4 June 2024
GOOCH & HOUSEGO PLC
("G&H", the "Company" or the
"Group")
INTERIM RESULTS FOR THE SIX MONTHS ENDED 31
MARCH 2024
Gooch & Housego PLC (AIM: GHH), the
specialist manufacturer of optical components and systems, today
announces its interim results for the six months ended 31 March
2024.
Key Financials
(Continuing operations)
Period ended 31 March
|
H1
2024
|
H1 2023 ^
|
Revenue*
|
£63.6m
|
£64.5m
|
Adjusted profit before tax*
|
£2.6m
|
£4.7m
|
Adjusted basic earnings per share*
|
8.3p
|
15.1p
|
Net debt excluding IFRS 16
|
£22.2m
|
£12.9m
|
Net debt including IFRS 16
|
£30.4m
|
£19.2m
|
|
|
|
Statutory profit before tax
|
£0.3m
|
£3.6m
|
Statutory basic earnings per share
|
(34.8p)
|
10.9p
|
|
|
|
Interim dividend per share
|
4.9p
|
4.8p
|
*Adjusted for amortisation of acquired
intangible assets and non-recurring items
^ Re-presented for discontinued
operations
Key Highlights
§ Important
building blocks put in place to support the delivery of the Group's
strategic plan.
§ Revenue
from continuing operations declined 1.4% to £63.6m (H1 2023:
£64.5m) or 5.3% on an organic constant currency basis reflecting
customer destocking in our industrial and medical laser
markets.
§ EM4
business divested representing an important milestone in reshaping
the Group's portfolio. Financials re-presented to treat its trading
as discontinued operations.
§ Adjusted
operating profit from continuing operations of £3.8m (H1 2023:
£5.4m).
§ The
integration of GS Optics and Artemis into the Group is proceeding
to plan. Commercial synergies are being realised.
§ Order book
remains strong at £115.8m (Sept 2023: £115.3m) and continues to
grow, substantially de-risking H2 revenue.
§ Full year
expectations are unchanged; execution risks to H2 remain but have
been reduced.
Charlie
Peppiatt, Chief Executive Officer of Gooch
& Housego, commented:
"Despite the
reduced demand in our industrial and medical laser markets
persisting longer than expected, the medium term outlook remains
positive underpinned by a strong order book and healthy pipeline
with the Group well positioned to benefit from increased demand
levels as a result of operational and supply chain
improvements.
"The market
dynamics for G&H's technologies and capabilities remains strong
in all our target sectors supported by the focused progress the
Group has made to establish the foundations to accelerate the
delivery of our strategy."
Analyst meeting
A meeting for analysts will be held
at 10.30 a.m. today at the offices of Buchanan, 107 Cheapside,
London EC2V 6DN. To register attendance, please contact Buchanan
at G&H@buchanan.uk.com.
A live audio webcast of the meeting
will be available via the following link:
https://stream.buchanan.uk.com/broadcast/663c7e38f309b09a38728804
Following the meeting, a recording
of the webcast will be made available for replay at the Group's
website at https://gandh.com/investors/.
For further information please
contact:
Charlie Peppiatt, Chief Executive
Officer
Chris Jewell, Chief Financial
Officer
|
Gooch & Housego PLC
|
+44 (0) 1460 256440
|
|
|
|
Mark Court / Sophie Wills / Abigail
Gilchrist
G&H@buchanan.uk.com
|
Buchanan
|
+44 (0) 20 7466 5000
|
|
|
|
Christopher Baird / David
Anderson
|
Investec Bank plc
|
+44 (0) 20 7597 5970
|
Notes to editors
1 Gooch & Housego is a
photonics technology business with operations in the USA and
Europe. A world leader in its field, the company researches,
designs, engineers and manufactures advanced photonic systems,
components and instrumentation for applications in the Aerospace
and Defence, Industrial and Telecom, and Life Sciences sectors.
World leading design, development and manufacturing expertise is
offered across a broad range of complementary technologies. It is
headquartered in Ilminster, Somerset, UK.
2. This announcement contains certain forward-looking statements
that are based on management's current expectations or beliefs as
well as assumptions about future events. These are subject to risk
factors associated with, amongst other things, the economic and
business circumstances occurring from time to time in the countries
and sectors in which G&H operates. It is believed that the
expectations reflected in these statements are reasonable but they
may be affected by a wide range of variables which could cause
actual results, and G&H's plans and objectives, to differ
materially from those currently anticipated or implied in the
forward-looking statements. Investors should not place undue
reliance on any such statements. Nothing in this announcement
should be construed as a profit forecast.
Operating and Financial
Review
Performance Overview
Revenue from the Group's continuing operations
for the six-month period totalled £63.6m (2023: £64.5m)
representing a 1.4% decline over the strong prior year comparator
period, or 5.3% on an organic, constant currency basis. The Group's
trading in the first half of the financial year was impacted by the
previously reported significant destocking on the part of many of
our industrial and medical laser customers. We expect volumes to
recover in the early part of FY2025.
The Group completed the divestment of its EM4
business towards the end of the reporting period. The EM4 business
manufactured optoelectronic components and laser modules primarily
for the US A&D market. Its sale was an important step on the
Group's journey to delivering sustainable margin growth and to
consolidating our A&D activities into areas where we can offer
differentiated products to our customers.
Our six-month financial results and those for
the comparative periods have been presented as continuing
operations, excluding the results of the divested business.
Continuing operations include the results of GS Optics and Artemis
Optical which were both acquired in the second half of the last
financial year. We have, therefore, also disclosed the organic
revenue performance of the Group where appropriate to enable like
for like comparison to the prior period.
In the first half of the financial year revenue
in to our Industrial market declined by 13.1%. As previously
reported, this was driven by a reduction in demand from our
Industrial laser customers who are correcting their inventory
levels as well as from some of our semiconductor equipment
customers. Volumes declined in to the more established areas of the
semiconductor infrastructure market although there was growth in
our revenue from the more advanced deep and extreme ultra
violet lithography equipment sub market. We expect deliveries
into these next generation semiconductor platforms to continue to
grow in the coming reporting periods. Revenue in the comparator
period had been partially supported by the Group's work to reduce
its levels of past due backlog, activity which had been
substantially completed by the end of the last financial
year.
Partially offsetting the reductions in
semiconductors and industrial lasers, revenue in our telecoms
markets and in particular the subsea data cable market grew. We are
seeing additional demand from one of our long standing customers in
this market space as they win new cable laying projects and we were
pleased to secure an important new customer in this market.
Deliveries to this new customer for a complex fibre optic module
are expected to commence in the second half of this financial year.
These modules will be built in our Torquay facility and in order to
provide the production space needed for this new product line we
are continuing to outsource production of our hi-reliability fused
couplers to our Asian contract manufacturing partner.
In our Life Sciences market some of our larger
medical laser customers are also working to reduce their inventory
holdings and consequently Group revenue from these customers
declined compared to the prior period. However, revenues into the
medical diagnostic market grew thanks to two significant diagnostic
instrument programmes progressing through regulatory approvals into
volume production. End demand for our customers' new instruments is
reported to be strong and we, therefore, expect these programmes to
provide good revenue streams for the Group through the medium
term.
Our engineering team in Ashford is developing
and assisting with the accreditation of other customers' diagnostic
instruments which we expect to also migrate in to production in the
medium term. At the same time the Group has substantially completed
the build out of additional R&D and production space in the
recently acquired GS Optics business in Rochester, NY, which will
form our Life Sciences centre of excellence for the North American
market, mirroring the capabilities that we currently offer from our
G&H|ITL facility in Ashford, Kent. This new facility has
already secured ISO 13485 medical device manufacture accreditation.
We expect this to allow us to secure better access to the large
North American medical diagnostic market.
In our Aerospace & Defence market we saw
strong growth in demand for our precision optic components that are
used in ring laser gyros in both commercial and military guidance
systems. This is driven by increased military spending in part
owing to the Ukraine conflict underpinned by solid demand from the
commercial aerospace sector.
Our deliveries to the space and armoured
vehicles market declined a little compared with the prior year as a
result of programme delivery requirements but in the armoured
vehicle market we are making good progress on development
activities on the Challenger 3 upgrade programme and have already
delivered prototypes of our advanced sighting systems to the
customer and these were used in the British Army's livefire
testing of the upgrade vehicle earlier this year. The Group is also
supplying similar modules for another significant European armoured
vehicle programme.
The Group's order book for its continuing
activities grew marginally through the first half of the year with
orders 3% higher than revenue to finish at £115.8m at the end of
March 2024 (September 2023 £115.3m continuing operations). We
secured orders from an important new customer in the subsea data
cable market for a complex fibre optic module and orders for follow
on deliveries from several of our medical diagnostic instrument
customers. The Group has substantially all of the order cover
needed for the delivery of full year market consensus
revenues.
The Group's pipeline for future orders is
healthy. We expect to secure material new orders for our super
polished components used in ring laser gyros, additional new
optical systems contract awards as well as our first significant
production order for our newly created Life Sciences centre of
excellence in our Rochester facility. More generally our customers
in the industrial laser and semiconductor market are advising us
that they expect to pass down to us increasing demand from around
the end of this calendar year as they finally work through their
excess inventory holdings and satisfy growing demand from their own
end markets.
