LONDON STOCK EXCHANGE ANNOUNCEMENT
Worldwide
Healthcare Trust PLC
Unaudited
Half Year Results for the six months ended
30 September 2024
This
Announcement is not the Company’s Half Year Report & Accounts.
It is an abridged version of the Company’s full Half Year Report
& Accounts for the six months ended 30
September 2024. The full Half Year Report & Accounts,
together with a copy of this announcement, will also shortly be
available on the Company’s website:
www.worldwidewh.com where up
to date information on the Company, including daily NAV, share
prices and fact sheets, can also be found.
The
Company's Half Year Report & Accounts for the six months ended
30 September 2024 has been submitted
to the UK Listing Authority, and will shortly be available for
inspection on the National Storage Mechanism (NSM):
https://data.fca.org.uk/#/nsm/nationalstoragemechanism
For
further information please contact: Mark
Pope, Frostrow Capital LLP 0203 008 4913.
Performance
|
Six months
to
|
One year
to
|
|
30
September
|
31
March
|
|
2024
|
2024
|
Net asset
value per share (total return)* #
|
0.6%
|
12.0%
|
Share
price (total return)* #
|
3.6%
|
8.6%
|
Benchmark
(total return)^ #
|
0.0%
|
10.9%
|
|
30
September
|
31
March
|
Six
months
|
|
2024
|
2024
|
change
|
Net asset
value per share
|
381.5p
|
381.1p
|
0.1%
|
Share
price
|
345.0p
|
335.0p
|
3.0%
|
Discount
of share price to the net asset value per share
|
9.6%
|
12.1%
|
|
Leverage1
|
13.3%
|
10.8%
|
|
Ongoing
charges*
|
0.9%
|
0.9%
|
|
Ongoing
charges (including performance fees crystallised during
the period)*
|
0.9%
|
0.9%
|
|
#
Source –
Morningstar.
^
Benchmark –
MSCI World Health Care Index on a net total return, sterling
adjusted basis (see Glossary).
*
Alternative
Performance Measure (See Glossary).
1
Leverage
calculated under the Commitment Method (see Glossary).
Statement from the Chair
“During
the period, the Company’s net asset value per share total return of
+0.6% and share price total return of +3.6% outperformed the
Benchmark, which was flat.”
PERFORMANCE
Macroeconomic
and geopolitical factors again buffeted global markets during the
period under review. Positive factors for markets included the
initiation of interest rate reductions in the U.S. as well as new
stimulus measures in China. These
were somewhat offset by concerns about a global economic slowdown
and the knock-on impacts of interest rate increases in Japan. There were also unexpected events in
the U.S. Presidential race, including the assassination attempt on
former President Trump and the withdrawal from the race of the
incumbent, President Biden.
Against
this backdrop, during the period under review, the MSCI World and
the FTSE All-Share Indices produced sterling based total returns of
+2.8% and +6.1%, respectively. The Company’s Benchmark, the MSCI
World Healthcare Index, measured on a net total return, sterling
adjusted basis was flat during the period.
In
comparison, the Company’s net asset value (NAV) per share total
return was +0.6%, outperforming the Benchmark during the period and
building on our outperformance in the previous financial year. The
NAV performance was achieved despite the headwind of sterling
strengthening against the U.S. dollar by +6.2%, the U.S. dollar
being the currency in which the majority of the Company’s
investments are denominated.
The
Company’s share price total return was +3.6%, greater than its NAV
total return, reflecting a narrowing of the discount of the
Company’s share price to its NAV per share from 12.1% at the
beginning of the half year to 9.6% at the end.
Looking at
specific names in the portfolio, the largest contributions during
the reporting period came from healthcare services company
Tenet
Healthcare and
medical technology company Boston
Scientific.
The
principal detractors from performance were the large capitalisation
biotechnology company Biogen,
and healthcare equipment manufacturer Dexcom.
Further
information regarding the Company’s investments and performance can
be found in the Portfolio Manager’s Review.
The
Company had, on average, leverage of 12.4% during the period, which
added 0.5% to performance. As at the half year-end, leverage stood
at 13.3%, compared to 10.8% at the beginning. Our Portfolio Manager
continues to adopt both a pragmatic
and a tactical approach to the use of leverage, which adds to
performance in periods of rising portfolio share prices and has
benefitted the Company over time.
Our
Portfolio Manager, through its extensive private equity research
capabilities, continues to review unquoted opportunities although,
in the period under review, no new unquoted investments were made.
The Company is able to invest up to 10% of the portfolio, at the
time of acquisition, in unquoted securities. Exposure to unquoted
equities accounted for 5.3% of the total portfolio at the half
year-end,
and these holdings made a negative contribution of 0.7% to the
Company’s performance during the period under review.
PERFORMANCE
FEE
No
performance fee was accrued as at 30
September 2024 and no performance fee can become payable
within the next year. The performance fee arrangements are
described in detail in the Company’s Annual Report.
CAPITAL
Share
price discounts continue to persist across the U.K. investment
company sector. As at the period end, the average level of share
price discount to NAV stood at 13.7%. (source: Winterflood
Investment Trusts)
It is the
Board’s policy to buy back our shares if the Company’s share price
discount to the NAV per share exceeds 6% on an ongoing basis.
Despite the Company’s share buybacks, the discount can remain
greater than 6% for extended periods of time, depending on overall
sentiment towards the Company, the sector and investment trusts
generally. Nonetheless, buybacks enhance the NAV per share for
remaining shareholders. In addition, the Board believes that
regular buybacks help to narrow the discount and go some way to
dampening discount volatility.
During the
period under review, the Company repurchased a total of 28,230,376
shares for treasury at a cost of £99.8m and at an average discount
of 9.6%. At the period end, there were 517,711,956 shares in issue
(excluding the 83,953,244 shares
held in treasury). Since the period end to 13 November 2024, a further 4,860,440 shares have
been bought back for treasury, at a cost of £16.8m and at the time
of writing, the share price discount stands at 10.5%.
DIVIDENDS
The Board
has declared an unchanged interim dividend of 0.7p per share, for
the year to 31 March 2025, which will
be payable on 9 January 2025 to
shareholders on the register of members on 29 November 2024. The associated
ex-dividend
date is 28 November 2024.
I remind
shareholders that it remains the Company’s policy to pay out
dividends at least to the extent required to
maintain investment
trust status. These dividend payments are paid out of the Company’s
net revenue for the year and, in accordance
with investment trust rules, a maximum of 15% of income can be
retained by the Company in any financial year.
It is the
Board’s continuing belief that it is in shareholders’ best
interests to see the Company’s capital deployed in its investment
portfolio rather than paid out as dividends to achieve a particular
target yield.
COMPOSITION
OF THE BOARD
I am
delighted to confirm that, at the beginning of October,
Sian Hansen and William Hemmings joined the Board. Sian is a
non-executive Director of Pacific Assets Trust plc, and formerly
the Chief Operating Officer at global strategic consultancy group
CT Group as well as a non-executive
Director of JP Morgan Multi-Asset Global Growth & Income plc.
William was the former Head of Closed End Funds and Head of
Investment Companies at abrdn PLC (formerly Aberdeen Asset
Management PLC) and a Director and Deputy Chair of the Association
of Investment Trust Companies. With their significant experience in
the investment trust sector as well as portfolio management,
financial, governance and geopolitical matters, Sian and William
will be valuable additions to the Board and our future
deliberations.
OUTLOOK
While
macroeconomic and geopolitical conditions continue to be
challenging, your Board believes that the fundamentals of the
healthcare sector remain strong.
Our
Portfolio Manager is positive about the outlook for the sector, a
view driven in part by strong innovation cycles, elevated patient
volumes and an ageing global demographic. They also believe that
the current high level of merger and acquisition activity in the
sector will continue, supported by attractive valuations, healthy
balance sheets and an increasing need for larger pharmaceutical and
biotechnology companies to address future patent
expirations.
Finally,
they also believe that the Republican victory in the U.S. election,
having won both the Presidency and also control of Congress, will
provide a positive backdrop for the healthcare sector, as it is not
expected that legislation detrimental to the industry will be
enacted.
