British Smaller Companies VCT
plc
Annual Financial Report
Announcement
for the year ended 31 March
2024
British Smaller Companies VCT plc
(the "Company") today announces its audited results for the year
ended 31 March 2024.
HIGHLIGHTS
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|
4.7 per cent return on opening net
assets, before dividends of 4.0 pence paid in the year, driven by
both underlying revenue growth in portfolio companies and positive
realisations.
|
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Net asset value at 31 March 2024 of
83.6 pence per share (2023: 83.7 pence per share), with 3.9 pence
increase in Total Return to 262.5 pence per share.
|
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Realisations generated total
proceeds of £16.5 million in the year, a gain of £4.6 million over
the opening carrying value and £11.3 million over cost, a blended
return of 3.1x cost.
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Two new investments and six
follow-on investments totalling £9.1 million completed during the
year. Two new investments totalling £4.7 million completed since
the year end.
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Total dividends paid during the year
ended 31 March 2024 of 4.0 pence per share (2023: 8.5 pence per
share), bringing total cumulative dividends paid since inception to
178.9 pence per share at 31 March 2024 (2023: 174.9 pence per
share).
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£62.4 million raised in the
year. £44.3
million raised in 2022/23 and allotted in April 2023, £18.1 million
raised in 2023/24 and allotted in January 2024. An additional £36.8
million raised in 2023/24 and allotted post-year-end in April
2024.
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The Board is declaring an interim
dividend of 2.0 pence per share in respect of the year ending 31
March 2025. The dividend will be paid on 26 July 2024 to
shareholders on the register on 28 June 2024.
|
Chair's
Statement
I am pleased to
present the 2024 annual report and financial statements of British
Smaller Companies VCT plc (the "Company"), which highlight steady
progress for the Company despite a challenging global economic and
political environment.
The year has been characterised by
the US, UK and European economies tackling persistently high
inflation. UK interest rates were still rising in the early
part of the Company's financial year, reaching a peak of 5.25 per
cent by August. While rates of inflation have come down
since, they remain stubbornly above central bank target rates,
resulting in delayed cuts to interest rates which continue to weigh
on the economy.
Across this period the Company has
generated a 4.7 per cent return on its opening net asset value in
the year. Over the same period, the FTSE Small Cap rose by 4.4 per
cent, while the AIC's index of generalist VCTs rose by 0.3 per cent
on a Share Price Total Return basis.
Two continuing trends have driven
this positive return. First, portfolio companies have adapted
well to market conditions and, while focused on capital efficiency,
are still achieving good growth rates in most cases. Of the 24
portfolio companies valued on a revenue basis, all but five have
demonstrated positive revenue growth over the last 12 months, and
nine have delivered growth of over 40 per cent. This growth
has helped to offset the impact of lower valuation multiples, and
leaves the portfolio well placed for further growth as market
conditions improve.
Second, the portfolio continues to
achieve positive realisations in a market where many firms have
struggled to convert book values into cash. In the year the Company
fully realised four investments and partially realised a further
two for combined proceeds of £16.5 million at a blended return of
3.1 times cost; these were pleasing outcomes for the Company and
reflect the Company's ethos of working closely with management
teams to generate positive returns from all of its
investments.
Financial Performance
In 2024, the Company delivered a 3.9
pence per ordinary share increase in Total Return which, as noted
above, is equivalent to 4.7 per cent of the opening net asset value
at 31 March 2023. Total Return is now 262.5 pence per ordinary
share.
The portfolio drove the positive
performance, which generated a return of £10.6 million, 8.6 per
cent over its opening value with £4.6 million of the return from
realised investments and £6.0 million from unrealised investments.
New and follow-on investments totalling £9.1 million were completed
in the year.
Realisations in the Year
Realisations of portfolio investments
generated total proceeds of £16.5 million, a gain of £4.6 million
over the opening carrying value and £11.3 million over the original
cost. There were four full realisations in the year: Ncam, E2E,
MacroArt and DisplayPlan; and two partial realisations: KeTech and
Arcus.
The investment in Ncam was realised
in April 2023, generating initial proceeds of £1.4 million (0.6x
cost), with the potential for additional receipts of up to £1.2
million over the coming years, which would see the Company fully
recover its investment. £0.3 million of deferred proceeds have been
recognised at the year-end.
In November 2023 the Company exited
its investment in E2E for £2.0 million, representing a 2.5x return
on the Company's cost; and MacroArt for £1.5 million, representing
a 2.0x return on cost.
To maximise shareholder value, the
KeTech business was split into its two component parts, Rail and
Defence. The Defence business was subsequently sold in
January 2024, generating proceeds of £1.5 million. To date,
the Company has realised proceeds of £4.1 million from its KeTech
investment, a 2.0x return on cost, while still retaining its
investment in the Rail business, which at the year-end was valued
at £1.2 million.
In January 2024 the Company realised
part of its investment in Arcus, generating proceeds of £0.3
million, while still retaining its investment in the remaining
restructured business which at the year-end was valued at £1.0
million. This combined £1.3 million of value to date equates to
0.4x cost.
In February 2024, the Company sold
its investment in Displayplan for £9.0 million. Total
proceeds received over the life of the investment are £12.5
million, an excellent 9.6x return on the Company's cost. There is
the potential for further deferred proceeds in due course with £0.6
million of deferred proceeds recognised at the year-end.
New Investments
The Company invested £9.1 million in
the year into the portfolio. Two new investments were made in the
year, totalling £4.9 million. In our continued support of the
portfolio, six companies received follow-on funding in the year,
totalling £4.2 million.
The new investments are:
Investment
Sector
GEEIQ
Data and market intelligence platform in the gaming
space
Workbuzz
SaaS based employee engagement, survey and insights
platform
Financial Results
The movement in net asset value
("NAV") per ordinary share and the dividends paid in the year are
set out in the table below:
|
Pence
per
ordinary
share
|
£000
|
NAV at 31 March 2023
|
|
83.7
|
|
157,032
|
Increase in value
|
2.3
|
|
6,045
|
|
Gain on disposal of
investments
|
1.7
|
|
4,475
|
|
Net underlying change in investment
portfolio
|
4.0
|
|
10,520
|
|
Net operating income
|
-
|
|
98
|
|
Total Return in period
|
|
4.0
|
|
10,618
|
Issue/buy-back of new
shares
|
|
(0.1)
|
|
61,585
|
NAV before the payment of
dividends
|
|
87.6
|
|
229,235
|
Dividends paid
|
|
(4.0)
|
|
(9,635)
|
NAV
at 31 March 2024
|
|
83.6
|
|
219,600
|
Cumulative dividends paid
|
|
178.9
|
|
|
Total
Return:
at 31 March 2024
|
|
262.5
|
|
|
at 31
March 2023
|
|
258.6
|
|
|
The charts on page 11 of the annual
report show the movement in Total Return and Net Asset Value over
time in greater detail.
The portfolio investments held at
the beginning of the financial year, amounting to £123.4 million,
delivered a return over the year of £10.6 million. There was a gain
of £0.1 million arising from prior year realisations, and the
realisation of the listed investments generated a value reduction
of £0.2 million.
The current portfolio's net
valuation increased by £6.0 million. Within this there were gains
of £14.8 million, offset by £8.8 million of downward
movements.
Treasury
Due to the nature of its structure,
a proportion of the Company's net assets will be held in cash and
cash equivalents at any point in time. As interest rates have
risen, the Company has taken an active approach to generating a
good return on liquid funds, whilst remaining focused on the
primary goal of capital preservation.
A portion of the Company's liquid
assets are held across a diversified range of Triple-A rated money
market funds, managed by global institutions, while the balance is
held as readily accessible cash, all of which is held at Tier 1
Financial Institutions (A2 rated or above).
The Company's small externally
managed listed portfolio was exited in the period, due to the
better risk-adjusted return profile available in money market funds
and cash deposits.
In the year, the Company generated a
return of £2.8 million on its liquid assets, and at year-end was
generating a weighted run-rate return on these assets of around 4.8
per cent per annum.
Dividends
Dividends paid in the year totalled
4.0 pence per ordinary share. These comprised interim dividends of
4.0 pence per ordinary share for the year ended 31 March 2024.
Cumulative dividends paid as at 31 March 2024 were 178.9 pence per
ordinary share.
An interim dividend for the year
ending 31 March 2025 of 2.0 pence per ordinary share will be paid
on 26 July 2024, to shareholders on the register at 28 June
2024.
Dividend Re-investment Scheme
("DRIS")
The Company operates a DRIS, which
gives shareholders the opportunity to re-invest any cash dividends
received; it is open to all shareholders, including those who
invested under the recent offers. The main advantages of the DRIS
are:
1
the dividends remain tax free; and
2
any DRIS investment attracts income tax relief at the rate of 30
per cent.
For the financial year ended 31
March 2024, £2.0 million was re-invested by way of the DRIS, from
overall dividends paid of £9.6 million.
Fundraising
During the year the Company received
net proceeds of £44.3 million from its 2022/23 fundraising,
allotted in April 2023; and £18.1 million from the first allotment
of its 2023/24 fundraising, allotted in January 2024.
Shareholder Relations
Investor
workshop
The annual shareholder workshop held
on 20 June 2023 was well attended. Attendees heard from Tom Dunlop,
CEO of Summize, and Philip Hunt, Chair of Vuealta.
The Company also hosted an online
webinar on 27 November 2023, which included presentations from Tom
Whicher, CEO of DrDoctor, and Mal Barritt, CEO of
TravelTek.
We are pleased to confirm that the
next in-person shareholder workshop will be held jointly with
British Smaller Companies VCT2 plc on 20 June 2024 at One Great
George Street, Westminster, London SW1 3AA.
The electronic communications policy
continues to be a success, with 82 per cent of shareholders now
receiving communications in this way. Documents such as the annual
report are published on the website www.bscfunds.com
rather than by post, saving on printing costs, as
well as being more environmentally friendly.
The Company's website,
www.bscfunds.com.,
is refreshed on a regular basis and provides a comprehensive level
of information in what I hope is a user-friendly format.
Annual General Meeting
The Annual General Meeting of the
Company will be held at 9:30 am on 10 September 2024 at Thomas
House, 84 Ecclestone Square, London SW1V 1PX. Full details of the
agenda for this meeting are included in the Notice of the Annual
General Meeting on page 92 of the annual report.
Events After the Balance Sheet Date
On 3 April 2024 the Company allotted
the final shares from its fully subscribed 2023/24 share
offer. Gross proceeds of £36.8 million were raised, resulting
in the issue of 42,588,037 ordinary shares. This increased
the number of ordinary shares in issue to 305,247,398.
Subsequent to the year end, £4.7
million has been invested into two new investments, Fuuse and
Ohalo.
Outlook
While rates of inflation have come
down in recent months, central banks remain wary of its
persistence, which is seeing interest rates remaining at elevated
levels for longer than originally anticipated. Ongoing
geopolitical instability, particularly in Ukraine and the Middle
East, may negatively impact western economies, while upcoming US
and UK elections may also provide some uncertainty.
Portfolio companies have performed
well while maintaining a focus on capital efficiency over the past
12 months. They are therefore now well placed to take on
further funding to accelerate growth, and we anticipate significant
opportunities to deploy capital into the Company's most promising
investments over the course of the next year. The Company's
2023/24 fundraising leaves it well placed to provide this support,
as well as adding new companies to the portfolio in the coming
year.
Rupert Cook
Chair
14 June 2024
Objectives and Key
Policies
The
Company's objective is to maximise Total Return and provide
investors with a long-term tax free dividend yield whilst
maintaining the Company's status as a venture capital
trust.
Investment Strategy
The Company seeks to build a broad
portfolio of investments in early-stage companies focused on
growth, with the aim of spreading the maturity profiles and
maximising return, as well as ensuring compliance with VCT
Regulations.
The Company predominantly invests in
unquoted smaller companies and expects that this will continue to
make up the significant majority of the portfolio. It will also
retain holdings in cash or near-cash investments to provide a
reserve of liquidity which will maximise the Company's flexibility
as to the timing of investment acquisitions and disposals, dividend
payments and share buy-backs.
Unquoted investments are structured
using various investment instruments, including ordinary shares,
preference shares, convertible securities and very occasionally
loan stock, to achieve an appropriate balance of income and capital
growth, having regard to the VCT Regulations. The portfolio is
diversified by investing in a broad range of industry sectors. The
normal investment period into the portfolio companies is expected
to be typically between the range of five to seven
years.
Investment Policy
The investment policy of the Company
is to invest in UK businesses across a broad range of sectors that
blends a mix of businesses operating in established and emerging
industries that offer opportunities in the application and
development of innovation in their products and
services.