Revenue
Six months ended 31 March
|
2024
|
2023*
|
|
From continuing operations
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
% Change
|
|
Industrial
|
31,674
|
36,435
|
(13.1)%
|
Aerospace & Defence
|
16,595
|
12,221
|
35.7%
|
Life Sciences
|
15,348
|
15,880
|
(3.3)%
|
Group Revenue
|
63,617
|
64,536
|
(1.4)%
|
|
|
|
|
| |
* Re-presented for discontinued
operation
Products and Markets - Industrial
Gooch & Housego's principal industrial
markets are industrial lasers, telecommunications, sensing and
semiconductor manufacturing. Industrial lasers are used in a
diverse range of precision material processing applications ranging
from microelectronics and semiconductors to automotive
manufacturing.
Overall, sales of products by the Group's
continuing operations into our industrial markets in the six months
ended 31 March 2024 declined by 13.1%, or 13.4% when measured on an
organic, constant currency basis, compared with the equivalent
period last year. Destocking by our customers impacted the Group's
revenues in to all of its principal sub markets with our industrial
laser markets most significantly impacted although our revenues in
to the semiconductor market were also lower. Within the
semiconductor market our deliveries to the latest deep and extreme
ultra violet photolithography markets grew but this was more than
offset by reductions in deliveries to the more mature elements of
this sub market.
Offsetting to some extent these reductions we
did see growth in our shipments to the telecoms market and in
particular the subsea data market where our largest long standing
customers generated additional demand for us. We expect a further
step up in revenue from this sub market in the second half of the
financial year as their demand continues to grow and first sales
are secured from an important new subsea data customer for a very
complex fibre optic module assembly. Part of our revenue for hi
reliability couplers supplied to the subsea data market are now
being sourced from our contract manufacturing partner in Thailand.
In the first half of this financial year a further six production
rigs were transferred to them to enable them to further ramp their
output allowing our Torquay facility to instead focus its
productive capacity on more complex fibre optic module
assembly.
The reduced volume achieved in this segment
drove a 36.8% drop in adjusted operating profit compared with H1
2023, to £3.5m and the reported return on sales percentage fell to
10.9% for this segment in the first half. (H1 2023:
15.0%).
Products and Markets - Aerospace & Defence
(A&D)
Superior product quality, reliability and
performance are paramount in this sector, playing to G&H's
strengths, along with our commitment to provide value through our
wide photonics technical capabilities. We have solid,
well-established positions in target designation and range finding,
ring laser gyroscope navigational systems, periscopes and sighting
systems, opto-mechanical subsystems used in unmanned aerial
vehicles (UAVs) and space satellite communications. We are working
with our partners on the development of new directed energy weapon
systems that are increasingly specified as part of the defensive
suites of both naval and land platforms.
The trend in funding priorities in both the US
and Europe continues to favour G&H products and capabilities.
The need for all weather precision guidance and targeting generates
the demand for the product capabilities that G&H can offer. The
conflict in Ukraine is generating higher levels of enquiries for
the Group's precision optics including our advanced thin film
coating capabilities which can protect optics against lasers used
in an offensive manner on the battlefield. We are making good
progress on our contract to deliver advanced periscope systems for
the UK MOD's programme to upgrade the Challenger MBT platform.
First prototypes have been delivered to the prime contractor and
integrated into the overall vehicle which recently successfully
completed live firing trials. We are also working to complete first
production deliveries of a similar periscope system for an eastern
European NATO country for a new amphibious armoured vehicle
programme. The combination of the thin film coating capabilities
from our newly acquired business, Artemis Optical, with the optical
substrates that our Ilminster facility provides is proving to be
very attractive to our customers and we are optimistic that recent
proposals submitted to defence customers will result in large
orders for multi-year deliveries.
Within this market we completed the divestment
of our EM4 business in the period. The business manufactured
optoelectronic components and laser modules primarily for the US
A&D market. The business also manufactured and supplied fused
fibre couplers but this product line was excluded from the sale and
transferred to the Group's Torquay facility given this technology
is utilised in some of our products supplied in to the most
advanced photolithography machines. The EM4 business had struggled
to demonstrate that it could provide a differentiated product
offering compared with its competitors and shortly before its sale
some of the contracts that it was supplying were cancelled by an
end customer. We therefore anticipated that the business would not
be able to contribute to the profitable growth of the Group and we
consider its sale to be an important step on the Group's journey to
deliver sustainable margin growth and to consolidate our A&D
activities into areas where we can offer differentiated products to
our customers.
Excluding the discontinued EM4 business the
Group's revenues in to the A&D market grew by 35.8%, or 19.6%
on an organic constant currency basis compared with the first half
of FY2023. Deliveries of our super polished optical components used
in ring laser gyroscopes grew significantly. Our end customer is
indicating continuing growth in demand for these components fuelled
by strong demand from military applications and underpinned by a
solid commercial aerospace market. Whilst it is not yet
contributing material revenue for the Group we are active in a
number of directed energy systems programmes. These systems are
scheduled to be deployed by the US and Royal Navy in the coming few
years and we expect this market to develop significantly in the
medium term.
Additional volumes in this market helped to
reduce the adjusted operating loss of our continuing operations in
to this segment to £1.6m (H1 2023: £(1.9)m) and the loss on sales
reduced from 15.5% in the first half of FY2023 to 9.4% in H1
FY2024. We still have much to do to improve production yields and
generate acceptable returns in this part of the business but we are
confident that our inhouse continuous improvement programmes,
better use of our supply chain and the addition of more G&H
content in to sub system and system offerings can generate
acceptable returns for the Group from the A&D
segment.
The recently acquired Artemis Optical business
which primarily supplies the A&D market is performing well
under G&H ownership. Additional coating capacity has been added
to support it servicing growing interest from our customers for its
advanced thin film coating capabilities. The commercial synergy
between this business and our other precision optics business is
strong and is being exploited through a number of materials
quotations currently being submitted to customers for optical
sighting systems for military vehicles.
Products and Markets - Life
Sciences
G&H's two principal Life Sciences revenue
streams are derived from diagnostics applications where we design,
develop and manufacture a broad range of diagnostic systems, and
electro-optics and acousto-optics used in medical lasers. The
acquisition of GS Optics in FY2023 brought new polymer optic
manufacturing capabilities to the Group. This enables the Group to
target new revenue streams from the supply of disposable polymer
lenses and other components in to the Life Sciences
market.
Revenues from our Life Sciences market were
also impacted by our end customers correcting their inventory
holdings especially in the medical laser market and in addition
they reported some softening of end market demand compared with the
very strong demand seen in the first half of FY2023 driven by a
surge post COVID in the number of cosmetic and aesthetic procedures
being undertaken. The revenue decline we experienced in our medical
laser market was partially offset by good revenue growth in to our
medical diagnostic customers. In this market two important customer
programmes completed their regulatory approval stage and
transitioned in to volume production. These systems assist in
the targeted delivery of treatments for cancers and
liver transplantation, both ensuring improved outcomes for patients
delivered faster than before to the benefit of both recipients and
hospitals.
Revenue from our continuing operations in the
Life Sciences market in total declined by 3.4% or 5.9% on an
organic, constant currency basis in the six months to 31 March
2024, compared with the first half of FY2023. Despite the decline
in revenue operating profit returns in this segment improved to
14.7% (H1 2023: 14.6%) thanks to favourable pricing on some of our
newly introduced product ranges. Adjusted operating profit in the
segment was £2.2m (H1 2023: £2.3m).
Looking ahead our medical laser customers
expect demand pull through to return to more normal levels in 2025.
Our design teams based in our medical equipment solutions business
in Ashford are fully engaged on the development of our customers'
next generation systems and these will typically migrate to
production over the coming two/three years. We have substantially
completed the build out of a new Life Sciences design and
production centre in our new Rochester facility which will
gradually replicate the capabilities we have at our Ashford site in
this new North American centre of excellence. Our first R&D
contract for this new facility has been secured and we expect our
first significant production programme order to be received in the
second half of the current financial year.
The integration of our newly acquired GS Optics
business which secures an important share of its revenue from the
Life Sciences market is proceeding well. In common with other parts
of our business it has experienced some softness in demand from its
consumer electronics customers. But with the additional business
development support the business now has from the rest of the
G&H Group we are implementing targeted campaigns to offer GS
Optics' polymer capabilities in to the Group's existing Life
Sciences customers to address their needs for disposable healthcare
optics and other components, providing a one-stop shop solution for
their diagnostic device requirements. These campaigns are expected
to support the growth of the GS Optics business in
FY2025.
Strategy
Following the launch of the Group's new
strategy exactly twelve months ago focused on transforming G&H
to become an 'innovative customer focused technology company'
delivered responsibly by making a 'better world with photonics',
the Group is pleased to report that positive progress has already
been made and foundational building blocks are in place to support
the delivery of sustainable margin growth in the medium term. The
successful execution of this strategy will ensure that G&H
becomes and remains the 'first choice' for all our stakeholders
whether that's our employees, our customers, our shareholders, our
eco-system partners or the communities in which we operate. We will
offer differentiated performance through four key strategic
priorities.
1.
1. PEOPLE - Establish High
Performance Teams
This will be achieved by following G&H's
corporate values that guide the way we endeavour to do business,
consisting of customer focus, integrity, action, unity and
precision to deliver fundamental and sustainable improvement for
our employees, for the profitability of the company and for the
sustainability of our planet.
Priorities
• Embed our Vision, Mission, Values and Behaviours through every
step of our employees' work experience.
