TIDMSFE
RNS Number : 2308Z
Safestyle UK PLC
17 September 2020
17 September 2020
Safestyle UK plc
("Safestyle" or the "Group")
Interim Results 2020
Safestyle UK plc (AIM: SFE), the leading UK-focused retailer and
manufacturer of PVCu replacement windows and doors for the
homeowner market, today announces its interim results for the six
months ended 30 June 2020.
Financial and operational highlights
Unaudited Unaudited
6 months 6 months
ended ended
30 Jun 30 Jun
2020 2019
GBPm GBPm % change
---------- ---------
Revenue 42.1 64.4 (34.7%)
---------- ---------- ---------
Gross profit 9.7 16.6 (41.5%)
---------- ---------- ---------
Gross margin % 23.13% 25.84% (271bps)
---------- ---------- ---------
Underlying (loss) before taxation(1) (5.1) (0.8) (513.5%)
---------- ---------- ---------
Non-underlying items(2) (0.5) (1.6) 68.5%
---------- ---------- ---------
(Loss) before taxation (5.6) (2.5) (126.4%)
---------- ---------- ---------
EPS - Basic (5.0p) (2.8p) (78.6%)
---------- ---------- ---------
Net cash / (debt)(3) 6.0 (0.6)
---------- ---------- ---------
(1) Underlying (loss) before taxation is defined as reported
(loss) before taxation before non-underlying items and is included
as an alternative performance measure in order to aid users in
understanding the ongoing performance of the Group.
(2) Non-underlying items consist of non-recurring costs,
share-based payments and the Commercial Agreement amortisation.
(3) Net cash / (debt) is cash and cash equivalents less loan
facility.
A reconciliation between the terms used in the above table and
those in the financial statements can be found in the Financial
Review.
-- Prior to lockdown the Group had started the year well with
turnover and profitability ahead of 2019
-- The business continued to grow market share (as measured by
FENSA), reaching 9.2% in Q1 2020 vs 8.5% in 2019
-- Operations ceased on 23 March and hence revenue and
profitability between March and May were materially lower versus
the prior year as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic
-- The business undertook a Placing of new shares in April which
raised GBP8.2m to strengthen the Group's balance sheet
-- Operations were restarted in a phased way from late May and
order intake since then has been strong, achieving year on year
growth of 26.4% across the three month period between June to
August
-- Increased sales have required a step-up in headcount across
survey, manufacturing, customer services and installation resource
to match demand
-- The business has experienced some operational challenges
linked to the ramp up in capacity, the service / warranty backlog
from lockdown and recent, temporary disruption to the supply
chain
-- Despite these challenges, progress has been made with
operational capacity increases delivering revenue growth year on
year of 13.5% for July and August
-- The difference between the operational capacity requirement
and order intake growth since the restart has resulted in an order
book that was 45% higher than the prior year at the end of June
increasing to 82% higher at the end of August
-- Good progress has been sustained on operational KPIs, with
average price per frame up 3.0% versus H1 2019 to GBP688 and
average order value up by 4.1% versus H1 2019 to GBP3,440
-- The Group's financial position is strong, with net cash of
GBP6.0m at the end of H1 2020 (31 December 2019: GBP0.4m).
Alongside the Placing of new shares, the deferral of a GBP2.5m VAT
payment until March 2021 has contributed to this favourable net
cash position
Outlook
-- The Group has seen strong customer demand since the restart
of operations in May and we aim to continue to invest behind this
growth and maintain a strong order book
-- This growth in order intake has recently been matched by
delivering a 20% increase in survey, processing, manufacturing and
fit capacity which will enable double digit revenue growth in the
second half of the year
-- The operational challenges linked to recovery and growth have
adversely impacted customer service levels post-lockdown and
investment is now underway to address this rapidly
-- There remains significant uncertainty around the short and
medium term and the Board continues to closely monitor the Group's
performance to understand the sustainability of recent performance
levels with the intention of providing guidance for the full year
as soon as it is credible to do so
-- The Board believes that as the clear national value brand in
our category, with recent strong increases in market share, the
business is well positioned to navigate the likely challenges
ahead
Commenting on the results, Mike Gallacher, CEO said:
"The first half of 2020 presented some major management and
operational challenges which were successfully navigated with
strong support from our shareholders, effective Government
intervention and the efforts of all of our staff. Clearly their
health and safety, along with that of our customers, was our
priority during the lockdown period.
Since we re-emerged from lockdown, our strong order intake
performance has been sustained and we have moved to ramp up
operational capacity to match this demand. We have experienced some
operational challenges linked to recovering the backlog of warranty
work from the lockdown, our growth and recent supplier performance.
We are focused on ensuring that the impact of these issues on our
good customer service levels is addressed promptly.
Concurrently, despite the challenges in the first half of 2020
our team have been able to make tangible progress on our
longer-term strategic priorities. This includes modernising our
brand, professionalising our sales force and embedding best
practice compliance processes.
It is not yet clear if the recent strong trading performance is
sustainable in light of the current economic environment and any
uncertainty is likely to impact consumer confidence. However our
strong order book, our position as a leading national value brand
and the progress made on modernising the business leaves us well
positioned to sustain our momentum as we move into 2021."
Enquiries:
Safestyle UK plc via FTI Consulting
Mike Gallacher, Chief Executive Officer
Rob Neale, Chief Financial Officer
Zeus Capital (Nominated Adviser & Joint Broker) Tel: 0203
Dan Bate / Dan Harris / Dominic King 829 5000
Liberum Capital Limited (Joint Broker) Tel: 0203
Neil Patel / Jamie Richards 100 2100
FTI Consulting (Financial PR) Tel: 0203
Alex Beagley / James Styles 727 1000
About Safestyle UK plc
The Group is the leading retailer and manufacturer of PVCu
replacement windows and doors to the UK homeowner market. For more
information please visit www.safestyleukplc.co.uk or
www.safestyle-windows.co.uk.
CEO's Statement
Summary of Performance
The majority of the Group's financial performance measures and
KPIs for H1 2020 were adversely impacted by the cessation of
installation activity for nine weeks as a result of the COVID-19
pandemic and lockdown period.
Prior to the lockdown, the Group had started the year well, with
the performance in the eight week period to February 2020
representing revenue growth of GBP0.6m (3.4%), gross profit growth
of GBP0.6m (11.4%) and an underlying profit before taxation of
GBP0.9m, an improvement of GBP1.4m ( 273%) versus the same period
for the prior year.
