. In addition, in accordance with the Directors’
commitment at launch the Company will formulate and submit to
shareholders proposals to provide them with an opportunity at each
five year anniversary since launch to realise the value of their
ordinary shares at the prevailing NAV per share less applicable
costs. Such an opportunity took place in the year ended
30 September 2021. The next
opportunity will take place in early 2026.
For the year under review the Company’s shares traded at an average
discount to the cum-income NAV of 8.5% and were trading at a
discount of 9.1% on a cum-income basis at 2
December 2024. The Directors have the authority to buy back
up to 14.99% of the Company’s issued share capital (excluding
treasury shares). The Directors sought and received shareholder
authority at the last AGM to issue up to 10% of the Company’s
issued share capital (via the issue of new shares or sale of shares
from treasury) on a non pre-emptive basis. Further information can
be found in the Directors’ Report in the Company’s Annual Report
for the year ended 30 September
2024.
Ongoing charges
The ongoing charges reflect those expenses which are likely to
recur in the foreseeable future, whether charged to capital or
revenue, and which relate to the operation of the investment
company, excluding the costs of acquisition or disposal of
investments, financing charges and gains or losses arising on
investments and performance fees. The ongoing charges are based on
actual costs incurred in the year as being the best estimate of
future costs. The Board reviews the ongoing charges and monitors
the expenses incurred by the Company.
The table below sets out the key KPIs for the Company (see Glossary
in the Company’s Annual Report for the year ended 30 September 2024).
|
Year ended
30 September 20241
|
Year ended
30 September 20231
|
|
£%
|
US$%
|
£%
|
US$%
|
Net asset value total return2
|
+6.0
|
+16.5
|
+14.3
|
+25.1
|
Share price total return3
|
+5.4
|
+15.8
|
+17.7
|
+28.8
|
Benchmark Index return4
|
+5.3
|
+15.7
|
-3.9
|
+5.0
|
Discount to cum income NAV
|
|
9.4
|
|
8.5
|
Ongoing charges5
|
|
1.41
|
|
1.38
|
Ongoing charges including performance fees6
|
|
2.33
|
|
3.78
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
=========
|
=========
|
1 Based
on an exchange rate of US$1.3414 to
£1 at 30 September 2024 and
US$1.2206 to £1 at 30 September 2023.
2 Calculated
with dividends reinvested.
3 Calculated
on a mid to mid basis with dividends reinvested.
4 The
Benchmark Index is a composite of the MSCI Emerging Markets Index
ex Selected Countries + MSCI Frontier Markets Index. Benchmark
Index return calculates the reinvestment of dividends net of
withholding taxes.
5 Ongoing
charges represent the management fee and all other operating
expenses, excluding performance fees, finance costs, direct
transaction costs, custody transaction charges, VAT recovered,
taxation, prior year expenses written back and certain
non-recurring items, as a % of average daily net assets.
6 Ongoing
charges represent the management fee and all other operating
expenses, including performance fees, but excluding finance costs,
direct transaction costs, custody transaction charges, VAT
recovered, taxation, prior year expenses written back and certain
non-recurring items, as a % of average daily net assets.
Principal risks
As required by the 2018 UK Code of Corporate Governance, the Board
has in place a robust, ongoing process to identify, assess and
monitor the principal and emerging risks of the Company, including
those that they consider would threaten its business model, future
performance, solvency or liquidity. Emerging risks are considered
by the Board as they come into view and are incorporated into the
Company’s risk register where applicable. Additionally, the Manager
considers emerging risks in numerous forums and the Risk and
Quantitative Analysis team produces an annual risk survey. Any
material risks of relevance to the Company identified through the
annual risk survey will be communicated to the Board.
A core element of this is the Company’s risk register, which
identifies the risks facing the Company and assesses the likelihood
and potential impact of each risk, and the quality of the controls
operating to mitigate the risk. A residual risk rating is then
calculated for each risk based on the outcome of this assessment.
This approach allows the effect of any mitigating procedures to be
reflected in the final assessment.
The risk register, its method of preparation and the operation of
the key controls in BlackRock’s and other third party service
providers’ systems of internal control are reviewed on a regular
basis by the Company’s Audit and Management Engagement Committee.
In order to gain a more comprehensive understanding of BlackRock’s
and other third party service providers’ risk management processes
and how these apply to the Company’s business, the Audit and
Management Engagement Committee periodically receives presentations
from BlackRock’s Internal Audit and Risk & Quantitative
Analysis teams, and reviews Service Organisation Control (SOC 1)
reports from BlackRock and the Company’s Custodian and Fund
Accountant, The Bank of New York Mellon (International) Limited
(BNY).
The current risk register includes a range of risks spread between
performance risk, income/dividend risk, legal and regulatory risk,
counterparty risk, operational risk, market risk, political risk
and financial risk.
The principal risks and uncertainties faced by the Company during
the year, together with the potential effects, controls and
mitigating factors, are set out below.
Investment Performance Risk
Principal risk
The Board is responsible for:
- setting
the investment policy to fulfil the Company’s objectives;
and
- monitoring
the performance of the Company’s Investment Manager and the
strategy adopted.
An inappropriate policy or strategy may lead to:
- poor
performance compared to the Company’s benchmark peer group or
shareholder expectations;
- a
widening discount to NAV;
- a
reduction or permanent loss of capital; and
- dissatisfied
shareholders and reputational damage.
The Board is also cognisant of the long-term risk to performance
from inadequate attention to environmental, social and governance
(ESG) issues and in particular the impact of climate
change.
Mitigation/Control
To manage this risk the Board:
- regularly
reviews the Company’s investment mandate and long-term
strategy;
- has
set, and regularly reviews, the investment guidelines and has put
in place appropriate limits on levels of gearing and the use of
derivatives;
- receives
from the Investment Manager a regular explanation of stock
selection decisions, portfolio gearing and any changes in gearing
and the rationale for the composition of the investment
portfolio;
- receives
from the Investment Manager regular reporting on the portfolio’s
exposure through derivatives, including the extent to which the
portfolio is geared in this manner and the value of any short
positions;
- monitors
the maintenance of an adequate spread of investments in order to
minimise the risks associated with particular countries or factors
specific to particular sectors, based on the diversification
requirements inherent in the Company’s investment
policy;
- regularly
reviews detailed performance attribution analysis; and
- monitors
ESG factors in the portfolio and engagement with investee companies
on ESG issues.
Income/Dividend Risk
Principal risk
The quantum of dividends and future dividend growth will depend on
the income generated by the Company’s underlying portfolio. In
addition, any change in the tax treatment of the dividends or
interest received by the Company (including as a result of
withholding taxes or exchange controls imposed by jurisdictions in
which the Company invests) may reduce the level of dividends
received by shareholders.
Mitigation/Control
Although the Company does not have a policy of actively seeking
income, the Board monitors this risk through the receipt of
detailed income forecasts and considers the level of income at each
meeting. The Company also has a revenue reserve and powers to pay
dividends from capital which can be used to support the Company’s
dividend if required.
Legal and Regulatory Risk
Principal risk
The Company has been approved by HM Revenue & Customs as an
investment trust, subject to continuing to meet the relevant
eligibility conditions, and operates as an investment trust in
accordance with Chapter 4 of Part 24 of the Corporation Tax Act
2010. As such, the Company is exempt from capital gains tax on the
profits realised from the sale of its investments.
Any breach of the relevant eligibility conditions could lead to the
Company losing its investment trust status and being subject to
corporation tax on capital gains realised within the Company’s
portfolio.
In such event the investment returns of the Company may be
adversely affected. Any serious breach could result in the Company
and/or the Directors being fined or the subject of criminal
proceedings or the suspension of the Company’s shares which would
in turn lead to a breach of the Corporation Tax Act 2010. Amongst
other relevant laws and regulations, the Company is required to
comply with the provisions of the Companies Act 2006, the
Alternative Investment Fund Managers’ Directive, the Market Abuse
Act, the UK Listing Rules and the Disclosure Guidance &
Transparency Rules.
Mitigation/Control
The Investment Manager monitors investment movements, the level of
forecast income and expenditure and the quantum of proposed
dividends, if any, to ensure that the provisions of Chapter 4 of
Part 24 of the Corporation Tax Act 2010 are not breached, and the
results are reported to the Board at each meeting.
Following authorisation under the Alternative Investment Fund
Managers’ Directive (AIFMD), the Company and its appointed
Alternative Investment Fund Manager (AIFM) are subject to the risks
that the requirements of this Directive are not correctly complied
with. The Board and the AIFM also monitor changes in government
policy and legislation which may have an impact on the
Company.
Compliance with the accounting standards applicable to quoted
companies and those applicable to investment trusts are also
regularly monitored to ensure compliance.
The Company Secretary and the Company’s professional advisers
monitor developments in relevant laws and regulations and provide
regular reports to the Board in respect of the Company’s
compliance.
Counterparty Risk
Principal risk
The Company’s investment policy permits the use of both
exchange-traded and over-the-counter derivatives (including
contracts for difference). Counterparty risk represents potential
loss that the Company could incur if a counterparty is unable (or
unwilling) to honour its commitments.
The Company may also gain exposure to the Frontiers Universe by
investing indirectly through Participatory Notes (P-Notes) which
presents additional risk to the Company as P-Notes are
uncollateralised resulting in the Company being subject to full
counterparty risk via the P-Note issuer. P-Notes also present
liquidity issues as the Company, being a captive client of a P-Note
issuer, may only be able to realise its investment through the
P-Note issuer and this may have a negative impact on the liquidity
of the P-Notes which does not correlate to the liquidity of the
underlying security.
Mitigation/Control
Due diligence is undertaken before contracts are entered into and
exposures are diversified across a number of counterparties. The
Board reviews the controls put in place by the Investment Manager
to monitor and to minimise counterparty exposure, which include
intra-day monitoring of exposures to ensure that these are within
set limits.
Operational Risk
Principal risk
In common with most other investment trust companies, the Company
has no employees. The Company therefore relies upon the services
provided by third parties and is dependent on the control systems
of BlackRock (the Investment Manager and AIFM), and of The Bank of
New York Mellon (International) Limited (the Custodian, Depositary
and Fund Accountant), which ensures safe custody of the Company’s
assets and maintains the Company’s accounting records. The
Company’s share register is maintained by the Registrar,
Computershare.
Failure by any service provider to carry out its obligations to the
Company could have a material adverse effect on the Company’s
performance. Disruption to the accounting, payment systems or
custody records, as a result of a cyberattack or otherwise, could
impact the monitoring and reporting of the Company’s financial
position.
The security of the Company’s assets, dealing procedures,
accounting records and maintenance of regulatory and legal
requirements, depend on the effective operation of these
systems.
Mitigation/Control
The Board reviews the overall performance of the Manager,
Investment Manager and all other third-party service providers and
compliance with the investment management agreement on a regular
basis.
The Fund Accountant’s and the Manager’s internal control processes
are regularly tested and monitored throughout the year and are
evidenced through their Service Organisation Control (SOC 1)
reports, which are subject to review by an Independent Service
Assurance Auditor. The SOC 1 reports provide assurance in respect
of the effective operation of internal controls.
The Company’s assets are subject to a strict liability regime and
in the event of a loss of financial assets held in custody, the
Depositary must return assets of an identical type or the
corresponding amount, unless able to demonstrate that the loss was
a result of an event beyond its reasonable control.
