ICG-Longbow Senior Secured
UK Property Debt Investments Limited
Annual Report And Financial
Statements
For the year ended 31 January
2024
Company
Number: 55917
All capitalised terms are defined in
the Glossary of Capitalised Defined Terms unless separately
defined.
Corporate
Summary
Investment Objective
In line with the revised
Investment Objective and Policy approved by shareholders at the
Extraordinary General Meeting in January 2021, the Company is
undertaking an orderly realisation of its investments.
Structure
The Company is a non‑cellular
company limited by shares and incorporated in Guernsey on 29
November 2012 under the Companies Law. The Company's registration
number is 55917 and it has been registered with the Guernsey
Financial Services Commission (GFSC) as a registered closed‑ended
collective investment scheme. The Company's Ordinary Shares were
admitted to the premium segment of the Financial Conduct
Authority's (FCA) Official List and to trading on the Main Market
of the London Stock Exchange as part of its IPO which completed on
5 February 2013. The issued share capital comprises the Company's
Ordinary Shares denominated in Pounds Sterling.
Investment Manager
The Company has appointed ICG
Alternative Investment Limited as external discretionary investment
manager, under the Alternative Investment Fund Managers Directive
(AIFMD) within a remit set by the Board.
Financial
Summary
for the year ended 31
January 2024
Key
Developments
· The Company is continuing to pursue an orderly realisation of
its assets, against a backdrop of difficult market conditions.
During the year, the Company returned £15.7 million of shareholder
capital, equating to 12.9 pence per ordinary share.
· As at the date of this report, the Company has now returned
capital of 44.90 pence per ordinary share to shareholders, equating
to £54.46 million in total.
· The Company is now seeking to realise its investments through
formal enforcement actions on all of its remaining loans with the
appointment of receivers or administrators over the properties or
borrowers in each case.
· Since 31 July 2023, the Company has increased ECL provisions
by £11.16 million to £32.48 million. This brings the total ECL
provisions made during the year to 31 January 2024 to £28.54
million. The movement in ECL provisions during the year to 31
January 2024 comprises:
- £6.31 million in respect of the Southport loan, increasing
the total provision to £8.60 million.
- £15.54 million in respect of the RoyaleLife loan, increasing
the total provision to £17.18 million.
- £6.68 million in respect of the Affinity loan, increasing the
total provision to £6.70 million.
· Total loans outstanding at gross carrying value, excluding
ECL adjustments, amount to £66.12 million as at 31 January 2024.
Total loans outstanding after ECL adjustments amount to
£33.64 million as at 31 January 2024.
· Following extensive discussion between the Board and the
Investment Manager, their fee will reduce to 0.5% of Net Asset
Value from 1% previously.
Performance
· NAV of £36.22 million as at 31 January 2024 after ECL adjustments of
£(32.48 million) (31 January 2023: £77.35 million after ECL adjustments of £(3.94 million)), (31 July
2023: £55.37 million after ECL adjustments of £(21.32
million)).
· NAV per share as at 31 January 2024 of 29.86
pence.
· (Loss)/profit after tax of £(24.87) million for the year ended 31 January 2024 (31 January 2023:
£1.96 million).
· (Loss)/Earnings per share for the year of (20.51) pence
(31 January 2023:
1.62 pence).
Dividend
· No dividends were declared for the year ended 31 January 2024
(31 January 2023: 3.6 pence per share).
· A Dividend of 0.5 pence per share of £0.61 million, declared
in respect of the period ended 31 January 2023 was paid in May
2023.
Investment Portfolio
· As at 31 January 2024, the Company's investment portfolio
comprised three loans with an aggregate principal balance of £58.01
million, and a carrying value after provision for ECL of £33.64
million (31 January 2023: five loans with an aggregate principal
balance of £67.4 million, and a carrying value of £68.96
million).
*Unless stated otherwise, loan
balances are stated gross of ECL provisions for impairment.
A comparison to the carrying value of the
loans is set out in Note 5 to the accounts.
Chairman's
Statement
Introduction
On behalf of the Board, I present
the eleventh Annual Report for the Company, for the year ended 31
January 2024.
The last 12 months have clearly
been very difficult for commercial property and finance
markets. The headwinds have been well documented with
conflicts in Ukraine and the Middle East, inflationary pressures
and a tightening of monetary policy across most western economies
creating uncertainty and volatility in many markets. In the
UK, rising short- and long-term interest rates, combined with
valuation uncertainties, have led to a severe slowdown in
commercial property transaction volumes which has continued into
2024.
At the end of 2023 the UK slipped
into a technical recession and, while monthly data for 2024 suggest
a return to limited GDP growth, economic and property market
conditions are widely expected to remain sluggish in the near
term.
Focusing on the sectors relevant
to the Company's remaining investments, 2023 is likely to have been
one of the worst years on record for the office sector, housing
markets having been impacted by higher mortgage costs, while hotel
transactions were also at a 10-year low, as the Investment Manager
notes below. Offices have undoubtedly been affected by
negative sentiment, including from the USA where high vacancy rates
across key metropolitan markets and rising costs of finance have
led to widespread loan defaults and significant valuation
declines. While UK and European markets typically have higher
occupancy rates than their US peers, investor views on the sector
remain heavily bearish.
In the context of the above,
shareholders will be aware that this has been a difficult period
for the Company as it seeks to realise its remaining investments in
what continue to be challenging market conditions. While the
Company's Northlands loan repaid during the year with ahead of
target returns due to default interest and fees, the Company has,
through enforcement processes, taken control away from the
borrowers of all assets securing the remaining loans. Those
assets are either on the market for sale or being readied for
sale.
It is important to be clear with
shareholders that as the Company's remaining investments are
impaired with receivers or administrators in place, the only exit
route is through sale of the underlying assets or loans themselves
- refinancing by the borrowers is no longer a plausible route to
exit. This exposes the Company to the potential for further
delay in realisations, with conditions not
supportive of quick or easy asset sales.
As I set out in our Interim
Report, an illiquid market with few buyers is clearly unhelpful for
any seller, and it is not clear how long it may take for liquidity
to improve materially. Buyers are under no pressure to
acquire assets and demand steep discounts, as well as being able to
stretch out buying processes where there is a lack of competitive
bidding. Accordingly, the market environment for the Company to
exit its remaining investments is expected to remain challenging in
the near term.
Shareholders will recall that, in
recognition of the poor market conditions and falling property
values, as at 31 July 2023 we recognised Expected Credit Loss (ECL)
allowances against our three remaining assets equivalent to 17.57
pence per share. Reflecting the continuing difficult market
conditions, which have prevailed since then, along with agency
advice and indicative bidding levels for the remaining properties,
the Board has determined it necessary to make further provision for
impairment against the Company's remaining loans, totalling 5.96
pence per share, as set out further below. This brings the
total ECL allowance recognised during the year ended 31 January
2024 to 23.53 pence per share. The total provision for ECL against
the remaining investments, including those raised in prior periods,
is 26.77 pence per share.
The carrying values as at 31
January 2024 included in this report and accounts have been, as
highlighted above, established in a market facing a continued
period of uncertainty, reduced credit availability and
deteriorating values in many sectors. Accordingly,
shareholders' attention is drawn to the risks to valuations as
discussed in the principal risks and notes to the financial
statements. The Board believes that the stress analysis gives some
guidance to the possible impact of further deterioration in the
value of the underlying properties securing its investment
portfolio, noting that any further deterioration may not be limited
to the examples given.
As a consequence of the difficult
sales environment for the remaining assets, the Board and
Investment Manager have been focused on seeking to drive operating
performance at property level as well as seeking efficiencies
within the Company. In particular, I am aware that
shareholders have been eager to see improved alignment of the
Investment Management fee structure. Accordingly, as a result of
extensive discussion between the Board and the Investment
Manager, their fee will reduce to 0.5% of Net Asset Value from 1%
previously. This halving of the investment management fee will
result in meaningful savings for shareholders over the remaining
life of the Company and will apply from today's date. This is
discussed further below and in note 13 to the
accounts.
Portfolio
At 31 January 2024, the portfolio
comprised three loans with a total principal balance outstanding of
£58.01 million (before impairment).
During the year the Company
received staged repayments, and ultimately full redemption, of the
£9.6 million balance of the Northlands loan. With fees and
default interest charges, this realised returns for shareholders
modestly ahead of underwritten levels.
As highlighted above, exit
processes are underway for the remaining portfolio loans, although
in order to avoid having to accept a 'forced sale' price, some of
these may be protracted. The outlook for the timing of the
redemption of the RoyaleLife loan, in particular, is uncertain, and
various options are being explored by the Investment Manager as set
out below. The property securing the Affinity loan is being readied
for sale following some leasing success, although conditions for
the office sector remain difficult. The Southport hotel securing
our loan continues to attract interest; however, interested parties
are under no competitive pressure to accelerate their processes.
This is discussed further in the Investment Manager's report
below.
Dividend
The Company paid a 0.50 pence per
share dividend in May 2023, covering the three months to 31 January
2023. Given the current status of the portfolio, the Board
considers it unlikely that any further dividends will be declared
which is in line with previous communications to the
market.
Governance and Management
As mentioned above, the Board is
acutely aware that shareholders additionally wish to see a
reduction in central costs and overheads as the Company's portfolio
continues to shrink and that this includes the costs of the Board
itself. In this crucial stage of the Company's winding up
process, the Board and I feel that retaining the varied skillsets
of all the Directors is critical to ensuring the best outturn for
shareholders. The Directors' fees have remained unchanged in
the past year, as they have for the past six years, despite
inflationary pressures and the intensity of oversight required of
the remaining investments.
Outlook
In our Interim Report and accounts
I wrote to you highlighting that the Board expects to have to make
difficult decisions on the remaining investments in the context of
property market conditions which remain challenging. Despite
a somewhat improved economic backdrop I have to report that we have
not seen any improvement since that time: liquidity remains
constrained, and the market environment is not conducive to quick
and easy exits. In my discussions with shareholders during the
year, most of you have highlighted a wish for an orderly
realisation avoiding the forced sale of assets and this has been
uppermost in the minds of the Board as we seek to balance the
acceleration of sales processes with optimising the value to be
realised from the remaining investments.
During our regular dialogue with
major shareholders over the past year, we have acknowledged the
frustration you have with the apparent lack of progress in
realising loans, combined with the disappointment of having to
recognise further substantial impairment provisions and associated
poor share price performance. As I have highlighted previously,
regrettably there is no easy way to accelerate realisations without
compromising unduly on price. As a result, the Board's focus
is on actively managing the remaining assets to deliver value, to
control costs and to continue to seek the optimal recovery
possible. We will continue to consult shareholders through
our final wind down.
Investment Manager's
Report
The Investment Manager's Report
refers to the performance of the loans and the portfolio for the
year to 31 January 2024, and the general market conditions
prevailing at that date. Any forward-looking statements in
this report reflect the latest information available as at 1 May
2024.
Investment Objective
The investment objective of the
Company, as approved by its shareholders
in January 2021, is to conduct an orderly
realisation of the assets of the Company.
Summary
As at 31 January 2024 the Company
had three investments remaining, all of which are being managed and
realised through enforcement processes. This report provides a
summary update on the realisation process for each investment, and
steps being taken by the Investment Manager to secure optimum
outcomes.
At the year end, and as discussed
further below, the Company made further provisions for impairment
against each of its remaining loans reflecting deteriorating market
conditions and property values. The aggregate carrying value of the
investments is now £33.64 million, or 27.73 pence per ordinary
share, against the aggregate principal advanced of £58.01
million.
Company Performance
During the period, the Company
received a series of partial repayments of the Northlands loan,
following sales of certain of the portfolio properties, with full
repayment received in December 2023. These payments totalled £9.6
million, together with £0.5 million in aggregate of interest,
default interest and fees.
At the period end, the Company had
£2.9 million of cash, which is largely held in high-interest
accounts with rated clearing banks. The Company's available
cash balances are considered sufficient to cover all the Company's
ongoing costs and expected working capital needs while maintaining
a prudent liquidity buffer and further capital to invest in the
underlying assets, should it prove necessary. At the date of
this report, no such investment has been committed although where
appropriate we will consider the merits of modest further
investment to preserve and enhance value.
Portfolio Summary
Portfolio statistics
|
31 January
2024
|
31 July 2023
(unaudited)
|
31 January
2023
|
Number of loan
investments
|
3
|
4
|
4
|
Aggregate principal advanced
(1)
|
£58,007,806
|
£57,967,369
|
£67,443,056
|
Aggregate carrying value after
ECL
|
£33,639,051
|
£44,612,344
|
£68,963,675
|
Cash held
|
£2,945,897
|
£11,348,746
|
£9,209,494
|
(1)
During the 6 months from 31 July 2023 to 31
January 2024, £85,389 principal in the Northlands loan was repaid,
£174,174 of trapped cash was allocated against the Affinity loan
and there was a £300,000 increase to the Southport loan
principal.
Reconciliation of Changes in Book Value
|
|
31 January
2024
|
31 July
2023
(unaudited)
|
31 January
2023
|
Project
|
Balance
outstanding (£m)(1)
|
Book
Value after ECL (£m)
|
Book
Value per share (p)
|
Book
Value after ECL (£m)
|
Book
Value per share (p)
|
Book
Value after ECL (£m)
|
Book
Value per share (p)
|
Affinity
|
17.13
|
11.34
|
9.3
|
15.99
|
13.2
|
17.76
|
14.6
|
Southport
|
15.50
|
7.91
|
6.5
|
9.38
|
7.7
|
13.70
|
11.3
|
RoyaleLife
|
25.38
|
14.39
|
11.9
|
18.72
|
15.4
|
27.67
|
22.8
|
Northlands
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
0.52
|
0.4
|
9.83
|
8.1
|
Total
|
58.01
|
33.64
|
27.7
|
44.61
|
36.7
|
68.96
|
56.8
|
(1)
Balance outstanding excludes accrued
interest. A comparison to the carrying value of the loans is
set out in Note 5 to the accounts.
Investment Update
Southport
The Company's Southport hotel loan
continues to be run by the administrator appointed by the Company,
with services provided by hotel sector specialists Michels &
Taylor. Despite the uncertainty caused by the administration
and cost pressures on hotel operations nationally, the asset traded
profitably in 2023 while maintaining the same local management
team. Trading at the hotel is seasonal, with revenues strongest
from April to October. Despite the administration, the hotel has
seen revenue performance rise to close to the pre-Covid peak. On
the costs side, pressure on wages continues although falling
utilities prices should help the bottom line in 2024.
Nonetheless, given the seasonal nature of trading and impact of
administration costs and empty running costs of the adjoining
leisure site, the Company does not anticipate distributing any
interest or capital repayments from the loan in the near
term.
As reported last year, the
property had previously been under offer for sale to a large trade
buyer, however certain of the purchase conditions linked to
freeholder consent could not be satisfied and the buyer
withdrew. Following this process we, through the
administrator, introduced a new joint selling agent and relaunched
the sales process which uncovered further interested parties.
At the time of writing, heads of terms have been agreed with a
North West focused hotelier known to ICG who have made a credible
bid, albeit subject to debt, at a level that supports the carrying
value of the loan. While that financing process is being
pursued, the agents continue to speak with other interested
parties.
RoyaleLife
The Company and its co-lenders
appointed administrators over parts of the borrower group in May
2023 and the entire borrower group in August 2023. The Investment
Manager, on behalf of the Company and its co-lenders, has continued
to work to restructure the loan and underlying business to maintain
existing operations, improve efficiency and create a clean,
marketable structure for the medium term. This has been
undertaken against the backdrop of a corporate insolvency of the
borrower entities and bankruptcy of the ultimate beneficial owner,
resulting in material reputational risk to the brand.
During the reporting period and
concluding in January, the sites securing the loan were transferred
into a new structure with a new operator, with the in-place debt
retained. The Company's loan was fully cross-collateralised
with a second facility provided by the Company's co-lenders,
allowing the Company the benefit of a more diversified security
pool, a wider operating platform and greater economies of
scale. Given the potential for a conflict of interest in this
arrangement, the Board took independent legal advice on the
cross-collateralisation before agreeing to this
restructure.
Additionally, the restructure also
incurred certain legal, working capital and stamp duty costs funded
by the co-lenders, and the Board determined that in view of the
Company's liquidity position it would seek to meet its share of
these costs through a dilution of its share in the transferred loan
rather than through a cash payment.
Ahead of the restructure the
administrator appointed selling agents to run a marketing process
covering the majority of the security properties. The process
was short with limited data available to bidders. However,
all of the sites marketed received bids (some multiple bids)
and three bids were received for the entire marketed portfolio.
While much of the bidding interest can be characterised as
opportunistic, two institutional bidders emerged and discussions
with one of these is ongoing, which, if concluded, may lead to a
partial disposal and realisation in the near term. Again, this
bidding interest is supportive of the carrying value of the
loan.
In tandem, the new operator has
developed an independent plan for the relaunch of the business with
a view to selling the portfolio and platform as a going concern
after stabilisation. This is being run in parallel with sales
discussions and we continue to explore the optimal route for
recovery.
Whilst population demographics and
housing sector tailwinds remain compelling for the portfolio, the
nature of the administration and some of the associated publicity
has undoubtedly affected buyer liquidity and pricing, which is
reflected in the carrying value of the loan. We would refer
shareholders to the sensitivity analysis set out in the financial
statements (Note 5 (iv)) which reflect the range of potential
outcomes for the investment. The Investment Manager and the
Board are seeking to balance the prospect of earlier liquidity
against the optimal proceeds from realisation, noting significant
shareholder feedback received advocating against any 'fire sale' of
the assets and balancing these against the holding costs of the
investment.
Affinity
We have previously reported that
the office property securing this loan has been historically well
occupied, and as at the date of these accounts a new letting was in
solicitors' hands with a UK Government entity on the primary vacant
space, at a new record rental level for the building. Elsewhere, a
lease extension of the lower ground floor was recently completed at
a 16% increase to prior levels, illustrative of the continued
growth in rental levels in the Bristol market and at the
property.
On the downside, one of the larger
office tenants exercised a break clause on part of its space within
the building which it then vacated in March 2024. While this
reduces total income, the Company will not be liable for empty
business rates (as there is a receiver appointed), mitigating the
bottom line impact. We would highlight that the overall rates
shelter provided by the receivership significantly outweighs the
cost of the receivership fees incurred and will continue to do so
until closer to full occupancy is achieved. Nonetheless, the
weighted average length remaining on the leases will continue to
reduce, leading to the potential for further tenant turnover in
2025.
Since placing the property into
receivership we have worked closely with the receiver and appointed
selling agents to better prepare the property for marketing,
including discussing an extension of the head leasehold interest
with the freeholder, Bristol City Council and have commissioned
several third party reports which should help provide comfort to
potential buyers and streamline the sale process. In recent
months we have seen a small number of office sales conclude in
Bristol, after a very challenged 2023, and this combined with the
recent rental evidence could allow for a somewhat improved
marketing environment. However, we would caution that liquidity
remains extremely thin in this market and pricing levels are
considered unlikely to rebound or show any signs of strengthening
in the near term.
Economy and Financial Market Update
After a year of uncertainty and
periods of volatility in key economic data, the UK economy finished
2023 in a technical recession, after a contraction between October
and December. Whilst GDP growth for 2023 remained marginally
positive at 0.1%, the wider macroeconomic picture was subdued, with
the UK and European economies lagging the growth seen in the United
States.
While there have undoubtedly been
times where it felt otherwise, the UK's political leadership showed
more stability than in 2022, although the significant erosion in
support for the governing Conservative party has led to ongoing
speculation of the timing of a general election and the expectation
of a change in government. Often election uncertainty can
lead to a period of inactivity in markets, however there is a
perception that the UK outcome is a forgone conclusion, with the US
elections perhaps more likely to cause market jitters.
As in 2022, inflation and interest
rates were key drivers of market activity. As with other
western economies, the UK saw a significant period of disinflation
in the year as base effects took historical energy price rises out
of the index. CPI inflation fell from 10.1% to 3.4% for the
year to end February, however the high inflation levels observed in
the first half of 2023 led to sustained interest rate rises over
the period, from 3.5% to 5.25% in August. The combination of
these factors, plus the freeze on income tax thresholds, led to a
year of heavy pressure on household finances, in many cases more
than offsetting wage increases.
As set out below, these macro
factors led to a subdued level of activity in the commercial
property sector, with uncertainty affecting occupational,
purchasing and lending decisions. More recently, as inflation
levels have fallen, early GDP data has been more positive and the
outlook for interest rates points to cuts, we have seen signs of a
return to optimism in certain sectors, leaving market participants
to redraw their business plans once again.
Occupational Demand/Supply
Offices
Central London office uptake stood
flat year on year, with strong pre-let activity and high
single-digit prime rental growth indicative of a flight to quality
in the occupational markets, particularly in the prime West End
market, where prime rents moved to £140 per sq ft. Outside of
London, the market showed strength in the Thames Valley and parts
of the South East, however uptake amongst the big six regional
markets was down 15% year on year across 2023. Reflecting the
continued mantra of quality over quantity, Manchester and Edinburgh
recorded both the highest rental increases (8% and 12%
respectively) as well as the highest overall prime rents (£43 per
sq ft), whilst other markets lagged - Bristol take up was at a
five-year low, and prime rents remained flat year on
year.
Retail &
Industrial
The fate of the two other
traditional property sectors has at times seemed to be inversely
correlated - as occupier demand for physical retail has suffered in
recent years, as shoppers migrated online, industrial (including
logistics) demand grew ever higher with occupiers seeking to
service this consumer need. The market in 2023 tempered this
pattern somewhat, as demand for retail saw tentative green shoots
emerge just as rampant demand for the industrial sector cooled
slightly.
Contradiction in economic
indicators was also present in retail. Despite an upswing in the
GfK Consumer Sentiment Index to -22 in December (+20 pts year on
year, only 10 pts below the long-term average), Christmas trading
was weaker than expected. Strong Black Friday spending coincided
with an increase in consumer credit of £2.0bn, indicating the cost
of living weighing heavily on households. Interlinking with
softer industrial growth, the e-commerce share of retail spend
broadly flatlined in 2023.
The occupational retail leasing
story, depressed in the earlier quarters of 2023 due to economic
uncertainty, showed positive momentum, driven by retailers
competing for prime high street pitches and higher quality stores.
Locations such as Mount Street in London and Edinburgh's Princes
Street saw rental growth in 2023, as international new entrants
(e.g. Sephora) and previously online only retailers (e.g. Gymshark,
Maniere de Voir) took prime retail space. Overall, the sector
remains polarised with the best space in demand and weaker space
remaining out of favour.
