Final Results

JPMorgan Smaller Cos IT PLC 10 October 2007 LONDON STOCK EXCHANGE ANNOUNCEMENT JPMORGAN SMALLER COMPANIES INVESTMENT TRUST PLC PRELIMINARY ANNOUNCEMENT OF FINAL RESULTS The Directors of JPMorgan Smaller Companies Investment Trust plc announce the Company's results for the year ended 31st July 2007. CHAIRMAN'S STATEMENT Investment Performance Despite recent market volatility, I am pleased to report that the Company has continued to outperform its benchmark index. Over the year to 31st July 2007 the Company produced a total return on net assets of +32.7%, which compares favourably with the total return of the benchmark, the FTSE Small Cap Index (excluding investment trusts) of +18.7%. The return to shareholders was also positive at +28.6%. Since the year end, relative performance has remained strong with the Company outperforming the benchmark index. As at 5th October 2007 the net asset value per share was 659.9p, the share price 537.5p and the discount 18.6%. Revenue and Dividends Net revenue after taxation for the year was £1,172,000 (2006: £1,025,000) and revenue return per share, calculated on the average number of shares in issue, was 5.22p (2006: 4.37p). The Directors are recommending a final dividend of 5.00p per share (2006: 4.25p), costing £1,062,000 (2006: £979,000). If approved, the dividend will be paid on 14th December 2007 to shareholders on the register on 2nd November 2007. Each year the level of income received varies according to the Company's gearing, its investment stance and market conditions and, whilst it is the Company's policy to distribute substantially all the available income each year, shareholders should note that the Company's dividends will vary accordingly. Investment Manager The Company's objective is to provide shareholders with capital growth from a portfolio of investments in UK smaller companies. The Board carried out a formal review of the capabilities and services of the Manager during the year. This covered the investment management, company secretarial, administrative and marketing services provided to the Company by JPMorgan Asset Management (UK) Limited ('JPMAM') and further included their investment performance record, management processes, investment style and resources. We have concluded that JPMorgan Asset Management (UK) Limited remains the most appropriate manager of the Company's assets and that the ongoing appointment of the existing Investment Manager is in the best interests of shareholders. Since the year end, the Board has been advised that Mark Davids will no longer be on the team managing the Company's portfolio. He is remaining within JPMorgan but will be relocating to Japan. We will be sorry to lose Mark and wish him all the best. Sarah-Jane Morley has now joined the investment management team to work alongside Georgina Brittain. Share Buy backs At last year's Annual General Meeting, shareholders granted the Directors authority to repurchase the Company's shares for cancellation, such authority to expire at the earlier of 28th May 2008 or the conclusion of the Annual General Meeting in 2007. During the financial year the Company repurchased a total of 1,781,203 ordinary shares for cancellation, representing 7.7% of the issued share capital at the beginning of the year. This has added approximately 6.9p per ordinary share to the net asset value for continuing shareholders. The Board's objective remains to use the share repurchase authority to manage imbalances between the supply and demand of the Company's shares, thereby reducing the volatility of the discount. To date the Board believes this mechanism has been helpful and therefore proposes and recommends that powers to repurchase up to 14.99% of the Company's shares for cancellation be renewed for a further period. Board of Directors On 5th April 2006, Andrew Robson was appointed a Director of the Company. He has had a successful career in the field of banking and as a finance director. Most recently he was a director of Edinburgh UK Smaller Companies Tracker Trust PLC. Andrew Robson has proved to be a valuable addition to the Board since his appointment and, having been appointed to the Board during the year, I have no hesitation in recommending his election at the forthcoming Annual General Meeting. If appointed, he will be eligible to serve for a three year term. At the Nomination Committee held earlier this year, the Board carried out an evaluation of the Directors, the Chairman, the Board itself and its Committees. The Board takes this review seriously and views it as an effective means of evaluating the continuing efficacy of the Board. In accordance with the Company's Articles of Association, and having served as Directors for more than nine years, both Richard Fitzalan Howard and I offer ourselves for re-election on an annual basis. The Board does not believe that length of service in itself should disqualify a Director from seeking re-election and, in proposing our re-elections, it has taken into account the ongoing