• Invest in our HR team and new tools to enable them to better
support our employees.
• Apply more rigour and structure to our talent reviews and
invest in our development and succession planning.
• Review our benefits and incentive plans to ensure they remain
market competitive and appropriately motivate and reward our
employees for the right behaviours.
• Promote greater diversity amongst our team especially at
management levels.
• Drive further improvements in our safety performance targeting
zero harm in all of our facilities.
Progress
• A new Chief People Officer was appointed and joined the Group
in December 2023. Her impact has already been positive as she has
brought a deep knowledge of Human Resource and Talent development
from her wide portfolio of experience in other Hi-Tech
businesses.
• The upskilling of the HR function through personal development
and where appropriate replacement of a number of our site HR
business partners continues to proceed in line with
plan.
• A new Group-wide HR Information System has been selected that
will provide our HR leaders with a single source of information on
each of our employees and implementation is planned for the second
half of the year.
• Revised incentive scheme developed for our sales force
ensuring they are appropriately motivated to grow the business and
secure new customer and programme positions.
• Annual site health and safety audits established.
• Zero reportable accidents (RIDDOR) in the first half of
FY2024.
• Environmental management certification to ISO 14001 for all
sites over the next 3 years. Since launching the new strategy
twelve months ago we now have five of our ten worldwide sites
encompassed by ISO14001, with Ashford (UK) and Keene (US)
recommended for certification in the first half of
CY2024.
• The successful integration of the two new acquisitions that
joined G&H in the second half of FY2023 continues ahead of
plan. This smooth transition into G&H has fostered a sense of
unity and shared purpose among our employees and encouraged a
greater willingness to harness and capitalise on the complementary
expertise that GS Optics and Artemis bring to G&H.
• The newly established Sustainability Committee has
successfully launched with a focus, amongst other things, on
driving the Group's equality, diversity and inclusion
agenda.
Future Priorities
• In FY2024 we intend to complete the successful implementation
of our new Group HR Information System.
• We will continue to develop a more focused approach to career
planning and succession providing our high potential employees with
structured development activities.
• We will continue to focus on ensuring our HR function is
organised with the right talent to enable the delivery of the key
'people' element of our strategy aligned to a more customer focused
structure.
• Renewed focus on how we attract, recruit, promote and retain a
diverse group of talented people who share our values.
• Our incentive plans for management will be updated to allocate
a greater reward for cash generation thereby supporting the Group's
goal to further improve the efficiency with which it deploys its
capital.
• Proactive follow-up to the actions and improvement
opportunities raised in the last employee engagement survey to
deliver further improvements in employee engagement, performance
and well-being.
• Our newly formed Sustainability Committee and Sub-Committee
will establish a series of supporting working groups to help drive
the Group agenda and accelerate our efforts in this
area.
• We will continue our site health and safety inspections to
achieve further improvement in our safety at work metrics. We are
targeting zero workplace harm in our facilities.
2. SELF-HELP - Deliver
an exceptional customer experience and superior operational
execution
Priorities
• Leverage our Customer Relationship Management tools to improve
the effectiveness of our Business Winning activities.
• Reorganise our commercial teams to clearly separate our
product line management activities from our other selling
activities.
• Support our product line and business development teams in
selling more complex solutions that incorporate more of the Group's
components and capabilities.
• Cross selling capabilities and products from newly integrated
acquisitions through our global sales team.
• Through strategic engagements with our customers ensure we are
developing joint product and technology roadmaps that inform our
R&D priorities.
• Disciplined focus on superior operational execution through
productivity, quality, inventory management, delivery and new
product introduction improvements
• Proactive outsourcing of carefully selected products earlier
in life cycle where technological sovereignty is not a
differentiator.
• Use our Operations planning processes to improve our on-time
delivery performance and reduce our lead times.
• Anticipate our customers' quality needs and drive to exceed
them.
Progress
• Our sales, business development and commercial teams have been
reorganised to allow a better focus on our medium-term product
management strategies and aligned more closely to the specialist
end markets we serve in Aerospace & Defence optics, Industrial
photonics and Life Sciences lasers and diagnostics.
• We are working closely with a number of our major customers on
their next generation product roadmaps with contract awards
imminent.
• The Group's on time delivery performance further improved
during the first half of year following strong performance
improvement in FY2023. Overdue backlog associated with Operations
continues to reduce, down to <£3m from £5.7m at
FY2023 year end and more than £11m at FY2024.
• We have strengthened our Supply Chain team reporting into the
new VP of Contract Manufacturing and Supply Chain focused on
driving process improvement and low-cost region manufacturing from
our global supply chain.
• In addition to the supply of AO products, following the
qualification of our Asian contract manufacturing partner for FO
products, we have started to ramp-up production of fused fibre
couplers as a third source for the supply of those products to our
customers.
• Over the period of our strategic plan, we intend to increase
the proportion of the Group's revenue that is manufactured by our
contract manufacturing partner to around 25%. We have now
established a 4-year plan by product line to meet this
target.
• After completing the transfer of our North American medical
diagnostic manufacturing activity from its former site in Virginia
into our newly acquired GS Optics facility in Rochester we have
achieved ISO 13485 certification for the manufacture of medical
devices at this location and completed the phase one build out of
the expanded production area at the site.
• Several talented optical and mechanical engineers have been
recruited for the Life Sciences business unit Rochester
successfully tapping into the large pool of optics talent in the
Rochester, New York state location.
• We have appointed a new EVP of Life Sciences who has
significant experience in global Healthcare, Medical Device and
Diagnostics sectors to lead the strategic business development and
go to market strategies for our Life Sciences business.
Future Priorities
• We will develop our Customer Relationship Management tool to
allow us to further integrate it with our core ERP systems. This
will enable us to reduce our time to prepare customer quotes and
give our sales team a more complete dashboard of our overall
interactions with our customers.
• We will implement a series of structured customer engagements
in which we will share our product technology roadmaps and receive
their feedback on how those roadmaps may support their own next
generation product development activities.
• We will continue to identify further products to outsource to
our Asian contract manufacturing partner. We intend to transfer
products earlier in their product life cycle to enable us to secure
the margin accretion and the additional capacity flexibility that
can result from these transfers.
• We have identified further second source suppliers to mitigate
the risk associated with some of our sole source suppliers,
especially those that are assessed as being of higher risk. We will
work to qualify this supplier for selected products.
• We will focus on delivering the planned productivity and cost
of poor quality improvements over the period of the strategic
plan.
• We will deliver further improvement of safety, quality,
delivery, inventory and productivity across our operations through
Lean and other continuous improvement tools.
3. TECHNOLOGY - Create
value through our technology
Priorities
• Technology roadmaps that focus our investment on those areas
identified as offering the greatest returns.
• A smaller number of development projects but with same level
of overall Group investment thereby allowing an acceleration of
time to market.
• On time and on budget delivery of our new product development
programmes.
• An increasing proportion of the Group's revenues derived from
products introduced in the last three years.
• A greater proportion of our engineers' time spent on new
product development activities.
• A greater interaction between our business development and
engineering teams to maximise our influence on our customers as
well as ensuring our technology roadmaps reflect our customers
latest plans,
Progress
• Spend on R&D in H1 FY2024 totalled £3.6m (H1 FY2023:
£3.5m).
• We have identified, resourced and established actions plans
for the vital few "Lucky Seven" research programmes which we will
receive priority given their potential to deliver materials
accretion to the Group's revenues and profitability.
• The Acousto-optic engineering and product line management team
has been strengthened and is focused on the commercialisation and
ramp-up of further optimised Germanium-based modulators for
CO2 lasers used in semiconductor fabrication and
micro-machining.
• Fibre optic: Design and development of new generation of
fibre-optic components for semiconductor fabrication, submarine
hi-reliability network coupler and medical diagnostics.
• Precision optic systems: Design of novel imaging sighting
systems for the UK's main battle tank and the application of unique
advanced laser protection filters into aerospace and defence
applications.
• Precision optics: Design and transfer to production of coating
technology in the Deep Ultraviolet, opening up new business
opportunities in advanced semiconductor laser tools.
• Life Sciences: More point of care, user interface and apps
development, AI, machine learning, cyber security of patient
data.
Future Priorities
• Focused investment in the vital few "Lucky Seven" development
projects.
• Using our newly acquired Artemis business to become a global
hub and centre of excellence to develop our advanced thin film
coating offerings and to capture a greater share of our customers'
spend.
• Win additional armoured fighting vehicle advanced periscope,
sighting systems and fire control optical systems.
• Organically grow our high-value add optics business by
leveraging the acquired polymer technology with in-house and newly
acquired expertise in coatings, coupled with our capability to
system integrate and offer optomechanical assemblies.
• Develop and expand our AO regional design centre in Fremont US
to support strong pipeline for next generation product developments
and customer-led R&D.
• Develop our US Life Sciences R&D hub in our Rochester, NY
facility.
• Secure and launch US Medical Diagnostic R&D
programmes.
4. INVESTMENT - Apply
focused investment across the business
Priorities
• Ensure acquired businesses are successfully integrated into
the Group and that the expected commercial and operational
synergies are achieved.
• Tight management and reduction of the Group's investment in
its working capital, through efficient operations planning and
inventory procurement policies.
• Ensure Group investment in new capital equipment is optimised
and appropriately prioritised into the areas of the business that
offer the most attractive potentials for returns and aligned to new
strategic priorities.