In the industrial sector,
availability at end Q4 stood at 66.5m sq ft, 16% up year on year,
and construction slowed, hampered by factors such as lower demand a
relative lack of funding and higher build costs, helpfully
mitigating the risk of market oversupply.
Vacancy rates have increased in
most markets over the course of 2023, ranging between 4% (Midlands)
and 8% (South Yorkshire) across the regions. Prime rents have
largely stabilised in the last months of 2023, and a strong Q4 took
annual industrial take up to 32.5m sq ft, just 2% below the
pre-pandemic average, signalling market normalisation. Whilst
larger units lagged due to lessened demand from third party
logistics operators and retailers, small and mid-sized units
remained strong, reinforcing the sector's resilience.
Leisure
Operationally, the hotel sector
witnessed one of the strongest years in memory in terms of topline
performance, with Average Daily Rates (ADR) growing 26% over the
pre-Covid 2019 baseline. Whilst occupancy remained 40 bps below
2019, RevPAR (Revenue per available room, a key metric) was
positive overall. Notably, London's phenomenal performance over
2023 eclipsed the UK regions, which saw much more measured growth
with owners attempting to absorb significant cost
increases.
Whilst 2023 saw minimal supply
growth, weakness in the office markets has accelerated the number
of conversions to hotel use underway, converging with a strong push
from the Government to return beds currently used to house asylum
seekers, implying impending growth in the supply
pipeline.
Property Investment Market
Full year 2023 investment volumes
stood at c. £43bn, with office, industrial and residential at c.
£10bn each. Apart from residential, volumes remain below long term
averages across the board, in what some consider may mark the low
point of the cycle. Alternative asset classes continue to be in
high demand, and the Build to Rent sector in particular catapulted
forward with landmark transactions including a 3,900 unit, £819m
Blackstone purchase in Q4, and multiple substantial student housing
transactions.
Overall, 2023 saw widespread
rebasing of market prices, although early 2024 has seen some signs
of confidence re-emerging in certain sectors. As government
bond yields have fallen, the spread to commercial real estate
yields increased, bolstering the relative attractiveness of the
asset class. The strain on construction also eased, and while costs
remain high and contractor insolvencies persist, the most
significant squeeze is believed to be surmounted, with materials
availability and labour cost becoming less of an issue. As in
previous quarters, the 2023 theme of flight to quality continued to
play out across all asset classes on the investment side. Whilst a
number of issues remain on the horizon for 2024, not least the UK
and US elections and a largely flatlining economy, the anticipated
lowering of interest rates and fall off in inflation bode
positively.
In the office sector, 2023 was one
of the worst years on record for investment in both London and the
regions. The continued concerns over flexible working, occupier
space requirements and ESG retrofitting costs, combined with
limited buyer appetite and debt availability being scarce, has
pushed yields towards double digit levels for many previously
sought after assets.
Industrial investment, previously
buoyant, likewise recorded a relatively weaker year, driven by a
lack of larger assets transacting, and yields repricing in the face
of sustained higher interest rates. A continued bid ask spread
stalemate and higher debt cost may weigh on investment volumes into
2024, albeit anecdotally some of our borrower clients are reporting
highly competitive bidding re-emerging.
Despite occupational buoyancy in
the hotel market, transaction volumes were down year on year, and
stood at a 10-year low (excluding the Covid-impacted 2020). The
regional market was particularly impacted, and yields moved out
75-100 bps over the year. Holiday Park operators reported a marked
drop in caravan and lodge sales in 2023, particularly at the upper
end, on the back of the economic climate, and both leisure parks
and regional pubs saw outward movements in yields over the course
of year.
Finance Markets
We believe loan to value (''LTV'')
ratios for new lending have restabilised at lower levels and as
such, a clearer picture of the debt funding gap is emerging.
As a consequence of reduced property values and lower LTVs,
in addition to declining interest coverage ratios, there is a
significant gap between available debt capital and that required to
refinance existing loans. Across Europe, in both the public
(listed) and private sectors, this gap has been estimated at
€300bn. While this may reduce as interest rates come off, the gap
remains a significant issue to borrowers seeking
refinance.
Whilst alternative debt funds were
well poised to take a large slice of this gap, a different obstacle
to this has become more prominent over 2023 - the after-effects of
pension funds and insurers rebalancing their portfolios (and
reducing their real estate debt allocation) has led to a reduction
in the ability of many of these players to raise funds and take
advantage of this situation.
Investment
Policy
Investment Objective
The investment objective of the
Company, as approved by the shareholders, is to conduct an orderly
realisation of the Company's assets.
Investment Policy
The assets of the Company are
being realised in an orderly manner, returning cash to Shareholders
at such times and in such manner as the Board may, in its absolute
discretion, determine. The Board will endeavour to realise all the
Company's investments in a manner that achieves a balance between
maximising the net value received from those investments and making
timely returns to Shareholders.
The Company may not make any new
investments save that:
·
investments may be made to honour commitments
under existing contractual arrangements or to preserve the value of
the underlying property security; and
·
cash held by the Company may be invested in
quoted bond and other debt instruments with a final maturity of
less than 365 days as well as money market funds for the purposes
of cash management provided any such
instrument has a minimum credit rating.
The Company will continue to
comply with the restrictions imposed by the Listing Rules in force
from time to time.
Any material change to the
Company's published investment policy will be made only with the
prior approval of Shareholders by ordinary resolution at a general
meeting of the Company.
Board of
Directors
Jack Perry CBE - Chairman
and Non-Executive Independent Director
Appointment: Appointed to the
Board and as Chairman in November 2012
Experience: Jack is an
independent non-executive board member and adviser to a number of
public and private companies. He is currently a director and
Chairman of the audit committee of the Witan Investment Trust PLC.
He will retire as Chairman of European Assets Trust PLC in May
2024. He previously served as Chief Executive of Scottish
Enterprise, Scotland's enterprise, innovation and investment agency
for six years until November 2009.
Prior to this, he was the managing
partner of Ernst & Young in Glasgow. In addition, he was
Regional Industry Leader for Scotland and Northern Ireland for
Ernst & Young's Technology & Communications and Consumer
Products practices.
He is a former non-executive
director of FTSE 250 company, Robert Wiseman Dairies PLC and
Capital for Enterprise Ltd. He also served as a member of the
Advisory Committee of Barclays UK & Ireland Private
Bank.
Jack is a member of the Institute
of Chartered Accountants of Scotland.
Committee Membership: Nomination Committee, Management Engagement Committee,
Remuneration Committee
Stuart Beevor - Non-Executive Independent
Director
Appointment: Appointed to the
Board in November 2012
Experience: Stuart is an
Independent Consultant with various roles advising clients in real
estate fund management, investment, development and asset
management. From 2004 to 2013 he was a non-executive director at
Unite Group PLC and from 2013 to 2020 a non-executive director of
Metropolitan Thames Valley Housing. Furthermore, from 2016 to 2022,
he was a non-executive director of Empiric Student Property PLC.
From 2002 to 2011 he was Managing Director of Grosvenor Fund
Management Limited and a member of the Board of Grosvenor Group
Limited, the international property group. Prior to joining
Grosvenor, he was Managing Director at Legal and General Property
Limited, having previously held a number of roles at Norwich Union
(now Aviva). Stuart is a Chartered Surveyor with over 40 years'
experience in real estate both in the UK and overseas.
Committee Membership: Audit
and Risk Committee, Nomination Committee, Management Engagement
Committee, Remuneration Committee
Fiona Le Poidevin - Non-Executive Independent
Director
Appointment: Appointed to the
Board in September 2020
Experience: A Chartered
Director, Fellow of the Institute of Directors and Chartered
Accountant (FCA), Fiona is a non-executive director with over 25
years' experience working in financial services in both London and
the Channel Islands with experience in accounting, tax, strategy,
marketing, PR and the regulatory and listed company
environments.
Among her appointments, in
addition to that with the Company, Fiona is director of Sequoia
Economic Infrastructure Income Fund Limited, a FTSE 250 company.
She is also director and Chair of Doric Nimrod Air Two Limited and
director of Doric Nimrod Air Three Limited, companies admitted to
trading on the Specialist Fund Segment of the LSE. Fiona is also a
member of the AIC Channel Islands Committee.
Until the end of July 2020, Fiona
was Chief Executive Officer of The International Stock Exchange
Group Limited and prior to that she was CEO of Guernsey Finance,
the promotional body for Guernsey's finance industry
internationally. Previously, she was an auditor and latterly tax
adviser at PwC (London and Channel Islands) and KPMG (Channel
Islands) for over 13 years.
Committee Membership: Audit
and Risk Committee (Chair), Nomination Committee, Management
Engagement Committee, Remuneration Committee
Paul Meader - Non-Executive
Independent Director
Appointment: Appointed to the
Board in November 2012
Experience: Paul is an
independent director of investment companies, insurers and
investment funds. Until 2012, he was Head of Portfolio Management
for Canaccord Genuity based in Guernsey, prior to which he was
Chief Executive of Corazon Capital. He has over 35 years'
experience in financial markets in London, Dublin and Guernsey,
holding senior positions in portfolio management and trading. Prior
to joining Corazon, he was managing director of Rothschild's Swiss
private banking subsidiary in Guernsey. He is currently a
non-executive director of Schroder Oriental Income Fund
Limited.
Paul is a Chartered Fellow of the
Chartered Institute for Securities & Investments, a past
Commissioner of the Guernsey Financial Services Commission and past
Chairman of the Guernsey International Business
Association.
He is a graduate of Hertford
College, Oxford. Paul is a resident of Guernsey.
Committee Membership: Audit
and Risk Committee, Nomination Committee, Management Engagement
Committee, Remuneration Committee
Report of the
Directors
The Directors hereby submit the
Annual Report and Financial Statements for the Company for the year
ended 31 January 2024. This Report of the Directors should be read
together with the Corporate Governance Report.
Business Review
A review of the Company's business
and its likely future development is provided in the Chairman's
Statement and in the Investment Manager's
Report.
Listing Requirements
Since being admitted on 5 February
2013 to the Official List maintained by the FCA, the Company has
complied with the applicable Listing Rules.
Results and Dividends
The results for the year are set
out in the Financial Statements.
During the year, and since the
year end, the Directors declared the following
dividends:
Dividend
|
Quarter Ended
|
Date of Declaration
|
Payment Date
|
Amount per Ordinary Share
(pence)
|
Interim dividend
|
31 January 2023
|
06 April 2023
|
04 May 2023
|
0.5
|
Share Capital
The Company has one class of
Ordinary Shares. The issued nominal value of the Ordinary Shares
represents 100% of the total issued nominal value of all share
capital. Under the Company's Articles of Incorporation, on a show
of hands, each shareholder present in person or by proxy has the
right to one vote at Annual General Meetings. On a poll, each
shareholder is entitled to one vote for every share
held.
Holders of Ordinary Shares are
entitled to all dividends paid by the Company and, on a winding up,
providing the Company has satisfied all its liabilities, the
shareholders are entitled to all of the surplus assets of the
Company. The Ordinary Shares have no right to fixed
income.
Under Company Articles the Company
may, from time to time, issue Redeemable B Shares in order to
return capital to holders of Ordinary Shares. The Company
made two such issuances during the year, which were redeemed and
cancelled:
No.
B Shares issued
|
Purpose
|
Date of Declaration
|
Payment Date
|
Par Value per Redeemable B
Share (pence)
|
121,302,779
|
Return of Capital
|
26 January 2023
|
17 February 2023
|
5.50
|
121,302,779
|
Return of Capital
|
11 August 2023
|
1 September 2023
|
7.40
|
Shareholdings of the Directors
The Directors' beneficial
interests in the shares of the Company as at 31 January 2024 and
2023 are detailed below:
Director
|
Ordinary
Shares
of £1
each held
31
January 2024
|
%
holding at
31
January 2024
|
Ordinary
Shares
of £1
each held
31
January 2023
|
% holding at
31
January
2023
|
Mr Perry
|
108,609
|
0.09
|
108,609
|
0.09
|
Mr Beevor
|
30,000
|
0.02
|
30,000
|
0.02
|
Mr Meader
|
305,921
|
0.25
|
305,921
|
0.24
|
Mrs Le Poidevin
|
-
|
0.00
|
-
|
0.00
|
Directors' beneficial interests in
the shares of the Company as at 2 May
2024, being the most current information
available, are unchanged from those disclosed above.
Directors' Authority to Buy Back Shares
The Directors believe that the
most effective means of minimising any discount to Net Asset Value
which may arise on the Company's share price, is to realise optimal
recoveries from the Company's investment portfolio in both absolute
and relative terms. However, the Board recognises that wider market
conditions and other considerations will affect the rating of the
shares in the short term and the Board may seek to limit the level
and volatility of any discount to Net Asset Value at which the
shares may trade. The means by which this might be done could
include the Company repurchasing shares. Therefore, subject to the
requirements of the Listing Rules, the Companies Law, the Articles
and other applicable legislation, the Company may purchase shares
in the market in order to address any imbalance between the supply
of and demand for shares or to enhance the Net Asset Value of
shares.
In deciding whether to make any
such purchases the Directors will have regard to what they believe
to be in the best interests of shareholders and in accordance with
the applicable Guernsey legal requirements which require the
Directors to be satisfied on reasonable grounds that the Company
will, immediately after any such repurchase, satisfy a solvency
test prescribed by the Companies Law and any other requirements in
its Memorandum and Articles of Incorporation. The making and timing
of any buybacks will be at the absolute discretion of the Board and
not at the option of the shareholders. Any such repurchases would
only be made through the market for cash at a discount to Net Asset
Value.
Annually the Company passes a
resolution granting the Directors general authority to purchase in
the market up to 14.99% of the shares in issue immediately
following Admission at a price not exceeding the higher of (i) 5%
above the average mid-market values of shares for the five business
days before the purchase is made or (ii) the higher of the last
independent trade or the highest current independent bid for
shares. The Directors intend to seek renewal of this authority from
the shareholders at the Annual General Meeting.
Pursuant to this authority, and
subject to the Companies Law and the discretion of the Directors,
the Company may purchase shares in the market on an ongoing basis
with a view to addressing any imbalance between the supply of and
demand for shares.
Shares purchased by the Company
may be cancelled or held as treasury shares. The Company may borrow
and/or realise investments in order to finance such share
purchases.
The Company has not purchased any
shares for treasury or cancellation during the year or to date.
During the year, the Board considered if such a purchase of shares
would be appropriate and concluded that it would not be in the best
interests of shareholders.
Directors' and Officers' Liability
Insurance
The Company maintains insurance in
respect of Directors' and Officers' liability in relation to their
acts on behalf of the Company.
Substantial Shareholdings
As at 31 January 2024, the Company
had been notified, in accordance with Chapter 5 of the Disclosure
and Transparency Rules, of the following substantial voting rights
as shareholders of the Company.
Shareholder
|
Shareholding
|
|
%
holding
|
Close Brothers Asset
Management
|
21,029,244
|
|
17.34%
|
Almitas Capital
|
12,372,209
|
|
10.20%
|
Canopius
|
12,276,107
|
|
10.12%
|
TDC Pensionskasse
|
10,600,000
|
|
8.74%
|
Premier Miton Investors
|
10,500,000
|
|
8.66%
|
Intermediate Capital
Group
|
10,000,000
|
|
8.24%
|
Hargreaves Lansdown, stockbrokers
(Execution Only)
|
6,868,641
|
|
5.66%
|
Philip J Milton,
stockbrokers
|
5,467,607
|
|
4.51%
|
CG Asset Management
|
4,882,100
|
|
4.02%
|
RBC Brewin Dolphin,
stockbrokers
|
3,309,670
|
|
2.73%
|
In addition, the Company also
provides the same information as at 23 April 2024, being the most
current information available.
Shareholder
|
Shareholding
|
|
%
holding
|
Close Brothers Asset
Management
|
20,657,247
|
|
17.03%
|
Canopius
|
12,276,107
|
|
10.12%
|
Almitas Capital
|
11,972,209
|
|
9.87%
|
TDC Pensionskasse
|
10,600,000
|
|
8.74%
|
Premier Miton Investors
|
10,500,000
|
|
8.66%
|
Intermediate Capital
Group
|
10,000,000
|
|
8.24%
|
Hargreaves Lansdown, stockbrokers
(Execution Only)
|
6,903,552
|
|
5.69%
|
Philip J Milton,
stockbrokers
|
5,702,660
|
|
4.70%
|
CG Asset Management
|
4,882,100
|
|
4.02%
|
RBC Brewin Dolphin,
stockbrokers
|
3,122,970
|
|
2.57%
|
The Directors confirm that there
are no securities in issue that carry special rights with regard to
the control of the Company.
Independent External Auditor
Deloitte LLP has been the
Company's external auditor since the Company's incorporation. The
Audit and Risk Committee reviews the appointment of the external
auditor, its effectiveness and its relationship with the Company,
which includes monitoring the use of the external auditor for
non-audit services and the balance of audit and non-audit fees
paid, as included in Note 14 to the
Financial Statements. Following a review
of the independence and effectiveness of the external auditor, a
resolution was proposed and accepted at the 2023 Annual General
Meeting to re-appoint Deloitte LLP. Each Director believes that
there is no relevant information of which the external auditor is
unaware. Each had taken all steps necessary, as a director, to be
aware of any relevant audit information and to establish that
Deloitte LLP is made aware of any pertinent information. This
confirmation is given and should be interpreted in accordance with
the provisions of Section 249 of the Companies Law. Further
information on the work of the external auditor and reasons for not
putting the audit service out to tender is set out in the Report of
the Audit and Risk Committee.
Articles of Incorporation
The Company's Articles of
Incorporation may only be amended by special resolution of the
shareholders.
NMPI Status
The Company no longer meets the
criteria to be an exempt NMPI and the Company was removed from the
AIC list of excluded securities in the prior year.
AIFMD
The Company is a non-EU domiciled
alternative investment fund and appointed ICG Alternative
Investments Limited as its discretionary Investment Manager on 25
November 2020. Prior to this appointment the Company was internally
managed. Any offer of shares to prospective investors within
selected member states of the European Economic Area and the UK
will be made in accordance with the applicable national private
placement regime, and the Company will notify its intention to
market to the competent authority in each of the selected member
states for the purposes of compliance with AIFMD.
AEOI Rules
Under AEOI Rules the Company
continues to comply with both FATCA and CRS requirements to the
extent relevant to the Company.
The Board is committed to
upholding and maintaining a zero-tolerance policy towards the
criminal facilitation of tax evasion.
Change of Control
There are no agreements that the
Company considers significant and to which the Company is party
that may affect its control following a takeover bid.
Going Concern
The Directors, at the time of
approving the Financial Statements, are required to consider
whether they have a reasonable expectation that the Company has
adequate resources to continue in operational existence for the
foreseeable future and whether there is any threat to the going
concern status of the Company. At the EGM of the Company on 14
January 2021, following a recommendation from the Board published
in a circular on 16 December 2020, shareholders voted by the
requisite majority in favour of a change to the Company's
Objectives and Investment Policy which would lead to an orderly
realisation of the Company's assets and a return of capital to
shareholders.
It is intended that, following the
appointment of receivers or administrators in respect of the last
remaining loans, the investments will be realised as and when the
underlying property assets, or loans upon which they are secured,
can be sold in an orderly manner. The Company may take actions with
the consequence of accelerating or delaying realisation in order to
optimise shareholders' returns in the context of the Company's
size.
Whilst the Directors are satisfied
that the Company has adequate resources to continue in operation
throughout the realisation period and to meet all liabilities as
they fall due, given the Company is now in a managed wind down, the
Directors consider it appropriate to adopt a basis other than going
concern in preparing the financial statements.
In the absence of a ready
secondary market in real estate loans by which to assess market
value of the loans, the basis of valuation for investments is
amortised cost net of impairment, recognising the realisable value
of each property in the orderly wind down of the Company. In
accordance with the Company's IFRS 9 Policy the staging of each
loan has been reviewed and all loans are now considered to be at
Stage 3. Consequently, valuations reflect the ECL assuming a twelve
month realisation period, as detailed in Note 5. No material
adjustments have arisen solely as a result of ceasing to apply the
going concern basis.
Viability Statement
The AIC Code requires that, the
Directors make a viability statement in which they assess the
prospects of the Company over a period longer than the 12 months
required by the going concern provision.
A change in Investment Policy was
approved by the shareholders at the EGM on 14 January 2021 with the
resultant intention that the Company undergo an orderly realisation
of assets, returning capital to shareholders.
For this reason, and as discussed
above, the Company is preparing the financial statements on a basis
other than going concern due to the Company being in a managed wind
down.
Since the EGM, 8 loans have repaid
in full and £54.46 million of capital has been returned to
Shareholders. The Company's remaining three loans are now past due
and receivers or administrators have been appointed to accelerate
the realisation of the security underpinning the loans. As
discussed elsewhere in this report, market conditions have been,
and remain, unfavourable to near term realisations except to
opportunistic buyers seeking material discounts to value in the
face of high funding costs in order to generate their target
returns.
The valuations applied to the
loans reflect the Board's current expectations of realisable values
in a twelve month period, however the Board have considered the
Company's working capital requirements, assuming no further income
or capital receipts over a two year period.
Cashflow projections are prepared
regularly. The Board intends to return surplus capital to investors
following each loan repayment, whilst it remains prudent to do so
and taking into account the commitments, liabilities and expected
duration of the Company at the time.
Having conducted a robust analysis
on this basis, the Directors remain satisfied that the Company can
meet its liabilities as they fall due over the period under
consideration to February 2026, if the Company continues in
operation up until that date. The Company is likely to operate with
a cashflow deficit in some quarters. Cash reserves are held to
cover these periods and will be re-assessed with each loan
repayment. The Company will, on a prudent basis, maintain working
capital reserves to meet all liabilities as they fall due through
to the latest expected repayment date.
Directors' Responsibilities to Stakeholders
Section 172 of the UK Companies
Act 2006 applies directly only to UK domiciled companies.
Nonetheless, the AIC Code requires that the matters set out in
section 172 are reported on by all companies, irrespective of
domicile. This requirement does not conflict with Guernsey company
law.
Section 172 recognises that
Directors are responsible for acting in a way that they consider,
in good faith, is the most likely to promote the success of the
Company for the benefit of its shareholders as a whole. In doing
so, they are also required to consider the broader implications of
their decisions and operations on other key stakeholders and their
impact on the wider community and the environment. Key decisions
are those that are either material to the Company or are
significant to any of the Company's key stakeholders. The Company's
engagement with key stakeholders and the key decisions that were
made or approved by the Directors during the year are described
below.
Stakeholder Group
|
Methods of Engagement
|
Benefits of Engagements
|
Shareholders
Following a series of economic
shocks and the Company share price falling to a deep discount to
NAV, shareholders supported a recommendation by the Board in 2021,
to wind down the Company.