The improvement in these metrics demonstrated the continued
upward trend in the Group's financial performance and the positive
impact of the measures taken as part of phase two of the Turnaround
Plan. These actions increased revenues, improved the gross margin
and drove an increase in underlying profit before taxation.
The impact on the financial performance of the business as a
result of COVID-19 from late March to the end of May resulted in
the Group incurring losses in those three months totalling in
excess of GBP6m. Encouragingly, following the restart of
installation activity at the end of May, the Group returned to a
modest profit in June on activity levels that were, for most of
that month, lower than pre-COVID-19 levels as a result of the
Group's phased return to work.
Impact of and response to COVID-19
Following the 'Stay at Home' measures guidance published by the
Government on 23 March in relation to the COVID-19 outbreak, the
Group took prompt and decisive action with the aims of:
-- protecting its people, business and customers,
-- providing the best service possible through the crisis, and
-- ensuring it had both the capability and plans in place to
accelerate rapidly out of the crisis.
As a result, the Group announced that it was temporarily closing
all of its locations across the country and also temporarily
ceasing all installation activities for a nine week period.
The Group had prepared for this event well ahead of time and
measures were swiftly put in place to garner all available
Government support to protect cash. 95% of the Group's staff were
formally furloughed at 80% pay at the end of March and the CEO,
Chairman and each of the Non-Executive Directors took a 50%
reduction in salary / fees for the duration of the crisis.
Having put in place these immediate measures and with the safety
of the Group's staff and customers secured, the key objective for
the Board was to ensure the business was well capitalised, using
all possible options available to the Group, including the
Government's Job Retention Scheme. The Group obtained furlough
support totalling GBP1.8m in H1 2020, almost entirely in relation
to furloughed staff during the April and May period.
To further underpin the balance sheet and to build a strong cash
buffer in order to support the Group through and out of the crisis,
the Group performed an equity Placing and raised GBP8.2m in net
proceeds from existing and new shareholders. This Placing was
achieved in conjunction with appropriate reductions in covenant
targets for both the duration of the lockdown and our restart
alongside an extension of the borrowing facility to October 2023.
The strong and rapid support from our shareholders and banking
partners was a critical enabler for managing the business smoothly
through this challenging time.
The Group restarted its operations in late May, following the
creation of a comprehensive restart plan which was based on a
phased and measured return to work. Detailed policies were put in
place to ensure staff and customer safety in line with the COVID-19
Secure guidelines.
With the necessary health and safety measures in place,
manufacturing restarted on 18 May, followed swiftly by
installations, survey and in-home selling by the end of May.
Colleagues working in our various support functions also returned
to work in line with this phased restart, the pace of which was
linked to activity levels. Many of our returning colleagues
continued to work from home in the initial phase. However our
offices have been altered to be COVID-safe and we now have the vast
majority of staff working normally.
Trading and Operational Update
Since the business restarted operations at the end of May and
despite the impact of local lockdowns we have been able to return
to largely normal operations. The COVID-safe policies and practices
developed during the shutdown are now well embedded and continue to
be welcomed by consumers.
Demand has continued to be strong since our restart with order
intake performance between June to August showing growth of 26.4%
versus 2019. This has been driven by three factors:
Market Demand: While there is limited real time market data
available we can be clear that the RMI (repair, maintenance and
improvement) category has benefited from a shift in consumer
spending from leisure, travel and entertainment into home
improvement. Our continued, albeit reduced, commercial operations
(via remote selling) during lockdown gave us early visibility of
this demand and informed our decision to recommence sales
operations promptly and earlier than previously planned.
Sales and Marketing Improvements: Significant progress has been
made in recovering from the Group's challenges in 2018 and then
modernising our sales and marketing functions. This has included
embedding and leveraging our digital transformation project,
rebuilding a modern and compliant door canvass force and making
improvements in our digital marketing capabilities.
Competitive Set: While the majority of our competition comes
from local businesses, our national competitors impact us most in
digital lead acquisition. Our national competitors restarted
operations later than our business and one performed a major
restructuring coming out of the lockdown.
The latter two factors have driven an improved market share (as
measured by FENSA) from 8.5% in 2019 to 11.1% in Q2 2020 although
the Q2 share figures are likely to be skewed by the speed of our
restart versus our competitors.
Operationally the business has continued to ramp up its capacity
in order processing, survey, manufacturing and installation. Our
target has been to increase capacity by over 20% as rapidly as
possible in the face of strong trading. Delivering this ramp up in
capacity has required investment in recruitment and staffing levels
and as a result installation revenue has lagged sales performance.
The capacity increase is now in place and offers the opportunity to
better manage recent growth in our order book.
The business has also had to navigate some limited supply
disruption caused by the effect of industry-wide supply
constraints. In general, the impact of this has been mitigated by
our close relationship with our major suppliers and proactive
building of buffer stocks through the summer.
Strategic Priorities
2020 has provided an unprecedented series of challenges and
these, combined with the impact of the lockdown, have impacted the
pace of delivery of phase three of our Turnaround Plan. However, I
am pleased that progress has still been made in critical
improvement projects:
Modernising our Brand: Our intent has been to apply best in
class marketing to our value brand, developing new communications
that take us beyond the iconic "Buy One, Get One Free" advertising
that consumers know. In addition, we have aimed to modernise our
digital marketing, leveraging our scale by working with new, best
in class partners. In both areas we have made good progress and the
benefits from the appointment of Journey Further as our new digital
marketing agency are already mitigating growth in digital lead
acquisition costs.
As a result of this work, we will be ready to recommence
investment in sustained brand communication when the market context
is judged appropriate.
Sustaining Momentum in Compliance and Customer Service: While
impacted by the lockdown and the disruption caused by COVID-19,
progress has again been made in relation to compliance and customer
service. Compliance processes are now embedded and audited and we
continue to focus on Health and Safety, Data Protection and
ensuring we sell fairly.
The business has dedicated resources for warranty and service
work and the lockdown has generated a significant backlog of work
which we are now resourcing to recover. This has reduced our normal
levels of customer service and we are actively communicating with
impacted customers while prioritising emergency cases. We expect to
have largely addressed this backlog by the end of the year.
