Half-year Report

RNS Number : 9466U
Herald Investment Trust PLC
18 July 2018
 

HERALD INVESTMENT TRUST plc (the "Company")

HALF-YEARLY FINANCIAL REPORT

For the six months ended 30 June 2018

 

 

SUMMARY OF PERFORMANCE

 


At inception
16 February
1994

At
30 June 2018

At
31 December 2017

Performance since
31 December 2017

Performance

since

inception

NAV per ordinary share (including current year income)

98.7p

1506.5p

1374.9p

9.6%

1426.3%

NAV per ordinary share (excluding current year income)

98.7p

1506.1p

1374.2p

9.6%

1425.9%

Share price

90.9p

1345.0p

1171.0p

14.9%

1379.6%

Numis Smaller Companies Index plus AIM

(ex.investment companies)

1,750.0

5,898.4

6,001.8

(1.7%)

237.1%

Russell 2000 (small cap)

Technology Index (in sterling terms)†

688.7*

2,867.8

2,480.2

15.6%

316.4%

 

*        At 9 April 1996 being the date funds were first available for international investment.  

†        The Russell 2000 (small cap) Technology Index was rebased during 2009 following some minor adjustments to its constituents. The rebased index has been used from 31 December 2008 onwards.

 

CHAIRMAN'S STATEMENT

 

The Company's NAV per share rose 9.6% to 1506.45p in the first half of 2018. This represents another good performance both relatively and absolutely. The UK, which still accounts for 56% of the Company's portfolio, returned 9.1% relative to the Numis Smaller Companies Index plus AIM (excluding investment companies) return of -0.4%. The North American component of the portfolio returned 18.7% against the sterling return for the Russell 2000 Technology Index of 15.8%. The smaller Asian segment returned 8.6% and the EMEA region returned 2.6%.

 

UK

 

GB Group is now the largest holding in the UK, as well as being the Company's single largest position. It delivered the biggest appreciation in assets, adding £9.4m of value (+37%). Wandisco was the second biggest winner, adding £6.5m. In percentage terms, the biggest returns came from Seeing Machines, Lombard Risk, Elektron Technology and Versarien; all of these more than doubled.

 

Takeover activity remains high. SQS (announced last year), Fidessa, Lombard Risk and Cityfibre have all been acquired. The period was more noticeable for the extremely large number of placings, together with a few new issues. This breath-taking level of activity normally signals that we are near a peak. Nevertheless, AIM is a vibrant market and the UK a fertile environment for entrepreneurs and underlying trading in our investee companies has generally been good. Our main concern is that the majority of interesting companies have a market capitalisation below £200m. Not many professional investors participate in such small companies. In contrast, private clients have been more conspicuously active. It is difficult to determine how much this is a structural shift, with the internet enabling a greater participation from savvy investors using platforms and disintermediating advisors, and how much of it is cyclical enthusiasm.

 

The manager has purposefully taken profits, selling £65.6m of UK company shares, including takeovers, and only made purchases of £27m during the half year. The manager believes it to be important to have cash to take advantage of any weakening of markets.

 

 

OVERSEAS

 

Takeovers in the US continue to outpace new issues and IPO activity has been relatively low, and performance stronger. The strong performers in the North American portfolio were LivePerson, Attunity, Radware, Five9, Mellanox Technologies and Varonis Systems. This list has a surprisingly high proportion of NASDAQ-listed Israeli companies, which have a more disciplined approach to share dilution from the issue of restricted stock units to staff and lower valuations than US based companies, together with a greater focus on delivering profits. Takeovers in North America have included Barracuda (announced last year), Callidus, Orbotech and Web.com which has received an offer from private equity.

 

The star performers in Asia were the two largest holdings, Kingdee International Software and 51job, which together accounted for the Asian return. There has been an increased focus on Australia, where software companies are flourishing.

 

The European performance was adversely affected by the largest holding, BE Semiconductor, which has delivered wonderful returns over a number of years but experienced profit taking in the first half as investors anticipated a semiconductor downturn. Elsewhere Nordic Semiconductor, Devoteam, Isra Vision, WALLIX and Data Respons all provided useful returns.

