RNS Announcement
The Monks Investment Trust PLC
(MNKS)
Legal Entity Identifier: 213800MRI1JTUKG5AF64
Results for the six months to 31 October 2024
The following is the unaudited Interim Financial
Report for the six months to 31 October 2024 which was approved by
the Board on 3 December 2024.
Chairman's statement
Performance
During the first half of the financial year, the
Company produced a net asset value (NAV*) total return
of +6.3% compared to +8.1% for the comparative index (FTSE World in
sterling). The share price total return was +3.1%. Commentary on
performance and portfolio positioning is contained in the Managers'
Report.
Capital allocation
The Board has continued to be active in buying back
shares at a discount to NAV. The Company bought back approximately
15 million of its own shares over the six months to 31 October
2024, at a cost of £176 million and an average discount of 9.1%.
Since the Company commenced its buyback programme in January 2022
it has bought back 54 million shares at a total cost of £582
million and an average discount of 8.6%. This represents 22.9% of
the share capital outstanding at the end of December 2021.
Gearing
An advantage of the investment trust structure is
that the Company can deploy borrowing to enhance returns in the
long term. The Company has a mixture of long term, structural debt
and shorter term, more flexible debt. The Company's revolving
credit facility of £150 million with National Australia Bank
Limited expired at the end of November 2024 and has been replaced
by a £100 million revolving credit facility with The Royal Bank of
Scotland International. £50 million is drawn under this facility.
At the period end, net gearing was 7.3% and the weighted average
interest rate across all borrowings was 3.6%.
The Board
Jeremy Tigue retired from the Board at the AGM in
September 2024, and Claire Boyle has succeeded him as Audit
Committee Chair. As I announced at the AGM, it is my intention to
step down at or before the Company's 2025 AGM. The Board has
recruited three new Directors over the four years since I became
its Chairman and the Board's succession plan will be announced in
due course.
Outlook
Monks has a well-diversified portfolio of growth
stocks. The Board believes that the Company's diversified approach
offers investors exposure to a wide range of growth opportunities
that are likely to drive returns in the years ahead.
Karl Sternberg
Chairman
3 December 2024
* NAV with debt at fair
value. For a definition of terms used see Glossary of terms and
Alternative Performance Measures towards the end of this
announcement.
Total return information is sourced from Baillie
Gifford/LSEG and relevant underlying index providers. See
disclaimer towards the end of this announcement.
Interim management report
Global equity markets have continued to make progress
in the six months to the end of October, delivering +8.1% in
sterling terms. There has been no shortage of news for investors to
digest. The US Federal Reserve began to cut interest rates amidst
optimism that the United States would pull off a "soft landing" by
both tempering inflation and maintaining economic growth. China
announced a significant package of stimulus measures designed to
boost its economy in September. And of course, the prospect of a
new US president, coupled with what feels like rising geopolitical
barriers, gathered substantial attention through the period.
The implications of these moves will be felt over our
investment time horizon of five years and beyond but they are far
from the only things that matter: Massive infrastructure spending
catch-up is being deployed in some of the largest economies in the
world; a billion more people have joined the global online
population since 2020; and a new era of space transport was ushered
in when Space X's super heavy booster rocket landed safely back at
its launch site in October.
As always, we remain focused on making the best
long-term choices for the Company. So far this year, that has meant
pursuing the areas outlined in our annual Research Agenda, engaging
with current holdings, and 'kicking the tyres' (literally, in some
cases) of new investment ideas. In the past six months, we have
visited the US, Brazil, and China (more on this later), seeking to
broaden the base for growth within the Monks portfolio.
Performance
In the first half of the financial year the Company
produced a net asset value (NAV) total return of +6.3% compared to
+8.1% for the comparative index (FTSE World in sterling). The share
price total return was +3.1%. This represents continued progress in
the recovery of the portfolio's NAV which has increased by +29.2%
in the twelve months to 31 October 2024, modestly ahead of the
benchmark index's return of +26.1% over the same period.
The portfolio's NAV performance lagged the stock
market in the past six months for two key reasons. First, some very
large businesses have found strong favour in markets based on their
scale and technology advantages in an emerging era of artificial
intelligence. We share that excitement. The Company is invested in
the likes of Microsoft, NVIDIA, Meta and Amazon. But we do not hold
all the biggest businesses in this space, and in some cases hold
them in smaller sizes than the index, and this has detracted from
our relative returns. Those deliberate choices reflect the return
opportunities we see elsewhere in the portfolio.
The second reason has been the poor share price
performance of a subset of our healthcare holdings. Elevance Health and Novo Nordisk have both suffered share
price falls on disappointing news. Elevance is the second largest
US health insurer after United Health, which we also own within the
portfolio. We believe a growing need for health insurance coverage
(as the population ages and treatment becomes more expensive)
provides a structural tailwind for growth in the years ahead. The
recent weakness in Elevance's shares is a result of its
government-supported Medicaid customers falling as eligibility
criteria are tightened post-pandemic. This has increased the
company's medical loss ratio and weighed on margins, but we believe
this is a temporary phenomenon. Elevance's pricing power should
allow it to grow its margins again and deliver sustainable
double-digit earnings growth over the long term.
Novo Nordisk could become one of the scale providers
of weight loss drugs to a vast and structurally undersupplied
market. Its current drug (Wegovy) is driving strong growth for the
business, whilst there has been exciting potential shown in
late-stage trials of a more efficacious iteration called CagriSema
(which has the potential of up to 25% weight loss). Recently, its
shares fell following disappointing results from a small trial of
weight loss pills (existing products are taken by injection). This
looks overdone to us in the context of the overall opportunity. We
believe that Novo's significant investment in capacity and its
scalable manufacturing process leave it positioned to grow
materially from here.
Finally, Moderna's revenues continue to fall
from Covid vaccine highs. We have been disappointed by the
company's respiratory syncytial virus vaccine which took too long
to reach the market. While the platform potential of its mRNA
technology remains exciting, and progress in personalised cancer
vaccines is encouraging, we want to see improved commercial
execution from the business as it seeks to become a multi-drug
company.
We have seen stronger results from other healthcare
holdings in the portfolio. Alnylam
Pharmaceuticals' pioneering drugs restrict the production of
specific genes that can cause disease. It reached a significant
milestone after positive results from its late-stage trial to treat
a rare heart condition. This could multiply its addressable patient
population tenfold. We took some profits on shareholders' behalf
after the share price rose by 80% but remain excited by the
company's potential to address even larger patient populations.
Other notable contributors include The Trade Desk
(TTD) and CBRE. The Trade
Desk's programmatic ad-buying platform is market-leading and
allows advertisers to place targeted adverts online. It is the
largest and fastest-growing platform (revenues at +27%
year-on-year) but remains in the early stages of its growth. It is
expanding strategic partnerships with major platforms like Disney
and Netflix which suggests that they recognise its importance. The
connected TV market (adverts being sold on streaming platforms) is
forecast to double to $13.5bn over the next 5 years and we believe
that TTD is strongly positioned to take an outsized share of these
revenues. We have reflected our enthusiasm by adding to the
position. CBRE is a
diversified real estate business and plays an important 'stalwart'
role within the portfolio. Whilst property transactions are down
against a backdrop of higher interest rates, CBRE's recurring
revenue services have performed strongly. These results are a
testament to management's efforts to make CBRE a more robust
business by widening the scope of property management services it
provides. We are encouraged by the progress of each of these
companies and by the breadth of growth they represent.
Boldly seeking diversification
Our approach deliberately seeks different sources of
growth. These are reflected in our growth profiles as set out on
the following pages, into which we categorise all our holdings. We
invest in some of the largest and fastest-growing companies in the
world, but we value the latitude to seek a broader base for growth.
Market forecasts suggest that the outlook for earnings growth is
changing. Whilst the large technology companies look set to remain
important contributors, they will not retain a monopoly on earnings
growth.
Broadening outlook
(% contribution of S&P 500 earnings growth
year-over-year*)
http://www.rns-pdf.londonstockexchange.com/rns/6767O_1-2024-12-3.pdf
- Market Concentration
Graph
Source: BoFA Global Research, Factset.
* 3Q25E, as of 16 May
2024.
We believe the stage is set for returns from a more
diversified group of companies. Our task, therefore, is to ensure
that we identify where the rewards for growth are most seriously
underappreciated. Our Research Agenda helps ensure that we remain
return-seeking in our outlook and focus our research
productively.