These investments will all meet the
definition of a Qualifying Investment and be primarily in unquoted
UK companies. It is anticipated that the majority of these will be
re-investing their profits for growth and the investments will
comprise mainly equity instruments.
The Company seeks to build a broad
portfolio of investments in early-stage companies focused on growth
with the aim of spreading the maturity profiles and maximising
return as well as ensuring compliance with the VCT
guidelines.
Borrowing
The Company does not borrow and has
no borrowing facilities, choosing to fund investments from its own
resources.
Co-investment
British Smaller Companies VCT plc and
British Smaller Companies VCT2 plc (together "the VCTs") typically
co-invest in investments, allocating such investments 60 per cent
to the Company and 40 per cent to British Smaller Companies VCT2
plc. However, the Board of the Company has discretion as to whether
or not to take up its allocation; where British Smaller Companies
VCT2 plc does not take its allocation, the Board may opt to
increase the Company's allocation in such opportunities.
The VCTs may invest alongside
co-investment funds managed by YFM, the Manager of the VCTs. The
VCTs have first priority on all equity investment opportunities
meeting the VCT qualifying criteria. Non-VCT qualifying investments
are allocated to YFM's co-investment funds.
Asset Mix
Cash which is pending investment in
VCT-qualifying securities is held in money market funds and
interest bearing instant access and short-notice bank
accounts.
Remuneration Policy
The Company's policy on the
remuneration of its directors, all of whom are non-executive, can
be found on page 49 of the annual report.
Other Key Policies
Details of the Company's policies on
the payment of dividends, the DRIS and the buy-back of shares are
given on page 1 of the annual report. In addition to these, details
of the Company's anti-bribery and environmental and social
responsibilities policies can be found on
page 35 of the annual report.
Processes and Operations
The Manager
is responsible for the sourcing and screening of investment
opportunities, carrying out suitable due diligence investigations
and making submissions to the Board regarding potential
investments.
Post investment, the Manager works
intensively with the businesses and management teams in which the
Company is invested, monitoring progress, effecting change and,
where applicable, redefining strategies with a view to maximising
values through structured exit processes.
The Board regularly monitors the
performance of the portfolio and the investment requirements set by
the relevant VCT legislation. Reports are received from the Manager
regarding the trading and financial position of each investee
company and senior members of the Manager regularly attend the
Company's Board meetings. Monitoring reports on compliance with VCT
regulations are also received at each Board meeting so that the
Board can monitor that the Venture Capital Trust status of the
Company is maintained and take corrective action if appropriate.
Monitoring reports carrying out an independent review of this
compliance are received twice a year.
The Board reviews the terms of YFM
Private Equity Limited's appointment as Manager on a regular
basis.
YFM Private Equity Limited has
performed investment advisory/management, administrative and
secretarial services for the Company since its inception on 28
February 1996. The principal terms of the agreement under which
these services are performed are set out in note 3 to the financial
statements.
In the opinion of the directors, the
continuing appointment of YFM Private Equity Limited as Manager is
in the interests of the shareholders as a whole, in view of its
experience in managing venture capital trusts and in making,
managing and exiting investments of the nature falling within the
Company's investment policies.
Key Performance
Indicators
Total
Return, calculated by reference to
the cumulative dividends paid plus net asset value (excluding tax
reliefs received by shareholders), is the primary measure of
performance in the VCT industry.
The chart on page 11 of the annual report shows how the Total
Return of your Company has developed over the last ten
years.
The evaluation of comparative
success of the Company's Total Return is by way of reference to the
Share Price Total Return for an index of generalist VCTs that are
members of the AIC (based on figures provided by Morningstar). This
is the Company's stated benchmark index. A comparison and
explanation of the calculation of this return is shown in the
Directors' Remuneration Report on page 51 of the annual
report.
The second
chart on page 11 of the annual report illustrates the Total Return
(excluding tax reliefs received by shareholders) for investors who
subscribed to the first fundraising in 1996 who have re-invested
their dividends.
Shareholder Returns
The Board considers Total Return to
be the primary measure of shareholder value. The IRR returns from
the offers over the last ten years are set out on page 12 of the
annual report. IRR is the annual rate of return that equates the
cost at the date of the original investment, with the value of
subsequent dividends plus the audited 31 March 2024 Net Asset Value
per share. This excludes the benefit of any initial tax
relief.
The IRRs shown are based on
fundraisings and offer prices during the relevant calendar year
whilst the second graph shows specific financial periods to 31
March 2024. Note, there were no fundraisings in 2018 and 2020
and it is too soon to give meaningful returns for the fundraising
in 2023 and 2024.
Also set
out on page 12 of the annual report is the annualised return over
10, 5, 3, 2 and 1 years to 31 March 2024. The annualised return is
calculated with reference to the cumulative dividends paid in the
period plus the audited NAV at 31 March 2024, compared to the NAV
at the beginning of the relevant period.
Expenses
Ongoing
Charges
The Ongoing Charges figure, as
calculated in line with the AIC recommended methodology, is used by
the Board to monitor expenses. This figure shows shareholders the
costs of the Company's recurring operational expenses, expressed as
a percentage of the average net asset value. Whilst based on
historical information, this provides an indication of the likely
level of costs that will be incurred in managing the Company in the
future.
|
Year to
31
March
2024
(%)
|
Year to
31
March
2023
(%)
|
Ongoing Charges
figure*
|
1.85
|
2.12
|
* Alternative Performance
Measure.
Shareholders benefit from the
Company's agreement with the Manager to pay a lower level of
management fee of 1 per cent on surplus cash. The Company's ongoing
charges ratio is one of the lowest in the VCT industry.
Expenses Cap
The total costs incurred by the
Company in the year (excluding any performance related fees, trail
commission payable to financial intermediaries and VAT) is capped
at 2.9 per cent of the total net asset value as at the relevant
year end. The treatment of costs in excess of the cap is described
in note 3 below. There was no breach of the expenses cap in the
current or prior year.
Compliance with VCT
Legislative Tests
A principal risk facing the Company
is the retention of its VCT qualifying status. The Board receives
regular reports on compliance with the VCT legislative tests from
the Manager. In addition, the Board receives formal reports from
its VCT Tax Adviser (Philip Hare & Associates LLP) twice a
year. The Board can confirm that during the period, all of the VCT
legislative tests have been met.
Under Chapter 3 Part 6 of the Income
Tax Act 2007, in addition to the requirement for a VCT's ordinary
share capital to be listed in the Official List on a European
regulated market throughout the period, there are further specific
tests that VCTs must meet following the initial three year
provisional period.
Income Test
The Company's income in the period
must be derived wholly or mainly (70 per cent) from shares or
securities.
Retained Income Test
The Company must not retain more than
15 per cent of its income from shares and securities.
Qualifying Investments Test
At least 80 per cent by value of the
Company's investments must be represented throughout the period by
shares or securities comprised in Qualifying Investments of
investee companies.
For shares issued in accounting
periods beginning on or after 6 April 2018, at least 30 per cent of
those share issues must be invested in Qualifying Investments of
investee companies by the anniversary of the accounting period in
which those shares are issued.
Eligible Shares Test
At least 70 per cent of the Company's
Qualifying Investments must be represented throughout the period by
holdings of non-preferential shares.
Investments made before 6 April 2018
from funds raised before 6 April 2011 are excluded from this
requirement.
At least 10 per cent of the Company's
total investment in each Qualifying Investment must be in eligible
shares.
In addition, monies are not permitted
to be used to finance buy-outs or otherwise to acquire existing
businesses or shares.
Investment Limits
There is an annual limit for each
investee company which provides that they may not raise more than
£5 million of state aided investment (including from VCTs) in the
12 months ending on the date of each investment (£10 million for
Knowledge Intensive Companies).
There is also a lifetime limit that a
business may not raise more than £12 million of state aided
investment (including from VCTs); the limit for Knowledge Intensive
Companies is £20 million.
Maximum Single Investment Test
The value of any one investment must
not, at any time in the period, represent more than 15 per cent of
the Company's total investment value. This is calculated at the
time of investment and updated should there be further additions;
as such, it cannot be breached passively.
The Board can confirm that during the
period, all of the VCT legislative tests set out above have been
met, where required.
Further restrictions placed on VCTs
are:
Dividends from Cancelled Share Premium
The Finance Act 2014 introduced a
restriction with respect to the use of monies in respect of VCTs.
In particular, no dividends can be paid out of cancelled share
premium arising from shares allotted on or after 6 April 2014 until
at least three full financial years have elapsed from the date of
allotment.
In October 2022 the Company cancelled
the balance of its Share Premium, £63.6 million, of which £30.0
million is now distributable. The remaining £33.6 million will
become distributable over the period to 1 April 2026, as set out on
page 63 of the annual report.
Other
No more than seven years can have
elapsed since the first commercial sale achieved by the business
(ten years in the case of a Knowledge Intensive Company),
unless:
a.
The
business has previously received an investment from a source that
has received state aid; or
b.
The
investment comprises more than 50 per cent of the average of the
previous five years' turnover and the funds are to be used in the
business to fund growth into new product markets and/or new
geographies.
Wherever possible, the Company
self-assures that an investment is a Qualifying Investment, subject
to the receipt of professional advice.
Portfolio Structure and Analysis
Portfolio
Structure
The broad range of the portfolio is
illustrated on page 15 of the annual report, with 35 per cent of
the portfolio valuation being held for more than five years, while
93 per cent is valued at cost or above. 9 per cent of the portfolio
value is held in loans and preference shares, and loans account for
only 3 per cent of the value.
Portfolio
Analysis
Also included on page 16 of the
annual report is a profile of the portfolio by industry
sector.
Investment Review
The movements in the investment
portfolio are set out in Table A below:
Table A
Investment
Portfolio
|
Portfolio
£million
|
Listed
Investment
Funds
£million
|
Total
£million
|
Opening fair value at 1
April 2023
|
123.4
|
4.0
|
127.4
|
Additions
|
9.1
|
0.3
|
9.4
|
Disposal
proceeds
|
(16.5)
|
(4.1)
|
(20.6)
|
Valuation
movement
|
10.6
|
(0.2)
|
10.4
|
Closing fair value at 31
March 2024
|
126.6
|
-
|
126.6
|
Accrued
income
|
2.1
|
-
|
2.1
|
Financial assets -
investments
|
128.7
|
-
|
128.7
|
At 31 March 2024 the portfolio was
valued at £126.6 million, representing 57.6 per cent of net assets
(78.6 per cent at 31 March 2023). Cash and cash equivalents at 31
March 2024 of £89.8 million represented 40.9 per cent of net assets
(18.0 per cent at 31 March 2023).
The
Portfolio
£126.6 million
|
Fair value of the portfolio
|
(2023: £123.4 million)
|
25
|
Number of portfolio companies with an investment value of more
than £1.0 million
|
(2023: 27)
|
£1.1 million
|
Income from the portfolio
|
(2023: £1.4 million)
|
£9.1 million
|
Level of investment
|
(2023: £28.4 million)
|
£10.6 million
|
Return from the portfolio
|
(2023: £14.2 million)
|
The
portfolio showed robust performance in the period, adding £10.6
million of value on the opening fair value of £123.4 million. The
composition of investments continues to show its dynamism, with
£9.1 million invested in the period and cash proceeds of £16.5
million received.
Fair value
changes
Table
B
Gain from Investment
Portfolio
|
£million
|
%
|
Gain in fair value from the
portfolio
|
6.0
|
57
|
Gain on disposal over opening value
from the portfolio
|
4.6
|
43
|
Gain arising from the portfolio
|
10.6
|
100
|
|
|
|
Loss on disposal of listed investment
funds
|
(0.2)
|
|
Valuation movement from the investment
portfolio
|
10.4
|
|
Deferred consideration from prior
year realisation
|
0.1
|
|
Gain arising from the investment portfolio
|
10.5
|
|
Of the £10.6 million gain from the
portfolio in the year, £4.6 million arose from investments which
were realised, including Displayplan (£1.7 million), Macro Art
(£0.9 million), the partial realisation of KeTech (£0.9 million),
and E2E (£0.8 million). Further details can be found in the Chair's
Statement and note 7 to the financial statements.
The ongoing portfolio delivered a
net value gain of £6.0 million in the year, which arose across a
range of companies, including Unbiased, Matillion, SharpCloud,
Traveltek and Vypr.
Some decreases in value have been
seen, notably Outpost, Relative Insight and Wooshii; as with all
portfolio companies, the Manager continues to work closely with the
companies' management teams to aid their progress and
growth.
Other Significant Investment
Movements
Investments
During the year ended 31 March 2024,
the Company invested £9.1 million across 8 companies.
Two new companies were added to the
portfolio, receiving aggregate investment of £4.9 million; while a
further £4.2 million was invested across six existing portfolio
companies. The analysis of these investments is shown in Table
C.