The Company sought to maintain
shareholder satisfaction through:
· Transparency of communication
· Capital preservation
· Payment of regular and sustainable dividends for as long as
considered prudent and
· Return of capital on loan repayments
|
|
The Company engages with its
shareholders through the issue of portfolio updates in the form of
RNS announcements.
The Company provides in depth
commentary on the investment portfolio, corporate governance and
corporate outlook in its semi-annual and annual financial
statements.
The Board receives quarterly
feedback from its Broker in respect of their investor engagement
and investor sentiment.
The engagement with
shareholders,
through update calls and the AGM,
will continue through the wind down period as capital is returned
to investors.
|
In the financial year the Company
issued:
- 4 Portfolio updates by way of
RNS
The Company has continued in its
objective to execute the orderly realisation of assets of the
Company during the year. During a period when market conditions
have not been favourable towards this goal, discussions involving
Directors, the Investment Manager and the Company's brokers have
been held directly with major shareholders during the
year.
Engagement with shareholders
through these announcements enables shareholders to take informed
decision as to the winding up process and timetable.
|
Borrowers/Administrators and Receivers
The Company's principal clients are
the borrowers to whom the Company provides term finance.
During the year, other than in
respect of its Northlands loan which was repaid, the Company
has appointed administrators or receivers in respect of its
remaining loans, and, consequently the receiver/administrator now
fulfils the duties of the borrower and acts on behalf of any other
relevant creditors to the borrower entity.
|
The Company engaged with its
Borrowers, and now engages with the administrators and receivers,
through its Investment Manager.
The Investment Manager has formed
and maintained a close working relationship with these parties
through regular update calls and the ongoing quarterly monitoring
of loans over their respective terms.
Following the appointment of
receivers/administrators, the Investment Manager holds regular
meetings to monitor the performance of the underlying properties
and actions being undertaken to protect, enhance and ultimately
realise their value.
The Board monitors the timeliness
and
quality of these engagements through
its
regular engagement with the
Investment
Manager.
A Director of the Company has met
with two of the administrators/receivers and conducted site visits
at certain of the secured properties to understand the specific
market dynamics impacting liquidity and value of the subject
properties.
|
During the course of the year,
the
Investment Manager has provided and
the Board reviewed regular updates to the portfolio and
investments. Further specific updates have been provided on
investment specific matters throughout the year.
The Investment Manager regularly
engaged with all its Borrowers during the year to seek orderly
repayment of the Company's loans, as was the case with Northlands,
but has ultimately appointed of receivers/administrators due to the
borrowers' defaults under the terms of the original
loans.
Through its engagement with the
administrators and receivers, the Investment Manager is able to
advise on and monitor all actions being taken to prepare assets for
sale and the ensuing sales process, and take actions to support the
asset level performance to protect or enhance value.
|
Service Providers
The Company does not have any direct
employees; however, it works closely with a number of service
providers (the Investment Manager, Administrator, Company
Secretary, Broker and other professional service providers) whose
interests are aligned to the success of the Company.
The quality and timeliness of their
service provision is critical to the success of the
Company.
|
The Company's Management Engagement
Committee has identified its key service providers. On an annual
basis it undertakes a review of performance based on a
questionnaire through which it also seeks feedback.
Furthermore, the Board and its
sub-committees engage regularly with its service providers on both
a formal and informal basis.
The Management Engagement Committee
will also regularly review all material contracts for service
quality and value.
|
The information provided given by
the service providers is used to review the Company's policies,
controls, and procedures to ensure open lines of communication,
operational efficiency, robustness and, appropriate pricing for
services provided. Feedback has been given to all relevant service
providers during the year.
In addition, following extensive
discussion between the Board and the Investment Manager, their fee
will reduce to 0.5% of Net Asset Value from 1% previously, as
discussed in the Chairman's statement.
|
Community & Environment
As an investment company whose
purpose was the provision of and investment in commercial real
estate debt, the Company's direct engagement with the local
community and the environment is limited.
However, the Board recognises the
role the Company can play in terms of the environment by supporting
and guiding Borrowers to find environmentally friendly sustainable
solutions in the maintenance of their properties and delivery of
their business plan objectives more generally.
|
Within its investment strategy, the
environmental and social impact of the properties on which the
Company's loans are secured was an important consideration when it
had made its investments, and has remained so through the
monitoring of the loans and actions of the Borrowers.
The community, environmental and
social impact has also been a consideration in the choice to
appoint receivers/administrators in respect of the Company's
remaining loans.
|
In the year to 31 January 2024, the
Company made no new loans.
In monitoring its investments and
providing working capital facilities for the protection of
development of the properties the Investment Manager and the Board
have continued to consider the environmental and social
impact or such developments or expenditure.
With respect to the loans now in
administration or receivership the Investment Manager, on behalf of
the Company, continues to engage with the relevant parties to
ensure that the properties are being maintained in good order for
their occupants and in the case of operational properties a duty of
care to all stakeholders is being observed.
The ESG report provides further
information on the Investment Manager's approach to this important
subject.
|
Key Decisions
Key decisions are defined as both
those that are material to the Company but also those that are
significant to any of our key stakeholders as discussed
above.
In making the following key
decisions, the Board considered the outcome from its stakeholder
engagement as well as the need to maintain a reputation for high
standards of business conduct and the need to act fairly between
the members of the Company:
Given that further of the
Company's loans were fully repaid, the Board approved two
distributions of capital equating to 5.50 and 7.40 pence per share
for the year.
The Board agreed to the Investment
Manager's recommendation that the Company exercise its security
interests and appoint an administrator over the RoyaleLife borrower
companies and a receiver over the Spectrum Affinity
property.
In order to protect the value of
its underlying property security, the Board approved a restructure
of the RoyaleLife loan, which resulted in the cross
collateralisation of its security with other assets securing a
similar loan made to the same borrower group by its
co-lenders.
The Board determined to retain a
working capital buffer to ensure the Company's viability in the
absence of any further income or capital receipts during the
foreseeable realisation period of the remaining
investments.
The Board reviewed the performance
of the Investment Manager, which was considered to be
satisfactory. The Board has agreed to a reduction to the
Investment Manager's fees to control the Company's cost base and
improve the ultimate value returned to shareholders. Accordingly,
the Investment Manager's reappointment was confirmed.
Financial Risk Management Policies and
Procedures
Financial Risk Management Policies
and Procedures are disclosed in Note 11 to the Financial
Statements.
Principal Risks and Uncertainties
Principal Risks and Uncertainties
are discussed in the Corporate Governance Report.
Subsequent Events
Significant subsequent events have
been disclosed in Note 17 to the Financial Statements.
Alternative Performance Measures
The Directors believe that the
performance indicators detailed in the Financial
Summary, which are typical for entities
investing in real estate debt, will provide shareholders with
sufficient information to assess how effectively the Company is
meeting its objectives.
Annual General Meeting
The AGM of the Company will be
held at 12pm BST
on 18 June 2024 at Floor 2, Trafalgar Court, Les Banques, St Peter Port,
Guernsey, GY1 4LY. Details of the resolutions to be proposed at the
AGM, together with explanations of the AGM arrangements, will
appear in the Notice of Meeting to be distributed to
shareholders.
Members of the Board will be in
attendance at the AGM and will be available to answer shareholder
questions.
By order of the Board
Jack Perry
Chairman
8 May 2024
Directors' Responsibilities Statement
The Directors are responsible for
preparing the Annual Report and Financial Statements in accordance
with applicable law and regulations.
The Companies Law requires the
Directors to prepare Financial Statements for each financial
year. Under that law the Directors are required to prepare
the Financial Statements in accordance with UK adopted
international accounting standards (''IFRS''). Under the Companies
Law, the Directors must not approve the Financial Statements unless
they are satisfied that they give a true and fair view of the state
of affairs of the Company and of the profit or loss of the Company
for that period. In preparing these Financial Statements, the
Directors are required to:
· select suitable accounting policies in accordance with IAS 8:
Accounting Policies, Changes in Accounting Estimates and Errors and
then apply them consistently;
· make
judgements and estimates that are reasonable and
prudent;
· present information, including accounting policies, in a
manner that provides relevant, reliable, comparable and
understandable information;
· provide additional disclosures when compliance with the
specific requirements in IFRS are insufficient to enable users to
understand the impact of particular transactions, other events and
conditions on the Company's financial position and financial
performance;
· state that the Company has complied with IFRS, subject to any
material departures disclosed and explained in the Financial
Statements; and
· prepare the Financial Statements on a going concern basis
unless it is inappropriate to presume that the Company will
continue in business.
The Directors confirm that they
have complied with the above requirements in preparing the
Financial Statements.
The Directors are responsible for
keeping proper accounting records, which disclose with reasonable
accuracy at any time, the financial position of the Company and
enable them to ensure that the Financial Statements comply with
Companies Law. They are also responsible for safeguarding the
assets of the Company and hence for taking reasonable steps for the
prevention and detection of fraud, error and non-compliance with
law and regulations.
The Directors are responsible for
ensuring that the Annual Report and Financial Statements, taken as
a whole, is fair, balanced and understandable and provides the
information necessary for shareholders to assess the Company's
performance, business model and strategy.
The Directors are also responsible
under the AIC Code to promote the success of the Company for the
benefit of its members as a whole and in doing so have regard for
the needs of wider society and other stakeholders.
As part of the preparation of the
Annual Report and Financial Statements the Directors have received
reports and information from the Company's Administrator and
Investment Manager. The Directors have considered, reviewed
and commented upon the Annual Report and Financial Statements
throughout the drafting process in order to satisfy themselves in
respect of the content.
The Directors are responsible for
the maintenance and integrity of the corporate and financial
information included on the website (www.lbow.co.uk).
Legislation in Guernsey governing
the preparation and dissemination of the Financial Statements may
differ from legislation in other jurisdictions.
Responsibility Statement of the Directors in Respect of the
Annual Report under the Disclosure and Transparency
Rules
Each of the Directors confirms to
the best of their knowledge and belief that:
· the
Financial Statements, prepared in accordance with IFRS, give a true
and fair view of the assets, liabilities, financial position and
profit or loss of the Company taken as a whole;
· the
Annual Report includes a fair review of the development and
performance of the business and the position of the Company,
together with a description of the principal risks and
uncertainties faced.
Responsibility Statement of the Directors in Respect of the
Annual Report under the Corporate
Governance Code
The Directors are responsible for
preparing the Annual Report and Financial Statements in accordance
with applicable law and regulations. Having taken advice from the
Audit and Risk Committee, the Directors consider the Annual Report
and Financial Statements, taken as a whole, as fair, balanced and
understandable and that it provides the information necessary for
shareholders to assess the Company's performance, business model
and strategy.
By order of the Board
Jack Perry
|
Fiona Le Poidevin
|
Chairman
|
Director
|
8 May 2024
|
8 May 2024
|
Corporate Governance
Report
As a UK premium listed Company,
ICG-Longbow Senior Secured UK Property Debt Investment Limited's
governance policies and procedures are based on the principles of
the Corporate Governance Code as required under the Listing Rules.
The Corporate Governance Code is available on the Financial
Reporting Council's website, www.frc.org.uk.
The Company became a member of the
AIC effective 27 February 2013 and has therefore put in place
arrangements to comply with the AIC Code of Corporate Governance
(''AIC Code'') and thereby complies with the UK Corporate
Governance Code. The Directors recognise the importance of sound
corporate governance, particularly the Principles and Provisions
addressed within the AIC Code. The AIC Code is available on the
AIC's website www.theaic.co.uk.
The Company is subject to the GFSC
Code, which applies to all companies registered as collective
investment schemes in Guernsey. The GFSC has also confirmed that
companies which report against the UK Corporate Governance Code or
AIC Code are deemed to meet the GFSC Code.
The AIC Code addresses all the
principles set out in the UK Corporate Governance Code, as well as
setting out additional principles and recommendations on issues
that are of specific relevance to investment companies such as the
Company. The Board considers that reporting against the principles
and recommendations of the AIC Code provides appropriate
information to shareholders.
The Board monitors developments in
corporate governance to ensure the Board remains aligned with best
practice.
Throughout the year ended 31
January 2024, the Company has complied with the recommendations of
the AIC Code and the relevant provisions of Section 1 of the
Corporate Governance Code, except as set out below.
The Corporate Governance Code
includes provisions relating to:
· the
role of the chief executive;
· executive directors' remuneration;
· the
need for an internal audit function;
· succession.
For the reasons set out in the AIC
Code, and as explained in the UK Corporate Governance Code, the
Board considers that the above provisions other than succession are
not currently relevant to the position of the Company, which
delegates most day-to-day functions to third parties.
The Directors have access to the
services provided by the Company Secretary, Ocorian Administration
(Guernsey) Limited, who ensure statutory obligations of the Company
are achieved.
As an investment company, the
Company has no employees, all Directors are non-executive and
independent of the Investment Manager and, therefore, the Directors
consider the Company has no requirement for a Chief Executive or
Senior Independent Director and the Board is satisfied that any
relevant issues can be properly considered by the Board. The
absence of an internal audit function is discussed in the Report of
the Audit and Risk Committee.
As the Company is in wind down,
the Board has determined not to implement a succession plan for
Directors. The Board considers all Directors remain
independent.
Environmental, Social and Governance Report
As an investment company, the
Company's activities only have a limited direct impact on the
environment.
Following the change in Investment
Objective and Policy approved by shareholders in January 2021, the
Company is now conducting an orderly realisation of its
investments. As such, the opportunity to implement material ESG
changes across its portfolio is relatively limited and ESG
considerations are expected to be limited to monitoring the
existing investments for their own performance in this
area.
Nonetheless, the Board continues
to believe that it is in shareholders' interests to consider
environmental, social and governance factors in monitoring its
investments. The parent of the Investment Manager is a longstanding
signatory to the UN Principles for Responsible Investment and has a
fully formalised and embedded Responsible Investing Policy which is
applied to all investment decisions and the monitoring of each
investment opportunity.
The parent of the Investment
Manager continues to develop its ESG policies and procedures. Its
responsible investment policy is available to view at:
ICG Website
As the Company will no longer make
any new investments and is actively seeking to realise the
remaining assets in its portfolio, the opportunities to support
borrowers in ESG matters is limited. However, where receivers
and administrators have been appointed to realise the value of the
underlying security assets, the Company and the Investment Manager
remain mindful of its ESG responsibilities particularly toward the
stakeholders in the operating assets.
Culture and Values
The Board recognises that its tone
and culture is important and will greatly impact its interactions
with shareholders and service providers as well as the development
of long-term shareholder value. The importance of sound ethical
values and behaviours is crucial to the ability of the Company to
achieve its objectives successfully.
The Board individually and
collectively seeks to act with diligence, honesty and integrity. It
encourages its members to express differences of perspective and to
challenge but always in a respectful, open and cooperative fashion.
The Board encourages diversity of thought and approach and chooses
its members with this approach in mind. The governance principles
that the Board has adopted are designed to ensure that the Company
delivers long term value to its shareholders and treats all
shareholders equally. All shareholders are encouraged to have an
open dialogue with the Board.
The Board recognises that the
Company will take risks in order to achieve its objectives, but
these risks are monitored and managed. The Company seeks to
avoid excessive risk-taking in pursuit of returns. A large part of
the Board's activities are centred upon what is necessarily an open
and respectful dialogue with the Investment Manager. In holding the
Investment Manager to account, the Board regularly raises robust
challenges of the choices and recommendations made by
them.
The Board
The Company is led and controlled
by a Board of Directors, which is collectively responsible for the
remaining realisation period of the Company. It does so by acting
in the interests of the Company, creating and preserving value and
has as its foremost principle to act in the interests of all
shareholders.
The Company believes that the
composition of the Board is a fundamental driver of its success as
the Board must provide strong and effective leadership of the
Company. The current Board was selected, as their biographies
illustrate, to bring a breadth of knowledge, skills and business
experience to the Company. All Directors are members of
professional bodies and serve or have served on other boards, which
ensures that they are kept abreast of the latest technical
developments in their areas of expertise. In terms of gender
balance, the Board has 25% female and 75% male representation.
Fiona Le Poidevin is the Chair of the Audit and Risk
Committee.
The Chairman leads the Board and
is responsible for its overall effectiveness in directing the
Company. The Chairman must be independent and is appointed in
accordance with the Company's Articles of Incorporation. In
considering the independence of the Chairman, the Board took note
of the provisions of the AIC Code relating to independence and has
determined that Mr Perry is an independent Director.
The Board meets at least four
times a year and, in addition, there is regular contact between the
Board, the Investment Manager and the Administrator. At each
meeting the Board follows a formal agenda that covers the business
to be discussed. Directors meet regularly with the senior
management employed by the Investment Manager both formally and
informally to ensure the Board remains regularly updated on all
issues. Ordinarily, the Board also has regular contact with the
Administrator and the Board is supplied in a timely manner with
information by the Investment Manager, the Company Secretary and
other advisers in a form and of a quality to enable it to discharge
its duties.
The Company has adopted a share
dealing code which is complied with by the Directors of ICG Longbow
Senior Secured UK Property Debt Investments Limited and relevant
personnel of the Investment Manager.
Board Tenure and Re-election
Three of the four remaining
Directors were appointed in November 2012 and Fiona Le Poidevin was
appointed on 1 September 2020. Therefore, three of the four members
of the Board have served for longer than nine years to date. The
issue with respect to long tenure has arisen and, in accordance
with the AIC Code, when and if any Director shall have been in
office (or on re-election would have at the end of that term of
office) for more than nine years, the Company will consider further
whether there is a risk that such a Director might reasonably be
deemed to have lost independence through such long
service.
The Nomination Committee takes the
lead in any discussions relating to the appointment or
re-appointment of Directors and gives consideration to Board
rotation in advance of the nine-year tenure limit. The Board
recognises that Directors serving nine years or more may appear to
have their independence impaired. However, the Board nonetheless
considers the Directors to remain independent as noted further
below. In addition, the Board believes it is beneficial for
shareholders that there is continuity of Board leadership during
this final managed realisation phase before placing the Company in
liquidation.
Directors are appointed under
letters of appointment, copies of which are available at the
registered office of the Company. The Board considers its
composition and succession planning on an ongoing basis. The
Company's Articles of Incorporation specify that at each annual
general meeting of the Company all Directors shall retire from
office and may offer themselves for election or re‐election by the
Members. Mr Perry, Mr Beevor,
Mr Meader and Mrs Le Poidevin will
retire as Directors of the Company in accordance with the Articles
and will be put forward for re-election at the forthcoming
AGM.
Any Director who is elected or
re-elected at that meeting is treated as continuing in office
throughout. If they are not elected or re-elected, they shall
retain office until the end of the meeting or (if earlier) when a
resolution is passed to appoint someone in their place or when a
resolution to elect or re-elect the Director is put to the meeting
and lost.
The Board remains confident that
its membership respects the spirit of the Code regarding Board
composition, diversity, particularly with respect to gender, and
how effectively members work together to achieve the Company's
objectives.
The Company's policy on Chair
tenure is that the Chair should not normally serve longer than nine
years as a Director and/ or Chair unless it is determined to be in
the best interests of the Company, its shareholders and
stakeholders.
On 14 January 2021, the Company's
shareholders voted for the orderly realisation of the Company's
assets and the return of capital to shareholders. As the Company
now has a finite remaining operating life, not expected to exceed
one year from the date of this report, it is considered in the best
interests of shareholders and stakeholders to maintain the
continuity and experience of the existing Board. In addition, it is
considered impractical to attract, recruit and induct new Board
members for such a short period of time. Accordingly, the current
Chair of the Company, barring unforeseen circumstances, is expected
to remain in office until the Company is placed into liquidation.
In practice this means that his tenure will continue to exceed the
recommended nine-year term. Similarly, Mr Beevor and Mr Meader will
also continue to exceed the recommended nine-year term for the
reasons stated, until the Company is placed in
liquidation.
Directors' Remuneration
The level of remuneration of the
Directors reflects the time commitment and responsibilities of
their roles. The Chairman is entitled to annual remuneration of
£50,000 (31
January 2023: £50,000). The Chair of the Audit and Risk Committee
is entitled to annual remuneration of £40,000 (31 January 2023: £40,000).
The other independent Directors are entitled to annual remuneration
of £35,000 (31
January 2023: £35,000). These levels of remuneration have remained
unchanged since July 2017.
During the year ended 31 January
2024 and the year ended 31 January 2023, the Directors'
remuneration was as follows:
|
Expected fees 1 February 2024 to 31 January
2025
|
1 February 2023 to 31
January 2024
|
1 February 2022 to 31
January 2023
|
Director
|
£
|
£
|
£
|
Jack Perry
|
50,000
|
50,000
|
50,000
|
Paul Meader
|
35,000
|
35,000
|
35,000
|
Stuart Beevor
|
35,000
|
35,000
|
35,000
|
Fiona Le Poidevin
|
40,000
|
40,000
|
40,000
|
The Company Directors' fees for
the year amounted to £160,000 (31 January 2023: £160,000) with
outstanding fees of £31,250 due to the Directors at 31 January 2024
(31 January 2023: £31,250) (see Note 8).
All of the Directors are
non-executive and are each considered independent for the purposes
of Chapter 15 of the Listing Rules.
Duties and Responsibilities
The Board has overall
responsibility for maximising the Company's success by directing
and supervising the affairs of the business and meeting the
appropriate interests of shareholders and relevant stakeholders,
while enhancing the value of the Company and also ensuring the
protection of investors. The Board has adopted a Schedule of
Matters which sets out the particular duties of the Board. Such
reserved powers include the following:
• strategic
matters;
• risk
assessment and management including reporting, compliance,
governance, monitoring and control and financial
reporting;
• statutory
obligations and public disclosure;
• declaring
Company dividends;
• managing
the Company's advisers;
• appointment
of a liquidator; and
• other
matters having a material effect on the Company.
The Directors have access to the
advice and services of the Administrator, who is responsible to the
Board for ensuring that Board procedures are followed and that it
complies with Companies Law and applicable rules and regulations of
the GFSC and the London Stock Exchange. Where necessary, in
carrying out their duties, the Directors may seek independent
professional advice and services at the expense of the Company. The
Company maintains appropriate Directors' and Officers' liability
insurance in respect of legal action against its Directors, should
this occur.
The Board's responsibilities for
the Annual Report are set out in the Directors' Responsibility
Statement. The Board is also responsible for issuing appropriate
Interim Reports and other price-sensitive public
reports.
One of the key criteria the
Company uses when selecting non-executive Directors, is their
confirmation prior to their appointment that they will be able to
allocate sufficient time to the Company to discharge their
responsibilities in a timely and effective manner. The Board
assesses the training needs of Directors on an annual
basis.