Doug McCutcheon
Chair
14 November 2024
Portfolio
AS AT
30 SEPTEMBER 2024
|
|
|
Market
value
|
%
of
|
Investments
|
Sector
|
Country/region
|
£’000
|
investments
|
Eli
Lilly
|
Pharmaceuticals
|
United
States
|
194,711
|
9.4
|
Boston
Scientific
|
Health
Care Equipment & Supplies
|
United
States
|
161,020
|
7.8
|
Intuitive
Surgical
|
Health
Care Equipment & Supplies
|
United
States
|
124,748
|
6.0
|
AstraZeneca
|
Pharmaceuticals
|
United
Kingdom
|
122,151
|
5.9
|
Novo
Nordisk
|
Pharmaceuticals
|
Denmark
|
120,276
|
5.8
|
Merck
|
Pharmaceuticals
|
United
States
|
95,328
|
4.6
|
Tenet
Healthcare
|
Health
Care Providers & Services
|
United
States
|
79,290
|
3.8
|
Biogen
|
Biotechnology
|
United
States
|
78,681
|
3.8
|
UnitedHealth
|
Health
Care Providers & Services
|
United
States
|
78,003
|
3.8
|
Stryker
|
Health
Care Equipment & Supplies
|
United
States
|
76,271
|
3.7
|
Top
10 investments
|
|
|
1,130,480
|
54.6
|
Daiichi
Sankyo
|
Pharmaceuticals
|
Japan
|
67,535
|
3.3
|
Sarepta
Therapeutics
|
Biotechnology
|
United
States
|
46,781
|
2.3
|
Natera
|
Life
Sciences Tools & Services
|
United
States
|
46,186
|
2.2
|
Argenx
|
Biotechnology
|
Netherlands
|
45,960
|
2.2
|
Eisai
|
Pharmaceuticals
|
Japan
|
44,425
|
2.1
|
Integer
Holdings
|
Health
Care Equipment & Supplies
|
United
States
|
44,413
|
2.1
|
Ionis
Pharmaceuticals
|
Biotechnology
|
United
States
|
40,985
|
2.0
|
Vertex
Pharmaceuticals
|
Biotechnology
|
United
States
|
37,953
|
1.8
|
Thermo
Fisher Scientific
|
Life
Sciences Tools & Services
|
United
States
|
32,628
|
1.6
|
Elevance
Health
|
Health
Care Providers & Services
|
United
States
|
30,545
|
1.5
|
Top
20 investments
|
|
|
1,567,892
|
75.8
|
Caris Life
Sciences *
|
Life
Sciences Tools & Services
|
United
States
|
29,554
|
1.4
|
Alnylam
Pharmaceuticals
|
Biotechnology
|
United
States
|
28,290
|
1.4
|
Evolent
Health
|
Health
Care Providers & Services
|
United
States
|
25,385
|
1.2
|
SI-BONE
|
Health
Care Equipment & Supplies
|
United
States
|
23,954
|
1.2
|
Crossover
Health *
|
Health
Care Providers & Services
|
United
States
|
23,883
|
1.2
|
Cytokinetics
|
Biotechnology
|
United
States
|
21,992
|
1.1
|
ICON
|
Life
Sciences Tools & Services
|
Ireland
|
21,664
|
1.0
|
Universal
Health Services
|
Health
Care Providers & Services
|
United
States
|
21,162
|
1.0
|
Amgen
|
Biotechnology
|
United
States
|
20,265
|
1.0
|
Shanghai
INT Medical Instruments
|
Health
Care Equipment & Supplies
|
China
|
20,241
|
1.0
|
Top
30 investments
|
|
|
1,804,284
|
87.2
|
Regeneron
Pharmaceuticals
|
Biotechnology
|
United
States
|
20,066
|
1.0
|
Jiangxi
Rimag
|
Health
Care Providers & Services
|
China
|
19,926
|
1.0
|
Apellis
Pharmaceuticals
|
Biotechnology
|
United
States
|
19,574
|
0.9
|
Exact
Sciences
|
Life
Sciences Tools & Services
|
United
States
|
18,926
|
0.9
|
Neurocrine
Biosciences
|
Biotechnology
|
United
States
|
17,443
|
0.8
|
Vaxcyte
|
Biotechnology
|
United
States
|
17,097
|
0.8
|
Sino
Biopharmaceutical
|
Pharmaceuticals
|
Hong
Kong
|
14,872
|
0.7
|
VISEN
Pharmaceuticals *
|
Biotechnology
|
China
|
13,143
|
0.6
|
Innovent
Biologics
|
Biotechnology
|
China
|
13,103
|
0.6
|
Beijing
Yuanxin Technology *
|
Health
Care Providers & Services
|
China
|
12,031
|
0.6
|
Top
40 investments
|
|
|
1,970,464
|
95.2
|
EDDA
Healthcare & Technology *
|
Health
Care Equipment & Supplies
|
China
|
10,677
|
0.5
|
Ruipeng
Pet Group *
|
Health
Care Providers & Services
|
China
|
9,834
|
0.5
|
Medpace
|
Life
Sciences Tools & Services
|
United
States
|
8,896
|
0.4
|
New
Horizon Health ^
|
Life
Sciences Tools & Services
|
China
|
8,672
|
0.4
|
Galderma
|
Pharmaceuticals
|
Switzerland
|
6,944
|
0.3
|
Gushengtang
|
Health
Care Providers & Services
|
China
|
5,980
|
0.3
|
MabPlex
*
|
Health
Care Providers & Services
|
China
|
5,081
|
0.2
|
API
Holdings *
|
Health
Care Providers & Services
|
India
|
4,270
|
0.2
|
Oscar
Health
|
Health
Care Providers & Services
|
United
States
|
3,835
|
0.2
|
Sinopharm
|
Health
Care Providers & Services
|
China
|
3,784
|
0.2
|
Top
50 investments
|
|
|
2,038,437
|
98.4
|
Shandong
Weigao Group Medical Polymer
|
Health
Care Equipment & Supplies
|
China
|
3,231
|
0.2
|
Ikena
Oncology
|
Biotechnology
|
United
States
|
2,049
|
0.1
|
Shanghai
Bio-heart Biological Technology
|
Health
Care Equipment & Supplies
|
China
|
1,704
|
0.1
|
Passage
Bio
|
Biotechnology
|
United
States
|
1,050
|
0.1
|
Peloton
Therapeutics – Milestone *
|
Biotechnology
|
United
States
|
503
|
0.0
|
Total
equities
|
|
|
2,046,974
|
98.9
|
Biotech
M&A Target Swap
|
Swap
Baskets
|
United
States
|
175,109
|
8.5
|
Apollo
Hospitals Enterprise
|
Health
Care Providers & Services
|
India
|
16,989
|
0.8
|
Less:
Gross exposure on financed swaps
|
|
|
(170,072)
|
(8.2)
|
Total
OTC Swaps
|
|
|
22,026
|
1.1
|
Total
investments including OTC Swaps
|
|
|
2,069,000
|
100.0
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
*
Unquoted
holding
*
Private
holding
^
Shares
suspended – subject to fair valuation process
SUMMARY
|
Market
value
|
%
of
|
Investments
|
£’000
|
investments
|
Quoted
Equities
|
1,937,998
|
93.6
|
Equity
Swaps
|
22,026
|
1.1
|
Private
Equities
|
108,976
|
5.3
|
Total
investments
|
2,069,000
|
100.0
|
Portfolio Manager’s Review
MARKETS
Global
equity markets moved higher in the reported six-month period,
continuing a trend that first commenced in November 2023. Overall enthusiasm for global
economic conditions, avoidance of a recession, and anticipation of
interest rate cuts all contributed to steady market gains. The MSCI
World Index, the S&P 500 Index, and the FTSE All-Share Index
all closed at or near all-time highs as of 30 September 2024.
Global
healthcare stocks also advanced and reached an all-time high (see
MSCI World Health Care Index; in U.S. terms), but modestly lagged
the broader markets during the period. The defensive nature of the
sector, coupled with uncertainty around the frequency and magnitude
of interest rate cuts, conspired to create a headwind. This was
particularly true in U.S. markets, where the S&P 500 rose 3.3%
(in sterling terms) versus the S&P 500 Health Care Index which
declined 1.8% (in sterling terms).
ALLOCATION
The
Company’s long standing allocation strategy remained unchanged in
the first half of the financial year. Overall, our allocation
strategy represents a diverse distribution of investments across
all of the major sub-sectors and across the global healthcare
industry. This allows investors to view the Company as a
“one-stop-shop” for all of their healthcare investment needs given
the broad exposure of the portfolio to the entirety of the
healthcare ecosystem – from therapeutics, to services, to medical
technologies, to growth of emerging markets – given the embedded
diversification of the portfolio of companies represented in the
portfolio.
Other key
traits of our allocation strategy remained deployed in the reported
period. Specifically, allocation to Large Cap Pharma remained
underweight, owing to (1) disparate fundamentals across the group
and (2) the relatively large weight that is represented within the
Benchmark. As of 30 September 2024,
total investments across Large Cap Pharma was 13.8% below the
Benchmark (27.0% vs. 40.8%) and total Pharmaceutical holdings
(ex-Japan) was 27.8%, or 17.4%
below the Benchmark weight (45.2%).
Additionally,
allocation to Biotechnology remained above the collective Benchmark
weighting, owing to (1) the enormous therapeutic innovation and new
drug production that stems from Emerging Biotech companies and (2)
the relatively small weight that is represented in the Benchmark.
As of 30 September 2024, total
investments across Emerging Biotech were 18.2% above the Benchmark
(20.4% vs. 2.2%) and total Biotechnology holdings were 28.5%, or
19.7% above the Benchmark weight (8.8%).