The Board considers succession arrangements for key employees of
the Manager and the Board also considers the business continuity
arrangements of the Company’s key service providers on an ongoing
basis and reviews these as part of its review of the Company’s risk
register.
The Board also receives regular reports from BlackRock’s internal
audit function.
Political Risk
Principal risk
Investments in the Frontiers Universe may include a higher element
of risk compared to more developed markets due to greater political
instability. Political and diplomatic events in the Frontiers
Universe where the Company invests (for example, governmental
instability, corruption, adverse changes in legislation or other
diplomatic developments such as the outbreak of war or imposition
of sanctions) could substantially and adversely affect the
economies of such countries or the value of the Company’s
investments in those countries.
Mitigation/Control
The Investment Manager mitigates this risk by applying stringent
controls over where investments are made and through close
monitoring of political risks. The Investment Manager’s approach to
filtering the investment universe takes account of the political
background to regions and is backed up by rigorous stock specific
research and risk analysis, individually and collectively, in
constructing the portfolio. The management team has a wide network
of business and political contacts which provides economic insights
with public and private bodies. This enables the Investment Manager
to assess potential investments in an informed and disciplined way,
as well as being able to conduct regular monitoring of investments
once made. However, given the nature of political risk, all
investments will be exposed to a degree of risk and the Investment
Manager will ensure that the portfolio remains diversified across
countries to mitigate the risk.
Financial Risk
Principal risk
The Company’s investment activities expose it to a variety of
financial risks which include foreign currency risk, liquidity
risk, currency risk and interest rate risk.
Mitigation/Control
Details of these risks are disclosed in note 17 to the financial
statements in the Company’s Annual Report for the year ended
30 September 2024, together with a
summary of the policies for managing these risks.
Market Risk
Principal risk
The Company is exposed to currency, market and political risk due
to the location of the operations of the businesses in which it may
invest.
Market risk arises from volatility in the prices of the Company’s
investments. It represents the potential loss the Company might
suffer through realising investments in the face of negative market
movements. The securities markets of the Frontiers Universe are not
as large as the more established securities markets and have
substantially lower trading volume, which may result in a lack of
liquidity and higher price volatility.
Corruption also remains a significant issue across the Frontiers
Universe and the effects of corruption could have a material
adverse effect on the Company’s performance. Accounting, auditing
and financial reporting standards and practices and disclosure
requirements applicable to many companies in developing countries
may be less rigorous than in developed markets. As a result, there
may be less information available publicly to investors in these
securities, and such information as is available is often less
reliable. This risk can be partially mitigated by the fact that our
portfolio managers only invest in companies that produce fully
audited accounts.
Companies operating in the sectors in which the Company invests may
be impacted by new legislation governing climate change and
environmental issues, which may have a negative impact on their
valuation and share price.
Mitigation/Control
Market risk represents the risks of investment in a particular
market, country or geographic region. Therefore, this is largely
outside of the scope of the Board’s control. However, the Board
carefully considers asset allocation, stock selection and levels of
gearing on a regular basis and has set investment restrictions and
guidelines which are monitored and reported on by the Investment
Manager. Market risk is also mitigated through portfolio
diversification across countries and regions. The Board monitors
the implementation and results of the investment process with the
Investment Manager regularly.
The Investment Manager regularly reports to the Board on relative
market risks associated with investment in such regions. Further
information is provided under ‘Political Risk’.
The Board recognises the benefits of a closed-end fund structure in
extremely volatile markets such as those affected by the war in
Ukraine, the conflict in the
Middle East and the cost of living
crisis. Unlike open-ended counterparts, closed-end funds are not
obliged to sell-down portfolio holdings at low valuations to meet
liquidity requirements for redemptions. During times of elevated
volatility and market stress, the ability of a closed-end fund
structure to remain invested for the long term enables the
Investment Manager to adhere to disciplined fundamental analysis
from a bottom-up perspective and be ready to respond to
dislocations in the market as opportunities present
themselves.
The Portfolio Managers seek to understand the ESG risks and
opportunities facing companies and industries in the portfolio. The
Company does not exclude investment in stocks based on ESG
criteria, but the Portfolio Managers consider ESG information when
conducting research and due diligence on new investments and again
when monitoring investments in the portfolio.
Viability statement
In accordance with the provisions of the UK Corporate Governance
Code, the Directors have assessed the prospects of the Company over
a longer period than the twelve months referred to by the ‘Going
Concern’ guidelines. The Board is cognisant of the uncertainty
surrounding the potential duration of the conflicts in both
Ukraine and the Middle East, their impact on the global
economy, and the prospects for many of the Company’s portfolio
holdings. The Board expects the Company to continue to meet its
liabilities as they fall due for the foreseeable future and has
therefore conducted this review for a period of five years. Five
years is considered by the Board to be a reasonable time horizon
over which the performance of the Company can be assessed. The
Board also notes that this aligns with the five-yearly assessment
period adopted when the Company was launched (on the basis that
this was an appropriate time frame for shareholders to judge
performance and have the opportunity to tender their shares at the
applicable NAV per ordinary share less relevant costs).
The Board conducted this review for the period up to the AGM in
2030.
In determining this period, the Board took into account the
Company’s investment objective to achieve long-term capital growth
and the Company’s projected income and expenditure. The Directors
are satisfied that the Company has adequate resources to continue
in operational existence for the foreseeable future and is
financially sound.
When the Company was launched in late 2010, the Board made a
commitment that before the Company’s fifth AGM and at five yearly
intervals thereafter, it would formulate and submit to shareholders
proposals to provide shareholders with an opportunity to realise
the value of their ordinary shares at the applicable NAV per
ordinary share less applicable costs. The Board put proposals to
shareholders in 2021. The Company received elections to tender
representing 21.5% of the Company, with the vast majority of
shareholders choosing to retain their investment. The Board
believes this is indicative of the ongoing attractiveness of the
Company’s investment strategy and offering. The next such
opportunity will occur in early 2026.
In making the longer-term viability assessment the Board has
considered the following factors:
- the
Company’s principal risks as set out above;
- the
level of ongoing demand for the Company’s ordinary
shares;
- the
impact of a significant fall in Frontier equity markets on the
value of the Company’s investment portfolio;
- the
ongoing relevance of the Company’s investment objective, business
model and investment policy in the current environment;
- the
operational resilience of the Company and its key service providers
and their ability to continue to provide a good level of service
for the foreseeable future; and
- the
effectiveness of business continuity plans in place for the Company
and key service providers.
The Board has also considered a number of financial metrics,
including:
- the
level of current and historic ongoing charges incurred by the
Company;
- the
Company’s borrowings and its ability to meet its liabilities as
they fall due;
- the
premium or discount to NAV;
- the
level of income generated by the Company;
- future
income forecasts; and
- the
liquidity of the Company’s portfolio.
The Company is an investment company with a relatively liquid
equity portfolio (as at 30 September
2024, 92.79% of the equity portfolio was capable of being
realised in less than 20 days in normal market conditions) and
largely fixed overheads (excluding performance fees) which comprise
a very small percentage of net assets (1.41%). In addition, any
performance fees are capped at 1% of gross assets in years where
the NAV per share has fallen or 2.5% of gross assets in years where
the NAV per share has increased. Therefore, the Board has concluded
that even in exceptionally stressed operating conditions, the
Company would comfortably be able to meet its ongoing operating
costs as they fall due.
However, investment companies may face other challenges, such as
regulatory changes and the tax treatment of investment trusts, or a
significant decrease in size due to substantial share buy-back
activity or market falls, which may result in the Company no longer
being of sufficient market capitalisation to represent a viable
investment proposition or no longer being able to continue in
operation.
The Board has determined that the factors considered are applicable
to the period up to the AGM in 2030 and beyond.
Based on the results of their analysis, the Directors have a
reasonable expectation that the Company will be able to continue in
operation and meet its liabilities as they fall due over the period
of their assessment.
The Board’s assessment of the Company’s ability to operate in the
foreseeable future is included in the Going Concern Statement which
can be found in the Company’s Annual Report for the year ended
30 September 2024 in the Directors’
Report.
Section 172 Statement: Promoting the success of BlackRock
Frontiers Investment Trust Plc
The Companies (Miscellaneous Reporting) Regulations 2018 require
directors to explain more fully how they have discharged their
duties under Section 172(1) of the Companies Act 2006 in promoting
the success of their companies for the benefit of members as a
whole. This enhanced disclosure covers how the Board has engaged
with and understands the views of stakeholders and how
stakeholders’ needs have been taken into account, the outcome of
this engagement and the impact that it has had on the Board’s
decisions.
As the Company is an externally managed investment company and does
not have any employees or customers, the Board considers the main
stakeholders in the Company to be the shareholders, key service
providers (being the Manager and Investment Manager, the Custodian,
Depositary, Registrar and Broker) and investee
companies.
A summary of the principal areas of engagement undertaken by the
Board with its key stakeholders in the year under review and how
Directors have acted upon this to promote the long-term success of
the Company is set out in the tables below.
Stakeholders
Shareholders
Shareholder support and engagement are critical to the existence of
the Company and the successful delivery of its long-term strategy.
The Board is focused on fostering good relationships with
shareholders and on understanding the views of shareholders in
order to incorporate them into the Company’s strategy and
objectives.
Manager and Investment Manager
The Board’s main working relationship is with the Manager, who is
responsible for the Company’s portfolio management and risk
management, as well as ancillary functions such as administration,
secretarial, accounting and marketing services. The Manager has
sub-delegated portfolio management to the Investment Manager.
Successful management of shareholders’ assets by the Investment
Manager is critical for the Company to successfully deliver its
investment strategy and meet its objective. The Company is also
reliant on the Manager as AIFM to provide support in meeting
relevant regulatory obligations under the AIFMD and other relevant
legislation.
Other key service providers
In order for the Company to function as an investment trust with a
listing on the main market of London Stock Exchange, the Board
relies on a range of advisors for support in meeting relevant
obligations and safeguarding the Company’s assets. For this reason,
the Board considers the Company’s Custodian, Depositary, Registrar
and Broker to be stakeholders. The Board maintains regular contact
with its key external providers and receives regular reporting from
them through the Board and committee meetings, as well as outside
of the regular meeting cycle.
Investee companies
Portfolio holdings are ultimately shareholders’ assets, and the
Board recognises the importance of good stewardship and
communication with investee companies in meeting the Company’s
investment objective and strategy. The Board monitors the Manager’s
stewardship activities and receives regular feedback from the
Manager in respect of meetings with the management of portfolio
companies.
A summary of the key areas of engagement undertaken by the Board
with its key stakeholders in the year under review and how
Directors have acted upon this to promote the long-term success of
the Company is set out in the table below.
Area of Engagement
Responsible investing
Issue
The Board is committed to promoting the role and success of the
Company in delivering on its investment mandate to shareholders
over the long term. However, the Board recognises that securities
within the Company’s investment remit may involve additional risk
due to the political volatility and environmental, social and
governance concerns facing many of the countries in the Company’s
investment universe. While the Company does not have a sustainable
investment objective or exclude investments based only on ESG
criteria, these ethical and sustainability issues should be a
consideration of our Manager’s research. More than ever,
consideration of sustainable investment is a key part of the
investment process and should be factored in when making investment
decisions. The Board also has responsibility to shareholders to
ensure that the Company’s portfolio of assets is invested in line
with the stated investment objective and in a way that ensures an
appropriate balance between spread of risk and portfolio
returns.