Improving the National Sales and Depot Network: Despite the huge
operational challenges, progress has been made and during the
fourth quarter of 2020, a limited number of 'role model' depots and
branches will be in place. Within our Sales organisation, we have
now completed the recruitment of a new regional management
structure that will support our sustained focus on levelling up
branch performance using the new sales management information
systems.
Inevitably, the pace of delivering our strategic agenda has been
slowed in 2020 but we will exit the year having made tangible
progress in modernising the business and enabling our future
growth.
Outlook
Operationally, the business has invested during Q3 in building
the capacity to install at a significantly higher level than
originally planned for 2020. This will result in improved financial
delivery in October and November, albeit risks remain around
continued supply chain disruption.
It is recognised that the market outlook remains uncertain and
it is not yet clear if the recent strong trading performance is
sustainable. Any negative economic and employment news is likely to
impact consumer confidence in the months ahead. As a result, the
business is prepared for what may well be a challenging trading
context as we move into 2021, though it remains well positioned to
navigate these challenges.
Mike Gallacher
Chief Executive Officer
17 September 2020
Financial Review
6 months ended June 2020 6 months ended June 2019
Underlying Non-underlying Total Underlying Non-underlying Total Change in
items(1) items(1) underlying %
------------ --------------- --------- ------------ --------------- --------- -------------
Financials GBP000 GBP000 GBP000 GBP000 GBP000 GBP000
------------ --------------- --------- ------------ --------------- --------- -------------
Revenue 42,082 42,082 64,413 64,413 (34.7%)
------------ --------------- --------- ------------ --------------- --------- -------------
Cost of sales (32,349) (32,349) (47,771) (47,771) 32.3%
------------ --------------- --------- ------------ --------------- --------- -------------
Gross Profit 9,733 9,733 16,642 16,642 (41.5%)
------------ --------------- --------- ------------ --------------- --------- -------------
Other Operating
Expenses (14,207) (520) (14,727) (16,745) (1,649) (18,394) 15.2%
------------ --------------- --------- ------------ --------------- --------- -------------
Operating (Loss) (4,474) (520) (4,994) (103) (1,649) (1,752) (4233.3%)
------------ --------------- --------- ------------ --------------- --------- -------------
Finance Income - - 1 1 (100.0%)
------------ --------------- --------- ------------ --------------- --------- -------------
Finance Costs (619) (619) (728) (728) 14.9%
------------ --------------- --------- ------------ --------------- --------- -------------
(Loss) Before
Taxation (5,093) (520) (5,613) (830) (1,649) (2,479) (513.5%)
------------ --------------- --------- ------------ --------------- --------- -------------
Taxation 622 170
------------ --------------- --------- ------------ --------------- --------- -------------
(Loss) for the
Year (4,991) (2,309)
------------ --------------- --------- ------------ --------------- --------- -------------
Basic EPS (pence
per share) (5.0p) (2.8p)
------------ --------------- --------- ------------ --------------- --------- -------------
Diluted EPS (pence
per share) (5.0p) (2.8p)
------------ --------------- --------- ------------ --------------- --------- -------------
Cash and Cash
equivalents 10,120 5,374
------------ --------------- --------- ------------ --------------- --------- -------------
Loan facility (4,095) (6,016)
------------ --------------- --------- ------------ --------------- --------- -------------
Net cash /
(debt)(2) 6,025 (642)
------------ --------------- --------- ------------ --------------- --------- -------------
Change
KPIs H1 2020 H1 2019 %
Average Order Value
(GBP inc VAT) 3,440 3,304 4.1%
-------- -------- -----------------
Average Frame Price
(GBP inc VAT) 688 669 3.0%
-------- -------- -----------------
Frames installed - units 62,697 98,966 (36.6%)
-------- -------- -----------------
Orders installed 15,054 24,029 (37.4%)
-------- -------- -----------------
Frames per order 4.16 4.12 1.1%
-------- -------- -----------------
Financial and KPI headlines
-- Frames and orders installed of 62,697 and 15,054 respectively
represent a 36.6% and 37.4% reduction versus H1 2019 due to the
lower installations activity as a result of the lockdown as
described above.
-- Average frame price improved by 3.0% to GBP688 as a result of
the annualisation of small price increases in H1 2019 and,
moreover, as a result of an increased focus on discount levels.
This average price improvement was achieved despite a reduced mix
of higher average-priced composite guard doors which was 7.7% in H1
2020 compared to 10.0% in H1 2019.
-- Revenue decreased by 34.7% to GBP42.1m which is again due to
the cessation of installation activity for part of the period.
-- Gross profit decreased by GBP6.9m (41.5%) while the gross
margin percentage reduced by 271bps to 23.1%. A year on year
improvement in gross margin percentage was being delivered prior to
the lockdown, however, when activities paused, the business
continued to incur a level of fixed costs alongside a continuation
of investment in the order book during the lockdown and into June
which culminated in an order book that was 45% ahead of the prior
year at the end of June.
-- Underlying other operating expenses(3) reduced by GBP2.5m
(15.2%) to GBP14.2m. Reduced investment in TV advertising versus
the prior year, a GBP1.1m reclaim under the Government's
Coronavirus Job Retention Scheme ('CJRS') claim and annualisation
of cost reduction activities in the prior year all contributed to
the year on year reduction.
-- Reported other operating expenses reduced by GBP3.7m (20.1%)
to GBP14.7m as a result of the items described above along with a
reduction in non-recurring costs which have reduced following
completion of the actions taken as part of the cost reduction
initiatives under phase two of the Group's Turnaround Plan.
-- Finance costs have decreased year on year as a result of
reduced borrowing facility costs due to lower utilisation (and thus
lower fees) in relation to the GBP3m revolving credit facility.
-- Underlying (loss) before taxation(4) was a loss of GBP(5.1)m
(H1 2019: loss of GBP(0.8)m) with the increased loss attributable
to the impact of COVID-19 and the subsequent lockdown period on the
trading performance of the business.
-- Non-underlying items were GBP0.5m for the period (H1 2019:
GBP1.6m), full details of which are provided on the following pages
of this Financial Review.
-- Reported (loss) before taxation was a loss of GBP(5.6)m (H1 2019: loss of GBP(2.5)m).