WWH
vs. MSCI World Health Care Index
|
As of 30
September 2024
|
Subsector
|
WWH
% of
NAV
|
MSCI
HC
%
|
+/-
%
|
Biotechnology
|
28.5
|
8.8
|
19.7
|
Large Cap
Biotech*
|
8.1
|
6.6
|
1.5
|
Emerging
Biotech*
|
20.4
|
2.2
|
18.2
|
Pharmaceuticals
|
27.8
|
45.2
|
(17.4)
|
Large Cap
Pharma*
|
27.0
|
40.8
|
(13.8)
|
Spec
Pharma*
|
0.8
|
4.4
|
(3.6)
|
Healthcare
Equipment & Supplies
|
21.9
|
16.4
|
5.5
|
Healthcare
Providers & Services
|
12.0
|
15.1
|
(3.1)
|
Life
Science Tools & Services
|
6.5
|
10.6
|
(4.1)
|
Japan
|
5.7
|
3.9
|
1.8
|
Emerging
Markets
|
5.5
|
–
|
5.5
|
Privates
|
5.5
|
–
|
5.5
|
Total
|
113.4
|
100.0
|
13.4
|
^
Figures
expressed as a % of total Net Asset Value. This includes all
derivatives as an economically equivalent position in the
underlying holding and allocated to the underlying holding’s
respective Sector and Region.
See
Glossary for definition of Pharmaceutical and Biotechnology
subsectors.
PERFORMANCE
We are
pleased to report a positive return, in excess of the Benchmark,
for the reported period. Specifically, for the
six-month
period ended 30 September 2024, the
Company returned a net asset value per share total return of +0.6%
as compared
to the MSCI World Health Care Index which was flat on a net total
return, sterling adjusted basis. This continued
the trend from the previous financial year, namely positive
returns, both absolute and relative to the Benchmark.
Overall,
positive performance came primarily from stock picking across
non-therapeutic stocks, including Life Science Tools & Services
(‘Tools’), Healthcare Providers & Services (‘Services’), and
Healthcare Equipment & Supplies (‘Medtech’) and Emerging
Markets, offset by stock picking in therapeutic stocks
(Pharmaceuticals and Biotechnology). Asset allocation effects were
more muted outside of Biotechnology.
Of note,
three periods of volatility contributed to the shape of performance
across the six-month period. First, equity markets dipped for the
first time in five months at the start of the financial year
(April) as inflation data was “hotter” than expected and investor
optimism for an interest rate cut temporarily waned. Whilst equity
markets declined in response, as did
the Company’s performance, stock picking generated relative
outperformance which helped offset losses in April. Subsequent
gains (both absolute and relative) were extended into May and June
restoring nearly 6.0% of relative performance, despite
Biotechnology’s relative underperformance.
Second,
after equity markets reached all-time highs in June (led by market
favourite, Nvidia), Technology stocks wobbled on earnings in July
and triggered a broad macro trade in which “retail favourites” were
sold and year-to-date laggards were bought. This phenomenon
adversely impacted the Company’s performance materially, given our
positioning within these same segments from a healthcare
perspective, resulting in losses of almost 5.0% of both absolute
and relative performance in only eight trading days at the end of
July and the beginning of August.
That said,
those losses were more than reversed in the remaining days of
August due to (1) extreme market volatility that originated from
economic news in U.S. and
Japan which turned healthcare defensive and (2) solid
earnings reports by a host of portfolio companies to close the
second quarter reporting period which also aided
performance.
Finally,
in September 2024, an interest rate
cut by the U.S. Federal Reserve was the first rate reduction in
over four years. Whilst this action boosted broad markets,
healthcare stocks lost their defensive positioning, resulting in
stark declines in the month. The Company’s negative performance was
exacerbated by idiosyncratic negative newsflow from portfolio
companies including Novo
Nordisk,
Daiichi
Sankyo,
AstraZeneca,
and Ionis
Pharmaceuticals during
this same period, reducing absolute
and relative total return performance to +0.6% in the six-month
period.
Despite
these volatile periods, we do note that a record high net asset
value was achieved during the reported period. A closing
net asset value per share of 408.7p was achieved on 8 August 2024 eclipsing the previous high set in
January 2021.
Performance
since inception to 30 September 2024
remains strong, with a +4,769.8% return since April 1995. This represents an average annualised
return of 14.1% over the 29-plus year period. This ranks the
Company in third place of all closed end trusts across this period,
regardless of industry (source: Winterflood).
SUBSECTOR
PERFORMANCE
As
mentioned, positive performance came primarily from stock picking
across non-therapeutic stocks (including Tools, Services, Medtech
and Emerging Markets), offset by stock picking in Pharmaceuticals
and allocation/stock selection in Biotechnology.
The
largest contribution on a sub-sector level was from Services,
predominantly through stock selection in the U.S. hospitals area
and U.S. managed care, supported by prevailing U.S. Presidential
election sentiment that favoured a Democrat win ahead of the
November election. Medtech was the second largest contributor,
primarily from stock selection in multiple large cap companies with
above average growth and operational execution from a pipeline and
innovation perspective. Finally, we note the contribution from
Emerging Markets, specifically China, where healthcare stocks rallied more
than 20.0% (sterling; as per the Hang Seng Healthcare Index) on the
heels of a number of new economic stimulus packages announced in
late September, including interest rate cuts.
On the
detractor side, Biotechnology was the largest negative contributor
due to allocation and was exacerbated by stock picking
(notably Apellis
Pharmaceuticals and
Biogen.
See the Major Detractors section
for more information). Pharmaceuticals was also a material
detractor, again due to stock selection (including
Merck
and
Novo
Nordisk).
The
largest area of relative outperformance on sub-sector level came
from Medtech through both stock picking and allocation. On the
latter point, our emphasis on large cap over small cap with an
overlay of operational excellence, created nearly 1.5% of return
over the Benchmark. Other sub-sector performance was similar in
both relative and absolute terms. One exception of note was in
Pharmaceuticals, where the absence of holdings in Roche and
Novartis hurt relative returns in that sub-sector.
PRIVATE
HOLDINGS
During the
first half of the current financial year, the Company strategically
refrained from making new investments in private
companies, as we continued to cautiously navigate the challenging
public offering market for small and mid-capitalisation
healthcare firms. While the capital market funding landscape
continues to improve, most of our private companies are well
capitalised and are being selective with regards to pursuing
listings. We remain optimistic about the ability of our unquoted
investments to achieve listings within the next year as we
anticipate further improvement of the capital market funding
environment.
As of the
end of the period, private investments made up 5.5% of total net
assets, a decrease from 6.4% on 31 March
2024. This decrease was the result of one unquoted
investment, Jiangxi
Rimag Group, which
completed its Initial Public Offering (IPO) in Hong Kong and closed the half year with a post
offering return of roughly 74%.
For the
first six months of the current financial year, the Company’s
private investments generated a loss of £14.2 million, from an
opening market value of £133.8 million across 10 companies. The
private strategy as a whole had an implied return of -11.6% which
detracted -0.7% from performance.
The
existing private portfolio constitutes a diverse set of companies.
Geographically, exposure is evenly distributed among Emerging
Markets and North American companies. On a sub-sector basis, the
exposure is concentrated in Services and Tools, with small
exposures to Biotechnology and Medtech.
MAJOR
CONTRIBUTORS TO PERFORMANCE
Historically,
key performance drivers for the Company, whilst diverse from a
sub-sector perspective, usually share some common characteristics.
These typically include growth, innovation, new product flow,
astute business development acumen, operational excellence, among
other positive characteristics. The current interim period was no
different.
The
largest contributor in the reported six-month period was
Tenet
Healthcare, a
Dallas-based, diversified
healthcare services company and a leading U.S. hospital operator.
The company’s share price appreciated nearly 50% (sterling) due to
a multitude of factors. First, the company posted very strong
operating results with substantial outperformance versus
expectations. Second, the company executed on some value-creative
divestitures of hospitals at highly favourable multiples and
acquisitions of ambulatory surgery centres. Finally, the company
was able to procure improvements in reimbursement from their
Medicaid programs. We expect Tenet will continue to operate well as
the utilisation environment remains favourable for
providers.
Another
significant contributor in the interim period, Boston
Scientific, has been
a long-term portfolio holding. The medical
technology company has a history of innovation, operational
excellence, and above average industry growth. The management team
is considered top of their field and investors were again rewarded
over the past six months after the company experienced a material
acceleration in organic sales growth driven by the company’s next
generation pulsed field ablation device for the treatment of atrial
fibrillation. Whilst the company has several other new products
launching, investors are particularly focused on the pulsed field
ablation device as the multi-billion dollar atrial fibrillation
market has begun rapidly shifting toward this new technology.
Looking ahead, investors are optimistic that this market transition
can move more rapidly than consensus expectations. Moreover, Boston
Scientific has several important trials evaluating pulse field
ablation in combination with the company’s Watchman left atrial
appendage closure device. Positive results should lead to material
market increases for both technologies. We believe the ongoing
company algorithm of best-in-class organic sales growth,
differentiated margin expansion potential and ongoing mergers &
acquisitions (M&A) should result in continued strong and
durable profit growth for the foreseeable future.
The
undisputed leader in surgical robotic technology is
Intuitive
Surgical. The
California-based company extended
its lead with the debut of their next generation surgical suite,
the da Vinci 5 (Dv5). With a seasoned management team, a
multi-decade head start, and superior robotic technology, we view
Intuitive Surgical as the best positioned company in the
fast-growing and vastly underpenetrated surgical robotics space.