Engagement
The Board believes that responsible investment and sustainability
are important to the longer-term delivery of value and has worked
very closely with the Manager throughout the year to regularly
review the Company’s performance and investment strategy and to
understand how ESG considerations are integrated into the
investment process.
The Manager’s approach to the consideration of ESG factors in
respect of the Company’s portfolio, as well as its engagement with
investee companies to encourage the adoption of sustainable
business practices which support long-term value creation, are kept
under review by the Board. The Manager reports to the Board in
respect of its consideration of ESG factors and how these are
integrated into the investment process; a summary of BlackRock’s
approach to ESG and sustainability is set out in the Company’s
Annual Report for the year ended 30
September 2024. The Investment Manager’s engagement and
voting policy is detailed in the Company’s Annual Report for the
year ended 30 September 2024 and on
the BlackRock website.
Impact
The Board and the Manager believe there is a positive long-term
correlation between strong ESG practices and investment
performance. Details regarding the Company’s NAV and share price
performance can be found in the Chair’s Statement above. The
portfolio activities undertaken by the Manager can be found in the
Investment Manager’s Report above.
Share Capital Management
Issue
The Board believes that the Company’s unique investment offering,
strong performance and attractive dividend yield enhances demand
for the Company’s shares, which should help to maintain the
Company’s share price at as close to the underlying NAV as
possible. However, wider market issues such as the level of
interest rates and investor sentiment may lead to
divergence.
Engagement
The Manager reports total return performance statistics to the
Board on a regular basis, along with the portfolio yield and the
impact of dividends paid on brought forward distributable
reserves.
The Board reviews the Company’s discount/premium to NAV on a
regular basis and holds frequent discussions with the Manager and
the Company’s broker regarding the discount/premium level and the
factors effecting it.
The Board seeks shareholder authority each year to buy back up to
14.99% of the Company’s issued share capital for cancellation or to
be held in treasury for potential re-issue. Buying back the
Company’s shares can, in certain circumstances, help to narrow the
discount and/or reduce the volatility in the share
rating.
The Company has also put in place a five yearly mechanism which
provides shareholders with a periodic opportunity to tender their
shares at NAV less costs. This last occurred in March 2021, with the next opportunity to take
place in early 2026.
Impact
The average discount for the year to 30
September 2024 was 9.4%. During the year the Company’s share
price traded at a maximum discount of 11.4% and a minimum discount
of 5.3%. This range compares favourably with the peer group and
wider investment company sector.
Service levels of third party providers
Issue
The Board acknowledges the importance of ensuring that the
Company’s principal suppliers are providing a suitable level of
service, including the Manager in respect of investment
performance; the Custodian and Depositary in respect of their
duties towards safeguarding the Company’s assets; the Registrar in
its maintenance of the Company’s share register and dealing with
investor queries and the Company’s Brokers in respect of the
provision of advice and acting as a market maker for the Company’s
shares.
Engagement
The Manager reports to the Board on the Company’s performance on a
regular basis. The Board carries out a robust annual evaluation of
the Manager’s performance, their commitment and available
resources.
The Board performs an annual review of the service levels of all
third party service providers and concludes on their suitability to
continue in their role.
The Board receives regular updates from the AIFM, Depositary,
Registrar and Brokers on an ongoing basis.
The Board works closely with the Manager to gain comfort that
relevant business continuity plans are operating effectively for
all of the Company’s service providers.
Impact
All performance evaluations were performed on a timely basis and
the Board concluded that all third-party service providers,
including the Manager, Custodian, Depositary and Fund Accountant
were operating effectively and providing a good level of
service.
The Board has received updates in respect of business continuity
planning from the Company’s Manager, Custodian, Depositary, Fund
Accountant, Broker, Registrar and printer, and is confident that
arrangements are in place to ensure that a good level of service
will continue to be provided.
Board composition
Issue
The Board is committed to ensuring that its own composition brings
an appropriate balance of knowledge, experience and skills, and
that it is compliant with best corporate governance practice under
the UK Code, including guidance on tenure and the composition of
the Board’s committees.
Engagement
As it does each year, the Board, discharging the duties of a
Nomination Committee, considers the composition of the Board to
ensure that it is suitably aligned with the activities and needs of
the Company. Following this review, and in accordance with
corporate governance best practice, the Board appointed
Katrina Hart as Chair and
Elisabeth Airey as the Senior
Independent Director from the conclusion of the AGM in 2024. Over
the year ended 30 September 2024, a
comprehensive search and selection process was conducted to
identify a new non-executive Director. Following this thorough
process, Mr Hatem Dowidar was
appointed on 7 February
2024.
The Board will continue to keep the composition of the Board under
regular review. If it is determined that a new appointment to the
Board is required, it will agree the selection criteria, which will
take into account the need to maintain a suitable balance of
skills, knowledge, independence and diversity.
All Directors are subject to a formal evaluation process on an
annual basis (more details and the conclusions in respect of the
2024 evaluation process are given in the Company’s Annual Report
for the year ended 30 September
2024). All eligible Directors stand for re-election by
shareholders annually. Shareholders may attend the AGM and raise
any queries in respect of Board composition or individual Directors
in person or may contact the Company Secretary or the Chair using
the details provided in the Company’s Annual Report for the year
ended 30 September 2024 if they wish
to raise any issues.
Impact
The Directors are not aware of any issues that have been raised
directly by shareholders in respect of Board composition in 2024.
Details for the proxy voting results in favour and against
individual Directors’ re-election at the 2023 AGM are given on the
Company’s website at www.blackrock.com/uk/brfi.
Shareholders
Issue
Shareholder support and engagement are critical to the continued
existence of the Company and the successful delivery of its
long-term strategy.
Engagement
The Board is committed to maintaining open channels of
communication and engaging with shareholders. The Company welcomes
and encourages attendance and participation from shareholders at
its Annual General Meetings. Shareholders therefore have the
opportunity to meet the Directors and Investment Manager and to
address questions to them directly.
The Annual Report and Half Yearly Financial Report are available on
the BlackRock website and are also circulated to shareholders
either in printed copy or via electronic communications. In
addition, regular updates on performance, monthly factsheets, the
daily NAV and other information are published on the website at
www.blackrock.com/uk/brfi.
The Board works closely with the Manager to develop the Company’s
marketing strategy, with the aim of ensuring effective
communication with shareholders in respect of the investment
mandate and objective. Unlike trading companies, one-to-one
shareholder meetings usually take the form of a meeting with the
Investment Manager as opposed to members of the Board. As well as
attending regular investor meetings the Investment Manager holds
regular discussions with wealth management desks and offices to
build on the case for, and understanding of, long-term investment
opportunities in frontier markets.
The Manager coordinates public relations activity, including
meetings between the Investment Manager and relevant industry
publications to set out their vision for the portfolio strategy and
outlook for the region.
The Manager releases monthly portfolio updates to the market to
ensure that investors are kept up to date in respect of performance
and other portfolio developments and maintains a website on behalf
of the Company that contains relevant information in respect of the
Company’s investment mandate and objective.
If shareholders wish to raise issues or concerns with the Board,
they are welcome to do so at any time. The Chair is available to
meet directly with shareholders periodically to understand their
views on governance and the Company’s performance where they wish
to do so. She may be contacted via the Company Secretary whose
details are given in the Company’s Annual Report for the year ended
30 September 2024.
Impact
The Board values any feedback and questions from shareholders ahead
of and during Annual General Meetings in order to gain an
understanding of their views and will take action when and as
appropriate. Feedback and questions will also help the Company
evolve its reporting, aiming to make it more transparent and
understandable.
Feedback from all substantive meetings between the Investment
Manager and shareholders is shared with the Board. The Directors
also receive updates from the Company’s Broker and the Investment
Manager on any feedback from shareholders, as well as share trading
activity and share price performance.
The Company’s approach to ESG
Environmental, social and governance (ESG) issues can present both
opportunities and risks to long-term investment performance. Whilst
the Company does not exclude investment in stocks purely on ESG
criteria, material ESG analytics are integrated into the investment
process when weighing up the risks and rewards of investment
decisions. The Board believes that communication and engagement
with portfolio companies is important and can lead to better
outcomes for shareholders and the environment than merely excluding
investment in certain areas.
More information on BlackRock’s global approach to ESG integration,
as well as activity specific to the BlackRock Frontiers Investment
Trust plc portfolio, is set out below. BlackRock has defined ESG
integration as the practice of incorporating financially material
E, S and/or G data and information and consideration of
sustainability risks into investment decisions with the objective
of enhancing risk-adjusted returns. ESG integration does not change
the Company’s investment objective.
More information on sustainability risks may be found in the AIFMD
Fund Disclosures document of the Company available on the Company’s
website at www.blackrock.com/uk/brfi.
BlackRock’s approach to ESG integration
BlackRock believes that sustainability risks, including climate
risks, are investment risks. As a fiduciary, BlackRock manages
material risks and opportunities that could impact portfolios.
Sustainability can be a driver of investment risks and
opportunities, and BlackRock incorporates them in its firm wide
processes when they are material. This in turn (in BlackRock’s
view) is likely to drive a significant reallocation of capital away
from traditional carbon intensive industries over the next decade.
BlackRock believes that carbon-intensive companies will play an
integral role in unlocking the full potential of the energy
transition, and to do this, they must be prepared to adapt,
innovate and pivot their strategies towards a low carbon
economy.
BlackRock incorporates into its firmwide processes relevant,
financially material information, including financially material
data and information related to ESG. BlackRock’s investment view is
that doing so can provide better risk-adjusted returns for its
clients over the long term.
BlackRock’s clients have a wide range of perspectives on a variety
of issues and investment themes, including sustainable and
low-carbon transition investing. Given the wide range of unique and
varied investment objectives sought by its clients, BlackRock’s
investment teams have a range of approaches to considering
financially material E, S, and/or G factors. As with other
investment risks and opportunities, the financial materiality of E,
S and/or G considerations may vary by issuer, sector, product,
mandate, and time horizon. Depending on the investment approach,
this financially material E, S and/or G data or information may
help inform due diligence, portfolio or index construction, and/or
monitoring processes of client portfolios, as well as BlackRock’s
approach to risk management.
BlackRock’s ESG integration framework is built upon its history as
a firm founded on the principle of thorough and thoughtful risk
management. Aladdin, BlackRock’s core risk management and
investment technology platform, allows investors to leverage
financially material E, S and/or G data or information as well as
the combined experience of BlackRock’s investment teams to
effectively identify investment opportunities and investment risks.
BlackRock’s heritage in risk management combined with the strength
of the Aladdin platform enables BlackRock’s approach to ESG
integration.
BlackRock structures its approach around three main pillars:
investment processes, material insights and transparency. These
pillars underpin ESG integration at BlackRock and they are
supported by equipping BlackRock employees with investment relevant
E, S and/or G data, tools, and education.
More information in respect of BlackRock’s approach to ESG
integration can be found at
https://www.blackrock.com/corporate/literature/publication/blk-esg-investment-statement-web.pdf.
BlackRock Investment Stewardship
The BlackRock Investment Stewardship (BIS) team takes a long-term
approach in its stewardship efforts, reflecting the investment
horizons of the majority of BlackRock’s clients. BIS’ activities
include engaging with companies, proxy voting on clients’ behalf,
contributing to industry dialogue on stewardship, and reporting on
its activities. These activities are the main components of the
stewardship toolkit and are performed all year long. BIS aims to
take a globally consistent approach, while recognising the unique
markets and sectors in which companies operate.