 

MARKET BACKGROUND

 

The market has now adopted MiFID II. As long-term investors with low trading volumes, we have always suffered from the inability to generate adequate commissions to receive a full service from as broad a range of brokers as the manager would prefer. It is helpful that the manager has expanded access to research and corporates with payments from the manager's own resources. Historically, larger investment houses covered the overheads of brokers with their client commissions, so proportional to funds under management, commissions cost a similar percentage for clients of large houses as for small. Now the costs are being carried by the manager, it is a harsher environment for small investment managers and for investors in small companies. The aggregate payments to brokers and research providers from the manager's direct research payments and trading commissions in 2018 is expected to be two and a half times the level of 2016, which was the last full year at higher commission rates. Fortunately, this increase in costs has coincided with a period of strong performance (which has itself contributed to some of the increase). Over 90% of research payments will be to global and overseas brokers because we are more reliant on their help for corporate access. It will be a challenge for smaller managers operating globally, particularly for investing in small companies which the global investment banks do not cover.  However, we are aware that many of the larger investment houses are aggressively cutting research payments, and the fear is that their reductions will exceed the increased payments by smaller investment managers. The full extent of the squeeze on brokers has yet to emerge. Significantly, a number of analysts and salesmen in the broking fraternity have opted to leave the industry and work for corporations, which is a worrying development. Although MiFID-type rules have not been formally adopted in North America, many houses are adopting a global strategy and the pressure on smaller North American brokers is intense.

 

It is hard to determine quite what the motives of the regulator are, but it seems inconceivable that the regulator intended to challenge the smaller companies market in the way that it seems to be doing, when these markets provide essential capital for small businesses.

 

Cash balances have risen to about £100m (including short-dated government bonds). Receipts from takeovers have been £46m, with a potential further £23m from takeovers pending. Interestingly, nearly half the proceeds have come from bids by private equity groups. The Company undertook share buybacks during the period amounting to £9.5m.

 

Our manager continues to find good value companies, but some valuations have become quite full, so profits have been taken in some cases.

 

Politics continues to provide an unhelpful background, but I am pleased to say that companies are in general continuing to make strong progress. The valuation premia for growth companies in the portfolio seems surprisingly low. The world seems to be set for some monetary tightness, but the technology and media sectors which this Company targets should not suffer from rising interest rates as much as yield stocks, or those sensitive to interest rate hikes. The sector remains relatively attractive.

 

Julian Cazalet

Chairman
17 July 2018

 

 

 

TOP TWENTY EQUITY HOLDINGS AT 30 JUNE 2018

 

 

Company

Business

Value

£'000

% of
total
assets

GB Group

Intelligent identity data, software and services

33,294

3.2

Diploma

Distributor of components and systems

24,269

2.3

Next Fifteen Communications

Supplier of marketing communications services

19,313

1.8

 

IQE

Design and manufacture of compound semiconductor wafers

16,565

1.6

Bango

Provider of carrier billing and other alternative payment methods

15,688

1.5

Silicon Motion Technology ADR *

Develops controllers used in flash memory

15,346

1.5

YouGov

International opinion data surveys and analytics

14,950

1.4

Radware

Developer of application delivery and cyber security solutions

13,792

1.3

M&C Saatchi

Global marketing services business

13,619

1.3

Craneware

Automated revenue integrity software and solutions

13,248

1.3

Pegasystems

Develops applications for sales, marketing and operations

13,163

1.3

Statpro

Provider of portfolio analytics and risk management software

12,848

1.2

First Derivatives

Developer of database technology and software solutions

12,232

1.2

Descartes Systems

Supplier of logistics management software

11,771

1.1

LoopUp

Remote meetings collaboration solutions

11,730

1.1

Mellanox Technologies

Supplier of Ethernet and InfiniBand interconnect products

11,395

1.1

Euromoney Institutional Investor

Business to business media group

11,323

1.1

Boingo Wireless

Construction of Wi-Fi, cellular (DAS) and small cell networks

11,297

1.1

Microgen

Provider of financial management software and services

10,775

1.0

Seeing Machines

Developer of driver monitoring systems and solutions

10,733

1.0

 

 

 

 

 

 