Table C
Investments
Company
|
Investments made
|
New
£million
|
Follow-on
£million
|
Total
£million
|
Workbuzz
|
2.6
|
-
|
2.6
|
GEEIQ
|
2.3
|
-
|
2.3
|
Outpost
|
-
|
1.3
|
1.3
|
Relative Insight
|
-
|
1.2
|
1.2
|
Force24
|
-
|
0.7
|
0.7
|
Vuealta
|
-
|
0.5
|
0.5
|
Elucidat
|
-
|
0.3
|
0.3
|
SharpCloud
|
-
|
0.2
|
0.2
|
Portfolio
|
4.9
|
4.2
|
9.1
|
Listed investment funds
|
|
|
0.3
|
Total additions in the year
|
|
|
9.4
|
Disposal of Investments
As set out in Table D below, during
the year to 31 March 2024 the Company received proceeds from
disposals of £20.7 million, a net gain of £4.5 million over the
opening carrying value at the beginning of the year, and an overall
net gain of £10.5 million over cost. This included the successful
realisations of Displayplan, E2E, Macro Art, Ncam and KeTech
(partial). Further details are given in the Chair's statement
above.
Table D
Disposal of
Investments
|
Net
proceeds
from sale
of
investments
£million
|
Opening
value
31
March
2023
£million
|
Gain/(loss)
on
opening
value
£million
|
Portfolio
|
16.5
|
11.9
|
4.6
|
Deferred consideration
|
0.1
|
-
|
0.1
|
Listed investment funds*
|
4.1
|
4.3
|
(0.2)
|
Total investment disposals
|
20.7
|
16.2
|
4.5
|
* opening value includes additions
of £0.3 million made during the year.
Further analysis of all investments
sold in the year can be found in note 7 to the financial statements
below.
Investment Portfolio
Composition
As at 31 March 2024, the portfolio
was valued at £126.6 million, comprising wholly of unquoted
investments. An analysis of the movements in the year is shown
below.
The portfolio has 25 investments
valued above £1.0 million, with the single largest investment,
Matillion, representing 12.5 per cent of the NAV.
The charts on pages 15 and 16 of the
annual report show the diversity of the portfolio, split by
industry sector, investment instrument, age of investment, and the
valuation compared to cost.
Under VCT legislation, it is not
possible to deposit funds for longer than seven days, which means
that cash deposits must be available on very short notice. The
Company takes an active approach to cash management, whilst
pursuing its primary aim of capital preservation. This is effected
through the use of a pool of money market funds (which can be
converted back to cash with immediate notice) and cash deposits
held with tier one banking institutions. £2.8 million of income was
earned from money market funds and bank deposits during the year.
At 31 March 2024, the Company was achieving a weighted average
return on liquid assets of 4.8 per cent.
During the year, the Company
realised its small diversified quoted portfolio of listed
investment funds, managed by Brewin Dolphin, held as part of its
previous treasury operations. This sale generated proceeds of £4.1
million.
Valuation
Policy
Unquoted investments are valued in
accordance with both IFRS 13 'Fair Value Measurement' and
International Private Equity and Venture Capital Guidelines,
December 2022 edition (IPEV Guidelines).
Initially, at the first quarter-end
following investment, investments are valued at the price of the
funding round; following this, the valuation switches to a new
primary basis for all subsequent periods.
The valuation methodology applied
depends upon the facts and circumstances of each individual
investment. This may be with reference to revenue multiples,
earnings multiples, net assets, discounted cash flows or calibrated
from the price of the most recent investment.
The full valuation policy is set out
in note 1 on pages 66 and 67 of the annual report.
Table E shows the value of
investments within each valuation category as at 31 March 2024; no
investments are valued using discounted cash flow
methodologies.
With continued investment in earlier
stage businesses that are investing for growth, the majority of
valuations continue to be based on revenue multiples.
Table E
Valuation
Policy
|
Valuation
£million
|
2024
% of
portfolio
by value
|
2023
%
of
portfolio
by
value
|
Revenue multiple
|
114.6
|
91
|
79
|
Earnings multiple
|
9.2
|
7
|
13
|
Net assets, reviewed for change in
fair value
|
2.5
|
2
|
2
|
Cost or price of recent investment,
reviewed for change in fair value
|
0.3
|
-
|
4
|
Sale proceeds
|
-
|
-
|
2
|
Total
|
126.6
|
100
|
100
|
Sustainable Investment and
Environmental, Social and Governance ("ESG")
Management
Whilst not Impact investors,
the Company backs small UK businesses to help them to grow and
produce strong financial returns for shareholders with the
additional aim of building better businesses that are ultimately
more sustainable.
In order to deliver more
sustainable businesses, and to meet its commitments under the
United Nation's Principles for Responsible Investment (PRI), the
Manager has continued to develop its processes in this
area.
The Manager's approach is
based on the belief that good businesses:
•
Grow our economy;
•
Improve our society;
•
Value their people; and
•
Protect the environment.
These aims are consistent with the Company's financial aims
because businesses which improve in these areas also strengthen
their resilience and value creation potential through their
increased attractiveness to customers, employees, suppliers and
eventual future owners and investors.
Sustainable Investment
Principles
This set of principles guides the
Manager's investment process:
•
To seek to understand the ESG related impacts and
potential impacts of investments, aiming to grow and enhance
positive impacts and to avoid, reduce or minimise any negative
impacts over an investment's lifetime, leaving them overall better
businesses;
•
To play a positive role in the investor, business
and wider communities by promoting good practice in ESG management,
and by being transparent in the way that investments are made and
how the Manager behaves;
•
To increase focus on the challenge of climate
change both as it may be affected by our investments, and as it may
impact on them and their resilience to possible climate change
scenarios;
•
To show leadership by managing the Manager's own
business' ESG impacts to the best of their ability; and
•
To be a proactive signatory to the PRI and to
integrate its principles into the Manager's business
practices.
In line with the PRI the Manager has
developed processes to help the portfolio businesses to be better
in each of these spheres, by assessing them in terms of creating
positive impacts and outcomes and preventing or minimising negative
ones.
The Manager has developed and
integrated the following ESG management processes:
Pre-investment
Phase:
Structured processes at the
pre-investment stage to identify areas of potential ESG improvement
and risk as part of the due diligence and pre-investment
deliberations. Appropriate data is collected and assessed on each
business against ESG criteria at the point of investment as a
benchmark against which to evaluate future progress.
Portfolio
Phase:
For those investments made since
2020, based on the data collected at the point of investment at the
start of the portfolio phase, bespoke areas for improvement are
agreed with each management team together with consequent
objectives and targets. A similar process has been applied to the
significant majority of investments made prior to 2020.
Improvements are then measured and recorded against a set of ESG
criteria using the Manager's bespoke ESG framework, refreshing
targets annually and placing focus on any new issues as they become
more material in the management of the company and in meeting the
expectations of its stakeholders.
Reporting:
Annual reports will be produced,
using the Manager's ESG framework for consistency, recording the
ESG KPI performance of each company and providing an overview of
progress across the Manager's portfolios.
Note that Investment Companies are
not within scope for reporting under the Task Force on
Climate-Related Financial Disclosures (TCFD); and the Company does
not use more than 40,000kWh of energy and therefore is not required
to report on its energy usage within Streamlined Energy and Carbon
Reporting regulations.
ESG Performance Data and
Reporting
ESG KPI data analysis
The Manager has developed its
own ESG KPI data collation process. It has established a data set
reflecting the above ESG themes and a means of collecting this to
make year on year comparisons for each company and across the
portfolio. Where possible baseline data has been collected from the
date of investment with a view to showing where the Manager's
support has made a difference during the hold period to the
reporting date.
Annual company specific ESG performance progress
report
The annual data collection allows a
detailed report to be prepared on each company's progress across a
broad range of ESG KPI's. As well as using this for portfolio
reporting to investors it is used as an engagement tool with the
senior management teams of each company, allowing the Manager to
identify and agree programmes of action with each
business
2023 ESG KPI Report for
Investments held in YFM's VCT funds
Growing our
economy
•
£74 million of R&D
investment during 2023
•
£115 million of export sales achieved in
2023
•
750 new jobs were created from date of investment
to 2023 representing a 50 per cent increase
Improving our society
•
95 per
cent of companies were independently chaired in 2023
•
45 per cent of companies had female directors on
boards, with 15 per cent having a female CEO/MD
• 65 per
cent of businesses had a designated board member with
responsibility for improving ESG issues
Valuing our
people
•
35 per
cent of the portfolio workforce was female in 2023
•
60 per cent had mental wellbeing programmes in
place and 80 per cent held regular employee engagement
surveys
•
43,000 hours of non-statutory training was given
to employees
Protecting our
environment
•
20 per cent formally measure their carbon
footprint
•
10 per cent offset all or a defined portion of
their carbon impact
•
15 per cent formally set a target date and
strategy for achieving net zero carbon emissions
Summary and
Outlook
The portfolio continues to deliver
good underlying revenue growth, while also demonstrating good
levels of capital efficiency over the past 12 months. Portfolio
companies continue to navigate difficult macroeconomic conditions
well, with the portfolio well placed to benefit from a hoped for
improvement in the economic environment in 2024.
We continue to see a good pipeline
of potential investments in a range of growth companies, as well as
opportunities to further support the continued growth of the
current portfolio. We thank investors for their continuing support
in the Company's 2023/24 fundraising, and are looking forward to
putting the funds raised to work.
Eamon Nolan
YFM Private Equity
Limited
14 June 2024
Portfolio
Summary at 31 March 2024
Name of
company
|
Date of
initial
investment
|
Location
|
Industry
Sector
|
Amount
invested
£000
|
Valuation at
31 March
2024
£000
|
Recognised
income/
proceeds
to date
£000
|
Realised &
unrealised
value to date*
£000
|
Matillion Limited
|
Nov-16
|
Manchester
|
Data
|
2,666
|
27,415
|
7,071
|
34,486
|
Unbiased EC1 Limited
|
Dec-19
|
London
|
Tech-enabled Services
|
5,596
|
12,829
|
-
|
12,829
|
Outpost VFX Limited
|
Feb-21
|
Bournemouth
|
New Media
|
5,750
|
9,518
|
53
|
9,571
|
Elucidat Ltd
|
May-19
|
Brighton
|
Application Software
|
4,260
|
5,933
|
347
|
6,280
|
Force24 Ltd
|
Nov-20
|
Leeds
|
Application Software
|
3,900
|
5,835
|
41
|
5,876
|
SharpCloud Software
Limited
|
Oct-19
|
London
|
Data
|
3,577
|
5,375
|
-
|
5,375
|
Vypr Validation Technologies
Limited
|
Jan-21
|
Manchester
|
Tech-enabled Services
|
3,300
|
5,317
|
-
|
5,317
|
ACC Aviation Group Limited
|
Nov-14
|
Reigate
|
Business Services
|
2,068
|
4,725
|
5,280
|
10,005
|
Wooshii Limited
|
May-19
|
London
|
New Media
|
4,644
|
4,151
|
683
|
4,834
|
Quality Clouds Limited
|
May-22
|
London
|
Cloud & DevOps
|
3,916
|
4,019
|
-
|
4,019
|
DrDoctor (via ICNH Ltd)
|
Feb-23
|
London
|
Application Software
|
3,565
|
3,565
|
-
|
3,565
|
Workbuzz Analytics Limited
|
Jun-23
|
Nottingham
|
Tech-enabled Services
|
2,577
|
3,447
|
-
|
3,447
|
Traveltek Group Holdings
Limited
|
Oct-16
|
East Kilbride
|
Application Software
|
1,716
|
3,401
|
975
|
4,376
|
AutomatePro Limited
|
Dec-22
|
London
|
Cloud & DevOps
|
2,225
|
3,229
|
-
|
3,229
|
Tonkotsu Limited
|
Jun-19
|
London
|
Retail & Brands
|
2,388
|
3,090
|
-
|
3,090
|
GEEIQ (via Checkpoint GG
Limited)
|
Sep-23
|
London
|
Data
|
2,358
|
2,827
|
-
|
2,827
|
Vuealta Holdings Limited
|
Sep-21
|
London
|
Tech-enabled Services
|
3,580
|
2,459
|
4,619
|
7,078
|
Summize Limited
|
Oct-22
|
Manchester
|
Application Software
|
1,800
|
2,421
|
-
|
2,421
|
Frescobol Carioca Ltd
|
Mar-19
|
London
|
Retail & Brands
|
1,800
|
2,072
|
-
|
2,072
|
Plandek Limited
|
Oct-22
|
London
|
Cloud & DevOps
|
2,070
|
2,070
|
-
|
2,070
|
Xapien (via Digital Insight
Technologies Ltd)
|
Mar-23
|
London
|
Application Software
|
1,740
|
2,014
|
-
|
2,014
|
Biorelate Limited
|
Nov-22
|
Manchester
|
Application Software
|
1,560
|
1,691
|
-
|
1,691
|
Panintelligence (via Paninsight
Limited)
|
Nov-19
|
Leeds
|
Data
|
1,500
|
1,606
|
-
|
1,606
|
Relative Insight Limited
|
Mar-22
|
Lancaster
|
Tech-enabled Services
|
4,200
|
1,598
|
-
|
1,598
|
KeTech Technology Holdings
Limited
|
Nov-15
|
Nottingham
|
Tech-enabled Services
|
2,000
|
1,176
|
4,059
|
5,235
|
Arcus Global Limited
|
May-18
|
Cambridge
|
Application Software
|
3,075
|
952
|
332
|
1,284
|
Sipsynergy (via Hosted Network
Services Limited)
|
Jun-16
|
Hampshire
|
Cloud & DevOps
|
2,654
|
848
|
1
|
849
|
Other investments £0.75 million and
below
|
|
|
|
8,077
|
3,009
|
6,807
|
9,816
|
Total unquoted investments
|
|
|
|
88,562
|
126,592
|
30,268
|
156,860
|
Full disposals to date
|
|
|
|
80,135
|
-
|
167,596
|
167,596
|
Total portfolio
|
|
|
|
168,697
|
126,592
|
197,864
|
324,456
|
*
represents recognised income and proceeds received to date plus the
unrealised valuation at 31 March 2024.