01. Generative AI - the next frontier - We
are witnessing the dawn of a major technological revolution. Like
previous revolutions, it will precipitate profound social and
economic changes. Unlike previous revolutions, the pace of
diffusion will surely be rapid.
Over the
past two years, we have been building the portfolio's exposure to
the drivers and beneficiaries of AI. This has seen the proportion
of the portfolio invested in semiconductors rise from 2% to 11%
today, and underpinned investments in second and third-order
beneficiaries like Comfort Systems, which provides data centres
with essential cooling and ventilation equipment. In recent months
we have added to both Microsoft (enterprise software and
cloud) and NVIDIA
(semiconductors) where we believe AI is widening their competitive
moat and serving to elongate their runway for growth. In contrast,
we have reduced our position in Alphabet where we believe the emergence
of AI search platforms may threaten Alphabet's core search
advertising business.
Elsewhere,
we have sold our position in Adobe (creative software). The mass
adoption of generative AI tools is likely to disrupt Adobe's
creative platform, materially lowering barriers to entry. Whilst
Tesla is embracing AI too,
having built its own supercomputer for AI machine learning, we have
sold the portfolio's position because the valuation looked
stretched relative to its growth prospects. Electric vehicle
competition is intensifying, and we have reservations about the
management team's ability to deliver sufficient growth from its
self-driving software.
02. Infrastructure upgrade and the resurgence of
the domestic champion - We believe there are businesses
positioned to benefit from the repair and enhancement of physical
infrastructure. Developed nations have underinvested for decades.
Resilience and longer-term economic growth have suffered. Roads
need repaired; bridges rebuilt; power grids upgraded; advanced
manufacturing installed. Our conviction that we are witnessing the
early stages of an industrial super-cycle across the western world
has deepened further.
Our exposure
to domestic US infrastructure-related opportunities continues to
grow. Over the past year, we have added a handful of new positions
to the portfolio, including Advanced Drainage Systems (storm
drains) and Stella Jones
(utility poles). A core attraction of these businesses is that they
either have a first-mover advantage or are the largest player which
underpins their ability to grow through pricing power. The former
is the case for Advanced Drainage Systems, which has a dominant
position in plastic storm drains that are replacing crumbling
concrete equivalents. The latter is true of Stella Jones, which
owns around 70% of the market's supply of lumber for utility poles,
an essential component of the energy grid upgrade. Our most recent
purchase is Builders
FirstSource. It is establishing a first-mover advantage and
changing the way that building products and prefabricated
components are supplied to professional builders in the US. We
think that it will continue to take market share as its
prefabricated products are market-leading, allowing for greater
efficiencies and lower construction costs. Growth is underpinned by
a structural shortage of housing and sensible consolidation through
M&A should support growth further.
03. Capital cycles and emerging scarcity -
The impact of higher rates in some ways was immediate and obvious:
Long-duration assets such as high-growth equities became less
valuable. We have certainly felt that. However, in other ways, the
impact has been slower to materialise. Changes to the supply side
take time but in the long run the impact of capital scarcity on
spending, and therefore competition, should be far more impactful
than merely a higher discount rate today.
As several
of our technology companies have focused on operational execution
and profitable growth, we have added where our conviction has been
growing. For example, we have increased our positions in
DoorDash (food delivery)
and Adyen (digital
payments). DoorDash, now a top 10 holding within the fund, has
grown its US market share from 18% in 2018 to 70% today. We believe
that its focus on operational execution and customer experience has
been the driver of this success. Revenues are growing at over +20%,
whilst its nascent grocery delivery offering is growing both the
frequency and average order value of customers. Adyen provides an
end-to-end digital payment solution for global companies in search
of a simple solution for the complexities of global trade. Its
solution takes care of a range of services from risk management and
payment processing to dealing with issuing banks. The company's
premium pricing strategy, justified by the value-added services it
offers, appears to be gaining traction and revenues are growing at
more than +20%, per annum.
Elsewhere,
we took a new position in Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings, one of
three big players - alongside Carnival and Royal Caribbean - that
control 85% of the cruise shipping market. We believe that the
current valuation (13x forward price-to-earnings) underappreciates
the improving outlook for the business. Norwegian is set to address
a supply bottleneck by bringing thirteen new ships to market
through 2036. Allied with falling debt levels and margin expansion
we are excited by the potential return dynamic of the shares.
China
For us, getting out on the road helps to deepen our
understanding of industries and companies, no more so than in
China. Deputy Manager, Helen Xiong, spent a month there earlier
this year assessing, among other things, the competitive landscape
in the electric vehicle (EV) market. Her work underpinned our
decision to add to our holding in Li Auto, the electric vehicle
manufacturer. The EV market is fiercely competitive (there are more
than 100 EV manufacturers in China). However, we view Li Auto as one of a small list of
potential winners (alongside the likes of NIO and Xpeng which have
strong capabilities too). Li's 'extended range' offering (an
internal combustion system charges a battery pack and extends the
vehicle's range) has been a success (its latest results show it is
growing unit sales at +45% year-on-year) and has solved 'range
anxiety' among early adopters. It has established a strong brand
known for quality and innovation. We are confident that it is
well-placed to continue its progress towards a fully electric car
business (its first model was released this year) and has a strong
chance of emerging as one of the leading brands in Chinese EVs.
More broadly, we have been tilting the portfolio's
Chinese exposure toward the domestic consumer in recent years. At
around 4% of the portfolio, our Chinese holdings tend to be
'local-for-local' (i.e. Chinese companies growing into domestic
consumption). We added one new position in the period in
Kweichow Moutai, China's
leading producer of premium baiju (spirit drink). Its centuries-old
production techniques, limited supply, and loyal customer base mean
Moutai commands exceptional pricing power. Indeed, 24 bottles of
Kweichow Moutai sold for $1.4m at Sotheby's in 2021! We took a
position at a valuation considerably below its long-term average
and believe it will be a resilient compounder for the portfolio. We
recognise that there are risks associated with investing in China
but believe that there remains significant opportunity too. You can
read and hear more from Helen on the Chinese opportunity for global
investors by clicking on 'Why
growth investors can't ignore China' on bailliegifford.com.
We sold positions in Alibaba and Sands China. Having played a
transformative role in transitioning China from traditional retail
to ecommerce, we believe Alibaba is likely to be outcompeted by
other players in its different markets (e.g. Pinduoduo in
ecommerce, which we now hold in Monks). Sands China is a casino and
hotel operator based in Macau. Having endured a very difficult
spell through the pandemic, we had hoped that customers would
return in numbers, but this has been slower than we had
anticipated. We also have reservations about the extent of its
alignment with the priorities of the Chinese state and 'common
prosperity'.
Outlook
What excites us most is our ability to capture growth
in all its forms. Artificial intelligence (AI) represents a
paradigm shift in computing power and a transformational growth
opportunity. We invest in the protagonists (NVIDIA, Microsoft,
Amazon and Meta) in addition to a range of other beneficiaries. We
have sown the seeds of future returns by investing in a range of
overlooked growth companies in areas like cruise shipping, building
materials, and auto parts.
The resulting portfolio is in good shape. Over the
next three years, market consensus forecasts suggest that the
portfolio will grow its sales twice as fast as the market average
and earnings +50% faster. We recognise that share price performance
in recent years has been disappointing. However, amid continued
signs of progress from our portfolio holdings, we are increasingly
confident in the portfolio's ability to deliver attractive returns
for shareholders in the years ahead.
Baillie Gifford & Co
Managers
3 December 2024
For a definition of terms used see Glossary of terms
and Alternative Performance Measures towards the end of this
announcement.
Total return information is sourced from Baillie
Gifford/LSEG and relevant underlying index providers. See
disclaimer towards the end of this announcement.
Past performance is not a guide to future
performance.
The Managers' core investment beliefs
We believe the following features of Monks provide a
sustainable basis for adding value for shareholders.
Active management
• We
invest in attractive companies using a 'bottom-up' investment
process. Macroeconomic forecasts are of relatively little interest
to us.
• High
active share* provides the potential for adding
value.
• We
ignore the structure of the index - for example the location of a
company's HQ and therefore its domicile are less relevant to us
than where it generates sales and profits.
• Large
swathes of the market are unattractive and of no interest to
us.