The Board formally met four times
during the year and ad-hoc Board meetings were called in relation
to specific events or to issue approvals, often at short notice and
did not necessarily require full attendance. Each Board member
receives a comprehensive Board pack at least five days prior to
each meeting which incorporates a formal agenda together with
supporting papers for items to be discussed at the meeting.
Directors are encouraged when they are unable to attend a meeting
to give the Chairman their views and comments on matters to be
discussed, in advance. Representatives of the Investment Manager
attend relevant sections of the Board meetings by invitation and
the Directors also liaise with the Investment Manager whenever
required and there is regular contact outside the Board meeting
schedule.
Attendance is further set out
below :
Director
|
Scheduled
Board
Meetings
4
|
Ad-hoc
Board
Meetings
5
|
Audit and Risk
Committee
Meetings
6
|
Ad-hoc
Committee
Meetings
2
|
Nomination
Committee
Meeting
0
|
Management
Engagement
Committee
Meeting
2
|
Remuneration
Committee
Meeting
0
|
Stuart Beevor
|
4
|
5
|
6
|
2
|
-
|
2
|
-
|
Paul Meader
|
4
|
2
|
6
|
2
|
-
|
2
|
-
|
Jack Perry1
|
4
|
5
|
-
|
2
|
-
|
2
|
-
|
Fiona Le Poidevin
|
4
|
5
|
6
|
2
|
-
|
2
|
-
|
(1)
Mr Perry has a standing invitation to Audit and Risk Committee
meetings, however his attendance at the meetings is as an observer
only and is not recorded.
The quorum for any Board meeting
is two directors but attendance by all Directors at each meeting is
encouraged.
Conflicts of interest
A Director has a duty to avoid a
situation in which he or she has, or can have, a direct or indirect
interest that conflicts, or possibly may conflict, with the
interests of the Company. The Board requires Directors to declare
all appointments and other situations that could result in a
possible conflict of interest and has adopted appropriate
procedures to manage and, if appropriate, approve any such
conflicts. The Board is satisfied that there is no compromise to
the independence of those Directors who have appointments on the
boards of, or relationships with, companies outside the
Company.
Committees of the Board
The Board believes that it and its
committees have an appropriate composition and blend of
backgrounds, skills and experience to discharge their duties
effectively. The Board is of the view that no one individual or
small group dominates decision-making. The Board keeps its
membership, and that of its committees, under review to ensure that
an acceptable balance is maintained and that the collective skills
and experience of its members continue to be refreshed. It is
satisfied that all Directors have sufficient time to devote to
their roles and that undue reliance is not placed on any
individual.
Each committee of the Board has
written terms of reference, approved by the Board, summarising its
objectives, remit and powers and are reviewed on an annual basis.
Each committee has access to such external advice as it may
consider appropriate.
All committee members are provided
with an appropriate induction on joining their respective
committees, as well as ongoing access to training. Minutes of all
meetings of the committees are made available to all Directors and
feedback from each of the committees is provided to the Board by
the respective committee Chairs at the next Board
meeting.
The Board and its committees are
supplied with regular, comprehensive, and timely information in a
form and of a quality that enables them to discharge their duties
effectively. All Directors are able to make further enquiries of
the Investment Manager and Administrator whenever necessary and
have access to the services of the Company Secretary.
Audit and Risk Committee
The Audit and Risk Committee is
chaired by Mrs Le Poidevin. The Committee also comprises Mr Beevor
and Mr Meader, who held office throughout the year. Mr Perry has a
standing invitation to attend meetings. However, his attendance at
these meetings is as an observer only. The
Chair of the Audit and Risk Committee, the Investment Manager and
the external auditor, Deloitte LLP, have held discussions regarding
the audit approach and identified risks. The external auditors
attend Audit and Risk Committee meetings and a private meeting is
held routinely with the external auditor to afford them the
opportunity of discussions without the presence of the Investment
Manager or Administrator. The Audit and Risk Committee's activities
are contained in the Report of the Audit and Risk
Committee.
Management Engagement Committee
The Management Engagement
Committee is chaired by Mr Perry and also comprises Mr Meader, Mr
Beevor and Mrs Le Poidevin, all of whom held office throughout the
year. The Management Engagement Committee meets not less than once
a year pursuant to its terms of reference, which are available on
the Company's website.
The Management Engagement
Committee's main function is to review and make recommendations in
relation to the Company's service providers. The Management
Engagement Committee will review, in particular, any proposed
amendment to the Investment Management Agreement and will keep
under review the performance of the Investment Manager (including
effective and active monitoring and supervision of the activities
of the Investment Manager) in its role as investment manager to the
Company as well as the performance of other principal service
providers to the Company. The Audit and Risk Committee also reports
on its relationship with the external auditor.
Nomination Committee
The Nomination Committee is
chaired by Mr Perry and also comprises Mr Beevor, Mr Meader and Mrs
Le Poidevin, all of whom held office throughout the year. Given
that the Company is in orderly wind-down and that there is no
expectation for the Committee/Board composition to change for the
reasons provided in this Report, it was no longer deemed necessary
for the committee to meet at least once a year. The Nomination
Committee's remit is to review regularly the structure, size and
composition of the Board, to give full consideration to succession
planning for Directors, to keep under review the leadership needs
of the Company and be responsible for identifying and nominating,
for the approval of the Board, candidates to fill Board vacancies
as and when they arise. The Nomination Committee met on 4
April 2024 and confirmed that its terms of reference remained
appropriate. Board composition and tenure were discussed and
the policy on both issues was agreed as disclosed in the Corporate
Governance Report above. The directors' independence was also
reviewed and each individual director was considered as
independent.
Board Performance Evaluation
In accordance with Provision 26 of
the AIC Code, the Board is required to undertake a formal and
rigorous evaluation of its performance on an annual basis. The
Board believes that annual evaluations are helpful and provide a
valuable opportunity for continuous improvement. Such an evaluation
of the performance of the Board as whole, the Audit and Risk
Committee, the Nomination Committee, the Management Engagement
Committee, the Remuneration Committee, individual Directors and the
Chairman is carried out and the results are considered by the whole
Board.
The internal evaluation conducted
by the Board during the year took the form of self-appraisal
questionnaires and discussion to determine effectiveness and
performance as well as the Directors' continued independence. The
responses were consolidated and anonymised and common themes
identified in order for the Board to determine key actions and next
steps for improving Board and Committee effectiveness and
performance.
The evaluation concluded that the
Board is performing satisfactorily and is acquitting its
responsibilities well in the areas reviewed which incorporated:
investment matters; Board composition and independence;
relationships and communication; shareholder value; knowledge and
skills; Board processes; and the performance of the Chairman. The
Board believes that the current mix of skills, experience and
knowledge of the Directors is appropriate to the requirements of
the Company.
The Nomination Committee has also
reviewed the composition, structure and diversity of the Board, the
independence of the Directors and whether each of the Directors has
sufficient time available to discharge their duties effectively.
The Committee and the Board confirm that they believe that the
Board has an appropriate mix of skills and backgrounds and that all
Directors should be considered as independent in accordance with
the provisions of the AIC Code and have the time available to
discharge their duties effectively.
Accordingly, the Board recommends
that shareholders vote in favour of the re-election of all
Directors at the forthcoming AGM.
Succession Planning
The Board recognises that
Directors serving nine years or more may appear to have their
independence impaired. However, the Board may nonetheless consider
Directors to remain independent. The Board considers it beneficial
for shareholders that there is continuity of Board leadership
during this final, managed realisation phase before placing the
Company in liquidation. Therefore, the Board has determined that,
barring any unforeseen circumstances, the present complement of
Directors will continue in office until the appointment of a
liquidator.
Remuneration Committee
The Remuneration Committee is
chaired by Mr Perry and comprises of Mr Meader and Mr Beevor who
have held office from 12 December 2019, when the Remuneration
Committee was formed, and Mrs Le Poidevin who was appointed to the
Committee on 10 December 2020. The Remuneration Committee is
responsible for recommending and monitoring the level and structure
of remuneration for all the Directors, including any compensation
payments, taking into account the time commitments and
responsibilities of Directors and any other factors which it deems
necessary, including the recommendations of the AIC
Code.
There had been no changes to the
Director fees since they were set on 1 July 2017 and they were not
expected to change, subject to any unforeseen circumstances, so an
annual meeting was no longer deemed necessary. The Remuneration
Committee met on 4 April 2024 and
confirmed that its terms of reference remained
appropriate. It was agreed that
there will be no increase to fees during the realisation period
subject to any unforeseen circumstances. No change in remuneration is therefore proposed for the year
to 31 January 2025.
Internal Control and Financial Reporting
The Directors acknowledge that
they are responsible for establishing and maintaining the Company's
system of internal controls and reviewing its effectiveness.
Internal control systems are designed to manage rather than
eliminate the failure to achieve business objectives and can only
provide reasonable but not absolute assurance against material
misstatements or loss. The Directors can confirm they have carried
out a robust assessment of the principal risks facing the Company,
including those that would threaten its business model, future
performance, solvency or liquidity. The key procedures which
have been established to provide internal control are:
• the Board has
delegated the day-to-day operations of the Company to the
Administrator and Investment Manager, however it remains
accountable for all functions it delegates;
• the Board clearly
defines the duties and responsibilities of the Company's agents and
advisers, and appointments are made by the Board after due and
careful consideration. The Board monitors the on-going performance
of such agents and advisers and continues to do so through the
Management Engagement Committee;
• the Board monitors the
actions of the Investment Manager at regular Board meetings and is
also given frequent updates on developments arising from the
operations and strategic direction of the underlying borrowers;
and
• the Administrator
provides administration and corporate secretarial services to the
Company. The Administrator maintains a system of internal controls
on which it reports to the Board.
The Board has reviewed the need
for an internal audit function and has decided that the systems and
procedures employed by the Administrator and Investment Manager,
including their own internal controls and procedures, provide
sufficient assurance that an appropriate level of risk management
and internal control, which safeguards shareholders' investment and
the Company's assets, is maintained. An internal audit function
specific to the Company is therefore considered
unnecessary.
Internal controls over financial
reporting are designed to provide reasonable assurance regarding
the reliability of financial reporting and the preparation of
financial statements for external reporting purposes. The
Administrator and Investment Manager both operate risk-controlled
frameworks on a continual ongoing basis within a regulated
environment. The Administrator undertakes an ISAE3402 report:
Assurance Report on Controls at a Service Organisation Audit which
is provided to the Board when finalised. The last available report
is dated 23 March 2023 and covers the year to 31 October 2021. The
report for the period to 31 October 2022 is expected shortly. For
the period to 31 October 2023, the Administrator is undertaking a
Global Service Organisation Control (SOC-1) Report which will be
available in Q2 2024. The Board has received an assurance from the
Administrator that there have been no material changes in their
control environment that would adversely affect the Auditor's
Opinion in the most recently published ISAE 3402 and the Directors
have held further satisfactory discussions with the Administrator
around key controls employed. The Administrator also formally
reports to the Board quarterly through a compliance report. The
Investment Manager formally reports to the Board quarterly,
including relevant updates regarding their policies and procedures,
and also engages with the Board on an ad-hoc basis as
required. No major weaknesses or failings within the Administrator
or Investment Manager have been identified.
The systems of control referred to
above are designed to ensure effectiveness and efficient operation,
internal control and compliance with laws and regulations. In
establishing the systems of internal control, regard is paid to the
materiality of relevant risks, the likelihood of costs being
incurred and costs of control. It follows, therefore, that the
systems of internal control can only provide reasonable but not
absolute assurance against the risk of material misstatement or
loss. This process has been in place for
the year under review and up to the date of approval of this Annual
Report and Financial Statements. It is reviewed by the Board and is
in accordance with the FRC's internal control publication: Guidance
on Risk Management, Internal Control and Related Financial and
Business Reporting.
The Company has delegated the
provision of services to external service providers whose work is
overseen by the Management Engagement Committee at its regular
scheduled meetings. Each year a detailed review of performance
pursuant to their terms of engagement is undertaken by the
Management Engagement Committee. An on-site review of the
Investment Manager was undertaken by the Directors on 8 February
2024 as part of the internal control environment. Given the
uncertainty in regards to the remaining life of the Company, the
Board may consider a further visit to the Investment Manager's
office, if required. The conclusions of these reviews have been
satisfactory, providing assurance on the control environment to the
Board. In addition, the Company maintains a website which contains
comprehensive information, including regulatory announcements,
share price information, financial reports, investment objectives
and strategy, investor contacts and information on the
Board.
Investment Management Agreement
The Company has entered into an
agreement with the Investment Manager. This sets out the Investment
Manager's key responsibilities, this includes being responsible to
the Board for all issues relating to the maintenance and monitoring
of existing investments.
In accordance with Listing Rule
15.6.2(2) R and having formally appraised the performance and
resources of the Investment Manager, in the opinion of the
Directors the continuing appointment of the Investment Manager on
the terms agreed is in the interest of the shareholders as a
whole.
Whistleblowing
The Board has considered the AIC
Code recommendations in respect of arrangements by which staff of
the Investment Manager or Administrator may, in confidence, raise
concerns within their respective organisations about possible
improprieties in matters of financial reporting or other
matters.
It has concluded that adequate
arrangements are in place for the proportionate and independent
investigation of such matters and, where necessary, for appropriate
follow-up action to be taken within their organisation.
Principal risks and uncertainties
During the year the Board has
overseen the Company's risk management framework and risk culture.
The Audit and Risk Committee undertook a robust assessment of the
Company's principal risks and associated risk appetite, taking into
account changes in the business and the external environment.
Determination of the risk appetite allows the Company to assess the
nature and extent of principal risks that it is exposed to and/or
willing to take to achieve objectives.
The Board considers the process
for identifying, evaluating and managing any significant risks
faced by the Company on an ongoing basis and these risks are
reported and discussed at Board meetings. This ensures that
effective controls are in place to mitigate these risks and that a
satisfactory compliance regime exists to ensure all applicable
local and international laws and regulations are adhered
to.
The Board can confirm that it has
agreed all recommendations proposed by the Audit and Risk
Committee. The risks set out below represent a snapshot of the
Company's current principal risk profile. These risks have been
ranked considering the magnitude of potential impact, probability
and taking into account the effectiveness of existing controls.
This is not an exhaustive list of all risks the Company faces. As
the macro environment changes and country and industry
circumstances evolve, new risks may arise and existing risks may
recede or the rankings of these risks may change.
For each material risk, the
likelihood and potential impact are identified. The Company's
financial instrument risks are discussed in Note 11 to the
Financial Statements.
The Directors have identified the
following as the principal risks faced by the Company:
Description
|
Nature of Risk
|
Potential Impact
|
Mitigation
|
Inability to secure sales of
underlying properties to facilitate timely capital
repayments
|
Market, geopolitical and economic
conditions are currently volatile and the outlook unsure. The
Company's three key loans are in administration or
receivership.
The Company's Borrowers retain a
right of redemption but have been unable to raise sufficient equity
to refinance the current loans.
In adverse market conditions with
low transaction volumes and high costs of debt, the appointed
Receivers and Administrators may find it challenging to secure
sales.
|
This could result in delayed sale of
the underlying properties and/or reduced quantum of capital
proceeds.
The thin market liquidity combined
with receivership/administrator sales may also attract only
opportunistic buyers seeking high returns and deep discounts in
order to proceed with a perceived distressed sale with very limited
indemnities or warranties being offered.
|
The Investment Manager has appointed
a receiver or administrator to each of the three key loans
remaining and is ensuring the property securing each loan is being
actively managed, with income and condition being maintained
wherever possible and economic to do so.
The Investment Manager maintains an
active dialogue with all the administrators/receivers and keeps the
Board informed of any issues arising. Loans and the underlying
security are monitored on an ongoing basis to identify any further
deterioration or distress.
The Investment Manager remains an
active participant in the UK CRE financing market and as such is
continually monitoring property and finance market conditions,
meaning it is well placed to deal with any issues. Current
conditions mean that reconciling a timely exit with maximising
shareholder value is challenging.
|
Fall in collateral values, and
accuracy of valuations
|
Commercial property values are
typically linked to a property's ability to generate cashflows and
are benchmarked against comparable properties.
Economic and market volatility
create material uncertainty in terms of property
valuations.
|
This may impact the Company's
ability to accurately determine collateral values, and to
appropriately consider the level of permanent impairment of any
particular investment, within the target timeframe to realise that
investment.
|
The current volatile market
conditions may make the accuracy of valuations somewhat unreliable
with significant but unknown bid offer spreads between buyer and
seller aspirations. As things stand at the time of review, the
market for refinancing loans or the sale of underlying properties
is uncertain.
The Board obtains external
valuations as appropriate but also makes judgements based on offers
in hand, valuer and agency advice and outlook for each specific
property.
Given the market uncertainty and
lack of transactional evidence, the Company applies a
probability weighted approach to the range of outcomes based on
differing realisation scenarios.
|
Portfolio Diversification
|
The Company is in wind down with
only three loans remaining.
|
The Company no longer benefits from
portfolio diversification, but carries the specific risks
associated with the remaining loans.
The remaining loans are in
receivership or administration and, as such, the Company's income
generation is and cashflow are unpredictable.
Furthermore, the Company's fixed
costs will thereof comprise a greater proportion of the Group's
revenues which may impact the amount of funds available for
distribution to shareholders.
|
As part of the orderly realisation,
the Investment Manager and the Board have stepped up monitoring of
the individual investments and the Board receives frequent formal
and informal reports from the Investment Manager.
The Board also continues to closely
monitor the Company's costs, to ensure optimum value is obtained
during the realisation of the portfolio.
However, with only three loans
outstanding, the portfolio's concentration risk has increased
significantly and will continue to increase as loans are
repaid.
The Board will adopt a prudent
approach to the repayment of capital to shareholders to ensure that
the Company remains viable and avoids becoming a distressed seller
through the final realisation process.
|
Liquidation process and timeliness
of final capital distribution
|
The Company's liquidation is
expected to follow repayment of the final loan and the discharge of
all creditors and claims, timings of which is uncertain for the
reasons set out above.
|
Liquidation of the Company may be
delayed and it may continue to operate with high fixed costs
relative to the remaining income streams.
|
The performance of all loans and
timings of repayments is monitored closely.
The Board and Investment Manager
will continue to weigh the merits of accelerated exits versus
orderly repayment to maximise shareholder returns where
possible.
Potential claims and liabilities
will be identified and addressed in advance wherever
possible.
|
The Company's principal risk
factors are fully set out in the Company's 2018 Prospectus
available on the Company's website (www.lbow.co.uk) and should be
reviewed by shareholders, together with the supplemental prospectus
issued in 2019, albeit in the context that the Company has now
adopted a new Investment Policy and is in managed wind down which
has changed the nature of many of the principal risk factors, as
described above.
Emerging risks are regularly
considered to assess any potential impact on the Company and to
determine whether any actions are required. Emerging risks include
those related to regulatory/legislative change, the war in the
Middle East and macroeconomic and political change.
In summary, the above risks are
mitigated and managed by the Board through continual review, policy
setting and updating of the Company's detailed risk matrix to
ensure that procedures are in place with the intention of
minimising the impact of the above-mentioned risks. The Board also
relies on periodic reports provided by the Investment Manager and
Administrator regarding risks that the Company faces. When
required, experts will be employed to gather information, including
property surveyors, tax managers, legal managers or environmental
managers as appropriate.
By order of the Board
Jack Perry
|
Fiona Le Poidevin
|
Chairman
|
Director
|
8 May 2024
|
8 May 2024
|
Report of the Audit and Risk
Committee
The Audit and Risk Committee,
chaired by Mrs Le Poidevin, operates within clearly defined terms
of reference (which are available from the Company's website) and
includes all matters indicated by Disclosure and Transparency Rule
7.1, the AIC Code and the UK Code. Its other members are Mr Beevor
and Mr Meader.
Only independent Directors can
serve on the Audit and Risk Committee. Members of the Audit and
Risk Committee must be independent of the Company's external
auditor and Investment Manager. The Audit and Risk Committee will
meet no less than twice a year, and at such other times as the
Audit and Risk Committee Chair shall require.
The Committee members have
considerable financial and business experience and the Board has
determined that the membership as a whole has sufficient recent and
relevant sector and financial experience to discharge its
responsibilities. The Board has taken note of the requirement that
at least one member of the Audit and Risk Committee should have
recent and relevant financial experience and is satisfied that the
Audit and Risk Committee is properly constituted in that respect,
with all members being highly experienced and, in particular, with
one member having a background as a chartered
accountant.
The duties of the Audit and Risk
Committee in discharging its responsibilities include reviewing the
Annual Report and Financial Statements and the Interim Report, the
system of internal controls, and the terms of appointment of the
Company's independent auditor together with their remuneration. It
is also the formal forum through which the auditor will report to
the Board of Directors. The objectivity of the auditor is reviewed
by the Audit and Risk Committee which will also review the terms
under which the external auditor is appointed to perform non-audit
services and the fees paid to them or their affiliated firms
overseas.
Responsibilities
The main duties of the Audit and
Risk Committee are:
• reviewing and
monitoring the integrity of the Financial Statements of the Company
and any formal announcements relating to the Company's financial
performance, reviewing significant financial reporting judgements
contained in them;
• reporting to the
Board on the appropriateness of the Company's accounting policies
and practices including critical judgement areas;
• reviewing any
draft impairment reviews of the Company's investments prepared by
the Investment Manager and making a recommendation to the Board on
any impairment in the value of the Company's
investments;
• meeting regularly
with the external auditor to review their proposed audit plan and
the subsequent audit report and assess the effectiveness of the
audit process and the levels of fees paid in respect of both audit
and non-audit work;
• making
recommendations to the Board in relation to the appointment,
re-appointment or removal of the external auditor and approving
their remuneration and the terms of their engagement;
• monitoring and
reviewing annually the auditor's independence, objectivity,
expertise, resources, qualification and non-audit work;
• considering
annually whether there is a need for the Company to have its own
internal audit function;
• monitoring the
internal financial control and risk management systems on which the
Company is reliant;
• reviewing and
considering the UK Code, the AIC Code and the FRC Guidance on Audit
and Risk Committees; and
• reviewing the risks
facing the Company and monitoring the risk matrix.
The Audit and Risk Committee is
required to report its findings formally to the Board, identifying
any matters on which it considers that action or improvement is
needed, and make recommendations on the steps to be
taken.
The external auditor is invited to
attend the Audit and Risk Committee meetings as the Directors deem
appropriate and the Audit and Risk Committee has the opportunity to
meet the external auditor without representatives of the Investment
Manager or the Administrator being present at least once per
year.