Summary of Portfolio
Movement since 31 March
2023
Name of Company
|
Investment
valuation
at
31
March
2023
£000
|
Disposal
proceeds
£000
|
Additions
including
capitalised
income
£000
|
Valuation
gains
including
profits
(losses)
on
disposal
£000
|
Investment
valuation
at 31
March
2024
£000
|
Unbiased EC1 Limited
|
9,976
|
-
|
-
|
2,853
|
12,829
|
Matillion Limited
|
25,193
|
-
|
-
|
2,222
|
27,415
|
SharpCloud Software
Limited
|
3,404
|
-
|
170
|
1,801
|
5,375
|
Displayplan Holdings
Limited
|
7,901
|
(9,636)
|
-
|
1,735
|
-
|
Traveltek Group Holdings
Limited
|
2,049
|
-
|
-
|
1,352
|
3,401
|
Vypr Validation Technologies
Limited
|
4,051
|
-
|
-
|
1,266
|
5,317
|
Arcus Global Limited
|
239
|
(300)
|
-
|
1,013
|
952
|
Macro Art Holdings Limited
|
558
|
(1,484)
|
-
|
926
|
-
|
Workbuzz Analytics Limited
|
-
|
-
|
2,577
|
870
|
3,447
|
KeTech Holdings Limited/KeTech
Technology Holdings Limited
|
1,786
|
(1,461)
|
-
|
851
|
1,176
|
E2E Engineering Limited
|
1,200
|
(1,960)
|
-
|
760
|
-
|
AutomatePro Limited
|
2,557
|
-
|
-
|
672
|
3,229
|
Other investments £0.75 million and
below
|
2,346
|
-
|
-
|
663
|
3,009
|
Summize Limited
|
1,885
|
-
|
-
|
536
|
2,421
|
GEEIQ (via Checkpoint GG
Limited)
|
-
|
-
|
2,358
|
469
|
2,827
|
Tonkotsu Limited
|
2,666
|
-
|
-
|
424
|
3,090
|
Force24 Ltd
|
4,757
|
-
|
750
|
328
|
5,835
|
Xapien (via Digital Insight
Technologies Ltd)
|
1,740
|
-
|
-
|
274
|
2,014
|
Biorelate Limited
|
1,570
|
-
|
-
|
121
|
1,691
|
Panintelligence (via Paninsight
Limited)
|
1,500
|
-
|
-
|
106
|
1,606
|
Frescobol Carioca Ltd
|
1,995
|
-
|
-
|
77
|
2,072
|
Ncam Technologies Limited
|
1,659
|
(1,682)
|
-
|
23
|
-
|
DrDoctor (via ICNH Ltd)
|
3,565
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
3,565
|
Plandek Limited
|
2,070
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
2,070
|
Quality Clouds Limited
|
4,074
|
-
|
-
|
(55)
|
4,019
|
Vuealta Holdings Limited/Vuealta
Group Limited
|
2,126
|
-
|
535
|
(202)
|
2,459
|
Sipsynergy (via Hosted Network
Services Limited)
|
1,464
|
-
|
-
|
(616)
|
848
|
Elucidat Ltd
|
6,277
|
-
|
300
|
(644)
|
5,933
|
ACC Aviation Group Limited
|
5,398
|
-
|
-
|
(673)
|
4,725
|
Outpost VFX Limited
|
9,420
|
-
|
1,250
|
(1,152)
|
9,518
|
Relative Insight Limited
|
2,794
|
-
|
1,200
|
(2,396)
|
1,598
|
Wooshii Limited
|
7,141
|
-
|
-
|
(2,990)
|
4,151
|
Total portfolio
|
123,361
|
(16,523)
|
9,140
|
10,614
|
126,592
|
Deferred consideration*
|
-
|
(96)
|
-
|
96
|
-
|
Total
|
123,361
|
(16,619)
|
9,140
|
10,710
|
126,592
|
Accrued income
|
|
|
|
|
2,070
|
Financial assets - investments
|
|
|
|
|
128,662
|
* Wakefield Acoustics (trading as
Malvar Engineering Limited), see note 7.
Risk
Factors
The Board
carries out a regular review of the risk environment in which the
Company operates. The emerging and principal risks and
uncertainties identified by the Board and techniques used to
mitigate these risks are set out in this section.
The Board seeks to mitigate its
emerging and principal risks by setting policy, regularly reviewing
performance and monitoring progress and compliance. In the
mitigation and management of these risks, the Board rigorously
applies the principles detailed in section 8: "Audit, Risk and
Internal Control" of the AIC Code. Details of the Company's
internal controls are contained in the Corporate Governance
Internal Control section on pages 47 and 48 of the annual report
and further information on exposure to risks, including those
associated with financial instruments, can be found in note 16 of
the financial statements.
The Board carries out a regular
review of the risk environment in which the Company operates,
together with changes to the operational environment. The Board
also seeks to identify emerging risks which might impact on the
Company. In the period the most notable emerging risks have
been:
•
Geopolitical instability: geopolitical tensions,
such as the conflicts in the Middle East and Ukraine can create
uncertainty, disrupt global markets and create market
volatility.
•
Global trade: ongoing global trade tensions
between major economies have the potential to disrupt global supply
chains which could cause a slowdown in economic
activity.
•
Rising interest rates: whilst interest rates
appear to be stabilising, higher interest rates can increase
borrowing costs for businesses and consumers, potentially leading
to reduced spending and investment, and ultimately economic
growth.
The principal risks the Company
faces are considered in more detail below.
VCT
Qualifying Status:
Risk
- A failure to meet the VCT qualifying criteria
could result in the loss of approved VCT status. The loss of such
approval could lead to investors losing the various tax benefits
associated with VCT investments.
Mitigation
- The Manager tracks the Company's VCT qualifying
status on an ongoing and continual basis. Furthermore, external
independent experts have been retained and report on the VCT
qualifying status regularly throughout the year.
The Manager reports to the Board on
a quarterly basis.
Further information on these
requirements can be found under the heading "Compliance with VCT
Legislative Tests" above.
Change
- No overall change in
risk exposure.
Economic:
Risk
- Macroeconomic events such as geopolitical
developments, external shocks and economic recession could
adversely affect smaller companies' valuations, as they may be more
vulnerable to changes in trading conditions or the sectors in which
they operate. This could lead to a reduction in the Company's
share price, resulting in capital losses for
Shareholders.
Mitigation
- The Board, in conjunction with the Manager,
regularly assesses the resilience of the portfolio. The Company has
a clear Investment Policy (summarised above) and invests in a
diverse portfolio of companies across a range of sectors, which
helps to mitigate against the impact on any one sector. The Manager
also seeks to maintain adequate liquidity to ensure it can provide
follow-on investment to those portfolio companies which require
funding when supported by the individual investment
case.
Change
- Increased. Growing
international tensions with the potential to deter investment,
disrupt markets and re-awaken inflationary pressures.
Investment Performance:
Risk
- The Company invests in small and medium-sized
VCT qualifying companies, which, by their nature, entail a higher
level of risk and shorter cash runway than investments in larger
quoted companies. Poor performance could reduce returns for
shareholders through downward valuations.
Mitigation
- The Board comprises individuals experienced in
assessing suitable investment opportunities. The Manager has
significant experience, expertise and a strong track record of
investing in early-stage unquoted companies. The Manager has a
rigorous and robust formal process in selecting new companies which
includes appropriate due diligence and approval by an Investment
Committee made up of the senior members of the Manager's investment
team.
Change
- No overall change in
risk exposure.
Strategy:
Risk
- The Board fails to set appropriate strategic
objectives and fails to monitor the Company's implementation of the
strategy, which leads to poor performance.
Mitigation
- The Board reviews strategy annually. At each of
the Board meetings, the directors review the appropriateness of the
Company's objectives and stated strategy in response to changes in
the operating environment and peer group activity. It also reviews
compliance of the Manager with the stated investment
strategy.
Change
- No overall change in
risk exposure.
Legislative & Regulatory:
Risk
- The Company fails to comply with applicable laws
and regulations including VCT Rules, UK Listing Authority Rules,
AIC Code on Corporate Governance, Stewardship Code, Companies Act,
Bribery Act, Market Abuse Regulations, data protection rules,
Criminal Finances Act and relevant Taxes Acts and as a result loses
its approval as a VCT.
Changes to the UK legislation, in
particular relating to the VCT Rules, could have an adverse effect
on the Company's ability to achieve satisfactory investment
returns.
Mitigation
- The Manager ensures that it has suitably
qualified members of staff who are experienced with regulatory
requirements and relevant accounting standards. The Manager and the
Company Secretary have procedures in place to ensure recurring
Listing Rules requirements are met.
The Board and Manager review
corporate governance, regulatory legislative change and political
developments on a continual basis and seek additional advice as and
when required.
The Manager is a member of the
Venture Capital Trust Association which engages with the Government
to help shape future legislation.
Change
- No overall change in
risk exposure. Albeit a slight reduction in this risk, as result of
the ten year extension of the VCT legislation sunset clause to 6
April 2035, continuing shareholders' rights to Income Tax relief on
newly issued shares. The extension has been
agreed by HMRC, however this needs to be ratified by the
EU.
Operational:
Risk
- Key service providers, such as the Manager, have
inadequate procedures for the identification, evaluation and
management of risks putting the Company's assets and data at
risk.
Mitigation
- The Board regularly reviews the system of
internal controls, both financial and non-financial operated by the
Company and the Manager. These include controls designed to ensure
that the Company's assets are safeguarded and proper accounting
records are maintained.
Change
- No overall change in
risk exposure.
Cyber Security and Information Technology:
Risk
- A failure in IT systems and controls might lead
to business interruption, loss of data, the inability of the
Manager to provide accurate reporting and monitoring or the loss of
Company records.
Mitigation
- The Manager has in place significant
cybersecurity controls, including multifactor authentication, email
protection software, monitored firewalls and regularly updated
electronic devices. Staff at the Manager regularly receive training
in relation to their cybersecurity obligations. The Manager is
Cyber Essentials Plus certified.
Due diligence is conducted on other
service providers, including a review on their controls for
information security.
Change
- No overall change on
balance, although cyber threat remains a significant risk area
faced by all service providers, with ever increasing sophistication
of attacks.
Liquidity:
Risk
-
a.
The Company may not have sufficient liquidity available to meet its
financial obligations.
b.
The VCT invests in smaller unquoted companies, which by their
nature are illiquid, therefore they may be difficult to realise, at
fair market value, at short notice
Mitigation
- The Company's overall liquidity risks and
cashflow forecasts are monitored on an ongoing basis by the Manager
and on a quarterly basis by the Board.
The Company's valuation methodology
takes account of potential liquidity restrictions in the markets in
which it invests.
For any publicly listed investments,
accounting standards require an ongoing assessment of the liquidity
of the stock.
The Manager regularly reviews its
exit plans for investee companies to allow it to identify the
optimal point at which to seek a sale. As part of a planned exit,
the assistance of a third party adviser will normally be sought,
with a view to identifying the largest number of possible
purchasers.
Change
- Increased. A small
increase to reflect the potential impacts of economic uncertainty,
including the impacts on fundraising and ability to exit
investments.
Other
Matters
Section 172
Statement
This Section 172 Statement
should be read in conjunction with the other contents of the
Strategic Report, on pages 5 to 35 of the annual
report.