• As index
agnostic global investors we can go anywhere and only invest in the
best ideas.
• As the
portfolio is very different from the index, we expect portfolio
returns to vary - sometimes substantially and often for prolonged
periods.
Committed growth investors
• In the
long run, share prices follow fundamentals; growth drives
returns.
• We aim
to produce a portfolio of stocks with above average growth, this in
turn underpins the ability of Monks to add value.
• We have
a differentiated approach to growth, focusing on the type of growth
that we expect a company to deliver. All holdings fall into one of
three growth categories - as set out on the following pages.
• The use
of these three growth categories ensures a diversity of growth
drivers within a disciplined framework.
Long-term perspective
•
Long-term holdings mean that company fundamentals are given time to
drive returns.
• We
prefer companies that are managed with a long-term mindset, rather
than those that prioritise the management of market
expectations.
• We
believe our approach helps us focus on what is important during the
inevitable periods of underperformance.
•
Short-term portfolio results are random.
• As
longer-term shareholders we are able to have greater influence on
environmental, social and governance matters.
Dedicated team with clear decision‑making
process
•
Senior and experienced team drawing on the full resources of
Baillie Gifford.
•
Alignment of interests - the investment team responsible for Monks
all own shares in the Company.
Portfolio construction
•
Investments are held in three broad holding sizes, as set out on
the following pages.
•
This allows us to back our judgement in those stocks for which we
have greater conviction, and to embrace the asymmetry of returns
through 'incubator' positions in higher risk/return stocks.
•
'Asymmetry of returns' - some of our smaller positions will
struggle and their share prices will fall; those that are
successful may rise many fold. The latter should outweigh the
former.
Low cost
•
Investors should not be penalised by high management fees.
• Low
turnover and trading costs benefit shareholders.
* For a definition of
terms used see Glossary of terms and Alternative Performance
Measures towards the end of this announcement.
Responsibility statement
We confirm that to the best of our knowledge:
a. the condensed
set of Financial Statements has been prepared in accordance with
FRS 104 'Interim Financial Reporting';
b. the Interim
Management Report includes a fair review of the information
required by Disclosure Guidance and Transparency Rule 4.2.7R
(indication of important events during the first six months, and
their impact on the Financial Statements, and a description of
principal risks and uncertainties for the remaining six months of
the year); and
c. the Interim
Financial Report includes a fair review of the information required
by Disclosure Guidance and Transparency Rule 4.2.8R (disclosure of
related party transactions and changes therein).
On behalf of the Board
KS Sternberg
Chairman
3 December 2024
List of investments
as at 31 October
2024
Name
|
Business
|
Value
£'000
|
% of total
assets *
|
Microsoft
|
Software and cloud computing
|
115,126
|
4.0
|
Meta Platforms
|
Social networking website
|
111,304
|
3.9
|
NVIDIA
|
Graphics processing, gaming, AI technology
|
102,626
|
3.6
|
Amazon.com
|
Online retailer and cloud computing platform
|
101,974
|
3.6
|
Prosus
|
Media and ecommerce
|
88,366
|
3.1
|
Martin Marietta Materials
|
Cement and aggregates manufacturer
|
85,494
|
3.0
|
TSMC
|
Semiconductor manufacturer
|
85,141
|
3.0
|
Elevance Health
|
Healthcare insurer
|
72,592
|
2.5
|
Ryanair
|
Low cost European airline
|
67,764
|
2.4
|
DoorDash
|
Online commerce platform
|
65,144
|
2.3
|
Service Corporation International
|
Funeral and crematoria services
|
63,020
|
2.2
|
The Schiehallion Fund
|
Global unlisted growth equity investment company
|
61,606
|
2.2
|
The Trade Desk
|
Advertising technology
|
58,399
|
2.0
|
Mastercard
|
Electronic payments network and related services
|
52,883
|
1.9
|
Novo Nordisk
|
Diabetes and weight loss treatment
|
51,789
|
1.8
|
CRH
|
Diversified building materials
|
50,172
|
1.8
|
Shopify
|
Online commerce platform
|
47,080
|
1.6
|
Alphabet
|
Online search engine
|
39,497
|
1.4
|
Analog Devices
|
Integrated circuits
|
39,445
|
1.4
|
MercadoLibre
|
Latin American ecommerce platform
|
37,888
|
1.3
|
Arthur J. Gallagher
|
Insurance broker
|
36,718
|
1.3
|
Reliance Industries
|
Indian energy conglomerate
|
34,229
|
1.2
|
Netflix
|
Subscription service for TV shows and movies
|
33,176
|
1.2
|
CBRE Group
|
Commercial real estate
|
32,332
|
1.1
|
Olympus
|
Optoelectronic products
|
30,654
|
1.1
|
Texas Instruments
|
Semiconductors
|
30,198
|
1.1
|
Cloudflare
|
Cloud based IT services
|
29,179
|
1.0
|
Royalty Pharma
|
Biopharmaceutical royalties portfolio
|
28,967
|
1.0
|
AIA
|
Asian life insurer
|
28,904
|
1.0
|
S&P Global
|
Credit rating agency
|
28,769
|
1.0
|
UnitedHealth
|
Healthcare insurer
|
28,689
|
1.0
|
AeroVironment
|
Reconnaissance and defence drones
|
28,460
|
1.0
|
Coupang
|
South Korean ecommerce
|
28,086
|
1.0
|
Block
|
Financial technology
|
28,063
|
1.0
|
Richemont
|
Luxury goods
|
27,240
|
1.0
|
BHP Group
|
Mineral exploration and production
|
27,019
|
0.9
|
CATL
|
Battery manufacturer
|
26,848
|
0.9
|
Atlas Copco
|
Industrial equipment
|
26,660
|
0.9
|
Eaton
|
Industrial engineering products
|
25,744
|
0.9
|
Advanced Drainage Systems
|
Manufacturer of pipes and drainage systems
|
25,291
|
0.9
|
Alnylam Pharmaceuticals
|
RNA interference based biotechnology
|
25,225
|
0.9
|
Markel
|
Markets and underwrites speciality insurance
products
|
24,699
|
0.9
|
PDD Holdings
|
Chinese real estate development
|
24,367
|
0.9
|
ByteDance§
|
Online content platform including TikTok
|
23,532
|
0.8
|
Comfort Systems USA
|
HVAC systems and solutions
|
23,098
|
0.8
|
Adyen
|
Digital payments
|
22,528
|
0.8
|
Moody's
|
Credit rating agency
|
21,743
|
0.8
|
Li Auto
|
Chinese EV manufacturer
|
21,611
|
0.8
|
Thermo Fisher Scientific
|
Scientific instruments, consumables and chemicals
|
21,297
|
0.7
|
Sea Limited
|
Online and digital gaming
|
20,691
|
0.7
|
Chewy
|
Online pet supplies retailer
|
20,499
|
0.7
|
Autozone†
|
Automotive replacement parts and accessories
|
20,348
|
0.7
|
Stella-Jones
|
Industrial pressure treated wood products
manufacturer
|
20,215
|
0.7
|
Schibsted
|
Media and classified advertising platforms
|
19,969
|
0.7
|
Builders FirstSource†
|