• Regularly review the portfolio to ensure we have in all cases
a differentiated offering capable of delivering attractive
returns.
• Assess and execute suitable accretive and strategic
acquisitions to deliver 'speed to value'.
• End of life or divest those elements of the portfolio that are
not differentiated or non-core.
• Invest in our supply chain partners with our capital equipment
and our on-site supply chain staff to help drive superior returns
for the Group and improved responsiveness for our
customers.
Progress
• After completing the acquisitions of GS Optics and Artemis,
the integration of both business proceeds in line with plan.
Additional commercial synergies for Artemis have been identified
and the establishment of our North American Life Sciences hub is
progressing well.
• We have completed the transfer of our US medical diagnostics
business that was located in Virginia in to GS Optics' Rochester
campus and closed our Shanghai satellite manufacturing
site.
• We divested the EM4 business, located near Boston (MA), which
manufactures photonic components and laser modules primarily for
the US A&D market. The business also manufactured and supplied
fused fibre couplers, but this strategic product line was excluded
from the sale and transferred to the Group's Torquay
facility.
• As our supply chain is able to increasingly improve on time
delivery performance we have been able to further reduce the levels
of our safety stock holding.
• Where our customers request us to carry safety stocks to
protect their programmes we ensure that they provide us with
advanced funding to cover the working capital investment. This is
being successfully implemented.
• We have set ourselves targets for improvements in the Group's
returns on capital employed over the course of the strategic
plan.
• We continue to monitor the market for potential acquisition
targets. We are supported in this activity by a network of advisors
with whom we have shared our acquisition criteria.
Future Priorities
• We will continue to identify and deliver commercial synergies
from the acquisitions of GS Optics and Artemis as part of the
G&H Group.
• We continue to see the benefits from substituting previously
third party spend in both G&H and the two acquired businesses
with internal supply.
• Our customers remain positive about the combined offerings
that G&H is now able to provide with both Artemis and GS Optics
as part of the Group. We expect this to be converted into
additional new business awards.
• We will continue to explore acquisition opportunities that may
be a match to our acquisition criteria and deliver speed to value
creation for the Group.
• Our capital equipment spend will be optimised and focused
tightly on those areas of the business that offer the greatest
potential return.
• We are targeting further reduction in our inventory
holdings.
Financial Review
The financial statements of the Group
separately identify the performance of the Group's continuing
operations from those of the divested EM4 business which has been
treated as a discontinued operation. Prior year comparative
financial information has also been re-presented to reflect
discontinued operations.
Revenue for the Group's continuing operations
declined by 5.3% on an organic, constant currency basis. Despite
this decline the Group's gross margins progressed to 29.1% from
28.5% in the first half of FY2023. Our objective is to improve the
Group's gross margins by a further 500-700 basis points over the
plan period.
The Group was able to pass on the impact of
inflation in its cost base to its customers. Whilst wage inflation
continued to run a little higher than historical levels, our
general pay awards for FY2024 were lower than we had been required
to make in FY2023. We are also seeing inflation from our suppliers
returning to normalised levels although we remain alert to the risk
of the inflationary effects of higher tariffs potentially being
imposed on certain territories by US and UK governments.
The Group's overhead increase reflects the
inclusion of the GS Optics and Artemis within the Group's reported
numbers. Excluding this effect, overheads grew by 5% reflecting
wage inflation and the addition of some additional roles required
to support the delivery of the Group's strategic objectives. The
Group was careful to maintain its level of R&D expenditure
which totalled £3.6m (2023: £3.5m) in the period. Following the
sale of the EM4 business in March the Group has made some
reductions to its Group shared functions to ensure it is
appropriately sized for its continuing operations.
Underlying operating profit was £3.8m (2023:
£5.4m). Whilst declining market demand impacted Group margins
negatively in the reported period the delivery of our strategic
priorities are projected to improve the Group return on sales to
mid-teens over the plan period. Reported operating profit declined
to £1.6m (2023: £4.3m). Further details of the adjustments made
between underlying and reported profit measures are set out
below.
The Group's interest charges increased to £1.2m
(2023: £0.7m) as a result of the additional debt in the second half
of the last financial year to fund the acquisitions of GS Optics
and Artemis Optical. The charge also reflects the higher interest
rates in the market. The Group was able to reduce its net debt a
little in the first half of FY2024 and expects to make further
progress in the second half.
The Group's adjusted effective tax rate was
19.2% (2023: 19.5%). Adjusted earnings per share was 8.3p
(2023:15.1p)
The loss from discontinued operations in the
period totalled £9.3m (2023: £0.2m). This comprised a loss on
disposal of the EM4 business of £8.9m, a trading loss in the period
£0.6m (2023: £(0.3)m) and a tax credit of £0.2m (£0.2m). The EM4
business had experienced two contract cancellations in the
reporting period which impacted its trading levels.
Alternative Performance Measures
In the analysis of the Group's financial
performance, alternative performance measures are presented to
provide readers with additional information. The interim report
includes both statutory and adjusted non-GAAP financial measures.
The Directors believe the latter reflect the underlying performance
of the business. Items excluded from the adjusted results, together
with their prior period comparatives, are set out below.
Reconciliation of adjusted
performance measures
|
Operating
profit
|
Net
finance costs
|
Profit
before tax
|
Taxation
|
Profit after tax from continuing
operations
|
Earnings
per share
|
Half Year to 31 March
|
2024
£000
|
2023
£000
|
2024
£000
|
2023
£000
|
2024
£000
|
2023
£000
|
2024
£000
|
2023
£000
|
2024
£000
|
2023
£000
|
2024
Pence
|
2023
pence
|
Reported
|
1,571
|
4,295
|
(1,247)
|
(705)
|
324
|
3,590
|
(168)
|
(672)
|
156
|
2,918
|
0.7p
|
11.6p
|
Amortisation of acquired intangible
assets
|
1,074
|
685
|
-
|
-
|
1,074
|
685
|
(224)
|
(151)
|
850
|
534
|
3.3p
|
2.1p
|
Restructuring and other costs
|
649
|
438
|
-
|
-
|
649
|
438
|
(59)
|
(96)
|
590
|
342
|
2.2p
|
1.4p
|
Acquisition costs
|
116
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
116
|
-
|
(54)
|
-
|
62
|
-
|
0.3p
|
-
|
Site closure costs
|
425
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
425
|
-
|
(2)
|
-
|
423
|
-
|
1.6p
|
-
|
Interest on deferred
consideration
|
-
|
-
|
57
|
-
|
57
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
57
|
-
|
0.2p
|
-
|
Adjusted
|
3,835
|
5,418
|
(1,190)
|
(705)
|
2,645
|
4,713
|
(507)
|
(919)
|
2,138
|
3,794
|
8.3p
|
15.1p
|
Cash
Flow and Financing
In the six months ended 31 March 2024, G&H
generated net cash from operations of £2.5m, compared with £6.1m in
the same period of 2023. Working capital levels increased by £3m
from the end of FY2023. This was driven by outflows associated with
payables held on the Group balance sheet at the end of the previous
financial year. Inventory levels for the continuing business
reduced by £3.6m with £1.7m of the reduction as a result of the
reclassification of holdings of heavy water held at our Cleveland
facility from inventory to fixed assets. Elsewhere despite the
increased activity expected by the Group in the second half of the
year, inventory levels are being reduced as we adjust our safety
stock holdings downward. There was an inflow of £0.8m from
the movement on receivables within our continuing
operations.
The net cash inflow from the sale of our EM4
subsidiary totalled £2.4m. This comprises consideration received of
£4.2m less transaction fees and other costs incurred of £1.4m and
cash included in the business at sale of £0.4m. Working capital and
net debt adjustments concluded early in the second half of the
financial year resulted in a repayment of £0.7m to the
purchaser. The net proceeds from the sale were used to reduce
the Group's borrowings.
Capital expenditure on property, plant and
equipment was £1.8m in the period (2023: £3.4m). Investment levels
were lower in the first half of FY2024 given the significant
investments that have been made in prior periods especially in our
precision optic facilities to add further capacity to our surface
finishing stations and to increase automation in areas of the
production process. The principal area of investment in H1
FY2024 was in our fibre optic facility in Torquay where we are
investing in our production facilities to prepare them for new
fibre optic module assembly work that has been secured as well
adding further hi-reliability fuse coupler capacity at our contract
manufacturing partners facility in Thailand to allow them to
further increase their output.
In addition to our investments in tangible
assets £1.2m was added to the Group's intangible fixed assets
(2023: £0.7m). During the period we transitioned our GS Optics
business that was acquired in June 2023 on to the Group's
enterprise resource planning tool, and we expect to complete the
migration of our other newly acquired business, Artemis Optical, on
to the Group's systems in H2 FY2024. This means that both newly
acquired businesses will have been fully integrated into the
Group's business management and reporting systems within their
first full year of ownership by the Group.
Good progress has been made in the period in
establishing our new North American Life Sciences centre of
excellence in the Rochester facility which houses our GS Optics
business. As part of the acquisition the Group leased additional
unused space in which to develop this new centre of excellence. In
the first half of FY2024 most of the investment has been made by
our landlord and this means with limited investment from G&H we
have been able to equip the production space in the new facility
suitable for the manufacture and assembly of both small and larger
medical diagnostic instruments. In the second half of FY2024 we
will make further, significant investments to equip the adjacent
R&D space including the lab space capable of prototype
instruments for our customers.