Section 172 of the Companies
Act 2006 requires that a director must act in a way that they
consider, in good faith, would be most likely to promote the
success of the company for the benefit of its members as a whole,
and in doing so have regard (amongst other matters)
to:
•
The likely consequences of any decision in
the long term;
•
The interests of the company's
employees;
•
The need to foster the company's business
relationships with suppliers, customers and
others;
•
The impact of the company's operations on
the community and the environment;
•
The desirability of the company
maintaining a reputation for high standards of business conduct;
and
•
The need to act fairly as between members
of the company.
The Company takes a number
of steps to understand the views of investors and other key
stakeholders and considers these, along with the matters set out
above, in Board discussions and decision
making.
Key
Stakeholders
As an investment company
with no employees, the Company's key stakeholders are its
investors, its service providers and its portfolio
companies.
Investors
The Board engages and
communicates with shareholders in a variety of
ways.
The Company encourages
shareholders to attend its Annual General
Meeting.
Along with British Smaller
Companies VCT2 plc, the Company held two Investor Workshops during
the year. An in-person workshop was held on 20 June 2023 and an
online webinar was hosted on 27 November 2023. Both were well
attended.
Maintaining the Company's
status as a VCT is critical to meeting the Company's objective to
maximise Total Return and provide investors with an attractive
long-term tax-free dividend
yield.
The Company receives regular reports on
this issue from the Manager and has taken various steps in the year
to ensure that the relevant tests are met.
The Board also aims for
investors to continue to have tax efficient opportunities to invest
in the Company, and to generate tax-free returns from both capital
appreciation and ongoing dividends.
After carefully considering
its funding needs, on 20 September 2023 the Company issued a
prospectus, alongside British Smaller Companies VCT2 plc, to raise
up to £90 million in aggregate for the 2023/24 tax
year.
During the year the Board
kept its arrangements for dividends, share buy-backs and the
dividend re-investment scheme under constant review. Normal
dividends totalling 4.0 pence per ordinary share were paid in the
year ended 31 March 2024.
Manager
The Company's most important
service provider is its Manager. There is regular contact with the
Manager, and members of the Manager's board attend all of the
Company's Board meetings. There is also an annual strategy meeting
with the Manager, alongside the board of British Smaller Companies
VCT2 plc.
The Manager maintains strong
relationships with relevant media publications and a wide range of
distributors for the Company's shares, including wealth managers,
independent financial advisers and execution-only brokers. RAM
Capital acts as a promoter of the Company's shares to smaller
distributors.
The Company is a member of
the Association of Investment Companies which promotes the
interests of investment companies, including VCTs. The Manager is a
founder member of the Venture Capital Trust Association, which
promotes the interests of VCTs in a variety of
ways.
Portfolio
Companies
The Company holds minority
investments in its portfolio companies and has delegated the
management of the portfolio to the Manager. The Manager provides
the Board with regular updates on the performance of each portfolio
company at least quarterly and the Board is made aware of all major
issues.
The Manager has a dedicated
Portfolio team to assist the portfolio companies with the
challenges that they face as fast-growing companies. The Manager
promotes ongoing sustainable growth within the businesses; this
often involves improving systems and processes, as well as
significant job creation.
Employees
The Company has no
employees. The Board is composed of four non-executive directors.
For a review of the policies used when appointing directors to the
Board of the Company, please refer to the Directors' Remuneration
Report.
Environment and
Community
The Company seeks to ensure
that its business is conducted in a manner that is responsible to
the environment. The management and administration of the Company
is undertaken by the Manager, YFM Private Equity Limited, which
recognises the importance of its environmental responsibilities and
is a signatory of the United Nations' Principles for Responsible
Investment.
More details of the work
that the Manager has achieved in this area are set out above. Its
Sustainable Investment Policy can be found at
www.yfmep.com/who-we-are/our_impact/.
Business
Conduct
The Company has a zero
tolerance approach to bribery and corruption. The following is a
summary of the controls in place:
·
The Company conducts all its business in
an honest and ethical manner. The Company is committed to acting
professionally, fairly and with integrity in all its business
dealings and relationships;
·
The Company prohibits the offering, the
giving, the solicitation or the acceptance of any
bribe;
·
The Company has communicated its
Anti-Bribery & Corruption Policy to the Manager and its other
service providers; and
·
The Manager has its own Anti-Bribery &
Corruption and Anti-Slavery Policies and monitors portfolio
companies' compliance with their legal
obligations.
Rupert
Cook
Chair
14 June
2024
Statement of Comprehensive
Income
For the year ended 31 March
2024
|
Notes
|
2024
|
2023
|
Revenue
£000
|
Capital
£000
|
Total
£000
|
Revenue
£000
|
Capital
£000
|
Total
£000
|
Gains on investments
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
held at fair value
|
7
|
-
|
6,045
|
6,045
|
-
|
8,152
|
8,152
|
Gain on disposal of
investments
|
7
|
-
|
4,475
|
4,475
|
-
|
5,213
|
5,213
|
Gain arising from the investment
portfolio
|
|
-
|
10,520
|
10,520
|
-
|
13,365
|
13,365
|
Income
|
2
|
4,045
|
-
|
4,045
|
1,994
|
-
|
1,994
|
Total income
|
|
4,045
|
10,520
|
14,565
|
1,994
|
13,365
|
15,359
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Administrative expenses:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Manager's fee
|
|
(795)
|
(2,384)
|
(3,179)
|
(696)
|
(2,086)
|
(2,782)
|
Incentive fee
|
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(125)
|
(125)
|
Other expenses
|
|
(768)
|
-
|
(768)
|
(215)
|
-
|
(215)
|
|
3
|
(1,563)
|
(2,384)
|
(3,947)
|
(911)
|
(2,211)
|
(3,122)
|
Profit before taxation
|
|
2,482
|
8,136
|
10,618
|
1,083
|
11,154
|
12,237
|
Taxation
|
4
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Profit for the year
|
|
2,482
|
8,136
|
10,618
|
1,083
|
11,154
|
12,237
|
Total comprehensive income for the year
|
|
2,482
|
8,136
|
10,618
|
1,083
|
11,154
|
12,237
|
Basic and diluted earnings per ordinary
share
|
6
|
1.01p
|
3.33p
|
4.34p
|
0.58p
|
5.96p
|
6.54p
|
The notes on pages 65 to 91
of the annual report are an integral part of the financial
statements.
The Total column of this
statement represents the Company's Statement of Comprehensive
Income, prepared in accordance with UK adopted international
accounting standards. The supplementary Revenue and Capital columns
are prepared under the Statement of Recommended Practice 'Financial
Statements of Investment Trust Companies and Venture Capital
Trusts' (issued in July 2022 - "SORP") published by the
AIC.
Balance
Sheet
At 31 March 2024
|
Notes
|
2024
£000
|
2023
£000
|
ASSETS
|
|
|
|
Non-current assets at fair value through profit and
loss
|
|
|
|
Financial assets at fair value
through profit or loss
|
7
|
128,662
|
127,406
|
Accrued income and other
assets
|
|
-
|
1,556
|
|
|
128,662
|
128,962
|
Current assets
|
|
|
|
Accrued income and other
assets
|
|
1,382
|
161
|
Current asset investments
|
|
53,500
|
7,501
|
Cash at bank
|
|
36,304
|
20,766
|
|
|
91,186
|
28,428
|
|
|
|
|
LIABILITIES
|
|
|
|
Current liabilities
|
|
|
|
Trade and other payables
|
|
(248)
|
(358)
|
Net
current assets
|
|
90,938
|
28,070
|
Net
assets
|
|
219,600
|
157,032
|
|
|
|
|
Shareholders' equity
|
|
|
|
Share capital
|
|
28,830
|
20,969
|
Share premium account
|
|
58,293
|
1,700
|
Capital reserve
|
|
79,171
|
82,893
|
Investment holding gains and losses
reserve
|
|
49,207
|
49,215
|
Revenue reserve
|
|
4,099
|
2,255
|
Total shareholders' equity
|
|
219,600
|
157,032
|
Net
asset value per ordinary share
|
8
|
83.6p
|
83.7p
|
The notes on pages 65 to 91
of the annual report are an integral part of the financial
statements.
The financial statements
were approved and authorised for issue by the Board of Directors
and were signed on its behalf on 14 June 2024.
Rupert
Cook
Chair
Statement of Changes in
Equity
For the year ended 31 March
2024
|
Share
capital
|
Share
premium
account
|
Capital
reserve
|
Investment
holding
gains
and
losses
reserve
|
Revenue
reserve
|
Total
equity
|
|
£000
|
£000
|
£000
|
£000
|
£000
|
£000
|
Balance at 31 March 2022
|
20,510
|
62,123
|
33,620
|
41,982
|
1,299
|
159,534
|
Revenue return for the
year
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
1,083
|
1,083
|
Expenses charged to
capital
|
-
|
-
|
(2,211)
|
-
|
-
|
(2,211)
|
Investment holding gain on
investments held at fair value
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
8,152
|
-
|
8,152
|
Realisation of investments in the
year
|
-
|
-
|
5,213
|
-
|
-
|
5,213
|
Total comprehensive income for the
year
|
-
|
-
|
3,002
|
8,152
|
1,083
|
12,237
|
Issue of shares - DRIS
|
459
|
3,245
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
3,704
|
Issue costs *
|
-
|
(62)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(62)
|
Share premium
cancellation
|
-
|
(63,606)
|
63,606
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Purchase of own shares
|
-
|
-
|
(2,497)
|
-
|
-
|
(2,497)
|
Dividends
|
-
|
-
|
(15,757)
|
-
|
(127)
|
(15,884)
|
Total transactions with
owners
|
459
|
(60,423)
|
45,352
|
-
|
(127)
|
(14,739)
|
Realisation of prior year investment
holding gains
|
-
|
-
|
919
|
(919)
|
-
|
-
|
Balance at 31 March 2023
|
20,969
|
1,700
|
82,893
|
49,215
|
2,255
|
157,032
|
Revenue return for the
year
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
2,482
|
2,482
|
Expenses charged to
capital
|
-
|
-
|
(2,384)
|
-
|
-
|
(2,384)
|
Investment holding gain on
investments held at fair value
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
6,045
|
-
|
6,045
|
Realisation of investments in the
year
|
-
|
-
|
4,475
|
-
|
-
|
4,475
|
Total comprehensive income for the
year
|
-
|
-
|
2,091
|
6,045
|
2,482
|
10,618
|
Issue of share capital
|
7,612
|
57,237
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
64,849
|
Issue of shares - DRIS
|
249
|
1,769
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
2,018
|
Issue costs *
|
-
|
(2,413)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(2,413)
|
Purchase of own shares
|
-
|
-
|
(2,869)
|
-
|
-
|
(2,869)
|
Dividends
|
-
|
-
|
(8,997)
|
-
|
(638)
|
(9,635)
|
Total transactions with
owners
|
7,861
|
56,593
|
(11,866)
|
-
|
(638)
|
51,950
|
Realisation of prior year investment
holding gains
|
-
|
-
|
6,053
|
(6,053)
|
-
|
-
|
Balance at 31 March 2024
|
28,830
|
58,293
|
79,171
|
49,207
|
4,099
|
219,600
|
The notes on pages 65 to 91
of the annual report are an integral part of the financial
statements.
Reserves available for distribution
Under the Companies Act 2006
the capital reserve and the revenue reserve are distributable
reserves. The table below shows amounts that are available for
distribution.
|
Capital
reserve
|
Revenue
reserve
|
Total
|
|
£000
|
£000
|
£000
|
Distributable reserves as shown
above
|
79,171
|
4,099
|
83,270
|
Income/proceeds not yet
distributable
|
(1,003)
|
(2,131)
|
(3,134)
|
Cancelled share premium not yet
distributable
|
(33,612)
|
-
|
(33,612)
|
Reserves available for distribution**
|
44,556
|
1,968
|
46,524
|
*
Issue costs include both fundraising costs and costs incurred from
the Company's DRIS.
**
Following the circulation of the Annual Report to
shareholders.
The capital reserve and
revenue reserve are both distributable reserves. The reserves total
£83,270,000, representing a decrease of £1,878,000 during the year.
The directors also take into account the level of the investment
holding gains and losses reserve and the future requirements of the
Company when determining the level of dividend
payments.
Of the potentially
distributable reserves of £83,270,000 shown above, £3,134,000
relates to income and proceeds not yet distributable and
£33,612,000 relates to cancelled share premium which will become
distributable from the dates shown in the table
below.