297,351

28.4

* American Depositary Receipt

 

 

INCOME STATEMENT

(UNAUDITED)


For the six months ended

30 June 2018

For the six months ended

30 June 2017


Revenue

£'000

Capital

£'000

Total

£'000

Revenue

£'000

Capital

£'000

Total

£'000

Gains on investments

-

56,845

56,845

-

22,830

22,830

Movements in unrealised gains on investments 

-

31,176

31,176

-

81,809

81,809

Currency gains/(losses)

-

1,332

1,332

-

(2,255)

(2,255)

Income

5,855

-

5,855

5,649

-

5,649

 

Investment management fee (note 3)

 

(4,998)

 

-

 

(4,998)

 

(4,242)

 

-

 

(4,242)

Other administrative expenses

(325)

(4)

(329)

(240)

(1)

(241)

 

Profit before finance costs and taxation

 

532

 

89,349

 

89,881

 

1,167

 

102,383

 

103,550

Finance costs of borrowings

(85)

-

(85)

(259)

-

(259)

Profit before taxation

447

89,349

89,796

908

102,383

103,291

Tax

(184)

-

(184)

(193)

-

(193)

 

Profit after taxation

 

263

 

89,349

 

89,612

 

715

 

102,383

 

103,098

 

Profit per ordinary share (note 4)

 

0.38p

 

127.76p

 

128.14p

 

0.99p

 

142.14p

 

143.13p

 

Weighted average number of ordinary  shares in issue during each period

 

69,930,886



 

72,031,127



 

The total column of this statement is the profit and loss account of the Company, prepared in accordance with UK Accounting Standards.

 

The profit after taxation is the total comprehensive income and therefore no additional statement of 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. All items in the above statement derive from continuing operations of the Company. No operations were acquired or discontinued in the year.                                                                                                                                                             

 



 

BALANCE SHEET

(UNAUDITED)


As at

30 June

2018

(unaudited)

£'000

As at

31 December

2017

(audited)

£'000

Fixed assets






Investments held at fair value through profit or loss

973,637

925,541




Current assets






Cash and cash equivalents

66,248

41,870

Other receivables

8,816

1,682


75,064

43,552

Current liabilities






Other payables

(1,936)

(2,443)




Net current assets

73,128

41,109




TOTAL NET ASSETS

1,046,765

966,650




Capital and reserves






Called up share capital

17,371

17,577

Share premium

73,738

73,738

Capital redemption reserve

4,581

4,375

Capital reserve

949,651

869,799

Revenue reserve

1,424

1,161




SHAREHOLDERS' FUNDS

1,046,765

966,650




Net asset value per ordinary share (including current year income)

1506.45p

1374.88p




Net asset value per ordinary share (excluding current year income)

1506.07p

1374.20p




Ordinary shares in issue

69,485,583

70,307,785

 

 



 

STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN EQUITY

(UNAUDITED)

 

 

 

 

 

For the six months ended 30 June 2018

 


Called up share capital £'000

Share premium £'000

Capital redemption reserve £'000

Capital reserve £'000

Revenue reserve £'000

Share-
holders' funds
£'000

Shareholders' funds at 1 January 2018

17,577

73,738

4,375

869,799

1,161

966,650

Profit after taxation

-

-

-

89,349

263

89,612

Shares bought back (note 8)

(206)

-

206

(9,497)

-

(9,497)

Shareholders' funds at

30 June 2018

17,371

73,738

4,581

949,651

1,424

1,046,765

 

 

 

For the six months ended 30 June 2017

 


Called up share capital £'000

Share premium £'000

Capital redemption reserve £'000

Capital reserve £'000

Revenue reserve £'000

Share-
holders' funds
£'000

Shareholders' funds at 1 January 2017

18,266

73,738

3,686

695,049

675

791,414

Profit after taxation

-

-

-

102,383

715

103,098

Shares bought back (note 8)

(374)

-

374

(13,882)

-

(13,882)

Shareholders' funds at

30 June 2017

17,892

73,738

4,060

783,550

1,390

880,630

 

 

 



 

 

NOTES TO THE CONDENSED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (UNAUDITED)

 

