TIDMUSF TIDMUSFP
RNS Number : 3378S
US Solar Fund PLC
16 March 2021
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16 March 2021
US SOLAR FUND PLC (USF, the "Company")
Annual Results to 31 December 2020 and Dividend Announcement
US Solar Fund PLC (LSE: USF) is pleased to announce its annual
results. This covers the period ending 31 December 2020.
Highlights to 31 December 2020
-- Over the course of the year, the Investment Manager has
focused on achieving its operational and dividend targets.
-- As at 31 December 2020, the Company had closed on five
transactions since IPO, totalling 41 assets. These solar projects
are spread across four states in the US with a total a capacity of
443MW(DC) . All 41 assets have power purchase agreements (PPAs) for
100% of generation with investment-grade offtakers for a weighted
average term remaining of 14.9 years.
-- All of USF's assets are fully operational as at 31 December
2020. At the end of the period, USF had also executed binding
agreements to acquire an initial 25% interest in an operating solar
plant, Mount Signal 2 (MS2), bringing USF's portfolio to a total of
493MW(DC) of fully operating assets with a weighted average
investment-grade PPA term remaining of 15.4 years.
-- USF's NAV at 31 December 2020 was $194.2 million. The 31
December 2020 NAV increased by US$1.3 million from 30 June 2020,
due to construction cost savings on the Milford project, strong
operating performance, and discount rate reductions as the
portfolio moved to a fully operational state.
-- All 41 operating assets held for the year ending 31 December
2020 have been externally valued by KPMG, with the Company
recognising a small gain across the portfolio due to positive
working capital movements and increased portfolio valuations
reflecting initial uplifts as assets commence operations.
-- In December 2020, one of the Company's wholly owned US
subsidiaries signed a new $25 million revolving credit facility
with Fifth Third Bank National Association (FTB Facility). The FTB
Facility provides liquidity for capital expenditures, working
capital and general corporate purposes. The FTB Facility is
currently undrawn.
-- As at 31 December 2020, the Investment Manager's pipeline
included 2.8GW(DC) of high-quality assets, with an aggregate value
of approximately $2.7 billion in cash equity value and a
weighted-average PPA term remaining of 15 years.
Dividends
-- The Board is pleased to declare a dividend for the quarter
ended 31 December 2020 of 0.50 cents per ordinary share. The
dividend will be paid on 12 April 2021 to shareholders on the
register as at the close of business on 26 March 2021. The
ex-dividend date is 25 March 2021. This brings the total dividend
for FY 2020 to 2.0 cents per ordinary share.
-- With all projects now operating, USF confirms its 2021 annual
dividend target of 5.5 cents per ordinary share, which will
continue to be paid quarterly and be covered with operating
cashflows.
-- The Company expects to declare the dividend for the quarter
ended 31 March 2021 in June 2021, for payment in July 2021.
Highlights after Period-End
-- On 10 February 2021, the Company announced it was assessing
debt and equity fund raising options. Any further fundraising is
subject to Board and customary regulatory approvals and the Company
will make a further announcement in due course.
Gill Nott, Chair of the Company said:
"US Solar Fund has continued to operate smoothly during 2020,
and the Board would like to thank the Investment Manager's staff
for their all hard work over the year. Despite challenges caused by
the pandemic, they delivered seven in-construction assets through
to full commercial operation. The entire portfolio is now fully
operational and the Company confirms its 5.5 cent dividend target
for 2021, to be fully covered with operating cashflows.
Having delivered on its IPO goals, the Company is now
well-positioned for future growth. Following November's
Presidential elections, certainty over the political direction
points to a supportive policy outlook for renewables and an
accelerating energy transition in the US. The Investment Manager
continues to maintain a pipeline of very attractive investment
opportunities. We thank shareholders for their support and look
forward to providing updates on further progress in the year
ahead."
The Company's Annual Report and Financial Statements for the
period ending 31 December 2020 are available on the Company's
website at:
www.ussolarfund.co.uk/investor-centre/key-documents-and-disclosure
and can be found at
https://data.fca.org.uk/#/nsm/nationalstoragemechanism .
For further information, please contact:
US Solar Fund
Liam Thomas +61 2 8622 9123
Cenkos Securities plc
James King
Tunga Chigovanyika
Will Talkington +44 20 7397 8900
Jefferies International Limited
Stuart Klein
Gaudi le Roux
Neil Winward +44 20 7029 8000
KL Communications +44 20 3995 6673
Charles Gorman
Charlotte Stickings
About US Solar Fund plc
US Solar Fund plc listed on the premium segment of the London
Stock Exchange in April 2019, following its successful US$200m IPO.
The Company's investment objective is to provide investors with
attractive and sustainable dividends with an element of capital
growth by investing in a diversified portfolio of solar power
assets in North America and other OECD countries in the
Americas.
The Company acquires or constructs, owns and operates solar
power assets that are expected to have an asset life of at least 30
years and generate stable and uncorrelated cashflows by selling
electricity to creditworthy offtakers under long-term power
purchase agreements (or PPAs).
Further information on the Company can be found on its website
at http://www.ussolarfund.co.uk .
About the Investment Manager
USF is managed by New Energy Solar Manager (NESM). NESM also
manages New Energy Solar, an Australian Securities Exchange
(ASX)-listed fund. NESM manages over US$1.4bn of invested capital
across US and Australian solar plants.
NESM is owned by E&P Funds, the funds management division of
E&P Financial Group, an ASX listed company (ASX: EP1) with over
A$20 billion of funds under advice.
Chair's Statement
I am pleased to present the second Annual Report for US Solar
Fund plc for the period ended 31 December 2020. It has been a very
unusual year as a result of the global pandemic of COVID-19. The
Board and the Investment Manager have met regularly, albeit
virtually, and I am delighted
to say that the Company has continued to operate smoothly
despite working remotely and with the Board and the Investment
Manager spread across three continents. Also, in the face of the
obvious challenges that the pandemic presented during the period,
the Company reached completion of its final in-construction project
on time and under budget, the entire 443MWDC, 41 project portfolio
as at 31 December 2020, is now fully operational, and the Company
is working toward financial close on its sixth acquisition; Mount
Signal 2 (MS2). The operating assets performed well overall during
2020, with actual production of 374 gigawatt-hours (GWh); 2% above
budgeted or forecast production of 365GWh; and 4% above
weather-adjusted expected production of 360GWh. The recently
approved US coronavirus relief package, proposed by the Biden
administration, extends the existing Investment Tax Credit (ITC)
incentives for solar at current rates for two years. Although this
move does not impact USF's operational projects, it supports the
economics of new solar projects which is expected to positively
impact USF's investment pipeline.
The Board believes that USF's long-term contracted cash flows
are particularly attractive in the current environment of low
interest rates and reduced dividends in many sectors. The share
price has traded up during the period from $1.05 at the end of the
last financial year (31 December 2019), to $1.075 at the end of
this financial year (31 December 2020). Including dividends paid
and reinvested during the period, shareholder total return since
inception is 10.13%.
POTENTIAL FUNDRAISING
With the Initial Public Offering (IPO) proceeds now fully
committed, the Company is considering raising additional funds. The
funds are expected to be used to refinance the Heelstone portfolio
(Acquisition Four) and acquire a further 25% of MS2 in California
(bringing the Company's total ownership of the MS2 asset to 50%).
The two transactions are expected to benefit the Company by
reducing gearing, and increasing the size and diversification of
the overall portfolio. Refer to Note 24 of the financial statements
for further information on the potential equity raise.
PERFORMANCE
USF's NAV at 31 December 2020 was $194.2 million, a 0.7%
increase from the $192.9 million reported at 30 June 2020 and 0.1%
decrease from the 31 December 2019 NAV of $194.4 million. The 0.6
cent per share increase in NAV from 30 June 2020 reflects the
payment of 1 cent per share in dividends and 0.7 cents per share in
operating expenses, which were more than offset by a 2.3 cents per
share net gain in the fair value of underlying investments. In
accordance with Company policy, all 41 operating assets held for
the year ending 31 December 2020 have been externally valued by
KPMG, with the Company recognising a small gain across the
portfolio due to positive working capital movements and increased
portfolio valuations. The share price has also increased from $1.05
at 31 December 2019 ($0.94 at 30 June 2020) to $1.075 over the
period and was trading at $1.06 as at 1 March 2021. The shares have
traded at an average premium to NAV of 10.9% since 31 December
2020.
PORTFOLIO PROGRESS
During 2020, USF closed the acquisition of ten operational
utility-scale solar projects in Oregon (140MWDC), 22 operational
projects in North Carolina (130MWDC) and two operational projects
in California (7MWDC). USF also executed a binding agreement to
acquire a 25% interest in MS2 (Tranche One), a 200MWDC
utility-scale solar operating project in California, with an option
to acquire a further 25% (Tranche Two). All 41 of USF's Solar
Assets have power purchase agreements (PPAs) in place with
contracted prices for 100% of electricity generated. Including the
initial 25% stake in MS2, the PPAs have an average remaining term
of 15.4 years at period end.
DIVID
The Company paid a dividend of 0.50 cents per share in February
2021 for the quarter ending 30 September 2020, totalling 1.00 cent
per share for the six-month period, representing an annualised
dividend of 2% when measured against the initial issue price of
$1.00 per share.
With all projects now operating, USF expects to cover the
remaining 2020 dividend with operating cash flows and confirms its
2021 annual dividend target of 5.5 cents per ordinary share will be
covered with operating cash flows.
OUTLOOK AND COVID-19
The US is a leading global solar market and is expected to
experience continued strong growth in the future. The Company
believes this growth will largely be driven by the improving cost
competitiveness of solar PV and, to a lesser extent, the continued
support of state and federal incentive schemes.
During the period, the global COVID-19 pandemic continued
spreading and the US has struggled to contain the virus. However,
the initiation of the roll-out of vaccinations around the US, as
well as the major focus on tackling the COVID-19 pandemic by
President Biden, are both positive signs for 2021. Despite the
widespread economic impact of the disruption caused by the virus,
the US solar market has fared well during the period. Operation and
construction of Solar Assets were both largely deemed essential
services and allowed to continue with little
or no interruption. Indications of further growth of the
industry also remain strong. 87GWDC of utility-scale PV is expected
to be installed in the US from 2021 to 2025 according to Wood
Mackenzie. This includes an 8.5GWDC increase on earlier forecasts
(one month prior), after the ITC extension was recently passed. As
solar is the most cost-effective new build source of power
generation in much of the US, the outlook for solar in the US
remains positive.
In January 2021 US legislation extended US$900 billion of
coronavirus relief and decreed US$1.4 trillion in federal spending
and tax extensions. The legislation delays the ITC step down for
solar power by two years. This means that the ITC will remain at
26% for projects that begin construction by the end of 2022, will
fall to 22% for projects that begin construction by the end of
2023, and then fall to 10% for commercial solar projects commencing
construction from 2024 onwards. These changes do not impact the
Company's operating portfolio, with the tax equity funding process
completed on all projects, however the Company expects to see
increased acquisition opportunities resulting from the ITC
increase.
The impact of COVID-19 on the Company has been limited despite
shutdown measures reducing US electricity demand by 3.8% during
2020. Despite this, USF's assets were able to continue to operate
as normal and sell 100% of power generated to their offtakers, with
utilities and system operators balancing electricity supply and
demand by reducing output from their own generation or, where
specific contractual mechanisms exist, requesting that other
generators reduce output. With the COVID-19 recovery underway in
the US, the EIA forecasts electricity demand will increase by 2.1%
in 2021, placing USF in a strong position to continue to operate
and sell power as normal.
We believe that USF's core business is resilient and that the
Company is well-positioned for future growth. At the period end,
all 41 projects acquired are operational and are generating revenue
for the Company. The Board is pleased with the progress made
committing all the IPO proceeds and successfully achieving a fully
operating portfolio to support the full 5.5 cent per share dividend
as targeted at IPO.
We are keen to engage with shareholders at the Annual General
Meeting (AGM) which we intend to hold in May 2021. Details of the
timing and nature of the meeting will be confirmed in due course
subject to applicable Government legislation and restrictions.
GILL NOTT
CHAIR
16 March 2021
Investment Manager's Report
SUMMARY OF THE PERIOD
Over the course of the year, the Investment Manager has focused
on achieving its operational and dividend targets. As at 31
December 2020, the Company had closed on five transactions since
IPO, totalling 41 assets. These solar projects are spread across
four states in the US with a total capacity of 443MWDC. All cash
flows from these assets are contracted in the US with
investment-grade offtakers for a weighted average of 14.9
years.
On 31 December 2020, the Company announced it had executed
binding agreements to acquire up to a 50% interest in a 200MWDC
operating solar plant located in the Imperial Valley of Southern
California, MS2. On completion of Tranche One of the transaction,
expected in March 2021, USF's total portfolio will be 493MWDC of
fully operational assets, with a weighted average investment-grade
PPA term of 15.4 years as at 31 December 2020.
COVID-19 had no material impact on USF's operating or
construction assets over the period. All assets within the
portfolio are now operating with USF's final in-construction asset
reaching its commercial operations date under its PPA in November
2020; on time and under budget. At year end all assets are
operational and generating revenues for USF.
INVESTMENT PORTFOLIO PROGRESS
USF closed three acquisition transactions between 1 January 2020
and 31 December 2020. In January 2020, USF closed the acquisition
of eight operating utility-scale solar power projects totalling
approximately 39MWDC in North Carolina from Greenbacker Renewable
Energy Company LLC. The projects commenced commercial operations
between 2012 and 2015 and all are selling 100% of their electricity
output under fixed-price long-term PPAs with Duke Energy Progress
and Progress Energy (S&P rating for both: A-).
In March 2020, USF closed the acquisition of a portfolio of 22
operating utility-scale solar power projects located in North
Carolina, Oregon and California, with a total capacity of 177MWDC
from Heelstone Renewable Energy, LLC. The assets sell 100% of their
electricity output under fixed-price long-term PPAs to a variety of
investment-grade offtakers (S&P ratings: from BBB+ to A).
In June 2020, USF closed the acquisition of four mechanically
complete utility-scale solar power projects located in Oregon
totalling 61MWDC. The portfolio was acquired from Southern Current
LLC. The Investment Manager announced the commissioning of the four
assets in July 2020, with the portfolio now operational. All four
projects are selling 100% of their electricity output under
long-term PPAs with Portland General Electric, an investor-owned
utility based in Portland (S&P rating: BBB+).
During the year, USF brought its remaining seven in-construction
assets to commercial operations; six in North Carolina and one in
Utah. The six North Carolina projects totaling 39MWDC achieved
commercial operations progressively during the year, with the
Investment Manager working closely with the construction contractor
to achieve operations in line with planned timeframes. These assets
are selling 100% of their electricity output to Duke Energy
Progress (S&P rating: A-), a subsidiary of Duke Energy, under
long-term PPAs.
USF's final construction asset, the 128MWDC Milford project in
Utah, achieved completion in November 2020 on time and under
budget. The Company was pleased to benefit from construction and
development cost savings of approximately $4 million as well as
approximately
$1 million from better than expected test electricity sales,
which resulted in a combined $5 million upside to the Company
compared to acquisition assumptions. Milford is selling 100% of the
electricity generated to PacifiCorp (S&P: A) for a remaining
PPA term of 24.9 years as at 31 December 2020.
USF's portfolio is now fully operational, comprising 443MWDC of
capacity across 41 projects, in four states and with a variety of
investment-grade offtakers (S&P rated: BBB+ to A). In December
2020, the Company announced it had executed binding agreements to
acquire a 25% interest in a 200MWDC operating solar plant located
in the Imperial Valley of Southern California, MS2, with an option
to acquire a further 25%. If the option of the additional 25% is
exercised, USF's total operating portfolio will be 543MWDC.
US SOLAR FUND STRUCTURE
USF invests in its US-based subsidiary, USF Holding Corp., via a
combination of debt and equity. USF is entitled to a Management
Services Agreement (MSA) fee for the provision of management
services to USF Holding Corp. In addition, the Company earns
interest on the intercompany loan. Cash may also flow from USF
Holding Corp. to USF as a dividend or return of capital, which is
distributed to USF Holding Corp. on a periodic basis from the
Company's underlying Solar Assets.
There are no restrictions on the movement of cash between USF
and its subsidiary. As of 31 December 2020, the Company and USF
Holding Corp. have available cash of $0.05 million and $14.3
million respectively, giving a total balance of $14.35 million
which may be used to meet the obligations of USF. At 31 December
2020 an undrawn $25 million revolving credit facility was in place
at USF Avon LLC (a wholly owned subsidiary of USF Holding Corp.),
providing further liquidity support.
OPERATING ASSET UPDATE
The USF portfolio was fully operational by the end of 2020. The
portfolio performed well overall during the year, with actual
production of 374 GWh. USF measures "Actual" performance against
"Forecast" and "Expected" targets. "Actual" production is the
number of GWh generated and sold to the offtaker. "Forecast" (also
called "Budget") is the P50 production forecast for the plant
before any adjustment for experienced weather conditions.
"Weather-adjusted expected" or simply "Expected" production is the
Forecast production of the plant adjusted for weather conditions
during the period. The difference between Actual and Expected
production allows an assessment of asset performance excluding the
impact of weather.
During 2020, USF's production of 374 GWh was 2% above budgeted
or forecast production of 365GWh, and 4% above weather-adjusted
expected production of 360GWh. This reflects a production index
(actual generation divided by weather-adjusted expected generation)
of 104% for the year.
UTAH
In Utah, the Company's newest asset Milford, which comprises 29%
of USF's portfolio capacity by MWDC, performed above budget and
weather- adjusted expectations between its commercial operations
date (in November 2020) and year end. Prior to commercial
operations, Milford also generated test revenue that exceeded
expectations by approximately $1 million. In December, its first
full month of operations, Milford performed above both budget and
weather-adjusted expectations.
NORTH CAROLINA
In North Carolina, performance was below the Investment
Manager's expectations during the year primarily due to
storm-related grid outages, ongoing inverter issues at the 7MWDC
Gauss site, and isolated inverter outages at other sites. Issues at
Gauss were largely resolved under a warranty claim by year end, and
inverter issues at other sites are being resolved progressively
during the first quarter of 2021.