-- Net cash / (debt)(2) was GBP6.0m versus net (debt) of
GBP(0.6)m at the end of H1 2019 and net cash of GBP0.4m at 31
December 2019. The improved cash position is despite the losses
incurred in the first half of the year and is a result of a
successful Placing of new shares in April which raised net proceeds
of GBP8.2m and the agreed deferral of tax payments originally
payable during the lockdown period.
References
(1) See later section in this Financial Review
(2) Net cash / (debt) is cash and cash equivalents less loan
facility
(3) Underlying other operating expenses are defined in the
'Underlying performance measures' section below and the
reconciliation between this measure and the GAAP measure is shown
in the 'Financials' table at the front of this Financial Review
(4) Underlying (loss) before taxation is defined in the
'Underlying performance measures' section below and the
reconciliation between this measure and the GAAP measure is shown
in the 'Financials' table at the front of this Financial Review
Underlying performance measures
In the course of the last two years, the Group encountered a
series of unprecedented and unusual challenges. These gave rise to
a number of significant non-underlying items in 2018 and
consequential items continued into 2019 as the Group addressed the
impact of these challenges, predominantly as part of the Turnaround
Plan.
Consequently, adjusted measures of underlying gross profit,
underlying other operating expenses and underlying (loss) before
taxation have been presented as the primary measures of financial
performance. Adoption of these measures results in non-underlying
items being excluded to enable a meaningful evaluation of the
performance of the Group compared to prior periods.
These alternative measures are entirely consistent with how the
Board monitors the financial performance of the Group and the
underlying profit / (loss) before taxation is the basis of
performance targets for incentive plans for the Executive Directors
and senior management team.
Non-underlying items consist of non-recurring costs, share-based
payments and Commercial Agreement amortisation. A full breakdown of
these items is shown below. Non-recurring costs are excluded
because they are not expected to repeat in future years. These
costs are therefore not included in the Group's primary performance
measures as they would distort how the performance and progress of
the Group is assessed and evaluated.
Share-based payments are subject to volatility and fluctuation
and are excluded from the primary performance measures as such
changes year to year would again potentially distort the evaluation
of the Group's performance year to year.
Finally, Commercial Agreement amortisation is also excluded from
the primary performance measures because the Board believes that
exclusion of this enables a better evaluation of the Group's
underlying performance year to year.
Revenue
Revenue for the period was GBP42.1m compared to GBP64.4m last
year, representing a decrease of 34.7% as a result of no
installation activity taking place across late March, April and
May. The year on year revenue performance up to the end of Feb
represented year on year growth of 3.4%.
The impact on volumes was a similar decline of 36.6% to 62,697
frames installed compared to 98,966 in the equivalent period last
year. The revenue decline was less than this volume decline as a
result of improvements in the non-volume performance measures as
follows:
-- The average frame price increased by 3.0% to GBP688 (H1 2019:
GBP669). The annualisation benefit of list price increases
alongside a larger beneficial component coming from reduced
discount levels were the major drivers of the improvement.
-- The improvement in the average frame price was also despite a
reduced mix of higher average-priced composite guard doors which
reduced to 7.7% of installed volumes (H1 2019: 10.0%).
-- The above favourable average price gains were offset by a
marginal increase in uptake of our consumer finance offers and a
higher proportion of our industry-leading 0% finance option, the
cost of which is deducted from revenue. The Group has seen
continued growth in the uptake of consumer finance products in the
last five years, but the rate of uptake increase has begun to
slow.
-- The other reported operational KPIs also improved versus H1
2019 with the metric of frames per order increasing by 1.1% to 4.16
which is a reversal of a declining trend seen in the last 18 months
and follows the rebalancing of mix out of higher-value composite
doors.
-- Finally, the average order value also improved by 4.1% to
GBP3,440. Progress in these operational KPIs remains a critical
area of ongoing focus for the Group as it looks to drive improving
quality of revenue alongside volume recovery out of lockdown and as
part of phase three of the Turnaround Plan.
Gross profit
Gross profit decreased by GBP6.9m (41.5%) in the period to
GBP9.7m (H1 2019: GBP16.6m) while the gross margin percentage
reduced by 271bps to 23.1% (H1 2019: 25.8%). The reduction in
installation volumes described above was the main contributor to
the year on year reduction in gross margin. The factors behind the
dilution in gross margin percentage were as follows:
-- Prior to the lockdown, the Group was continuing to experience
increased costs per leads generated as a result of continued
competition driving up 'Pay Per Click' and other digital marketing
channel costs. Moving into the middle of the first half, despite
the cessation of installation activities, the Group continued,
albeit on a much-reduced scale, to respond via remote-selling
methods to customer enquiries during the lockdown period. These
enquiries were generated with minimal levels of investment as
compared to spend prior to the lockdown.
Following the restart of operations, the Group experienced a
strong consumer response as it stepped up its lead generation
activities across all lead sources and although the costs per lead
increased as volumes grew when compared to the very low levels
during lockdown, these were still markedly lower than the first two
months of the year with costs per lead in June over 10% favourable
compared to June 2019.
The cumulative impact of the above is that order intake has
significantly exceeded the level of installation activity which has
generated an order book that is 45% ahead of the prior year
position at the end of June. This investment has diluted gross
margin % in the first half.
-- Aside from the volume and order intake investment, gross
margin was impacted favourably by a GBP0.7m reclaim under the CJRS
scheme from the UK Government to contribute to the costs of the
Group's furloughed factory employees.
This CJRS reclaim was largely offset as a result of the
following :
-- The Group continued to incur some fixed costs that could not
be fully removed during lockdown such as leased equipment
costs;
-- Finally, as the business restarted its factory in late May,
the initial few weeks of operation were part of a staged return to
work plan which inevitably resulted in a lower level of
productivity than normal whilst COVID-secure ways of working were
fully embedded.
Underlying other operating expenses
Underlying other operating expenses reduced by GBP2.5m (15.2%)
to GBP14.2m versus H1 2019 . There were reductions in the amount
invested in TV advertising versus H1 2019 of GBP0.4m which
partially offset the increased investment in digital media lead
generation channels referred to above. Excluding this reduced TV
advertising spend, all other operating expenses were, in total,
GBP2.1m lower than the first half of last year with variances
versus the prior period in specific areas as follows:
-- In addition to the amount received and included within gross
margin as described above, the Group also received GBP1.1m for its
CJRS reclaim for furloughed staff costs that are expensed within
underlying other operating expenses. Half of the amount reclaimed
was for staff furloughed in April with the remaining half spread
across May and June. This reducing reclaim profile after April
reflects the gradual return to work of furloughed staff through the
second half of May with 60% of staff returned to work by the end of
May and 93% by the end of June.