The company operates as a monopoly with its da Vinci suite of
robotic systems, and we see upcoming competitor system launches as
being market expansive as opposed to driving material share gains
against Intuitive. During the past six months, investor
expectations for the company’s new Dv5 robotic surgery platform
have rapidly improved. Dv5 system placements have been stronger
than investor expectations during the past two quarters and,
importantly, sales of prior generation systems have outpaced
expectations as well. Procedure volumes have continued to grow at
elevated levels, and new instruments have allowed the company to
generate a higher amount of sales per procedure. Lastly, the
company’s margin profile has improved in recent quarters, which has
historically been a point of contention amongst investors. With the
Dv5 system launch still in the early stages, we see continued
strong trends for the company for the next several
years.
The
treatment of cancer continues to evolve and perhaps the leader to
emerge over the past decade has been U.K.-based
AstraZeneca.
With dominant positions in both solid and liquid tumours, the
company has been a key innovator in oncology. The company can also
claim leadership in respiratory, cardiovascular, immunologic,
metabolic, and rare diseases. This diversity has led to outsized
growth in the near and long term, the latter was highlighted during
a May 2024 Investor Day in which the
company articulated a plan to more than triple revenues during the
current decade. The share price rose in response, although some
gains were pruned in the September period after the company
disclosed efficacy data for a late-stage oncology asset that were
below expectations. Despite the late sell-off, the stock remained a
top contributor in the period. The calendar year 2025 is poised to
be catalyst rich for AstraZeneca, and continued commercial and
development execution could push the share price back to all-time
highs.
The rise
of “diabesity” continues to be a major theme in therapeutics. The
most recent entrant, Zepbound (tirzepatide for obesity),
from Eli
Lilly, was
approved in December 2023 and set
launch records in 2024, reaching blockbuster status (more than
U.S.$1 billion in sales) in the
second quarter alone. Sales of Mounjaro (tirzepatide for diabetes)
reached over U.S.$3 billion at the
same time. The tremendous growth at the company is unprecedented
for a global large cap pharmaceutical company and the share price
was rewarded, reaching an all-time high in August 2024. Some volatility has crept into the
share price, as generalists and retail investors alike crowded into
the name, becoming a “market favourite,” which elicited some
unwanted, non-fundamental trading action. Despite a modest sell-off
into the half-year end, the stock remained a major contributor to
performance. Moreover, we expect this to continue as manufacturing
efforts to increase supply will boost sales, global rollouts
inflect, outcomes studies will read out, and data for next
generation products (both orals and injectables) will be presented
in earnest in 2025.
MAJOR
DETRACTORS FROM PERFORMANCE
Merck
is a
global large cap pharmaceutical company that is
well regarded as a pioneer in immuno-oncology and vaccine
development. It has seen its top line rise by more than 50% over
the past five years and is expected to eclipse the U.S.$60 billion sales threshold in 2024. Sales in
China comprise a portion of the
company’s growth strategy. However, an unexpected slowdown in
Gardasil (a cancer-preventing vaccine) sales in the second quarter
spooked investors who then quickly dumped the stock on the fears
that a key long-term growth driver was in question. The stock fell
in late-July 2024 as a result and
never recovered into the financial half-year end. The investment
was the largest detractor in the reported period. Subsequently, the
company argued (thus far unsuccessfully) that this was a near-term
issue only and so we continue to assess the risk/benefit of the
company’s impressive pipeline and growth potential versus near-term
sales uncertainty.
The
Emerging Biotech company, Apellis
Pharmaceuticals has
displayed all of the hallmarks of investing in a speculative
Biotechnology company, with high rewards and high risks. The
company developed Syfovre (pegcetacoplan injection),
a first-in-class
treatment for geographic atrophy, a specific form of progressive
blindness. Its approval in early 2023 heralded a new treatment for
a devastating disease for which there was no treatment – a
breakthrough innovation – and the company’s valuation soared to
over U.S.$10 billion by mid-2023.
However, rare, unexpected, but serious side effect (ocular
vasculitis) leading to irreversible blindness emerged in real world
use. Company efforts to identify and contain the side effect
ultimately proved futile in 2024. European approval was
subsequently denied. Questions later arose around true visual
acuity benefit and a follow-on competitor with likely better
efficacy and absent the vasculitis continued to take share. The
company’s valuation at the end of September was less than
U.S.$3.5 billion.
Pharmaceutical
brand names rarely become part of popular culture, but
Novo
Nordisk has
recently succeeded with two, Ozempic and Wegovy, joining the ranks
such as Viagra and Lipitor. With the immense popularity and
insatiable demand for these drugs, the share price has enjoyed
similar popularity, rising over 30% since the beginning of the
calendar year and peaking above 1,000 Danish Kroner in late
June 2024. However, with such
admiration comes great expectations. First, a solid but
less-than-perfect second quarter report in August 2024 exacerbated a macro sell-off that had
commenced in late July 2024. Second,
additional selling pressure was triggered in late September 2024 when the company announced Phase
II data for monlunabant, a novel CB1 inverse agonist, the company’s
lead oral asset in the obesity space. The positive trial was
sufficient for Novo Nordisk to advance the agent into the next
stage of clinical trials, but the reported efficacy and safety data
disappointed investors. The share price ultimately finished the
six-month period more than 20% below its peak and more than 10%
below its 29 March 2024 share price.
We remain confident that the long-term opportunity in the
“diabesity” category (and associated indications) can evolve into
the largest market in the pharmaceutical industry, and that Novo
Nordisk can retain a leadership position that may allow it to more
than double its revenues before the decade’s end.
In the
Medtech space, Dexcom
stands out
as the leader in the development and production of continuous
glucose monitors for diabetes management. Unfortunately, the
company experienced unexpected and unprecedented issues during the
second quarter, where growth slowed considerably due to: (1) a
disruptive U.S. sales force realignment, (2) a slowdown
in growth in certain customer channels, and (3) underperformance in
international markets. As a result of these stunning announcements,
the share price fell by more than 40% (local currency)
in late
July 2024. Whilst we view the
category as very promising and maintain our belief in Dexcom as a
strong company and innovator, we exited our position as we viewed
the current situation as too uncertain and without asymmetric
positive risk.
One of the
most innovative new drugs over the past 20 years was Leqembi
(lecanemab), an antibody developed and commercialised by
Eisai
and
partnered with Biogen
for the
treatment of mild to moderate Alzheimer’s disease. The positive
pivotal trial (CLARITY-AD) in September
2022 was a landmark study that surprised both the clinical
and investment communities. The subsequent filing with the U.S.
Food and Drug Administration (FDA), a positive Advisory Committee
meeting, an accelerated approval (January
2023) and a full approval (July
2023) set the stage for a much-anticipated
launch. However, some 12 months later, the uptake for Leqembi
remained modest and was even denied approval in Europe over safety concerns, which was overly
conservative in our opinion. Despite positive expert opinion on the
clinical importance of Leqembi for Alzheimer’s patients and their
families and caregivers, obstacles for uptake remain, including
lack of a blood-based diagnostics, infusion centre availability,
burden of dose frequency, and a launch primarily presided over by
an inexperienced Tokyo-based
pharmaceutical company. All of which pressured the share price of
Biogen in the reported period.
DERIVATIVE
STRATEGY
The
Company has the ability to utilise equity swaps and options as part
of its financial strategy. Equity swaps are a financial tool (a
derivative contract), that allow for synthetic exposure to a basket
of single stocks in an efficient manner and within a well-defined
theme. For example, having 15 to 50+ additional positions at
smaller weights in the portfolio (i.e., non-core)
is suboptimal. An equity swap basket facilitates management of the
investment theme and tracking of performance. The swaps contain
multiple single stock long positions and the basket swap
counterparty is Goldman Sachs, allowing for confidence in forward
trading and rebalancing strategies.
The
Company strategically invested in two customised tactical basket
swaps, targeting growth opportunities in undervalued small and
mid-capitalisation Biotechnology, Pharmaceutical and Medtech
companies.
These
baskets were constructed to capitalise on three prevailing themes:
1) investment opportunities possessing considerable potential as
attractive acquisition targets for larger corporations (M&A
swap basket) and 2) substantial valuation dislocations in small and
mid-capitalisation medical device companies brought about by the
GLP-1 weight loss craze.
During the
period under review, the basket swaps gained £8.0 million, which
added 0.4% to performance. The gains were primarily due to the
returns generated by the propriety Biotechnology M&A Target
Swap.
Throughout
the year, the Company also used single stock equity swaps to access
Chinese and Indian investments, which would otherwise be
inaccessible through more traditional investment methods. During
the period under review, single stock equity swaps contributed £1.7
million to performance, and we remain confident in the long-term
prospects of emerging market securities, particularly those trading
locally in mainland China.
LEVERAGE
STRATEGY
Historically,
the typical leverage level employed by the Company has been in the
mid-to-high teens range. Considering the market volatility during
the past three plus financial years, we have, more recently, used
leverage in a more tactical fashion.
In 2024,
we have flexed leverage modestly in response to the economic
climate, including in consideration of a putative recession earlier
in the period and interest rate fluctuations and speculation. Most
recently, leverage has converged to the low-double digit range, a
reflection of our overall bullishness on the portfolio and a turn
in biotechnology stocks. Some factors that keep us from extending
leverage even further are the continued uncertainty with the macro
backdrop, further geopolitical risk, the looming U.S. Presidential
election, and relatively high borrowing costs at
present.