OREGON
USF's Oregon assets, which became fully operational in the third
quarter, performed above budget but below weather-adjusted
expectations. In the third quarter, production from the Oregon
projects was reduced due to smoke and dust from West Coast
wildfires. Additionally, the Oregon sites experienced significant
snowfall during November and December thereby decreasing
weather-adjusted performance. Snow coverage of solar panels across
a site can be highly variable, and therefore snow coverage is not
included in the adjustment for actual weather conditions. As a
result, in periods where there has been snow coverage, performance
against weather-adjusted expectations will be lower.
CALIFORNIA
During the year, the two assets in California (comprising 2% of
USF's portfolio capacity by MWDC), were impacted by smoke and dust
from the West Coast wildfires. In the fourth quarter, the assets
performed below budget and weather-adjusted expectations due to
soiling. This will be addressed by a panel washing before the 2021
summer high-production period.
POTENTIAL FUNDRAISING
Given that the proceeds of the IPO are now fully committed the
Company is considering raising additional funds. The proceeds of a
further fundraising could be used as part of a refinancing of the
Heelstone (Acquisition Four) portfolio comprising 14 projects
(90MWDC) in North Carolina, six projects (79MWDC) in Oregon and two
projects (7MWDC) in California, as well as exercising the option to
acquire a further 25% of MS2 in California (bringing the Company's
total ownership of the asset to 50%). These two transactions could
benefit the Company by reducing gearing, and increasing the size
and diversification of the overall portfolio. Any further
fundraising is subject to Board and customary regulatory
approvals.
REVOLVER
In December 2020, one of the Company's wholly owned US
subsidiaries signed a new $25 million revolving credit facility
with Fifth Third Bank National Association (FTB Facility). The FTB
Facility provides liquidity for capital expenditures, working
capital, and general corporate purposes. It increases the Company's
flexibility to consider bolt-on acquisition opportunities. As the
Company grows, the FTB Facility could grow in parallel to further
support the Company's growth. The FTB Facility may be used to fund
transactions, allowing the Company to commit to transactions in the
pipeline. The FTB Facility is currently undrawn.
PIPELINE UPDATE
The pipeline has remained robust since the Company's IPO ranging
from US$1.9 billion to US$4.8 billion at any given quarter. As at
31 December 2020, the Investment Manager's pipeline included
2.8GWDC of high-quality assets, with an aggregate value of
approximately $2.7 billion in cash equity value and a
weighted-average PPA term of 15 years. This includes Tranche Two of
MS2 which gives USF the option, exercisable for up to 12 months
from completion of Tranche One, to acquire a further 25% of the
200MWDC asset. This compares to a pipeline of 2.0GWDC of assets
with a $1.9 billion cash equity value, and an average PPA term of
14 years, at 31 December 2019.
Throughout the course of the year, the Investment Manager has
screened over 13GWDC of projects, with a total cash equity value of
over $13 billion. The Investment Manager continues to take a
conservative approach to pricing. It also continues to strictly
adhere to a process that is consistent with the strategy and return
targets of the Company given the pipeline offers numerous
high-quality construction-ready and operational investment
opportunities.
THIRD-PARTY FRAUD
At the end of January 2020, the Investment Manager was the
victim of a fraud by a third-party in relation to $6.9 million of
contracted construction payments. The Company fully recovered the
entire $6.9 million within two months. Immediately following the
fraud, with the full support of the Board, the Investment Manager
appointed a major accounting firm to review its financial controls
and processes. The review was completed in March 2020 and the
Investment Manager has implemented the enhancements to its
financial controls and processes suggested by the accounting firm.
The Investment Manager has also undertaken internal and external
reviews focused on IT and email security, particularly with more
employees working remotely as a result of COVID-19 workplace access
restrictions, and recommended enhancements to cybersecurity are now
in place.
In March 2021 the Board engaged the Company's Auditor Deloitte,
LLP, to perform an Agreed Upon Procedures Engagement. This was to
confirm that the recommendations made by a third-party accounting
firm in March 2020 in connection with the Investment Manager's
financial controls and processes had been implemented by the
Investment Manager. No exceptions were noted from these
procedures.
EVENTS AFTER THE PERIOD
On 10 February 2021, the Company announced it was assessing debt
and equity fundraising options. Any further fundraising is subject
to Board and customary regulatory approvals, and the Company will
make an announcement in due course.
CORONAVIRUS
COVID-19 has had limited impact on the Company to date. Since
the outbreak, USF has made changes to its work environment to
ensure the health and safety of its employees, contractors, and
stakeholders. The New York office is staffed on a limited basis
with most of the US team working remotely using existing systems.
The Sydney office has implemented staggered access arrangements to
enable staff to work from the office while adhering to social
distancing guidelines.
The Investment Manager works with contractors and other
stakeholders to ensure that operational targets are met whilst also
meeting relevant COVID-19 requirements. Essential for economic
activity, the generation and provision of electricity in most of
the US has not been significantly disrupted by the pandemic. USF's
projects have continued to operate throughout the pandemic and
service personnel have been permitted
to travel to sites to conduct work as needed. The Investment
Manager continues to assess the current and potential impact of the
COVID-19 measures implemented by US federal and state governments
on the Company's investment strategy and operations.
The Investment Manager also monitors actual and forecast changes
in electricity and financial markets to assess the potential impact
on USF, developing scenarios and planning for a range of outcomes.
Leading indicators monitored by the Investment Manager include:
-- Electricity prices: COVID-19 restrictions of economic
activity have contributed to both reduced demand for electricity
and an oversupply of oil on global markets. These factors have
resulted in reduced electricity prices in many markets including
most US electricity markets. USF's short- to medium-term exposure
to electricity prices is limited, given its long-term PPAs (average
of 15.4 years as at 31 December 2020 when including 25% interest of
MS2).
-- Equity markets: UK equity markets have remained open during
COVID-19. Renewables funds, in particular, have seen continued
support from investors and continue to raise new capital,
demonstrating demand for the sector.
-- Tax equity markets: Since the onset of COVID-19 it has become
evident that tax equity funding may be less available than in
previous years as the outlook for US corporate profitability
remains weak, and the available pool of tax equity funding may
shrink as a result. This is not a current issue for USF as tax
equity funding is complete or committed for all USF projects and,
at this time, it is not seeking to close any further transactions
that require tax equity. The Investment Manager will continue to
monitor US tax equity markets given the likely requirement for tax
equity for any future transactions.
-- Debt markets: In the earlier stages of COVID-19, debt
providers increased pricing and reduced lending volumes in response
to the uncertainty of current and future economic conditions. Since
then, debt markets have largely normalised and USF successfully put
in place its FTB Facility later in the year. USF's existing assets
are largely insulated from short- to medium-term movements in debt
markets, with all debt in place for levered projects (Acquisition
One, Four and Five). Long-term debt is in place for Acquisition
Four and debt does not mature until after 2030. Refinancing of
Acquisition Four is at USF's option and subject to raising
additional equity capital.
-- Insurance: COVID-19 has caused the global insurance market,
and specifically the renewables industry insurance market, to
experience changes such as increased deductible amounts and
additional conditions for business interruption coverage for events
occurring offsite. The Investment Manager is working with
underwriters and insurance brokers to implement appropriate
coverage to address site risks.
For further information please see our COVID-19 Statement at
www.ussolarfund.co.uk/usf-and-covid-19-pandemic .
INVESTMENT PORTFOLIO
As at 31 December 2020 the Company owned 41 operational,
utility-scale solar projects, totalling 443MWDC. USF is expected to
financially close on Tranche One of its sixth acquisition, a 25%
stake in the 200MWDC MS2 project in Southern California, in March
2021, bringing the total operational portfolio to 42 projects with
a total capacity of 493MWDC.
Table 1: Portfolio Overview
Asset Capacity Location Acquisition Acquisition Energy Offtaker Offtaker Remaining COD
(MWDC) Date Credit PPA Length
Rating (Years)
Milford 127.8 Utah One Aug 19 PacifiCorp S&P: A 24.9 Nov 20
-------- -------------- ----------- ----------- ----------------- --------- ----------- ------
Southern
California
Mount Signal 49.9 California Six Mar 19 Edison S&P: BBB 19.4 Jan 20
-------- -------------- ----------- ----------- ----------------- --------- ----------- ------
Portland General
Suntex 15.3 Oregon Five Jun 20 Electric S&P: BBB+ 10.6 Jul 20
-------- -------------- ----------- ----------- ----------------- --------- ----------- ------
Portland General
West Hines 15.3 Oregon Five Jun 20 Electric S&P: BBB+ 10.6 Jun 20
-------- -------------- ----------- ----------- ----------------- --------- ----------- ------
Portland General
Alkali 15.1 Oregon Five Jun 20 Electric S&P: BBB+ 10.7 Jun 20
-------- -------------- ----------- ----------- ----------------- --------- ----------- ------
Portland General
Rock Garden 14.9 Oregon Five Jun 20 Electric S&P: BBB+ 10.7 Jun 20
-------- -------------- ----------- ----------- ----------------- --------- ----------- ------
Chiloquin 14.0 Oregon Four Mar 20 PacifiCorp S&P: A 11.0 Jan 18
-------- -------------- ----------- ----------- ----------------- --------- ----------- ------
Dairy 14.0 Oregon Four Mar 20 PacifiCorp S&P: A 10.8 Mar 18
-------- -------------- ----------- ----------- ----------------- --------- ----------- ------
Tumbleweed 14.0 Oregon Four Mar 20 PacifiCorp S&P: A 11.0 Dec 17
-------- -------------- ----------- ----------- ----------------- --------- ----------- ------
Lakeview 13.7 Oregon Four Mar 20 PacifiCorp S&P: A 10.8 Dec 17
-------- -------------- ----------- ----------- ----------------- --------- ----------- ------
Turkey Hill 13.2 Oregon Four Mar 20 PacifiCorp S&P: A 10.8 Dec 17
-------- -------------- ----------- ----------- ----------------- --------- ----------- ------
Merrill 10.5 Oregon Four Mar 20 PacifiCorp S&P: A 10.8 Jan 18
-------- -------------- ----------- ----------- ----------------- --------- ----------- ------
Duke Energy
Lane II 7.5 North Carolina Two Dec 19 Progress S&P: A- 12.7 Jul 20
-------- -------------- ----------- ----------- ----------------- --------- ----------- ------
Duke Energy
Pilot Mountain 7.5 North Carolina Two Dec 19 Carolinas S&P: A- 12.7 Sep 20
-------- -------------- ----------- ----------- ----------------- --------- ----------- ------
Virginia Electric
Davis Lane 7.0 North Carolina Four Mar 20 & Power S&P: BBB+ 12.0 Dec 17
-------- -------------- ----------- ----------- ----------------- --------- ----------- ------
Virginia Electric
Gauss 7.0 North Carolina Four Mar 20 & Power S&P: BBB+ 12.6 Oct 18
-------- -------------- ----------- ----------- ----------------- --------- ----------- ------
North Carolina
Jersey 7.0 North Carolina Four Mar 20 Electric S&P: A- 7.0 Dec 17
-------- -------------- ----------- ----------- ----------------- --------- ----------- ------
Duke Energy
Sonne Two 7.0 North Carolina Four Mar 20 Carolinas S&P: A- 10.6 Dec 16
-------- -------------- ----------- ----------- ----------------- --------- ----------- ------
Duke Energy
Red Oak 6.9 North Carolina Four Mar 20 Progress S&P: A- 11.0 Dec 16
-------- -------------- ----------- ----------- ----------------- --------- ----------- ------
Virginia Electric
Schell 6.9 North Carolina Four Mar 20 & Power S&P: BBB+ 11.0 Dec 16
-------- -------------- ----------- ----------- ----------------- --------- ----------- ------
Duke Energy
Siler 421 6.9 North Carolina Four Mar 20 Progress S&P: A- 10.6 Dec 16
-------- -------------- ----------- ----------- ----------------- --------- ----------- ------
Duke Energy
Cotten 6.8 North Carolina Four Mar 20 Progress S&P: A- 10.9 Nov 16
-------- -------------- ----------- ----------- ----------------- --------- ----------- ------
Duke Energy
Tiburon 6.7 North Carolina Four Mar 20 Carolinas S&P: A- 10.6 Dec 16
-------- -------------- ----------- ----------- ----------------- --------- ----------- ------
Duke Energy
Monroe Moore 6.6 North Carolina Four Mar 20 Carolinas S&P: A- 10.6 Dec 16
-------- -------------- ----------- ----------- ----------------- --------- ----------- ------
Duke Energy
Four Oaks 6.5 North Carolina Three Dec 19 Progress S&P: A- 9.8 Oct 15
-------- -------------- ----------- ----------- ----------------- --------- ----------- ------
Duke Energy
Princeton 6.5 North Carolina Three Dec 19 Progress S&P: A- 9.8 Oct 15
-------- -------------- ----------- ----------- ----------------- --------- ----------- ------
Duke Energy
Tate 6.5 North Carolina Two Dec 19 Progress S&P: A- 12.7 Aug 20
-------- -------------- ----------- ----------- ----------------- --------- ----------- ------
Duke Energy
Freemont 6.4 North Carolina Four Mar 20 Carolinas S&P: A- 10.6 Dec 16
-------- -------------- ----------- ----------- ----------------- --------- ----------- ------
Duke Energy
Mariposa 6.4 North Carolina Four Mar 20 Carolinas S&P: A- 10.7 Sep 16
-------- -------------- ----------- ----------- ----------------- --------- ----------- ------
S. Robeson 6.3 North Carolina Three Jan 20 Progress Energy S&P: A- 6.6 Jul 12
-------- -------------- ----------- ----------- ----------------- --------- ----------- ------
Duke Energy
Sarah 6.3 North Carolina Three Dec 19 Progress S&P: A- 9.5 Jun 15
-------- -------------- ----------- ----------- ----------------- --------- ----------- ------
Duke Energy
Nitro 6.2 North Carolina Three Dec 19 Progress S&P: A- 8.9 Jul 15
-------- -------------- ----------- ----------- ----------------- --------- ----------- ------
Duke Energy
Sedberry 6.2 North Carolina Four Mar 20 Progress S&P: A- 10.6 Dec 16
-------- -------------- ----------- ----------- ----------------- --------- ----------- ------
Duke Energy
Willard 6.0 North Carolina Two Dec 19 Progress S&P: A- 12.7 Oct 20
-------- -------------- ----------- ----------- ----------------- --------- ----------- ------
Duke Energy
Benson 5.7 North Carolina Two Dec 19 Progress S&P: A- 12.7 Aug 20
-------- -------------- ----------- ----------- ----------------- --------- ----------- ------
Duke Energy
Eagle Solar 5.6 North Carolina Two Dec 19 Progress S&P: A- 12.7 Aug 20
-------- -------------- ----------- ----------- ----------------- --------- ----------- ------
San Diego Gas &
Granger 3.9 California Four Mar 20 Electric S&P: BBB+ 15.7 Sep 16
-------- -------------- ----------- ----------- ----------------- --------- ----------- ------
San Diego Gas &
Valley Center 3.0 California Four Mar 20 Electric S&P: BBB+ 15.9 Dec 16
-------- -------------- ----------- ----------- ----------------- --------- ----------- ------
Duke Energy
County Home 2.6 North Carolina Four Mar 20 Carolinas S&P: A- 10.6 Sep 16
-------- -------------- ----------- ----------- ----------------- --------- ----------- ------
Progress
1 2.5 North Carolina Three Jan 20 Progress Energy S&P: A- 11.3 Apr 12
-------- -------------- ----------- ----------- ----------------- --------- ----------- ------
Progress
2 2.5 North Carolina Three Jan 20 Progress Energy S&P: A- 7.0 Apr 13
-------- -------------- ----------- ----------- ----------------- --------- ----------- ------
Duke Energy
Faison 2.3 North Carolina Three Dec 19 Progress S&P: A- 9.3 Jun 15
-------- -------------- ----------- ----------- ----------------- --------- ----------- ------
Grand Total 492.9 15.4
-------- -------------- ----------- ----------- ----------------- --------- ----------- ------
ACQUISITIONS
As of 31 December 2020, the Company had closed five
acquisitions. Acquisitions One and Two completed in 2019, and
Acquisitions Three, Four and Five were completed in 2020.
In December 2020, the Company announced it had executed binding
agreements to acquire a 25% interest in MS2, a 200MWDC operating
solar plant located in the Imperial Valley of Southern California,
with an option to acquire a further 25%. Having already paid a $2.3
million deposit in December 2020, USF will fund the remainder of
the $23 million Tranche One purchase price using a combination of
available cash and the FTB Facility. Including MS2, the total
committed capital is $194.4 million (with $179.2 million invested
as at 31 December 2020).
Table 2 shows USF's completed and committed acquisitions as well
as near-term growth options, being the acquisition of a further 25%
stake in MS2, and the refinancing of the Acquisition Four
portfolio. As the Company is fully invested and committed,
executing these growth options is subject to the Company raising
sufficient further equity capital. Figure 7 shows USF's portfolio
by stage since IPO.
Table 2: Portfolio Acquisition Commitments and Growth
Options
US$(m) Invested Remaining Commitment Total Commitment
(as at 31
Dec 2020)
Acquisition One (Completed) 30.0 - 30.0
---------- -------------------- ----------------
Acquisition Two (Completed) 42.6 (5.5) 37.1
---------- -------------------- ----------------
Acquisition Three (Completed) 36.1 - 36.1
---------- -------------------- ----------------
Acquisition Four (Completed) 38.3 - 38.3
---------- -------------------- ----------------
Acquisition Five (Completed) 29.9 - 29.9
---------- -------------------- ----------------
Acquisition Six Trache One
(March 2021 Expected Completion) 2.3 20.7 23.0
---------- -------------------- ----------------
Total Committed and Invested 179.2 15.2 194.4
---------- -------------------- ----------------
Acquisition Six Trache Two - 21.0 to 23.0 21.0 to 23.0
(Growth Option)
---------- -------------------- ----------------
Acquisition Four Refinancing
(Growth Option) - 80.0 80.0
---------- -------------------- ----------------
Total Including Growth Options 179.2 116.2 to 118.2 295.4 to 297.4
---------- -------------------- ----------------
US SOLAR MARKET UPDATE
Despite current pandemic conditions, US solar photovoltaic (PV)
installations accounted for 43% of new US electricity-generating
capacity additions from Q1 to Q3 2020, representing the largest
share of new capacity addition by type, followed by natural gas
with 30%. During Q3 2020, 2.7 gigawatts (GWDC) of utility-scale PV
capacity was installed in the US, representing:
-- a 90% increase compared to Q3 2019;
-- a 370% increase compared to Q3 five years prior; and
-- the largest third quarter for US utility-scale PV since 2016.