As at 31 March 2024 the Group had drawn $34.3m
on its revolving credit facility (September 2023: $23.8m). The
Group has access to a total committed facility of $50m with a
further $20m available from an uncommitted accordion facility. The
Group has started to pay down the additional drawings that were
made in the second half of last financial year to funds the two
acquisitions.
At 31 March 2024 the Group's net debt totalled
£30.4m (30 September 2023 - £31.7m) including lease liabilities of
£8.2m (30 September 2023 - £10.8m). Consistent with the Group's
borrowing agreements, which exclude the impact of IFRS
16, Leases, our leverage ratio was 1.3 times at 31 March 2024
(30 September 2023: 1.1 times).
Environmental, Social and
Governance
In the first half of the year the Group
achieved a like for like reduction of 15% in its greenhouse gas
emissions compared with the first half of FY2023. We are continuing
the migration of our US sites to sourcing their purchased
electricity from renewable sources following the lead of the UK
sites which have now migrated in full.
We are continuing to invest to support our
target of being net zero for scope 1 and 2 emissions by 2035. A
voltage optimisation system in our Ilminster facility became
operational in the period and we have commissioned new batteries in
our Ashford site to store electricity generated from our solar
panels installed at the site.
We are delighted to have secured ISO 14001 -
Environmental Management - recommendation for our Ashford and
Keene, New Hampshire sites in addition to the Ilminster and Torquay
facilities which achieved the accreditation in FY2023. We have a
plan in place to have all Group's facilities accredited by the end
of FY2027.
The Group manages its activities its activities
in this area through the Sustainability Committee of the Board.
This Committee was established in FY2023 with our non-executive
director, Susan Searle, acting as its chair. This Committee is
supported in its work by a Sustainability subcommittee staffed with
representatives from across the Group. The Group's agenda in the
area of environmental management is now moving in to assessing our
suppliers' performance in managing their operations in a
sustainable manner. We are engaging with third party agencies to
assist us in gathering data about our suppliers' performance and
this will be used as one of the factors used in our selection of
suppliers for new work.
Dividends
Given the Board's confidence in the outlook for
the Group and our plans to improve operating profit returns to
mid-teens over the medium term an interim dividend of 4.9p per
share (2023: 4.8p) has been declared. This dividend will be payable
to shareholders on the register as at 21 June 2024 on 26 July
2024.
Prospects and outlook
Whilst reduced demand levels from our
industrial and medical laser markets have persisted longer than we
had expected we are well positioned to benefit from recovering
demand levels which are now expected in the early part of FY2025.
Elsewhere we are seeing strong demand in the period, especially for
our medical diagnostic and fibre optic module products and for our
components used in ring laser gyros.
The divestment of the EM4 business was an
important milestone on our journey to focus our A&D business on
those areas where we believe we can offer differentiated products
that can over time will deliver acceptable returns to the Group. At
the same time the integration of GS Optics and Artemis is
proceeding to plan and we are seeing commercial synergy
opportunities arising from working with our other
businesses.
In the first half of the year the Group started
to reduce its borrowings which were increased in the second half of
FY2023 to fund the acquisitions of GS Optics and Artemis. We have
reduced our inventory holdings and expect to make further progress
in this area in the second half of the year allowing us to reduce
our borrowings further.
Our order book remains at a healthy level and
we have substantially all of the orders needed to support the
expected increase in revenues and profitability. The Group is
involved in complex development and production programmes some of
which are dependent upon inputs from both our customers and
suppliers in order to progress to their expected timescales.
Nevertheless, our expectations for FY2024 are
unchanged.
The long-term outlook for our technologies and
capabilities in all our target sectors remains strong supported by
the progress that we are already making in delivering against our
strategy.
Principal Risks and Uncertainties
The principal risks and uncertainties to which
the Group is exposed and our approach to managing those risks are
unchanged from those identified on page 88 of our 2023 Annual
Report available on our website. We are aware that geopolitical
risks are increasing and whilst that trend can have the effect of
increasing demand for some of the Group's products we also have to
manage the impact that this risk can have on our supply chain. In
order to help us mitigate this risk we have invested in additional
resources in our supply chain teams in some cases located in low
cost supply regions and they are active in ensuring we have access
to alternative supply sources where we have identified continuity
of supply from our existing suppliers as being high
risk.
The Group has been impacted in the first half
of FY2024 by lower demand levels from some of our important
customers in the medical and industrial laser markets. Our sales
teams maintain close relationships with our customers in order to
support us in predicting the timing of market improvement. Whilst
our customers report expected increases in demand in FY2025 we
remain vigilant in this area. We ensure there is frequent and
detailed communication between our sales and operations teams to
ensure our operational areas are appropriately resourced and that
we are able to anticipate the timing and location of the recovery
so as to be able to secure a greater share of the market by
offering competitive lead times.
We are alert to the emergence of new
competitors in our markets, especially from lower cost regions.
This is a constant phenomenon and risks lowering the price points
for the Group's products. We seek to mitigate this risk by
continuing to develop advanced product solutions for our customers
that can address their most complex needs. We regularly review the
Group's technology roadmaps to ensure we are investing our
engineering and development efforts in to the areas that are likely
to offer the best returns. The Board regularly reviews progress on
our technology development projects.
The competition for appropriately skilled
resources remains strong. Whilst we have resolved the serious
resourcing problems that impacted the Group in the periods
following the pandemic we still have to work hard to attract and
retain employees in some of our functional areas. Whilst general
employment cost growth has adjusted back down to more normalised
levels the competition for good employees can put upward pressure
on our wage bill.
Group Income Statement
Unaudited interim results for the 6 months
ended 31 March 2024
|
|
Half Year
to 31 March 2024 (Unaudited)
|
Half Year to 31 March
2023 (Unaudited)*
|
Full Year to 30
September 2023
(Audited)*
|
|
Note
|
Underlying
|
Non-underlying
|
Total
|
Underlying
|
Non-underlying
|
Total
|
Total
|
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Revenue
|
4
|
63,617
|
-
|
63,617
|
64,536
|
-
|
64,536
|
135,041
|
Cost of revenue
|
|
(45,115)
|
-
|
(45,115)
|
(46,118)
|
-
|
(46,118)
|
(94,746)
|
Gross profit
|
|
18,502
|
-
|
18,502
|
18,418
|
-
|
18,418
|
40,295
|
Research and development
|
|
(3,554)
|
-
|
(3,554)
|
(3,500)
|
-
|
(3,500)
|
(7,372)
|
Sales and marketing
|
|
(4,572)
|
-
|
(4,572)
|
(4,294)
|
-
|
(4,294)
|
(8,942)
|
Administration
|
|
(6,815)
|
(2,264)
|
(9,079)
|
(5,522)
|
(1,123)
|
(6,645)
|
(17,002)
|
Other income and expenses
|
|
274
|
-
|
274
|
316
|
-
|
316
|
835
|
Operating profit / (loss)
|
4
|
3,835
|
(2,264)
|
1,571
|
5,418
|
(1,123)
|
4,295
|
7,814
|
Net finance costs
|
|
(1,190)
|
(57)
|
(1,247)
|
(705)
|
-
|
(705)
|
(1,812)
|
Profit / (loss) before income tax
expense
|
|
2,645
|
(2,321)
|
324
|
4,713
|
(1,123)
|
3,590
|
6,002
|
Income tax expense
|
6
|
(507)
|
339
|
(168)
|
(919)
|
247
|
(672)
|
(1,145)
|
Profit /
(loss) for the period from continuing operations
|
|
2,138
|
(1,982)
|
156
|
3,794
|
(876)
|
2,918
|
4,857
|
Loss for the period from discontinued
operations
|
11
|
-
|
(9,262)
|
(9,262)
|
-
|
(191)
|
(191)
|
(809)
|
Profit /
(loss) for the period
|
|
2,138
|
(11,244)
|
(9,106)
|
3,794
|
(1,067)
|
2,727
|
4,048
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Earnings /
(loss) per share
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
From continuing
operations
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Basic earnings per share
|
7
|
8.3p
|
(7.6p)
|
0.7p
|
15.1p
|
(3.5p)
|
11.6p
|
19.4p
|
Diluted earnings per
share
|
7
|
8.2p
|
(7.5p)
|
0.7p
|
15.0p
|
(3.4p)
|
11.6p
|
19.2p
|
From continuing and discontinued
operations
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Basic earnings per share
|
|
8.3p
|
(43.1p)
|
(34.8p)
|
15.1p
|
(4.2p)
|
10.9p
|
16.1p
|
Diluted earnings per
share
|
|
8.2p
|
(43.0p)
|
(34.8p)
|
15.0p
|
(4.2p)
|
10.8p
|
16.0p
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
*The results for the period and year
ended 31 March 2023 and 30 September 2023 respectively have been
re-presented to show the effect of discontinued
operations.