SECTOR
DEVELOPMENTS
As
innovation continues to be the hallmark of our investment strategy,
we persist in monitoring and measuring developments at the FDA,
perhaps the most objective measure of industry productivity. Whilst
2023 was a record year for new
drug approvals with 67, the current calendar year looks nearly as
robust with 43 approvals to date (as of 30 September
2024) and is on pace for over 50 approvals in the full year.
This is commensurate with the seven-year average of 55 per annum
and most important, moves the total number of new drugs approved
over the past eight years at over 450.
This era
of productivity is simply incredible, especially considering
evolving standards for new product approvals – both efficacy and
safety – is ever increasing. This year has seen approvals for
another antibody for the treatment of Alzheimer’s disease (Kisunla
from Eli Lilly), a first-in-class “activin” inhibitor for pulmonary
arterial hypertension (Winrevair from Merck), a best-in-class
pneumococcal vaccine (Capvaxive from Merck), and the first ever
cell therapy for melanoma (Amtagvi from Iovance).
Another
important value driver in the therapeutics space has been the
acceleration of biotechnology M&A over the past three years. A
number of factors have fuelled this M&A frenzy, including a
quarter trillion U.S. dollars of branded drug sales losing patent
protection by the end of the decade, pricing pressure in the U.S.
from the Inflation Reduction Act, the plethora of innovation coming
from small-cap Biotechnology companies, and the still attractive
valuations of those companies. The total dollar volume has
decreased in 2024 from 2023 as acquiring companies have pivoted
from larger scale, already commercialised assets to mid-to-late
clinical stage assets that come with smaller price tags. However,
the number
of deals to date – 33 – is expected to eclipse last year’s record
number of 40. That said, we do note that after a typical summer
holiday hiatus of deal making, we expect M&A to remain quiet
until after the U.S. Presidential election in November, as
risk-averse large cap executives will hedge further efforts until
after the polls are in.
On the
legislative front, nothing has been more scrutinised in healthcare
than the emergence of the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), passed
into law by the Biden Administration in 2022. For the
pharmaceutical industry, the IRA is more commonly referred to as
“drug price reform” and this year saw important developments in
Medicare drug price negotiations between the Federal Centres for
Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) and companies on the first
“List of 10” (ten prescription drugs chosen by CMS given length of
time on market, lack of generic competition, and total Federal
expenditures). The list included Eliquis, Jardiance, Xarelto,
Januvia, Farxiga, Entresto, Enbrel, Imbruvica, Stelara,
and Fiasp.
Whilst
investors were appropriately concerned over this potentially
industry-altering pricing mechanism, most breathed a sigh of relief
when actual negotiated prices were released ahead of the
1 September 2024 deadline. Current
estimates assumed that Medicare-reimbursed drugs included a rebate
of approximately 50% from list price. Investors believed that this
discount could be extended to 65% or even as much as 80% through
the IRA. However, the average negotiated rebate came to 63%
(source: CMS), clearly better than expected. We believe this may
alleviate near term fears about the potential financial impact of
the IRA across the industry.
We
continue to monitor the roll out of the IRA. The new drug prices
for the first list of 10 do not take effect until 1 January 2026. However, the next list will
increase to 15 drugs and continue to be published on a rolling
basis. Actual prices may also continue to surprise (in either
direction). In addition, 2025 will see the first implementation of
the so called “Part D Redesign”, which includes, among other
things, patient annual out-of-pocket costs that will be capped at
U.S.$2,000 for people with Medicare
Part D. Funding for this benefit comes from a number of sources,
including increased government subsidies, increased patient
premiums, increased contribution from the manufacturers, and also
private payers. Impact will vary company-to-company but also may be
offset by increased volumes in certain therapeutic categories given
the improved access to medicine.
Finally,
the much-anticipated U.S. Presidential election of 2024 ended with
much of the same drama that led up to it. Whilst polls toggled back
and forth between the candidates, ultimately it was Republican
nominee Donald Trump beating out
incumbent candidate Kamala Harris,
marking a second (albeit interrupted) term for President Trump. The
final result was without doubt, as president-elect Trump swept
three key battle ground states and easily eclipsed – with more than
310 – the necessary 270 electoral votes required to become
President. Trump also won on the popular vote at 51% to Harris who
polled less than 48%. The Senate majority control also moved in the
Republican’s favour with more than 51 seats
whilst the Republican party also held the majority of House of
Representatives seats. The final result was an unexpected
“Republican Sweep”.
The
implications for healthcare are unequivocally positive. Healthcare
stocks were weak ahead of the election on concerns of a Harris win
that obviously did not come to fruition. Moreover, the “Red Sweep”
was probably the best-case scenario for healthcare. Whilst the
implications may vary by sub-sector, overall the Republican party
history (and previous Trump administration) has been industry
friendly. With Republicans in total control, we can expect no
controversial legislation to be posited and some possibility now
exists that Drug Price Reform may be repealed/amended in the
industry’s favour. But perhaps the biggest positive is now the lack
of any negative legislation by the Democrats now that they are
completely out of power.
OUTLOOK
The
malaise that hung over the Biotechnology industry post-COVID has
now evaporated, and investors are re-focused on the fundamentals.
The healthcare industry continues to benefit from significant
technological advancements and accelerating innovation in drug
discovery and development. Across therapeutics, continuous
advancements in genetic engineering, personalised medicine, and
synthetic biology are fostering a robust pipeline of new therapies
and treatments. Increased investment in early-stage science feeds
long-term opportunities. Artificial intelligence and machine
learning are already impacting all facets of the industry despite
still being in its infancy. New product approvals are delivering a
quantity and quality of medicines never seen before. The growing
elderly demographic worldwide is driving demand for new healthcare
solutions, particularly in areas such as cancer treatment, chronic
disease management, and age-related health issues. Overall, the
future of healthcare will remain robust and dynamic, driven by
data, shaped by innovation, improving access and quality for
patients on a global basis.
Sven H. Borho and Trevor M.
Polischuk
OrbiMed
Capital LLC
Portfolio
Manager
14 November 2024
CONTRIBUTION
BY INVESTMENT
PRINCIPAL
STOCK CONTRIBUTORS TO AND DETRACTORS FROM ABSOLUTE NET ASSET VALUE
PERFORMANCE
FOR THE
SIX MONTHS ENDED 30 SEPTEMBER
2024
Top five
contributors
|
Sector
|
Country
|
Contribution
£’000
|
Contribution
per
share*
p
|
Tenet
Healthcare
|
Health
Care Providers & Services
|
United
States
|
35,414
|
6.7
|
Boston
Scientific
|
Health
Care Equipment & Supplies
|
United
States
|
21,269
|
4.0
|
Intuitive
Surgical
|
Health
Care Equipment & Supplies
|
United
States
|
19,549
|
3.7
|
AstraZeneca
|
Pharmaceuticals
|
United
Kingdom
|
13,808
|
2.6
|
Eli
Lilly
|
Pharmaceuticals
|
United
States
|
12,777
|
2.4
|
|
|
|
|
|
Top five
detractors
|
Sector
|
Country
|
Contribution
£’000
|
Contribution
per
share
p
|
Biogen
|
Biotechnology
|
United
States
|
(14,308)
|
(2.7)
|
Dexcom**
|
Health
Care Equipment & Supplies
|
United
States
|
(15,958)
|
(3.0)
|
Novo
Nordisk
|
Pharmaceuticals
|
Denmark
|
(18,414)
|
(3.5)
|
Apellis
Pharmaceutical
|
Biotechnology
|
United
States
|
(20,982)
|
(3.9)
|
Merck
|
Pharmaceuticals
|
United
States
|
(21,119)
|
(4.0)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
*
531,337,518
Weighted average number of shares
**
Not held at
30 September 2024.
INTERIM
MANAGEMENT REPORT
PRINCIPAL
RISKS AND UNCERTAINTIES
The
Directors continue to review the Company’s key risk register, which
identifies the risks and uncertainties that the Company is exposed
to, and the controls in place and the actions being taken to
mitigate them.
A review
of the half year and the outlook for the Company can be found in
the Chair of the Board’s Statement and the Portfolio Manager’s
Review. The principal risks and uncertainties faced by the Company
include the following:
· Exposure
to market risks and those additional risks specific to the sectors
in which the Company invests, such as political interference in
drug pricing.
· The
Company uses leverage (both through derivatives and gearing) the
effect of which is to amplify the gains or losses the Company
experiences.
· Macro
events (including geopolitical and regulatory) may have an adverse
impact on the Company’s performance by causing exchange rate
volatility, changes in tax or regulatory environments, and/or a
fall in market prices. Emerging markets, which a portion of the
portfolio is exposed to, can be subject to greater political
uncertainty and price volatility than developed markets.
· Unquoted
investments are more difficult to buy, sell or value and so changes
in their valuations may be greater than for listed
assets.
· The
risk that the individuals responsible for managing the Company’s
portfolio may leave their employment or may be prevented from
undertaking their duties.
· The
risk that, following the failure of a counterparty, the Company
could be adversely affected through either delay in settlement or
loss of assets.