-- Alongside the impact of the CJRS reclaim, salary costs were
GBP1.0m lower than the prior period as a result of the
annualisation benefit of the restructuring activities taken during
2019 as part of the Turnaround Plan.
-- IT licensing and infrastructure costs increased by GBP0.2m
versus the prior year as the rollout of technology across the Group
continues, most notably the implementation of Office 365 and
Microsoft Teams which proved crucial to underpin remote working
during the lockdown and to enable a phased return to office working
after restrictions were lifted.
-- Finally, costs associated with the Group's response to
implementing COVID-19 safeguards including enhanced cleaning
routines for offices, the provision of Personal Protective
Equipment to the workforce and providing safety screens around
workstations totalled GBP0.2m in the first half of the year. The
annualised equivalent of these costs is forecast to be
approximately GBP0.5m.
Underlying (loss) before taxation
Underlying (loss) before taxation was a loss of GBP(5.1)m in the
period (H1 2019: a loss of GBP(0.8)m). This is before the
non-underlying items described below.
Non-underlying items
A total of GBP0.5m has been separately treated as non-underlying
items for the year (H1 2019: GBP1.6m). The prior period included
GBP1.1m of costs related to restructuring activities as part of
phase two of the Turnaround Plan.
The current period's costs consist of GBP0.1m of non-recurring
costs (H1 2019: GBP1.1m), a GBP0.2m shared based payment charge (H1
2019: GBP0.3m) and GBP0.2m (H1 2019: GBP0.2m) of Commercial
Agreement (Intangible Asset) amortisation. The table below shows
the full breakdown of these items:
H1 2020 H1 2019
GBP000 GBP000
-------- --------
Restructuring and operational
costs 100 571
-------- --------
Impairment of right-of-use assets 36 524
-------- --------
Total non-recurring costs (note
5) 136 1,095
-------- --------
Commercial Agreement amortisation 226 226
-------- --------
Equity-settled share based payment
charges 158 328
-------- --------
Total non-underlying items 520 1,649
-------- --------
The Commercial Agreement amortisation is a result of an
agreement entered into in 2018 with Mr M. Misra which encompassed a
five year non-compete agreement and the provision of services by Mr
Misra in support of the continued recovery of Safestyle. The Group
agreed consideration with Mr Misra subject to the satisfaction of
both clear performance conditions by him over five years and
Safestyle's trading performance in 2019.
Subject to satisfying the strict terms of the agreement, the
consideration takes the form of an allotment by Safestyle to Mr
Misra of four million ordinary shares of 1 pence each in the
capital of the Group and a payment of cash consideration that,
following conclusion of the 2019 year, has been confirmed at
GBP1.0m. Both the share issue and the cash consideration payment
are due to take place in October 2020.
The items classified as non-recurring costs on the Consolidated
Income Statement, the share based payment charge and the
amortisation of the intangible asset created as a result of the
Commercial Agreement reached in 2018 have all been excluded from
the underlying (loss) before taxation performance measure to enable
a meaningful evaluation of the performance of the Group from year
to year.
Earnings per share
Basic earnings per share for the period were a loss of (5.0)p
compared to a loss of (2.8)p in H1 2019. The basis for these
calculations is detailed in note 6.
Net cash / (debt) and cashflow
As reported in the CEO's statement, a key aspect of the Group's
response to the COVID-19 pandemic to mitigate the impact on the
Group's liquidity as a result of the cessation of revenue-driving
activity was to raise funds via a share Placing.
The Placing was completed at the end of April with net proceeds
of GBP8.2m raised. Alongside this injection of additional
liquidity, the Group also secured a two year extension to its
existing borrowing facilities until October 2023. Covenant waivers
for the lockdown period and reductions in covenant targets for the
remainder of the facility were also secured.
At the end of the first half, net cash was GBP6.0m (H1 2019: net
(debt) of GBP(0.6)m). GBP4.5m of the Group's GBP7.5m facility,
being that of the term loan, was fully drawn with the remaining
GBP3m revolving credit facility undrawn.
The deferral of payments to HRMC that have been agreed represent
a year on year working capital benefit of GBP3.0m and contribute to
the above net cash position increase. The majority of this
deferral, being that of a GBP2.5m VAT liability originally payable
during the lockdown period, will be paid in March 2021. Since the
restart of operations, the Group has not continued to defer
additional tax payments owed to HMRC and, with the exception of the
deferred amount, is paying all its liabilities normally.
Net cash (outflow) / inflow from operating activities, including
the cashflow impact of non-underlying items, was an outflow of
GBP(0.1)m (H1 2019: inflow of GBP1.6m). This net outflow was a
result of the losses in the first half which were largely offset by
working capital benefits as a result of the deferred HMRC payments
and an increase in payments on account for customer deposits
received in line with the growth in the order book described
above.
Capital expenditure in the first half of GBP0.3m was the same as
that in H1 2020. Whilst some capex expenditure was deferred as part
of the Group's response to the pandemic, critical investment in
replacing and upgrading IT hardware continued.
After the GBP8.2m proceeds in relation to the share Placing and
the lease payments of GBP2.1m on leased assets (H1 2019: GBP2.2m),
net cash inflow in the period was GBP5.7m (H1 2019: GBP1.2m).
Dividends
In order to protect the Group's strengthened liquidity position
in an environment where confidence and consumer demand remain
uncertain, the Board is not declaring an interim dividend for this
year (2019: GBPnil per share).
Going Concern
Following the lockdown, the Group is meeting its day-to-day
working capital requirements with liquidity levels built as a
result of the share Placing in April 2020 and through the
utilisation of part of its borrowing facility. The Group is also
generating positive operating cashflows following the restart of
operations. The Group's borrowing facility consists of a GBP4.5m
Term Loan which was drawn on inception of the facility and a
revolving credit facility of GBP3.0m that is currently undrawn.
Cash and cash equivalents are GBP10.1m at the end of June.
The Directors have prepared a number of forecasts covering the
period to December 2021 which include a number of assumptions in
relation to sales volume, pricing growth and margin improvements,
with various levels of written sales reductions applied to
sensitise the forecasts.