BIS benchmark policies
The BIS Global Principles, regional voting guidelines and
engagement priorities (website links listed below and collectively,
the ‘BIS benchmark policies’) set out the core elements of
corporate governance that guide BIS’ efforts globally and within
each regional market, including when engaging with companies and
voting at shareholder meetings when authorised to do so on behalf
of clients. BIS is committed to transparency in terms of disclosure
of its stewardship activities on behalf of clients and publishes
these benchmark policies to help BlackRock’s clients understand its
work to advance their interests as long-term investors in public
companies. Each year, BIS reviews its benchmark policies and
updates them as necessary to reflect changes in market standards
and regulations, insights gained over the year through third-party
and its own research, and feedback from clients and companies.
Additionally, BIS publishes both annual and quarterly reports
detailing its stewardship activities, as well as vote bulletins
that describe its rationale for certain votes at high-profile
shareholder meetings. More detail in respect of BIS reporting can
be found at
www.blackrock.com/corporate/insights/investment-stewardship.
Global Principles
The
BIS Global Principles
reflect BIS’ views on the globally-applicable fundamental elements
of corporate governance that contribute to a company’s ability to
create long-term financial value. The Global Principles are
available on BIS’ website:
www.blackrock.com/corporate/literature/fact-sheet/blkresponsible-investment-engprinciples-global.pdf.
Regional voting guidelines
The BIS regional voting guidelines provide context on local market
rules and norms within the framework of BIS’ overarching global
corporate governance principles. The regional voting guidelines
help provide clients, companies, and others guidance on BIS’
position on common voting matters in each market. BIS’ regional
voting guidelines are available on its website:
www.blackrock.com/corporate/insights/investment-stewardship#stewardship-policies.
Engagement priorities
The BIS engagement priorities are the five themes on which BIS most
frequently engages with companies, where they are relevant and a
source of material business risk or opportunity. The engagement
priorities are available on BIS’ website:
www.blackrock.com/corporate/literature/publication/blk-stewardship-priorities-final.pdf.
BlackRock’s reporting and disclosures
In terms of its own reporting, BlackRock believes that the
Sustainability Accounting Standards Board provides a clear set of
standards for reporting sustainability information across a wide
range of issues, from labour practices to data privacy to business
ethics. For evaluating and reporting climate-related risks, as well
as the related governance issues that are essential to managing
them, the Task Force on Climate-related Financial Disclosures
(TCFD) provides a valuable framework. BlackRock recognises that
reporting to these standards requires significant time, analysis,
and effort. BlackRock’s 2023 TCFD report can be found at
www.blackrock.com/corporate/literature/continuous-disclosure-and-important-information/tcfd-report-2023-blkinc.pdf.
BY ORDER OF THE BOARD
KEVIN
MAYGER
FOR AND ON BEHALF OF
BLACKROCK INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT (UK)
LIMITED
Company Secretary
4 December 2024
Related Party Transactions
BlackRock Fund Managers Limited (BFM) provides management and
administration services to the Company under a contract which is
terminable on six months’ notice. BFM has (with the Company’s
consent) delegated certain portfolio and risk management services,
and other ancillary services, to BlackRock Investment Management
(UK) Limited (BIM (UK)). Further
details of the investment management contract are disclosed in the
Directors’ Report in the Company’s Annual Report for the year ended
30 September 2024.
The investment management fee due for the year ended 30 September 2024 amounted to US$4,204,000 (2023: US$3,783,000). The performance fee payable for
the year ended 30 September 2024
amounted to US$3,510,000 (2023:
US$8,272,000).
At the year end, US$3,204,000 (2023:
US$2,902,000) was outstanding in
respect of management fees and US$3,510,000 (2023: US$8,272,000) was outstanding in respect of
performance fees.
In addition to the above services, BIM
(UK) has provided the Company with marketing services. The
total fees paid or payable for these services for the year ended
30 September 2024 amounted to
US$211,000 (2023: US$90,000) excluding VAT. Marketing fees of
US$344,000 (US$143,000) excluding VAT were outstanding at
the year end.
The Company has an investment in the BlackRock Institutional Cash
Series plc – US Dollar Liquid Environmentally Aware Fund of
US$68,559,000 (2023: US$64,875,000) at the year end, which is a fund
managed by a company within the BlackRock Group. The Company’s
investment in the Cash Fund is held in a share class on which no
management fees are paid to BlackRock to avoid double
dipping.
Disclosures of the Directors’ interests in the ordinary shares of
the Company and fees and expenses payable to the Directors are set
out in the Directors’ Remuneration Report in the Company’s Annual
Report for the year ended 30 September
2024. At 30 September 2024,
US$20,000 (£15,000) (2023:
US$20,000 (£17,000)) was outstanding
in respect of Directors’ fees.
Statement of Directors’ responsibilities in respect of the
Annual Report and Financial Statements
The Directors are responsible for preparing the Annual Report, the
Directors’ Remuneration Report and the financial statements in
accordance with applicable United
Kingdom law and regulations.
Company law requires the Directors to prepare financial statements
for each financial year. Under that law, the Directors are required
to prepare the financial statements in accordance with UK-adopted
International Accounting Standards (IAS). Under Company law the
Directors must not approve the financial statements unless they are
satisfied that they give a true and fair view of the state of
affairs of the Company and of the profit or loss of the Company for
that period.
In preparing these financial statements, the Directors are required
to:
- present
fairly the financial position, financial performance and cash flows
of the Company;
- select
suitable accounting policies in accordance with IAS 8 Accounting
Policies, Changes in Accounting Estimates and Errors and then apply
them consistently;
- present
information, including accounting policies, in a manner that
provides relevant, reliable, comparable and understandable
information;
- make
judgements and estimates that are reasonable and
prudent;
- state
whether the financial statements have been prepared in accordance
with IAS, subject to any material departures disclosed and
explained in the financial statements;
- provide
additional disclosures when compliance with the specific
requirements in IAS is insufficient to enable users to understand
the impact of particular transactions, other events and conditions
on the Company’s financial position and financial performance;
and
- prepare
the financial statements on the going concern basis unless it is
inappropriate to presume that the Company will continue in
business.
The Directors are responsible for keeping adequate accounting
records that are sufficient to show and explain the Company’s
transactions and disclose with reasonable accuracy at any time the
financial position of the Company and enable them to ensure that
the financial statements comply with the Companies Act
2006.
They are also responsible for safeguarding the assets of the
Company and hence for taking reasonable steps for the prevention
and detection of fraud and other irregularities. The Directors are
also responsible for preparing the Strategic Report, the Directors’
Report, the Directors’ Remuneration Report, Corporate Governance
Statement and the Report of the Audit and Management Engagement
Committee in accordance with the Companies Act 2006 and applicable
regulations, including the requirements of the Listing Rules and
the Disclosure Guidance and Transparency Rules. The Directors have
delegated responsibility to the Investment Manager and the AIFM for
the maintenance and integrity of the Company’s corporate and
financial information included on BlackRock’s website. Legislation
in the United Kingdom governing
the preparation and dissemination of financial statements may
differ from legislation in other jurisdictions.
Each of the Directors, who were appointed as at the date of the
Annual Report, confirms to the best of their knowledge
that:
- the
financial statements, which have been prepared in accordance with
IAS, give a true and fair view of the assets, liabilities,
financial position and profit of the Company; and
- the
Strategic Report contained in the Annual Report and Financial
Statements includes a fair review of the development and
performance of the business and the position of the Company,
together with a description of the principal risks and
uncertainties that it faces.
The 2018 UK Corporate Governance Code also requires Directors to
ensure that the Annual Report and Financial Statements are fair,
balanced and understandable. In order to reach a conclusion on this
matter, the Board has requested that the Audit and Management
Engagement Committee advise on whether it considers that the Annual
Report and Financial Statements fulfil these requirements. The
process by which the Committee has reached these conclusions is set
out in the Audit and Management Engagement Committee’s report in
the Company’s Annual Report for the year ended 30 September 2024. As a result, the Board has
concluded that the Annual Report and Financial Statements for the
year ended 30 September 2024, taken
as a whole, is fair, balanced and understandable and provides the
information necessary for shareholders to assess the Company’s
position and performance, business model and strategy.
FOR AND ON BEHALF OF THE BOARD
KATRINA
HART
Chair
4 December 2024
Statement of comprehensive income for the year ended
30 September 2024
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
Notes
|
Revenue
US$’000
|
Capital
US$’000
|
Total
US$’000
|
Revenue
US$’000
|
Capital
US$’000
|
Total
US$’000
|
Income from investments held at fair value through profit or
loss
|
3
|
20,656
|
–
|
20,656
|
17,402
|
–
|
17,402
|
Net income from contracts for difference
|
3
|
2,425
|
–
|
2,425
|
1,985
|
565
|
2,550
|
Other income
|
3
|
209
|
–
|
209
|
251
|
–
|
251
|
|
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
Total income
|
|
23,290
|
–
|
23,290
|
19,638
|
565
|
20,203
|
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
=========
|
=========
|
=========
|
=========
|
Net profit on investments held at fair value through profit or
loss
|
|
–
|
54,953
|
54,953
|
–
|
58,566
|
58,566
|
Net loss on foreign exchange
|
|
–
|
(1,197)
|
(1,197)
|
–
|
(1,980)
|
(1,980)
|
Net (loss)/profit from derivatives
|
|
–
|
(7,902)
|
(7,902)
|
–
|
12,523
|
12,523
|
|
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
Total
|
|
23,290
|
45,854
|
69,144
|
19,638
|
69,674
|
89,312
|
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
=========
|
=========
|
=========
|
=========
|
Expenses
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Investment management and performance fees
|
4
|
(841)
|
(6,873)
|
(7,714)
|
(757)
|
(11,298)
|
(12,055)
|
Other operating expenses
|
5
|
(1,162)
|
(92)
|
(1,254)
|
(942)
|
(68)
|
(1,010)
|
|
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
Total operating expenses
|
|
(2,003)
|
(6,965)
|
(8,968)
|
(1,699)
|
(11,366)
|
(13,065)
|
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
=========
|
=========
|
=========
|
=========
|
Net profit on ordinary activities before finance costs and
taxation
|
|
21,287
|
38,889
|
60,176
|
17,939
|
58,308
|
76,247
|
Finance costs
|
|
(23)
|
(92)
|
(115)
|
(23)
|
(94)
|
(117)
|
|
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
Net profit on ordinary activities before
taxation
|
|
21,264
|
38,797
|
60,061
|
17,916
|
58,214
|
76,130
|
Taxation (charge)/credit
|
|
(2,380)
|
867
|
(1,513)
|
(2,044)
|
770
|
(1,274)
|
|
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
Profit for the year
|
|
18,884
|
39,664
|
58,548
|
15,872
|
58,984
|
74,856
|
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
=========
|
=========
|
=========
|
=========
|
Earnings per ordinary share (cents)
|
7
|
9.97
|
20.95
|
30.92
|
8.38
|
31.16
|
39.54
|
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
=========
|
=========
|
=========
|
=========
|
The total columns of this statement represent the Company’s
Statement of Comprehensive Income, prepared in accordance with
UK-adopted International Accounting Standards (IAS). The
supplementary revenue and capital accounts are both prepared under
guidance published by the Association of Investment Companies
(AIC). All items in the above statement derive from continuing
operations. No operations were acquired or discontinued during the
year. All income is attributable to the equity holders of the
Company.