· The
Board is reliant on the systems of the Company’s service providers
and as such disruption to, or a failure of, those systems could
lead to a failure to comply with law and regulations leading to
reputational damage and/or financial loss to the
Company.
· The
risk that investing in companies that disregard Environmental,
Social and Governance (ESG) factors will have a negative impact on
investment returns and also that the Company itself may become
unattractive to investors if ESG is not appropriately considered in
the Portfolio Manager’s decision making process.
· The
risk, particularly if the investment strategy and approach are
unsuccessful, that the Company may underperform, resulting in the
Company becoming unattractive to investors and a widening of the
share price discount to NAV per share. Also, falls in stock
markets, and the risk of a global recession, are likely to
adversely affect the performance of the Company’s
investments.
Further
information on these risks is given in the Annual Report for the
year ended 31 March 2024. The Board
has noted that global markets are continuing to experience
unusually high levels of uncertainty and heightened geopolitical
risks. The Board continues to monitor this closely.
RELATED
PARTY TRANSACTIONS
During the
first six months of the current financial year, no material
transactions with related parties have taken place which have
affected the financial position or the performance of the Company
during the period.
GOING
CONCERN
The
Directors believe, having considered the Company’s investment
objectives, risk management policies, capital management policies
and procedures, the nature of the portfolio and expenditure
projections, that the Company has adequate resources, an
appropriate financial structure and suitable management
arrangements in place to continue in operational existence for the
foreseeable future and, more specifically, that there are no
material uncertainties relating to the Company that would prevent
its ability to continue in such operational existence for at least
12 months from the date of the approval of this half yearly
financial report. For these reasons, they consider there is
reasonable evidence to continue to adopt the going concern basis in
preparing the accounts. In reviewing the position as at the date of
this report, the Board has considered the guidance issued by the
Financial Reporting Council.
The
Directors noted the result of the continuation vote held in 2024
(where 93.7% of the votes cast were in favour of continuation). As
part of their going concern assessments, stress testing was carried
out in May 2024, which modelled the
effects of substantial falls in markets and significant reductions
in market liquidity, on the Company’s net asset value,
its cash
flows and its expenses.
DIRECTORS’
RESPONSIBILITIES
The Board
of Directors confirms that, to the best of its
knowledge:
(i)
the
condensed set of financial statements contained within the Half
Year Report have been prepared in accordance with Financial
Reporting Standard 104 (Interim Financial Reporting);
and
(ii)
the
interim management report includes a true and fair review of the
information required by:
(a)
DTR 4.2.7R
of the Disclosure Guidance and Transparency Rules, being an
indication of important events that have occurred during the first
six months of the financial year and their impact on the condensed
set of financial statements; and a description of the principal
risks and uncertainties for the remaining six months of the year;
and
(b)
DTR 4.2.8R
of the Disclosure Guidance and Transparency Rules, being related
party transactions that have taken place in the first six months of
the current financial year and that have materially affected the
financial position or performance of the entity during that period;
and any changes in the related party transactions described in the
last annual report that could do so.
The Half
Year Report has not been reviewed or audited by the Company’s
auditors.
This Half
Year Report contains certain forward-looking statements. These
statements are made by the Directors in good faith
based on the information available to them up to the date of this
report and such statements should be treated with caution due to
the inherent uncertainties, including both economic and business
risk factors, underlying any such forward-looking
information.
For and on
behalf of the Board
Doug McCutcheon
Chair
14 November 2024
INCOME
STATEMENT
For the six months ended 30 September
2024
|
(Unaudited)
30
September 2024
|
(Unaudited)
30
September 2023
|
|
Revenue
Return
£’000
|
Capital
Return
£’000
|
Total
£’000
|
Revenue
Return
£’000
|
Capital
Return
£’000
|
Total
£’000
|
Gains/(losses)
on investments
|
–
|
2,585
|
2,585
|
–
|
(11,111)
|
(11,111)
|
Foreign
exchange gains/(losses)
|
–
|
6,906
|
6,906
|
–
|
(6,791)
|
(6,791)
|
Income
from investments (note 2)
|
8,830
|
–
|
8,830
|
12,481
|
–
|
12,481
|
AIFM,
portfolio management, and
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
performance
fees (note 3)
|
(408)
|
(7,751)
|
(8,159)
|
(411)
|
(7,803)
|
(8,214)
|
Other
expenses
|
(654)
|
–
|
(654)
|
(686)
|
–
|
(686)
|
Net
return/(loss) before finance charges and
taxation
|
7,768
|
1,740
|
9,508
|
11,384
|
(25,705)
|
(14,321)
|
Finance
charges
|
(176)
|
(3,342)
|
(3,518)
|
(246)
|
(4,673)
|
(4,919)
|
Net
return/(loss) before finance
|
7,592
|
(1,602)
|
5,990
|
11,138
|
(30,378)
|
(19,240)
|
Taxation
|
(357)
|
–
|
(357)
|
(1,486)
|
–
|
(1,486)
|
Net
return/(loss) after taxation
|
7,235
|
(1,602)
|
5,633
|
9,652
|
(30,378)
|
(20,726)
|
Return/(loss)
per share (note 4)
|
1.4p
|
(0.3)p
|
1.1p
|
1.6p
|
(5.0)p
|
(3.4)p
|
The
“Total” column of this statement is the Income Statement of the
Company. The “Revenue” and “Capital” columns are supplementary to
this and are prepared under guidance published by the Association
of Investment Companies.
All
revenue and capital items in the above statement derive from
continuing operations.
The
Company has no recognised gains and losses other than those shown
above and therefore no separate Statement of Total Comprehensive
Income has been presented.
The
accompanying notes are an integral part of these
statements.
STATEMENT
OF CHANGES IN EQUITY
For the six months ended 30 September
2024
|
(Unaudited)
30
September
2024
£’000
|
(Unaudited)
30
September
2023
£’000
|
Opening
shareholders’ funds
|
2,080,417
|
2,150,721
|
Shares
purchased for treasury
|
(99,759)
|
(133,365)
|
Return/(loss)
for the period
|
5,633
|
(20,726)
|
Dividends
paid – revenue
|
(11,198)
|
(14,709)
|
Closing
shareholders’ funds
|
1,975,093
|
1,981,921
|
STATEMENT
OF FINANCIAL POSITION
As at 30 September 2024
|
(Unaudited)
30
September
2024
£’000
|
(Audited)
31
March
2024
£’000
|
Fixed
assets
|
|
|
Investments
|
2,046,974
|
2,108,235
|
Derivatives
– OTC swaps
|
22,026
|
944
|
|
2,069,000
|
2,109,179
|
Current
assets
|
|
|
Debtors
|
8,635
|
10,232
|
Cash and
cash equivalents
|
41,496
|
73,797
|
|
50,131
|
84,029
|
Current
liabilities
|
|
|
Creditors:
amounts falling due within one year
|
(144,038)
|
(100,373)
|
Derivative
– OTC Swaps
|
–
|
(12,418)
|
|
(144,038)
|
(112,791)
|
Net
current liabilities
|
(93,907)
|
(28,762)
|
Total
net assets
|
1,975,093
|
2,080,417
|
Capital
and reserves
|
|
|
Ordinary
share capital – (note 5)
|
15,042
|
15,042
|
Capital
redemption reserve
|
9,564
|
9,564
|
Share
premium account
|
841,599
|
841,599
|
Capital
reserve
|
1,092,035
|
1,193,396
|
Revenue
reserve
|
16,853
|
20,816
|
Total
shareholders’ funds
|
1,975,093
|
2,080,417
|
Net
asset value per share – (note 6)
|
381.5p
|
381.1p
|
CASH
FLOW STATEMENT
For the Six months ended 30 September
2024
|
Note
|
(Unaudited)
Six months
ended
30
September
2024
£’000
|
(Unaudited)
Six months
ended
30
September
2023
£’000
|
Net
cash (outflow)/inflow from operating activities
|
8
|
(4,336)
|
5,174
|
Purchases
of investments and derivatives
|
|
(411,658)
|
(554,711)
|
Sales of
investments and derivatives
|
|
420,462
|
560,892
|
Realised
gains/(losses) on foreign exchange
|
|
4,803
|
(2,218)
|
Net
cash inflow from investing activities
|
|
13,607
|
3,963
|
Shares
repurchased
|
|
(98,072)
|
(133,365)
|
Equity
dividends paid
|
|
(11,198)
|
(14,709)
|
Interest
paid
|
|
(3,518)
|
(4,919)
|
Net
cash outflow from financing activities
|
|
(112,788)
|
(152,993)
|
Increase
in net debt
|
|
(103,517)
|
(143,856)
|
Cash flows
from operating activities includes interest received of £1,684,000
(2023: £1,885,000) and dividends received of £7,448,000 (2023:
£10,135,000).