Building products for professional homebuilders
|
19,722
|
0.7
|
Samsung Electronics
|
Multinational technology
|
18,664
|
0.7
|
Kweichow Moutai†
|
Spirits manufacturer
|
18,270
|
0.6
|
CoStar
|
Commercial property portal
|
18,080
|
0.6
|
Entegris
|
Supplier of materials to high-tech industries
|
18,027
|
0.6
|
SiteOne Landscape Supply
|
US distributor of landscaping supplies
|
17,640
|
0.6
|
Petroleo Brasileiro†
|
Oil exploration and production
|
17,377
|
0.6
|
Epiroc
|
Construction and mining machinery
|
17,352
|
0.6
|
Walt Disney
|
Media and theme parks
|
17,052
|
0.6
|
ASM International
|
Vapour deposition technology for semiconductors
|
16,937
|
0.6
|
Spotify
|
Online music streaming service
|
16,829
|
0.6
|
Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings†
|
Global cruise company
|
16,616
|
0.6
|
Nippon Paint
|
Japanese paint manufacturer
|
16,603
|
0.6
|
SMC
|
Factory automation equipment
|
16,091
|
0.6
|
ICICI Prudential Life Insurance
|
Life insurance services
|
15,310
|
0.5
|
B3 Group
|
Brazilian stock exchange operator
|
15,270
|
0.5
|
Rakuten
|
Online retail and financial services
|
14,550
|
0.5
|
Bellway
|
Home construction
|
13,946
|
0.5
|
Dutch Bros†
|
Coffee and drinks retailer
|
13,922
|
0.5
|
Nexans
|
Manufacturer of cables and electrical parts
|
13,880
|
0.5
|
Topicus.com
|
Vertical market software and solutions
|
13,698
|
0.5
|
Stripe§
|
Payments platform
|
13,456
|
0.5
|
Floor & Décor Holdings
|
Floor and furnishing retailer
|
13,273
|
0.5
|
Epic Games§
|
Gaming software developer
|
13,264
|
0.5
|
YETI Holdings
|
Outdoor lifestyle products
|
12,132
|
0.4
|
Datadog
|
Cloud based IT system monitoring application
|
11,886
|
0.4
|
Brunswick Corp
|
Recreational boats, marine engines, marine parts and
accessories
|
11,649
|
0.4
|
Albemarle
|
Lithium miner
|
11,044
|
0.4
|
Shiseido
|
Japanese cosmetics manufacturer
|
10,550
|
0.4
|
LVMH
|
Luxury goods
|
10,518
|
0.4
|
Neogen Corp
|
Food and animal safety products and services
|
10,444
|
0.4
|
Sartorius Stedim Biotech
|
Biotechnology, specialised equipment for research
|
9,904
|
0.3
|
Moderna
|
Drug discovery using mRNA technology
|
8,940
|
0.3
|
Genmab
|
Biotechnology
|
8,745
|
0.3
|
Space Exploration Technologies§
|
Space rockets and satellites
|
8,711
|
0.3
|
Soitec†
|
Manufactures substrates for semiconductor wafers
|
7,984
|
0.3
|
CyberAgent
|
Japanese internet advertising and content
|
7,643
|
0.3
|
Mobileye
|
Advanced driver assistance systems (ADAS) and
autonomous driving technologies
|
6,206
|
0.2
|
Ant International§
|
Chinese online payments and financial services
business
|
6,147
|
0.2
|
Silk Invest Africa Food Fund§
|
Africa focused private equity fund
|
2,232
|
0.1
|
Illumina CVR§
|
Gene sequencing business
|
323
|
<0.1
|
Abiomed CVR
|
Medical implant manufacturer
|
-
|
-
|
Sberbank of Russia^
|
Russian commercial bank
|
-
|
-
|
Total
investments
|
|
2,823,245
|
99.1
|
Net liquid assets*
|
|
27,186
|
0.9
|
Total
assets*
|
|
2,850,431
|
100.0
|
Borrowings
|
|
(222,586)
|
(7.8)
|
Shareholders'
funds
|
|
2,627,845
|
92.2
|
|
Listed
equities
%
|
Schiehallion
Fund
%
|
Unlisted
securities #
%
|
Net liquid
assets *
%
|
Total
assets *
%
|
31 October
2024
|
94.5
|
2.2
|
2.4
|
0.9
|
100.0
|
30 April 2024
|
94.1
|
2.6
|
2.0
|
1.3
|
100.0
|
* For a definition of terms
used see Glossary of terms and Alternative Performance Measures
towards the end of this announcement.
§ Denotes
unlisted/private company holding.
^ Denotes suspended investment.
† New purchase during
the period.
# Includes holdings in
preference shares, ordinary shares and contingent value rights
(CVR).
Investment portfolio by growth category
as at 31 October
2024*
Holding size
|
Growth Stalwarts
|
31.1%
|
Rapid Growth
|
38.8%
|
Cyclical Growth
|
30.1%
|
Holding
|
Highest conviction holdings
c.2.0% each
|
Microsoft
|
4.1
|
NVIDIA
|
3.6
|
Martin Marietta Materials
|
3.0
|
Total in this
holding size
45.3%
|
Meta Platforms
|
3.9
|
Amazon.com
|
3.6
|
TSMC
|
3.0
|
Elevance Health
|
2.6
|
Prosus
|
3.1
|
Ryanair
|
2.4
|
Service Corporation
International
|
2.2
|
DoorDash
|
2.3
|
CRH
|
1.8
|
Mastercard
|
1.9
|
The Schiehallion Fund
|
2.2
|
|
|
|
|
The Trade Desk
|
2.1
|
|
|
|
|
Novo Nordisk
|
1.8
|
|
|
|
|
Shopify
|
1.7
|
|
|
Average sized holdings
c.1.0% each
|
Alphabet
|
1.4
|
MercadoLibre
|
1.3
|
CBRE Group
|
1.1
|
Total in this
holding size
37.9%
|
Analog Devices
|
1.4
|
Reliance Industries
|
1.2
|
Royalty Pharma
|
1.0
|
Arthur J. Gallagher
|
1.3
|
Netflix
|
1.2
|
Richemont
|
1.0
|
Olympus
|
1.1
|
Cloudflare
|
1.0
|
BHP Group
|
1.0
|
Texas Instruments
|
1.1
|
AeroVironment
|
1.0
|
CATL
|
1.0
|
AIA
|
1.0
|
Coupang
|
1.0
|
Atlas Copco
|
0.9
|
S&P Global
|
1.0
|
Block
|
1.0
|
Eaton
|
0.9
|
UnitedHealth
|
1.0
|
Alnylam Pharmaceuticals
|
0.9
|
Advanced Drainage Systems
|
0.9
|
Moody's
|
0.8
|
PDD Holdings
|
0.9
|
Markel
|
0.9
|
Thermo Fisher Scientific
|
0.8
|
ByteDance
|
0.8
|
Comfort Systems USA
|
0.8
|
Chewy
|
0.7
|
Adyen
|
0.8
|
Builders FirstSource
|
0.7
|
Autozone
|
0.7
|
Li Auto
|
0.8
|
Samsung Electronics
|
0.7
|
Stella-Jones
|
0.7
|
Sea Limited
|
0.7
|
|
|
Kweichow Moutai
|
0.7
|
Schibsted
|
0.7
|
|
|
Incubator holdings c.0.5% each
|
Walt Disney
|
0.6
|
Spotify
|
0.6
|
CoStar
|
0.6
|
Total in this
holding size
16.8%
|
Topicus.com
|
0.5
|
ICICI Prudential Life
Insurance
|
0.5
|
Entegris
|
0.6
|
Shiseido
|
0.4
|
B3 Group
|
0.5
|
SiteOne Landscape Supply
|
0.6
|
LVMH
|
0.4
|
Dutch Bros
|
0.5
|
Petroleo Brasileiro
|
0.6
|
Neogen Corp
|
0.4
|
Stripe
|
0.5
|
Epiroc
|
0.6
|
Sartorius Stedim Biotech
|
0.4
|
Epic Games
|
0.5
|
ASM International
|
0.6
|
|
|
Datadog
|
0.4
|
Norwegian Cruise Line
Holdings
|
0.6
|
|
|
Moderna
|
0.3
|
Nippon Paint
|
0.6
|
|
|
Genmab
|
0.3
|
SMC
|
0.6
|
|
|
Space Exploration
Technologies
|
0.3
|
Rakuten
|
0.5
|
|
|
CyberAgent
|
0.3
|
Bellway
|
0.5
|
|
|
Mobileye
|
0.2
|
Nexans
|
0.5
|
|
|
Ant International
|
0.2
|
Floor & Décor
Holdings
|
0.5
|
|
|
Illumina CVR
|
<0.1
|
YETI Holdings
|
0.4
|
|
|
Abiomed CVR
|
-
|
Brunswick Corp
|
0.4
|
|
|
|
|
Albemarle
|
0.4
|
|
|
|
|
Soitec
|
0.3
|
|
|
|
|
Silk Invest Africa Food
Fund
|
0.1
|
|
|
|
|
Sberbank of Russia
|
-
|
* Excludes net liquid
assets.
Portfolio positioning
as at 31 October
2024*†
Although the Managers' approach to stock picking is
resolutely 'bottom-up' in nature and pays no attention to the
structure of the index, it is essential to understand the risks of
each investment and, in turn, where there may be concentrations of
exposures. The charts below outline some key exposures of the
portfolio.