The Company does not have any other comprehensive income. The net
profit for the year disclosed above represents the Company’s total
comprehensive income.
Statement of changes in equity for the year ended
30 September 2024
|
Notes
|
Called
up share
capital
US$’000
|
Capital
redemption
reserve
US$’000
|
Special
reserve
US$’000
|
Capital
reserves
US$’000
|
Revenue
reserve
US$’000
|
Total
US$’000
|
For the year ended 30 September 2024
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
At 30 September 2023
|
|
2,418
|
5,798
|
308,804
|
36,153
|
10,425
|
363,598
|
Total comprehensive income:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Net profit for the year
|
|
–
|
–
|
–
|
39,664
|
18,884
|
58,548
|
Transactions with owners, recorded directly to equity:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Dividends paid1
|
6
|
–
|
–
|
–
|
–
|
(15,903)
|
(15,903)
|
|
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
At 30 September 2024
|
|
2,418
|
5,798
|
308,804
|
75,817
|
13,406
|
406,243
|
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
=========
|
=========
|
=========
|
=========
|
For the year ended 30 September 2023
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
At 30 September 2022
|
|
2,418
|
5,798
|
308,804
|
(22,831)
|
8,467
|
302,656
|
Total comprehensive income:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Net profit for the year
|
|
–
|
–
|
–
|
58,984
|
15,872
|
74,856
|
Transactions with owners, recorded directly to equity:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Dividends paid2
|
6
|
–
|
–
|
–
|
–
|
(13,914)
|
(13,914)
|
|
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
At 30 September 2023
|
|
2,418
|
5,798
|
308,804
|
36,153
|
10,425
|
363,598
|
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
=========
|
=========
|
=========
|
=========
|
1 Final
dividend of 4.90 cents per share for
the year ended 30 September 2023,
declared on 30 November 2023 and paid
on 14 February 2024 and an interim
dividend of 3.50 cents per share for
the year ended 30 September 2024,
declared on 31 May 2024 and paid on
2 July 2024.
2 Final
dividend of 4.25 cents per share for
the year ended 30 September 2022,
declared on 7 December 2022 and paid
on 14 February 2023 and an interim
dividend of 3.10 cents per share for
the year ended 30 September 2023,
declared on 6 June 2023 and paid on
7 July 2023.
For information on the Company’s distributable reserves please
refer to note 16 in the Company’s Annual Report for the year ended
30 September 2024.
Statement of financial position as at 30 September 2024
|
Notes
|
2024
US$’000
|
2023
US$’000
|
Non current assets
|
|
|
|
Investments held at fair value through profit or loss
|
|
412,308
|
374,517
|
Current assets
|
|
|
|
Current tax asset
|
|
803
|
444
|
Other receivables
|
|
3,934
|
5,085
|
Derivative financial assets held at fair value through profit or
loss – contracts for difference
|
|
2,756
|
1,402
|
Cash and cash equivalents – cash at bank
|
|
2,284
|
5,308
|
Cash collateral pledged with brokers
|
|
1,305
|
2,435
|
|
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
Total current assets
|
|
11,082
|
14,674
|
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
Total assets
|
|
423,390
|
389,191
|
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
Current liabilities
|
|
|
|
Cash and cash equivalents – bank overdraft
|
|
–
|
(25)
|
Other payables
|
|
(12,667)
|
(20,015)
|
Derivative financial liabilities held at fair value through profit
or loss – contracts for difference
|
|
(1,561)
|
(3,234)
|
Liability for cash collateral received
|
|
(2,900)
|
(2,300)
|
|
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
Total current liabilities
|
|
(17,128)
|
(25,574)
|
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
Total assets less current liabilities
|
|
406,262
|
363,617
|
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
Non current liabilities
|
|
|
|
Management shares of £1.00 each (one quarter paid up)
|
|
(19)
|
(19)
|
|
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
Net assets
|
|
406,243
|
363,598
|
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
Equity attributable to equity holders
|
|
|
|
Called up share capital
|
8
|
2,418
|
2,418
|
Capital redemption reserve
|
9
|
5,798
|
5,798
|
Special reserve
|
9
|
308,804
|
308,804
|
Capital reserves
|
9
|
75,817
|
36,153
|
Revenue reserve
|
9
|
13,406
|
10,425
|
|
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
Total equity
|
|
406,243
|
363,598
|
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
Net asset value per ordinary share
(cents)
|
7
|
214.57
|
192.05
|
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
Cash flow statement for the year ended 30 September 2024
|
2024
US$’000
|
2023
US$’000
|
Operating activities
|
|
|
Net profit on ordinary activities before
taxation1
|
60,061
|
76,130
|
Add back finance costs
|
115
|
117
|
Net profit on investments held at fair value through profit or loss
(including transaction costs)
|
(54,953)
|
(58,566)
|
Net loss/(profit) from derivatives (including transaction
costs)
|
7,902
|
(12,523)
|
Financing costs on derivatives
|
(4,835)
|
(4,107)
|
Net loss on foreign exchange
|
1,197
|
1,980
|
Sales of investments held at fair value through profit or
loss
|
236,900
|
183,095
|
Purchases of investments held at fair value through profit or
loss
|
(216,098)
|
(207,654)
|
Sales of Cash Fund2
|
161,427
|
163,097
|
Purchases of Cash Fund2
|
(165,067)
|
(156,544)
|
Amounts paid for losses on closure of derivatives
|
(47,584)
|
(42,659)
|
Amounts received on profit on closure of derivatives
|
41,490
|
57,263
|
Increase in other receivables
|
(489)
|
(855)
|
(Decrease)/increase in other payables
|
(4,210)
|
10,651
|
Decrease/(increase) in amounts due from brokers
|
1,640
|
(2,885)
|
(Decrease)/increase in amounts due to brokers
|
(3,138)
|
4,506
|
Cash collateral pledged with brokers
|
1,130
|
4,969
|
Cash collateral received from brokers
|
600
|
1,650
|
Taxation paid
|
(1,872)
|
(1,272)
|
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
Net cash inflow from operating
activities
|
14,216
|
16,393
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
Financing activities
|
|
|
Interest paid
|
(115)
|
(117)
|
Dividends paid
|
(15,903)
|
(13,914)
|
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
Net cash outflow from financing
activities
|
(16,018)
|
(14,031)
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
(Decrease)/increase in cash and cash
equivalents
|
(1,802)
|
2,362
|
Effect of foreign exchange rate changes
|
(1,197)
|
(1,980)
|
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
Change in cash and cash equivalents
|
(2,999)
|
382
|
Cash and cash equivalents at the start of the year
|
5,283
|
4,901
|
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
Cash and cash equivalents at the end of the
year
|
2,284
|
5,283
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
Comprised of:
|
|
|
Cash at bank
|
2,284
|
5,308
|
Bank overdraft
|
–
|
(25)
|
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
|
2,284
|
5,283
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
1 Dividends
and interest received in cash during the year amounted to
US$15,293,000 and US$2,964,000 respectively (2023: US$14,859,000 and US$3,182,000).
2 Cash
Fund represents investment in the BlackRock Institutional Cash
Series plc - US Dollar Liquid Environmentally Aware
Fund.
Notes to the financial statements for the year ended
30 September 2024
1. Principal activity
The principal activity of the Company is that of an investment
trust company within the meaning of Section 1158 of the Corporation
Tax Act 2010. The Company was incorporated on 15 October 2010, and this is the thirteenth
Annual Report.
2. Accounting policies
The principal accounting policies adopted by the Company have been
applied consistently, other than where new policies have been
adopted and are set out below.
(a) Basis of preparation
The financial statements have been prepared under the historic cost
convention modified by the revaluation of certain financial assets
and financial liabilities held at fair value through profit or loss
and in accordance with UK-adopted IAS. All of the Company’s
operations are of a continuing nature.
Insofar as the Statement of Recommended Practice (SORP) for
investment trust companies and venture capital trusts, issued by
the Association of Investment Companies (AIC) in October 2019 and updated in July 2022, is compatible with UK-adopted IAS, the
financial statements have been prepared in accordance with the
guidance set out in the SORP.
Substantially, all of the assets of the Company consist of
securities that are readily realisable and, accordingly, the
Directors are satisfied that the Company has adequate resources to
continue in operational existence for the foreseeable future for
the period to 30 September 2026,
being a period of at least twelve months from the date of approval
of the financial statements, and therefore consider the going
concern assumption to be appropriate. The Directors have reviewed
the income and expense projections and the liquidity of the
investment portfolio in making their assessment.
The Directors have considered the impact of climate change on the
value of the investments included in the Financial Statements and
have concluded that there was no further impact of climate change
to be considered as the investments are valued based on market
pricing as required by IFRS 13.
None of the Company’s other assets and liabilities were considered
to be potentially impacted by climate change.
The Company’s financial statements are presented in US Dollars,
which is the functional currency of the Company and the currency of
the primary economic environment in which the Company operates. All
values are rounded to the nearest thousand dollars (US$’000) except
where otherwise indicated.
Adoption of new and amended International Accounting
Standards and interpretations:
IFRS 17 – Insurance contracts
(effective 1 January 2023). This
standard replaced IFRS 4 and applies to all types of insurance
contracts. IFRS 17 provides a consistent and comprehensive model
for insurance contracts covering all relevant accounting
aspects.
IAS 12 – Deferred tax related to assets and liabilities
arising from a single transaction
(effective 1 January 2023). The
International Accounting Standards Board (IASB) has amended IAS 12
Income Taxes to require companies to recognise deferred tax on
particular transactions that, on initial recognition, give rise to
equal amounts of taxable and deductible temporary differences.
According to the amended guidance, a temporary difference that
arises on initial recognition of an asset or liability is not
subject to the initial recognition exemption if that transaction
gave rise to equal amounts of taxable and deductible temporary
differences. These amendments might have a significant impact on
the preparation of financial statements by companies that have
substantial balances of right-of-use assets, lease liabilities,
decommissioning, restoration and similar liabilities. The impact
for those affected would be the recognition of additional deferred
tax assets and liabilities.
IAS 8 – Definition of accounting estimates
(effective 1 January 2023). The IASB
has amended IAS 8 Accounting Policies, Changes in Accounting
Estimates and Errors to help distinguish between accounting
policies and accounting estimates, replacing the definition of
accounting estimates.
IAS 1 and IFRS Practice Statement 2 – Disclosure of
accounting policies
(effective 1 January 2023). The IASB
has amended IAS 1 Presentation of Financial Statements to help
preparers in deciding which accounting policies to disclose in
their financial statements by stating that an entity is now
required to disclose material accounting policies instead of
significant accounting policies.
IAS 12 – International Tax Reform Pillar Two Model
Rules
(effective 1 January 2023). The IASB
has published amendments to IAS 12 Income Taxes to respond to
stakeholders’ concerns about the potential implications of the
imminent implementation of the OECD pillar two rules on the
accounting for income taxes. The amendment is an exception to the
requirements in IAS 12 that an entity does not recognise and does
not disclose information about deferred tax assets as liabilities
related to the OECD pillar two income taxes and a requirement that
current tax expenses must be disclosed separately to pillar two
income taxes.