Group Statement of Comprehensive
Income
Group Statement of Comprehensive Income
|
Half Year
to
31 Mar 2024
(Unaudited)
|
Half Year
to
31 Mar 2023
(Unaudited)
|
Full Year
to
30 Sep 2023
(Audited)
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
(Loss) / profit for the
period
|
(9,106)
|
2,727
|
4,048
|
Other comprehensive income /
(expense)
|
|
|
|
Gains on cash flow hedges
|
104
|
1,279
|
1,287
|
Currency translation
differences
|
(2,064)
|
(6,152)
|
(5,801)
|
Other comprehensive expense for the
period
|
(1,960)
|
(4,873)
|
(4,514)
|
Total comprehensive (expense) /
income for the period
|
(11,066)
|
(2,146)
|
(466)
|
Group Balance Sheet
Unaudited interim results for the 6 months ended 31 March
2024
Group Balance Sheet
|
|
31 Mar
2024
(Unaudited)
|
31 Mar
2023
(Unaudited)
|
30 Sep
2023
(Audited)
|
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Non-current assets
|
|
|
|
|
Property, plant and
equipment
|
|
37,799
|
40,608
|
41,818
|
Right of use assets
|
|
8,956
|
5,283
|
9,932
|
Intangible assets
|
|
54,297
|
44,248
|
59,729
|
Deferred tax assets
|
|
1,770
|
1,640
|
2,178
|
|
|
102,822
|
91,779
|
113,657
|
Current assets
|
|
|
|
|
Inventories
|
|
32,022
|
39,961
|
37,582
|
Trade and other
receivables
|
|
31,661
|
31,128
|
34,075
|
Cash and cash equivalents
|
|
4,816
|
6,141
|
7,294
|
|
|
68,499
|
77,230
|
78,951
|
Current liabilities
|
|
|
|
|
Trade and other payables
|
|
(16,933)
|
(19,513)
|
(21,156)
|
Borrowings
|
|
(10)
|
(43)
|
(10)
|
Lease liabilities
|
|
(913)
|
(1,247)
|
(1,443)
|
Tax liabilities
|
|
(866)
|
(1,102)
|
(581)
|
|
|
(18,722)
|
(21,905)
|
(23,190)
|
|
|
|
|
|
Net current assets
|
|
49,777
|
55,325
|
55,761
|
|
|
|
|
|
Non-current liabilities
|
|
|
|
|
Borrowings
|
|
(26,971)
|
(18,970)
|
(28,157)
|
Lease liabilities
|
|
(7,282)
|
(5,089)
|
(9,394)
|
Provision for other liabilities and
charges
|
|
(1,398)
|
(804)
|
(1,582)
|
Deferred consideration
|
|
(927)
|
-
|
(870)
|
Deferred tax liabilities
|
|
(9,043)
|
(7,632)
|
(9,682)
|
|
|
(45,621)
|
(32,495)
|
(49,685)
|
|
|
|
|
|
Net assets
|
|
106,978
|
114,609
|
119,733
|
|
|
|
|
|
Shareholders' equity
|
|
|
|
|
Called up share capital
|
|
5,159
|
5,008
|
5,159
|
Share premium account
|
|
16,051
|
16,000
|
16,051
|
Merger reserve
|
|
11,561
|
7,262
|
11,561
|
Cumulative translation
reserve
|
|
7,963
|
9,676
|
10,027
|
Hedging reserve
|
|
119
|
7
|
15
|
Retained earnings
|
|
66,125
|
76,656
|
76,920
|
Equity Shareholders'
Funds
|
|
106,978
|
114,609
|
119,733
|
Statement of Changes in Equity
Unaudited interim results for the 6 months
ended 31 March 2024
Statement of Changes in Equity
|
Share capital
account
|
Share premium
account
|
Merger
reserve
|
Retained
earnings
|
Hedging
reserve
|
Cumulative
translation reserve
|
Total
equity
|
|
£000
|
£000
|
£000
|
£000
|
£000
|
£000
|
£000
|
At 1 October 2022
|
5,008
|
16,000
|
7,262
|
75,715
|
(1,272)
|
15,828
|
118,541
|
Profit for the period
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
2,727
|
-
|
-
|
2,727
|
Other comprehensive income / (expense) for the
period
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
1,279
|
(6,152)
|
(4,873)
|
Total comprehensive income /
(expense) for the period
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
2,727
|
1,279
|
(6,152)
|
(2,146)
|
Dividends
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(1,978)
|
-
|
-
|
(1,978)
|
Share based payments
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
192
|
-
|
-
|
192
|
At 31 March 2023
(unaudited)
|
5,008
|
16,000
|
7,262
|
76,656
|
7
|
9,676
|
114,609
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
At 1 October 2023
|
5,159
|
16,051
|
11,561
|
76,920
|
15
|
10,027
|
119,733
|
Loss for the period
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(9,106)
|
-
|
-
|
(9,106)
|
Other comprehensive income / (expense) for the
period
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
104
|
(2,064)
|
(1,960)
|
Total comprehensive (expense) /
income for the period
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(9,106)
|
104
|
(2,064)
|
(11,066)
|
Dividends
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(2,114)
|
-
|
-
|
(2,114)
|
Share based payments
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
425
|
-
|
-
|
425
|
At 31 March 2024
(unaudited)
|
5,159
|
16,051
|
11,561
|
66,125
|
119
|
7,963
|
106,978
|
Group Cash Flow Statement
Unaudited interim results for the 6 months
ended 31 March 2024
Group Cash Flow Statement
|
Half Year to 31 Mar
2024 (Unaudited)
|
Half Year to 31 Mar
2023 (Unaudited)
|
Full Year to 30 Sep
2023 (Audited)
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Cash flows from operating
activities
|
|
|
|
Cash generated from operations
|
2,220
|
5,996
|
16,164
|
Income tax refunded
|
315
|
78
|
2
|
Net cash generated from operating
activities
|
2,535
|
6,074
|
16,166
|
Cash flows from investing
activities
|
|
|
|
Disposal of subsidiary, net of cash
disposed
|
2,380
|
-
|
-
|
Acquisition of subsidiaries, net of
cash acquired
|
-
|
-
|
(11,697)
|
Purchase of property, plant and
equipment
|
(1,789)
|
(3,439)
|
(6,257)
|
Sale of property, plant and
equipment
|
12
|
-
|
516
|
Purchase of intangible assets
|
(1,217)
|
(728)
|
(1,062)
|
Interest received
|
28
|
4
|
11
|
Net cash used in investing
activities
|
(586)
|
(4,163)
|
(18,489)
|
Cash flows from financing
activities
|
|
|
|
Drawdown of borrowings
|
2,789
|
2,748
|
19,154
|
Repayment of borrowings
|
(2,988)
|
(687)
|
(8,378)
|
Repayment of lease liabilities
|
(904)
|
(796)
|
(1,624)
|
Interest paid
|
(1,220)
|
(775)
|
(1,784)
|
Dividends paid to ordinary
shareholders
|
(2,114)
|
(1,978)
|
(3,180)
|
Net cash (used in) / generated by financing
activities
|
(4,437)
|
(1,488)
|
4,188
|
Net (decrease) / increase in
cash
|
(2,488)
|
423
|
1,865
|
Cash at beginning of the
period
|
7,294
|
5,999
|
5,999
|
Exchange gains / (losses) on cash
|
10
|
(281)
|
(570)
|
Cash at the end of the
period
|
4,816
|
6,141
|
7,294
|
Notes to the Group Cash Flow
Statement
Notes to the Group Cash Flow Statement
|
|
Half Year
to 31 Mar 2024 (Unaudited)
|
Half Year
to 31 Mar 2023 (Unaudited)
|
Full Year
to 30 Sep 2023 (Audited)
|
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Profit before income tax from
continuing operations
|
|
324
|
3,590
|
6,002
|
Loss before income tax from
discontinued operations
|
|
(9,465)
|
(328)
|
(982)
|
Adjustments for:
|
|
|
|
|
- Amortisation of acquired
intangible assets
|
|
1,074
|
833
|
1,672
|
- Amortisation of other intangible
assets
|
|
905
|
753
|
1,692
|
- Loss on disposal of
subsidiary
|
|
8,261
|
-
|
-
|
- Loss on disposal of property,
plant and equipment
|
|
-
|
-
|
234
|
- Depreciation
|
|
4,052
|
3,814
|
7,652
|
- Share based payments
|
|
425
|
192
|
337
|
- Amounts claimed under the
RDEC
|
|
(100)
|
(100)
|
(200)
|
- Finance income
|
|
(28)
|
(4)
|
(11)
|
- Finance costs
|
|
1,275
|
716
|
1,841
|
- Non cash interest charge included
in finance costs
|
|
(57)
|
-
|
(57)
|
Total adjustments
|
|
15,807
|
6,204
|
13,160
|
|
|
|
|
|
Changes in working
capital
|
|
|
|
|
- Inventories
|
|
380
|
(4,957)
|
(1,291)
|
- Trade and other
receivables
|
|
849
|
3,344
|
1,005
|
- Trade and other
payables
|
|
(5,675)
|
(1,857)
|
(1,730)
|
Total changes in working
capital
|
|
(4,446)
|
(3,470)
|
(2,016)
|
|
|
|
|
|
Cash generated from operating
activities
|
|
2,220
|
5,996
|
16,164
|
Reconciliation of net cash flow to movements in net
debt
|
|
Half Year
to
31 Mar 2024
(Unaudited)
|
Half Year to
31 Mar 2023
(Unaudited)
|
Full Year to 30 Sep
2023
(Audited)
|
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
(Decrease) / increase in cash in the
period
|
|
(2,488)
|
423
|
1,865
|
Drawdown of borrowings
|
|
(2,789)
|
(2,748)
|
(19,154)
|
Repayment of borrowings
|
|
4,158
|
1,623
|
10,298
|
Changes in net debt resulting from cash
flows
|
|
(1,119)
|
(702)
|
(6,991)
|
New leases
|
|
(218)
|
(13)
|
(3,305)
|
Translation differences
|
|
1,286
|
2,225
|
1,443
|
Non cash movements including leases
disposed
|
|
1,401
|
(1,652)
|
(392)
|
Acquired debt due after 1 year
|
|
-
|
-
|
(54)
|
Acquired leases
|
|
-
|
-
|
(3,345)
|
Movement in net debt in the period /
year
|
|
1,350
|
(142)
|
(12,644)
|
|
|
|
|
|
Net debt at start of period
|
|
(31,710)
|
(19,066)
|
(19,066)
|
Net debt at end of period
|
|
(30,360)
|
(19,208)
|
(31,710)
|
Analysis of net debt
|
At 1 Oct
2023
|
New
leases
|
Cash
flow
|
Exchange
movement
|
Disposal
of subsidiary
|
Non-cash
movement
|
At 31
Mar
2024
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Cash at bank and in hand
|
7,294
|
-
|
(2,047)
|
10
|
(441)
|
-
|
4,816
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Debt due within one year
|
(10)
|
-
|
2,988
|
-
|
-
|
(2,988)
|
(10)
|
Debt due after one year
|
(28,157)
|
-
|
(2,789)
|
1,035
|
-
|
2,940
|
(26,971)
|
Lease liabilities
|
(10,837)
|
(218)
|
1,170
|
241
|
1,713
|
(264)
|
(8,195)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Net debt
|
(31,710)
|
(218)
|
(678)
|
1,286
|
1,272
|
(312)
|
(30,360)
|
Notes to the Interim Report
1. Basis of
Preparation
The unaudited Interim Report has been prepared
under the historical cost convention as modified by financial
assets and financial liabilities at fair value and in accordance
with UK adopted International Accounting Standards and with the
requirements of the Companies Act 2006 as applicable to companies
reporting under those standards.