Geographical
Geographical region
|
% at
31 October
2024
|
% at
30 April
2024
|
1 North America
|
60.9
|
57.4
|
2 Continental Europe
|
16.3
|
17.7
|
3 Emerging Markets
|
13.1
|
12.6
|
4 Japan
|
3.5
|
4.2
|
5 United Kingdom
|
2.7
|
3.6
|
6 Developed Asia
|
2.6
|
3.2
|
7 Net liquid assets
|
0.9
|
1.3
|
Sectoral
Sector
|
% at
31 October
2024
|
% at
30 April
2024
|
1 Technology
|
33.4
|
28.5
|
2 Consumer
discretionary
|
22.0
|
20.3
|
3 Industrials
|
18.1
|
18.2
|
4 Healthcare
|
10.3
|
11.8
|
5 Financials
|
8.5
|
11.7
|
6 Basic materials
|
2.0
|
1.9
|
7 Energy
|
1.8
|
2.6
|
8 Real estate
|
1.7
|
1.6
|
9
Telecommunications
|
0.7
|
0.9
|
10 Consumer staples
|
0.6
|
1.2
|
11 Net liquid assets
|
0.9
|
1.3
|
* Expressed as a
percentage of total assets.
† For a definition of terms
used see Glossary of Terms and Alternative Performance Measures
towards the end of this announcement.
Past performance is not a guide to future
performance.
Income statement (unaudited)
|
|
For the six months
ended
31 October 2024
|
For the six months
ended
31 October 2023
|
For the year ended
30 April 2024 (audited)
|
|
Notes
|
Revenue
£'000
|
Capital
£'000
|
Total
£'000
|
Revenue
£'000
|
Capital
£'000
|
Total
£'000
|
Revenue
£'000
|
Capital
£'000
|
Total
£'000
|
Gains/(losses) on investments
|
|
-
|
145,724
|
145,724
|
-
|
(96,176)
|
(96,176)
|
-
|
389,428
|
389,428
|
Currency gains/(losses)
|
|
-
|
132
|
132
|
-
|
(50)
|
(50)
|
-
|
1,419
|
1,419
|
Income from investments and interest receivable
|
|
13,688
|
-
|
13,688
|
16,092
|
-
|
16,092
|
29,888
|
-
|
29,888
|
Investment management fee
|
3
|
(4,913)
|
-
|
(4,913)
|
(4,592)
|
-
|
(4,592)
|
(9,431)
|
-
|
(9,431)
|
Other administrative expenses
|
|
(938)
|
-
|
(938)
|
(830)
|
-
|
(830)
|
(1,850)
|
-
|
(1,850)
|
Net return before
finance costs and taxation
|
|
7,837
|
145,856
|
153,693
|
10,670
|
(96,226)
|
(85,556)
|
18,607
|
390,847
|
409,454
|
Finance cost of borrowings
|
|
(4,297)
|
-
|
(4,297)
|
(3,892)
|
-
|
(3,892)
|
(8,264)
|
-
|
(8,264)
|
Net return on
ordinary activities before taxation
|
|
3,540
|
145,856
|
149,396
|
6,778
|
(96,226)
|
(89,448)
|
10,343
|
390,847
|
401,190
|
Tax on ordinary activities
|
4
|
(1,142)
|
(957)
|
(2,099)
|
(1,219)
|
(559)
|
(1,778)
|
(2,102)
|
(736)
|
(2,838)
|
Net return on
ordinary activities after taxation
|
|
2,398
|
144,899
|
147,297
|
5,559
|
(96,785)
|
(91,226)
|
8,241
|
390,111
|
398,352
|
Net return per ordinary share
|
5
|
1.15p
|
69.66p
|
70.81p
|
2.44p
|
(42.41p)
|
(39.97p)
|
3.68p
|
174.07p
|
177.75p
|
The total column of this statement represents the
profit and loss account of the Company. The supplementary revenue
and capital columns are prepared under guidance issued by the
Association of Investment Companies.
All revenue and capital items in this statement
derive from continuing operations.
A Statement of Comprehensive Income is not required
as the Company does not have any other comprehensive income and the
net return on ordinary activities after taxation is both the profit
and total comprehensive income for the period.
Balance sheet (unaudited)
|
Notes
|
At 31 October
2024
£'000
|
At 30 April
2024
(audited)
£'000
|
Fixed
assets
|
|
|
|
Investments held at fair value through profit or
loss
|
7
|
2,823,245
|
2,847,068
|
Current
assets
|
|
|
|
Debtors
|
|
1,705
|
12,506
|
Cash and cash equivalents
|
|
41,753
|
38,622
|
|
|
43,458
|
51,128
|
Creditors
|
|
|
|
Amounts falling due within one year:
|
|
|
|
National Australia Bank Limited Loan
|
8
|
(50,000)
|
(50,000)
|
Other creditors
|
|
(15,124)
|
(11,957)
|
|
|
(65,124)
|
(61,987)
|
Net current
liabilities
|
|
(21,666)
|
(10,859)
|
Total assets less
current liabilities
|
|
2,801,579
|
2,836,209
|
Creditors
|
|
|
|
Amounts falling due after more than one year:
|
|
|
|
Loan notes
|
8
|
(172,586)
|
(173,176)
|
Provision for tax liability
|
9
|
(1,148)
|
(1,896)
|
|
|
(173,734)
|
(175,072)
|
Net
assets
|
|
2,627,845
|
2,661,137
|
Capital and
reserves
|
|
|
|
Share capital
|
|
12,659
|
12,659
|
Share premium account
|
|
433,714
|
433,714
|
Capital redemption reserve
|
|
8,700
|
8,700
|
Capital reserve
|
|
2,101,291
|
2,132,609
|
Revenue reserve
|
|
71,481
|
73,455
|
Shareholders'
funds
|
10
|
2,627,845
|
2,661,137
|
Shareholders' funds
per ordinary share (borrowings at book value)
|
10
|
1,319.8p
|
1,242.8p
|
Net asset value per
ordinary share* (borrowings at par value)
|
|
1.319.7p
|
1,242.7p
|
Net asset value per
ordinary share* (borrowings at fair value)
|
|
1,344.1p
|
1,266.1p
|
Ordinary shares in
issue
|
10
|
199,115,666
|
214,130,666
|
* For a definition of
terms used see Glossary of terms and Alternative Performance
Measures towards the end of this announcement.
Statement of changes in equity (unaudited)
For the six months ended 31 October 2024
|
Notes
|
Share
capital
£'000
|
Share
premium
account
£'000
|
Capital
redemption
reserve
£'000
|
Capital
reserve *
£'000
|
Revenue
reserve
£'000
|
Shareholders'
funds
£'000
|
Shareholders' funds at 1 May 2024
|
|
12,659
|
433,714
|
8,700
|
2,132,609
|
73,455
|
2,661,137
|
Net return on ordinary activities after taxation
|
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
144,899
|
2,398
|
147,297
|
Ordinary shares bought back
|
11
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(176,217)
|
-
|
(176,217)
|
Dividends paid during the period
|
6
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(4,372)
|
(4,372)
|
Shareholders' funds
at 31 October 2024
|
|
12,659
|
433,714
|
8,700
|
2,101,291
|
71,481
|
2,627,845
|
For the six months ended 31 October 2023
|
Notes
|
Share
capital
£'000
|
Share
premium
account
£'000
|
Capital
redemption
reserve
£'000
|
Capital
reserve *
£'000
|
Revenue
reserve
£'000
|
Shareholders'
funds
£'000
|
Shareholders' funds at 1 May 2023
|
|
12,659
|
433,714
|
8,700
|
1,915,385
|
72,422
|
2,442,880
|
Net return on ordinary activities after taxation
|
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(96,785)
|
5,559
|
(91,226)
|
Ordinary shares issued/bought back
|
11
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(62,938)
|
-
|
(62,938)
|
Dividends paid during the period
|
6
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(7,208)
|
(7,208)
|
Shareholders' funds
at 31 October 2023
|
|
12,659
|
433,714
|
8,700
|
1,755,662
|
70,773
|
2,281,508
|
* The Capital Reserve
balance at 31 October 2024 includes holding gains on investments of
£1,008,555 (31 October 2023 - gains of £520,850,000).