1        Financial Statements

          The condensed financial statements for the six months to 30 June 2018 within the Half Yearly Report comprise the statements set out above together with the related notes that follow below. The condensed financial statements do not constitute statutory accounts as defined in sections 434 to 436 of the Companies Act 2006 and have been neither audited nor reviewed by the Company's auditors. Financial information in relation to the year ended 31 December 2017 has been extracted from the statutory accounts which have been filed with the Registrar of Companies. The Auditors' report on those accounts was unqualified and did not contain a statement under Section 498 (2) or (3) of the Companies Act 2006.                                                                                

 

          The Company's assets, the majority of which are investments in quoted securities, exceed its liabilities significantly. All borrowings require the prior approval of the board. Gearing levels and compliance with loan covenants are reviewed by the board on a regular basis. In accordance with the Company's articles of association, shareholders have the right to vote on the continuation of the Company every three years with the next vote being in April 2019. Accordingly, the financial statements have been prepared on the going concern basis as it is the directors' opinion that the Company will continue in operational existence for the foreseeable future.                                                                                         

 

2        Accounting policies

          The condensed financial statements have been prepared in accordance with applicable United Kingdom Accounting Standards and applicable law (UK Generally Accepted Accounting Practice), including FRS 102 The Financial Reporting Standard applicable in the UK and Republic of Ireland, FRS 104 Interim Financial Reporting and the Statement of Recommended Practice Financial Statements of Investment Trust Companies and Venture Capital Trusts, issued by the Association of Investment Companies in November 2014, as amended in January 2017.

                                                                                   

          The accounting policies applied for the condensed financial statements are as set out in the Company's annual report and financial statements for the year ended 31 December 2017.                                                                                    

 

3        Investment management fee

          Herald Investment Management Limited is appointed investment manager under a management agreement which is terminable on twelve months' notice. Its annual remuneration is 1.0% of the Company's net asset value based on middle market prices, calculated on a monthly basis payable in arrears. The management fee is levied on all assets except the holding in Herald Ventures II Limited Partnership managed by Herald Investment Management Limited.                                                                                     

 

4        Net return per ordinary share


Six months

ended

30 June 2018

£'000

Six months

ended

30 June 2017

£'000

Revenue profit after taxation

263

715

Capital profit after taxation

89,349

102,383

Total net return

89,612

103,098

 

 

Weighted average number of ordinary shares

 

 

69,930,886

 

 

72,031,127

 

          Net return per ordinary share is based on the above totals of revenue and capital and the weighted average number of ordinary shares in issue during each period.

 

          There are no dilutive or potentially dilutive shares in issue.

 

5        Dividends

          In accordance with FRS 102 Section 32 'Events After the End of the Reporting Period', the final dividend payable on ordinary shares is recognised as a liability when approved by shareholders. Interim dividends are recognised only when paid.

 

          No dividends were paid for the year ended 31 December 2017 (2016: same), nor declared for the interim (2017: same).

 

6        Borrowings

 

          The Company had a sterling loan facility of £25 million which was repaid in full on 29 December 2017 and has a £25 million multi-currency revolving credit facility maturing 31 December 2019.                                                  

          At the period end no drawings had been made.                                                                                          

                                                                                                

7        Financial Instruments

 

          The Company's investments, as disclosed in the Company's balance sheet, are valued at fair value.

 

          Nearly all of the Company's portfolio of investments are in the Level 1 category as defined in FRS 102.                                                                                      

          The three levels set out in FRS 102 are as follows:                                                                                     

          Level 1: The unadjusted quoted price in an active market for identical assets or liabilities that the entity can access at the measurement date.

                                                                       

          Level 2: Inputs other than quoted prices included within Level 1 that are observable (i.e. developed using market data) for the asset or liability, either directly or indirectly.                                                                                         

          Level 3: Inputs are unobservable (i.e. for which market data is unavailable) for the asset or liability.                 

 

          The investment manager considers observable data to be the market data that is readily available,

          regularly distributed or updated, reliable and verifiable, not proprietary, and provided by independent

          sources that are actively involved in the relevant market.