A level of uncertainty as to the future impact of the COVID-19
pandemic remains and has been separately considered as part of the
directors' consideration of the going concern basis of preparation.
It remains difficult to predict the overall outcome and future
impact of COVID-19 at this stage. However, in some of the scenarios
modelled, specifically those which include a second national
lockdown, there is a risk of breaching the Group's financial
covenants despite the EBITDA covenant headroom increasing during
the first half of the year.
The Directors note that the financial position of the Group is
stronger than prior to the lockdown in March and is confident that
liquidity could be managed should the lockdown period be of
comparable length to that of the previous one.
Based on the above, having made these enquiries, the Directors
believe that it remains appropriate to prepare the financial
statements on a going concern basis. However, the specific second
lockdown scenario would indicate the existence of a material
uncertainty which may cast significant doubt on the Group's ability
to continue as a going concern and that the Group may, as a
consequence, be unable to realise its assets and discharge its
liabilities in the normal course of business. The financial
statements do not include any adjustments that would result from
the basis of preparation being inappropriate.
Rob Neale
Chief Financial Officer
17 September 2020
Consolidated Income Statement
Unaudited Unaudited Audited
Note 6 months 6 months 12 months
ended ended ended
30 June 2020 30 June 2019 31 December
2019
GBP000 GBP000 GBP000
Revenue 42,082 64,413 126,237
Cost of sales (32,349) (47,771) (94,337)
Gross profit 9,733 16,642 31,900
Other operating expenses (14,727) (18,394) (34,332)
Operating (loss) (4,994) (1,752) (2,432)
Finance income - 1 2
Finance costs (619) (728) (1,402)
------------- ------------- ------------
Net Finance Costs (619) (727) (1,400)
------------- ------------- ------------
(Loss) before taxation (5,613) (2,479) (3,832)
------------- ------------- ------------
Underlying (loss) before
taxation before non-recurring
costs, Commercial Agreement
amortisation and share
based payments (5,093) (830) (1,518)
Non-recurring costs 5 (136) (1,095) (1,850)
Commercial Agreement
amortisation (226) (226) (452)
Share based payments (158) (328) (12)
(Loss) before taxation (5,613) (2,479) (3,832)
Taxation 622 170 526
(Loss) for the period (4,991) (2,309) (3,306)
============= ============= ============
(Loss) earnings per
share
Basic (pence per share) 6 (5.0p) (2.8p) (4.0p)
Diluted (pence per
share) 6 (5.0p) (2.8p) (4.0p)
There is no other comprehensive income for the period.
All operations were continuing throughout all periods.
Consolidated Statement of Financial Position
Unaudited Unaudited Audited
Note 6 months 6 months 12 months
ended ended ended
30 June 2020 30 June 2019 31 December
2019
GBP000 GBP000 GBP000
Assets
Intangible assets - Trademarks 504 504 504
Intangible assets - Goodwill 20,758 20,758 20,758
Intangible assets - Software 824 1,783 1,122
Intangible assets - Other 1,510 1,962 1,736
Property, plant and equipment 12,213 12,980 12,633
Right-of-use assets 6,318 7,488 6,012
Deferred taxation asset 1,508 693 886
Non-current assets 43,635 46,168 43,651
Inventories 3,346 2,727 2,725
Trade and other receivables 6,184 6,880 3,999
Cash and cash equivalents 10,120 5,374 4,435
Current assets 19,650 14,981 11,159
Total assets 63,285 61,149 54,810
============= ============= ============
Equity
Called up share capital 8 1,328 828 828
Share premium account 8 89,495 81,845 81,845
Profit and loss account 5,176 11,366 10,009
Common control transaction
reserve (66,527) (66,527) (66,527)
29,472 27,512 26,155
Liabilities
Trade and other payables 7 19,990 15,564 15,384
Lease liabilities 4,291 3,432 2,482
Deferred taxation liability 17 53 17
Provision for liabilities
and charges 1,089 857 990
Current liabilities 25,387 19,906 18,873
Provision for liabilities
and charges 1,888 3,468 1,891
Lease liabilities 2,443 4,247 3,900
Borrowing facility 4,095 6,016 3,991
Non-current liabilities 8,426 13,731 9,782
Total liabilities 33,813 33,637 28,655
Total equity and liabilities 63,285 61,149 54,810
============= ============= ============
Consolidated Statement of Changes in Equity
Share Share Profit Common Total
capital premium and loss control equity
account transaction
reserve
GBP000 GBP000 GBP000 GBP000 GBP000
Balance at 30 June 2019 828 81,845 11,366 (66,527) 27,512
Total comprehensive (loss)
for the period - - (997) - (997)
Transactions with owners
recorded
directly in equity:
Equity settled share based
payment transactions - - (316) - (316)
Deferred taxation asset
taken
to reserves - - (44) - (44)
Balance at 31 December
2019 828 81,845 10,009 (66,527) 26,155
------------------- ------------------- ---------------- ------------------- --------
Total comprehensive (loss)
for the period - - (4,991) - (4,991)
Issue of new shares 500 7,650 - - 8,150
Transactions with owners
recorded
directly in equity:
Equity settled share based
payment transactions - - 158 - 158
Balance at 30 June 2020 1,328 89,495 5,176 (66,527) 29,472
=================== =================== ================ =================== ========
Consolidated Statement of Cash Flows
Unaudited Unaudited Audited
6 months ended 6 months ended 12 months ended
Note 30 June 2020 30 June 2019 31 December 2019
GBP000 GBP000 GBP000
Cash flows from operating activities
(Loss) for the period (4,991) (2,309) (3,306)
Adjustments for:
Depreciation of plant, property and equipment 771 850 1,666
Depreciation and impairment of right-of-use
assets 1,939 2,490 4,322
Amortisation of intangible fixed assets 441 433 904
Finance income (0) (1) (2)
Finance expense 619 727 1,402
IT project impairment - - 113
Equity settled share based payments charge 158 328 12
Taxation (credit) (622) (170) (526)
---------------- ---------------- -----------------
(1,685) 2,348 4,585
(Increase) in inventories (621) (311) (309)
(Increase) / decrease in trade and other
receivables (2,185) (2,402) 479
Increase in trade and other payables 7 4,606 278 98
Increase / (decrease) in provisions 96 14 (1,430)
IFRS 16 prepaid lease costs - (428) (413)
IFRS 16 onerous lease costs - - 67
---------------- ---------------- -----------------
1,896 (2,849) (1,508)
Other interest (paid) (280) (327) (1,079)
---------------- ---------------- -----------------
Taxation received - 2,457 2,540
Net cash (outflow) / inflow from operating
activities (69) 1,629 4,538
---------------- ---------------- -----------------
Cash flows from investing activities
Acquisition of property, plant and equipment (254) (28) (86)
Interest received 0 1 2
Acquisition of intangible fixed assets (15) (231) (341)
Net cash (outflow) from investing activities (269) (258) (425)
Cash flows from financing activities
Proceeds from loans and borrowings - 2,000 -
Proceeds from issue of share capital 8 8,150 - -
Transaction costs relating to loans and
borrowings (9) - (235)
Payment of right-of-use leases (2,118) (2,160) (3,606)
Net cash inflow / (outflow) from financing
activities 6,023 (160) (3,841)
Net inflow in cash and cash equivalents 5,685 1,211 272
Cash and cash equivalents at start of period 4,435 4,163 4,163
Cash and cash equivalents at end of period 10,120 5,374 4,435
================ ================ =================
Notes to the interim financial information
1 General information
The interim financial information for the six months ended 30
June 2020 and for the six months ended 30 June 2019 does not
constitute statutory financial statements as defined in Section 434
of the Companies Act 2006 and is neither reviewed nor audited. The
comparative figures for the year ended 31 December 2019 are not the
Group's consolidated statutory accounts for that financial year but
are extracted from those accounts which have been reported on by
the Group's auditor and delivered to the Registrar of Companies.