The Interim Report was approved by the Board of
Directors on 4 June 2024. The Interim Report does not constitute
statutory financial statements within the meaning of the Companies
Act 2006 and has not been audited.
Comparative figures in the Interim Report for
the year ended 30 September 2023 have been taken from the Group's
audited statutory financial statements on which the Group's
auditors, PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, expressed an unqualified
opinion. The comparative figures to 31 March 2023 are
unaudited.
The Interim Report will be announced to all
shareholders on the London Stock Exchange and published on the
Group's website on 4 June 2024. Copies will be available to members
of the public upon application to the Company Secretary at Dowlish
Ford, Ilminster, Somerset, TA19 0PF.
There were no changes to accounting policies
described in the annual financial statements for the year ended 30
September 2023 that had a material effect on the financial
statements.
Cash flow projections show that the Group has
sufficient funding available to withstand plausible downside
scenarios, and therefore the financial statements have been
prepared on a going concern basis.
2.
Estimates
The preparation of interim financial statements
requires management to make estimates and assumptions that affect
the application of accounting policies and the reported amounts of
assets and liabilities, income and expense. Actual results may
differ from these estimates.
In preparing these condensed consolidated
interim financial statements, the significant judgments made by
management in applying the Company's accounting policies and the
key sources of estimation uncertainty were the same as those that
applied to the consolidated financial statements for the year ended
30 September 2023.
3. Financial risk
management
The Company's activities expose it to a variety
of financial risks, market risk (including currency risk, cash flow
interest rate risk and price risk), credit risk and liquidity
risk.
The interim condensed consolidated financial
statements do not include all financial risk management information
and disclosures required in the annual financial statements and
should be read in conjunction with the Company's annual financial
statements as at 30 September 2023. There have been no changes to
the risk management policies since the year end.
4. Segmental analysis
- continuing operations
|
Aerospace
& Defence
|
Life
Sciences / Biophotonics
|
Industrial
|
Corporate
|
Total
|
For half year to 31 March
2024
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Revenue
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total revenue
|
18,041
|
16,212
|
33,002
|
-
|
67,255
|
Inter and intra-division
|
(1,446)
|
(864)
|
(1,328)
|
-
|
(3,638)
|
External revenue
|
16,595
|
15,348
|
31,674
|
-
|
63,617
|
Divisional expenses
|
(16,932)
|
(12,506)
|
(27,058)
|
481
|
(56,015)
|
EBITDA¹
|
(337)
|
2,842
|
4,616
|
481
|
7,602
|
EBITDA %
|
(2.0%)
|
18.5%
|
14.6%
|
-
|
11.9%
|
Depreciation and amortisation
|
(1,423)
|
(889)
|
(1,778)
|
(867)
|
(4,957)
|
Operating (loss) / profit before
amortisation of acquired intangible assets
|
(1,760)
|
1,953
|
2,838
|
(386)
|
2,645
|
Amortisation of acquired intangible
assets
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(1,074)
|
(1,074)
|
Operating (loss) / profit
|
(1,760)
|
1,953
|
2,838
|
(1,460)
|
1,571
|
Operating (loss) / profit margin %
|
(10.6%)
|
12.7%
|
9.0%
|
-
|
2.5%
|
Add back non-recurring items
|
205
|
296
|
617
|
1,146
|
2,264
|
Operating (loss) / profit excluding
non-recurring items
|
(1,555)
|
2,249
|
3,455
|
(314)
|
3,835
|
Adjusted operating (loss) / profit
margin %
|
(9.4%)
|
14.7%
|
10.9%
|
-
|
6.0%
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Aerospace
& Defence
|
Life
Sciences / Biophotonics
|
Industrial
|
Corporate
|
Total
|
For half year to 31 March
2023
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Revenue
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total revenue
|
12,979
|
16,993
|
38,239
|
-
|
68,211
|
Inter and intra-division
|
(758)
|
(1,113)
|
(1,804)
|
-
|
(3,675)
|
External revenue
|
12,221
|
15,880
|
36,435
|
-
|
64,536
|
Divisional expenses
|
(12,971)
|
(13,045)
|
(29,434)
|
608
|
(54,842)
|
EBITDA¹
|
(750)
|
2,835
|
7,001
|
608
|
9,694
|
EBITDA %
|
(6.1%)
|
17.9%
|
19.2%
|
-
|
15.0%
|
Depreciation and amortisation
|
(1,227)
|
(597)
|
(1,807)
|
(935)
|
(4,566)
|
Operating (loss) / profit before
amortisation of acquired intangible assets
|
(1,977)
|
2,238
|
5,194
|
(327)
|
5,128
|
Amortisation of acquired intangible
assets
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(833)
|
(833)
|
Operating (loss) / profit
|
(1,977)
|
2,238
|
5,194
|
(1,160)
|
4,295
|
Operating (loss) / profit margin %
|
(16.2%)
|
14.1%
|
14.3%
|
-
|
6.7%
|
Add back non-recurring items
|
86
|
78
|
275
|
684
|
1,123
|
Operating (loss) / profit excluding
non-recurring items
|
(1,891)
|
2,316
|
5,469
|
(476)
|
5,418
|
Adjusted operating (loss)/profit
margin %
|
(15.5%)
|
14.6%
|
15.0%
|
-
|
8.4%
|
¹EBITDA = Earnings before interest, tax,
depreciation and amortisation.
All of the amounts recorded are in
respect of continuing operations. The numbers for the half year to
31 March 2023 have been re-presented to show the effect of
discontinued operations.
4. Segmental analysis
continued
Analysis of revenue from continuing operations by
destination
|
Half year
to
31 Mar
2024
(Unaudited)
|
|
Half year
to
31 Mar
2023
(Unaudited)
|
|
£'000
|
|
£'000
|
United Kingdom
|
17,219
|
|
11,995
|
North and South America
|
22,614
|
|
20,581
|
Continental Europe
|
13,921
|
|
16,242
|
Asia-Pacific
|
9,863
|
|
15,718
|
|
63,617
|
|
64,536
|
5. Non-underlying
items
|
|
Half Year
to
31 Mar 2024
(Unaudited)
|
Half Year
to
31 Mar 2023
(Unaudited)
|
Full Year
to
30 Sep 2023
(Audited)
|
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Profit before tax from continuing
operations
|
|
324
|
3,590
|
6,002
|
Amortisation of and impairment of
acquired intangible assets
|
|
1,074
|
685
|
1,456
|
Restructuring and other
costs
|
|
649
|
438
|
787
|
Acquisition costs
|
|
116
|
-
|
1,156
|
Site closure costs
|
|
425
|
-
|
879
|
Interest on deferred
consideration
|
|
57
|
-
|
57
|
Adjusted profit before
tax
|
|
2,645
|
4,713
|
10,337
|
The restructuring costs in the period ended 31
March 2024 relate to non-recurring costs arising from our
manufacturing streamlining activities.