                                   

          The analysis of the valuation basis for the financial instruments based on the hierarchy is as follows:

 


30 June 2018

31 December 2017


Assets

£'000

Liabilities

£'000

Assets

£'000

Liabilities

£'000

Level 1

1,033,052

(1,936)

956,214

(2,443)

Level 3

15,649

-

12,879

-

 

Total net assets

 

1,048,701

 

(1,936)

 

969,093

 

(2,443)

 

          The fair value of listed security investments is bid value. Investments on the Alternative Investment Market are included at their bid value. The fair value of unlisted investments uses valuation techniques determined by the directors on the basis of latest information in line with the relevant principles of the International Private Equity and Venture Capital Valuation Guidelines.         

 

8        Share capital

 

          At the AGM held on 19 April 2018 the Company's authority to buy back up to 14.99% of its issued share capital at that date was renewed. In the six months to 30 June 2018 a total of 822,202 (30 June 2017 - 1,494,919) ordinary shares of 25p each were bought back at a total cost of £9,496,743 (30 June 2017 - £13,881,514). At 30 June 2018 the Company had authority to buy back a further 9,593,686 ordinary shares.                                                                                                                  

 

9        Fixed asset investments

 

          During the period, cost of purchases amounted to £65,029,000 (30 June 2017 - £61,924,000) and proceeds of sales amounted to £104,931,000 (30 June 2017 - £60,752,000).

 

         


Six months ended  30 June 2018

Six months ended  30 June 2017


                          £'000

                       £'000

Transaction costs



Commission costs:



Purchases

                          115

                   192

Sales

                          179

                   195

 

 

Total commission costs

                          294

                   387

Custody transaction costs

                             4

                      1

Other transaction costs

                           21

                     46




Total transaction costs

                         319

                   434

                                                                       

                                                           

INVESTMENT POLICY AND OBJECTIVE

 

Herald's objective is to achieve capital appreciation through investments in smaller quoted companies, in the areas of telecommunications, multimedia and technology (TMT). Investments may be made across the world. The business activities of investee companies will include information technology, broadcasting, printing and publishing and the supply of equipment and services to these companies.

 

 

PRINCIPAL RISKS AND UNCERTAINTIES

The principal risks facing the Company relate to the Company's investment activities. These risks are market risk (comprising other price risk, interest rate risk and foreign currency risk), credit risk and liquidity risk. An explanation of these risks and how they are managed is contained in note 18 of the Company's Annual Report and Financial Statements for the year to 31 December 2017. The principal risks and uncertainties have not changed since the publication of the Annual Report which can be obtained free of charge from Herald Investment Management Limited and is available on its website: www.heralduk.com. Other risks facing the Company include the following: regulatory risk (that the loss of investment trust status or a breach of applicable legal and regulatory requirements could have adverse financial consequences and cause reputational damage), operational/financial/custody risk (failure of service providers' accounting and/or settlements systems could lead to inaccurate reporting or financial loss), the risk that the discount can widen and gearing risk (the use of borrowings can magnify the impact of falling markets). Further information can be found on page 35 of the latest Annual Report and Financial Statements.

 

RESPONSIBILITY STATEMENT

 

We confirm that to the best of our knowledge:

 

a)   the condensed set of financial statements has been prepared in accordance with FRS104 "Interim Financial Reporting" published by the Financial Reporting Council and gives a true and fair view of the assets, liabilities, financial position and profit of the Company;

b)   the Half Yearly Financial Report and interim management report (Chairman's Statement) includes a fair review of the information required by Disclosure and Transparency Rules 4.2.7R (indication of important events during the first six months, and their impact on the financial statements and a description of principal risks and uncertainties for the remaining six months of the year); and

c)   the Half-Yearly Financial Report includes a fair review of the information required by Disclosure and Transparency Rules 4.2.8R (disclosure of related party transactions and changes therein - see note 3 above).

 

By order of the Board

Julian Cazalet
Chairman

17 July 2018

 

The Half Yearly Financial report will be posted to shareholders on or around 2 August 2018 and published on the Manager's website: www.heralduk.com 

 

Contacts:

 

Katie Potts, Manager                                                     020 7553 6300

 

Law Debenture Corporate Services Limited                       020 7696 5285

Company Secretary

 

 


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