This 2.7GWDC of utility-scale PV deployed brings 2020 cumulative
installed capacity to 7.6GWDC through to the end of Q3 as seen in
the figure below. A further 7GWDC is expected to be completed by
the end of December 2020, which will put 2020 on track to be the
largest year for US utility-scale PV installations.
According to Wood Mackenzie, the US utility-scale PV contracted
pipeline grew by a further 7GWDC over the quarter to reach a record
high of 69.2GWDC. The growth has been driven by continued expansion
of state-level renewable energy targets as well as targets set by
large corporates, utilities, and municipalities. While there have
been concerns about the impact of COVID-19 on new project
development, utility-scale PV is expected to remain the most
economically competitive electricity source in the US. Voluntary
procurement, where procurement is primarily driven by the
attractive economics of utility-scale PV, continues to be the top
driver of new projects contracted in the US at 53% of total
projects in Q3 2020, as seen in Figure 9 below. The US
utility-scale PV market is expecting to see a rise in Renewable
Portfolio Standards (RPS) driven solar installations as state
governments, utilities and corporations set more stringent
renewable and carbon reduction targets. During 2020, utilities in
states including California, Colorado and Washington announced
carbon reduction targets to align with state policies, but some
went further, setting targets above these policies. Since 2018,
nine states have raised their RPS and carbon reduction targets.
Although the pandemic heightened uncertainty in financial and
electricity markets, the utility-scale solar market has continued
to expand. As at Q3 2020, Wood Mackenzie has not reported any
pandemic-related delays in US utility-scale PV construction. As a
result of the Investment Tax Credit (ITC) extension in January
2021, Wood Mackenzie increased their 2021-2025 US utility-scale PV
capacity additions forecast by 8.5GWDC to 87GWDC (one month after
its original forecast) and utilities across the US have continued
to ramp up solar procurement in anticipation of the revised ITC
timetable.
In December 2020, the pandemic relief package included a
two-year extension on the ITC for solar systems across the US, with
the Solar ITC remaining at 26% for projects that begin construction
by the end of 2022 (previously set to drop from 26% to 22% for
projects that begin construction in 2021). The ITC then steps down
to 22% for projects that begin construction by the end of 2023 and
then 10% for commercial projects commencing construction from 2024
onwards. As a result of the extension, Wood Mackenzie forecasts US
utility-scale PV installations will increase by 10% between 2021
and 2025 due to developers having more breathing room to spread
projects out to 2024 and 2025. Although these changes do not impact
USF's current operating portfolio, the Investment Manager expects
to see increased acquisition opportunities later in 2021 through
2023, and that the other components of the relief package will have
a positive impact on the already buoyant renewable energy market in
the US.
With President Biden now in the White House, the renewables
industry is poised for strong support and growth. President Biden
has released an outline of the "Build Back Better" plan that
includes a $2 trillion investment towards deploying decarbonisation
technologies within the economy, targeting a carbon-free power
sector by 2035. Wood Mackenzie projects that to achieve this goal,
there would need to be at least $2.2 trillion deployed in
renewables and energy storage, driving US utility-scale capacity
additions to be at least 100GWDC per year by 2025 onwards (capacity
currently projected to be 11.8GWDC in 2025).
INVESTMENT PERFORMANCE
At 31 December 2020, the Company's shares were trading at $1.075
per share. This represents a 10.8% premium to the NAV of $194.2
million or $0.970 per share. The Net Asset Value (NAV) is defined
as the total assets less any liabilities.
The Company generated a profit after tax of $3,650,037 (0.018
cents per share) during the period. Interest income of $224,699,
foreign exchange gains of $3,411 on funds that were retained in
GBP, MSA fee income of $3,000,000 from management services provided
to the Fund's wholly owned US subsidiaries, and a net gain from
investments of $3,300,528, which were offset by administrative and
other expenses of $2,878,601. The net fair value gain on
investments arose from positive value impacts due to the lower
discount rates which offset the negative value impacts from updated
merchant curves across the Fund's operating portfolio.
The financial statements of the Company are presented on pages
79 to 102. The Fund's sensitivity to discount rates and power
prices is detailed below.
Table 3: Performance Summary
31 DECEMBER 2020 30 JUNE 2020 31 DECEMBER
2019
Number of projects 41 41 37
------------------ ------------ ------------
Capacity of projects 443MW 443MW 382MW
------------------ ------------ ------------
NAV $194.2m $192.9m $194.4m
------------------ ------------ ------------
NAV per share $0.970 $0.964 $0.972
------------------ ------------ ------------
Ordinary shares issued 200m 200m 200m
------------------ ------------ ------------
Closing share price
(USF) $1.075 $0.940 $1.050
------------------ ------------ ------------
Market capitalisation
(based on closing price) $215m $188m $210m
------------------ ------------ ------------
Dividends paid $4.00m (full year) $2.00m (half $0.82m (full
year) year)
------------------ ------------ ------------
Share price total return
performance 10.13% (4.67%) 5.44%
------------------ ------------ ------------
ONGOING CHARGES
The ongoing charges ratio of the Company is 1.48% of the average
NAV for the period ended 31 December 2020. The ratio has been
calculated using the AIC recommended methodology. The estimated
total cost as laid out in the prospectus was 1.35% based on
proceeds of $250 million. As total proceeds of the IPO were $200
million, this ratio is slightly higher than estimated at IPO but
the Company expects that the ratio will decrease as further funds
are raised.
VALUATION
NET ASSET VALUE
The NAV for the period ending 31 December 2020 is $194.2
million.
The valuation of the Solar Assets produced by the Investment
Manager is based on valuations by an independent appraiser on a
semi-annual basis as at 30 June and 31 December. These valuations
form part of the NAV calculation of the Company, which is subject
to audit. Additionally, an unaudited NAV and NAV per Ordinary Share
is calculated in US dollars on a quarterly basis as at 31 March and
30 September by the administrator, JTC (UK) Limited,
(Administrator) in conjunction with the Investment Manager.
VALUATION METHODOLOGY
The Company has engaged an independent third-party appraiser to
value operational Solar Assets acquired by the Company and its
Project SPVs, every six months as at 30 June and 31 December.
At each quarter end, the Investment Manager provides the
relevant third-party or internal valuations of the Solar Assets
together with the valuations of the other assets of the Company and
its Project SPVs to the Company Secretary and Administrator of the
Company.
The Administrator, in conjunction with the Investment Manager,
calculates the NAV and the NAV per ordinary share as at the end of
each quarter of the Company's financial year, and submits the same
to the Board for its approval.
The valuation has been calculated in accordance with Uniform
Standards of Professional Appraisal Practice (USPAP) as applied to
PV electricity generation systems in the US.
Fair value for operational Solar Assets is derived from a
discounted cash flow (DCF) methodology. For Solar Assets that are
still under construction at the time of valuation, the purchase
price of the Solar Power Asset including construction and
acquisition costs is normally used as an appropriate estimate of
fair value, provided no significant changes to key underlying
economic considerations (such as major construction impediments or
natural disasters) have arisen.
In a DCF analysis, the fair value of the Solar Power Asset is
the present value of the asset's expected future cash flows, based
on a range of operating assumptions for revenues and costs and an
appropriate discount rate range.
The Investment Manager has reviewed a range of sources in
determining the fair market valuation of the Solar Assets,
including but not limited to:
-- discount rates publicly disclosed by the Company's global peers;
-- discount rates applicable to comparable infrastructure asset classes; and
-- capital asset price model outputs and implied risk premium
over relevant risk-free rates.
A broad range of assumptions are used in valuation models. Where
possible, assumptions are based on observable long-term historical
market and technical data given the long-term life of the assets.
The Investment Manager also engages technical experts such as
long-term electricity price forecasters to provide long-term inputs
for use in its valuations.
Long-term electricity price forecasts are obtained every six
months from two leading independent power price forecasting firms
for each jurisdiction in which Solar Assets are located. The most
recent two electricity price forecasts from each firm are averaged
and provided to the independent valuer to project the prices at
which existing PPAs will be re-contracted. The averaging of curves
and providers is used to prevent the valuation of the portfolio
being unduly influenced by one forecaster's set of assumptions; to
mitigate potential forecaster errors in a particular period; and to
reduce the timing risk inherent in valuing the portfolio shortly
before curve updates are released. The independent valuer assesses
these forecast prices for reasonableness against their own internal
forecasts and others in the marketplace.
The Investment Manager has used its judgement in arriving at
appropriate discount rates which are consistent with the discount
rates derived by the independent valuer. The Investment Manager's
view of discount rates is based on its knowledge of the market,
considering intelligence gained from its bidding activities,
discussions with financial advisers in the appropriate market and
publicly available information on relevant transactions.
NESM has engaged independent valuer KPMG to calculate the fair
value of its operating renewable energy assets. KPMG is one of the
largest valuation firms in the US with significant experience in
estimating the fair value of solar and other renewable energy
assets. In accordance with Company policy, all 41 operating assets
were externally valued at 31 December 2020 (construction assets
were held at cost in previous periods).
Primary valuation methodology:
-- The equity fair values of USF's construction assets are based
on the equity purchase price plus transaction costs (no assets were
valued at this basis for 31 December 2020 as all assets were
operational at period end).
-- The equity fair values of USF's operational assets are based
on DCF modelling of pre-tax cash flows to equity as at 31 December
2020. This methodology more accurately reflects the valuation
impact of the discrete debt instruments that USF has in place when
compared to an unlevered valuation.
-- A post-tax valuation is conducted at the US Holding Corp.
level to cross-check the implied post-tax discount rate.
The discount rates used by the external valuer ranged from 6.5%
to 7.0% on a pre-tax weighted average cost of capital (WACC) basis
for unlevered assets (30 June 2020: 6.8% to 7.2%) and 8.1% to 9.7%
on a pre-tax cost of equity basis (30 June 2020: 8.1% to 8.8%) for
levered assets. The generally lower discount rates reflect projects
moving from construction to operational stage. The use of a WACC or
cost of equity in valuations is dependent on actual leverage
employed. For 31 December 2020 valuations, given the impact of the
pandemic, KPMG has included COVID-19 risk premiums in overall
equity and asset-specific risk premiums.
TAX EQUITY
At a federal level in the US, the Investment Tax Credit (ITC)
introduced in 2005 to give project owners tax credits for
installing designated renewable energy generation equipment has
been highly successful in driving renewable energy adoption in the
US. In addition, certain solar PV assets are eligible for
accelerated depreciation, enhancing US tax effectiveness.
In January 2021, new legislation delayed the ITC step down for
solar power by two years. This means that the ITC will remain at
26% for projects that begin construction by the end of 2022, will
fall to 22% for projects that begin construction by the end of
2023, and then fall to 10% for commercial solar projects commencing
construction from 2024 onwards.
Typically, solar PV asset developers and equity investors do not
have sufficient taxable income to fully utilise these tax
attributes. Many investment structures for US solar PV assets
include tax equity partners (usually banks and other financial
institutions, insurance companies or large corporates) who have the
capacity to use tax attributes in a shorter timeframe, alongside
equity investors. The ability of tax equity partners to generate
value from tax attributes, including the ITC, over a shorter time
horizon allows them to invest in solar PV projects and generate a
return through a combination of savings on other tax liabilities
and project cash distributions. There is also a clear pathway to
exiting
the investment if they do not have an appetite to be a long-term
holder in the solar PV project. At 31 December 2020, tax equity
financing was in place for all projects in the Company's portfolio
except two projects in the Acquisition Four (Heelstone) portfolio
where the remaining tax equity funding amount of approximately $5.5
million is expected in the first half of 2021.
Table 4 below details the tax equity arrangements for the Company's portfolio.
Table 4: Tax Equity Summary
Solar Asset Tax Equity Partner Funding Status Remaining
Commitment
Acquisition Wells Fargo Fully funded and active -
One
----------------------- -------------------------- -------------
Acquisition Partially funded and
Two US Bancorp active $5.5 million
----------------------- -------------------------- -------------
Acquisition US Bancorp Fully funded and active -
Three (five projects)
Fully funded and exited
(three projects)
----------------------- -------------------------- -------------
Acquisition Hartford Insurance Fully funded and active -
Four Company;
Valley National
Bank; and US Bancorp
----------------------- -------------------------- -------------
Acquisition US Bancorp Fully funded and active -
Five
----------------------- -------------------------- -------------
Acquisition Wells Fargo Fully funded -
Six
----------------------- -------------------------- -------------
GEARING
On a look-through basis USF had outstanding debt of $237.3
million as at 31 December 2020, based on the face value of drawn
debt. This equates to 55.0% of Gross Asset Value (GAV) (calculated
as NAV plus outstanding debt), noting the Prospectus permits
gearing above 50% during construction and the first year in which
all assets are operational. The Company expects to reduce gearing
to 50% or below, subject to the Company refinancing the Acquisition
Four portfolio with the proceeds of the announced capital
raising.
Table 5: Gearing Summary
FACILITY DRAWN FACE VALUE DRAWN FAIR
SOLAR ASSET LOAN TYPE SIZE USD (M) VALUE
USD (M) USD (M)16
Acquisition
One Term Loan 48.5 48.1 51.0
--------------- -------- ------------------------------------ ---------------------------
Acquisition
Four Term Loans 152.3 14 7. 6 1 60 . 8
--------------- -------- ------------------------------------ ---------------------------
Acquisition
Five Term Loan 41.6 41.6 41 . 9
--------------- -------- ------------------------------------ ---------------------------
Total 242.4 237.3 253.7
-------- ------------------------------------ ---------------------------
Refer to Note 9 of the financial statements for further information on USF's debt facilities.
SENSITIVITY ANALYSIS
The Investment Manager and the Company use sensitivity analysis
to assess the impact of changes in key assumptions on the fair
value of the Company's investments. The sensitivities shown in
Figure 15 assume the relevant input is changed over the entire
useful life of each of the underlying renewable energy assets,
while all other variables remain constant. All sensitivities have
been calculated independently of each other. The full sensitivity
analysis, including comments on key assumptions and sensitivities,
is included in Note 17 to the financial statements.
The Company has announced that it has the option to refinance
the existing project-level debt associated with Acquisition Four
with a new, smaller facility on more favourable terms resulting in
lower gearing and improved returns. The Company also has the option
to acquire a further 25% of MS2. The refinancing and the
acquisition of the further 25% of MS2 would require the Company to
raise approximately $100 million (net) of equity but results in
reduced sensitivity to key assumptions as shown below. This is
based on the equity raising and refinancing being completed in H1
2021.
The proposed Acquisition Four refinancing reduces the estimated
impact of almost all key sensitivities.
SHARE CAPITAL
On 16 April 2019, the Company was admitted to the premium
listing segment of the Official List of the FCA and to trading on
the main market of the London Stock Exchange.
As at 31 December 2020, 200,192,361 Ordinary Shares were in
issue and no other classes of shares were in issue at that date. At
31 December 2019 there were 200,092,323 ordinary shares on
issue.
During the period from 1 January 2020 to 31 December 2020, the
Company issued 100,038 ordinary shares to the Investment Manager at
a price of $0.964 per share, representing the amount due in shares
to the Investment Manager for the period from 1 January 2020 to 30
June 2020, in accordance with the terms of the investment
management agreement between the Company and New Energy Solar
Manager Pty Limited.
INFORMATION ON THE INVESTMENT MANAGER
USF is managed by New Energy Solar Manager Pty Limited, which
also manages New Energy Solar (www.newenergysolar.com.au).
Combined, US Solar Fund and New Energy Solar have committed
approximately US$1.3 billion to 57 projects totalling 1.2GWDC.
The Investment Manager has been given responsibility, subject to
the overall supervision of the Board, for active discretionary
investment management of the Portfolio in accordance with the
Company's investment objective and policy. The Investment Manager
offers in-house deal origination, execution, and asset management
capabilities with experience in equity, tax equity, debt
structuring and arranging, and active asset management. The
Investment Manager's team currently consists of more than 20
investment and asset management professionals located in Sydney and
New York. The Investment Manager is a corporate authorised
representative of E&P Funds Management Pty Limited.
Environmental, Social and Governance
During the reporting period, the Company and Investment Manager
focused on acquiring, onboarding and constructing assets, and in
doing so, Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) factors were
taken into account.
With the Company investing in and selling the power output of
Solar Assets to energy users, the Company directly contributes to
renewable energy infrastructure and renewable power generation. As
at 31 December 2020, USF's acquired portfolio comprised 41
operational solar plants, with the Company now responsible for
displacing more than an estimated 618,000 tonnes19 of CO2
emissions, equivalent to powering over 74,000 US homes, or removing
over 134,000 US cars from the road every year.
Core to the Company's investment and environmental objectives is
the intention to build a long-term, sustainable business.
Accordingly, the Directors and the Investment Manager are committed
to managing USF in line with the core principles of good ESG
practices.
Investing in utility-scale solar to provide attractive
risk-adjusted returns for investors is, by its very nature, a
compelling investment for investors focused on sustainability and
ESG. It contributes positively and materially to the world's
growing awareness of and momentum to address the impact of human
activity on the environment and climate. Importantly, through
developing utility-scale solar projects and contracting the PPAs
with various offtakers, the Company directly contributes to the
share of renewable energy in the global energy mix.