Condensed cash flow statement (unaudited)
|
Notes
|
Six months to
31 October 2024
£'000
|
Six months to
31 October 2023
£'000
|
Cash flows from
operating activities
|
|
|
|
Net return on ordinary activities before taxation
|
|
149,396
|
(89,448)
|
Net (gains)/losses on investments
|
|
(145,724)
|
96,176
|
Currency (gains)/losses
|
|
(132)
|
50
|
Finance costs of borrowings
|
|
4,297
|
3,892
|
Overseas tax incurred
|
|
(2,869)
|
(1,244)
|
Changes in debtors and creditors
|
|
1,172
|
1,302
|
Cash from
operations*
|
|
6,140
|
10,728
|
Interest paid
|
|
(4,325)
|
(3,427)
|
Net cash inflow from
operating activities
|
|
1,815
|
7,301
|
Net cash inflow from
investing activities
|
|
176,598
|
39,429
|
Cash flows from
financing activities
|
|
|
|
Equity dividends paid
|
6
|
(4,372)
|
(7,208)
|
Ordinary shares bought back
|
|
(170,449)
|
(67,591)
|
Borrowings drawn down
|
|
-
|
15,000
|
Net cash outflow
from financing activities
|
|
(174,821)
|
(59,799)
|
Increase/(decrease)
in cash and cash equivalents
|
|
3,592
|
(13,069)
|
Exchange movements
|
|
(461)
|
(50)
|
Cash and cash equivalents at start of period
|
|
38,622
|
42,191
|
Cash and cash
equivalents at end of period
|
|
41,753
|
29,072
|
* Cash from operations
includes dividends received of £13,123,000 (31 October 2023 -
£16,998,000) and deposit interest received of £940,000 (31 October
2023 - £727,000).
Notes to the condensed financial statements (unaudited)
01 Basis of accounting
The condensed Financial Statements for the six months
to 31 October 2024 comprise the statements set out on the previous
pages together with the related notes below. They have been
prepared in accordance with FRS 104 'Interim Financial Reporting'
and the AIC's Statement of Recommended Practice issued in November
2014 and updated in July 2022 with consequential amendments. They
have not been audited or reviewed by the Auditor pursuant to the
Auditing Practices Board Guidance on 'Review of Interim Financial
Information'. The Financial Statements for the six months to 31
October 2024 have been prepared on the basis of the same accounting
policies as set out in the Company's Annual Report and Financial
Statements at 30 April 2024.
Going concern
The Directors have considered the Company's principal
risks and uncertainties, as set out on the inside front cover,
together with the Company's current position, investment objective
and policy, the level of demand for the Company's shares, the
nature of its assets, its liabilities and projected income and
expenditure. The Board has, in particular, considered the impact of
macroeconomic and geopolitical concerns, including hostilities in
Ukraine and Gaza, and US-China and China-Taiwan tensions. It is the
Directors' opinion that the Company has adequate resources to
continue in operational existence for the foreseeable future. The
vast majority of the Company's investments are readily realisable
and can be sold to meet its liabilities as they fall due. All
borrowings require the prior approval of the Board. Gearing levels
and compliance with covenants are reviewed by the Board on a
regular basis. The Company has continued to comply with the
investment trust status requirements of section 1158 of the
Corporation Tax Act 2010 and the Investment Trust (Approved
Company) Regulations 2011. Accordingly, the Directors consider it
appropriate to adopt the going concern basis of accounting in
preparing these Financial Statements and confirm that they are not
aware of any material uncertainties which may affect the Company's
ability to continue to do so over a period of at least twelve
months from the date of approval of these Financial Statements.
02 Financial information
The financial information contained within this
Interim Financial Report does not constitute statutory accounts as
defined in sections 434 to 436 of the Companies Act 2006. The
financial information for the year ended 30 April 2024 has been
extracted from the statutory accounts which have been filed with
the Registrar of Companies. The Auditor's Report on those accounts
was not qualified, did not include a reference to any matters to
which the Auditor drew attention by way of emphasis without
qualifying its report, and did not contain statements under
sections 498(2) or (3) of the Companies Act 2006.
03 Investment managers
Baillie Gifford & Co Limited, a wholly owned
subsidiary of Baillie Gifford & Co, has been appointed by the
Company as its Alternative Investment Fund Managers (AIFM) and
Company Secretary. The investment management function has been
delegated to Baillie Gifford & Co. The management agreement can
be terminated on six months' notice. The annual management fee is
0.45% on the first £750 million of total assets, 0.33% on the next
£1 billion of total assets and 0.30% on the remaining total assets.
For fee purposes, total assets is defined as the total value of all
assets held less all liabilities (other than any liability in the
form of debt intended for investment purposes) and excludes the
value of the Company's holding in The Schiehallion Fund a
closed-ended investment company managed by Baillie Gifford &
Co. The Company does not currently hold any other collective
investment vehicles managed by Baillie Gifford & Co. Where the
Company holds investments in open-ended collective investment
vehicles managed by Baillie Gifford, such as OEICs, Monks' share of
any fees charged within that vehicle will be rebated to the
Company. All debt drawn down during the periods under review is
intended for investment purposes.
04 Tax on ordinary
activities
The revenue tax charge arises from withholding tax
suffered on overseas dividends. The capital tax charge results from
the Provision for Tax Liability in respect of Indian capital gains
tax as detailed in note 9.
05 Net return per ordinary
share
|
Six months to
31 October 2024
£'000
|
Six months to
31 October 2023
£'000
|
Year to
30 April 2024
(audited)
£'000
|
Revenue return on ordinary activities after
taxation
|
2,398
|
5,559
|
8,241
|
Capital return on ordinary activities after
taxation
|
144,899
|
(96,785)
|
390,111
|
Total net
return
|
147,297
|
(91,226)
|
398,352
|
Net return per ordinary share is based on the above
totals of revenue and capital and on 208,004,715 (31 October 2023 -
228,211,498; 30 April 2024 -224,114,021) ordinary shares, being the
weighted average number of ordinary shares in issue during the
period.
There are no dilutive or potentially dilutive shares
in issue.
06 Dividends
|
Six months to
31 October 2024
£'000
|
Six months to
31 October 2023
£'000
|
Year to
30 April 2024
(audited)
£'000
|
Amounts recognised
as distributions in the period:
Previous year's final dividend of 2.10p (2023 -
3.15p),
paid 17 September 2024
|
4,372
|
7,208
|
7,208
|
Amounts paid and
payable in respect of the period:
Final dividend (2024 - 2.10p)
|
-
|
-
|
4,372
|
07 Fair value hierarchy
The Company's investments are financial assets held
at fair value through profit or loss. The fair value hierarchy used
to analyse the basis on which the fair values of such financial
instruments are measured is described below. Fair value
measurements are categorised on the basis of the lowest level input
that is significant to the fair value measurement.
Level 1 - using unadjusted quoted prices for
identical instruments in an active market;
Level 2 - using inputs, other than quoted
prices included within Level 1, that are directly or indirectly
observable (based on market data); and
Level 3 - using inputs that are unobservable
(for which market data is unavailable).
An analysis of the Company's financial asset
investments based on the fair value hierarchy described above is
shown below.
As at 31 October 2024
|
Level 1
£'000
|
Level 2
£'000
|
Level 3
£'000
|
Total
£'000
|
Listed equities
|
2,693,974
|
61,606
|
-
|
2,755,580
|
Unlisted securities
|
-
|
-
|
67,665
|
67,665
|
Total financial
asset investments
|
2,693,974
|
61,606
|
67,665
|
2,823,245
|
As at 30 April 2024
(audited)
|
|
|
|
|
Listed equities
|
2,714,161
|
73,796
|
-
|
2,787,957
|
Unlisted securities
|
-
|
-
|
59,111
|
59,111
|
Total financial
asset investments
|
2,714,161
|
73,796
|
59,111
|
2,847,068
|
The fair value of listed investments is either bid
price or last traded price depending on the convention of the
exchange on which the investment is listed. Listed Investments are
categorised as Level 1 if they are valued using unadjusted quoted
prices for identical instruments in an active market and as Level 2
if they do not meet all these criteria but are, nonetheless, valued
using market data. Unlisted investments are valued at fair value by
the Directors following a detailed review and appropriate challenge
of the valuations proposed by the Managers. The Managers' unlisted
investment policy applies methodologies consistent with the
International Private Equity and Venture Capital Valuation
Guidelines ('IPEV'). These methodologies can be categorised as
follows: (a) market approach (multiples, industry valuation
benchmarks and available market prices); (b) income approach
(discounted cash flows); and (c) replacement cost approach (net
assets). The Company's holdings in unlisted investments are
categorised as Level 3 as unobservable data is a significant input
to their fair value measurements.