The amendment of these standards did not have any significant
impact on the Company.
Relevant International Accounting Standards that have yet
to be adopted:
IAS 1 – Classification of liabilities as current or non
current
(effective 1 January 2024). The IASB
has amended IAS 1 Presentation of Financial Statements to clarify
its requirement for the presentation of liabilities depending on
the rights that exist at the end of the reporting period. The
amendment requires liabilities to be classified as non current if
the entity has a substantive right to defer settlement for at least
12 months at the end of the reporting period. The amendment no
longer refers to unconditional rights.
IAS 1 – Non current liabilities with
covenants
(effective 1 January 2024). The IASB
has amended IAS 1 Presentation of Financial Statements to introduce
additional disclosures for liabilities with covenants within 12
months of the reporting period. The additional disclosures include
the nature of covenants, when the entity is required to comply with
covenants, the carrying amount of related liabilities and
circumstances that may indicate that the entity will have
difficulty complying with the covenants.
IAS 21 – Lack of exchangeability
(effective 1 January 2025). The IASB
issued amendments to IAS 21 The Effects of Changes in Foreign
Exchange Rates to specify how an entity should assess whether a
currency is exchangeable and how it should determine a spot
exchange rate when exchangeability is lacking. The amendments also
require disclosure of information that enables users of its
financial statements to understand how the currency not being
exchangeable into the other currency affects, or is expected to
affect, the entity’s financial performance, financial position and
cash flows.
IFRS 18 – Presentation and disclosure in financial
statements
(effective 1 January 2027). The IASB
issued IFRS 18, which replaces IAS 1 Presentation of Financial
Statements. IFRS 18 introduces new requirements for presentation
within the statement of profit or loss, including specified totals
and subtotals. Furthermore, entities are required to classify all
income and expenses within the statement of profit or loss into one
of five categories: operating, investing, financing, income taxes
and discontinued operations, whereof the first three are new. It
also requires disclosure of newly defined management-defined
performance measures, subtotals of income and expenses, and
includes new requirements for aggregation and disaggregation of
financial information based on the identified ‘roles’ of the
primary financial statements and the notes.
None of the standards that have been issued, but are not yet
effective, are expected to have a material impact on the
Company.
(b) Presentation of the Statement of Comprehensive
Income
In order to better reflect the activities of an investment trust
company and in accordance with guidance issued by the AIC,
supplementary information which analyses the Statement of
Comprehensive Income between items of a revenue and a capital
nature has been presented alongside the Statement of Comprehensive
Income.
(c) Segmental reporting
The Directors are of the opinion that the Company is engaged in a
single segment of business being investment business.
(d) Income
Dividends receivable on equity shares are recognised as revenue for
the year on an ex-dividend basis. Where no ex-dividend date is
available, dividends receivable on or before the year end are
treated as revenue for the year. Provision is made for any
dividends and interest income not expected to be received. Special
dividends, if any, are treated as a capital or a revenue receipt
depending on the facts or circumstances of each particular case.
The return on a debt security is recognised on a time apportionment
basis so as to reflect the effective yield on the debt security.
Interest income and deposit interest are accounted for on an
accruals basis.
Where the Company has elected to receive its dividends in the form
of additional shares rather than in cash, the cash equivalent of
the dividend is recognised as income. Any excess in the value of
the shares received over the amount of the cash dividend is
recognised in capital.
(e) Expenses
All expenses, including finance costs, are accounted for on an
accruals basis. Expenses have been charged wholly to the revenue
account of the Statement of Comprehensive Income, except as
follows:
- expenses
which are incidental to the acquisition or sale of an investment
are charged to the capital account of the Statement of
Comprehensive Income. Details of transaction costs on the purchases
and sales of investments are disclosed within note 10 to the
financial statements in the Company’s Annual Report for the year
ended 30 September 2024;
- expenses
are treated as capital where a connection with the maintenance or
enhancement of the value of the investments can be
demonstrated;
- the
investment management fee and finance costs have been allocated 20%
to the revenue account and 80% to the capital account of the
Statement of Comprehensive Income in line with the Board’s expected
long-term split of returns, in the form of capital gains and
income, respectively, from the investment portfolio; and
- performance
fees are allocated 100% to the capital account of the Statement of
Comprehensive Income as fees are generated in connection with
enhancing the value of the investment portfolio.
(f) Taxation
The tax expense represents the sum of the tax currently payable and
deferred tax. The tax currently payable is based on the taxable
profit for the year. Taxable profit differs from net profit as
reported in the Statement of Comprehensive Income because it
excludes items of income or expenses that are taxable or deductible
in other years and it further excludes items that are never taxable
or deductible. The Company’s liability for current tax is
calculated using tax rates that were applicable at the balance
sheet date.
Where expenses are allocated between capital and revenue accounts,
any tax relief in respect of the expenses is allocated between
capital and revenue returns on the marginal basis using the
Company’s effective rate of corporation tax for the accounting
period.
Deferred taxation is recognised in respect of all temporary
differences that have originated but not reversed at the financial
reporting date, where transactions or events that result in an
obligation to pay more taxation in the future or right to pay less
taxation in the future have occurred at the financial reporting
date. This is subject to deferred taxation assets only being
recognised if it is considered more likely than not that there will
be suitable profits from which the future reversal of the temporary
differences can be deducted. Deferred taxation assets and
liabilities are measured at the rates applicable to the legal
jurisdictions in which they arise.
(g) Investments held at fair value through profit or
loss
In accordance with IFRS 9, the Company classifies its investments
at initial recognition as held at fair value through profit or loss
and are managed and evaluated on a fair value basis in accordance
with its investment strategy and business model.
All investments are measured initially and subsequently at fair
value through profit or loss. Purchases of investments are
recognised on a trade date basis. Sales of investments are
recognised at the trade date of the disposal.
The fair value of the financial investments is based on their
quoted bid price at the financial reporting date, without deduction
for the estimated future selling costs. This policy applies to all
current and non-current asset investments held by the Company. The
fair value of the P-Notes are, when held, based on the quoted bid
price of the underlying equity to which they relate.
Changes in the value of investments held at fair value through
profit or loss and gains and losses on disposal are recognised in
the Statement of Comprehensive Income as “Net profit/(loss) on
investments held at fair value through profit or loss”. Also
included within the heading are transaction costs in relation to
the purchase or sale of investments.
For all financial instruments not traded in an active market, the
fair value is determined by using various valuation techniques.
Valuation techniques include market approach (i.e., using recent
arm’s length market transactions adjusted as necessary and
reference to the current market value of another instrument that is
substantially the same) and the income approach (i.e., discounted
cash flow analysis and option pricing models making as much use of
available and supportable market data where possible). See note
2(o) below.
(h) Derivatives
The Company can hold long and short positions in contracts for
difference (CFDs) which are held at fair value based on the bid
prices of the underlying securities in respect of long positions,
and the offer prices of the underlying securities in respect of
short positions.
Profits and losses on derivative transactions are recognised in the
Statement of Comprehensive Income. They are shown in the capital
account of the Statement of Comprehensive Income if they are of a
capital nature and are shown in the revenue account of the
Statement of Comprehensive Income if they are of a revenue nature.
To the extent that any profits or losses are of a mixed revenue and
capital nature, they are apportioned between revenue and capital
accordingly.
(i) Other receivables and other
payables
Other receivables and other payables do not carry any interest and
are short term in nature and are accordingly stated on an amortised
cost basis.
(j) Dividends payable
Under IAS, final dividends should not be accrued in the financial
statements unless they have been approved by shareholders before
the financial reporting date. Interim dividends should not be
recognised in the financial statements unless they have been
paid.
Dividends payable to equity shareholders are recognised in the
Statement of Changes in Equity.
(k) Foreign currency translation
Transactions involving foreign currencies are converted at the rate
ruling at the date of the transaction. Foreign currency monetary
assets and liabilities and non-monetary assets held at fair value
are translated into US Dollars at the rate ruling on the financial
reporting date. Foreign exchange differences arising on translation
are recognised in the Statement of Comprehensive Income as a
revenue or capital item depending on the income or expense to which
they relate. For investment transactions and investments held at
the year end, denominated in a foreign currency, the resulting
gains or losses are included in the profit/(loss) on investments
held at fair value through profit or loss in the Statement of
Comprehensive Income.
(l) Cash and cash equivalents
Cash comprises cash in hand, bank overdrafts and on demand
deposits. Cash equivalents are short term, highly liquid
investments that are readily convertible to known amounts of cash
and that are subject to an insignificant risk of changes in
value.
The Company’s investment in the Cash Fund is managed as part of the
Company’s investment policy and, accordingly, this investment along
with purchases and sales of this investment has been classified in
the Statement of Financial Position as an investment and not as a
cash equivalent as defined under IAS 7.
(m) Bank borrowings
Bank overdrafts and loans are recorded as the proceeds received.
Finance charges, including any premium payable on settlement or
redemption and direct issue costs, are accounted for on an accruals
basis in the Statement of Comprehensive Income using the effective
interest rate method and are added to the carrying amount of the
instrument.
(n) Share repurchases and share
reissues
Shares repurchased and subsequently cancelled – share capital is
reduced by the nominal value of the shares repurchased and the
capital redemption reserve is correspondingly increased in
accordance with Section 733 of the Companies Act 2006. The full
cost of the repurchase is charged to the special
reserve.
Shares repurchased and held in treasury – the full cost of the
repurchase is charged to the special reserve.
Where treasury shares are subsequently re-issued:
- amounts
received to the extent of the repurchase price are credited to the
special reserve and capital reserves based on a weighted average
basis of amounts utilised from these reserves on repurchases;
and
- any
surplus received in excess of the repurchase price is taken to the
share premium account.
Where new shares are issued, amounts received to the extent of any
surplus received in excess of the par value are taken to the share
premium account.
Share issue costs are charged to the share premium account. Costs
on share reissues are charged to the special reserve and capital
reserves.
(o) Critical accounting estimates and
judgements
The Company makes estimates and assumptions concerning the future.
The resulting accounting estimates and assumptions will, by
definition, seldom equal the related actual results. Estimates and
judgements are regularly evaluated and are based on historical
experience and other factors, including expectations of future
events that are believed to be reasonable under the circumstances.
The Directors do not believe that any accounting judgements or
estimates have a significant risk of causing a material adjustment
to the carrying amount of assets and liabilities within the next
financial year.
3. Income
|
2024
US$’000
|
2023
US$’000
|
Investment income:
|
|
|
UK dividends
|
576
|
362
|
Stock dividends
|
–
|
14
|
Overseas dividends
|
16,276
|
12,997
|
Overseas special dividends
|
913
|
1,006
|
Interest from Cash Fund
|
2,891
|
3,023
|
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
Total investment income
|
20,656
|
17,402
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
Net income from contracts for difference (note 11
in the Company’s Annual Report for the year ended 30 September
2024)
|
2,425
|
1,985
|
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
Total income from contracts for
differences
|
2,425
|
1,985
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
Other income:
|
|
|
Interest received on cash collateral
|
135
|
68
|
Deposit interest
|
74
|
183
|
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
Total other income
|
209
|
251
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
Total
|
23,290
|
19,638
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
Dividends and interest received in cash during the year amounted to
US$15,293,000 and US$2,964,000 respectively (2023: US$14,859,000
and US$3,182,000).