ESG DUE DILIGENCE AND ACQUISITION
-- Environmental Site Assessments are completed for all assets
during diligence and obtained certification that all projects
comply with applicable local, state, or federal law.
-- Physical climate-related risks are considered during the diligence process.
-- O&M contractors must obtain and maintain all permits
required under applicable laws, including environmental regulations
for each facility, and operate them accordingly.
-- EPC contracts require third parties to conduct themselves and
their processes to the highest standard of environmental control
and compliance with all applicable laws. Strict controls are
implemented to avoid any spill contamination, hazardous substances,
trade sanctions in supply chains, and waste containment, among
others.
-- Prior to construction or investment, each solar asset site
has, as part of the EPC contract, an agreed Health and Safety Plan
that explicitly outlines health, safety and security measures to be
employed and includes various state and federal laws to which all
contractors, subcontractors, and site visitors must adhere, as well
as injury reporting and investigation and corrective action
processes.
ESG PRINCIPLES AT WORK IN USF
Adherence to ESG principles requires US Solar Fund to consider
the broader impact of its activities and to incorporate practices
to further the aim of these principles.
Environmental considerations incorporate the impact on both the
local environment, as well as global issues like climate change.
USF's primary activity is investing in Solar Assets which support
renewable energy development and provide a clean energy source to
communities in rural and metropolitan areas. Further, USF's
strategy of owning and operating solar power portfolios directly
contributes to the displacement of CO2 emissions and assists states
in their transition to becoming low carbon economies, helping to
achieve their respective renewable energy targets.
USF's positive environmental impact can be seen in USF's first
acquisition, the Milford Solar project in Utah. This project
generates over 277,500 megawatt hours of electricity annually. This
volume of electricity is equivalent to displacing approximately
235,000 tonnes of CO2 emissions, powering 31,000 US homes, or
removing 51,000 US cars from the road, every year.
The Company will often acquire plants that are not yet
operational, and as such require many contractors and employees to
construct each project. For example there were over 80 contractors
on site for the construction of the 128MWDC Milford solar plant.
The Company, through the engagement of its contractors, seeks to
create quality jobs in the communities in which it operates. Once
operational, the plants provide a smaller number of long-term
employment opportunities for members of the communities in which
the plants are located.
The Company is committed to making tangible contributions to the
prosperity and economic development of the regions in which it
operates. For example, the Company seeks to form open and strong
relationships with the landowners on which its assets are located,
as well as those near its assets. The Company also partners with
educational and research institutions to share insights and data to
further advance the solar industry.
These partnerships also help USF to continue to improve its
practices around land preservation, a key consideration for the
Company during an asset's construction phase and operational
life.
Governance considerations require a company to examine its
structure, leadership, shareholder rights and internal controls.
USF's Board of Directors is independent of the Investment Manager
and seeks to implement a system of rules and practices that
preserves the integrity and efficiency of its operations. The Board
has worked with the Investment Manager and Company Secretary to
maintain a framework of governance to meet the interests of
stakeholders including security holders, customers, financiers,
government, suppliers and the community. The Company also considers
acquisition and asset management principles and practices as they
relate to dealing with anti-corruption and labour standards.
USF recognises that these governance considerations are critical
to building a successful, long-term business.
SITE-SPECIFIC ESG INITIATIVES DURING OWNERSHIP
As assets are onboarded and in-construction assets become
operational, site specific KPIs will be implemented based on a list
of potential measures for each asset. The US is vast and contains
many different ecological environments. The measures used for each
site depend on the local environment as well as the size of the
asset. As USF assets to date range from 2MWDC to 128MWDC different
measures are appropriate for different size assets. The list below
includes actual measures that have been implemented and options
that are being considered at various USF sites:
ENVIRONMENTAL
-- Grazing of sheep or livestock
-- Planting of local / indigenous grasses, plants or wildflowers
-- Implementation of sustainable drainage and flood control measures
SOCIAL
-- Attendance at local community and government meetings to
maintain community engagement and dialogue
-- Ongoing relationship development with O&M providers,
construction contractors, and landowners to encourage local
community engagement and contribution
-- Effective complaint reporting and handling
-- Engagement with local education institutions to help develop
understanding of renewable energy
-- Contributions to select local and regional charitable organisations
-- On site, all injuries and incidents must be reported
immediately, and reporting is followed by a well-documented
investigation process, detailed report, and corrective action
GOVERNANCE
-- Periodic and regular review of safety statistics and site
visits with site service providers to ensure compliance with local
and regional laws and the Investment Manager's ESG practices
-- Annual review of contract compliance (including health and
safety plans) with site service providers
SUSTAINABILITY
USF was established to both capitalise on and contribute to the
world's increasing awareness of the impact of climate change and
the need to better manage the world's resources for present and
future generations. The Company is focused on sustainability,
primarily as an investor in the solar industry, but also in the way
the Company is managed.
ALIGNMENT WITH UNITED NATIONS SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT GOALS
(UNSDG)
In 2015, the United Nations (UN) developed 17 Sustainable
Development Goals to enable individuals, organisations,
corporations, and governments to implement, record and measure
their approach to addressing global challenges including poverty,
inequality, and climate change.
The Company is aligned with the UNSDG and has selected two core
goals to which the Company can most measurably contribute.
Affordable and Clean Energy Decent Work and Economic
Growth
Relevant Target 7.2 By 203, increase substantially 8.8 Protect labour
the share of renewable rights and promote
energy in the global energy safe and secure working
mix. environments for all
workers, including
migrant workers, in
particular women migrants,
and those in precarious
employment.
---------------------------------- ---------------------------
Reporting Measurement of carbon Reporting on health
impact of Solar Assets; and safety strategic
development of strategic initiatives, planning
plans for assets at end and incidents at assets
of life (e.g. solar panel under ownership.
recycling).
---------------------------------- ---------------------------
UNSDG 7. 2
The 41 solar power projects in USF's portfolio have a combined
capacity of 443MWDC. This power is generated without producing
emissions and importantly, also replaces fossil-fuel generated
power, thereby displacing CO2 emissions. As USF's 41 assets are now
all operational, they will be responsible for displacing more than
an estimated 618,000 tonnes of CO2 every year. Including MS2 in the
portfolio, the CO2 emissions displaced by the Company's Solar
Assets will be 679,000 tonnes20, equivalent to powering 92,000 US
homes or removing 147,000 US cars off the road every year.
As a sustainably run business, USF is conscious of its
obligations to carefully consider and plan for the future disposal
of solar panels. Given USF's solar plants are relatively new, with
only 8% of capacity (including all acquisitions) being operational
for greater than five years and the majority being operational
between two and five years, the business has not yet had to manage
the disposal of large quantities of solar panels, due to the
assumed solar asset life of 35+ years per project.
During construction and operation, the solar panels employed in
USF's plants have proven to be robust and rates of damage and waste
have been very low. With respect to the bulk of the panels
installed at USF's solar power plants, USF intends to establish a
solar panel recycling system that can facilitate the recovery of
valuable secondary raw materials and promote high levels of reuse.
To this end, USF is investigating the recycling programs available
in the industry and the approaches of its development and
construction partners.
UNSDG 8.8
When an acquired project is yet to be constructed, an
Engineering, Procurement and Construction (EPC) Agreement must be
agreed upon and signed before construction. This agreement contains
a comprehensive and systematic Health and Safety Plan that
explicitly outlines certain requirements according to each site
location and layout of the project. This plan incorporates health,
safety and security measures required by various state and federal
laws to which all contractors, subcontractors and site visitors
must adhere.
A site Health and Safety Committee is established for each
project location, comprised of field representatives and management
from the EPC contractor once construction commences. These
representatives must obtain appropriate construction safety
certification (known as "OSHA36") and are responsible for daily
safety briefings. The representatives also facilitate weekly
"toolbox" meetings, designed to address potential safety concerns
on-site, and ensure the implementation of preventive safety
measures.
Once a site is operational, and upon appointment of Operation
and Maintenance contractors, a Safety and Health Management Plan is
implemented. These plans provide personnel working at the site with
a framework for addressing safety and health in the workplace with
the goal of preventing any fatalities, injuries, illnesses and
equipment damage. The approach is based on the principle that
nearly all worksite fatalities, injuries and illnesses are
preventable.
The Company and the Investment Manager are also focused on
injury reporting and investigation as they allow for review of
existing preventive measures, thereby reducing the likelihood of an
event occurring. All injuries and incidents must be reported
immediately on the construction site, followed by an investigation
process, detailed report and corrective action.
Over the course of the period to 31 December 2020, there were
two recordable injuries and one lost-time accident on site. In
March, there was a foot injury on one of the Acquisition Two
construction sites which resulted in lost time. The Investment
Manager has worked with Horne Brothers Construction (the EPC
provider) to determine the root cause of the accident and has
completed a review of the incident with corrective actions. At the
Milford construction site, there were two separate incidents over
the period, a fractured wrist in April and an arm laceration in
June.
McCarthy, the EPC contractor, have investigated the root cause
of these accidents and have since made corrections to its operating
procedures to prevent further injuries.
The Company and Investment Manager continue to monitor and
maintain health and safety management policies and take a
preventive and proactive approach when dealing with health and
safety hazards, rigorously implementing safety practices and
improving them where applicable.
Principal Risk and Uncertainties
The Board is responsible for financial reporting and controls,
including the approval of the Annual Report and Accounts, the
dividend policy, any significant changes in accounting policies or
practices, and treasury policies including a use of derivative
financial instruments.
The Company faces a broad range of risks that the Board and
Investment Manager aim to mitigate through internal controls and
other actions. These risks are regularly assessed on a periodic
basis to ensure that the business operates smoothly and that any
adverse effect on the Company's performance and share value is
mitigated. To the extent possible, the Board also maintains a risk
matrix that is reviewed annually under the risk management
framework in place to minimise the impact of these risks should
they occur. The risks that the Board and Investment Manager believe
to be the most relevant to the business can be organised into key
categories as set below:
-- legal & regulatory risks;
-- financial & market risks; and
-- operational risks,
Principal risks for the period and their mitigants are
summarised in the tables below:
LEGAL & REGULATORY RISKS
Risk Impact on Company Mitigant
Changes in Regulation changes may adversely The Company and Investment
laws or regulations affect the business and performance Manager monitor changes in
governing of the Company. The Company legislation for relevant
the Company's is sensitive to tax changes jurisdictions to enable rapid
operations for example, including but and effective response. This
or the Investment not limited to income tax, ensures that any upcoming
Manager's Investment Tax Credits and changes in legislation are
operations tax restrictions on renewables. proactively accounted for
An adverse change in tax when evaluating potential
legislation may impact the investment opportunities.
Company's overall returns. The Company and Investment
Manager also consult with
tax and regulatory experts
as required.
------------------------------------- ------------------------------------
Political Political risks often translate As the Company's assets are
risks to elevated political uncertainties in the US, the Investment
and have detrimental effects Manager does not consider
on investment and currency Brexit to cause significant
markets. Ongoing Brexit uncertainty risks to the US renewables
may impact the Company's market. The Company and Investment
ability to raise additional Manager monitor changes in
funds. The outcome of US legislation for relevant
elections and the impacts jurisdictions to enable rapid
on renewable energy credits, and effective response. The
tax concessions and support Company and Investment Manager
for the renewable generation also consult with tax and
sector are uncertain. legislation experts as required.
The election of the Biden
administration has lowered
the political risk associated
with investment in US renewable
energy.
------------------------------------- ------------------------------------
FINANCIAL & MARKET RISKS
Risk Impact on Company Mitigant
Long-term PPA terms are generally shorter The Company secures revenue
power price than the expected useful by acquiring assets that have
fluctuations life of Solar Assets so price long-term PPAs in place (with
forecasts are used to estimate a minimum PPA term of 10 years
the value of cash flows between for each project or portfolio
PPA expiry and the end of acquisition and a target weighted
the asset's useful life. average PPA term of 15 years
Lower wholesale electricity for the Company's entire portfolio).
price forecasts will reduce The Company continues to regularly
the revenue that the Solar monitor changes in expert energy
Assets are expected to generate price forecasts and ensures
after PPA expiry, thereby that they are appropriately
impacting asset valuations. factored into asset valuations.
Additionally, the Company is
evaluating energy storage as
a means to reduce exposure
to power price and re-contracting
risk.
----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------
Valuation The due diligence process The Company appoints an independent
of assets that the Investment Manager reputable firm to undertake
undertakes in evaluating valuations of its Solar Assets
acquisitions of Solar Assets on at least an annual basis.
may not reveal all facts Further, the Company appoints
that may be relevant in connection reputable third parties with
with such investments. This industry specific skills to
could lead to valuation errors assist in the due diligence
that affect the returns achieved process including reviewing
by the underlying assets detailed financial model inputs.
or results in inaccurate
reporting to investors and
other stakeholders. .
----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------
Access to The Company has announced The Company is now fully invested
equity capital it is considering fundraising and trading at a premium to
options to refinance the NAV. Recent successful equity
Acquisition Four portfolio, fundraisings in the renewables
acquire a further 25% of sector suggest positive market
MS2, or acquire other assets sentiment toward the renewables
consistent with investment sector. The Company's brokers
policy. The Company may not and the Investment Manager
be able to raise the target maintain regular contact with
amount or any amount, in existing and prospective investors.
which case it would not have
sufficient equity capital
to complete these transactions.
----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------
Access to The Company may not be able Debt and tax equity financing
capital from to source funding from suitable is in place for all projects
tax equity tax equity partners and debt in the Company's portfolio.
partners providers which may limit The Company has appointed a
and debt the amount of capital the reputable and experienced Investment
providers Company is able to utilise Manager with strong existing
in acquiring assets. Additionally, banking and tax equity relationships.
the Company may be exposed These existing relationships,
to risks from its contractual in addition to new relationships,
relationships in relation developed with experienced
to tax equity financing with tax equity partners allow for
any tax equity partner. various avenues to appoint
a partner best suited for the
project. The Company also continues
to monitor compliance with
tax equity financing provisions.
With respect to the Acquisition
Four
refinancing, the Company has
received a signed term sheet
to reduce execution risk.
----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------
Unable to Whilst the Company is currently The IPO proceeds are fully
source suitable fully invested, invested in or committed to
Solar Assets it may not be able to source Solar Assets so the Company
suitable assets in future, will need to raise new equity
which would result in the capital. The Company has also
Company holding levels of appointed an Investment Manager
cash which are higher than with a dedicated team of experienced
optimal. This cash would investment and renewable energy
likely generate much lower professionals focused on sourcing,
levels of returns than the evaluating and transacting
assets in the Company, consequentially on new investments for the
adversely affecting the level Company, when new capital is
of returns to shareholders available.
and the market value of the
Company.
----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------
OPERATIONAL RISKS
Risk Impact on Company Mitigant
Operational The Company is potentially The Investment Management Agreement
fraud exposed to financial losses (IMA) provides USF with certain
from fraudulent activities protections through passing
related to receipts from certain responsibilities to
counterparties or wholesale the Investment Manager. The
markets, or payments made Investment Manager maintains
to construction entities, and adheres to policies and
maintenance providers and processes to mitigate the risk
capital investors. . of fraud. The E&P Financial
Group, of which the Investment
Manager is a member, holds insurance
which covers fraudulent incidents.
-------------------------------------- -----------------------------------------
Default of The Company may experience The Company has a fully operational
developer a financial loss portfolio and with no Solar
or (realised or unrealised) Assets under construction. Where
Engineering, from a developer or EPC the Company undertakes construction
Procurement, counterparty failing to perform activity in the future, it appoints
Construction their contractual experienced and reputable contractors
(EPC) contractor obligations including warranty with strong track records and
obligations which through existing relationships
continue after construction with the Investment Manager.
is completed. The Company will periodically
review the credit ratings and
other available financial indicators
of counterparties before contracting
and adjust risk premiums accordingly.
Contractual protections in EPC
contracts (milestone-based payments,
performance security, liens
over assets purchased and installed
by the EPC contractor), means
the potential impact of EPC
contractor default during construction
is largely limited to the time
and cost of replacing the contractor
rather than any persistent loss.
-------------------------------------- -----------------------------------------
Unfavourable The Company may be exposed The Company and Investment Manager
weather to a lower than conduct sensitivity analysis
conditions expected volume of revenue on power generation when evaluating
including generation produced by the the acquisition target. The
climate Solar Assets. Additionally, Company and Investment Manager
change or the Solar Assets may face conduct sensitivity analysis
events damages due to extreme weather using a range of power generation
conditions arising from climate forecasts when evaluating acquisitions
change. however isolated or localised
conditions such as storms, heavy
snowfall, or smoke and dust
events may cause production
shortfalls outside the range
of power generation forecasts.
Investing in geographically
diverse projects mitigates the
impact of localised, unfavourable
weather conditions.
-------------------------------------- -----------------------------------------
Under- Global health concerns often The Investment Manager has established
performance translate to elevated uncertainties systems and procedures that
of solar in financial markets and allow remote monitoring of the
power have detrimental effects solar power assets and remote
plants relative on the global economy. The work by staff. These systems
to acquisition COVID-19 outbreak may impact have operated throughout COVID-19.
assumptions the Company's supply chain The Investment Manager manages
and service providers (such costs by using fixed-time and
as higher O&M costs, longer fixed-cost contracts for construction,
response times, and higher working closely with EPC contractors
insurance costs) and also during the construction of assets,
ability to raise additional and with O&M contractors and
funds. other key suppliers once assets
become operational.
-------------------------------------- -----------------------------------------
Counterparty There is the potential for There have been no material
credit risk losses to be incurred due changes to the creditworthiness
to defaults by PPA counterparties, of the USF counterparties as
EPC contractors, derivative a result of COVID-19, and the
counterparties and multiple Company and the Investment Manager
deposit taking institutions. diversified credit risk across
investment-grade counterparties.
No financial transactions are
permitted with counterparties
with a credit rating of less
than BBB- from Standard & Poor's
or Baa3 from Moody's unless
specifically approved by the
Board. The Investment Manager
will continue to monitor credit
market conditions, including
as they apply to PPA counterparties.