Financial Reporting
The primary role of the Audit and
Risk Committee in relation to the financial reporting is to review
with the Administrator, Investment Manager and the auditor the
appropriateness of the Annual Report and Financial Statements,
concentrating on, amongst other matters:
• the quality and
acceptability of accounting policies and practices;
• the clarity of
the disclosures and compliance with financial reporting standards
and relevant financial and governance reporting
requirements;
• material areas in
which significant judgements have been applied or where there has
been discussion with the external auditor including the going
concern status and viability statement;
• whether the
Annual Report and Financial Statements, taken as a whole, is fair,
balanced and understandable and provides the information necessary
for shareholders to assess the Company's performance, business
model and strategy; and
• any
correspondence from regulators in relation to the Company's
financial reporting.
To aid its review, the Audit and
Risk Committee considers reports from the Administrator and
Investment Manager and also reports from the auditor on the outcome
of their annual audit. The Audit and Risk Committee supports the
external auditor and recognises the necessary professional
scepticism their role requires.
Meetings
During the year ended 31 January
2024, the Audit and Risk Committee met formally on four occasions.
The matters discussed at those meetings included:
• review of the
terms of reference of the Audit and Risk Committee for approval by
the Board;
• review of the
accounting policies and format of the Financial
Statements;
• detailed review
of the Annual Report and Financial Statements, Interim Report and
recommendation for approval by the Board including the basis other
than that of a going concern and the viability
statement;
• detailed review
and updating of the Company's risk matrix;
• review and
approval of the audit plan and final Audit and Risk Committee
report of the auditor;
• discussion and
approval of the fee for the external audit;
• assessment of the
independence of the external auditor;
• assessment of the
effectiveness of the external audit process as described below;
and
• review of the
Company's key risks and internal controls.
Primary Area of Judgement
The Audit and Risk Committee
determined that the key risk of misstatement of the Company's
Financial Statements relates to the valuation and recoverability of
the loans, in the context of the judgements necessary to evaluate
any related impairment of the loans and associated credit
loss.
The Company's loans are the key
value driver for the Company's NAV and interest income. Judgements
over the level of any impairment and recoverability of loan
principal and interest could significantly affect the
NAV.
The Company's remaining loans are
past due and, in each case, the underlying assets are subject to
either receivership or administration process at the behest of the
Company. The Committee reviews the Investment Manager's monitoring
of the subject properties and performance of its appointed asset
managers, receivers, administrators and sales agents to ensure all
reasonable steps are being taken in the orderly realisation of the
assets.
The Committee also receives
updates from the Investment Manager regarding the trading
performance of each property. As a result, the Committee seeks to
determine the level of impairment to the loans.
The Audit and Risk Committee notes
that critical judgements have been made in relation to the
assessment of the estimation of the loss given default to
each of the remaining three loans.
The incorrect treatment of any
arrangement, exit and prepayment fees and the impact of loan
impairments in the effective interest rate calculations may
significantly affect the level of income recorded in the year thus
affecting the level of distributable income.
The Audit and Risk Committee
focused their work on disclosures required in the Annual Report
following requirements under the AIC Code, consideration of
emerging risks, environmental, social and governance matters and on
subsequent event disclosures.
The Audit and Risk Committee also
focused on IFRS 9 and in particular the assessment of the credit
risk changes and loss given default in relation to the loan
portfolio. The Audit and Risk Committee has reviewed detailed
impairment analysis and current loan performance reports prepared
by the Investment Manager together with the consideration of the
current collateral values underpinning the loan
portfolio.
The Audit and Risk Committee also
reviewed the income recognition and the treatment of arrangement
and exit fees which were based on effective interest rate
calculations prepared by the Investment Manager and the
Administrator. The internal credit rating
of each loan as at 31 January 2024 was reviewed. All three loans, Affinity, RoyaleLife and Southport were
identified as Stage 3 and have an impairment provision of £32.48
million. All loans were discussed at the Audit and Risk Committee
meeting to review the Annual Report, with the Investment Manager,
the Administrator and Auditor. In line with requirements of IFRS as
set out in the accounting policies, interest accruing and unpaid on
Stage 3 loans recognised as Income net of ECL allowance in the
Statement of Comprehensive Income.
The Audit and Risk Committee has
reviewed the judgements and estimations in determining the fair
value of prepayment options embedded within the contracts for loans
advanced. The key factors considered in the valuation of prepayment
options include the exercise price, the interest rate of the host
loan contract, differential to current market interest rates, the
risk-free rate of interest, contractual terms of the prepayment
option, and the expected term of the option. In response to these
factors, it has been evaluated that the probability of exercise by
the borrower is low and the timing of exercise is indeterminable.
As a result, the Audit and Risk Committee has concluded that it is
appropriate no value is attributed to embedded prepayment
options.
Risk Management
The Company's risk assessment
process and the way in which significant business risks are managed
is a key area of focus for the Audit and Risk Committee. The work
of the Audit and Risk Committee is driven primarily by the
Company's assessment of its principal risks and uncertainties as
set out in the Corporate Governance
Report, and it receives reports from the Investment Manager and
Administrator on the Company's risk evaluation process and reviews
changes to significant risks identified. Furthermore, the
Investment Manager monitors the risks associated with the
investments and the compliance of the investment portfolio with the
investment restrictions of the Company.
Internal Audit
The Audit and Risk Committee
continues to review the need for an internal audit function and has
decided that the systems and procedures employed by the
Administrator and the Investment Manager, including their own
internal controls and procedures, provide sufficient assurance that
an appropriate level of risk management and internal control, which
safeguards shareholders' investment and the Company's assets, is
maintained. Furthermore, the visit to the Investment Manager's
London office on 8 February 2024 gave the Committee assurance
around the Investment Manager's internal controls and included a
discussion with the Investment Manager's head of internal audit. An
internal audit function specific to the Company is therefore
considered unnecessary.
External Audit
Deloitte LLP has been the
Company's external auditor since the Company's inception. This is
the eleventh audit period and therefore the Company is obliged to
consider tendering for a new audit firm. As the Company is in a
managed realisation, the Audit and Risk Committee has determined
that Deloitte LLP should remain as auditor until the Company has
wound up.
The external auditor is required
to rotate the audit partner every five years. The current Deloitte
LLP lead audit partner, Mr David Becker, started his tenure in 2020
(in respect of the year ended 31 January 2020) and his current
rotation will end with the audit of the 2024 Annual Report and
Financial Statements. The Audit and Risk Committee has considered
the re-appointment of the auditor and decided not to put the
provision of the external audit out to tender, given the limited
life of the Company.
The objectivity of the auditor is
reviewed by the Audit and Risk Committee which also reviews the
terms under which the external auditor may be appointed to perform
non-audit services. The Audit and Risk Committee reviews the scope
and results of the audit, its cost effectiveness and the
independence and objectivity of the auditor, with particular regard
to any non-audit work that the auditor may undertake. In order to
safeguard auditor independence and objectivity, the Audit and Risk
Committee ensures that any other advisory and/or consulting
services provided by the external auditor do not conflict with its
statutory audit responsibilities. Advisory and/or consulting
services will generally only cover reviews of Interim Reports and
capital raising work. Any non-audit services conducted by the
auditor outside of these areas will require the consent of the
Audit and Risk Committee before being initiated.
The external auditor may not
undertake any work for the Company in respect of the following
matters - preparation of the Financial Statements, provision of
investment advice, taking management decisions or advocacy work in
adversarial situations.
The Committee reviews the scope
and results of the audit, its cost effectiveness and the
independence and objectivity of the auditor, with particular regard
to the level of non-audit fees.
The Committee regularly monitors
non-audit services being provided by the external auditor to ensure
there is no impairment to their independence or
objectivity.
Notwithstanding such services, the
Audit and Risk Committee considers Deloitte LLP to be independent
of the Company and that the provision of such non-audit services is
not a threat to the objectivity and independence of the conduct of
the audit as appropriate safeguards are in place.
To fulfil its responsibility
regarding the independence of the auditor, the Audit and Risk
Committee will consider:
• discussions with or
reports from the auditor describing its arrangements to identify,
report and manage any conflicts of interest; and
• the extent of
non-audit services provided by the auditor and arrangements for
ensuring the independence, objectivity, robustness and
perceptiveness of the auditor and their handling of key accounting
and audit judgements.
To assess the effectiveness of the
auditor, the Audit and Risk Committee will review:
• the auditor's
fulfilment of the agreed audit plan and variations from
it;
• discussions or
reports highlighting the major issues that arose during the course
of the audit;
• feedback from
other service providers evaluating the performance of the audit
team;
• arrangements for
ensuring independence and objectivity;
• the robustness of
the auditor in handling key accounting and audit judgements;
and
• a summary of the
FRC's Audit Quality Review report for Deloitte and discuss the
findings with the audit partner to determine if any of the
indicators in that report had particular relevance to this year's
audit of the Company. Specifically, the Audit and Risk Committee
discuss the extent of the auditor's challenge of key estimates and
assumptions in key areas of judgement, including asset valuations
and impairment testing and the quality of the firm's audit of
revenue.
The Audit and Risk Committee is
satisfied with Deloitte LLP's effectiveness and independence as
auditor having considered the degree of diligence and professional
scepticism demonstrated by them. Having carried out the review
described above and having satisfied itself that the auditor
remains independent and effective, the Audit and Risk Committee has
recommended to the Board that Deloitte LLP be reappointed as
auditor for the year ending 31 January 2025.
The Board's recommendation to
shareholders on the re-appointment of Deloitte LLP as external
auditor will be put to shareholders at the Annual General
Meeting.
The Chair of the Audit and Risk
Committee will be available at the Annual General Meeting to answer
any questions about the work of the Committee.
On behalf of the Audit and Risk
Committee
Fiona Le Poidevin
Chair of the Audit and Risk Committee
8 May 2024
Statement of Comprehensive
Income
For the year ended 31 January
2024
|
|
1 February 2023
to
|
1 February 2022
to
|
|
Notes
|
31 January
2024
|
31 January
2023
|
|
|
£
|
£
|
Income
|
|
|
|
Income from loans
|
2 e)
|
4,896,000
|
7,136,574
|
Other fee income from
loans
|
2 f)
|
5,168
|
133,051
|
Income from cash and cash
equivalents
|
|
53,518
|
2,864
|
Total income
|
|
4,954,686
|
7,272,489
|
|
|
|
|
Expenses
|
|
|
|
Investment Management
fees
|
13
|
551,167
|
761,047
|
Directors' remuneration
|
12
|
160,000
|
160,000
|
Audit fees for the
Company
|
14
|
63,013
|
42,353
|
ECL provision on financial
assets
|
5
|
28,507,897
|
3,940,181
|
Other expenses
|
15
|
548,860
|
409,085
|
Total expenses
|
|
29,830,937
|
5,312,666
|
(Loss)/profit for the year before tax
|
|
(24,876,251)
|
1,959,823
|
Taxation charge
|
4
|
-
|
-
|
(Loss)/profit for the year after tax
|
|
(24,876,251)
|
1,959,823
|
Total comprehensive (loss)/income for the
year
|
|
(24,876,251)
|
1,959,823
|
Basic and diluted (Loss)/Earnings per Share
(pence)
|
9
|
(20.51)
|
1.62
|
All items within the above statement
have been derived from discontinuing activities on the basis of the
orderly realisation of the Company's assets.
The Company had no recognised gains
or losses for either period other than those included in the
results above.
The accompanying notes from 1 to 16
form an integral part of these Financial Statements.
Statement of Financial
Position
As at 31 January 2024
|
Notes
|
31 January
2024
|
31 January
2023
|
|
|
£
|
£
|
Assets
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Current Assets
|
|
|
|
Loans advanced
|
5
|
33,639,051
|
68,963,675
|
Trade and other
receivables
|
6
|
30,718
|
43,435
|
Cash and cash equivalents
|
7
|
2,945,829
|
9,209,494
|
Total current assets
|
|
36,615,598
|
78,216,604
|
|
|
|
|
Total assets
|
|
36,615,598
|
78,216,604
|
|
|
|
|
Liabilities
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Current Liabilities
|
|
|
|
Trade and other payables
|
8
|
391,470
|
861,653
|
Total current liabilities
|
|
391,470
|
861,653
|
|
|
|
|
Total liabilities
|
|
391,470
|
861,653
|
|
|
|
|
Net
assets
|
|
36,224,128
|
77,354,951
|
|
|
|
|
Equity
|
|
|
|
Share capital
|
10
|
64,650,361
|
80,298,419
|
Retained loss
|
|
(28,426,233)
|
(2,943,468)
|
Total equity attributable to the owners of the
Company
|
|
36,224,128
|
77,354,951
|
Number of Ordinary Shares in issue at year
end
|
10
|
121,302,779
|
121,302,779
|
Net
Asset Value per Ordinary Share (pence)
|
9
|
29.86
|
63.77
|
The Financial Statements were
approved by the Board of Directors on 8 May and signed on their behalf by:
Jack Perry
|
Fiona Le Poidevin
|
Chairman
|
Director
|
8 May 2024
|
8 May 2024
|
The accompanying notes from 1 to 16
form an integral part of these Financial Statements.
Statement of Changes
in Equity
For the year ended 31 January
2024
|
|
Number
|
Ordinary
Share
|
B Share
|
Retained
|
|
|
Notes
|
of shares
|
capital
|
capital
|
(loss) /
earnings
|
Total
|
|
|
|
£
|
£
|
£
|
£
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
As
at 1 February 2023
|
|
121,302,779
|
80,298,419
|
-
|
(2,943,468)
|
77,354,951
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total comprehensive loss
|
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(24,876,251)
|
(24,876,251)
|
Dividends paid
|
10
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(606,514)
|
(606,514)
|
B Shares issued February
2023
|
10
|
121,302,779
|
(6,671,653)
|
6,671,653
|
-
|
-
|
B Shares redeemed & cancelled
February 2023
|
10
|
(121,302,779)
|
-
|
(6,671,653)
|
-
|
(6,671,653)
|
B Shares issued August
2023
|
10
|
121,302,779
|
(8,976,405)
|
8,976,405
|
-
|
-
|
B Shares redeemed & cancelled
August 2023
|
10
|
(121,302,779)
|
-
|
(8,976,405)
|
-
|
(8,976,405)
|
As
at 31 January 2024
|
|
121,302,779
|
64,650,361
|
-
|
(28,426,233)
|
36,224,128
|
For the year ended 31 January
2023
|
|
Number
|
Ordinary
Share
|
B Share
|
Retained
|
|
|
Notes
|
of shares
|
capital
|
capital
|
(loss) /
earnings
|
Total
|
|
|
|
£
|
£
|
£
|
£
|
As
at 1 February 2022
|
|
121,302,779
|
87,576,589
|
-
|
191,426
|
87,768,015
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total comprehensive
income
|
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
1,959,823
|
1,959,823
|
Dividends paid
|
10
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(5,094,717)
|
(5,094,717)
|
B Shares issued May 2022
|
10
|
121,302,779
|
(7,278,170)
|
7,278,170
|
-
|
-
|
B Shares redeemed & cancelled
May 2022
|
10
|
(121,302,779)
|
-
|
(7,278,170)
|
-
|
(7,278,170)
|
As
at 31 January 2023
|
|
121,302,779
|
80,298,419
|
-
|
(2,943,468)
|
77,354,951
|
The accompanying notes from 1 to 16
form an integral part of these Financial Statements.
Statement of Cash
Flows
For the year ended 31 January
2024
|
|
1 February 2023
to
|
1 February 2022
to
|
|
Notes
|
31 January
2024
|
31 January
2023
|
|
|
£
|
£
|
Cash flows generated from operating
activities
|
|
|
|
(Loss)/profit for the
year
|
|
(24,876,251)
|
1,959,823
|
Adjustments for non-cash items and
working capital movements:
|
|
|
|
Movement in other
receivables
|
6
|
12,718
|
459,050
|
Movement in other payables and
accrued expenses
|
8
|
(296,009)
|
68,430
|
Loan amortisation
|
|
25,889,373
|
1,193,484
|
|
|
729,831
|
3,680,787
|
|
|
|
|
Loans advanced less arrangement
fees
|
|
(308,400)
|
(487,610)
|
Arrangement fees received
|
|
-
|
64,740
|
Loans repaid
|
5
|
9,569,476
|
13,523,240
|
Net loans repaid less arrangement
fees
|
|
9,261,076
|
13,100,370
|
Net
cash generated from operating activities
|
|
9,990,907
|
16,781,157
|
|
|
|
|
Cash flows used in financing activities
|
|
|
|
Dividends paid
|
10
|
(606,514)
|
(5,094,717)
|
Return of Capital paid
|
10
|
(15,648,058)
|
(7,278,170)
|
Net
cash (used in) financing activities
|
|
(16,254,572)
|
(12,372,887)
|
Net (decrease)/increase in cash and
cash equivalents
|
|
(6,263,665)
|
4,408,270
|
Cash and cash equivalents at the
start of the year
|
|
9,209,494
|
4,801,224
|
Cash and cash equivalents at the end of the
year
|
|
2,945,829
|
9,209,494
|
The accompanying notes from 1 to 16
form an integral part of these Financial Statements.
1. General information
ICG-Longbow Senior Secured UK
Property Debt Investments Limited is a non-cellular company limited
by shares and was incorporated in Guernsey under the Companies Law
on 29 November 2012 with registered number 55917 as a closed-ended
investment company. The registered office
address is Floor 2, PO Box 286, Trafalgar Court, Les Banques, St
Peter Port, Guernsey, GY1 4LY.
The Company's shares were admitted
to the Premium Segment of the Official List and to trading on the
Main Market of the London Stock Exchange on 5 February
2013.
In line with the revised
Investment Objective and Policy approved by shareholders in the
Extraordinary General Meeting in January 2021, the Company is now
undertaking an orderly realisation of its investments. As
sufficient funds become available the Board intends to return
capital to shareholders, taking account of the Company's working
capital requirements and funding commitments.
ICG Alternative Investment Limited
is the external discretionary investment manager.
2. Accounting policies
a) Basis of preparation
The Financial Statements for the
year ended 31 January 2024 have been prepared in accordance with UK
adopted international accounting standards and the Companies
(Guernsey) Law, 2008.
The same accounting policies and
methods of computation have been followed in the preparation of
these Financial Statements as in the Annual Report and Financial
Statements for the year ended 31 January 2023.
At the date of approval of these
Financial Statements, the Company has reviewed the following new
and revised IFRS standards and interpretations that have been
issued and are now effective:
The adoption of these standards
and interpretations has had no impact on the Financial Statements
of the Company.
|
|
Effective for periods
commencing
|
IFRS 17
|
Insurance Contracts (Amendments to
address concerns and implementation challenges that were identified
after IFRS 17 was published)
|
01
January 2023
|
IAS 1
|
Presentation of Financial Statements
(Amendments regarding the disclosure of accounting
policies)
|
01
January 2023
|
IAS 8
|
Accounting Policies, Changes in
Accounting Estimates and Errors (Amendments regarding the
definition of accounting estimates)
|
01
January 2023
|
IAS 12
|
Income Taxes (Amendments regarding
deferred tax on leases and decommissioning obligations
|
01
January 2023
|
The following new and revised IFRS
standards and interpretations that have been issued and are not yet
effective. The Company intends to adopt
these new and amended standards and interpretations, if applicable,
when they become effective.
|
|
Effective for periods
commencing
|
IFRS 7
|
Financial Instruments: Disclosures
(Amendments regarding supplier finance arrangements)
|
01
January 2024
|
IFRS 16
|
Leases (Amendments to clarify how
a seller-lessee subsequently measures sale and leaseback
transactions)
|
01
January 2024
|
IAS 1
|
Presentation of Financial
Statements (Amendments regarding the classification of
liabilities)
|
01
January 2024
|
IAS 1
|
Presentation of Financial
Statements (Amendments regarding the classification of debt with
covenants)
|
01
January 2024
|
IAS 7
|
Statement of Cash Flows
(Amend-ments regarding supplier finance arrange-ments)
|
01
January 2024
|
b) Going concern
The Directors, at the time of
approving the Financial Statements, are required to consider
whether they have a reasonable expectation that the Company has
adequate resources to continue in operational existence for the
foreseeable future and whether there is any threat to the going
concern status of the Company. At the EGM of the Company on 14
January 2021, following a recommendation from the Board published
in a circular on 16 December 2020, shareholders voted by the
requisite majority in favour of a change to the Company's
Objectives and Investment Policy which would lead to an orderly
realisation of the Company's assets and a return of capital to
shareholders.
It is intended that, following the
appointment of receivers or administrators in respect of the last
remaining loans, the investments will be realised as and when the
underlying property assets, or loans upon which they are secured,
can be sold in an orderly manner. The Company may take actions with
the consequence of accelerating or delaying realisation in order to
optimise shareholders' returns in the context of the Company's
size.
Whilst the Directors are satisfied
that the Company has adequate resources to continue in operation
throughout the realisation period and to meet all liabilities as
they fall due, given the Company is now in a managed wind down, the
Directors consider it appropriate to adopt a basis other than going
concern in preparing the financial statements.
In the absence of a ready
secondary market in real estate loans by which to assess market
value of the loans, the basis of valuation for investments is
amortised cost net of impairment, recognising the realisable value
of each property in the orderly wind down of the Company. In
accordance with the Company's IFRS 9 Policy the staging of each
loan has been reviewed and all loans are now considered to be at
Stage 3. Consequently, valuations reflect the ECL assuming a twelve
month realisation period, as detailed in Note 5. No material
adjustments have arisen solely as a result of ceasing to apply the
going concern basis.
c) Functional and presentation
currency
The Financial Statements are
presented in Pounds Sterling, which is the functional currency as
well as the presentation currency as all the Company's investments
and most transactions are denominated in Pounds
Sterling.
d) Foreign currencies
Transactions in foreign currencies
are translated at the foreign exchange rate ruling at the date of
the transaction. Monetary assets and liabilities denominated in
foreign currencies at the reporting date are translated at the
foreign exchange rate ruling at that date. Foreign exchange
differences arising on translation are recognised in the Statement
of Comprehensive Income.
e) Interest income
In accordance with IFRS 9 interest
income is recognised when it is probable that the economic benefits
will flow to the Company and the amount of revenue can be measured
reliably. Interest income is accrued on a time basis, by reference
to the principal outstanding and at the effective interest rate
applicable, which is the rate that exactly discounts estimated
future cash receipts through the expected life of the financial
asset to that asset's net carrying amount on initial recognition.
Arrangement and exit fees which are considered to be an integral
part of the contract are included in the effective interest rate
calculation.
For financial assets in stage 3,
interest is recognised on a net basis after allowance for ECL. For
financial assets in Stage 2, where the Company considers that the
quantum or timeliness of the economic benefit cannot be measured
reliably, in accordance with IFRS, interest will be recognised on a
gross basis and an ECL provision will be raised.