The report of the auditor was (i) unqualified and (ii) did not
contain a statement under Sections 498(2) or 498(3) of the
Companies Act 2006. The report of the auditor did however draw
attention by way of emphasis, without qualifying the report, to the
material uncertainty due to COVID-19 identified by the Directors in
relation to the going concern basis of preparation. Further
reference to the going concern basis of preparation for these
interim financial statements can be found in note 3.
2 Basis of preparation
The condensed consolidated interim financial information for the
period ended 30 June 2020 has been prepared in accordance with IAS
34, 'Interim financial reporting' as adopted by the European
Union.
Selected explanatory notes are included to explain events and
transactions that are significant to an understanding of the
changes in financial position and performance of the Group since
the last annual consolidated financial statements as at and for the
year ended 31 December 2019.
The condensed consolidated interim financial information should
be read in conjunction with the annual financial statements for the
period ended 31 December 2019 which have been prepared in
accordance with International Financial Reporting Standards
("IFRS") as adopted by the European Union.
The accounting policies adopted in the condensed interim
financial information are consistent with those set out in the
financial statements for the period ended 31 December 2019.
3 Going concern
The financial statements are prepared on a going concern basis
which the Directors believe to be appropriate for the following
reasons.
The Group made a statutory loss of GBP(5.0)m in the 6 months to
30 June 2020 (June 19: GBP(2.3)m loss) and had net current
liabilities of GBP5.7m (June 2019: GBP4.9m). As described in the
financial review, a key aspect of the Group's response to the
COVID-19 pandemic was to raise funds via a share Placing in April
with net proceeds of GBP8.2m raised. In addition to this injection
of additional liquidity, the Group also secured an extension to its
existing borrowing facilities until October 2023. The facility
agreement contains certain covenants, including a minimum EBITDA to
be tested on a rolling 12 month basis, which was revised in
conjunction with the extension such that the minimum EBITDA for
covenant compliance has been reduced for 2020 and 2021. In
addition, the 2022 and 2023 covenants are lower than the 2020/21
covenants previously in place. Covenant waivers for the lockdown
period were also secured. As at 30 June 2020, the GBP4.5m term loan
was fully drawn with the remaining GBP3.0m revolving credit
facility undrawn. The Group had net cash of GBP6.0m as at 30 June
2020 (June 2019 net (debt): GBP(0.6)m).
The Directors have prepared forecasts covering the period to
December 2021, built from the detailed Board approved forecast for
2020. The forecast includes a number of assumptions in relation to
sales volume and pricing growth, and margin improvements, with
various levels of written sales reduction applied to sensitise the
forecasts.
Whilst the Group's trading and cash flow forecasts have been
prepared using current trading assumptions, the operating
environment presents a number of challenges which could negatively
impact the actual performance achieved. Excluding the potential
impact of COVID-19 which is considered below, these risks include,
but are not limited to, achieving forecast levels of order intake,
the impact on customer confidence as a result of general economic
conditions, Brexit and achieving forecast margin improvements. If
future trading performance significantly underperforms the Group's
forecasts, this could impact the ability of the Group to comply
with its covenant tests over the period of the forecasts.
A level of uncertainty as to the future impact of the COVID-19
pandemic remains and has been separately considered as part of the
Directors' consideration of the going concern basis of preparation.
In modelling the impact on the Group's trading and cashflow
projections, the downside scenario considered the possibility of a
second national lockdown in November and December 2020, resulting
in the full cessation of all order intake and installation
activities. The assumption of reduced Government support for a
second lockdown was incorporated into the modelling resulting in a
larger loss across November and December than for the previous
lockdown period between March and May. Order intake was
subsequently modelled to reduce to 70% of the 2020 budget for the
first 3 months of 2021 and to increase slightly to 80% of the 2020
budget for the remainder of 2021. The Group notes the higher level
of consumer demand post lockdown which has led to a significant
year on year increase in the order book. Due to the strong order
book at the time of reporting, the assumption is that as happened
during the first lockdown period, this will be maintained
throughout the second lockdown period, enabling installations to
recommence in January 2021 following lifting of the lockdown
period.
It remains difficult to predict the overall outcome and future
impact of COVID-19 at this stage and the duration of disruption to
written and fitted sales activity could be longer than modelled if
the pandemic worsens. However, in some of the scenarios modelled,
there is a risk of breaching the Group's financial covenants
despite the covenant headroom now standing at GBP1.7m.
The Directors note that the financial position of the Group is
stronger than prior to the lockdown in March and is confident that
liquidity could be managed should the lockdown period be of
comparable length to that of the previous one.