Following shareholder
approval at the 2022 Annual General Meeting, in October 2022 the
Company cancelled the balance of its Share Premium, £63,606,000, of
which £29,994,000 is now distributable. The remaining share premium
cancelled will be available for distribution from the following
dates:
|
£000
|
1 April 2025
|
32,128
|
1 April 2026
|
1,484
|
Cancelled share premium not yet
distributable
|
33,612
|
Statement of Cash
Flows
For the year ended 31 March
2024
|
Notes
|
2024
£000
|
2023
£000
|
Net
cash outflow from operating activities
|
|
(744)
|
(2,277)
|
Cash flows generated from (used in) investing
activities
|
|
|
|
Cash maturing from fixed term
deposits
|
|
-
|
6,970
|
Purchase of financial assets at fair
value through profit or loss
|
7
|
(9,390)
|
(28,832)
|
Proceeds from sale of financial
assets at fair value through profit or loss
|
7
|
19,625
|
20,716
|
Deferred consideration
|
7
|
96
|
-
|
Net
cash inflow (outflow) from investing activities
|
|
10,331
|
(1,146)
|
Cash flows from (used in) financing
activities
|
|
|
|
Issue of ordinary shares
|
|
64,849
|
-
|
Costs of ordinary share
issues*
|
|
(2,413)
|
(62)
|
Purchase of own ordinary
shares
|
|
(2,869)
|
(2,497)
|
Dividends paid
|
5
|
(7,617)
|
(12,180)
|
Net
cash inflow (outflow) from financing activities
|
|
51,950
|
(14,739)
|
Net
increase (decrease) in cash and cash equivalents
|
|
61,537
|
(18,162)
|
Cash and cash equivalents at the beginning of the
year
|
|
28,267
|
46,429
|
Cash and cash equivalents at the end of the
year
|
|
89,804
|
28,267
|
*
Issue costs include both fundraising costs and expenses incurred
from the Company's DRIS
Cash and cash equivalents comprise
|
|
2024
£000
|
2023
£000
|
Money market funds
|
|
53,500
|
7,501
|
Cash at bank
|
|
36,304
|
20,766
|
Cash and cash equivalents at the end of the
year
|
|
89,804
|
28,267
|
Reconciliation of Profit before Taxation to
Net
Cash Outflow from Operating Activities
|
2024
£000
|
2023
£000
|
Profit before taxation*
|
10,618
|
12,237
|
Decrease in trade and other
payables
|
(110)
|
(429)
|
Increase in accrued income and other
assets
|
(732)
|
(660)
|
Gain on disposal of
investments
|
(4,475)
|
(5,213)
|
Gains on investments held at fair
value
|
(6,045)
|
(8,152)
|
Capitalised income
|
-
|
(60)
|
Net
cash outflow from operating activities
|
(744)
|
(2,277)
|
* Includes
cash inflow from dividends of £341,000 (2023: £1,117,000) and
interest of £2,899,000 (2023: £700,000).
The notes on pages 65 to 91 of the
annual report are an integral part of the financial
statements.
Notes to the Financial
Statements
1. Principal
Accounting Policies
Basis of Preparation
The accounts have been
prepared on a going concern basis as set out in the Directors
Report on pages 37 and 38 of the annual report and in accordance
with UK adopted international accounting
standards.
The directors have carefully
considered the issue of going concern in view of the Company's
activities and associated risks. The Company has a well-diversified
portfolio with businesses in a variety of sectors, many of which
are well funded. Some portfolio companies may require additional
funding in the near- to medium-term; the Company is well placed to
provide this, where appropriate.
The Company has a
significant level of liquidity, which was enhanced by the final
allotment of the 2023/24 fundraising post-year-end, in April 2024.
In addition, the Board has control over, and can flex as
appropriate, the Company's major outgoings, which predominantly
comprise investments, dividends and share
buy-backs.
The directors have also
assessed whether material uncertainties exist and their potential
impact on the Company's ability to continue as a going concern;
they have concluded that no such material uncertainties
exist.
Taking all of the above into
consideration, the directors are satisfied that the Company has
sufficient resources to meet its obligations for at least 12 months
from the date of this report and therefore believe that it is
appropriate to continue to apply the going concern basis of
accounting in preparing the financial
statements.
The financial statements
have been prepared under the historical cost basis as modified by
the measurement of investments at fair value through profit or
loss.
The accounts have been
prepared in compliance with the recommendations set out in the
Statement of Recommended Practice 'Financial Statements of
Investment Trust Companies and Venture Capital Trusts' issued by
the Association of Investment Companies (issued in
July 2022 - "SORP") to the
extent that they do not conflict with UK adopted international
accounting standards.
The financial statements are
prepared in accordance with UK adopted international accounting
standards (International Financial Reporting Standards ("IFRS") and
International Accounting Standards ("IAS")) and interpretations in
force at the reporting date. From 1 January 2023 IAS 1 has been
amended introducing the concept Material Accounting Policy
Information. The Company has performed a review of its existing
accounting policies and updated where relevant. Other new standards
coming into force during the year and future standards that come
into effect after the year-end have not had a material impact on
these financial statements.
The Company has carried out
an assessment of accounting standards, amendments and
interpretations that have been issued by the IASB and that are
effective for the current reporting period. The Company has
determined that the transitional effects of the standards do not
have a material impact.
The financial statements are
presented in sterling and all values are rounded to the nearest
thousand (£000), except where stated.
Financial Assets held at Fair Value through Profit or Loss -
Investments
Financial assets designated
as at fair value through profit or loss ("FVPL") at inception are
those that are managed and whose performance is evaluated on a fair
value basis, in accordance with the documented investment strategy
of the Company. Information about these financial assets is
provided internally on a fair value basis to the Company's key
management. The Company's investment strategy is to invest cash
resources in venture capital investments as part of the Company's
long-term capital growth strategy. Consequently, all investments
are classified as held at fair value through profit or
loss.
All investments are measured
at fair value on the whole unit of account basis with gains and
losses arising from changes in fair value being included in the
Statement of Comprehensive Income as gains or losses on investments
held at fair value. Accrued income on loans/preference shares that
is rolled to exit and is not past due, forms part of the
investment's fair value.
Transaction costs on
purchases are expensed immediately through profit or
loss.
Although the Company holds
more than 20 per cent of the equity of certain companies, it is
considered that the investments are held as part of the investment
portfolio, and their value to the Company lies in their marketable
value as part of that portfolio. These investments are therefore
not accounted for using equity accounting, as permitted by IAS 28
'Investments in associates' and IFRS 11 'Joint arrangements' which
give exemptions from equity accounting for venture capital
organisations.
Under IFRS 10 "Consolidated
Financial Statements", control is presumed to exist when the
Company has power over an investee (whether or not used in
practice); exposure or rights; to variable returns from that
investee, and ability to use that power to affect the reporting
entities returns from the investees. The Company does not hold more
than 50 per cent of the equity of any of the companies within the
portfolio. The Company does not control any of the companies held
as part of the investment portfolio. It is not considered that any
of the holdings represent investments in subsidiary
undertakings.
Due to the above factors,
the Company has applied the IFRS 10 investment entity consolidation
exemption and has not prepared consolidated financial
statements.
Valuation of Investments
Unquoted investments are
valued in accordance with IFRS 13 "Fair Value Measurement" and
using the International Private Equity and Venture Capital
Valuation Guidelines ("the IPEV Guidelines") updated in December
2022. Quoted investments are valued at market bid prices. A
detailed explanation of the valuation policies of the Company is
included below.
Initial Measurement
The best estimate of the
initial fair value of an unquoted investment is the cost of the
investment. Unless there are indications that this is
inappropriate, an unquoted investment will be held at this value
within the first three months of investment.
Subsequent Measurement
Based on the IPEV Guidelines
we have identified six of the most widely used valuation
methodologies for unquoted investments. The Guidelines advocate
that the best valuation methodologies are those that draw on
external, objective market-based data in order to derive a fair
value.
Unquoted
Investments
·
Revenue
multiples. An appropriate
multiple, given the risk profile and revenue growth prospects of
the underlying company, is applied to the revenue of the company.
The multiple is adjusted to reflect any risk associated with lack
of marketability and to take account of the differences between the
investee company and the benchmark company or companies used to
derive the multiple.
·
Earnings
multiple. An appropriate
multiple, given the risk profile and earnings growth prospects of
the underlying company, is applied to the maintainable earnings of
the company. The multiple is adjusted to reflect any risk
associated with lack of marketability and to take account of the
differences between the investee company and the benchmark company
or companies used to derive the multiple.
·
Net
assets. The value of the
business is derived by using appropriate measures to value the
assets and liabilities of the investee company.
·
Discounted cash flows of the underlying
business. The present
value of the underlying business is derived by using reasonable
assumptions and estimations of expected future cash flows and the
terminal value, and discounted by applying the appropriate
risk-adjusted rate that quantifies the risk inherent in the
company.
·
Discounted cash flows from the
investment. Under this
method, the discounted cash flow concept is applied to the expected
cash flows from the investment itself rather than the underlying
business as a whole.
·
Price of recent
investment. This may
represent the most appropriate basis where a significant amount of
new investment has been made by an independent third party. This is
adjusted, if necessary, for factors relevant to the background of
the specific investment such as preference rights and will be
benchmarked against other valuation techniques. In line with the
IPEV Guidelines the price of recent investment will usually only be
used for the initial period following the round and after this an
alternative basis will be found.
Due to the significant
subjectivity involved, discounted cash flows are only likely to be
reliable as the main basis of estimating fair value in limited
situations. Their main use is to support valuations derived using
other methodologies and for assessing reductions in fair
value.
One of the valuation methods
described above is used to derive the gross attributable enterprise
value of the company after which adjustments are then made to
reflect specific circumstances. This value is then apportioned
appropriately to reflect the respective debt and equity instruments
in the event of a sale at that level at the reporting
date.
Listed Investment
Funds
Listed investment funds are
valued at active market bid price. An active market is defined as
one where transactions take place regularly with sufficient volume
and frequency to determine price on an ongoing basis. There were no
listed investment funds held at 31 March 2024.
Income
Dividends and interest are
received from financial assets measured at fair value through
profit and loss and are recognised on the same basis in the
Statement of Comprehensive Income. This includes interest and
preference dividends rolled up and/or payable at redemption.
Interest income is also received on cash, cash equivalents and
current asset investments. Dividend income from unquoted equity
shares is recognised at the time when the right to the income is
established.
Expenses
Expenses are accounted for
on an accruals basis. Expenses are charged through the Revenue
column of the Statement of Comprehensive Income, except for the
Manager's fee and incentive fees. Of the Manager's fees 75 per cent
are allocated to the Capital column of the Statement of
Comprehensive Income, to the extent that these relate to an
enhancement in the value of the investments and in line with the
Board's expectation that over the long term 75 per cent of the
Company's investment returns will be in the form of capital gains.
The incentive fee payable to the Manager (as set out in note 3) is
charged wholly through the Capital column.
Tax relief is allocated to
the Capital Reserve using a marginal basis.
Incentive
Fee
The incentive fee is
accounted for on an accruals basis. As further detailed in
note 3, a performance incentive fee is payable to the Manager
subject to the Company achieving both a target level of Total
Return (the "Total Return Hurdle") and dividends ("Dividend
Hurdle"). Subject to meeting the Total Return Hurdle, the
Manager will receive an amount equivalent to 20 per cent of the
amount by which dividends paid per share exceeds the Dividend
Hurdle, multiplied by the number of shares in issue at the year
end. The incentive fee in any financial year will be subject
to a cap if the excess of dividends paid over the Dividend Hurdle
is greater than the sum of the excess of the Total Return over the
Total Return Hurdle divided by 1.2. At the end of each reporting
period, an accrual is recognised based upon the dividends paid
during the financial year to date and the Total Return at the end
of the reporting period. The incentive fee is charged wholly
through the Capital column.
Cash, Cash Equivalents and
Current Asset Investments
Cash at bank comprises cash
at hand and bank deposits with an original maturity of less than
three months, readily convertible to a known amount of cash and
subject to an insignificant risk of changes in
value.
Current asset investments
comprise money market funds.
Cash and cash equivalents
include cash at hand, money market funds and bank deposits
repayable on up to three months' notice as these meet the
definition in IAS 7 'Statement of cash flows' of a short-term
highly liquid investment that is readily convertible into known
amounts of cash and subject to insignificant risk of change in
value.
Balances held in fixed term
deposits which mature after three months are not classified as cash
and cash equivalents, as they do not meet the definition in IAS 7
'Statement of cash flows' of short-term highly liquid
investments.
Cash and cash equivalents
are valued at amortised cost, which equates to fair
value.
Cash flows classified as
"operating activities" for the purposes of the Statement of Cash
Flows are those arising from the Revenue column of the Statement of
Comprehensive Income, together with the items in the Capital column
that do not fall to be easily classified under the headings for
"investing activities" given by IAS 7 'Statement of cash flows',
being management and incentive fees payable to the Manager. The
capital cash flows relating to the acquisition and disposal of
investments are presented under "investing activities" in the
Statement of Cash Flows in line with both the requirements of IAS 7
and the positioning given to these headings by general practice in
the industry.