Interest on cash and cash
equivalents is recognised on an accruals basis.
f) Other fee income
Other fee income includes
prepayment and other fees due under the contractual terms of the
debt instruments. Such fees and related cash receipts are not
considered to form an integral part of the effective interest rate
and are accounted for on an accruals basis.
g) Operating expenses
Operating expenses are the
Company's costs incurred in connection with the ongoing management
of the Company's investments and administrative costs. Operating
expenses are accounted for on an accruals basis.
h) Taxation
The Company is exempt from
Guernsey taxation under the Income Tax (Exempt Bodies) (Guernsey)
Ordinance 1989 for which it pays an annual fee of £1,600 which is
included within other expenses. The Company is required to apply
annually to obtain exempt status for the purposes of Guernsey
Taxation.
i) Dividends
Dividends payable are recognised
as distributions in the financial statements when the Company's
obligation to make payment has been established. Dividends paid
during the year are disclosed in the Statement of Changes In
Equity. Any dividends that are declared post year end are disclosed
in note 16.
j) Segmental reporting
Operating segments are reported in
a manner consistent with the internal reporting provided to the
chief operating decision-maker. The chief operating decision-maker,
who is responsible for allocating resources and assessing
performance of the operating segments, has been identified as the
Board of Directors, as a whole. The key measure of performance used
by the Board to assess the Company's performance and to allocate
resources is the total return on the Company's Net Asset Value, as
calculated under IFRS, and therefore no reconciliation is required
between the measure of profit or loss used by the Board and that
contained in the Financial Statements.
For management purposes, the
Company is organised into one main operating segment,
being the provision of a portfolio of UK
commercial property backed senior debt investments.
The majority of the Company's
income is derived from loans secured on commercial and residential
property in the United Kingdom.
Due to the Company's nature, it
has no employees.
k) Financial instruments
Financial assets and financial
liabilities are recognised in the Company's Statement of Financial
Position when the Company becomes a party to the contractual
provisions of the instrument. Financial assets and financial
liabilities are only offset and the net amount reported in the
Statement of Financial Position and Statement of Comprehensive
Income when there is a currently enforceable legal right to offset
the recognised amounts and the Company intends to settle on a net
basis or realise the asset and liability simultaneously.
Financial
Assets
All financial assets are
recognised and de-recognised on a trade date where the purchase or
sale of a financial asset is under a contract whose terms require
delivery of the financial asset within the timeframe established by
the market concerned, and are initially measured at fair value,
plus transaction costs, except for those financial assets
classified as at fair value through profit or loss, which are
initially measured at fair value.
Financial assets are classified into
the following specified categories: financial assets at fair value
through profit or loss, financial assets at fair value through
Other Comprehensive Income or financial assets at amortised
cost.
The classification depends on the
nature and purpose of the financial assets and is determined at the
time of initial recognition.
The Company's financial assets
currently comprise loans, trade and other receivables and cash and
cash equivalents.
i) Loans and
receivables
These assets are non-derivative
financial assets with fixed or determinable payments that are not
quoted in an active market. They comprise loans and trade and other
receivables.
They are initially recognised at
fair value plus transaction costs that are directly attributable to
the acquisition, and subsequently carried at total claim value less
allowance for Expected Credit Loss (ECL). The effect of discounting
on trade and other receivables is not considered to be
material.
ii) Cash and
cash equivalents
Cash and cash equivalents comprise
cash on hand and demand deposits and other short-term highly liquid
investments with an original maturity of three months or less that are
readily convertible to a known amount of cash and are subject to an
insignificant risk of changes in value.
iii) Effective
interest rate method
The effective interest rate method
is a method of calculating the amortised cost of a debt instrument
and of allocating interest income over the relevant period. The
effective interest rate is the rate that exactly discounts
estimated future cash receipts (including all fees paid or received
that form an integral part of the effective interest rate,
transaction costs and other premiums or discounts) through the
expected life of the debt instrument, or, where appropriate, a
shorter period, to the net carrying amount on initial
recognition.
iv) Impairment of
financial assets
The Company recognises a loss
allowance for ECL on trade receivables and loan receivables. The
amount of ECL is updated at each reporting date to reflect changes
in credit risk since initial recognition of the respective
financial instrument. The Company always recognises a 12-month ECL
for trade receivables and loan receivables that fall under stage 1
assets. For stage 2 assets, the Company recognises a lifetime ECL
when there has been a significant increase in credit risk since
initial recognition. In respect of the Stage 3, non-performing
loans, lifetime expected credit losses are also recognised, and
interest is calculated on the net carrying amount and subject to
further provision for impairment in the event that it is unlikely
to be received. The ECL on Stage 1 and Stage 2 loans are
estimated using a provision matrix based on the Investment
Manager's historical credit loss experience, adjusted for factors
that are specific to the debtors, general economic conditions and
an assessment of both the current as well as the forecast direction
of conditions at the reporting date, including time value of money
where appropriate. The Company has adopted a simplified model for
trade receivables where lifetime ECL is estimated and does not
materially differ from the 12-month ECL.
The ECL for Stage 3 loans is
assessed based on the expected net realisable value of the
underlying properties, taking inputs from various external sources
including property valuations, agency advice, comparable evidence
and offers received. Where specific valuation evidence is not
available or unclear, a risk probability weighted approach will be
applied to a range of outcomes.
v)
Significant increase in credit risk
In assessing whether the credit
risk on a financial instrument has increased significantly since
initial recognition, the Company compares the risk of a default
occurring on the financial instrument at the reporting date with
the risk of a default occurring on the financial instrument at the
date of initial recognition. In making this assessment, the Company
considers both quantitative and qualitative information that is
reasonable and supportable, including historical experience and
forward-looking information that is available without undue cost or
effort. Forward-looking information considered includes the future prospects
of the industries in which the Company's debtors operate, obtained
from
economic expert reports, financial
analysts, governmental bodies, relevant think‑tanks and other similar
organisations, as well as consideration of various external sources
of actual and forecast economic information that relate to the
Company's core operations.
In particular, the following
information is taken into account when assessing whether credit
risk has increased significantly since initial
recognition:
• an actual or expected
significant deterioration in the financial instrument's external
(if available) or internal credit rating;
• significant deterioration in external market indicators of
credit risk for a particular financial instrument,
e.g. a significant increase in the
credit spread, the credit default swap prices for the
debtor, or the length of time or the
extent to which the fair value of a financial asset has been less
than its amortised cost;
• existing or forecast adverse
changes in business, financial or economic conditions that are
expected to cause a significant decrease in the debtor's ability to
meet its debt obligations;
• any actual or expected
significant deterioration in the operating results of the
debtor;
• significant increases in credit
risk on other financial instruments of the same debtor;
or
• an actual or expected
significant adverse change in the regulatory, economic, or
technological environment of the debtor that results in a
significant decrease in the debtor's ability to meet its debt
obligations.
Despite the foregoing, the Company
assumes that the credit risk on a financial instrument has not
increased significantly since initial recognition if the financial
instrument is determined to have low credit risk at the reporting
date. A financial instrument is determined to have low credit risk
if:
(1) The financial instrument has a
low risk of default;
(2) The debtor has a strong
capacity to meet its contractual cash flow obligations in the near
term; and
(3) Adverse changes in economic
and business conditions have not, or will not in the foreseeable
future, reduce the ability of the borrower to fulfil its
contractual cash flow obligations. Where the ability to meet
cashflow obligations, including payment of interest, are impacted
the risk associated with the financial instrument may be considered
to have increased.
The Company considers a financial
asset to have low credit risk when the asset has external credit
rating of 'investment grade' in accordance with the globally
understood definition or if an external rating is not available,
the asset has an internal rating of 'performing'. Performing means
that the counterparty has a strong financial position and there are
no past due amounts.
The Company regularly monitors the
effectiveness of the criteria used to identify whether there has
been a significant increase in credit risk and revises them as
appropriate to ensure that the criteria are capable of identifying
significant increase in credit risk before the amount becomes past
due.
vi) Definition of
default
The Company considers the
following as constituting an event of default for internal credit
risk management purposes as historical experience indicates that
financial assets that meet any of the following criteria may not be
fully recoverable:
• when there is a breach of
financial covenants by the debtor which has not be waived or where
the lender's rights have not been reserved pending action by the
borrower;
• information developed internally
or obtained from external sources indicates that the debtor is
unlikely to pay its creditors, including the Company, in full
(without taking into account any collateral held by the Company);
or
• when the Company have appointed
administrators or receivers to the debtor.
There is a rebuttable presumption
that where loans are past due or interest is unpaid for more than
30 days, this leads to a significant increase in credit risk or
that if unpaid for more than 90 days this leads to an event of
default. However, the Company may elect to waive the default or
give a period of forbearance and reserve its rights in respect of
the default to enhance returns and hence may rebut the presumption
that there is a significant increase in credit risk or an event of
default.
vii) Credit-impaired
financial assets
A financial asset is
credit‑impaired
when one or more events that have a detrimental impact on the
estimated future cash flows of that financial asset have occurred.
Evidence that a financial asset is credit‑impaired includes observable data
about the following events:
(a) significant financial
difficulty of the issuer or the borrower;
(b) a breach of contract, such as
a default or past due event (see (vi) above);
(c) the lenders to the borrower,
for economic or contractual reasons relating to the borrower's
financial difficulty having granted to the borrower concessions
that the lenders would not otherwise consider;
(d) it is becoming probable that
the borrower will enter bankruptcy or other financial
reorganisation; or
(e) the disappearance of an active
market for that financial asset because of financial
difficulties.
viii) Write-off
policy
The Company writes off a financial
asset when there is information indicating that the debtor is in
severe financial difficulty and there is no realistic prospect of
recovery, e.g. when the debtor has been placed under liquidation or
has entered into bankruptcy proceedings, or in the case of loan
receivables, when the amounts are over two years past due,
whichever occurs sooner. Financial assets written off may still be
subject to enforcement activities under the Company's recovery
procedures, taking into account legal advice where appropriate. Any
recoveries made are recognised in profit or loss.
ix) Measurement and
recognition of ECL
The measurement of ECL is a
function of the probability of default, loss given default (i.e.
the magnitude of the loss if there is a default) and the exposure
at default. The assessment of the probability of default and loss
given default is based on historical data adjusted by
forward‑looking
information as described above. As for the exposure at default, for
financial assets, this is represented by the asset's gross carrying
amount at the reporting date.
For financial assets, the ECL is
estimated as the difference between all contractual cash flows that
are due to the Company in accordance with the contract and all the
cash flows that the Company expects to receive, discounted at the
original effective interest rate.
If the Company has measured the
loss allowance for a financial instrument at an amount equal to
lifetime ECL in the previous reporting period but determines at the
current reporting date that the conditions for lifetime ECL are no
longer met, the Company measures the loss allowance at an amount
equal to 12‑month
ECL at the current reporting date, except for assets for which a
simplified approach was used.
The Company's measurement of ECL
reflects an unbiased and probability-weighted amount that is
determined by evaluating the range of possible outcomes as well as
incorporating the time value of money. The Company has also
considered reasonable and supportable information from past events,
current conditions and reasonable and supportable forecasts for
future economic conditions when measuring ECL.
· Stage 1 covers financial assets that have not deteriorated
significantly in credit risk since initial recognition;
· Stage 2 covers financial assets that have significantly
deteriorated in credit quality since initial recognition;
and
· Stage 3 covers financial assets that have objective evidence
of impairment at the reporting date.
Twelve-month ECL are recognised in
stage 1, while lifetime ECL are recognised in stages 2 and 3.
The Company's remaining loan book are all past due and as a
result 12 month and lifetime ECL will be the same.
x) Modification of
cash flows
Having performed adequate due
diligence procedures, the Company may negotiate or otherwise modify
the contractual cash flows of loans to customers, usually as a
result of loan extensions. When this happens, the Company assesses
whether or not the new terms are substantially different to the
original terms.
If the terms are not substantially
different, the renegotiation or modification does not result in
derecognition, and the Company recalculates the gross carrying
amount based on the revised cash flows of the financial asset and
recognises a modification gain or loss in profit or loss. The new
gross carrying amount is recalculated by discounting the modified
cash flows at the original effective interest rate.
If terms are substantially
different the original asset is derecognised and a new financial
asset is recognised. It is assumed that the terms are substantially
different if the discounted present value of the cash flows under
the new terms, including any fees paid net of any fees received and
discounted using the original effective rate is at least 10 per
cent different from the discounted present value of the remaining
cash flows of the original financial asset. If the modification is
not substantial, the difference between: (1) the carrying amount of
the liability before the modification; and (2) the present
value of the
cash flows after modification is
recognised in profit or loss as the modification gain or loss
within other gains and losses as explained in paragraph
above.
xi) Derecognition of
financial assets
The Company derecognises a
financial asset only when the contractual rights to the cash flows
from the asset expire, or when it transfers the financial asset and
substantially all the risks and rewards of ownership of the asset
to another entity. If the Company neither transfers nor retains
substantially all the risks and rewards of ownership and continues
to control the transferred asset, the Company recognises its
retained interest in the asset and an associated liability for
amounts it may have to pay. If the Company retains substantially
all the risks and rewards of ownership of a transferred financial
asset, the Company continues to recognise the financial asset and
also recognises a collateralised borrowing for the proceeds
received.
On derecognition of a financial
asset measured at amortised cost, the difference between the
asset's carrying amount and the sum of the consideration received
and receivable, is recognised in profit or loss.
Financial
liabilities
The classification of financial
liabilities at initial recognition depends on the purpose for which
the financial liability was issued and its
characteristics.
All financial liabilities are
initially recognised at fair value net of transaction costs
incurred. All purchases of financial liabilities are recorded on a
trade date, being the date on which the Company becomes party to
the contractual requirements of the financial liability. Unless
otherwise indicated the carrying amounts of the Company's financial
liabilities approximate to their fair values.
The Company's financial
liabilities consist of only financial liabilities measured at
amortised cost.
i)
Financial liabilities measured at amortised cost
These include trade payables and
other short-term monetary liabilities, which are initially
recognised at fair value and subsequently carried at amortised cost
using the effective interest rate method.
ii)
Derecognition of financial liabilities
The Company derecognises financial
liabilities when, and only when, the Company's obligations are
discharged, cancelled or have expired. The difference between the
carrying amount of the financial liability derecognised and the
consideration paid and payable is recognised in profit or
loss.
i) Equity
instruments
An equity instrument is any
contract that evidences a residual interest in the assets of an
entity after deducting all of its liabilities. Equity instruments
issued by the Company are recognised as the proceeds received, net
of direct issue costs.
3. Critical accounting judgements and key sources of
estimation uncertainty in applying the Company's accounting
policies
The preparation of the Financial
Statements under IFRS requires management to make judgements,
estimates and assumptions that affect the application of policies
and reported amounts of assets and liabilities, income and
expenses. The estimates and associated assumptions are based on
historical experience and other factors that are believed to be
reasonable under the circumstances, the results of which form the
basis of making judgements about carrying values of assets and
liabilities that are not readily apparent from other sources.
Actual results may differ from these estimates.
The estimates and underlying
assumptions are reviewed on an on-going basis. Revisions to
accounting estimates are recognised in the period in which the
estimate is revised if the revision affects only that period or in
the period of the revision and future periods if the revision
affects both current and future periods.
Critical accounting
judgements
In assessing the ECL, the Board
have made critical judgements in relation to the staging of the
loans and assessments which impact the loss given default. In
assessing whether the loans have incurred a significant increase in
credit risk the Investment Manager, on behalf of the Board,
assesses the credit risk attaching to each of the loans, and the
value of the properties on which they are secured. The Company has
adopted the Investment Manager's internal credit rating methodology
and has used its loss experience to benchmark investment
performance and potential impairment for Stage 1, Stage 2 and Stage
3 loans under IFRS 9 considering both probability of default and
loss given default. The judgement applied in allocating each
investment to Stage 1, 2 or 3 is key in deciding whether losses are
considered for the next 12 months or over the residual life of the
loan. It is noted that the Company's remaining loans are all now
past due, and that receivers or administrators have been appointed
over the Company's security.
The Investment Manager and the
Board will also take into consideration the likely repayment term
of loans that have become past due and the actions to be taken, by
the appointed receiver or administrator to repay such loans.
Consequently a loan which is past due, but otherwise performing,
may continue to be assessed as Stage 1 where there is an active
repayment plan in place, or supporting evidence that the loan can
be repaid in full and the Company has given a period of forbearance
whilst reserving its rights to, or charging, default
interest.
The Investment Manager and the
Board will also take into account prevailing economic and market
conditions, investor sentiment and outlook over the expected term
of the investments to realisation or repayment. In this
regard the sustained rise in UK interest rates over the past
eighteen months, and interest rate outlook implied by the five year
swap rate, has dramatically reduced liquidity in property and
finance markets as well as affecting asset prices in many property
sectors. As a result, the number of UK commercial property
transactions in the first half of 2023 was over 50% lower than the
same period in the prior year, and 37% below the 10-year average.
The UK economy fell into a technical recession at the end of 2023,
and whilst headline inflation is now falling core pressures remain,
with rate cuts not now expected until H2 2024. Geopolitical
concerns are high with the continuing war in Ukraine, escalating
hostilities in the Gaza and the Middle East, and further
uncertainties caused by an upcoming general elections in the UK and
US.
Against the backdrop of interest
rate rises and liquidity issues as discussed in the Investment
Manager's Report, the Investment Manager and Board agree that all
remaining investments have a heightened credit risk. At the
reporting date all three loans are subject to enforcement action
and, in the absence of an active and liquid property market, are
considered as Stage 3 assets with a material risk of credit
loss.
Key sources of estimation
uncertainty
The measurement of both the
initial and ongoing ECL allowance for loan receivables measured at
amortised cost is an area that has required the use of significant
assumptions about credit behaviour such as likelihood of borrowers
continuing to support their properties through interest payments
and equity injections, or defaulting and the resulting
losses.
In assessing the probability of
default for loans at Stage 1 and Stage 2, the Board has taken note
of the experience and loss history of the Investment Manager which
may not be indicative of future losses. The default probabilities
are based on a number of factors including rental income trends,
interest cover and LTV headroom and sectoral trends which the
Investment Manager believes to be a good predictor of the
probability of default, in accordance with recent market studies of
European commercial real estate loans.
In line with the Company's
investment strategy at the time, most loans benefited from
significant LTV headroom at origination, with business plans
designed to deliver further value increases over time. This
combined with tight covenants generally enabled the Investment
Manager to manage risk over the term of the loans. However,
following the change in Investment Strategy to one of orderly wind
down and the reduction of the portfolio to just three remaining
assets, the Investment Manager and the Board have placed greater
emphasis on the source and delivery of repayment of each loan when
assessing valuation and the risk of capital loss.
As discussed above, a material
reduction in transactional evidence and higher funding costs have
led to fall in property values generally, but with those sectors
subject to structural change (e.g. offices), and interest rates
(e.g. residential housing for sale) being particularly
impacted. As a result all remining loans have evidence of
heightened credit risk with the equity buffer having been eroded by
falls in property values, and as such have been assessed as Stage 3
loans.
The Board's valuation of Stage 3
assets (those loans considered to have a material risk of credit
loss), is first informed by third party property valuations and
supporting comparative transactional evidence, including marketing
processes being undertaken. The Investment Manager and the Board
will then overlay property level cashflows, expected sales costs
and other factors considered necessary to achieve exits within the
target timeframes for returning capital to shareholders.
All of the Company's Stage 3
assets are subject to enforcement action in the form of
administration or receivership at the reporting date. As a result,
the Company has considered the likelihood of achieving sales at the
most recent third-party valuation or at discounts to reflect the
current lack of liquidity in the relevant property sector and the
Company's target timeframes and the probability of such outcomes.
These probabilities and discounts are further informed by
prospective purchasers' offers or expressions of interest where
properties have been marketed.
In arriving at the investment
valuations, the Investment Manager has overlayed the expected costs
of sale and exit timeframes to determine a weighted average
valuation of each loan under the expected interest rate method and,
thereby, the expected credit loss for each loan that may
result.
Revenue recognition is considered
a significant accounting judgement and estimate that the Directors
make in the process of applying the Company's accounting policies.
In respect of the Company's Stage 3 loans, interest income will be
recognised through in the Statement of Comprehensive Income net of
ECL allowance. In view of the trading conditions of the Southport
hotel and liquidity challenges facing the RoyaleLife loan, the
Directors consider it unlikely that interest payments will be
received in the near term. The Affinity property remains well
occupied and able to meet its interest liabilities in full from
rents receivable, however the receiver will likely reserve some
cash for working capital purposes in order to prepare the property
for sale with a full due diligence pack. Interest on the
Affinity Loan will therefore also be recognised on a net basis
after ECL allowance, whilst any cash withheld by the receiver will
form part of the final settlement.
4.
Taxation
No tax was chargeable for the
current year ended 31 January 2024. (31 January 2023:
£Nil)
5. Loans advanced
(i)
Loans advanced
|
1 February 2023 to 31
January 2024
|
1 February 2022 to 31
January 2023
|
|
£
|
£
|
Loans gross carrying
value:
|
66,116,828
|
72,903,856
|
Less: Expected Credit
Losses
|
(32,477,777)
|
(3,940,181)
|
|
33,639,051
|
68,963,675
|
|
31 January
2024
|
31 January
2024
|
31 January
2023
|
31 January
2023
|
|
Principal
advanced
|
Carrying value before ECL
allowance
|
Principal
advanced
|
At amortised cost before ECL
allowance
|
|
£
|
£
|
£
|
£
|
Northlands(1)
|
-
|
-
|
9,561,076
|
9,829,286
|
Affinity
|
17,125,789
|
18,033,451
|
17,299,963
|
17,774,436
|
Southport(2)
|
15,500,000
|
16,511,470
|
15,200,000
|
15,988,651
|
RoyaleLife
|
25,382,017
|
31,571,907
|
25,382,017
|
29,311,483
|
|
58,007,806
|
66,116,828
|
67,443,056
|
72,903,856
|
(1)
Repaid in full during the year
(2)
There was a £300,000 increase to the Southport loan principal
during the year.
(ii)
Valuation considerations
As noted above, the Company is now
in the process of an orderly wind down. It had been the intention
of the Investment Manager and Directors to hold loans through to
their repayment date, and seek a borrower led repayment in order to
maximise value for the shareholders. Economic and property
market conditions have not enabled this, with commercial property
transactions in some sectors at their lowest levels for 15
years.
The carrying value amounts of the
loans in the Financial Statements have been adjusted for expected
credit losses. For further information regarding the status of each
loan and the associated risks see the Investment Manager's
Report.