No special dividends from equity investments have been recognised
in capital for the year ended 30 September 2024 (2023: US$nil). No
special dividends from long contracts for difference have been
recognised in capital for the year ended 30 September 2024 and
included within net income from contracts for difference in the
capital account in the Statement of Comprehensive Income (2023:
US$565,000).
4. Investment management and performance
fees
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
Revenue
US$’000
|
Capital
US$’000
|
Total
US$’000
|
Revenue
US$’000
|
Capital
US$’000
|
Total
US$’000
|
Investment management fee
|
841
|
3,363
|
4,204
|
757
|
3,026
|
3,783
|
Performance fee
|
–
|
3,510
|
3,510
|
–
|
8,272
|
8,272
|
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
Total
|
841
|
6,873
|
7,714
|
757
|
11,298
|
12,055
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
=========
|
=========
|
=========
|
=========
|
An investment management fee equivalent to 1.10% per annum of the
Company’s gross assets (defined as the aggregate net assets of the
long equity and CFD portfolios of the Company) is payable to the
Manager. In addition, the Manager is entitled to receive a
performance fee at a rate of 10% of any increase in the net asset
value (NAV) at the end of a performance period over and above what
would have been achieved had the NAV since launch increased in line
with the Benchmark Index, which, since 1 April 2018, is a composite
of the MSCI Emerging Markets Index ex Selected Countries + MSCI
Frontier Markets Index.
For the purposes of the calculation of the performance fee, the
performance of the NAV total return since launch has been measured
against the performance of the Benchmark Index on a blended
basis.
For the year ended 30 September 2024, the Company’s NAV
outperformed the Benchmark Index on a US Dollar basis by 0.8%
(2023: outperformed by 20.1%) resulting in a cumulative
outperformance since launch of 68.5% (2023: cumulative
outperformance of 57.9%); therefore, a performance fee of
US$3,510,000 has been accrued (2023: US$8,272,000). Any accrued
performance fee is included within other payables in the Statement
of Financial Position.
The performance fee payable in any year is capped at 2.5% of the
gross assets of the Company if there is an increase in the NAV per
share, or 1% of the gross assets of the Company if there is a
decrease in the NAV per share, at the end of the relevant
performance period. Any outperformance in excess of the cap for a
period may be carried forward to the next two performance periods,
subject to the then applicable annual cap. The performance fee is
also subject to a high watermark such that any performance fee is
only payable to the extent that the cumulative outperformance of
the NAV relative to the Benchmark Index is greater than what would
have been achieved had the NAV increased in line with the Benchmark
Index since the last date in relation to which a performance fee
had been paid. This mechanism requires the Manager to catch up any
cumulative underperformance against the Benchmark Index since
launch before a performance fee can be generated.
The investment management fee is allocated 20% to the revenue
account and 80% to the capital account and the performance fee is
wholly allocated to the capital account of the Statement of
Comprehensive Income. There is no additional fee for company
secretarial and administration services.
5. Other operating expenses
|
2024
US$’000
|
2023
US$’000
|
Allocated to revenue:
|
|
|
Custody fee
|
276
|
229
|
Auditor’s remuneration:
|
|
|
– audit services
|
61
|
62
|
– other assurance services1
|
10
|
9
|
Registrar’s fee
|
38
|
32
|
Directors’ emoluments2
|
258
|
243
|
Broker fees
|
40
|
38
|
Depositary fees3
|
38
|
33
|
Marketing fees
|
211
|
90
|
AIC fees
|
25
|
24
|
FCA fees
|
23
|
18
|
Printing and postage fees
|
47
|
58
|
Employer NI contributions
|
25
|
31
|
Stock exchange listings
|
17
|
13
|
Legal and professional fees
|
24
|
21
|
Write back of prior year expenses4
|
(17)
|
(27)
|
Other administrative costs
|
86
|
68
|
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
Total revenue expenses
|
1,162
|
942
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
Allocated to capital:
|
|
|
Custody transaction charges5
|
92
|
68
|
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
Total
|
1,254
|
1,010
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
The Company’s ongoing charges6,
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 costs, custody
transaction charges, VAT recovered, taxation, prior year expenses
written back and certain non-recurring items, were:
|
1.41%
|
1.38%
|
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
The Company’s ongoing charges6,
calculated as a percentage of average daily net assets and using
the management fee and all other operating expenses and including
performance fees but excluding finance costs, direct transaction
costs, custody transaction charges, VAT recovered, taxation, prior
year expenses written back and certain non-recurring items,
were:
|
2.33%
|
3.78%
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
1 Fees
for other assurance services of £7,100 (US$10,000) (2023: £7,100
(US$9,000)) relate to the review of the interim financial
statements.
2 Further
information on Directors’ emoluments can be found in the Directors’
Remuneration Report in the Company’s Annual Report for the year
ended 30 September 2024. The Company has no employees.
3 All
expenses other than depositary fees are paid in British Pound
Sterling and are therefore subject to exchange rate
fluctuations.
4 Relates
to Director search fees, miscellaneous fees and legal fees written
back during the year (2023: Directors’ expenses, miscellaneous fees
and legal fees).
5 For
the year ended 30 September 2024, expenses of £69,000 (US$92,000)
(2023: £56,000 (US$68,000)) were charged to the capital account of
the Statement of Comprehensive Income. These relate to transaction
costs charged by the Custodian on sale and purchase
trades.
6 Alternative
Performance Measures, see Glossary in the Company’s Annual Report
for the year ended 30 September 2024.
No fees were payable in 2024 or 2023 in relation to investing in
new markets.
6. Dividends
Dividends paid on equity shares
|
Record date
|
Payment date
|
2024
US$’000
|
2023
US$’000
|
2023 final of 4.90 cents (2022: 4.25 cents) per ordinary
share
|
5 January 2024
|
14 February 2024
|
9,277
|
8,046
|
2024 interim of 3.50 cents (2023: 3.10 cents) per ordinary
share
|
14 June 2024
|
2 July 2024
|
6,626
|
5,868
|
|
|
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
|
|
|
15,903
|
13,914
|
|
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
The total dividends payable in respect of the year ended 30
September 2024 which form the basis of Section 1158 of the
Corporation Tax Act 2010 and Section 833 of the Companies Act 2006,
and the amounts proposed, meet the relevant requirements as set out
in this legislation.
Dividends paid, proposed or declared on equity shares
|
2024
US$’000
|
2023
US$’000
|
Interim dividend of 3.50 cents per ordinary share (2023: 3.10
cents)
|
6,626
|
5,868
|
Final proposed dividend of 6.00 cents per ordinary share (2023:
4.90 cents)1
|
11,358
|
9,277
|
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
|
17,984
|
15,145
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
1 Based
on 189,300,748 ordinary shares in issue on 2 December
2024.
7. Earnings and net asset value per ordinary
share
Revenue earnings, capital earnings and net asset value per ordinary
share are shown below and have been calculated using the
following:
|
Year ended
30 September
2024
|
Year ended
30 September
2023
|
|
|
|
Net revenue profit attributable to ordinary shareholders
(US$'000)
|
18,884
|
15,872
|
Net capital profit attributable to ordinary shareholders
(US$'000)
|
39,664
|
58,984
|
|
-----------------
|
-----------------
|
Total profit attributable to ordinary shareholders
(US$'000)
|
58,548
|
74,856
|
|
==========
|
==========
|
Equity shareholders’ funds (US$’000)
|
406,243
|
363,598
|
|
==========
|
==========
|
The weighted average number of ordinary shares in issue during the
year on which the earnings per ordinary share was calculated
was:
|
189,325,748
|
189,325,748
|
The actual number of ordinary shares in issue at the end of the
year on which the net asset value per ordinary share was calculated
was:
|
189,325,748
|
189,325,748
|
Earnings per ordinary share
|
|
|
Revenue earnings per share (cents) – basic and diluted
|
9.97
|
8.38
|
Capital earnings per share (cents) – basic and diluted
|
20.95
|
31.16
|
|
-----------------
|
-----------------
|
Total earnings per share (cents) – basic and
diluted
|
30.92
|
39.54
|
|
==========
|
==========
|
|
As at
30 September
2024
|
As at
30 September
2023
|
Net asset value per ordinary share (cents)
|
214.57
|
192.05
|
Ordinary share price (cents)1
|
194.50
|
175.76
|
Net asset value per ordinary share (pence)1
|
159.96
|
157.35
|
Ordinary share price (pence)
|
145.00
|
144.00
|
|
==========
|
==========
|
1 Based
on an exchange rate of US$1.3414 to £1 at 30 September 2024 (30
September 2023: US$1.2206 to £1).
8. Called up share capital
|
Ordinary
shares
in issue
number
|
Treasury
shares
number
|
Total
shares
number
|
Nominal
value
US$’000
|
Allotted, called up and fully paid share capital
comprised:
|
|
|
|
|
Ordinary shares of 1 cent each:
|
|
|
|
|
At 30 September 2023
|
189,325,748
|
52,497,053
|
241,822,801
|
2,418
|
At 30 September 2024
|
189,325,748
|
52,497,053
|
241,822,801
|
2,418
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
=========
|
=========
|
During the year, the Company did not issue or buy back any ordinary
shares (2023: nil). Additionally, during the year no shares were
transferred into treasury (2023: nil).
Since the year end and up to 2 December 2024, the Company bought
25,000 ordinary shares back at an average price of 149.00p per
share for a total cost of £37,000. No shares were issued during the
year under review or post year end from 1 October 2024 up to the
date of this report.
9. Reserves
For the year ended 30 September 2024
|
|
Distributable reserves
|
|
Capital
redemption
reserve
US$’000
|
Special
reserve
US$’000
|
Capital
reserve
arising on
investments
sold
US$’000
|
Capital
reserve
arising on
revaluation of
investments
held
US$’000
|
Revenue
reserve
US$’000
|
At 30 September 2023
|
5,798
|
308,804
|
31,765
|
4,388
|
10,425
|
Movement during the year:
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total comprehensive income:
|
|
|
|
|
|
Net profit for the year
|
–
|
–
|
4,000
|
35,664
|
18,884
|
Transactions with owners, recorded directly to equity:
|
|
|
|
|
|
Dividends paid
|
–
|
–
|
–
|
–
|
(15,903)
|
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
At 30 September 2024
|
5,798
|
308,804
|
35,765
|
40,052
|
13,406
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
=========
|
=========
|
=========
|
For the year ended 30 September 2023
|
|
Distributable reserves
|
|
Capital
redemption
reserve
US$’000
|
Special
reserve
US$’000
|
Capital
reserve
arising on
investments
sold
US$’000
|
Capital
reserve
arising on
revaluation of
investments
held
US$’000
|
Revenue
reserve
US$’000
|
At 30 September 2022
|
5,798
|
308,804
|
21,748
|
(44,579)
|
8,467
|
Movement during the year:
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total comprehensive income:
|
|
|
|
|
|
Net profit for the year
|
–
|
–
|
10,017
|
48,967
|
15,872
|
Transactions with owners, recorded directly to equity:
|
|
|
|
|
|
Dividends paid
|
–
|
–
|
–
|
–
|
(13,914)
|
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
At 30 September 2023
|
5,798
|
308,804
|
31,765
|
4,388
|
10,425
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
=========
|
=========
|
=========
|
The share premium account and capital redemption reserve are not
distributable reserves under the Companies Act 2006. In accordance
with ICAEW Technical Release 02/17BL on Guidance on Realised and
Distributable Profits under the Companies Act 2006, the special
reserve and capital reserves may be used as distributable reserves
for all purposes and, in particular, the repurchase by the Company
of its ordinary shares and for payments such as dividends. In
accordance with the Company’s Articles of Association, the special
reserve, capital reserves and the revenue reserve may be
distributed by way of dividend. The gain on the capital reserve
arising on the revaluation of investments of US$40,052,000 (2023:
US$4,388,000) is subject to fair value movements and may not be
readily realisable at short notice, as such it may not be entirely
distributable. The investments are subject to financial risks, as
such capital reserves (arising on investments sold) and the revenue
reserve may not be entirely distributable if a loss occurred during
the realisation of these investments.