-------------------------------------- -----------------------------------------
LONGER TERM VIABILITY
The Board is responsible for financial reporting and controls,
including the approval of the Annual Report and Accounts, the
dividend policy, any significant changes in accounting policies or
practices, and treasury policies including the use of derivative
financial instruments. The Board of the Company is also required to
assess the long-term prospects of the Company according to the
Association of Investment Companies (AIC) Code. The Board has
assessed the prospects of the group over a five-year period. The
Board considers a five-year timeframe to be reasonable on the basis
that the Company is in the initial stage of operating assets. The
key risks facing the Company including, but not limited to, the
risks mentioned on pages 30 to 33 have been individually assessed
by the Board. The likelihood and impact of each risk on the Company
prior to and after specific risk mitigation controls have taken
place have been evaluated.
The Company owns a portfolio of Solar Assets in the US that are
fully constructed, operational and generating renewable
electricity. As a result, it benefits from predictable and reliable
long-term cash flows and is subject to a set of risks that can be
identified and assessed. Each Solar Asset is supported by a
detailed financial model at acquisition and incorporated into the
Company's valuation model for quarterly valuations, which are
independently reviewed every half-year. The Board believes the
diversification within the Company's portfolio of Solar Assets
helps to withstand and mitigate the emerging and principal risks
the Company is most likely to face. The Company's revenues from
investments provide substantial cover to the operating expenses of
the SPVs, USF Holding Corp., and the Company and any other costs
likely to be faced by any of them over the viability assessment
period. The Investment Manager also prepares a rolling detailed
monthly two-year cash flow forecast to address and specifically
consider the sustainability of the dividends.
After assessing these risks, and reviewing the Company's
liquidity position, together with the Company's commitments,
available but undrawn credit facilities, and forecasts of future
performance under various scenarios, the Board has a reasonable
expectation that the Company is well positioned to continue to
operate and meet its liabilities over the short term and the
five-year outlook period. While the Board has no reason to believe
that the Company will not be viable beyond the specified outlook
period, it is aware that it is difficult to foresee the viability
of any business over a longer period given the inherent uncertainty
involved.
It is important to note that the risks associated with
investments within the infrastructure sector could result in a
material adverse effect on the Company's performance and value of
ordinary shares. When required, experts will be employed to gather
information, including tax advisers, legal advisers, and
environmental advisers.
STRATEGIC REPORT AND SECTION 172 OBLIGATIONS
The strategic report is set out on pages 1 to 36 of this
document and has been prepared to provide information in relation
to how the directors have performed their duty to promote the
success of the company. The strategic report section was approved
by the Board of Directors on 16 March 2021.
SECTION 172
Section 172 of the Companies Act 2006 recognises that directors
are responsible for acting fairly as between members and in a way
that they consider, in good faith, is the most likely to promote
the success of the Company for the benefit of its Shareholders as a
whole. In doing so, they are also required to consider the broader
implications of their decisions and operations on other key
stakeholders and their impact on the wider community and the
environment. Key decisions are those that are either material to
the Company or are significant to any of the Company's key
stakeholders. The Company's engagement with key stakeholders and
the key decisions that were made or approved by the Directors
during the year are described below:
SHAREHOLDERS
The Company also relies on Shareholders for continued access to
capital to support further growth of the Company.
The Investment Manager liaises with Shareholders through
specified reporting of Company performance at set dates in the
calendar, as well as ad hoc reporting of major announcements.
In addition, Shareholders have the opportunity to meet the Board
at the Annual General Meeting (AGM). The Board is also endeavours
to respond to any written queries made by Shareholders during the
course of the period, or to meet with major Shareholders if so
requested.
In addition to the formal business of the AGM, representatives
of the Investment Manager and the Board are available to answer any
questions a Shareholder may have.
LERS
The Company also relies on Lenders for continued access to
capital to support further growth of the Company, and to refinance
existing debt facilities at maturity, or prior to maturity where it
is accretive for shareholders.
The Investment Manager liaises with Lenders through specified
reporting of project level performance at set dates in the
calendar, as well as ad hoc reporting of major announcements.
SERVICE PROVIDERS
Our service providers are fundamental to the quality of our
product and to ensuring that as a business we meet the high
standards of conduct that we set ourselves.
The Board meets at least annually to review the performance of
the key service providers.
The Board has regular contact with the two main service
providers: the Investment Manager and Administrator through
quarterly board meetings with the Chair and Audit Chair meeting
more regularly.
REGULATORS / GOVERNMENT
The Board regularly considers how it meets regulatory and
statutory obligations and follows voluntary and best-practice
guidance, including how any governance decisions it makes impact
its stakeholders both in the short- and long-term.
PPA OFFTAKERS
The Offtakers for the Company's projects provide the main source
of operating cash inflows to the Company. No Offtaker is a related
party of the Board or Investment Manager. The Company is focused on
ensuring assets operate in line with weather-adjusted expectations
to deliver power to their PPA Offtakers.
LOCAL COMMUNITIES
The local communities, within which the Company's projects are
based, provide local support as well as human resources to work on
the project sites. The Company works actively with landholders and
city councils, and has resolved egress and access, erosion, and
land management issues during the year.
The strategic report is set out of page 1 to 36 of this document
and was approved by the Board of Directors on 16 March 2021.
Directors' Responsibilities Statement
The Directors are responsible for preparing the Annual Report
and financial statements in accordance with applicable law and
regulations.
As a Company listed on the London Stock Exchange, US Solar Fund
plc is subject to the FCA's Listing Rules and Disclosure and
Transparency Rules, as well as to all applicable laws and
regulations in England and Wales where it is registered.
The Annual Report and financial statements have been prepared in
accordance with International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS)
as adopted pursuant to Regulation (EC) No 1606/2002 as it applies
in the European Union. Under Company law, the Directors must not
approve the financial statements unless they are satisfied they
give a true and fair view of the state of affairs of the Company
and of the profit or loss for the period. In preparing these
financial statements, the Directors should:
-- select suitable accounting policies and then apply them consistently;
-- make judgements and estimates that are reasonable;
-- specify which generally accepted accounting principles have
been adopted in their preparation; and
-- prepare the financial statements on the going concern basis,
unless it is inappropriate to presume that the Company will
continue in business.
The Directors are responsible for keeping proper accounting
records which are sufficient to show and explain the Company's
transactions and are to disclose with reasonable accuracy at any
time the financial position of the Company and enable them to
ensure that the financial statements comply with the requirements
of the Companies Act 2006. They are also responsible for
safeguarding the assets of the Company and hence for taking
reasonable steps for the prevention and detection of fraud and
other irregularities.
The Directors are also responsible for preparing the Annual
Report and financial statements and the Directors confirm that they
consider that, taken as a whole, the Annual Report and financial
statements are fair, balanced and understandable and provide the
information necessary for shareholders to assess the Company's
performance, business model and strategy. In accordance with the
FCA's Disclosure and Transparency Rules, the Directors confirm to
the best of their knowledge that:
a) the financial statements, prepared in accordance with
applicable accounting standards, give a true and fair view of the
assets, liabilities, financial position and profit or loss of the
Company taken as a whole;
b) the Annual Report and accounts include a fair view of
important events that have occurred during the financial period;
and
c) the Annual Report and accounts include the related parties'
transactions that have taken place in the financial period and that
have materially affected the financial position or the performance
of the enterprise during that period.
The Directors have acknowledged their responsibilities in
relation to the financial statements for the period to 31 December
2020.
Statement of Profit and Loss and Other Comprehensive Income
FOR THE YEARED 31 DECEMBER 2020
Revenue C Total Revenue C apital Total
Notes USD apital USD USD USD USD
USD
===================== ======== ================= ============= =============== ================ ============= ===============
Net gain on
investments
at fair value
through pro fi
t and loss 10 - 3,300,528 3,300,528 - 472,416 472,416
MSA fee income 10 3,000,000 - 3,000,000 - - -
Interest income 6 224,699 - 224,699 1,944,795 - 1,944,795
===================== ======== ================= ============= =============== ================ ============= ===============
Total income 3,224,699 3,300,528 6,525,227 1,944,795 472,416 2,417,211
===================== ======== ================= ============= =============== ================ ============= ===============
Expenditure
Administrative
and other expenses 7 (2,878,601) - (2,878,601) (2,120,851) - (2,120,851)
===================== ======== ================= ============= =============== ================ ============= ===============
Operating pro
fi t for the year
/ perio d 346,098 3,300,528 3,646,626 (176,056) 472,416 296,360
Gain / (loss)
on foreign exchange 2,460 951 3,411 2,765 (153,045) (150,280)
===================== ======== ================= ============= =============== ================ ============= ===============
Pro fi t / (loss)
before taxation 348,558 3,301,479 3,650,037 (173,291) 319,371 146,080
Taxation 8 - - - - - -
===================== ======== ================= ============= =============== ================ ============= ===============
Pro fi t / (loss)
and total
comprehensive
income for the
year / perio d 348,558 3,301,479 3,650,037 (173,291) 319,371 146,080
Earnings per share
(basic and diluted) ( 0. 0
- cents/share 9 0.002 0.016 0.018 0 1 ) 0.002 0.001
===================== ======== ================= ============= =============== ================ ============= ===============
All items dealt with in arriving at the result for the year
relate to continuing operations.
The Total column of this statement represents the Company's
profit and loss account. The financial statements have been
prepared in accordance with international accounting standards in
conformity with the requirements of the Companies Act 2006 and
International Financial Reporting Standards adopted pursuant to
Regulation (EC) No 1606/2002 as it applies in the European Union.
The return on ordinary activities after taxation is the total
comprehensive income and therefore no additional statement of other
comprehensive income is presented. The supplementary revenue and
capital columns are presented for information purposes, in
accordance with the Statement of Recommended Practice issued by the
Association of Investment Companies, as further explained in note
2.
Statement of Financial Position
AS AT 31 DECEMBER 2020
31 DECEMBER 31 DECEMBER
Notes 2020 2019
USD USD
================================== ======= ======================= =========================
Non-current assets
Investment held at fair 119 , 472 ,
value 10 195,324,276 416
================================== ======= ======================= =========================
195,324,276 119,472,416
================================== ======= ======================= =========================
Current assets
Tra de and other receivables 11 45,587 88,744
Cash and cash equivalents 12 523,170 76,458,662
================================== ======= ======================= =========================
568,757 76,547,406
================================== ======= ======================= =========================
T o t a l assets 195,893,033 196,019,822
================================== ======= ======================= =========================
Current liabilities
Tra de and other payables 13 732,723 603,641
Dividends payable 14 1,000,962 1,000,461
================================== ======= ======================= =========================
1,733,685 1,604,102
================================== ======= ======================= =========================
7 4 , 9 4
Net current (liabilities)/assets (1,164,928) 3 , 30 4
================================== ======= ======================= =========================
Total net assets 194,159,348 194,415,720
================================== ======= ======================= =========================
Shareholders equity
Share capital 18 2,001,924 2,000,923
Share premium 18 184,786 89,350
Capital reduction reserve 18 188,176,521 192,179,367
Capital reserve 19 3,271,402 31 9, 371
Retained earnings 19 524,715 (173,291)
================================== ======= ======================= =========================
Total shareholders
equity 194,159,348 194,415,720
================================== ======= ======================= =========================
Net asset value per
share 20 0.970 0.972
The financial statements of US Solar Fund plc (registered number
11761009) were approved by the Board of Directors and authorised
for issue on 16 March 2021. They were signed on its behalf by:
GILL NOTT
DIRECTOR
Date: 16 March 2021
Statement of Changes in Equity
FOR THE YEARED 31 DECEMBER 2020
C APIT
SHARE SHARE AL C A P IT RETAINED TOTAL
CAPITAL PREMIUM REDUCTION AL RESERVE EARNINGS E
RESERVE QU ITY
===============
Notes USD USD USD USD USD USD
=============== ====== ============= =============== =============== ============== ============ ==============
Balance at 1
January 2020 2,000,923 89,350 192,179,367 319,371 (173,291) 194,415,720
=============== ====== ============= =============== =============== ============== ============ ==============
Issue of share
capital 18 1,001 95,436 - - - 96,437
Dividends 14 - - (4,002,846) - - (4,002,846)
Tax charge 8 - - - (349,448) 349,448 -
Profit & total
comprehensive
income for
the
year - - - 3,301,479 348,558 3,650,037
=============== ====== ============= =============== =============== ============== ============ ==============
Balance at 31
December 2020 2,001,924 184,786 188,176,521 3,271,402 524,715 194,159,348
=============== ====== ============= =============== =============== ============== ============ ==============
FOR THE YEARED 31 DECEMBER 2020
C APIT AL
SHARE SHARE REDUCTION C A P RETAINED TOTAL
CAPITAL PREMIUM RESERVE IT AL EARNINGS E
RESERVE QU ITY
===============
Notes USD USD USD USD USD USD
=============== ============ ============= ================= =============== ============== =============== ===============
Balance at 10 - - - - - -
January 2019
=============== ============ ============= ================= =============== ============== =============== ===============
Issue of share
capital 18 2,000,923 198,089,350 - - - 200,090,273
Equity issue
costs 18 - (4,000,000) - - - (4,000,000)
Transfer to
capital
reduction
reserve 18 - (194,000,000) 194,000,000 - - -
Dividends 14 - - (1,820,633) - - (1,820,633)
Profit & total
comprehensive
income for
the
period - - - 31 9, 371 (173,291) 146,080
=============== ============ ============= ================= =============== ============== =============== ===============
Balance at 31
December 2019 2,000,923 89,350 192,179,367 319,371 (173,291) 194,415,720
=============== ============ ============= ================= =============== ============== =============== ===============
Statement of Cash Flows
FOR THE YEARED 31 DECEMBER 2020
YEARED PERIOD FROM 10
31 DECEMBER JANUARY 2019
2020 TO 31 DECEMBER
2019
============================================
Notes USD USD
============================================ ============ ====================== =========================
Cash flows from operating activities - -
============================================ ============ ====================== =========================
(Loss)/profit for the year/period 3,650,037 146,080
Adjustments for:
Net gain on investments at fair value
through profit and loss 10 (3,300,528) (194,000,000)
Equity settled management fee 96,437 90,273
Losses on foreign exchange (3,411) 150,280
============================================ ============ ====================== =========================
Operating cash flows before movements
in working capital 442,535 (85,783)
============================================ ============ ====================== =========================
Decrease/(increase) in trade and other
receivables 8,856 (54,443)
Increase in trade and other payables 129,084 603,641
Decrease/(increase) in interest receivable 34,301 (34,301)
============================================ ============ ====================== =========================
Net cash generated from operating
activities 614,776 429,114
============================================ ============ ====================== =========================
Cash flows used in investing activities
Purchases of investments 10 (72,551,332) (76,000,000)
Loan advanced 10 - (43,000,000)
============================================ ============ ====================== =========================
Net cash outflow from investing activities (72,551,332) (119,000,000)
============================================ ============ ====================== =========================
Cash flows (utilised)/generated in
financing activities
============================================ ============ ====================== =========================
Dividends paid (4,002,347) (802,172)
Proceeds from issue of ordinary shares
at a premium - 200,000,000
Share issue costs - (4,000,000)
============================================ ============ ====================== =========================
Net cash (outflow)/inflow from financing
activities (4,002,347) 195,179,828
============================================ ============ ====================== =========================
Net (decrease)/increase in cash and
cash equivalents for the year/period (75,938,903) 76,608,942
Effect of foreign exchange rate movements 3,411 (150,280)
Cash and cash equivalents at the beginning 76,458,662 -
of the year/period
============================================ ============ ====================== =========================
Cash and cash equivalents at the end
of the year/period 523,170 76,458,662
============================================ ============ ====================== =========================
Notes to the Financial Statements
FOR THE YEARED 31 DECEMBER 2020
1. GENERAL INFORMATION
US Solar Fund plc (the Company) was incorporated as a Public
Company, limited by shares, in England and Wales on 10 January 2019
with registered number 11761009. The registered office of the
Company is The Scalpel, 18th Floor, 52 Lime Street, London EC3M
7AF. Its share capital is denominated in US Dollars and currently
consists of ordinary shares. The Company's principal activity is to
invest in a diversified portfolio of Solar Power Assets located in
North America and other countries forming part of the Organisation
for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) in the
Americas.
2. BASIS OF PREPARATION
The financial statements have been prepared in accordance with
international accounting standards in conformity with the
requirements of the Companies Act 2006 and International Financial
Reporting Standards adopted pursuant to Regulation (EC) No
1606/2002 as it applies in the European Union and also considers
Statement of Recommended Practice "Financial Statements of
Investment Trust Companies and Venture Capital Trusts", issued by
the Association of Investment Companies, (the AIC SORP) in October,
2019. The financial statements have been prepared on a historical
cost basis, except where balances are recognised at fair value. The
principal accounting policies are set out in note 5. The first
accounting period commenced on 10 January 2019 (incorporation date)
and as a result the comparatives are presented for the period from
10 January 2019 until 31 December 2019.
In terms of the AIC SORP, the Company presents a Statement of
Profit and Loss and Other Comprehensive Income, which shows amounts
split between those which are revenue and capital in nature. The
determination of whether an item should be recognised as revenue or
capital (or part revenue and part capital) is carried out in
accordance with the recommendations and principles as set out in
the AIC SORP.
The determination of the revenue or capital nature of a
transaction is determined by giving consideration to the underlying
elements of the transaction. Capital transactions are considered to
be those arising as a result of the appreciation or depreciation in
the value of assets, whether due to the retranslation of assets
held in foreign currency or fair value movements on investments
held at fair value through profit and loss.
Revenue transactions are all transactions, other than those
which have been identified as capital in nature.
FUNCTIONAL AND PRESENTATION CURRENCY
The currency of the primary economic environment in which the
Company operates (the functional currency) is US Dollar, which is
also the presentation currency.