Based on the above, the Directors believe that it remains
appropriate to prepare the financial statements on a going concern
basis. However, the specific downside scenario detailed above would
indicate the existence of a material uncertainty which may cast
significant doubt on the Group's ability to continue as a going
concern and that the Group may, as a consequence, be unable to
realise its assets and discharge its liabilities in the normal
course of business. The financial statements do not include any
adjustments that would result from the basis of preparation being
inappropriate.
4 Significant accounting policies
Revenue recognition
The Group earns revenues from the sale, design, manufacture and
installation of domestic double-glazed replacement windows and
doors. There is no significant judgement involved in the estimation
of revenues and no material contract assets or liabilities are
recognised. IFRS 15 requires revenue earned from contracts to be
recognised in line with performance obligations based on a
five-step model.
Safestyle recognises revenue based on the stand-alone selling
price of each performance obligation. The selling price is
determined based on the contract agreed with the customer.
Subsidies payable by Safestyle to third party finance providers
where the customer takes out a finance product are recognised as a
reduction to revenue. On inception of the contract the performance
obligation is identified for each of the distinct goods or services
to be provided to the customer. The following summarises the
performance obligations identified and provides information on the
time of when they are satisfied and the related revenue recognition
policy.
Revenue on sale of windows and doors
The performance obligation in this case is the final
installation of products and the performance obligation is
satisfied at the point in time that installation is complete and
control has therefore passed to the customer. Revenue is recognised
at this point and payment is due on installation.
Survey fees
The performance obligation in this case is the completion of a
technical survey assessing the feasibility of the proposed
contract. The revenue is recognised at the point at which the
survey fee becomes non-refundable, which is after a period of time
defined in the contract. The survey fee is payable in advance of
the survey being carried out.
Non-recurring items
Items that are either material because of their nature,
non-recurring or whose significance is sufficient to warrant
separate disclosure and identification within the consolidated
financial statements are referred to as non-recurring items. The
separate reporting of non-recurring items is important to provide
an understanding of the Group's underlying performance.
5 Non-recurring costs
Unaudited Unaudited Audited
6 months 6 months 12 months
ended ended ended
30 June 2020 30 June 2019 31 December
2019
Non-recurring costs consist
of the following: GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
Restructuring and operational
costs 100 571 1,058
Impairment of right-of-use
assets 36 524 692
IT Project impairment - - 113
Commercial Agreement service
fee - - (13)
136 1,095 1,850
------------- ------------- ------------
Restructuring costs are expenses incurred, including redundancy
payments, as a result of changes being made to reduce the cost
structure of the business.
Impairment of right-of-use assets relates to the closure of
properties identified as right-of-use assets during the period.
For further detail on the 2019 non-recurring charges, please
refer to the 2019 Annual Report.
6 Earnings per share
Unaudited Unaudited Audited
6 months 6 months 12 months
ended ended ended
30 June 2020 30 June 2019 31 December
2019
(Loss) per share (pence) (5.0) (2.8) (4.0)
Diluted (loss) per share
(pence) (5.0) (2.8) (4.0)
a) Basic earnings per share
The calculation of basic earnings per share has been based on
the following profit attributable to ordinary shareholders and
weighted-average number of shares outstanding.
Unaudited Unaudited Audited
6 months 6 months 12 months
ended ended ended
30 June 2020 30 June 2019 31 December
2019
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
(Loss) attributable to
ordinary shareholders (4,991) (2,309) (3,306)
============= ============= =============
Weighted-average number
of ordinary shares (basic)
No of shares No of shares No of shares
'000 '000 '000
In issue during the period 99,753 82,809 82,809
============= ============= =============
b) Diluted earnings per share
Due to the net loss for the period, diluted loss per share is
the same as basic.
The calculation of diluted earnings per share has been based
on the following profit attributable to ordinary shareholders
and weighted-average number of ordinary shares outstanding after
adjustment for the effects of all dilutive potential ordinary
shares.
Unaudited Unaudited Audited
6 months 6 months 12 months
ended ended ended
30 June 2020 30 June 2019 31 December
2019
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
(Loss) attributable to
ordinary shareholders (4,991) (2,309) (3,306)
============= ============= =============
No of shares No of shares No of shares
'000 '000 '000
Weighted-average number
of ordinary shares (basic) 99,753 82,809 82,809
Effect of conversion
of share options and
share consideration 7,383 7,155 7,166
Weighted-average number
of ordinary shares (basic)
at period end 107,136 89,964 89,975
============= ============= =============
The average market value of the Group's shares for the purpose
of calculating the dilutive effect of share options was based
on quoted market prices for the period during which the options
were outstanding.
7 Trade Payables
Unaudited Unaudited Audited
6 months 6 months 12 months
ended ended ended
30 June 2020 30 June 2019 31 December
2019
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
Trade payables 6,018 6,659 6,675
Other taxation and social
security costs 5,856 2,981 2,167
Other payables 2,451 1,754 3,197
Accruals and deferred
income 5,665 4,170 3,345
19,990 15,564 15,384
------------- ------------- ------------
Trade payables represents the total amounts payable by Safestyle
as part of normal business operations.
Other taxation and social security costs are amounts owed to
HMRC for VAT and PAYE / NIC. The balance has increased at the end
of June as a result of the deferral of VAT payments due during the
lockdown period in accordance with HMRC's COVID-19 payment deferral
scheme.
Other payables have increased versus June 2019 as a result of a
higher number of customer deposits and survey fees received in the
first half of the year that are deferred until the revenue can be
recognised. This growth is consistent with the year on year
increase in the order book as described in the CEO's statement.
8 Share Capital and Share Premium
Share Share Total
capital premium equity
GBP000 GBP000 GBP000
Balance at 30 June 2019 828 81,845 82,673
Balance at 31 December 2019 828 81,845 82,673
--------- --------- --------
Issue of new shares 500 7,650 8,150
Balance at 30 June 2020 1,328 89,495 90,823
--------- --------- --------
Issue of ordinary shares
On 28 April 2020, the general meeting of shareholders approved
the issue of 50,000,000 ordinary shares. Following Admission, the
total number of ordinary shares and voting rights in the Group was
increased to 132,808,896 (2019: 80,808,896). The net proceeds of
GBP8.2m comprise GBP8.5m cash proceeds net of GBP0.3m of expenses
incurred in issuing new shares.
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END
IR FZGMLNVDGGZM
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