08 Financial liabilities
|
31 October 2024
£'000
|
30 April
2024
£'000
|
Due within one year:
|
|
|
National Australia Bank Limited revolving credit
facility
|
50,000
|
50,000
|
Due after more than one year:
|
|
|
£60 million 1.86% notes 2054
|
59,908
|
59,907
|
£40 million 1.77% notes 2045
|
39,957
|
39,956
|
¥2,500 million 2.17% notes 2037
|
12,766
|
12,687
|
€18 million 4.55% notes 2035
|
15,200
|
15,370
|
€35 million 4.29% notes 2033
|
29,555
|
29,886
|
€18 million 4.30% notes 2030
|
15,200
|
15,370
|
|
222,586
|
223,176
|
The fair value of borrowings at 31 October 2024 was
£174,188,000 (30 April 2024 - £173,210,000).
09 Provision for tax
liability
The tax liability provision at 31 October 2024 of
£1,148,000 (30 April 2024 - £1,896,000) relates to a potential
liability for Indian capital gains tax that may arise on the
Company's Indian investments should they be sold in the future,
based on the net unrealised taxable capital gain at the period end
and on enacted Indian tax rates. The amount of any future tax
amounts payable may differ from this provision, depending on the
value and timing of any future sales of such investments and future
Indian tax rates.
10 Shareholders' funds
|
31 October
2024
|
30 April
2024
|
Shareholders' funds
|
£2,627,845,000
|
£2,661,137,000
|
Number of ordinary shares in issue excluding treasury
shares
|
199,115,666
|
214,130,666
|
Shareholders' funds per ordinary share
|
1,319.8p
|
1,242.8p
|
The shareholders' funds figures above have been
calculated after deducting borrowings at book value, in accordance
with the provisions of FRS 104. Reconciliations between
shareholders' funds and net asset values, calculated after
deducting borrowings at par value and fair value, are shown towards
the end of this announcement.
11 Share capital
In the six months to 31 October 2024 the Company
bought back 15,015,000 ordinary shares into treasury (31 October
2023 - 6,521,000 shares bought back). No shares were issued during
the period and 54,055,794 shares were held in treasury at 31
October 2024 (31 October 2023 - 28,895,794, 30 April 2024 -
39,040,794). At 31 October 2024, the Company had authority to buy
back 24,364,293 shares and to allot, or sell from treasury,
21,061,566 shares.
12 Related party
transactions
There have been no transactions with related parties
during the first six months of the current financial year that have
materially affected the financial position or the performance of
the Company during that period and there have been no changes in
the related party transactions described in the last Annual Report
and Financial Statements that could have had such an effect on the
Company during that period.
Baillie Gifford - valuing private companies
We aim to hold our private company investments at
'fair value' i.e., the price that would be paid in an open-market
transaction. Valuations are adjusted both during regular valuation
cycles and on an ad hoc basis in response to 'trigger events'. Our
valuation process ensures that private companies are valued in both
a fair and timely manner.
The valuation process is overseen by a valuations
group at Baillie Gifford which takes advice from an independent
third party (S&P Global). The valuations group is independent
from the investment team, with all voting members being from
different operational areas of the firm, and the portfolio managers
only receive final valuation notifications once they have been
applied.
We revalue the private holdings on a three-month
rolling cycle, with one-third of the holdings reassessed each
month. During stable market conditions, and assuming all else is
equal, each investment would be valued four times in a twelve month
period. For investment trusts, the prices are also reviewed twice
per year by the respective investment trust boards and are subject
to the scrutiny of external auditors in the annual audit
process.
Beyond the regular cycle, the valuations team also
monitors the portfolio for certain 'trigger events'. These may
include: changes in fundamentals; a takeover approach; an intention
to carry out an Initial Public Offering (IPO); company news which
is identified by the valuation team or by the portfolio managers or
significant changes to the valuation of comparable public
companies. Any ad hoc change to the fair valuation of any holding
is implemented swiftly and reflected in the next published NAV.
There is no delay.
The valuations team also monitors relevant market
indices on a weekly basis and updates valuations in a manner
consistent with our external valuer's (S&P Global) most recent
valuation report where appropriate. When market volatility is
particularly pronounced the team undertakes these checks daily.
In addition to the 2.4% of the portfolio holdings in
direct private company investments, 2.2% of the portfolio is in The
Schiehallion Fund, a closed ended investment company investing
predominantly in private companies, which Monks values by reference
to its market price.
Glossary of terms and Alternative Performance Measures
('APM')
An Alternative Performance Measure is a financial
measure of historical or future financial performance, financial
position, or cash flows, other than a financial measure defined or
specified in the applicable financial reporting framework.
Total assets
This is the Company's definition of adjusted total
assets, being the total value of all assets held less all
liabilities (other than liabilities in the form of borrowings).
Shareholders' funds
Shareholders' funds is the value of all assets held
less all liabilities, with borrowings deducted at book cost.
Net Asset Value (APM)
Net Asset Value (NAV) is the value of all assets held
less all liabilities, with borrowings deducted at either par value
or fair value as described below. Per share amounts are calculated
by dividing the relevant figure by the number of ordinary shares in
issue.
Net Asset Value (borrowings at par value) (APM)
Borrowings are valued at nominal par value. A
reconciliation from shareholders' funds (borrowings at book value)
to net asset value after deducting borrowings at par value is
provided below.
|
31 October
2024
£'000
|
31 October
2024
per share
|
30 April
2024
£'000
|
30 April
2024
per share
|
Shareholders' funds (borrowings at book value)
|
2,627,845
|
1,319.8p
|
2,661,137
|
1,242.8p
|
Add: book value of borrowings
|
222,586
|
111.8p
|
223,176
|
104.2p
|
Less: par value of borrowings
|
(222,721)
|
(111.9p)
|
(223,313)
|
(104.3p)
|
Net asset value
(borrowings at par value)
|
2,627,710
|
1,319.7p
|
2,661,000
|
1,242.7p
|
The per share figures above are based on 199,115,666
(30 April 2024 - 214,130,666) ordinary shares of 5p, being the
number of ordinary shares in issue at the period end excluding
treasury shares.
Net Asset Value (borrowings at fair value) (APM)
Borrowings are valued at an estimate of market worth.
The fair values of the loan notes are calculated using a comparable
debt approach, by reference to a basket of corporate debt. The fair
value of the Company's short term bank borrowings is equivalent to
its book value.
A reconciliation from shareholders' funds (borrowings
at book value) to net asset value after deducting borrowings at
fair value is provided below.
|
31 October
2024
£'000
|
31 October
2024
per share
|
30 April
2024
£'000
|
30 April
2024
per share
|
Shareholders' funds (borrowings at book value)
|
2,627,845
|
1,319.8
|
2,661,137
|
1,242.8p
|
Add: book value of borrowings
|
222,586
|
111.8p
|
223,176
|
104.2p
|
Less: fair value of borrowings
|
(174,188)
|
(87.5p)
|
(173,210)
|
(80.9p)
|
Net asset value
(borrowings at fair value)
|
2,676,243
|
1,344.1p
|
2,711,103
|
1,266.1p
|
The per share figures above are based on 199,115,666
(30 April 2024 - 214,130,666) ordinary shares of 5p, being the
number of ordinary shares in issue at the period end excluding
treasury shares.
Net liquid assets
Net liquid assets comprise current assets less
current liabilities (excluding borrowings) and provisions for
deferred liabilities.