Share Capital and
Reserves
Share
Capital
This reserve contains the
nominal value of all shares allotted under offers for
subscription.
Share Premium
Account
This reserve contains the
excess of gross proceeds less issue costs over the nominal value of
shares allotted under offers for subscription, to the extent that
it has not been cancelled.
Capital
Reserve
The following are included
within this reserve:
·
Gains and losses on realisation of
investments;
·
Realised losses upon permanent diminution
in value of investments;
·
Capital income from
investments;
·
75 per cent of the Manager's fee expense,
together with the related taxation effect to this reserve in
accordance with the policy on expenses in note 1
above;
·
Incentive fee payable to the
Manager;
·
Capital dividends paid to
shareholders;
·
Applicable share issue
costs;
·
Purchase and holding of the Company's own
shares; and
·
Credits arising from the cancellation of
any share premium account.
Investment
Holding Gains and Losses Reserve
Increases and decreases in
the valuation of investments held at the year-end are accounted for
in this reserve, except to the extent that the diminution is deemed
permanent.
Revenue
Reserve
This reserve includes all
revenue income from investments along with any costs associated
with the running of the Company - less 75 per cent of the Manager's
fee expense as detailed in the Capital Reserve
above.
Taxation
Due to the Company's status
as a venture capital trust and the continued intention to meet the
conditions required to comply with Chapter 3 Part 6 of the Income
Tax Act 2007, no provision for taxation is required in respect of
any realised or unrealised appreciation of the Company's
investments which arises. Deferred tax is recognised on all
temporary differences that have originated, but not reversed, by
the balance sheet date.
Deferred tax assets are only
recognised to the extent that they are regarded as recoverable.
Deferred tax is calculated at the tax rates that are expected to
apply when the asset is realised. Deferred tax assets and
liabilities are not discounted.
Dividends
Payable
Dividends payable are
recognised only when an obligation exists. Interim and special
dividends are recognised when paid and final dividends are
recognised when approved by shareholders in general
meetings.
Segmental
Reporting
In accordance with IFRS 8
'Operating segments' and the criteria for aggregating reportable
segments, segmental reporting has been determined by the directors
based upon the reports reviewed by the Board. The directors are of
the opinion that the Company has engaged in a single operating
segment - investing in equity and debt securities within the United
Kingdom - and therefore no reportable segmental analysis is
provided.
Critical Accounting
Estimates and Judgements
The preparation of financial
statements in conformity with generally accepted accounting
practice requires the use of estimates and assumptions that affect
the reported amounts of assets and liabilities at the date of the
financial statements and the reported amounts of revenues and
expenses during the reporting period. Although these estimates are
based on management's best knowledge of the amount, event or
actions, actual results may ultimately differ from those estimates.
The estimates and assumptions that have a significant risk of
causing a material adjustment to the carrying amounts of assets and
liabilities within the next financial year are those used to
determine the fair value of investments at fair value through
profit or loss, as disclosed in note 7 to the financial
statements.
The fair value of
investments at fair value through profit or loss is determined by
using valuation techniques. As explained above, the Board uses its
judgement to select from a variety of methods and makes assumptions
that are mainly based on market conditions at each balance sheet
date.
The Board uses its judgement
to select the appropriate method for determining the fair value of
investments through profit or loss.
2.
Income
|
2024
£000
|
2023
£000
|
Dividends from unquoted
companies
|
907
|
1,102
|
Interest on loans to unquoted
companies
|
218
|
263
|
Income from unquoted
portfolio
|
1,125
|
1,365
|
Income from listed investment
funds
|
97
|
300
|
Income from investments held at fair
value through profit or loss
|
1,222
|
1,665
|
Interest from bank deposits/money
market funds
|
2,823
|
329
|
|
4,045
|
1,994
|
3.
Administrative Expenses
|
2024
£000
|
2023
£000
|
Manager's fee
|
3,179
|
2,782
|
Administration fee
|
85
|
75
|
Total payable
|
3,264
|
2,857
|
Incentive fee
|
-
|
125
|
Other expenses:
|
|
|
Trail commission paid to financial
intermediaries
|
142
|
92
|
Directors' remuneration
|
138
|
141
|
General expenses
|
136
|
149
|
Listing and registrar
fees
|
89
|
80
|
Auditor's remuneration - audit of
the financial statements
|
|
|
(excluding irrecoverable
VAT)
|
66
|
64
|
Printing
|
60
|
51
|
Irrecoverable VAT
|
52
|
46
|
|
3,947
|
3,605
|
Fair value movement related to
credit risk
|
-
|
(483)
|
|
3,947
|
3,122
|
Ongoing charges figure
|
1.85%
|
2.12%
|
Directors' remuneration
comprises only short-term benefits including social security
contributions of £12,000 (2023: £13,000).
The directors are the
Company's only key management personnel.
No fees are payable to the
auditor in respect of other services (2023:
£nil).
YFM Private Equity Limited
provides management services to the Company under an investment
agreement (IA) dated 28 February 1996 as varied by agreements dated
1 July 2009, 16 November 2012, 17 October 2014, 24 August 2015 and
18 November 2019. The agreement may be terminated by not less than
12 months' notice given by either party at any time. No
notice has been issued to or by YFM Private Equity Limited
terminating the contract as at the date of this
Report.
The key features of the IA
are:
·
YFM Private Equity Limited receives a
Manager's fee, calculated at half-yearly intervals as at 31 March
and 30 September, at the rate of 2.0 per cent of gross assets less
current liabilities. The fee is allocated between capital and
revenue as described in note 1. The fee is payable quarterly in
advance;
·
With effect from 1 April 2019 the annual
fee payable to the Manager is 1.0 per cent on all surplus cash,
defined as all cash above £7.5 million. The annual fee on all other
assets will be 2.0 per cent of net assets per annum. Based on the
Company's net assets at 31 March 2024 of £219,600,000 and cash and
cash equivalents of £89,804,000 at that date, this equates to
approximately £3,569,000 per annum;
·
Under the IA YFM Private Equity Limited
also provides administrative and secretarial services to the
Company for a fee of £35,000 per annum (at 28 February 1996) plus
annual adjustments to reflect movements in the Retail Prices
Index. This fee is charged fully to revenue, and totalled
£85,000 for the year ended 31 March 2024 (2023: £75,000);
and
·
YFM Private Equity Limited shall bear the
annual operating costs of the Company (including the fees set out
above but excluding any payment of the performance incentive fee,
details of which are set out below and excluding VAT and trail
commissions payable to financial intermediaries) to the extent that
those costs exceed 2.9 per cent of the net asset value of the
Company. The excess expenses during the year payable to the Company
from YFM Private Equity Limited amounted to £nil (2023:
£nil).
When the Company makes
investments into its unquoted portfolio the Manager charges that
investee an advisory fee or arrangement fee, calculated by applying
a percentage to the investment amount. The Company and the Manager
have agreed that, if the average of the relevant fees during the
Company's financial year exceeds 3.0 per cent of the total invested
into new portfolio companies and 2.0 per cent into follow-on
holdings this excess will be rebated to the Company. As at 31 March
2024, the Company was due a rebate from the Manager of £nil (2023:
£1,320).
The total remuneration
payable to YFM Private Equity Limited under the IA in the period
was £3,264,000 (2023: £2,857,000).
Monitoring and directors'
fees the Manager receives from the investee companies are limited
to a maximum of £40,000 (excluding VAT) per annum per
company.
Under the IA, YFM Private
Equity Limited is entitled to receive fees from investee companies
in respect of the provision of non-executive directors and other
advisory services. YFM Private Equity Limited is responsible for
paying the due diligence and other costs incurred in connection
with proposed investments which for whatever reason do not proceed
to completion. In the year ended 31 March 2024 the fees
receivable by YFM Private Equity Limited from investee companies
which were attributable to advisory and directors' and monitoring
fees amounted to £1,535,000 (2023: £1,355,000).
A performance incentive fee
is payable to the Manager subject to the Company achieving both a
target level of Total Return (the "Total Return Hurdle") and
dividends ("Dividend Hurdle"). Subject to meeting the Total
Return Hurdle, the Manager will receive an amount equivalent to 20
per cent of the amount by which dividends paid per share exceeds
the Dividend Hurdle, multiplied by the number of shares in issue at
the year end. The incentive fee in any financial year will be
subject to a cap if the excess of dividends paid over the Dividend
Hurdle is greater than the sum of the excess of the Total Return
over the Total Return Hurdle divided by 1.2. With effect from 31
March 2019 the Total Return Hurdle was 228.6 pence per share and
the annual increase is equivalent to 4.0 pence per share, as
increased or decreased by the percentage increase or decrease (if
any) in RPI from 1 April 2009. For the year ended 31 March
2024 the annual increase in the Total Return Hurdle was 7.0 pence
per share.
The Dividend Hurdle was 4.0
pence per share (increasing in line with RPI) from 1 April
2009. For the year ended 31 March 2024 the Dividend Hurdle
was 7.0 pence per share.
The incentive fees payable
for the years ended 31 March 2024 and 31 March 2023 were calculated
as follows:
|
2024
|
2023
|
Total Return Hurdle (p)
|
265.50
|
258.20
|
Actual Total Return per Share before
incentive fee (p)
|
262.50
|
258.60
|
(Shortfall) Excess over Total Return
Hurdle (p)
|
(3.00)
|
0.40
|
|
|
|
Dividend Hurdle (p)
|
7.00
|
6.10
|
Actual Dividends per share
(p)
|
4.00
|
8.50
|
(Shortfall) Excess over Dividend
Hurdle (p)
|
(3.00)
|
2.40
|
|
|
|
Lower excess of the two hurdles
(p)
|
-
|
0.40
|
Fee impact reduction (divide by 1.2)
(p)
|
-
|
0.333
|
Performance fee per share at 20% of
adjusted excess (p)
|
-
|
0.067
|
Number of shares in issue
('000)
|
262,659
|
187,679
|
Incentive fee payable (£'000)
|
-
|
125
|
The Total Return Hurdle for
the year ending 31 March 2025 is 272.75 pence per share. The
Dividend Hurdle is 7.25 pence per share.
If the annual incentive fee
exceeds £5.0 million then the excess is deferred until following
the next year's Annual General Meeting. Payment of the remainder is
made five Business Days after the relevant Annual General Meeting
at which the audited accounts are presented to
shareholders.
The amount of the incentive
payment paid to the Manager for any one year shall, when taken with
all other relevant costs, ensure that the Company's total costs in
a single year do not exceed 5 per cent of net assets. Any
excess over the 5 per cent is carried forward to be included in the
calculation of the amount that can be paid in future years. Except
with shareholder approval the maximum fee payable in any 12 month
period will not exceed £7.5 million.
There are also provisions
for a compensatory fee in circumstances where the Company is taken
over or the Incentive Agreement is terminated, which is calculated
as a percentage of the fee that would otherwise be payable under
the Incentive Agreement by reference to the accounting period
following its termination. In this instance 80 per cent is payable
in the first accounting period after such an event, 55 per cent in
the second, 35 per cent in the third and nothing is payable
thereafter.
Under the terms of the offer
launched with British Smaller Companies VCT2 plc on 30 November
2022, YFM Private Equity Limited was entitled to 3.0 per cent of
gross subscriptions, (3.5 per cent for Applications received from
Applicants who did not invest their money through a financial
intermediary advisor and invested directly into the Company) less
commissions payable to an execution-only broker or platform. The
net amount paid to YFM Private Equity Limited under this offer
amounted to £1,383,000.
Under the terms of the offer
launched with British Smaller Companies VCT2 plc on 20 September
2023, YFM Private Equity Limited was entitled to 3.0 per cent of
gross subscriptions, (3.5 per cent for Applications received from
Applicants who did not invest their money through a financial
intermediary advisor and invested directly into the Company) less
commissions payable to an execution-only broker or platform. The
net amount paid to YFM Private Equity Limited under this offer
amounted to £1,645,000.
The details of directors'
remuneration are set out in the Directors' Remuneration Report on
page 50 of the annual report under the heading "Directors'
Remuneration for the year ended 31 March 2024
(audited)".
4.
Taxation
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
Revenue
£000
|
Capital
£000
|
Total
£000
|
Revenue
£000
|
Capital
£000
|
Total
£000
|
Profit before taxation
|
2,482
|
8,136
|
10,618
|
1,083
|
11,154
|
12,237
|
Profit before taxation multiplied by
standard rate of corporation
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
tax in UK of 19% (2023:
19%)
|
471
|
1,546
|
2,017
|
206
|
2,119
|
2,325
|
Effect of:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
UK dividends received
|
(172)
|
-
|
(172)
|
(297)
|
-
|
(297)
|
Non-taxable profits on
investments
|
-
|
(1,999)
|
(1,999)
|
-
|
(2,539)
|
(2,539)
|
Deferred tax not
recognised
|
(299)
|
453
|
154
|
91
|
420
|
511
|
Tax
charge
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
The Company has no provided
or unprovided deferred tax liability in either
year.