In June 2011, the Company cancelled its share premium account
pursuant to shareholders’ approval of a special resolution and
Court approval on 17 June 2011. The share premium account, which
totalled US$142,704,000 was transferred to a special
reserve.
In November 2013, the Company cancelled its share premium account
pursuant to shareholders’ approval of a special resolution and
Court approval on 6 November 2013. The share premium account, which
totalled US$88,326,000 was transferred to a special
reserve.
In March 2021, the Company cancelled its share premium account
pursuant to shareholders’ approval of a special resolution and
Court approval on 11 March 2021. The share premium account, which
totalled US$165,984,000 was transferred to a special
reserve.
10. Valuation of financial instruments
Financial assets and financial liabilities are either carried in
the Statement of Financial Position at their fair value
(investments and derivatives) or at an amount which is a reasonable
approximation of fair value (due from brokers, dividends and
interest receivable, due to brokers, accruals, cash at bank and
bank overdrafts). IFRS 13 requires the Company to classify fair
value measurements using a fair value hierarchy that reflects the
significance of inputs used in making the measurements. The
valuation techniques used by the Company are explained in the
accounting policies note 2(g) to the Financial Statements in the
Company’s Annual Report for the year ended 30 September
2024.
Categorisation within the hierarchy has been determined on the
basis of the lowest level of input that is significant to the fair
value measurement of the relevant asset.
The fair value hierarchy has the following levels:
Level 1 – Quoted market price for identical instruments in
active markets
A financial instrument is regarded as quoted in an active market if
quoted prices are readily available from an exchange, dealer,
broker, industry group, pricing service or regulatory agency and
those prices represent actual and regularly occurring market
transactions on an arm’s length basis. The Company does not adjust
the quoted price for these instruments.
Level 2 – Valuation techniques using observable
inputs
This category includes instruments valued using quoted prices for
similar instruments in markets that are considered less than
active, or other valuation techniques where all significant inputs
are directly or indirectly observable from market data.
Valuation techniques used for non-standardised financial
instruments such as options, currency swaps and other
over-the-counter derivatives include the use of comparable recent
arm’s length transactions, reference to other instruments that are
substantially the same, discounted cash flow analysis, option
pricing models and other valuation techniques commonly used by
market participants making the maximum use of market inputs and
relying as little as possible on entity specific inputs.
As at the year end, the CFDs were valued using the underlying
equity bid price and the inputs to the valuation were the exchange
rates used to convert the CFD valuation from the relevant local
currency in which the underlying equity was priced to US Dollars at
the year-end date. There have been no changes to the valuation
technique since the previous year or as at the date of this
report.
Contracts for difference and forward currency contracts have all
been classified as Level 2 investments as their valuation has been
based on market observable inputs represented by the market prices
of the underlying quoted securities and exchange rates to which
these contracts expose the Company.
Level 3 – Valuation techniques using significant
unobservable inputs
This category includes all instruments where the valuation
technique includes inputs not based on market data and these inputs
could have a significant impact on the instrument’s
valuation.
This category also includes instruments that are valued based on
quoted prices for similar instruments where significant entity
determined adjustments or assumptions are required to reflect
differences between the instruments and instruments for which there
is no active market. The Investment Manager considers observable
data to be that market data that is readily available, regularly
distributed or updated, reliable and verifiable, not proprietary,
and provided by independent sources that are actively involved in
the relevant market.
The level in the fair value hierarchy within which the fair value
measurement is categorised in its entirety is determined on the
basis of the lowest level input that is significant to the fair
value measurement. If a fair value measurement uses observable
inputs that require significant adjustment based on unobservable
inputs, that measurement is a Level 3 measurement.
Assessing the significance of a particular input to the fair value
measurement in its entirety requires judgement, considering factors
specific to the asset or liability including an assessment of the
relevant risks including but not limited to credit risk, market
risk, liquidity risk, business risk and sustainability risk. The
determination of what constitutes ‘observable’ inputs requires
significant judgement by the Investment Manager and these risks are
adequately captured in the assumptions and inputs used in
measurement of Level 3 assets or liabilities.
Fair values of financial assets and financial
liabilities
For exchange listed equity investments, the quoted price is the bid
price. Substantially, all investments are valued based on
unadjusted quoted market prices. Where such quoted prices are
readily available in an active market, such prices are not required
to be assessed or adjusted for any business risks, including
climate risk, in accordance with the fair value related
requirements of the Company’s financial reporting
framework.
The table below sets out fair value measurements using IFRS 13 fair
value hierarchy.
Financial assets/(liabilities) at fair value through profit or
loss
at 30 September 2024
|
Level 1
US$’000
|
Level 2
US$’000
|
Level 3
US$’000
|
Total
US$’000
|
Assets:
|
|
|
|
|
Equity investments
|
343,749
|
–
|
–
|
343,749
|
Cash Fund
|
68,559
|
–
|
–
|
68,559
|
Contracts for difference (fair value)
|
–
|
2,756
|
–
|
2,756
|
Liabilities:
|
|
|
|
|
Contracts for difference (fair value)
|
–
|
(1,561)
|
–
|
(1,561)
|
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
|
412,308
|
1,195
|
–
|
413,503
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
=========
|
=========
|
Financial assets/(liabilities) at fair value through profit or
loss
at 30 September 2023
|
Level 1
US$’000
|
Level 2
US$’000
|
Level 3
US$’000
|
Total
US$’000
|
Assets:
|
|
|
|
|
Equity investments
|
309,642
|
–
|
–
|
309,642
|
Cash Fund
|
64,875
|
–
|
–
|
64,875
|
Contracts for difference (fair value)
|
–
|
1,402
|
–
|
1,402
|
Liabilities:
|
|
|
|
|
Contracts for difference (fair value)
|
–
|
(3,234)
|
–
|
(3,234)
|
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
---------------
|
|
374,517
|
(1,832)
|
–
|
372,685
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
=========
|
=========
|
There were no transfers between levels of financial assets and
financial liabilities during the year ended 30 September
2024.
The Company held no Level 3 assets or liabilities during the year
ended 30 September 2024 (2023: nil).
11. Related party disclosure
Directors’ emoluments
At the date of this report, the Board consists of five
non-executive Directors, all of whom are considered to be
independent of the Manager by the Board.
Disclosures of the Directors’ interests in the ordinary shares of
the Company and fees and expenses payable to the Directors are set
out in the Directors’ Remuneration Report in the Company’s Annual
Report for the year ended 30 September 2024. At 30 September 2024,
US$20,000 (£15,000) (2023: US$20,000 (£17,000)) was outstanding in
respect of Directors’ fees.
Significant holdings
The following investors are:
a. funds
managed by the BlackRock Group or are affiliates of BlackRock Inc.
(Related BlackRock Funds); or
b. investors
(other than those listed in (a) above) who held more than 20% of
the voting shares in issue in the Company and are as a result,
considered to be related parties to the Company (Significant
Investors).
As at 30 September 2024
|
Total % of shares
held by Related
BlackRock Funds
|
Total % of shares held by
Significant Investors who are
not affiliates of
BlackRock Group
or BlackRock, Inc.
|
Number of
Significant Investors who are
not affiliates of
BlackRock Group or
BlackRock, Inc.
|
As at 30 September 2024
|
4.0
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
As at 30 September 2023
|
4.1
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
|
=========
|
=========
|
=========
|
12. Transactions with the Investment Manager and
AIFM
BlackRock Fund Managers Limited (BFM) provides management and
administration services to the Company under a contract which is
terminable on six months’ notice. BFM has (with the Company’s
consent) delegated certain portfolio and risk management services,
and other ancillary services, to BlackRock Investment Management
(UK) Limited (BIM (UK)). Further details of the investment
management contract are disclosed in the Directors’ Report in the
Company’s Annual Report for the year ended 30 September
2024.
The investment management fee due for the year ended 30 September
2024 amounted to US$4,204,000 (2023: US$3,783,000). The performance
fee payable for the year ended 30 September 2024 amounted to
US$3,510,000 (2023: US$8,272,000).
At the year end, US$3,204,000 (2023: US$2,902,000) was outstanding
in respect of management fees and US$3,510,000 (2023: US$8,272,000)
was outstanding in respect of performance fees.
In addition to the above services, BIM (UK) has provided the
Company with marketing services. The total fees paid or payable for
these services for the year ended 30 September 2024 amounted to
US$211,000 (2023: US$90,000) excluding VAT. Marketing fees of
US$344,000 (US$143,000) excluding VAT were outstanding at the year
end.
The Company has an investment in the BlackRock Institutional Cash
Series plc – US Dollar Liquid Environmentally Aware Fund of
US$68,559,000 (2023: US$64,875,000) at the year end, which is a
fund managed by a company within the BlackRock Group. The Company’s
investment in the Cash Fund is held in a share class on which no
management fees are paid to BlackRock to avoid double
dipping.
The ultimate holding company of the Manager and the Investment
Manager is BlackRock, Inc., a company incorporated in Delaware,
USA.
13. Contingent liabilities
There were no contingent liabilities at 30 September 2024 (2023:
nil).
14. PUBLICATION OF NON STATUTORY
ACCOUNTS
The financial information contained in this announcement does not
constitute statutory accounts as defined in the Companies Act 2006.
The 2024 Annual Report and Financial Statements will be filed with
the Registrar of Companies shortly.
The report of the Auditor for the year ended 30 September 2024
contains no qualification or statement under Section 498(2) or (3)
of the Companies Act 2006.
The comparative figures are extracts from the audited financial
statements of BlackRock Frontiers Investment Trust plc for the year
ended 30 September 2023, which have been filed with the Registrar
of Companies. The
report of the Auditor on those financial statements contained no
qualification or statement under Section 498 of the Companies
Act.
This announcement was approved by the Board of Directors on 4
December 2024.
15. ANNUAL REPORT
Copies of the annual report will be sent to members shortly and
will be available from the registered office, c/o The Company
Secretary, BlackRock Frontiers Investment Trust plc, 12 Throgmorton
Avenue, London EC2N 2DL.
16. ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING
The Annual General Meeting of the Company will be held at 12
Throgmorton Avenue, London EC2N 2DL on Wednesday, 5 February 2025
at 12:30 p.m.
The Annual Report will also be available on the BlackRock website
at blackrock.com/uk/brfi. 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.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, PLEASE
CONTACT:
Sarah Beynsberger, Director, Investment Trusts, BlackRock
Investment Management (UK) Limited
Tel: 020 7743 3000
Press enquiries:
Lansons Communications
Email: BlackRockInvestmentTrusts@lansons.com
Tel: 020
7490 8828
4 December 2024
12 Throgmorton Avenue
London EC2N 2DL
END