6. Tax expense
Analysis of tax charge in the period
|
|
Half Year
to
31 Mar 2024
(Unaudited)
|
Half Year to
31 Mar 2023
(Unaudited)
|
Full Year to 30 Sep
2023 (Audited)
|
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Current taxation
|
|
|
|
|
UK Corporation tax
|
|
93
|
139
|
844
|
Overseas tax
|
|
(28)
|
404
|
703
|
Adjustments in respect of prior year tax
charge
|
|
-
|
-
|
(1,130)
|
Total current tax
|
|
65
|
543
|
417
|
|
|
|
|
|
Deferred tax
|
|
|
|
|
Origination and reversal of temporary
differences
|
|
(272)
|
(8)
|
(349)
|
Adjustments in respect of prior
years
|
|
173
|
-
|
874
|
Change to UK tax rate
|
|
-
|
-
|
31
|
Total deferred tax
|
|
(99)
|
(8)
|
556
|
|
|
|
|
|
Tax (credit) / expense per income
statement
|
|
(34)
|
535
|
973
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Tax (credit) / charge on loss from
discontinued operations
|
|
(203)
|
(137)
|
(173)
|
Tax charge on disposal of
discontinued operations
|
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The tax charge for the six months ended 31 March 2024
is based on the estimated effective rate of the tax for the Group
for the full year to 30 September 2024. The estimated rate is
applied to the profit before tax.
The adjusted effective tax rate on profit from
continuing activities is 19.2% (H1 2023: 19.5%).
7. Earnings per
share
The calculation of earnings per 20p Ordinary
Share is based on the profit for the period using as a divisor the
weighted average number of Ordinary Shares in issue during the
period. The weighted average number of shares is given
below.
|
Half Year
to
31 Mar 2024
(Unaudited)
|
Half Year to
31 Mar 2023
(Unaudited)
|
Full Year to 30 Sep
2023
(Audited)
|
|
No.
|
No.
|
No.
|
Number of shares used for basic earnings per
share
|
25,786,397
|
25,040,919
|
25,085,805
|
Dilutive shares
|
330,799
|
199,101
|
272,361
|
Number of shares used for dilutive earnings per
share
|
26,117,196
|
25,240,020
|
25,358,166
|
A reconciliation of the earnings used in the
earnings per share calculation is set out below:
|
Half Year
to
31 Mar 2024 (Unaudited)
|
Half Year to
31 Mar 2023
(Unaudited)
|
Full Year to
30 Sep 2023
(Audited)
|
|
£'000
|
p per
share
|
£'000
|
p per
share
|
£'000
|
p per
share
|
Basic earnings
per share from continuing operations
|
174
|
0.7p
|
2,918
|
11.6p
|
4,857
|
19.4p
|
Adjustments
net of income tax expense:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Amortisation of acquired intangible assets (net
of tax)
|
850
|
3.3p
|
534
|
2.1p
|
1,175
|
4.7p
|
Acquisition costs
|
62
|
0.3p
|
-
|
-
|
1,071
|
4.3p
|
Site closure costs
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
728
|
2.9p
|
Restructuring costs (net of tax)
|
995
|
3.8p
|
342
|
1.4p
|
600
|
2.4p
|
Unwind of discount on deferred
consideration
|
57
|
0.2p
|
-
|
-
|
59
|
0.2p
|
Total
adjustments net of income tax expense
|
1,964
|
7.6p
|
876
|
3.5p
|
3,633
|
14.5p
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Adjusted basic earnings per
share
|
2,138
|
8.3p
|
3,794
|
15.1p
|
8,490
|
33.9p
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Basic diluted earnings per
share
|
174
|
0.7p
|
2,918
|
11.6p
|
4,857
|
19.2p
|
Adjusted diluted earnings per
share
|
2,138
|
8.2p
|
3,794
|
15.0p
|
8,490
|
33.5p
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Basic and diluted loss per share
from discontinuing operations
|
(9,152)
|
(35.5p)
|
(190)
|
(0.8p)
|
(810)
|
(3.2p)
|
Adjusted earnings per share before amortisation
of acquired intangible assets and adjustments has been shown
because, in the opinion of the Directors, it more accurately
reflects the trading performance of the Group.
8.
Dividend
The Directors have declared an interim dividend
of 4.9p per share for the half year ended 31 March 2024 (2023:
4.8p).
|
Half Year
to
31 Mar 2024
(Unaudited)
|
Half Year to
31 Mar 2023
(Unaudited)
|
Full Year to
30 Sep 2023
(Audited)
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Final 2023 dividend: 8.2p per share (Final 2022
dividend paid in 2023: 7.7p)
|
2,114
|
1,978
|
1,978
|
2023 Interim dividend of 4.8p per share (2022:
4.7p per share)
|
-
|
-
|
1,202
|
|
2,114
|
1,978
|
3,180
|
9.
Borrowings
|
31 March
2024
£000
|
31 March 2023
£000
|
30 September
2023
£'000
|
Current:
|
|
|
|
Bank borrowings
|
10
|
43
|
10
|
Leases
|
913
|
1,247
|
1,443
|
|
923
|
1,290
|
1,453
|
Non-current:
|
|
|
|
Bank borrowings
|
26,971
|
18,970
|
28,157
|
Leases
|
7,282
|
5,089
|
9,394
|
|
34,253
|
24,059
|
37,551
|
|
|
|
|
Total borrowings
|
35,176
|
25,349
|
39,004
|
G&H's primary lending bank is NatWest Bank.
The Group's facilities comprise a $50m (£39.6m) dollar revolving
credit facility and a $20m (£15.8m) flexible acquisition facility.
At 31 March 2024, the balance drawn on the revolving credit
facility was $34.3m (£27.1m) (September 2023: $34.6m (£27.4m)) and
on the flexible acquisition facility nil (September 2023:
nil).
The facilities above are committed until 31
March 2027 and attract an interest rate of between 1.6% and 2.1%
above rates specified by the bank dependent upon the Company's
leverage ratio, payable on rollover dates.
The Group's banking facilities are secured on
certain of its assets including land and buildings, property plant
and equipment and inventory.
Maturity profile of bank borrowings
|
31
March
2024
£000
|
31 March
2023
£000
|
30 September 2023
£'000
|
Within one year
|
10
|
43
|
10
|
Between one and five years
|
26,971
|
18,970
|
28,103
|
|
26,981
|
19,013
|
28,113
|
Maturity profile of lease liabilities
|
31
March
2024
£000
|
31 March
2023
£000
|
30 September 2023
£'000
|
Within one year
|
1,934
|
1,469
|
2,009
|
Between two and five years
|
5,489
|
3,924
|
8,481
|
After five years
|
3,380
|
1,773
|
3,528
|
|
10,803
|
7,166
|
14,018
|
10. Called up share
capital
|
31 Mar
2024
No.
|
30 Sep
2023
No.
|
31 Mar
2024
£'000
|
30 Sep
2023
£'000
|
Allotted, issued and fully
paid
Ordinary share of 20p each
|
25,040,919
|
25,040,919
|
5,008
|
5,008
|
11. Disposal of
subsidiary
On 18 March 2024, Gooch & Housego PLC
disposed of the entire share capital of its subsidiary EM4 LLC to
EMFOUR Acquisition Co. LLC, a subsidiary of a US-based global
technology company for total consideration of up to $12.0m
(£9.4m).
The total consideration payable of up to $12.0m
comprised an initial cash consideration of $5.25m (£4.1m) and
deferred consideration of up to $6.75m (£5.3m). The deferred
consideration is based on the performance of the EM4 business in
the period ending 30 September 2025.
The Directors have shown the performance of the
Boston business as a discontinued operation in the income
statement, and the comparative figures have been restated
accordingly.
Details of the disposal consideration and the
net assets disposed of are as follows:
|
|
£000
|
Purchase consideration
|
|
|
Cash paid
|
|
4,154
|
Transaction fees
|
|
(674)
|
Working capital and debt
adjustment
|
|
(709)
|
Employee liabilities settled direct
from proceeds
|
|
(659)
|
Other disposal costs
|
|
(216)
|
Deferred consideration
|
|
-
|
Net disposal proceeds
|
|
1,896
|
Management have assessed the fair value of the
deferred consideration to be nil.
Other disposal costs include certain staff costs
and professional fees.
The details of the assets disposed of are as
follows:
|
|
Book value
£000
|
|
|
|
Right of use assets
|
|
1,588
|
Plant and equipment
|
|
1,348
|
Inventories
|
|
3,445
|
Trade and other
receivables
|
|
2,537
|
Cash
|
|
441
|
Intangible assets - customer
relationships
|
|
1,262
|
Trade and other payables
|
|
(842)
|
Lease liabilities
|
|
(1,639)
|
Add: goodwill
|
|
2,635
|
Net assets disposed of
|
|
10,775
|
Loss on disposal
|
|
(8,879)
|
The income statement of the discontinued
operation was as follows:
|
31
March
2024
£000
|
31 March
2023
£000
|
30 September 2023
£'000
|
Revenue
|
4,343
|
6,752
|
13,435
|
Cost of revenue
|
(3,644)
|
(4,556)
|
(9,708)
|
Gross profit
|
699
|
2,196
|
3,727
|
Operating expenses
|
(1,287)
|
(2,517)
|
(4,691)
|
Operating profit
|
(588)
|
(321)
|
(964)
|
Interest payable
|
-
|
(7)
|
(18)
|
Profit before tax
|
(588)
|
(328)
|
(982)
|
Taxation
|
202
|
137
|
173
|
Profit after tax
|
(386)
|
(191)
|
(809)
|
The cash flows attributable to the discontinued
operation were as follows:
|
31
March
2024
£000
|
31 March
2023
£000
|
30 September 2023
£'000
|
Net cash generated from operating
activities
|
50
|
918
|
1,444
|
Cash used in investing activities
|
(194)
|
(325)
|
(467)
|
Cash used in financing activities
|
(198)
|
(242)
|
(463)
|
(Decrease) / increase in cash
|
(342)
|
351
|
514
|