GOING CONCERN
The financial position of the Company, its cash flows, liquidity
position and borrowing facilities are described in the financial
statements and related notes. In addition, note 16 to the financial
statements includes the policies and processes for managing its
capital, its financial risk management, details of its financial
instruments and its exposure to credit risk and liquidity risk. The
impact of COVID-19 is detailed in the Chair's Statement on page 6
and Investment Manager's report on page 10. In the opinion of the
Directors, the Company has sufficient financial resources and
expectation of growth in the medium-term to meet its financial
obligations.
The Company generated profit after tax of $3.7 million and
operating cash flows of $0.4 million for the year. As at 31
December 2020, the company is in a net current liability position
of $1.7 million and has available cash of $0.05 million. As of the
same date, the Company's subsidiary, USF Holding Corp., has
available cash of $14.3 million, which is available to meet the
obligations of the Company. As such the Directors believe that the
Company will continue into the foreseeable future and have adopted
the going concern basis of preparation in preparing these financial
statements. In December 2020, the Company (through a wholly owned
US subsidiary) signed a new $25 million revolving credit facility
with Fifth Third Bank National Association (FTB Facility). The FTB
Facility provides liquidity for capital expenditures, working
capital and general corporate purposes. At 31 December 2020 the
facility was fully available but remained undrawn.
3. CRITICAL JUDGEMENTS AND KEY SOURCES OF ESTIMATION UNCERTAINTY
The preparation of the financial statements requires management
to make judgements, estimates and assumptions that affect the
application of accounting policies and the reported amount of
assets, liabilities, income and expenses. Estimates and underlying
assumptions are reviewed on an ongoing basis. Revisions to the
accounting estimates are recognised in the period in which the
estimates are revised and in any future periods affected.
During the year, the Directors considered the following
significant judgements, estimates and assumptions:
JUDGEMENTS
ASSESSMENT AS AN INVESTMENT ENTITY
Entities that meet the definition of an investment entity within
IFRS 10 are required to measure their subsidiaries at fair value
through profit or loss rather than consolidate them unless they
provided investment related services to the Company. To determine
that the Company continues to meet the definition of an investment
entity, the Company is required to satisfy the following three
criteria:
a) the Company obtains funds from one or more investors for the
purpose of providing those investors with investment management
services;
b) the Company commits to its investors that its business
purpose is to invest funds solely for returns from capital
appreciation, investment income, or both; and
c) the Company measures and evaluates the performance of
substantially all of its investments on a fair value basis. The
Company meets the criteria as follows:
-- the Company provides investment management services and has
several investors who pool their funds to gain access to
infrastructure related investment opportunities that they might not
have had access to individually;
-- the stated strategy of the Company is to deliver stable
returns to shareholders through investing in a diversified
portfolio of utility-scale solar power plants and associated
infrastructure, which may include transmission and
storage (e.g. batteries) assets which will typically be co-
located with the solar power plant (together, Solar Power Assets)
located in North America and other OECD countries in the Americas;
and
-- the Company measures and evaluates the performance of all of
its investments on a fair value basis. The fair value method is
used to represent the Company's performance in its communication to
the market, including investor presentations. In addition, the
Company reports fair value information internally to Directors, who
use fair value as the primary measurement attribute to evaluate
performance.
The Directors are of the opinion that the Company has all the
typical characteristics of an investment entity and continues to
meet the definition in the standard. This conclusion will be
reassessed on an annual basis.
In respect of the second criterion the Company's purpose is to
invest funds for returns from capital appreciation and investment
income. In respect of the requirement that investments should not
be held indefinitely but should have an exit strategy for their
realisation the Company may hold these assets until the end of
their expected useful lives, unless there is an opportunity in the
market to dispose of the investments at a price that is considered
appropriate. There continues to be an active secondary market for
renewables projects in the countries in which we operate.
As at 31 December 2020, the Company only had one subsidiary, USF
Holding Corp. Being an investment entity, it is measured at fair
value as opposed to being consolidated on a line-by-line basis,
meaning its cash, debt and working capital balances are included in
the fair value of investments rather than the Group's current
assets.
ESTIMATES
VALUATION OF INVESTMENT IN SUBSIDIARY
The significant estimate in the Company's financial statements
that carry the most significant risk of a material effect on next
year's financial statements are the fair value of investments. This
estimate is considered to be at risk of actual outcomes in the next
12 months varying from the estimates made in determining discount
rates applied in calculating the reported amount of an asset, as
the assumptions used are subject to measurement uncertainty and
possible changes could be significant. Refer to note 17 for further
year-end detail on the fair value measurement as at 31 December
2020.
4. NEW AND REVISED STANDARDS AND INTERPRETATIONS
APPLICATION OF NEW AND REVISED STANDARDS
The accounting policies adopted are consistent with those of the
previous financial year, except for the following new and amended
IFRS effective for the Group as of 1 January 2020. This adoption
has not had any material impact on the disclosures or on the
amounts reported in these financial statements:
-- IAS 1 'Presentation of financial statements' and IAS 8
'Accounting policies, changes in accounting estimates and error' on
definition of material These amendments to IAS 1, IAS 8 and
consequential amendments to other IFRSs:
- use a consistent definition of materiality throughout IFRSs
and the Conceptual Framework for Financial Reporting;
- clarify the explanation of the definition of material; and
- incorporate some of the guidance in IAS 1 about immateriality information.
-- IFRS 3 'Business Combinations'
On 22 October 2018, the IASB issued 'Definition of a Business
(Amendments to IFRS 3)' aimed at resolving the difficulties that
arise when an entity determines whether it has acquired a business
or a group of assets.
The amendments are effective for business combinations for which
the acquisition date is on or after the beginning of the first
annual reporting period beginning on or after 1 January 2020.
NEW AND REVISED STANDARDS IN ISSUE BUT NOT YET EFFECTIVE
There are no standards, amendments or interpretations in issue
at the reporting date which have been issued but are not yet
effective and are deemed to be material to the Company.
5. SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES
The accounting policies used in the preparation of the financial
statements have been consistently applied during the year ended 31
December 2020 as well as the prior period.
The principal accounting policies applied in the preparation of
the financial statements are set out below:
SEGMENTAL INFORMATION
The Board is of the opinion that the Group is engaged in a
single segment business, being the investment in Solar Power Assets
located in North America and other countries forming part of the
OECD in the Americas.
INCOME
Income comprises interest income (bank interest and loan
interest). Interest income is recognised when it is probable that
the economic benefits will flow to the Company and the amount of
revenue can be measured reliably. Loan interest income is accrued
by reference to the principal outstanding and at the effective
interest rate applicable, which is the rate that exactly discounts
estimated future cash receipts through the expected life of the
financial asset to that asset's net carrying amount on initial
recognition.
No income is earned from contracts with customers and as such
IFRS 15 has not been applied.
EXPENSES
Operating expenses are the Company's costs incurred in
connection with the on-going management of the Company's
investments and administrative costs. Operating expenses are
accounted for on an accruals basis.
The Company's management and administration fees, finance costs
and all other expenses are charged through the Statement of Profit
and Loss and Other Comprehensive Income.
Directly attributable acquisition costs of assets are
capitalised on purchase of assets. Costs directly relating to the
issue of ordinary shares are charged to share premium.
NET GAIN OR LOSS ON INVESTMENTS AT FAIR VALUE THROUGH PROFIT AND
LOSS
The Company recognises movements in the fair value of
investments in subsidiaries through profit and loss.
TAXATION
The Company is approved as an Investment Trust Company under
sections 1158 and 1159 of the Corporation Taxes Act 2010 and Part 2
Chapter 1 Statutory Instrument 2011/2999 for accounting periods
commencing on or after 25 May 2018. The approval is subject to the
Company continuing to meet the eligibility conditions of the
Corporations Tax Act 2010 and the Statutory Instrument 2011/2999.
The Company intends to ensure that it complies with the Investment
Trust Company regulations on an ongoing basis and regularly
monitors the conditions required to maintain Investment Trust
Company status.
From 1 April 2015 there is a single corporation tax rate of 19%.
Tax is recognised in the Statement of Profit and Loss and Other
Comprehensive Income except to the extent that it relates to the
items recognised as direct movements in equity, in which case it is
similarly recognised as a direct movement in equity. Current tax is
the expected tax payable on any taxable income for the period,
using tax rates enacted or substantively enacted at the end of the
relevant period.
INVESTMENT IN SUBSIDIARIES
Subsidiaries are entities controlled by the Company. Control
exists when the Company is exposed, or has rights, to variable
returns from its involvement with the subsidiary entity and has the
ability to affect those returns through its power over the
subsidiary entity. In accordance with the exception under IFRS 10
Consolidated financial statements, the Company is an investment
entity.
The Company does not have any subsidiaries that provide
investment management services and are not themselves investment
entities. As a result the Company does not consolidate any of its
subsidiaries.
CASH AND CASH EQUIVALENTS
Cash and cash equivalents comprise cash at bank and deposits
held with the bank.
TRADE AND OTHER RECEIVABLES
Trade and other receivables are recognised initially at fair
value and subsequently stated at amortised cost less loss allowance
which is calculated using the provision matrix of the expected
credit loss model, the effect of which is considered
immaterial.
TRADE AND OTHER PAYABLES
Trade and other payables are recognised initially at fair value
and subsequently stated at amortised cost.
EQUITY
Equity instruments issued by the Company are recorded at the
amount of the proceeds received, net of directly attributable issue
costs. Costs not directly attributable to the issue are immediately
expensed in the Statement of Profit and Loss and Other
Comprehensive Income. The Company's capital is represented by the
ordinary shares, Share Premium (until cancellation), Accumulated
losses and Capital Reduction Reserve.
FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS
In accordance with IFRS 9, the Company classifies its financial
assets and financial liabilities at initial recognition into the
categories of amortised cost or fair value through profit or loss.
None of the financial instruments are classified as fair value
through other comprehensive income.
FINANCIAL ASSETS
The Company classifies its financial assets at amortised cost or
fair value through profit or loss on the basis of both:
-- the entity's business model for managing the financial
assets
-- the contractual cash flow characteristics of the financial
asset
FINANCIAL ASSETS MEASURED AT AMORTISED COST
A debt instrument is measured at amortised cost if it is held
within a business model whose objective is to hold financial assets
in order to collect contractual cash flows and its contractual
terms give rise on specified dates to cash flows that are solely
payments of principal and interest on the principal amount
outstanding. The Company includes in this category short-term
non-financing receivables including cash and financial instruments
classified as trade and other receivables.
FINANCIAL ASSETS MEASURED AT FAIR VALUE THROUGH PROFIT OR LOSS
(FVPL)
A financial asset is measured at fair value through profit or
loss if:
a) its contractual terms do not give rise to cash flows on
specified dates that are solely payments of principal and interest
(SPPI) on the principal amount outstanding; or
b) it is not held within a business model whose objective is
either to collect contractual cash flows, or to both collect
contractual cash flows and sell; or
c) it is classified as held for trading (derivative contracts in an asset position).
The Company's investment in subsidiaries (which comprises both
debt and equity) is held at fair value through profit or loss under
IFRS 9 as the equity portion of the investment does not meet the
SPPI test nor will the Company elect to designate the investments
at fair value through other comprehensive income. The debt
investment forms part of a group of assets that are managed and the
performance evaluated on a fair value basis.
The Company includes in this category equity instruments
including investments in subsidiaries (which comprises both debt
and equity). There are no consolidated subsidiaries.
FINANCIAL LIABILITIES MEASURE AT AMORTISED COST
This category includes all financial liabilities, other than
those measured at fair value through profit or loss, including
short-term payables.
RECOGNITION AND DERECOGNITION
Financial assets are recognised on trade date, the date on which
the Company commits to purchase or sell an asset. A financial asset
is derecognised where the rights to receive cash flows from the
asset have expired, or the Company has transferred its rights to
receive cash flows from the asset. The Company derecognises a
financial liability when the obligation under the liability is
discharged, cancelled or expired.
IMPAIRMENT OF FINANCIAL ASSETS
While cash and cash equivalents are also subject to the
impairment requirements of IFRS 9, there has been no impairment
loss identified. Investment held at fair value through profit or
loss is not subject to IFRS 9 impairment requirements.
The company holds trade receivables with no financing component
and which have maturities of less than 12 months at amortised cost
and, as such has chosen to apply an approach similar to the
simplified approach for expected credit losses (ECL) under IFRS 9
to all of its trade receivables.
Interest receivable on cash balances, fall within the scope of
IFRS 9. The Company has completed some high-level analysis and
forward looking qualitative and quantitative information, the
Directors consider the interest receivable to be low credit risk as
the deposits are held with reputable financial institutions.
For interest receivable that are low credit risk, IFRS 9 allows
a 12 month expected credit loss to be recognised. The Directors
have concluded that any ECL on the interest receivable would be
immaterial to the Annual Financial Statements and therefore no
impairment adjustments were accounted for.
FAIR VALUE MEASUREMENT AND HIERARCHY
Fair value is the price that would be received on the sale of an
asset, or paid to transfer a liability, in an orderly transaction
between market participants at the measurement date. The fair value
measurement is based on the presumption that the transaction takes
place either in the principal market for the asset or liability, or
in the absence of a principal market, in the most advantageous
market. It is based on the assumptions that market participants
would use when pricing the asset or liability, assuming they act in
their economic best interest. A fair value measurement of a
non-financial asset takes into account the best and highest value
use for that asset.
The level in the fair value hierarchy within which the fair
value measurement is categorised is determined on the basis of the
lowest level input that is significant to the fair value
measurement in its entirety. For this purpose significance of the
inputs is assessed against the fair value measurement in its
entirety. Assessing the significance of a particular input to the
fair value measurement in its entirety requires judgement,
considering factors specific to the asset or liability. If a fair
value measurement uses observable inputs that require significant
adjustment based on unobservable inputs or any other significant
unobservable inputs, that measurement is a Level 3 measurement.
The fair value hierarchy to be applied under IFRS 13 is as
follows:
Level 1: Quoted (unadjusted) market prices in active markets for
identical assets or liabilities.
Level 2: Valuation techniques for which the lowest level input
that is significant to the fair value measurement is directly or
indirectly observable. Level 3: Valuation techniques for which the
lowest level input that is significant to the fair value
measurement is unobservable.
For assets and liabilities that are carried at fair value and
which will be recorded in the financial information on a recurring
basis, the Company will determine whether transfers have occurred
between levels in the hierarchy by reassessing categorisation at
the end of each reporting period.
6. INTEREST INCOME
31 DECEMBER 2019 31 DECEMBER 2019
===============
USD USD
=============== ======================= =======================
Bank interest 244,699 1,994,795
=============== ======================= =======================
244,699 1,994,795
=============== ======================= =======================
7. ADMINISTRATIVE AND OTHER EXPENSES
31 December 31 December
2020 2019
USD USD
============================================ ================================= =======================
Administrative fees 1 3 8 , 0 8 5 9 7, 458
Director & officer insurance 33,937 25,660
Directors fees 264,040 230,105
Fees payable to the Company's auditor
for the audit of the Company's fi nancial
statements 141,140 52,738
Fees payable to the Company's auditor
for non-audit services,1,2 24,606 1 9, 957
Investment Management (recoupment) 11 1 , 5 4
/ expenses (350) 4
Investment Management fees3 1,939,925 1,393,870
Legal and professional fees 107,357 62,863
Regulatory fees 9,364 13,684
Sundry expenses 220,497 112,972
============================================ ================================= =======================
2,878,601 2,120,851
============================================ ================================= =======================
1 During the prior period, the Company's auditor, Deloitte, was
paid GBP76,500 for their role as reporting accountant prior to the
IPO. This fee was recognised directly in equity as a cost
associated with the initial capital raising of the Company.
2 The non-audit services provided relates to the review of the
interim financial statements (2019: initial financial
statements).
3 2019 was not a full year. Investment Management fees commenced
from 19 April 2019, when the Company was admitted for trading on
the London Stock Exchange (LSE).
The Company has no employees and therefore no employee related
costs have been incurred.
8. TAXATION
The Company is approved as an Investment Trust Company with
effect as of 16 April 2019 and is subject to tax at the UK
corporation tax rate of 19%. An Investment Trust Company can claim
a corporation tax deduction for dividends designated as interest
distributions that are derived from net interest income. Therefore,
no UK corporation tax charge has been recognised by the Company for
the period ended 31 December 2020.
31 December 31 December 2019
2020 USD
USD
a) Tax charge in profit or loss: (181) 29,079
- UK corporation tax - -
31 December 31 December 2020
2020 USD
USD
b) Reconciliation of the tax charge
for the year/period (41,823) (361,031)
Profit before tax 3,650,037 146,080
========================================= =========== ===========================
Tax at UK main rate of 19% 693,507 2 7, 755
Tax effect of:
F ai r value gai ns / ( l osses)
on investments not taxable (666,720) 299,309
Fore ig n exchange (gain) / loss
not taxable (181) 29,079
Non-deductible expenditure 4,219 4 , 888
Deferred tax not recognised on expenses
not utilised 10,998 -
Dividends designated as interest
distributions (41,823) (361,031)
========================================= =========== =========================
T a x charge for the year / perio - -
d
========================================= =========== =========================
The tax credit of $41,823 (2019: $361,031) arose as a result of
dividends payable in respect of the year/period being designated as
interest distributions in accordance with UK tax legislation
specific to Investment Trust Companies.
Investment trust companies which have been approved by HM
Revenue & Customs are exempt from UK corporation tax on their
capital gains. Due to the Company's status as an approved
investment trust company, and the intention to continue meeting the
conditions required to maintain that approval for the foreseeable
future, the Company has not provided for deferred tax in respect of
any gains or losses arising on the revaluation of its investments.
The Company has an unrecognised deferred tax asset of $19,465
(2019: $7,576) in respect of tax losses which are available to be
carried forward and offset against future taxable profits. A
deferred tax asset has not been recognised as it is considered
unlikely that the Company will generate taxable profits in excess
of deductible expenses in future periods. The unrecognised deferred
tax asset has been calculated using a corporation tax rate of 19%
(2019: 17%).
On 3 March 2021, the UK Government announced its intention to
increase the rate of UK corporation tax rate from 19% to 25% with
effect from 1 April 2023. If this rate change had been
substantively enacted as at 31 December 2020, the unrecognised
deferred tax asset as at 31 December 2020 would be $25,612.