RECONCILIATION
OF NET CASH FLOW MOVEMENT TO MOVEMENT IN NET
DEBT
|
(Unaudited)
Six months
ended
30
September
2024
£’000
|
(Unaudited)
Six months
ended
30
September
2023
£’000
|
Increase
in net debt resulting from cash flows
|
(103,517)
|
(143,856)
|
Gains/(losses)
on foreign currency cash and cash equivalents
|
2,103
|
(4,574)
|
Movement
in net debt in the period
|
(101,414)
|
(148,430)
|
Net debt
at 1 April
|
4,855
|
2,997
|
Net
debt at 30 September*
|
(96,559)
|
(145,433)
|
*
The net
debt figure as at 30 September 2024
includes cash and cash equivalents less the overdraft drawn of
£138,055,000 (30 September 2023:
£219,230,000).
NOTES
TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
1.
ACCOUNTING POLICIES
The
condensed Financial Statements for the six months to 30 September 2024 comprise the statements
together with the related notes below. They have been prepared in
accordance with FRS 104 ‘Interim Financial Reporting’, the AIC’s
Statement of Recommended Practice published in July 2022 (‘SORP’) and using the
same
accounting policies as set out in the Company’s Annual Report and
Financial Statements at 31 March
2024.
Going concern
After
making enquiries, and having reviewed the Investments, Statement of
Financial Position and projected income and expenditure for the
next 12 months, the Directors have a reasonable expectation that
the Company has adequate resources to continue in operation for the
foreseeable future. The Directors have therefore adopted the going
concern basis in preparing these condensed financial
statements.
Fair value
Under FRS
102 and FRS 104 investments have been classified using the
following fair value hierarchy:
Level
1 – Quoted
market prices in active markets
Level
2 – Prices
of a recent transaction for identical instruments
Level
3 –
Valuation techniques that use:
(i) observable
market data; or
(ii) non-observable
data
AS AT 30
SEPTEMBER 2024
|
Level
1
£’000
|
Level
2
£’000
|
Level
3
£’000
|
Total
£’000
|
Investments
held at fair value through profit or loss
|
1,929,327
|
–
|
117,647
|
2,046,974
|
Derivatives:
OTC swaps (assets)
|
–
|
22,026
|
–
|
22,026
|
Derivatives:
OTC swaps (liabilities)
|
–
|
–
|
–
|
–
|
Financial
instruments measured at fair value
|
1,929,327
|
22,026
|
117,647
|
2,069,000
|
As at 31 March 2024
|
Level
1
£’000
|
Level
2
£’000
|
Level
3
£’000
|
Total
£’000
|
Investments
held at fair value through profit or loss
|
1,975,108
|
–
|
133,
127
|
2,108,235
|
Derivatives:
OTC swaps (assets)
|
–
|
944
|
–
|
944
|
Derivatives:
OTC swaps (liabilities)
|
–
|
(12,418)
|
–
|
(12,418)
|
Financial
instruments measured at fair value
|
1,975,108
|
(11,474)
|
133,127
|
2,096,761
|
2.
INCOME
|
(Unaudited)
Six months
ended
30
September
2024
£’000
|
(Unaudited)
Six months
ended
30
September
2023
£’000
|
Investment
income
|
7,146
|
10,596
|
Interest
Income
|
1,684
|
1,885
|
Total
|
8,830
|
12,481
|
3.
AIFM, PORTFOLIO MANAGEMENT AND PERFORMANCE FEES
|
(Unaudited)
Six months
ended
30
September 2024
|
(Unaudited)
Six months
ended
30
September 2023
|
|
Revenue
£’000
|
Capital
£’000
|
Total
£’000
|
Revenue
£’000
|
Capital
£’000
|
Total
£’000
|
AIFM
fee
|
72
|
1,365
|
1,437
|
72
|
1,369
|
1,441
|
Portfolio
management fee
|
336
|
6,386
|
6,722
|
339
|
6,434
|
6,773
|
Performance
fee charge for the period
|
–
|
–
|
–
|
–
|
–
|
–
|
|
408
|
7,751
|
8,159
|
411
|
7,803
|
8,214
|
As at
30 September 2024 no performance fees
were accrued or payable (31 March
2024: nil accrued).
No
performance fee could become payable by 30
September 2025.
See
Glossary for further information on the performance fee.
4.
RETURN/(LOSS) PER SHARE
|
(Unaudited)
Six months
ended
30
September
2024
£’000
|
(Unaudited)
Six months
ended
30
September
2023
£’000
|
The return
per share is based on the following figures:
|
|
|
Revenue
return
|
7,235
|
9,652
|
Capital
(loss)/return
|
(1,602)
|
(30,378)
|
Total
return
|
5,633
|
(20,726)
|
Weighted
average number of shares in issue for the period
|
531,229,280
|
606,004,086
|
Revenue
return per share
|
1.4p
|
1.6p
|
Capital
(loss)/return per share
|
(0.3)p
|
(5.0)p
|
Total
(loss)/return per share
|
1.1p
|
(3.4)p
|
The
calculation of the total, revenue and capital returns per ordinary
share is carried out in accordance with IAS 33, “Earnings per Share
(as adopted in the EU)”.
5.
SHARE CAPITAL
|
Shares
number
|
Treasury
shares
number
|
Total
shares
in
issue
number
|
As at 1
April 2024
|
545,942,332
|
55,722,868
|
601,665,200
|
Purchase
of shares into treasury
|
(28,230,376)
|
28,230,376
|
–
|
As
at 30 September 2024
|
517,711,956
|
83,953,244
|
601,665,200
|
|
(Unaudited)
30
September
2024
£’000
|
(Audited)
31
March
2024
£’000
|
Issued and
fully paid:
|
|
|
Nominal
value of ordinary shares of 2.5p
|
15,042
|
15,042
|
During the
period ended 30 September 2024 the
Company bought back ordinary shares into treasury at a cost
of
£99.8m
(Year ended 31 March 2024:
£252.8m).
At the AGM
of the Company held in July 2023,
shareholders approved a resolution for a ten for one share split
such that each shareholder would receive ten shares with a nominal
value of 2.5 pence each for every one
share held. 541,498,680 additional shares (541,019,916 to
shareholders and 478,764 in relation to shares held in treasury)
were created on
27 July 2023 following this approval.
6.
NET ASSET VALUE PER SHARE
The net
asset value per share is based on the assets attributable to equity
shareholders of £1,975,093,000 (31 March
2024: £2,080,417,000) and on the number of shares in issue
at the period end of 517,711,956 (31 March
2024: 545,942,332).
*
restated to
reflect the ten for one share split.
7.
TRANSACTION COSTS
Purchase
transaction costs for the six months ended 30 September 2024 were £204,000 (six months ended
30 September
2023: £499,000).
Sales
transaction costs for the six months ended 30 September 2024 were £340,000 (six months ended
30 September 2023:
£528,000).
8.
RECONCILIATION
OF OPERATING RETURN TO NET CASH INFLOW/(OUTFLOW) FROM OPERATING
ACTIVITIES
|
(Unaudited)
Six months
ended
30
September
2024
£’000
|
(Unaudited)
Six months
ended
30
September
2023
£’000
|
Gains/losses
before finance costs and taxation
|
9,508
|
(14,321)
|
(Less:
capital gains)/add: capital losses before finance charges and
taxation
|
(1,740)
|
25,705
|
Revenue
return before finance charges and taxation
|
7,768
|
11,384
|
Expenses
charged to capital
|
(7,751)
|
(7,803)
|
Decrease/(increase)
in other debtors
|
226
|
(474)
|
Increase
in other creditors and accruals
|
3,754
|
2,678
|
Net
taxation suffered on investment income
|
(825)
|
(611)
|
Amortisation
|
–
|
–
|
Net
cash (outflow)/inflow from operating activities
|
(4,336)
|
5,174
|
9.
PRINCIPAL RISKS AND UNCERTAINTIES
The
principal risks facing the Company are listed in the Interim
Management Report. An explanation of these risks and how they are
managed is contained in the Strategic Report and note 16 of the
Company’s Annual Report & Accounts for the year ended
31 March 2024.
10.
COMPARATIVE INFORMATION
The
condensed financial statements contained in this half year report
do not constitute statutory accounts as defined in section 434 of
the Companies Act 2006. The financial information for the half
years ended 30 September 2024 and
30 September
2023 has not been audited or reviewed by the Company’s
auditor.
The
information for the year ended 31 March
2024 has been extracted from the latest published audited
financial statements of the Company. Those financial statements
have been filed with the Registrar of Companies. The report of the
auditor on those financial statements was unqualified, did not
include a reference to any matters to which the auditors drew
attention by way of emphasis without qualifying the report, and did
not contain statements under either section 498 (2) or 498 (3) of
the Companies Act 2006.
Earnings
for the first six months should not be taken as a guide to the
results for the full year.
Glossary of Terms and Alternative Performance Measures
(“APMs”)
ALTERNATIVE
INVESTMENT FUND MANAGERS DIRECTIVE (“AIFMD”)
Agreed by
the European Parliament and the Council of the European Union and
transposed into UK legislation, the AIFMD classifies certain
investment vehicles, including investment companies, as Alternative
Investment Funds (“AIFs”) and requires them to appoint an
Alternative Investment Fund Manager (“AIFM”) and depositary to
manage and oversee the operations of the investment vehicle. The
Board of the Company retains responsibility for strategy,
operations and compliance and the Directors retain a fiduciary duty
to shareholders.