As loans have fallen past due and
enforcement actions have been taken, the Directors have also
reassessed the likelihood and timing of receipt of any exit
fees associated with the loans in the context of the current
underlying property value and weak market conditions.
Each property on which investments
are secured was subject to an independent, third-party valuation at
the time the investment was entered into and updated valuations
have been obtained over the term of the loans as deemed
appropriate, based on the performance of the subject properties and
prevailing macro and micro market conditions. All investments are
made on a hold to maturity basis. Each investment is being closely
monitored including a review of the performance of the underlying
property security.
Third party property valuations
are typically based on the specific particulars of the property
(rent, Weighted Average Unexpired Lease Term (WAULT), vacancy,
condition and location) and assume a normal marketing period and
sales process. Valuers benchmark against comparative evidence
from recent transactions in similar properties in similar
locations.
All the remaining Investments are
considered to be Stage 3 assets and were, at year end,
subject to enforcement action. Accordingly, the
carrying value of each loan has been reviewed and further
provisions for expected credit loss raised. The carrying
value of each Stage 3 investment has been calculated to reflect the
net present value of the expected net proceeds from, and timing of,
exit under a range of scenarios reflecting the latest property
valuation, the cost of disposal (including enforcement action
taken), and potential discount to valuation that a willing buyer
may offer in the current market for a purchase out of
administration/receivership in an accelerated process with limited
vendor warranties and indemnities.
(iii)
IFRS 9 -
Impairment of Financial Assets
As discussed above, during 2023
the UK commercial property market has experienced a period of
historically low transaction volumes, as buyers adjust their
pricing in order to generate target returns in a higher interest
rate environment with uncertain occupational demand in many
sectors. Conversely, unless forced, sellers are inclined to hold
properties where they can in the expectation of improved liquidity
as the economic outlook stabilises and medium-term interest rates
fall. In this context, valuation and, therefore, the ECL for each
investment has been recalculated based on the underlying property
performance and property valuations together with any
sales/marketing experience to date and is discussed further
below.
The internal credit rating of each
loan as at 31 January 2024 has been reviewed. Southport was
identified as a Stage 3 asset at 31 January 2023, and the loan has
remained a Stage 3 asset, with an ECL provision of £8,597,121 (31
January 2023: £2,288,651). The RoyaleLife and Affinity loans, that
were identified as Stage 2 assets at 31 January 2023, when third
party property valuations exceeded the debt outstanding, however,
both are now identified as Stage 3 assets, with aggregate ECL
provisions of £23,880,311 (31 January 2023: £1,651,530).
As at 31 January 2024
|
Stage 1
|
Stage 2
|
Stage 3
|
Total
|
Principal advanced
|
-
|
-
|
58,007,806
|
58,007,806
|
Gross carrying value
|
-
|
-
|
66,116,828
|
66,116,828
|
Less ECL allowance
|
-
|
-
|
(32,477,777)
|
(32,477,777)
|
|
-
|
-
|
33,639,051
|
33,639,051
|
As at 31 July 2023 (Unaudited)
|
Stage 1
|
Stage 2
|
Stage 3
|
Total
(Unaudited)
|
Principal advanced
|
85,389
|
-
|
57,881,980
|
57,967,369
|
Gross carrying value
|
517,935
|
-
|
65,414,598
|
65,932,533
|
Less ECL allowance
|
-
|
-
|
(21,320,189)
|
(21,320,189)
|
|
517,935
|
-
|
44,094,409
|
44,612,344
|
As at 31 January 2023
|
Stage 1
|
Stage 2
|
Stage 3
|
Total
|
Principal advanced
|
9,561,076
|
42,681,981
|
15,200,000
|
67,443,056
|
Gross carrying value
|
9,829,286
|
47,085,919
|
15,988,651
|
72,903,856
|
Less ECL allowance
|
-
|
(1,651,530)
|
(2,288,651)
|
(3,940,181)
|
|
9,829,286
|
45,434,389
|
13,700,000
|
68,963,675
|
The Northlands loan, identified as
stage 1 as at 31 January 2023, was repaid in stages through the
year and then in full in December 2023, through a combination
of property sales, and a refinance of the residual assets
.
The Southport hotel was identified
as a Stage 3 asset at 31 January 2023. This followed the
appointment of an administrator who marketed the hotel for sale and
was proceeding with a conditional offer at £14.50 million reflected
in the ECL at the time. The prospective purchaser was unable
to satisfy a condition of its offer, linked to planning consents,
and withdrew from the process. The Hotel, which continues to
trade positively, is now subject to an offer at £9.25 million,
slightly below valuation and agency guidance. In assessing the ECL
as at 31 January 2024, the Investment Manager and the Board have
considered a range of potential outcomes based on the current
offer, valuation and market advice and adopted a probability
weighted approach, discounting the resultant cashflows to the
balance sheet date.
Following failed attempts by the
borrower of the Affinity loan to complete a refinance of the
Company's loan, or to repay via a sale, the Affinity loan was
identified as a stage 3 asset at the time of the Company's interim
report given the risk of loss that was emerging. Subsequently, the
Investment Manager, on behalf of the Company, appointed a receiver
over the property in September 2023, in order to take control of
the exit process. Whilst the property remains well occupied
with new leases and regears being completed, there are rolling
lease events at the property over the coming twelve months.
Investor demand for regional offices is at a low due to
uncertainties surrounding occupational demand and capital
expenditure requirements in a post-Covid, remote working,
environment. These uncertainties combining with a higher
interest rate environment have materially impacted the valuation of
the property which is down by approximately 40% from over £20
million in April 2023, in line with the wider market where there
are very few if any bidders for regional office assets. The
receiver is preparing the property for market and intends to launch
a sales process shortly. The Investment Manager and the Board have
considered the agency and receiver advice to determine the likely
net realisable value of the property and timeframe in which it
might be achieved. As with the other the Stage 3 loans, a range of
outcomes have been considered and probabilities applied to each in
determining the ECL of the loan as at 31 January 2024.
As previously reported, the
companies holding the sites securing the RoyaleLife loan were
placed into administration during 2023 to protect the assets from
other creditor claims. Whilst the sites remain open and continue to
trade, it became apparent through the work of the administrator
that the business was unable to support itself and the Sponsor no
longer had the means, or was unwilling, to inject further capital
for working capital purposes. The Investment Manager
appointed a new operator to take over the running of the sites in
order to protect their cashflows. Furthermore, given the
specific nature of the sites and planning consents in place, it was
necessary to protect the property security from other creditor
claims and sites were transferred into a new holding structure,
along with part of the debt, at the end of 2023. As part of
this process, a shortform sales process was undertaken by the
administrator, and a new valuer appointed.
The Investment Manager continues
to work with the replacement operator, administrator and other
advisors to maximise the potential outcome for lenders, exploring
in parallel a sale and relaunch of the parks under a new brand.
Given the latest valuation and the outcome of the administrator-led
sales process, the Board and Investment Manager consider there to
be a material risk of loss and the loan was categorised as Stage 3
at the time of the Company's interim report. In determining the ECL
as at 31 January 2024 the Board and the Investment Manager have
adopted the same probability weighted approach and considered a
range of outcomes linked to sale of the properties, where
negotiations continue with an institutional buyer, and to the
relaunch of the underlying business with an exit over time.
The Company together with its co-lenders retain the rights, under
the original loan, to any recoveries linked to the administration
process and the bankruptcy proceedings against the previous
beneficial owner, albeit no value has been attached to such
claims.
A reconciliation of the ECL
allowance is presented as follows:
|
Expected Credit Loss
Allowances
|
|
|
|
At 31 January
2023
|
Movement in ECL Allowance
during year
|
At 31 January
2024
|
|
£
|
£
|
£
|
Affinity
|
(12,702)
|
(6,684,609)
|
(6,697,311)
|
Southport
|
(2,288,651)
|
(6,308,470)
|
(8,597,121)
|
RoyaleLife
|
(1,638,828)
|
(15,544,517)
|
(17,183,345)
|
|
(3,940,181)
|
(28,537,596)
|
(32,477,777)
|
|
Movement in ECL Allowance
during year
|
Other
adjustments(1)
|
ECL allowance charged to
SOCI
|
|
£
|
|
£
|
All loans
|
(28,537,596)
|
(29,699)
|
(28,507,897)
|
(1) Other adjustments include Spectrum trapped cash
adjustment
(iv)
IFRS 9 Impairment - Stress Analysis
The carrying values of the
remaining investments above contemplate sales in a difficult market
and have been adjusted for expected credit losses, making allowance
for the potential impact sales out of receivership/administration,
on the properties' underlying liquidity and attractiveness to
buyers, as well as the timeframe in which the Company is seeking to
realise its investments.
The remaining loans are all
subject to enforcement processes, which may be an additional factor
in the liquidity of and buyer pools for the subject assets.
Following the additional provision for ECL, all three of those
loans are held at 100% LTV. Two of the loans (Southport and
RoyaleLife) are secured against operating assets which brings
additional complexity for buyers when compared to, say, single
tenant investment properties and, in the case of RoyaleLife,
operates in a new and emerging sector of retirement
living.
The Investment Manager and the
Board have considered the impact of a further 10%, 20% and 30%
reduction in the underlying property values, broadly reflecting a
one, two and three stage credit deterioration as previously
presented, and recalculated its probability weighted valuations on
this basis. The negative impact of these further declines in
property values on the portfolio as a whole is set out
below.
Stress test impact on
Expected Credit Loss at 31 January 2024
|
31 January
2024
|
31 January
2023
|
One grade deterioration in credit
rating
|
£3,279,000
|
£3,286,000
|
Two grade deterioration in credit
rating
|
£6,558,000
|
£5,072,000
|
Three grade deterioration in
credit rating
|
£9,837,000
|
£5,412,000
|
All efforts continue to be made by
the Investment Manager and the Board to crystalise the value in the
remaining investments in a reasonable time frame in order to return
capital to shareholders and proceed to the liquidation of the
Company. However, as discussed above, in the current market many
properties for sale are not receiving any bids, even where they are
considered distressed, and the limited number of buyers active in
the market are seeking out the maximum distress in order achieve
best relative value and maximise their potential returns.
Accordingly, the timing of the final realisation of the Company's
remaining assets cannot be predicted with certainty. The Board and
Investment Manager have considered the impact of a delay in the
realisation of the remaining loans. A 3 month delay would, at
31 January 2024, reduce the net present value of the cashflows
arising by 2.5% (£780,000), whilst a 6 month delay would result in
a 5% (£1,540,000) reduction in the net present value of the
cashflows arising.
The current performance of each
loan is discussed in the Investment Manager's report.
6. Trade and other receivables
|
31 January
2024
|
|
31 January
2023
|
|
£
|
|
£
|
Other receivables
|
30,718
|
|
43,435
|
The Company has management
policies in place to ensure that all receivables are received
within the credit time frame. The Directors consider that the
carrying amount of all receivables approximates to their fair
value.
7. Cash and cash equivalents
Cash and cash equivalents comprise
cash held by the Company and short-term bank deposits held with
maturities of twelve months or less. The carrying amounts of these
assets approximate their fair value.
The table below shows the
Company's cash balances and the banks in which they are
held:
|
31 January
2024
|
31 January
2023
|
|
£
|
£
|
|
|
|
Lloyds Bank International
Limited
|
590,594
|
581,954
|
Barclays Bank plc
|
590,594
|
581,983
|
Butterfield Bank (Guernsey)
Limited
|
594,252
|
582,571
|
Royal Bank of Scotland International
Limited
|
1,170,389
|
7,462,986
|
|
2,945,829
|
9,209,494
|
8. Trade and other payables
|
31 January
2024
|
|
31 January
2023
|
|
£
|
|
£
|
Investment Management fees (see Note
13)
|
236,597
|
|
517,343
|
Directors' remuneration (see Note
12)
|
31,250
|
|
31,250
|
Administration fees (see Note
13)
|
67,917
|
|
43,283
|
Audit fees (see note 14)
|
17,150
|
|
50,138
|
Other expenses
|
38,556
|
|
40,465
|
Trade creditors
|
-
|
|
179,174
|
|
391,470
|
|
861,653
|
Trade creditors comprise amounts
payable to borrowers. The Company has management policies in place
to ensure that all payables are paid within the credit time frame.
The Directors consider that the carrying amount of all payables
approximates to their fair value.
9. Earnings per share and Net Asset Value per
share
Earnings per share
|
1 February 2023
to
|
|
1 February 2022
to
|
|
31 January
2024
|
|
31 January
2023
|
Loss/(profit) for the year
(£)
|
(24,876,251)
|
|
1,959,823
|
Weighted average number of Ordinary
Shares in issue
|
121,302,779
|
|
121,302,779
|
Basic and diluted (Loss)/EPS
(pence)
|
(20.51)
|
|
1.62
|
The calculation of basic and
diluted (loss)/earnings per share is based on the (loss)/profit for
the year and on the weighted average number of Ordinary Shares in
issue in for the year ended 31 January 2024.
There are no dilutive shares in issue at 31
January 2024 (31 January 2023: none).
Net Asset Value per share
|
31 January
2024
|
|
31 January
2023
|
NAV (£)
|
36,224,128
|
|
77,354,951
|
Number of Ordinary Shares in
issue
|
121,302,779
|
|
121,302,779
|
NAV per share (pence)
|
29.86
|
|
63.77
|
The calculation of NAV per share
is based on Net Asset Value and the number of Ordinary Shares in
issue at the year end.
10. Share capital
The authorised share capital of
the Company is represented by an unlimited number of Ordinary
Shares with or without a par value which, upon issue, the Directors
may designate as (a) Ordinary Shares; (b) B Shares; and (c) C
Shares, in each case of such classes and denominated in such
currencies as the Directors may determine.
|
31 January
2024
|
|
31 January
2023
|
|
Number of
shares
|
|
Number of
shares
|
Authorised
|
|
|
|
Ordinary Shares of no par
value
|
Unlimited
|
|
Unlimited
|
B Shares of no par value
|
Unlimited
|
|
Unlimited
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total No
|
|
Total No
|
Ordinary Shares
|
121,302,779
|
|
121,302,779
|
|
|
|
|
B
Shares
|
|
|
|
B Shares issued May 2022
|
-
|
|
121,302,779
|
B Shares redeemed and cancelled May
2022
|
-
|
|
(121,302,779)
|
B Shares issued February
2023
|
121,302,779
|
|
-
|
B Shares redeemed and cancelled
February 2023
|
(121,302,779)
|
|
-
|
B Shares issued August
2023
|
121,302,779
|
|
-
|
B Shares redeemed and cancelled
August 2023
|
(121,302,779)
|
|
-
|
|
-
|
|
-
|
|
£
|
|
£
|
Share capital brought
forward
|
80,298,419
|
|
87,576,589
|
Repaid in the year
|
(15,648,058)
|
|
(7,278,170)
|
Share capital carried forward
|
64,650,361
|
|
80,298,419
|
Dividends
Dividends are recognised by the
Company in the quarterly NAV calculation following the declaration
date. A summary of the dividends declared and/or paid during the
year ended 31 January 2024 and 31 January 2023 are set out
below:
|
Dividend per
share
|
|
Total
dividend
|
|
1
February 2023 to 31 January 2024
|
Pence
|
|
£
|
|
Interim dividend in respect of
quarter ended 31 January 2023
|
0.50
|
|
606,514
|
|
|
0.50
|
|
606,514
|
|
|
Dividend per
share
|
|
Total
dividend
|
1
February 2022 to 31 January 2023
|
Pence
|
|
£
|
Interim dividend in respect of
quarter ended 31 January 2022
|
1.10
|
|
1,334,331
|
Interim dividend in respect of
quarter ended 30 April 2022
|
1.10
|
|
1,334,331
|
Interim dividend in respect of
quarter ended 31 July 2022
|
1.00
|
|
1,213,028
|
Interim dividend in respect of
quarter ended 31 October 2022
|
1.00
|
|
1,213,027
|
|
4.20
|
|
5,094,717
|
Following shareholder approval of
proposed changes to the Company's Investment Objectives and
Investment Policy which allows an orderly realisation of the
Company's assets and return of capital to shareholders, the Board
has made it clear that payment of quarterly dividends would
continue only whilst it remained prudent to do so.
Due to the enforcement actions in
place over all three remaining assets, trading levels have been
reduced and accordingly levels of operating cashflow are projected
to be significantly reduced.
The Company has a predictable cost
base and the ability to hold back capital from the imminent
(contracted) and prospective future repayments to meet costs and
preserve working capital over the medium to long-term. However, it
is no longer considered appropriate to distribute a regular
dividend.
Return of Capital
Return of Capital is recognised by
the Company in the quarterly NAV calculation following the
declaration date.
The Directors announced two
returns in the year and have returned a total amount of 12.90 pence
per Ordinary Share to shareholders, being £15,648,058 in total
based on the current number of Ordinary Shares in issue. This
return of capital was effected by way of an issue of
redeemable B Shares to existing shareholders pro rata to their
shareholding on the record date set out below and the subsequent
redemption of those B Shares.
|
Return of Capital per
share
|
Total Return of
Capital
|
1
February 2023 to 31 January 2024
|
Pence
|
£
|
Return of Capital February
2023
|
5.50
|
6,671,653
|
Return of Capital August
2023
|
7.40
|
8,976,405
|
|
12.90
|
15,648,058
|
1
February 2022 to 31 January 2023
|
Pence
|
£
|
Return of Capital May
2022
|
6.00
|
7,278,170
|
|
6.00
|
7,278,170
|
Rights attaching to Shares
The Company has a single class of
Ordinary Shares which are not entitled to a fixed dividend. The
company had two issues of redeemable B shares which were redeemed
throughout the year on a Return of Capital payment to shareholders
of the redeemable B shares.
At any General Meeting of the
Company each Ordinary Shareholder is entitled to have one vote for
each share held. The Ordinary Shares also have the right to receive
all income attributable to those shares and participate in
distributions made and such income shall be divided pari passu
among the holders of Ordinary Shares in proportion to the number of
Ordinary Shares held by them.
The Company's Articles include a B
Share mechanism for returning capital to Shareholders and following
Shareholder approval on 14 January 2021, the Company has and will
continue to utilise this mechanism in future. When the Board
determines to
return capital to Shareholders, the Company will issue B Shares,
paid up out of
the Company's assets, to existing
Shareholders pro rata to their holding of Ordinary Shares at the
time of such issue. The amount paid up on the B Shares will be
equal to the cash distribution to be made to Shareholders via the B
Share mechanism. The B Shares shall be redeemable at the option of
the Company following issue and the redemption proceeds (being
equal to the amount paid up on such B Shares) paid to the holders
of such B Shares
on such terms and in such manner
as the Directors may from time to time determine. It is therefore
expected that the B Shares will only ever be in issue for a short
period of time and will be redeemed for cash shortly after their
issue in order to make the return of capital to
Shareholders.
It is intended that following each
return of capital the Company will publish a revised estimated Net
Asset Value and Net Asset Value per Ordinary Share based on the
prevailing published amounts adjusted to take into account the
return of capital. The number of Ordinary Shares in issue
will remain unchanged.
11.
Risk Management Policies and Procedures
The Company through its investment
in senior loans is exposed to a variety of financial risks,
including market risk (including currency risk and interest rate
risk), credit risk and liquidity risk. The Company's overall
risk management procedures focus on the unpredictability of
operational performance of the borrowers and on property
fundamentals and seek to minimise potential adverse effects on the
Company's financial performance.
The Directors are ultimately
responsible for the overall risk management approach within the
Company. The Directors have established procedures for monitoring
and controlling risk. The Company has investment guidelines
that set out its overall business strategies, its tolerance for
risk and its general risk management philosophy.
In addition, the Investment
Manager monitors and measures the overall risk bearing capacity in
relation to the aggregate risk exposure across all risk types and
activities. Further details regarding these policies are set
out below:
Market risk
Market risk includes market price
risk, currency risk and interest rate risk. If a borrower defaults
on a loan and the real estate market enters a downturn it could
materially and adversely affect the value of the collateral over
which loans are secured. This risk is considered by the Board to be
as a result of credit risk as it relates to the borrower defaulting
on the loan.
The Company's overall market
position is monitored by the Investment Manager and is reviewed by
the Directors on an ongoing basis.
Currency risk
The Company's currency risk
exposure is considered to be immaterial as all investments have
been and will be made in Pounds Sterling.
Interest rate risk
Interest rate risk is the risk
that the value of financial instruments and related income from
cash and cash equivalents will fluctuate due to changes in market
interest rates.
The majority of the Company's
financial assets are loans advanced, which are at a fixed rate of
interest, and cash and cash equivalents.
The following table shows the
portfolio profile of the material financial assets as at 31 January
2024 and 31 January 2023:
|
31 January
2024
|
|
31 January
2023
|
|
£
|
|
£
|
Floating rate
|
|
|
|
Cash
|
2,945,829
|
|
9,209,494
|
Fixed rate
|
|
|
|
Loans advanced, net of ECL
allowance
|
33,639,051
|
|
68,968,675
|
|
36,584,880
|
|
78,178,169
|
Credit risk
Credit risk is the risk that a
counterparty will be unable to pay amounts in full when due. The
Company's main credit risk exposure are on the loans advanced,
where the Company invests in secured senior debt, and in respect of
monies held with banks.
With respect to its loan portfolio
the Company has adopted the Investment Manager's internal credit
rating methodology to assess and monitor the creditworthiness of
each loan and resultant credit risk, PD and LGD. The model takes
into account factors below such as:
· financial risk of the borrower - considers the financial
position of the borrower in general and considers LTV, ICR and
amortisation profile/debt maturity;
· property risk - where the property location, quality
(specification, condition) and letting risk are
considered;
· income risk - the income risk category considers, tenant
diversity, tenant credit quality and lease length ratio, sector
diversity and geographical diversity; and
· borrower/structure risk - where factors such as history of
the borrower/sponsor, loan control (security package) and covenants
are considered.
The credit rating methodology is
dynamic and recognises the interplay between diversity and quality
as a risk mitigant. The Company's current credit risk grading
framework comprises the following categories and portfolio
weightings:
Grade
|
Description
|
Maximum credit risk exposure 2024
|
Maximum credit risk exposure 2023
|
AAA, AA+
|
Virtually no risk
|
-
|
-
|
AA to A
|
Low risk
|
-
|
-
|
BBB
|
Moderate risk
|
-
|
9,595,622
|
BB
|
Average risk
|
-
|
17,182,749
|
B
|
Acceptable risk
|
-
|
-
|
CCC+
|
Borderline Risk
|
-
|
-
|
CCC
|
Special Mention
|
-
|
-
|
CC
|
Substandard
|
-
|
26,405,642
|
D
|
Doubtful
|
60,493,105
|
15,734,452
|
D
|
Loss
|
-
|
-
|
The classification of loans for the
purpose of considering expected credit loss are discussed in the
company's accounting policies and in note 5 above, these include a
deterioration in credit rating from the date of initial recognition
and are not based solely on the absolute credit rating at a point
in time.