Deferred tax assets of £4.98
million (2023: £4.75 million) calculated at 25% (2023: 25%) in
respect of unrelieved management expenses (£19.93 million as at 31
March 2024 and £19.01 million as at 31 March 2023) have not been
recognised as the directors do not currently believe that it is
probable that sufficient taxable profits will be available against
which assets can be recovered.
Due to the Company's status
as a venture capital trust and the continued intention to meet with
the conditions required to comply with Section 274 of the Income
Tax Act 2007, the Company has not provided for deferred tax on any
capital gains or losses arising on the revaluation or realisation
of investments.
5.
Dividends
Amounts recognised as
distributions to equity holders in the period to 31
March:
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
Revenue
£000
|
Capital
£000
|
Total
£000
|
Revenue
£000
|
Capital
£000
|
Total
£000
|
Interim dividend for the year ended
31 March 2024 of 2.0p (2023: 2.0p) per ordinary share
|
638
|
4,178
|
4,816
|
-
|
3,725
|
3,725
|
Second interim dividend for the year
ended 31 March 2024 of 2.0p (2023: 2.0p) per ordinary
share
|
-
|
4,819
|
4,819
|
-
|
3,736
|
3,736
|
Third interim dividend for the year
ended 31 March 2023 of 4.5p per ordinary share
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
127
|
8,296
|
8,423
|
|
638
|
8,997
|
9,635
|
127
|
15,757
|
15,884
|
Shares allotted under
DRIS
|
|
|
(2,018)
|
|
|
(3,704)
|
Dividends paid in Statement of Cash Flows
|
|
|
7,617
|
|
|
12,180
|
The first interim dividend
of 2.0 pence per ordinary share was paid on 28 July 2023 to
shareholders on the register as at 30 June
2023.
The second interim dividend
of 2.0 pence per ordinary share was paid on 8 December 2023 to
shareholders on the register as at 10 November
2023.
An interim dividend of 2.0
pence per ordinary share, in respect of the year ending 31 March
2025, will be paid on 26 July 2024 to shareholders on the register
on 28 June 2024. This dividend was not recognised in the year ended
31 March 2024 as the obligation did not exist at the balance sheet
date.
6. Basic and
Diluted Earnings per Ordinary Share
The basic and diluted
earnings per ordinary share is based on the profit after tax
attributable to shareholders of £10,618,000 (2023: £12,237,000) and
244,463,235 (2023: 187,113,203) ordinary shares being the weighted
average number of ordinary shares in issue during the
year.
The basic and diluted
revenue earnings per ordinary share is based on the revenue profit
for the year attributable to shareholders of £2,482,000 (2023:
£1,083,000) and 244,463,235 (2023: 187,113,203) ordinary shares
being the weighted average number of ordinary shares in issue
during the year.
The basic and diluted
capital earnings per ordinary share is based on the capital profit
for the year attributable to shareholders of £8,136,000 (2023:
£11,154,000) and 244,463,235 (2023: 187,113,203) ordinary shares
being the weighted average number of ordinary shares in issue
during the year.
During the year the Company
allotted 2,490,239 new ordinary shares in respect of its DRIS and
76,120,499 new ordinary shares from its
fundraising.
The Company has also
repurchased 3,630,656 of its own shares in the year, and these
shares are held in the capital reserve. The total of 25,638,421
treasury shares has been excluded in calculating the weighted
average number of ordinary shares for the period. The Company has
no securities that would have a dilutive effect and hence basic and
diluted earnings per ordinary share are the
same.
The Company has no
potentially dilutive shares and consequently, basic and diluted
earnings per ordinary share are equivalent in both the year ended
31 March 2024 and 31 March 2023.
7. Financial
Assets at Fair Value through Profit or Loss -
Investments
|
2024
£000
|
2023
£000
|
Investment portfolio
|
126,592
|
127,406
|
Accrued income and other
assets*
|
2,070
|
-
|
Financial assets at fair value through profit and
loss
|
128,662
|
127,406
|
*
Relates to accrued income which is not
past due which has been disclosed as part of the investment value.
Prior year income was not included as it was not
material.
IFRS 13, in respect of
financial instruments that are measured in the balance sheet at
fair value, requires disclosure of fair value measurements by level
of the following fair value measurement
hierarchy:
Level
1: quoted prices in active
markets for identical assets or liabilities. The fair value of
financial instruments traded in active markets is based on quoted
market prices at the balance sheet date. An active market is
defined as a market in which transactions for the asset or
liability take place with sufficient frequency and volume to
provide pricing information on an ongoing basis. The quoted market
price used for financial assets held by the Company is the current
bid price. These instruments are included in level 1 and comprise
fixed income securities classified as held at fair value through
profit or loss. The Company held no such investments at 31 March
2024.
Level
2: the fair value of
financial instruments that are not traded in an active market is
determined by using valuation techniques. These valuation
techniques maximise the use of observable market data where it is
available and rely as little as possible on entity specific
estimates. If all significant inputs required to fair value an
instrument are observable, the instrument is included in level 2.
The Company held no such instruments in the current or prior
year.
Level
3: the fair value of
financial instruments that are not traded in an active market (for
example, investments in unquoted companies) is determined by using
valuation techniques such as revenue and earnings multiples. If one
or more of the significant inputs is not based on observable market
data, the instrument is included in level 3. All of the Company's
investments fall into this category at 31 March
2024.
Each investment is reviewed
at least quarterly to ensure that it has not ceased to meet the
criteria of the level in which it is included at the beginning of
each accounting period. The change in fair value for the current
and previous year is recognised through profit or
loss.
There have been no transfers
between these classifications in either period.
All items held at fair value
through profit or loss were designated as such upon initial
recognition.
Valuation of Investments
Full details of the methods
used by the Company are set out in note 1. Where investments are
held in listed investment funds, fair value is set at the market
bid price.
Movements in investments at
fair value through profit or loss during the year to 31 March 2024
are summarised as follows:
IFRS 13 measurement
classification
|
Level
3
|
Level
1
|
|
Unquoted
Investments
|
Listed
Investment
Funds
|
Total
Investments
|
|
£000
|
£000
|
£000
|
Opening cost
|
73,515
|
4,676
|
78,191
|
Opening investment holding gain
(loss)
|
49,846
|
(631)
|
49,215
|
Opening fair value at 1 April 2023
|
123,361
|
4,045
|
127,406
|
Additions at cost
|
9,140
|
250
|
9,390
|
Disposal proceeds
|
(16,523)
|
(4,105)
|
(20,628)
|
Net profit (loss) on
disposal*
|
4,569
|
(190)
|
4,379
|
Change in fair value
|
6,561
|
-
|
6,561
|
Foreign exchange loss
|
(516)
|
-
|
(516)
|
Closing fair value at 31 March 2024
|
126,592
|
-
|
126,592
|
Closing cost
|
77,385
|
-
|
77,385
|
Closing investment holding
gain
|
49,207
|
-
|
49,207
|
Closing fair value at 31 March 2024
|
126,592
|
-
|
126,592
|
*
The net profit on disposal in the table
above is £4,379,000 whereas that shown in the Statement of
Comprehensive Income is £4,475,000. The difference comprises the
change in the value of deferred proceeds totalling £96,000 in
respect of assets which have been disposed of and are not included
within the investment portfolio at 1 April
2023.
There were no individual
reductions in fair value during the year that exceeded 5 per cent
of the total assets of the Company (2023:
£nil).
The following disposals took
place in the year:
|
Net
proceeds
from
sale
|
Cost
|
Opening
carrying
value as
at
1 April
2023
|
Profit
(loss)
on
disposal
|
|
£000
|
£000
|
£000
|
£000
|
Unquoted investments:
|
|
|
|
|
Displayplan Holdings
Limited
|
9,636
|
130
|
7,901
|
1,735
|
E2E Engineering Limited
|
1,960
|
900
|
1,200
|
760
|
Ncam Technologies Limited
|
1,682
|
2,512
|
1,659
|
23
|
Macro Art Holdings
Limited
|
1,484
|
481
|
558
|
926
|
KeTech Holdings Limited*
|
1,461
|
-
|
593
|
868
|
Arcus Global Limited*
|
300
|
1,245
|
43
|
257
|
Total from portfolio
|
16,523
|
5,268
|
11,954
|
4,569
|
Wakefield Acoustics (via Malvar
Engineering Limited)
|
96
|
-
|
-
|
96
|
Deferred consideration
|
96
|
-
|
-
|
96
|
Listed investment funds**
|
4,105
|
4,928
|
4,295
|
(190)
|
Total from investment portfolio***
|
20,724
|
10,196
|
16,249
|
4,475
|
*
Partial realisation.
**
Opening value includes further investments made during the
year.
***
The total from
disposals in the year in the table above is £20,724,000 whereas
that shown in the Statement of Cash flows is £19,721,000. The
difference comprises deferred proceeds of £1,003,000 which will be
received in subsequent years.
8.
Basic and Diluted Net Asset Value per Ordinary
Share
The basic and diluted net
asset value per ordinary share is calculated on attributable assets
of £219,600,000 (2023: £157,032,000) and 262,659,361 (2023:
187,679,279) ordinary shares in issue at the year
end.
The treasury shares have
been excluded in calculating the number of ordinary shares in issue
at 31 March 2024.
The Company has no
potentially dilutive shares and consequently, basic and diluted net
asset values per ordinary share are equivalent in both the years
ended 31 March 2024 and 31 March 2023.
9.
Total Return per Ordinary Share
The Total Return per
ordinary share is calculated on cumulative dividends paid of 178.9
pence per ordinary share (2023: 174.9 pence per ordinary share)
plus the net asset value as calculated per note
8.
10.
Financial Commitments
There are no financial
commitments at 31 March 2024 or 31 March 2023.
11.
Events after the Balance Sheet Date
On 3 April 2024 the Company
allotted the final shares from its fully subscribed 2023/24 share
offer. Gross proceeds of £36.8 million were raised, resulting
in the issue of 42,588,037 ordinary shares. This increased
the number of ordinary shares issued with voting rights to
305,247,398.
Subsequent to the year end, £4.7
million has been invested into two new investments, Fuuse and
Ohalo.
12.
Related Party Transactions
Fees payable during the year
to the directors and their interests in the shares of the Company
are disclosed within the Directors' Remuneration Report on page 50
of the annual report. There were no amounts outstanding and due to
the directors at 31 March 2024 (2023: £nil).
13.
Annual Report and Accounts
Copies of the statutory accounts for
the year ended 31 March 2024 will shortly be submitted to the
National Storage Mechanism and will be available to the public for
viewing online at https://data.fca.org.uk/#/nsm/nationalstoragemechanism.
They can also shortly be viewed on the Company's website at
www.bscfunds.com.
Hard copies of the statutory accounts for the year to 31 March 2024
will be distributed by post or electronically to shareholders and
will thereafter be available to members of the public from the
Company's registered office.
14.
Directors
The directors of the Company are Mr
R Cook, Mr A C N Bastin, Mr J H Cartwright and Ms P
Sapre.
15.
Annual General Meeting
The Annual General Meeting of the
Company will be held at 9:30 am on 10 September 2024 at Thomas
House, 84 Ecclestone Square, London SW1V 1PX. Full details of
the agenda for this meeting are included in the Notice of the
Annual General Meeting on page 92 of the annual report.
16.
Interim Dividend for the Year Ending 31 March
2025
The directors are pleased to
announce the payment of an interim dividend for the year ending 31
March 2025 of 2.0 pence per ordinary share ("Interim
Dividend").
The Interim Dividend will be paid on
26 July 2024 to those shareholders on the Company's register at the
close of business on 28 June 2024. The ex-dividend date will be 27
June 2024.
The directors are not proposing a
final dividend for the year ended 31 March 2024.
17.
Dividend Re-investment Scheme
The Company operates a dividend
re-investment scheme ("DRIS"). The latest date for receipt of
new or updated DRIS elections in respect of the Interim Dividend is
the close of business on 12 July 2024.
18.
Inside Information
The information contained within
this announcement is deemed by the Company to constitute inside
information as stipulated under the Market Abuse Regulations (EU
No. 596/2014). Upon the publication of this announcement via
Regulatory Information Service this inside information is now
considered to be in the public domain.
For further information, please
contact:
Dan
Perkins YFM Private
Equity Limited Tel: 0113
244 1000
Alex Collins
Panmure Gordon (UK)
Limited Tel: 0207 886 2767