BENCHMARK
The
performance of the Company is measured against the MSCI World
Health Care Index on a net total return, sterling adjusted
basis.
The net
total return is calculated by reinvesting dividends after the
deduction of withholding taxes.
LARGE
CAP BIOTECH
Biotechnology
company with fully integrated discovery, development and commercial
capabilities and considered sustainably profitable.
LARGE
CAP PHARMA
Global,
multinational pharmaceutical companies with fully integrated
discovery, development and commercial capabilities.
DISCOUNT
OR PREMIUM
A
description of the difference between the share price and the net
asset value per share. The size of the discount or premium is
calculated by subtracting the share price from the net asset value
per share and then dividing by the net asset value per share. It is
usually expressed as a percentage (%) of the net asset value per
share. If the share price is higher than the net asset value per
share the result is a premium. If the share price is lower than the
net asset value per share, the shares are trading at a
discount.
EMERGING
BIOTECH
Biotechnology
company that does not fit the criteria of Large Cap Biotech,
ranging from early-stage development to newly
profitable.
EQUITY
SWAPS
An equity
swap is an agreement in which one party (counterparty) transfers
the total return of an underlying equity position to the other
party (swap holder) in exchange for a one-off payment at a set
date. Total return includes dividend income and gains or losses
from market movements. The exposure of the holder is the market
value of the underlying equity position.
Your
Company uses two types of equity swap:
-
funded,
where payment is made on acquisition. They are equivalent to
holding the underlying equity position with the exception of
additional counterparty risk and not possessing voting rights in
the underlying; and,
-
financed,
where payment is made on maturity. As there is no initial outlay,
financed swaps increase economic exposure by the value of the
underlying equity position with no initial increase in the
investments value – there is therefore embedded leverage within a
financed swap due to the deferral of payment to
maturity.
The
Company employs swaps for two purposes:
-
To gain
access to individual stocks in the Indian, Chinese and other
emerging markets, where the Company is not locally registered to
trade or is able to gain in a more cost efficient manner than
holding the stocks directly; and,
-
To gain
exposure to thematic baskets of stocks (a Basket Swap). Basket
Swaps are used to build exposure to themes, or ideas, that the
Portfolio Manager believes the Company will benefit from and where
holding a Basket Swap is more cost effective and operationally
efficient than holding the underlying stocks or individual
swaps.
GENERICS
Any
therapeutics company, domestic or global, that focuses a majority
of its efforts (not necessarily 100%) on developing and selling
generic and/or biosimilar prescription and/or OTC
products.
LEVERAGE
Leverage
is defined in the AIFMD as any method by which the AIFM increases
the exposure of an AIF. In addition to the gearing limit the
Company also has to comply with the AIFMD leverage requirements.
For these purposes the Board has set a maximum leverage limit of
140% for both methods. This limit is expressed as a percentage with
100% representing no leverage or gearing in the Company. There are
two methods of calculating leverage as follows:
The Gross
Method is calculated as total exposure divided by Shareholders’
Funds. Total exposure is calculated as net assets, less cash and
cash equivalents, adding back cash borrowing plus derivatives
converted into the equivalent position in their underlying
assets.
The
Commitment Method is calculated as total exposure divided by
Shareholders’ Funds. In this instance total exposure is calculated
as net assets, less cash and cash equivalents, adding back cash
borrowing plus derivatives converted into the equivalent position
in their underlying assets, adjusted for netting and hedging
arrangements.
See the
definition of Equity Swaps for more details on how exposure through
derivatives is calculated.
|
As
at
30
September 2024
|
As
at
31 March
2024
|
|
Fair
Value
£’000
|
Exposure*
£’000
|
Fair
Value
£’000
|
Exposure*
£’000
|
Investments
|
2,046,974
|
2,046,974
|
2,108,235
|
2,108,235
|
OTC equity
swaps
|
22,026
|
191,150
|
(11,474)
|
198,082
|
|
2,069,000
|
2,238,124
|
2,096,761
|
2,306,317
|
Shareholders’
funds
|
|
1,975,093
|
|
2,080,417
|
Leverage
%
|
|
13.3%
|
|
10.8%
|
*
Calculated
in accordance with AIFMD requirements using the Commitment
Method
MSCI
WORLD HEALTH CARE INDEX (THE COMPANY’S
BENCHMARK)
The MSCI
information (relating to the Benchmark) may only be used for your
internal use, may not be reproduced or redisseminated in any form
and may not be used as a basis for or a component of any financial
instruments or products or indices. None of the MSCI information is
intended to constitute investment advice or a recommendation to
make (or refrain from making) any kind of investment decision and
may not be relied on as such. Historical data and analysis should
not be taken as an indication or guarantee of any future
performance analysis, forecast or prediction. The MSCI information
is provided on an “as is” basis and the user of this information
assumes the entire risk of any use made of this information. MSCI,
each of its affiliates and each other person involved in or related
to compiling, computing or creating any MSCI information
(collectively, the “MSCI Parties”) expressly disclaims all
warranties (including, without limitation, any warranties of
originality, accuracy, completeness, timeliness, non-infringement,
merchantability and fitness for a particular purpose) with respect
to this information. Without limiting any of the foregoing, in no
event shall any MSCI Party have any liability for any direct,
indirect, special, incidental, punitive, consequential (including,
without limitation lost profits) or any other damages.
(www.msci.com)
NET
ASSET VALUE (NAV) TOTAL RETURN (“APM”)
The
theoretical total return on shareholders’ funds per share,
reflecting the change in NAV assuming that dividends paid to
shareholders were reinvested at NAV at the time the shares were
quoted ex-dividend. A way of measuring investment management
performance of investment trusts which is not affected by movements
in discounts/premiums.
|
Six months
to
30
September
2024
(p)
|
Year
to
31
March
2024
(p)
|
Opening
NAV per share
|
381.1
|
343.5
|
Increase
in NAV per share
|
0.4
|
37.6
|
Closing
NAV per share
|
381.5
|
381.1
|
% Change
in NAV per share
|
0.1%
|
10.9%
|
Impact of
reinvested dividends
|
0.5%
|
1.1%
|
NAV
per share Total Return
|
0.6%
|
12.0%
|
ONGOING
CHARGES (“APM”)
Ongoing
charges are calculated by taking the Company’s annualised ongoing
charges, excluding finance costs, taxation, performance fees and
exceptional items, and expressing them as a percentage of the
average daily net asset value of the Company over the
year.
|
Six months
to
30
September
2024
£’000
|
One year
to
31
March
2024
£’000
|
AIFM &
Portfolio Management fees
|
8,159
|
16,267
|
Other
Expenses
|
654
|
1,294
|
Total
Ongoing Charges
|
8,813
|
17,561
|
Performance
fees paid/crystallised
|
–
|
–
|
Total
|
8,813
|
17,561
|
Average
net assets
|
2,067,356
|
2,036,653
|
Ongoing
Charges (annualised)
|
0.9%
|
0.9%
|
Ongoing
Charges (annualised, including performance fees paid or
crystallised during the period)
|
0.9%
|
0.9%
|
PERFORMANCE
FEE
Dependent
on the level of long-term outperformance of the Company, a
performance fee can become payable.
The
performance fee is calculated by reference to the amount by which
the Company’s net asset value (‘NAV’) performance has outperformed
the Benchmark.
The fee is
calculated quarterly by comparing the cumulative performance of the
Company’s NAV with the cumulative performance of the Benchmark
since the launch of the Company in 1995. Provision is also made
within the daily NAV per share calculation as required and in
accordance with generally accepted accounting standards. The
performance fee amounts to 15.0% of any outperformance over the
Benchmark (see Company’s Annual Report & Accounts for the year
ended 31 March 2024 for further
information).
In order
to ensure that only sustained outperformance is rewarded, at each
quarterly calculation date any performance fee payable is based on
the lower of:
i)
The
cumulative outperformance of the investment portfolio over the
Benchmark as at the quarter end date; and
ii)
The
cumulative outperformance of the investment portfolio over the
Benchmark as at the corresponding quarter end date in the previous
year.
The effect
of this is that outperformance has to be maintained for a 12 month
period before the related fee is paid.
In
addition, a performance fee only becomes payable to the extent that
the cumulative outperformance gives rise to a total fee greater
than the total of all performance fees paid to date.
SHARE
PRICE TOTAL RETURN (“APM”)
Return to
the investor on mid-market prices assuming that all dividends paid
were reinvested.
|
Six months
to
30
September
2024
(p)
|
One year
to
31
March
2024
(p)
|
Opening
share price
|
335.0
|
311.5
|
Increase
in share price
|
10.0
|
23.5
|
Closing
share price
|
345.0
|
335.0
|
% Change
in share price
|
3.0%
|
7.5%
|
Impact of
reinvested dividends
|
0.6%
|
1.1%
|
Share
price Total Return
|
3.6%
|
8.6%
|
SPEC
PHARMA
Any other
therapeutics company that does not fit the criteria of Large Cap
Pharma that develops and sell pharmaceutical products, often
focused on a limited number of therapeutic areas (or technologies),
with a domestic and sometimes global footprint.
For
and on behalf of
Frostrow
Capital LLP, Secretary
14 November 2024
-
ENDS -