Discount/premium (APM)
As stock markets and share prices vary, an investment
trust's share price is rarely the same as its NAV. When the share
price is lower than the NAV per share it is said to be trading at a
discount. The size of the discount is calculated by subtracting the
NAV per share from the share price and is usually expressed as a
percentage of the NAV per share. If the share price is higher than
the NAV per share, this situation is called a premium.
|
|
31 October 2024
|
30 April
2024
|
Closing NAV per share (borrowings at par)
|
(a)
|
1,319.7p
|
1,242.7p
|
Closing NAV per share (borrowings at fair value)
|
(b)
|
1,344.1p
|
1,266.1p
|
Closing share price
|
(c)
|
1,192.0p
|
1,158.0p
|
Discount to NAV with
borrowings at par
|
(c - a) ÷ a
|
(9.7%)
|
(6.8%)
|
Discount to NAV with
borrowings at fair value
|
(c - b) ÷ b
|
(11.3%)
|
(8.5%)
|
Active share (APM)
Active share, a measure of how actively a portfolio
is managed, is the percentage of the listed equity portfolio that
differs from its comparative index. It is calculated by deducting
from 100 the percentage of the portfolio that overlaps with the
comparative index. An active share of 100 indicates no overlap with
the index and an active share of zero indicates a portfolio that
tracks the index.
Total return (APM)
The total return is the return to shareholders after
reinvesting the net dividend on the date that the share price goes
ex-dividend, as detailed below.
Net Asset Value total return
|
|
31 October 2024
NAV (par)
|
31 October 2024
NAV (fair)
|
Closing NAV per share
|
(a)
|
1,319.7p
|
1,344.1p
|
Dividend adjustment factor*
|
(b)
|
1.0017
|
1.0017
|
Adjusted closing NAV per share
|
(c = a x b)
|
1,321.9p
|
1,346.4p
|
Opening NAV per share
|
(d)
|
1,242.7p
|
1,266.1p
|
Total
return
|
(c ÷ d) -1
|
6.4%
|
6.3%
|
* The dividend
adjustment factor is calculated on the assumption that the dividend
of 2.10p paid by the Company during the period was reinvested into
shares of the Company at the cum income NAV at the ex-dividend
date.
Share price total return
|
|
31 October 2024
share price
|
Closing share price
|
(a)
|
1,192.0p
|
Dividend adjustment factor*
|
(b)
|
1.0019
|
Adjusted closing share price
|
(c = a x b)
|
1,194.3p
|
Opening share price
|
(d)
|
1,158.0p
|
Total
return
|
(c ÷ d) -1
|
3.1%
|
* The dividend
adjustment factor is calculated on the assumption that the dividend
of 2.10p paid by the Company during the period was reinvested into
shares of the Company at the share price at the ex-dividend
date.
Gearing (APM)
At its simplest, gearing is borrowing. Just like any
other public company, an investment trust can borrow money to
invest in additional investments for its portfolio. The effect of
the borrowing on the shareholders' assets is called 'gearing'. If
the Company's assets grow, the shareholders' assets grow
proportionately more because the debt remains the same. But if the
value of the Company's assets falls, the situation is reversed.
Gearing can therefore enhance performance in rising markets but can
adversely impact performance in falling markets. The level of
gearing can be adjusted through the use of derivatives which affect
the sensitivity of the value of the portfolio to changes in the
level of markets.
Gross gearing, also referred to as potential gearing
is the Company's borrowings expressed as a percentage of
shareholders' funds (a ÷ c in the table below).
Net gearing, also referred to as invested or equity
gearing is borrowings at book value less cash and cash equivalents
(any certificates of deposit are not deducted) and brokers'
balances expressed as a percentage of shareholders' funds (b ÷ c in
the table below)*.
Effective gearing, as defined by the Board and
Managers of Monks, is the Company's borrowings at par less cash,
brokers' balances and investment grade bonds maturing within one
year, expressed as a percentage of shareholders'
funds*.
* As adjusted to take
into account the gearing impact of any derivative holdings.
|
|
31 October 2024
|
30 April 2024
|
Borrowings (at book cost)
|
(a)
|
£222,586,000
|
£223,176,000
|
Less: cash and cash equivalents
|
|
(£41,753,000)
|
(£38,622,000)
|
Less: sales for subsequent settlement
|
|
-
|
(£9,749,000)
|
Add: purchases for subsequent settlement
|
|
£10,111,000
|
£7,086,000
|
Adjusted borrowings
|
(b)
|
£190,944,000
|
£181,891,000
|
Shareholders' funds
|
(c)
|
£2,627,845,000
|
£2,661,137,000
|
Gross (potential)
gearing
|
(a ÷ c)
|
8.5%
|
8.4%
|
Net (invested)
gearing
|
(b ÷ c)
|
7.3%
|
6.8%
|
Unlisted, unquoted and private company investments
'Unlisted', 'unquoted' and 'private company'
investments are investments in securities not traded on a
recognised exchange.
Treasury shares
The Company has the authority to make market
purchases of its ordinary shares for retention as treasury shares
for future reissue, resale, transfer, or for cancellation. Treasury
shares do not receive distributions and the Company is not entitled
to exercise the voting rights attaching to them.
Turnover (APM)
Turnover is a measure of portfolio change or trading
activity. Monthly turnover is calculated as the minimum of
purchases and sales in a month, divided by the average market value
of the fund. Monthly numbers are added together to get the rolling
12 month turnover data.
Contingent value rights
'CVR' after an instrument name indicates a security,
usually arising from a corporate action such as a takeover or
merger, which represents a right to receive potential future value,
should the continuing company achieve certain milestones. The
Illumina CVR was received on Illumina's takeover of the Company's
private company investment in GRAIL and the Abiomed CVR arose on
Johnson & Johnson's takeover of Abiomed. In both cases the
milestones relate to the performance of the technologies acquired
through those takeovers. Any values attributed to these holdings
reflect both the amount of the future value potentially receivable
and the probability of the milestones being met within the time
frames in the CVR agreement.
Automatic exchange of
information
In order to fulfil its obligations under UK tax
legislation relating to the automatic exchange of information, the
Company is required to collect and report certain information about
certain shareholders.
The legislation requires investment trust companies
to provide personal information to HMRC on certain investors who
purchase shares in investment trusts. Accordingly, the Company will
have to provide information annually to the local tax authority on
the tax residencies of a number of non-UK based certificated
shareholders and corporate entities.
Shareholders, excluding those whose shares are held
in CREST, who come on to the share register will be sent a
certification form for the purposes of collecting this
information.
For further information, please see HMRC's
Quick Guide: Automatic Exchange of Information - information
for account holders gov.uk/government/publications/exchange-of-information-account-holders.
Third party data provider
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timeliness of the data contained herewith nor as to the results to
be obtained by recipients of the data.
No Provider shall in any way be liable to any
recipient of the data for any inaccuracies, errors or omissions in
the index data included in this document, regardless of cause, or
for any damages (whether direct or indirect) resulting
therefrom.
No Provider has any obligation to update, modify or
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event that any matter stated herein changes or subsequently becomes
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conclusions, or any course of action determined, by you or any
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FTSE Index Data
London Stock Exchange Group plc and its group
undertakings (collectively, the 'LSE Group'). © LSE Group
2024. FTSE Russell is a trading name of certain of the LSE Group
companies. 'FTSE®' 'Russell®', FTSE Russell®, is/are a trade
mark(s) of the relevant LSE Group companies and is/are used by any
other LSE Group company under license. All rights in the FTSE
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which owns the index or the data. Neither LSE Group nor its
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contained in this communication.
No further distribution of data from the LSE Group
is permitted without the relevant LSE Group company's express
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the content of this communication.
None of the views expressed in this document should
be construed as advice to buy or sell a particular investment.
The printed version of the Interim Financial Report
will be sent to shareholders and will be available on the Monks'
page of the Managers' website monksinvestmenttrust.co.uk ‡ on or
around 18 December 2024.
‡ Neither the contents
of the Managers' website nor the contents of any website accessible
from hyperlinks on the Managers' website (or any other website) is
incorporated into, or forms part of, this announcement.
Monks is managed by Baillie Gifford & Co, the
Edinburgh based fund management group with around £224 billion
under management and advice in active equity and bond portfolios
for clients in the UK and throughout the world (as at 2 December
2024).
Investment Trusts are UK public limited companies and
are not authorised or regulated by the Financial Conduct
Authority.
Past performance is not a guide to future
performance. The value of an investment and any income from it is
not guaranteed and may go down as well as up and investors may not
get back the amount invested. This is because the share price is
determined by the changing conditions in the relevant stock markets
in which the Company invests and by the supply and demand for the
Company's shares.
3 December 2024
For further information please contact:
Client Relations, Baillie Gifford & Co - Tel:
0131 275 2000
Jonathan Atkins, Four Communications - Tel: 0203 920
0555 or 07872 495396
-ends-