9. EARNINGS PER SHARE
Earnings per share amounts are calculated by dividing the profit
or loss for the year/period attributable to ordinary equity holders
of the Company by the weighted average number of ordinary shares in
issue during the year. As there are no dilutive instruments
outstanding, basic and diluted earnings per share are
identical.
31 December 2020 31 December
2019
=====================================
USD USD
===================================== =================================== ====================
Net profit attributable to ordinary
shareholders 3,650,037 146,080
Weighted average number of ordinary
shares for the period 200,111,456 200,065,051
===================================== =================================== ====================
Earnings per share - Basic and
diluted (cents per share) 0.018 0.001
===================================== =================================== ====================
During the year ended 31 December 2020, the Company issued
100,038 (2019: 92,323) shares at US$1 (2019: US$1) per share to the
Investment Manager in accordance with the fee arrangement
established in the IPO Prospectus.
10. INVESTMENT IN SUBSIDIARY
B u sine O w n ers
ss hip
================= ================ ================ ================ ===================== ======================
USF Holding
Corp. Delaware,
US Delaware 100%
================= ================ ================ ================ ===================== ======================
Loans: Net Fair Closing
Opening Equity Principal Value Balance:
Equity Acquisitions Advanced Movement Equity
And during the during the During and
Loans Year Year the Year Loans
USD USD USD USD USD
USF Holding
Corp. Delaware, 119 , 472
US , 416 72,551,332 - 3,300,528 195,324,276
================= ================ ================ ================ ===================== ======================
From establishment to 31 December 2020, the Company has funded
USF Holding Corp. with equity and debt, with the total amount of
debt funding based on several criteria, including an arm's length
gearing test satisfying thin capitalisation rules. Note 17 of these
financial statements contains the components of the 31 December
2019 equity and loans balance. Fair value relates to USF's share of
the underlying Solar Asset investment and cash flows only (i.e.
balances exclude tax equity investment amounts) and expected
returns and fair values are modelled after allowing for
distributions to tax equity investors.
The net fair value movement comprises the following:
Total
USD
============================================ ===========
F ai r value gain on investments 6,871,600
Interest income 145,186
Operating costs (716,258)
============================================ ===========
T o tal fair value movement 6,300,528
MSA fee income - cash received transferred
to revenue reserve (3,000,000)
============================================ ===========
Net fair value movement 3,300,528
============================================ ===========
On 28 June 2019, the Company entered into a Management Services
Agreement (MSA) with its subsidiary USF Holding Corp. The Board of
the Company, with further assistance by delegation of its duties to
the Investment Manager, provides strategic management services to
USF Holding Corp relating to its current portfolio of US Solar
Assets and potential acquisitions. The fair value gain for the year
to 31 December 2020 includes an MSA fee of $3,000,000 (period to 31
December 2019: $2,047,726 included within the net fair value
movement).
The investment in subsidiaries comprises on a 'look-through' basis the following:
31 December 2020 31 December 2019
USD USD
====================================== ================================== =====================
F ai r value of underlying solar
asset interests held (i) 434,066,094 97,857,436
Cash or cash equivalents 14,250,138 41,693,039
Fair value of 3rd party loan funding
provided (ii) (250,455,652) (22,800,746)
Fair value of interest rate swaps
on 3rd party loan funding provided
(ii) (3,202,369) 2,941,464
Deferred tax asset/liabilities 660,356 -
Other net assets/liabilities 5,709 (218,777)
====================================== ================================== =====================
Investment balance 195,324,276 119,472,416
====================================== ================================== =====================
(i) The balance recorded at 31 December 2020 relates to the
company's interest in the Acquisition One, Acquisition Two,
Acquisition Three, Acquisition Four and Acquisition Five portfolio
solar asset plants.
(ii) Fair value of 3rd party loan funding provided and the fair
value of interest rate swaps at 31
December 2020 was $253,658,021 (2019: $19,859,282) is comprised of the following:
Facility Drawn Drawn Fair
Size Face Value Value21
Issuing Bank Loan Type H el d By U S D US D(M) U S D
(M) (M)
======================= ============ ============================= ============= ================ ===============
USF Bristol Class B Member,
Zions Bancorporation, LLC (Acquisition One -
N.A. Term Loan Milford) 24.27 24.06 25.48
USF Bristol Class B Member,
KeyBank National LLC (Acquisition One -
Association Term Loan Milford) 24.27 24.06 25 . 51
Project Acquisition Four (Heelstone) 1 5 2 1 4 7
Live Oak Bank Debt projects . 3 3 .6 0 160.75
SC Oregon 2, LLC
Fifth Third Bank, (Acquisition
National Association Term Loan Five - Dorset) 41.59 41.59 41.92
======================= ============ ============================= ============= ================ ===============
Total 242.46 237.31 253.66
==================================================================== ============= ================ ===============
On 29 August 2019 , USF Bristol Class B Member, LLC and Milford
Solar I Holdings, LLC, each as Acquisition One borrowers, entered
into a financing agreement with Zions Bancorporation, N.A. and
KeyBank National
Association, each as lenders. The facility included a
construction loan commitment and an ITC bridge loan commitment of
$48.5 million and $79.2 million, respectively. The ITC bridge loan
was repaid in November 2020 using proceeds from the tax equity
investor. Concurrently, the construction loan converted to a term
loan with a mini-perm structure, which will be fully amortised over
a 25-year period. The initial tenure of the loan is a 7-year
period, after which the loan will be refinanced. The term loan
facility is hedged with fixed interest rate swaps for the full
duration of the amortisation period. As at 31 December 2020, the
drawn fair value of the loan includes mark-to-market revaluation of
associated
interest rate swaps of $(2.88) million.
Each project in Acquisition Four (Heelstone) holds debt with
Live Oak Bank. As at 31 December 2020, the total drawn balance
across all projects is $147 . 60 million. The Heelstone Energy IX -
XIII portfolios are summarised as follows:
-- HE IX portfolio - four project loans drawn to $14.80 million, maturing in March 2042
-- HE X portfolio - seven project loans drawn to $29.31 million,
with maturities ranging from April 2032 to March 2042
-- HE XI portfolio - two project loans drawn to $9.83 million,
with maturities in May and September of 2042
-- HE XII portfolio - six project loans drawn to $81.49 million,
with maturities ranging from April to June of 2043
-- He XIII portfolio - three project loans drawn to $12.16
million, with maturities ranging from April 2038 to June 2044
Between 9 May 2019 and 6 August 2019 , the Acquisition Five
projects entered into construction loan agreements with Solar
Construction Lending, LLC. The construction loans were repaid in
September 2020 at substantial completion funding, and the managing
member in the inverted lease structure, SC Oregon 2, LLC, entered
into a term loan agreement with Fifth Third Bank, National
Association. The term loan has a mini-perm structure and will be
fully amortized over an 11-year period, with the initial tenure
maturing in June 2026. This term loan facility is hedged with fixed
interest rate swaps for the full duration of the loan, with a
mark-to-market revaluation as at 31 December 2020 of $(0.32)
million, included in the drawn fair value of the loan.
In addition to the above, the following Letters of Credit have been issued:
-- KeyBank National Association has provided a Letter of Credit
to USF Bristol Class B Member, LLC to the value of US$19.8 million,
expiring in November 2026 concurrent with the mini-perm structure
and will be refinanced thereafter.
-- Zions Bancorporation, N.A. has provided a Letter of Credit to
USF Bristol Class B Member, LLC to the value of US$2.3 million,
expiring in November 2026 concurrent with the mini-perm structure
and will be refinanced thereafter.
-- Fifth Third Bank, N.A. has provided a Letter of Credit to SC
Oregon 2, LLC to the value of US$4.5 million, expiring in June 2026
concurrent with the mini-perm structure and will be refinanced
thereafter.
11. TRADE AND OTHER RECEIVABLES
USD USD
============================= ====== ========================
Deposit interest receivable - 34,301
Prepayments 25,020 12,883
4 1 , 5 6
VAT receivable 20,567 0
============================= ====== ========================
45,587 88,744
============================= ====== ========================
12. CASH AND CASH EQUIVALENTS
31 December 2020 31 December
USD 2019
USD
======================= ================ =======================
Cash at bank 523,170 85 , 914
Deposits held at bank - 76,372,748
======================= ================ =======================
523,170 76,458,662
======================= ================ =======================
13. TRADE AND OTHER PAYABLES
31 December 2020 31 December
USD 2019
USD
=================================== ================ =====================
Creditors and operating accruals 194,705 112,499
Investment management fee accrual 538,018 491,142
=================================== ================ =====================
732,723 603,641
=================================== ================ =====================
14. DIVIDS PAYABLE
During the year, the Company declared dividends totalling
$4,002,846 (10 January 2019 to 31 December 2019: $1,820,633) of
which $3,001,884 (31 December 2019: $820,172) has been paid as at
31 December 2020. The Company declared a dividend of 0.50 cents per
share, totalling $1,000,962 for the period ending 30 September
2020. The dividend was paid on 12 February 2021.
15. CATEGORIES OF FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS
31 December 2020 31 December
USD 2019
USD
====================================== ================ =======================
Financial assets
Financial assets at fair value
through profit and loss: Investment 119 , 472 ,
in subsidiary 195,324,276 416
Financial assets at amortised
cost: Trade and other receivables - 34,301
Cash at bank 523,170 76,458,662
====================================== ================ =======================
Total financial assets 195,847,446 195,965,379
====================================== ================ =======================
Financial liabilities
Financial liabilities at amortised
cost: Trade and other payables 732,723 603,641
====================================== ================ =======================
Total financial liabilities 732,723 603,641
====================================== ================ =======================
At the balance sheet date, all financial assets and liabilities
were measured at amortised cost except for the investment in
subsidiary which is measured at fair value as further explained in
note 17.
16. FINANCIAL RISK MANAGEMENT
The Company is exposed to certain risks through the ordinary
course of business and the Company's financial risk management
objective is to minimise the effect of these risks. The management
of risks is performed by the Directors of the Company and the
exposure to each financial risk considered potentially material to
the Company, how it arises and the policy for managing it is
summarised below:
CREDIT RISK
The Company is exposed to third-party credit risk in several
instances and the possibility that counterparties with which the
Company and its subsidiaries, together the Group, contracts may
fail to perform their obligations in the manner anticipated by the
Group.
Counterparty credit risk exposure limits are determined based on
the credit rating of the counterparty. Counterparties are assessed
and monitored on the basis of their ratings from Standard &
Poor's and/or Moody's. No financial transactions are permitted with
counterparties with a credit rating of less than BBB- from Standard
& Poor's or Baa3 from Moody's unless specifically approved by
the Board.
Cash and other assets that are required to be held in custody
will be held at bank. Cash and other assets may not be treated as
segregated assets and will therefore not be segregated from the
banks own assets in the event of the insolvency of a custodian.
Cash held with the bank will not be treated as client money subject
to the rules of the FCA and may be used by the bank in the ordinary
course of its own business. The Company will therefore be subject
to the creditworthiness of the bank. In the event of the insolvency
of the bank, the Company will rank as a general creditor in
relation thereto and may not be able to recover such cash in full,
or at all.
Credit risk is mainly at subsidiary level where the capital
commitments are being made and is managed by diversifying exposures
among a portfolio of counterparties and through applying credit
limits to those counterparties with lower credit standing.
Credit exposures may also be managed using credit derivatives.
No credit derivatives were in place as at 31 December 2020.
Cash and bank deposits are held with major international
financial institutions who each hold a Moody's credit rating of A2
or higher.
LIQUIDITY RISK
The objective of liquidity management is to ensure that all
commitments which are required to be funded can be met out of
readily available and secure sources of funding. The Company's only
financial liabilities are trade and other payables. The Company
intends to hold sufficient cash across the Company and Subsidiary's
operating accounts to meet the working capital needs over a horizon
of at least the next 6 months. Cash held at subsidiary level is
available to meet the obligations of the Company. As at 31 December
2020 USF Holding Corp. held cash at bank of $14,250,138 and had
trade and other payables totalling $632,414. Cash flow forecasts
are prepared on a monthly basis for a rolling 2-year period to
assist in the ongoing analysis of short term cash flow.
The following table reflects the maturity analysis of financial
assets and liabilities.
<1 year 1 to 2 2 to 5 >5 Total
As at 31 USD years years years USD
December 2020 USD USD USD
================= ======================= ================== ================= ================ =================
Financial assets
Financial assets
at fa
i r value
through pro
fi t and loss:
Loan to
subsidiary* - - - 47,818,615 47,818,615
Financial assets
at amortised
cost:
Tra de and other - - - - -
receivables
Cash at bank 523,170 - - - 523,170
================= ======================= ================== ================= ================ =================
T o t a l fi
nancial
assets 523,170 - - 47,818,615 48,341,785
================= ======================= ================== ================= ================ =================
<1 year 1 to 2 to 5 >5 Total
As at 31 USD 2 years years USD
December 2020 years USD USD
USD
================= ======================= ================== ================= ================ =================
Financial lia b
ilitie
s
Financial lia b
iliti
es at amortised
cost:
Tra de and other
payables 732,723 - - - 732,723
================= ======================= ================== ================= ================ =================
T o t a l fi
nancial
liabilities 732,723 - - - 732,723
================= ======================= ================== ================= ================ =================
*Excludes the equity portion of the investment in
subsidiary.
MARKET RISK
Market risk is the risk that the fair value or cash flows of a
financial instrument will fluctuate due to changes in market
prices. Market risk reflects interest rate risk, currency risk and
other price risks. The objective is to minimise market risk through
managing and controlling these risks to acceptable parameters,
while optimising returns. The Company uses financial instruments in
the ordinary course of business, and also incurs financial
liabilities, in order to manage market risks.
PRICE RISK
Price risk is the risk that the fair value or cash flows of a
financial instrument will fluctuate due to changes in market
prices. At 31 December 2020, the Company had no direct exposure to
price risk. The effect of price on the Company's investments is
considered in note 17.
INTEREST RATE RISK
Interest rate Risk is the risk of changes in the interest
expense for debt, or interest received on deposits, as measured in
the currency of that debt, due to movements in market interest
rates.
The Company does not have any borrowings as at 31 December 2020.
The Company may manage the cost of borrowing by borrowing using
fixed rate instruments, and/or by overlaying interest rate
derivatives against the Company's debt portfolio. Policy limits for
the maximum and minimum levels of hedging relative to the expected
net debt profile for rolling multi-year periods.
In considering whether to execute hedging transactions, the
costs and benefits of hedging will be balanced against the effects
of movements in interest rates on the debt portfolio.
At 31 December 2020, the Company is indirectly exposed to
interest rate risk through its investment in the subsidiary.
However this risk is managed at a subsidiary level and the effect
of Interest rate risk on the Company is considered immaterial.
The Company may be exposed to changes in variable market rates
of interest as this could impact the discount rate and therefore
the valuation of the projects as well as the fair value of the loan
to subsidiary.
CURRENCY RISK
The Net Asset Value of the Company is calculated in US Dollars
whereas the financial instruments at year end may be in other
currencies. The value in terms of USD of the financial instruments
of the Company, which may be designated in any currency, may rise
and fall due to exchange rate fluctuations of individual
currencies. Adverse movements in currency exchange rates can result
in a decrease and loss of capital. At year end, the currency
exposure was considered immaterial.
Currency risk can be mitigated to some extent through
transacting wherever possible in USD. Where non-USD exposures are
unavoidable, the Company is able to manage exposures to movements
in foreign currencies through foreign exchange derivative
transactions.
CAPITAL RISK MANAGEMENT
The capital structure of the Company at year-end consists of
equity attributable to equity holders of the Company, comprising
issued capital, reserves and accumulated loss. The Company has no
return on capital benchmark, but the Board continues to monitor the
balance of the overall capital structure so as to maintain investor
and market confidence. The Company is not subject to any external
capital requirements.
17. FAIR VALUE MEASUREMENT
The following table analyses within the fair value hierarchy the
Company's assets and liabilities measured at fair value at 31
December 2020:
Level 1 Level 2 Level 3
USD USD USD
========================== ======= ======= ===================
Investment in subsidiary - - 168,243,133
========================== ======= ======= ===================
The following table analyses within the fair value hierarchy the
Company's assets and liabilities measured at fair value at 31
December 2019:
Level 1 Level 2 Level 3
USD USD USD
========================== ======= ======= ===================
Investment in subsidiary - - 119,472,416
========================== ======= ======= ===================
The investments recognised at fair value through profit and loss
are classified as Level 3 in the fair value hierarchy and the
reconciliation in the movement of this Level 3 investment is
presented below. No transfers between levels took place during the
year.
31 December 2020 31 December
USD 2019
USD
============================= ================ ===================
Opening balance 119,472,416 -
============================= ================ ===================
Add: purchases during the
year 72,551,332 76,000,000
============================= ================ ===================
Add: loans advanced - 43,000,000
============================= ================ ===================
Less: receipt of MAS fee (3,000,000) -
income
============================= ================ ===================
Total fair value movement
through the profit or loss
(capital) 6,300,528 472,416
============================= ================ ===================
Closing balance 195,324,276 119,472,416
============================= ================ ===================
The Company's policy is to recognise transfers into and
transfers out of fair value hierarchy levels as of the date of the
event or change in circumstances that caused the transfer.
In accordance with the guidelines of the Company's valuation
policy, all assets held as at 31 December 2020 have been valued by
an external valuation expert, as they are now fully
operational.
VALUATION APPROACH AND METHODOLOGY
Fair value for operational Solar Assets is derived using a
discounted cash flow ( DCF) methodology. For Solar Assets that are
not yet operational or where the completion of the acquisition by
the Company has not occurred at the time of valuation, the purchase
price of the Solar Power Asset including acquisition costs is
normally used as an appropriate estimate of fair value provided no
significant changes to key underlying economic considerations (such
as major construction impediments or natural disasters) have
arisen.