The Company has previously used
the Investment Manager's loss experience to benchmark investment
performance and potential impairment for Stage 1 and Stage 2 assets
under IFRS 9 considering expected loss given default. In the case
of Stage 3 assets the Company considers the net realisable value of
the underlying property security in determining expected credit
loss. The total exposure to credit risk arises from default
of the loan counterparty and the carrying amounts of other
financial assets best represent the maximum credit risk exposure at
the year-end date, including the principal advanced on loans,
interest outstanding on loans and cash and cash equivalents. As at
31 January 2024, the maximum credit risk exposure was £60,493,105
(31 January 2023: £68,918,465).
The Investment Manager has adopted
procedures to reduce credit risk exposure through the inclusion of
covenants in loans issued, along with conducting credit analysis of
the counterparties, their business and reputation, which is
monitored on an ongoing basis. The Investment Manager routinely
analyses the profile of the Company's underlying risk in terms of
exposure to significant tenants, reviewing market data and forecast
economic trends to benchmark borrower performance and to assist in
identifying potential future stress points.
Collateral held as
security
Each loan is secured by a charge
of commercial real estate property pledged by the borrower. To
diversify credit risk the Company maintains its cash and cash
equivalents across four (31 January 2023: four) different banking
groups as shown below. In order to cover operational expenses, a
working capital balance at Royal Bank of Scotland International
Limited is maintained and monitored. This is subject to the
Company's credit risk monitoring policies.
The table below shows the
Company's cash balances and the credit rating for each
counterparty:
|
Rating
|
31 January
2024
|
31 January
2023
|
|
|
£
|
£
|
Lloyds Bank International
Limited
|
A
|
590,594
|
581,954
|
Barclays Bank plc
|
A
|
590,594
|
581,983
|
Butterfield Bank (Guernsey)
Limited
|
BBB+
|
594,252
|
582,571
|
Royal Bank of Scotland International
Limited
|
A-
|
1,170,389
|
7,462,986
|
|
|
2,945,829
|
9,209,494
|
The carrying amount of these assets
approximates their fair value.
Liquidity risk
Liquidity risk is the risk that
the Company will not be able to meet its liabilities as they fall
due. The Company's loans advanced are illiquid and may be
difficult or impossible to realise for cash at short
notice.
The Company manages its liquidity
risks through the regular preparation and monitoring of cash flow
forecasts to ensure that it can meet its obligations as they fall
due. The Company expects the meet it ongoing obligations though
existing cash reserves.
Liquidity risks arise in respect
of other financial liabilities of the Company due to
counterparties. The Company's loan assets are all now past due
and in default and the financial liabilities all have maturity
dates within one year. An analysis of the maturity of
financial assets classified as loans advanced is shown in the table
below:
|
Less than one
year
|
Between one and five
years
|
Total as
at
|
31 January
2024
|
|
£
|
£
|
£
|
Affinity - principal
|
17,125,789
|
-
|
17,299,963
|
Affinity - interest and exit
fees
|
326,231
|
-
|
527,335
|
Southport - principal
|
15,500,000
|
-
|
15,500,000
|
Southport - interest and exit
fees
|
490.356
|
-
|
277,089
|
RoyaleLife - principal
|
25,382,017
|
-
|
25,382,017
|
RoyaleLife - interest and exit
fees
|
4,261,464
|
-
|
4,322,659
|
|
63,085,857
|
-
|
63,309,063
|
|
Less than one
year
|
Between one and five
years
|
Total as
at
|
31 January
2023
|
|
£
|
£
|
£
|
Northlands - principal
|
9,561,076
|
-
|
9,561,076
|
Northlands - interest and exit
fees
|
316,874
|
-
|
316,874
|
Affinity - principal
|
17,299,963
|
-
|
17,299,963
|
Affinity - interest and exit
fees
|
326,231
|
-
|
326,231
|
Southport - principal
|
15,200,000
|
-
|
15,200,000
|
Southport - interest and exit
fees
|
534,452
|
-
|
534,452
|
RoyaleLife - principal
|
25,382,017
|
-
|
25,382,017
|
RoyaleLife - interest and exit
fees
|
4,261,464
|
-
|
4,261,464
|
|
72,882,077
|
-
|
72,882,077
|
Capital management policies and procedures
The Company's capital management
objectives are to ensure that the Company will be able to continue
to meet all of its liabilities as they fall due and to maximise the
income and capital return to equity shareholders.
In accordance with the Company's
investment policy, the Company's principal use of cash has been to
fund investments in the form of loans sourced by the Investment
Manager, as well as on-going operational expenses and payment of
dividends and other distributions to shareholders in accordance
with the Company's dividend policy.
The Board, with the assistance of
the Investment Manager, monitors and reviews the broad structure of
the Company's capital on an ongoing basis.
The Company has no externally
imposed capital requirements. The Company's capital at the year-end
comprised equity share capital and reserves.
12. Related Party Transactions and Directors'
Remuneration
Parties are considered to be
related if one party has the ability to control the other party or
exercise significant influence over the party in making financial
or operational decisions.
In the opinion of the Directors,
on the basis of shareholdings advised to them, the Company has no
immediate or ultimate controlling party.
Directors
The Directors' fees for the year
amounted to £160,000 (31 January 2023: £160,000) with outstanding fees of
£31,250 due to
the Directors at 31 January 2024 (31 January 2023:
£31,250) (see
Note 8).
13. Material Agreements
Investment Manager
Agreement
Investment Management fees for the
year amounted to £551,167
(31 January 2023: £761,047), of which
£236,597 (31
January 2023: £517,343) was outstanding at the year-end (see Note 8).
The Investment Manager was
entitled to a management fee at a rate equivalent to 1% per annum
of the Net Asset Value paid quarterly in arrears based on the
average Net Asset Value as at the last business day of each month
in each relevant quarter. The Board has agreed an amendment to the
Investment Manager's fee structure to align more closely with
market capitalisation of the Company and ultimate value returned to
shareholders and as a result of extensive discussion between the
Board and the Investment Manager, it has been agreed that fee
will reduce to 0.5% of Net Asset Value from 1% previously.
This halving of the investment management fee will result in
meaningful savings for shareholders over the remaining life of the
Company and will apply from today's date.
The Investment Manager's agreement
became effective from 25 November 2020 and shall continue
thereafter unless terminated in accordance with the terms of the
agreement. The Investment Manager's appointment cannot be
terminated by the Company with less than 12 months' notice. The
Company may terminate the Investment Management Agreement with
immediate effect if the Investment Manager has committed any
material, irremediable breach of the Investment Management
Agreement or has committed a material breach and fails to remedy
such breach within 30 days of receiving notice from the Company
requiring it to do so; or the Investment Manager is no longer
authorised and regulated by the FCA or is no longer permitted by
the FCA to carry on any regulated activity necessary to perform its
duties under the Investment Management Agreement.
The Investment Manager may
terminate their appointment immediately if the Company has
committed any material, irremediable breach of the Investment
Management Agreement or has committed a material breach and fails
to remedy such breach within 30 days of receiving notice from the
Company requiring it to do so.
Administration
Agreement
The Administrator has been
appointed to provide day to day administration and company
secretarial services to the Company, as set out in the
Administration Agreement. Under the terms of the Administration
Agreement, the Administrator is entitled to a fixed fee of £90,000
per annum for services such as administration, corporate
secretarial services, corporate governance, regulatory compliance
and stock exchange continuing obligations provided to the Company.
The Administrator will also be entitled to an accounting fee
charged on a time spent basis with a minimum fee of £40,000 per
annum. Administration and accounting fees for the year amounted to
£239,806 (31 January 2023: £155,832) of which £67,917 (31 January
2023: £43,283) was outstanding at the year end.
Registrar
Agreement
The Registrar has been appointed
to provide registration services to the Company and maintain the
necessary books and records, as set out in the Registrar
Agreement.
Under the terms of the Registrar
Agreement, the Registrar is entitled to an annual fee from the
Company equal to £1.78 per shareholder per annum or part thereof,
subject to a minimum of £7,500 per annum. Other Registrar
activities will be charged for in accordance with the Registrar's
normal tariff as published from time to time.
Depositary
Agreement
The Depositary has been appointed
from 25 November 2020 to provide depositary services under the
AIFMD to the Company, which include cash monitoring, asset
verification and oversight, as set out in the Depositary
Agreement.
Under the terms of the Depositary
Agreement, the Depositary is entitled to a fixed fee from the
Company of £25,000 per annum.
14. Auditor's Remuneration
Audit and non-audit fees payable
to the auditors can be analysed as follows:
|
31 January
2024
|
|
|
31 January
2023
|
|
£
|
|
|
£
|
Audit fees for the
Company
|
63,013
|
|
|
48,025
|
Total Audit fees
|
63,013
|
|
|
48,025
|
|
|
|
|
|
There were no non-audit fees paid
during the year.
15. Other Expenses
|
31 January
2024
|
|
31 January
2023
|
|
£
|
|
£
|
Broker fees
|
50,000
|
|
25,550
|
Administration fees
|
239,806
|
|
155,832
|
Regulatory fees
|
17,872
|
|
21,415
|
Listing fees
|
13,230
|
|
15,239
|
Legal and professional
fees
|
118,645
|
|
71,296
|
Other expenses
|
109,307
|
|
119,753
|
|
548,860
|
|
409,085
|
|
|
|
|
16. Subsequent events
There are no material subsequent
events noted after the reporting date.
alternative performance
measures
Performance Measure
|
Definition
|
Reason for Use
|
Weighted Average Loan
Coupon
|
The money weighted average rate of
interest being charged on each investment at the relevant reporting
date.
|
To provide shareholders with a means
to assess whether the interest payable on the Company's loans
reflects the risk of such loans; and whether this is in line with
the Company's investment parameters and shareholders' return
expectations.
|
Capital Distribution Per
Share
|
The total annual Return of Capital
to shareholders divided by the number of Shares in issue (other
than shares held in treasury).
|
To assist shareholders in assessing
the performance of the Company in relation to its Investment
Objectives.
|
Weighted Average Loan Maturity/
Portfolio Weighted Average Residual Term
|
The money weighted average period
from the relevant reporting date until the Company's investments
reach their contractual repayment date.
|
To provide transparency to the
Company's investment outlook and likely level of loan repayments,
and to assist shareholders in identifying whether the remaining
duration of the loans reflects their own investment time
frames.
|
Weighted Average Loan to Value
Ratio/Portfolio Weighted Average LTV
|
The money weighted average Loan to
Value ratio at the relevant reporting date, calculated on the basis
of the outstanding loan amount for each investment as a percentage
of the most recent Market Value of the properties securing each
investment.
|
To provide transparency to the
Company's risk positioning and to demonstrate compliance with the
investment restrictions.
|
Current LTV
|
The current Loan to Value ratio for
each individual loan at the relevant reporting date, calculated on
the basis of the outstanding loan amount for each investment as a
percentage of the most recent Market Value of the property securing
the investment.
|
To provide transparency to the
Company's risk positioning and to demonstrate compliance with the
investment restrictions.
|
Total Income per Share
|
The total income of the Company as
disclosed in the Statement of Comprehensive Income divided by the
number of Ordinary Shares in issuance at the relevant reporting
date.
|
To provide transparency to the
Company's investment returns.
|
NAV per Share
|
The net asset value of the Company
divided by the number of Ordinary Shares in issuance at the
relevant reporting date.
|
To assist shareholders in assessing
the performance of the Company over a period in relation to its
Investment Objectives.
|
Dividend per Share
|
The total dividends per Ordinary
Share declared and/or paid during the relevant reporting
period.
|
To assist shareholders in assessing
the performance of the Company in relation to its Investment
Objectives.
|
Shareholder Total Return since
IPO
|
Share price movements combined with
dividends paid on the assumption that dividends have been
reinvested.
|
To assist shareholders in assessing
the total return earned over the life of the Company.
|
Share Price Premium /
Discount
|
The percentage difference between
the NAV per share and the quoted price of each Ordinary Share as at
the relevant reporting date.
|
To assist shareholders in
identifying and monitoring the performance of the
Company.
|
Percentage Capital
Invested
|
The aggregate value of the
investments at amortised cost divided by total shareholder
equity. Where the figure exceeds 100%, the investments will
be partially funded by the Company's debt facility.
|
To assist shareholders in
identifying and monitoring the performance of the Company and the
level of gearing.
|
glossary of capitalised
defined terms
"Administrator" means Ocorian
Administration (Guernsey) Limited;
"Administration Agreement" means the
Administration Agreement dated 23 January 2013 between the Company
and the Administrator;
"Admission" means the admission of the
shares to the premium listing segment of the Official List and to
trading on the London Stock Exchange;
"AEOI" means Automatic
Exchange of Information;
"Affinity" means
Impact Spectrum Limited;
"AGM" or "Annual General
Meeting" means the general meeting
of the Company;
"AIC" means the Association of
Investment Companies;
"AIC Code" means the AIC Code of
Corporate Governance;
"AIFMD" means the Alternative Investment
Fund Managers Directive;
"Annual Report" or "Annual Report and Financial Statements"
means the annual publication of the Company provided to the
shareholders to describe their operations and financial conditions,
together with their Financial Statements;
"Articles of Incorporation" or
"Articles" means the
articles of incorporation of the Company, as amended from time to
time;
"Board" or "Directors" or "Board of Directors" means the directors
of the Company from time to time;
"B shares" means a redeemable
Ordinary Share of no par value in the capital of the Company issued
and designated as a B Share of such class, and denominated in such
currency, as may be determined by the Directors at the time of
issue. Issued for the purpose of returning capital in
accordance with Article 8;
"Capital Distribution Per Share"
means the total annual Return of Capital to
shareholders divided by the number of Shares in issue (other than
shares held in treasury);
"Code" or "Corporate Governance Code" means the UK
Corporate Governance Code 2019 as published by the Financial
Reporting Council;
"Companies Law" means the Companies
(Guernsey) Law, 2008, (as amended);
"Company" means ICG-Longbow Senior
Secured UK Property Debt Investments Limited;
"CRS" means Common Reporting
Standard;
"ECL" means expected credit
losses;
"EPS" or "Earnings per share" means Earnings per
Ordinary Share of the Company and is expressed in Pounds
Sterling;
"ESG" means Environmental, Social and
Governance;
"EU" means the European
Union;
"Euro" or "€" means Euro;
"FATCA" means Foreign Account Tax
Compliance Act;
"FCA" means the UK Financial Conduct
Authority (or its successor bodies);
"Financial Statements" means the audited
financial statements of the Company, including the Statement of
Comprehensive Income, the Statement of Financial Position, the
Statement of Changes in Equity, the Statement of Cash Flows,
and associated notes;
"FRC" means the Financial Reporting
Council;
"FTSE" means the Financial Times Stock
Exchange;
"GDP" means gross domestic
product;
"GFSC" means the Guernsey Financial
Services Commission;
"GIIN" means Global Intermediary
Identification Number;
"GFSC Code" means the GFSC Finance
Sector Code of Corporate Governance;
"IAS" means international accounting
standards as issued by the Board of the International Accounting
Standards Committee;
"ICG" means Intermediate Capital Group
PLC;
"ICR" means interest coverage
ratio;
"IFRS" means the UK adopted
international accounting standards;
"Interest Cover Ratio" or "ICR"
means the debt/profitability ratio used to
determine how easily a company can pay interest on outstanding
debt;
"Interim Report" means the Company's
interim report and unaudited interim condensed financial statements
for the period ended 31 July;
"Investment Manager" or "ICG-Longbow" means ICG Alternative
Investment Limited or its associates;
"Investment Manager Agreement" means
Investment Management Agreement dated 25 November 2020 between the
Company and the Investment Manager;
"IPO" means the Company's initial public
offering of shares to the public which
completed on 5 February 2013;
"ISAE 3402" means International Standard
on Assurance Engagements 3402, "Assurance Reports on Controls at a
Service Organisation";
"ISIN" means an International Securities
Identification Number;
"LGD" means loss given
default;
"Listing Rules" means the listing rules
made by the FCA under section 73A Financial Services and Markets
Act 2000;
"London Stock Exchange" or "LSE" means London Stock Exchange
plc;
"LTV" means Loan to
Value ratio;
"Main Market" means the main securities
market of the London Stock Exchange;
"Management Engagement Committee" means
a formal committee of the Board with defined terms of
reference;
"Memorandum" means the Company's
memorandum;
"NAV per share" means
the Net Asset Value per Ordinary Share divided by
the number of Shares in issue (other than shares held in treasury);
"Net Asset Value" or "NAV" means the value of the assets of
the Company less its liabilities, calculated in accordance with the
valuation guidelines laid down by the Board, further details of
which are set out in the 2017 Prospectus;
"Northlands" means London &
Guildford Properties Limited, London & Weybridge Properties
Limited, Lamborfore Limited, Northlands Holdings Limited, Peeble
Stone Limited, Auldana Limited, Felixstow Limited, Richmond Lodge
Construction Limited, Piperton Finance Limited and Alton &
Farnham Properties Limited;
"Official List" is the Premium Segment
of the FCA's Official List;
"PD" means probability of
default;
"Registrar" means Link Asset Services
(Guernsey) Limited (formerly
Capita Registrars (Guernsey) Limited);
"Registrar Agreement" means the
Registrar Agreement dated 31 January 2013 between the Company and
the Registrar;
"RoyaleLife" means
collectively, Time GB Properties LendCo Limited, Royal Parks
Limited, Ambassador Royale Parks Parent Limited and
Ambassador Royale Parks Intermediate Limited ;
"Schedule of Matters" means the Schedule
of Matters Reserved for the Board, adopted 23 January 2013, amended
25 September 2020;
"SOCI" means the Statement of
Comprehensive Income;
"Southport" means Waterfront
Southport Properties Limited and Waterfront Hotels (Southport)
Limited - now in administration;
"Sq ft" means square feet;
"UK" or "United Kingdom" means the United
Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland;
"£" or "Pounds Sterling" means British pound
sterling and "pence" means
British pence.
directors and general
information
Board of Directors
Jack Perry
(Chair)
Stuart Beevor
Paul Meader
Fiona Le Poidevin
Audit and Risk Committee
Fiona Le Poidevin
(Chair)
Stuart Beevor
Paul Meader
Management Engagement Committee
Jack Perry
(Chair)
Paul Meader
Fiona Le Poidevin
Stuart Beevor
Nomination Committee
Jack Perry (Chair)
Stuart Beevor
Paul Meader
Fiona Le Poidevin
Remuneration Committee
Paul Meader (Chair)
Jack Perry
Stuart Beevor
Fiona Le Poidevin
Investment Manager
ICG Alternative Investment
Limited
Procession House
55 Ludgate Hill
London
United Kingdom
EC4M 7JW
Registered office
P.O. Box 286
Floor 2
Trafalgar Court
Les Banques
St Peter Port
Guernsey
GY1 4LY
|
Independent Auditor
Deloitte LLP
PO Box 137
Regency Court
Glategny Esplanade
St. Peter Port
Guernsey
GY1 3HW
Guernsey Administrator and Company
Secretary
Ocorian Administration (Guernsey)
Limited
P.O. Box 286
Floor 2
Trafalgar Court
Les Banques
St Peter Port
Guernsey
GY1 4LY
Depositary
Ocorian Depositary (UK)
Limited
5th Floor
20 Fenchurch Street
London
England
EC3M 3BY
Registrar
Link Asset Services (Guernsey)
Limited
Mont Crevelt House
Bulwer Avenue
St Sampson
Guernsey
GY2 4LH
Corporate Broker and Financial Adviser
Cavendish Securities plc
6-8 Tokenhouse Yard
London
United Kingdom
EC2R 7AS
Identifiers
GIIN: 6IG8VS.99999.SL.831
ISIN: GG00B8C23S81
Sedol: B8C23S8
Ticker: LBOW
Website: www.lbow.co.uk
|
English Solicitors to the Company
Gowling WLG (UK)
LLP
4 More London Riverside
London
United Kingdom
SE1 2AU
Guernsey Advocates to the Company
Carey Olsen
Carey House
PO Box 98
Les Banques
St Peter Port
Guernsey
GY1 4BZ
Bankers
Butterfield Bank (Guernsey)
Limited
PO Box 25
Regency Court
Glategny Esplanade
St Peter Port
Guernsey
GY1 3AP
Barclays Bank plc
6-8 High Street
St Peter Port
Guernsey
GY1 3BE
Lloyds Bank International
Limited
PO Box 136
Sarnia House
Le Truchot
St Peter Port
Guernsey
GY1 4EN
The Royal Bank of Scotland
International
Royal Bank Place
1 Glategny Esplanade
St Peter Port
Guernsey
GY1 4BQ
|
cautionary
statement
The Chairman's Statement and
Investment Manager's Report have been prepared solely to provide
additional information for shareholders to assess the Company's
strategies and the potential for those strategies to succeed. These
should not be relied on by any other party or for any other
purpose.
The Chairman's Statement and
Investment Manager's Report may include statements that are, or may
be deemed to be, "forward-looking statements". These
forward-looking statements can be identified by the use of
forward-looking terminology, including the terms "believes",
"estimates", "anticipates", "expects", "intends", "may", "will" or
"should" or, in each case, their negative or other variations or
comparable terminology.
These forward-looking statements
include all matters that are not historical facts. They appear in a
number of places throughout this document and include statements
regarding the intentions, beliefs or current expectations of the
Directors and the Investment Manager, concerning, amongst other
things, the investment objectives and investment policy, financing
strategies, investment performance, results of operations,
financial condition, liquidity, prospects, and distribution policy
of the Company and the markets in which it invests.
By their nature, forward-looking
statements involve risks and uncertainties because they relate to
events and depend on circumstances that may or may not occur in the
future. Forward-looking statements are not guarantees of future
performance.
The Company's actual investment
performance, results of operations, financial condition, liquidity,
distribution policy and the development of its financing strategies
may differ materially from the impression created by the
forward-looking statements contained in this document.
Subject to their legal and
regulatory obligations, the Directors and the Investment Manager
expressly disclaim any obligations to update or revise any
forward-looking statement contained herein to reflect any change in
expectations with regard thereto or any change in events,
conditions or circumstances on which any statement is
based.
ICG-Longbow Senior Secured UK Property Debt Investments
Limited
P.O. Box 286
Floor 2, Trafalgar Court
Les Banques, St Peter Port,
Guernsey
GY1 4LY, Channel
Islands.
T +44 (0) 1481 742742
F +44 (0) 1481 742698
Further information available
online:
www.lbow.co.uk