In a DCF analysis, the fair value of the Solar Power Asset is
the present value of the asset's expected future cash flows, based
on a range of operating assumptions for revenues and costs and an
appropriate discount rate range.
The Investment Manager has reviewed a range of sources in
determining the fair market valuation of the Solar Assets,
including but not limited to:
-- discount rates publicly disclosed by the Company's global peers;
-- discount rates applicable to comparable infrastructure asset classes; and
-- capital asset price model outputs and implied risk premium over relevant risk-free rates.
A broad range of assumptions are used in valuation models. Given
the long-term nature of the assets, valuations are assessed using
long-term historical data to reflect the asset life.
Where possible, assumptions are based on observable market and
technical data. The Investment Manager also engages technical
experts such as long-term electricity price forecasters to provide
long-term data for use in its valuations.
Long-term electricity price forecasts are obtained every six
months from two leading independent power price forecasting firms
for each jurisdiction in which Solar Assets are located. These two
electricity price forecasts are averaged and provided to the
independent valuer to project the prices at which existing power
purchase agreements will be re-contracted. A blend of providers is
used to prevent the valuation of the portfolio being unduly
influenced by one forecaster's set of assumptions, to mitigate
potential forecaster errors, and to reduce the timing risk inherent
in valuing the portfolio shortly before curve updates are released.
The independent valuer assesses these forecast prices for
reasonableness against their own internal forecasts and others in
the marketplace.
VALUATION PROCESS
NESM has engaged independent valuer KPMG to calculate the fair
value of its operating renewable energy assets. KPMG is one of the
largest valuation firms in the United States with significant
experience in estimating the fair value of solar and other
renewable energy assets. In accordance with Company policy, all 41
operating assets were externally valued at 31 December 2020
(construction assets were held at cost in previous periods). The
valuation has been calculated in accordance with Uniform Standards
of Professional Appraisal Practice (USPAP) as applied to
photovoltaic electricity generation systems in the United
States.
Primary valuation methodology:
-- The equity fair values of USF's construction assets are based
on the equity purchase price plus transaction costs (no assets were
valued at cost for 31 December 2020 as all assets were operational
at period end).
-- The equity fair values of USF's operational assets are based
on DCF modelling of pre-tax cash flows to equity as at 31 December
2020. This methodology more accurately reflects the valuation
impact of the discrete debt instruments that USF has in place when
compared to an unlevered valuation.
-- A post-tax valuation is conducted at the US Holding Corp.
level to compare the implied post-tax discount rate.
In order to ensure that the potential impact of the pandemic is
considered in the valuations, KPMG has included a specific COVID-19
risk premium in the discount rate used in valuations, and the
Company has adopted merchant curves which include the impact of the
pandemic on future power prices.
The discount rates used by the external valuer ranged from 6.5%
to 7.0% on a pre-tax weighted average cost of capital (WACC) basis
for levered assets (30 June 2020: 6.8% to 7.2%) and 8.1% to 9.7% on
a pre-tax cost of equity basis (30 June 2020: 8.1% to 8.8%) for
unlevered assets. The use of a WACC or cost of equity in valuations
is dependent on actual leverage employed.
A summary of the movement during the year is included in the
table below:
US CASH
ACQUISITION ACQUISITION ACQUISITION ACQUISITION ACQUISITION AND Total
ONE USD TWO USD THREE USD FOUR USD FIVE USD WORKING USD
CAPITAL
BALANCES
USD
============================================== ======================= ======================= ======================= ======================== ============= ==============
31 December
2019 29,098,744 25,794,479 23,104,931 - - 41,474,262 119,472,416
Additions 1 4 , 4 4
(at cost) (2,805,553)22 2 , 3 8 1 14,578,557 41,210,429 26,443,205 (23,009,010) 70,860,009
Change in
fair value 3,750,354 2,338,893 (1,613,379) (2,931,796) 3,447,779 - 4,991,851
============== ============================== ======================= ======================= ======================= ======================== ============= ==============
31 December
2020 30,043,545 42,575,753 36,070,109 38,278,633 29,890,984 18,465,252 195,324,276
============== ============================== ======================= ======================= ======================= ======================== ============= ==============
SENSITIVITY ANALYSIS
Set out below are the initial indications of the key assumptions
the Directors believe would have a material impact upon the fair
value of the investments should they change. In the absence of an
operating business model for each underlying renewable energy
asset, the sensitivities have been conducted on the acquisition
models of these assets. The following sensitivities assume the
relevant input is changed over the entire useful life of each of
the underlying renewable energy assets, while all other variables
remain constant. All sensitivities have been calculated
independently of each other.
The Directors consider the changes in inputs to be within a
reasonable expected range based on their understanding of market
transactions. This is not intended to imply that the likelihood of
change or that possible changes in value would be restricted to
this range.
CHANGE IN CHANGE IN NAV CHANGE IN NAV
INPUT PER SHARE
USD (M) USD (Cents)
===================================================== ========================== ==========================
Discount rate +0.5% -10.06 -5.05
-0.5% +11.24 +5.64
Electricity production
(change from P50) P90 -31.66 -15.89
===================================== ============== ========================== ==========================
P10 +30.88 +15.50
===================================== ============== ========================== ==========================
Merchant Period Electricity
Prices -10% -16.30 -8.19
===================================== ============== ========================== ==========================
+10% +16.37 +8.22
===================================== ============== ========================== ==========================
Operating expenses +10% -14.06 -7.06
===================================== ============== ========================== ==========================
-10% +13.79 +6.92
===================================== ============== ========================== ==========================
Operating life -3 years -12.06 -6.05
===================================== ============== ========================== ==========================
+3 years +10.21 +5.13
===================================== ============== ========================== ==========================
Tax rate -5% -4.16 -2.08
===================================== ============== ========================== ==========================
+5% +4.14 +2.07
===================================== ============== ========================== ==========================
DISCOUNT RATE
The sensitivity demonstrates the impact of a change in the
discount rate applied to the pre-tax, equity cash flows from all of
the Company's renewable energy asset investments as at 31 December
2020. A range of +/- 0.5% has been considered to determine the
resultant impact on the Company's NAV per share and the fair value
of its solar asset investments.
As at 31 December 2020, the discount rate range used was 6.46%
to 6.97% on a WACC basis, and 8.10% to 9.73% on a pre-tax cost of
equity basis. The use of a WACC or cost of equity in valuations is
dependent on actual leverage employed.
ELECTRICITY PRODUCTION
The Company's solar asset investments are valued based upon a
forecast P50 solar energy generation profile (being a 50%
probability that this generation estimate will be met or exceeded).
A technical adviser has derived this generation estimate by taking
into account a range of irradiation datasets, satellite and
ground-based measurements, and site-specific loss factors including
module performance degradation, module mismatch and inverter
losses. These items are then considered in deriving the anticipated
production of the individual solar asset (MWh per annum) based upon
a 50% probability of exceedance.
The sensitivity estimates the impact on the fair value of solar
asset investments and NAV per share of a change of production
estimates to P90 (90% likely probability of exceedance) and a P10
generation estimate (10% probability of exceedance).
As P10 generation estimates were not independently obtained for
each solar asset on or about the time of the asset acquisition, the
Directors have determined a proxy P10 estimate for those assets by
assessing the relationship between the independently determined P50
and P90 generation estimates for each of the assets in the
Operating Portfolio (e.g. a one-year P90 generation estimate might
be 92.5% of a one-year P50 generation estimate, implying that it is
7.5% lower than the P50 generation estimate).
In determining the proxy P10 generation estimate, the Directors
have assumed that the relationship between a P50 generation
estimate and a P10 generation estimate is the same as that between
a P50 generation estimate and a P90 generation estimate in absolute
terms. Therefore a one-year P10 generation estimate by this
methodology would be 107.5% (i.e. 100% + 7.5%) of the asset's P50
generation estimate.
MERCHANT PERIOD ELECTRICITY PRICES
Each of the assets underlying the Company's solar asset
investments have long-term PPAs in place with creditworthy energy
purchasers and thus the PPA prices are not impacted by energy price
changes during this period. For the post-PPA period of each solar
asset, the Directors use long-term electricity price forecasts that
have been prepared by a market consultant in their determination of
the fair value of the Company's operating solar asset
investments.
The sensitivities show the impact of an increase / decrease in
power prices for each year of the power price curve for each plant
over the plant's remaining economic life after the conclusion of
the existing PPAs. A flat 10% increase / decrease in market
electricity prices from forecasted levels over the remaining asset
life of all plants have been used in the sensitivity analysis.
Although a 10% increase / decrease is not typical, this figure has
been used as merchant period prices are determined upon the
discretion of expert market consultants.
OPERATING EXPENSES
The operating costs of the assets underlying the Company's solar
asset investments include annual operations and maintenance
(O&M), asset management (AM), insurance expenses, land lease
expenses, major maintenance and general administration expenses.
Most operating expenses for the Solar Power Assets are contracted
and as such there is typically little variation in annual operating
costs. However, there may be cases where all operating costs are
recontracted at a 10% premium or discount.
The sensitivity above assumes a 10% increase / decrease in
annual operating costs for all underlying assets and the resultant
impact on the Company's fair value of investments and NAV per
share.
OPERATING LIFE
The useful operating life of a solar asset is generally accepted
by independent valuers to be the lesser of the lease term for asset
site and the independent engineer's assessment of the asset's
useful life. The Company's maximum useful life assumption is 35
years for newly constructed assets.
The sensitivity above assumes a three-year increase / decrease
in useful operating life of the Company's Solar Assets, and the
resultant impact on the Company's fair value of investments and NAV
per share.
TAX RATE
The United States imposes a tax on profits of US resident
corporations at a rate of 21%. The sensitivity above assumes the US
corporate tax rate increases / decreases by 5% (to 26% / 16%) and
shows the resultant impact on the Company's fair value of
investments and NAV per share.
18. SHARE CAPITAL
ORDINARY SHARE SHARE REDUCTION SHAREHOLDERS
SHARES CAPITAL PREMIUM RESERVE EQUITY
NUMBER USD USD USD USD
===================== ================= ============== ================= ================= ====================
As at 10 January - - - -
2019
Issue of fully
paid ordinary
shares at USD0.01 2,000,923 198,089,350 - 200,090,273
Equity issue costs - - (4,000,000) - (4,000,000)
Transfer to capital
reduction reserve - - (194,000,000) 194,000,000 -
Dividends - - - (1,820,633) (1,820,633)
===================== ================= ============== ================= ================= ====================
As at 31 December
2019 200,092,323 2,000,923 89,350 192,179,367 194,269,640
Issue of fully
paid ordinary
shares at USD0.01 100,038 1,001 - - -
Dividends - - - (4,002,846) (4,002,846)
===================== ================= ============== ================= ================= ====================
As at 31 December
2020 200,192,361 2,001,924 184,786 188,176,521 190,363,231
===================== ================= ============== ================= ================= ====================
The Company has an authorised share capital of 500,000,000
ordinary shares.
On incorporation the Company issued one ordinary share of $0.01
which was fully paid up.
On 10 April 2019, the Board approved the proposed placing and
offer for subscription (together the Placing) of up to 200 million
ordinary shares of $0.01 each in the capital of the Company at a
price of $1 per ordinary share, raising gross proceeds from the
Placing of $200 million.
Following a successful application to the High Court and
lodgement of the Company's statement of capital with the Registrar
of Companies, the Company was permitted to cancel its share premium
account. This was effected on 21 June 2019 by a transfer of the
balance of $194 million from the share premium account to the
capital reduction reserve. The capital reduction reserve is classed
as a distributable reserve and dividends to be paid by the Company
are to be offset against this reserve.
The Company declared a dividend of 0.50 cents per share,
totalling $1,000,962 for the period ending 30 September 2020. The
dividend was paid on 12 February 2021. For the year ended 31
December 2020, the Company paid a total of 2.00 cents per
share.
19. RESERVES
The nature and purpose of each of the reserves included within
equity at 31 December 2020 are as follows:
-- Share premium reserve: represents the surplus of the gross
proceeds of share issues over the nominal value of the shares, net
of the direct costs of equity issues and net of conversion amount.
As at 31 December 2020 the share premium account has a balance of
$184,786 (2019:$89,350).
-- Capital reduction reserve: represents a distributable reserve
(which may be utilised in respect of dividend payouts) created
following a court approved reduction in capital. As at 31 December
2020 the capital reduction reserve has a balance of $188,176,521
(2019:$192,179,367).
-- Capital reserve: represents cumulative net gains and losses,
of a capital nature, recognised in the Statement of Profit and Loss
and Other Comprehensive Income and associated tax allocations
arising from the MSA fee income and interest distributions. As at
31 December 2020 the capital reserve reflects a profit of
$3,271,402 (2019:$319,371 profit).
-- Retained earnings represent cumulative net gains and losses,
of an income nature, recognised in the Statement of Profit and Loss
and Other Comprehensive Income and associated tax allocations
arising from the MSA fee income and interest distributions. As at
31 December 2020, retained earnings reflects a profit of $524,715
(2019:$173,291 loss).
The only movements in these reserves during the year are
disclosed in the statement of changes in equity.
20. NET ASSET VALUE PER SHARE
Basic NAV per share is calculated by dividing the Company's net
assets as shown in the statement of financial position that are
attributable to the ordinary equity holders of the Company by the
number of ordinary shares outstanding at the end of the period. As
there are no dilutive instruments outstanding, basic and diluted
NAV per share are identical.
31 DECEMBER 2020 31 DECEMBER
USD 2019
USD
============================= ================================================= ===================
Net assets per Statement of
Financial Position 194,159,348 194,415,720
Ordinary shares in issue as
at 31 December 200,192,361 200,092,323
============================= ================================================= ===================
NAV per share - Basic and
diluted 0.970 0.972
============================= ================================================= ===================
21. CASH FLOW STATEMENT RECONCOLIATION
IAS 7 Statement of Cash Flows require additional disclosures
about changes in an entity's financing liabilities, arising from
both cash flow and non- cash flow items. As at 31 December 2020 the
Company has no financing liabilities and therefore no further
disclosure is required.
22. TRANSACTIONS WITH RELATED PARTIES
Details of related parties are set out below:
NON-EXECUTIVE DIRECTORS
Directors are paid fees of GBP40,000 per annum. In addition to
this, Gillian Nott receives GBP20,000 per annum in respect of
serving as Chair of the Board and Jamie Richards receives GBP10,000
per annum in respect of serving as Chair of the Audit
committee.
Total Directors' fees of $264,040 (2019:$230,105) were incurred
in respect of the year with none being outstanding and payable at
the year-end (2019: $nil).
SUBSIDIARY
The Company previously issued loans totalling $43 million to its
subsidiary USF Holding Corp. The principal portions of the loans
are repayable in 7 years from issuance. The loans bear interest at
rates of 5% and 4.1% respectively, payable semi-annually in
arrears.
INVESTMENT MANAGER
The Investment Manager is entitled to management fees under the
terms of the Investment Management Agreement. The Company shall pay
to the Investment Manager an annual fee (exclusive of value added
tax, which shall be added where applicable) payable quarterly in
arrears calculated at the rate of:
ASSETS UNDER MANAGEMENT FEE BASED ON NAV
=========================== ============================
< $500 million 1.0% per annum
$500 million to $1 billion 0.9% per annum
=========================== ============================
> $1 billion 0.8% per annum
=========================== ============================
Based on the Net Asset Value on the last Business Day of the
relevant quarter.
The Management Fee due in respect of each quarter shall be
invoiced by the Manager to the Company as at the final Business Day
of the relevant quarter, and shall be due and payable in the
following manner:
a) no later than 10 Business Days after the Payment Date, 90% of
the Management Fee shall be paid to the Manager in cash to such
bank account as the Manager may nominate for this purpose; and
b) 10% of the Management Fee shall be paid to the Manager or an
Associate (as directed by the Manager) in the form of ordinary
shares in accordance with the provisions stated in the Investment
Management Agreement.
For the avoidance of doubt, where there are C Shares in issue,
the advisory fee will be charged on the Net Asset Value
attributable to the ordinary shares and C Shares respectively. On
10 November 2020, the Board approved a recommendation from the
Investment Manager to have the Administrator arrange for 10 per
cent of its Management Fee to be applied to purchase ordinary USF
shares in the secondary market. From that time, the Company ceased
issuing shares to the Investment Manager.
A management fee of $1,939,925 (2019: $1,393,870) was incurred
during the year ($193,992 paid or payable in ordinary shares), of
which $538,018 (2019: $491,142) remained payable at 31 December
2020 ($97,556 payable in ordinary shares). In addition to the
management fee, the Manager shall also be entitled to payment of
the following:
a) a fee for any successful arrangement of debt services payable
at a rate of 0.5% of the debt face value; and
b) a fee for any oversight of asset construction services
payable at market rates, negotiated on an arms' length basis and
subject to the approval of the Board.
The Manager provides debt arranging services to the Fund,
including contacting and liaising with capital providers,
negotiating borrowing terms, obtaining credit ratings, implementing
interest rate hedging strategies and executing documentation. The
Manager was successful in securing debt, interest rate hedging and
letter of credit facilities at competitive terms for the Fund,
providing diversification to the Fund's capital sources.
For this service, the Manager receives debt arranging fees of
0.5% of the face value of new third-party debt and letter of credit
facilities.
Debt arrangement fees totalling $336,500 ($125,000 accrued;
$211,500 paid) were incurred during the year (2019: $nil). Asset
management and construction services fees totalling $360,061
($229,261 accrued; $130,800 paid) were incurred during the year
(2019: $nil).
23. CAPITAL COMMITMENTS
The Company had no contingencies and no other significant
capital commitments at the reporting date.
24. POST BALANCE SHEET EVENTS
On 16 March 2021, the Company announced a dividend of 0.50 cents
per ordinary share for the period ending 31 December 2020.
On 10 February 2021, the Company announced it was assessing debt
and equity fundraising options. Any further fundraising is subject
to Board and customary regulatory approvals and the Company will
make an announcement in due course.
There were no other events after reporting date which requires
disclosure.
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END
FR SFASFMEFSESD
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
March 16, 2021 03:01 ET (07:01 GMT)
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