requirements of the Combined Code, including the need to refresh the Board and its Committees. The Nomination Committee recommends to shareholders that we should therefore be re-elected. Corporate Governance The Board believes that the Company operates in accordance with best practice in corporate governance. The Board has put in place procedures to monitor the Company's compliance with the Combined Code and the AIC Code on Corporate Governance. Annual General Meeting The Company's seventeenth Annual General Meeting will be held on Wednesday 28th November 2007 at 3.30 pm at The Library, 60 Victoria Embankment, London EC4Y 0JP. In addition to the formal part of the meeting, there will be a presentation from the Investment Managers who will answer questions on the portfolio and performance. Shareholders who are unable to attend the AGM in person are encouraged to use their proxy votes. Outlook The Board has felt for some months that traditional credit disciplines in the financial world have become uncomfortably lax, and that the plethora of novel and complex instruments now available to investors would at some stage cause investors to take fright. The correction has been severe in the credit markets, though to date the stockmarket in the UK, though volatile and markedly weak in certain areas, has remained encouragingly resilient. It is too early to judge whether the strong earnings growth in the portfolio of investments will be undermined by weaker confidence and changed credit conditions; however, investors' awareness of risk has undoubtedly become much more acute. On balance though, the Board is reasonably optimistic that the current easing of interest rates and slowly improving liquidity provided by Central Banks will more than counterbalance increasing risk awareness, at least in the near term. The medium to longer term outlook, with the possibility of rising inflation and interest rates, looks likely to be more difficult. The year has started well, ahead of the benchmark, and we have confidence in the nimbleness of the Investment Managers and their ability to continue an excellent record of picking good stocks in these more turbulent conditions. Strone Macpherson Chairman 10th October 2007 INVESTMENT MANAGERS' REPORT Market Background The strong upward trend in global stockmarkets continued during the last financial year. This was powered by positive economic conditions, notably global GDP growth, which led to strong corporate earnings growth, driving stocks higher. As discussed in the Interim Report, this upward trend in markets over the last four years has not been without periodic retrenchments, most recently as concerns over inflationary pressures in the UK and US came to the fore, and the first hints of the US sub-prime issue appeared. These led to an increase in volatility and a market set-back in February 2007. However, strong global demand, continuing corporate activity and positive corporate newsflow drove the markets upwards. This was in spite of two further interest rate rises in the UK in May and July 2007, which took UK base rates to 5.75%, as the Monetary Policy Committee continued to focus on inflation risks, and the doughty UK consumer continued to spend. Portfolio The strong performance that the portfolio demonstrated in the first half of the financial year continued in the second half. The FTSE Small Cap (ex Investment Trusts) Index was up 18.7% for the year to 31st July 2007, but the Company significantly outperformed its benchmark and produced +32.7% net asset value total return. The key driver of this outperformance was stock selection, which contributed 9.6% of the excess above benchmark. Sector selection was also strongly positive, and in addition gearing enhanced returns. Over the last year two key changes have been made to the shape of the portfolio. First, what was already a significant overweight position in the Industrials sector has been increased further. (By overweight we mean the size of the position relative to the benchmark weighting.) This is comprised of large positions in Support Services, Industrial Engineering and Construction & Materials, and these were accountable for much of the strong performance seen in the year. The second key change to the portfolio was the move from some 5% overweight to 5% underweight in the Financials sector. This was brought about by our move from large overweight to large underweight in the Real Estate sub-sector at the beginning of 2007, as we became concerned over heady valuations, and by a significant reduction in the portfolio's General Financials position. In addition to the key overweight position within Industrials, sector selection was aided by the overweight in the Oil Equipment, Services & Distribution sector, and the underweight in Software & Computer Services. In the former, notable contributors included Hunting and Wellstream, a new issue which produces pipeline products for the sub-sea oil industry; in the latter, long-term holdings Axon and SDL continued to contribute strongly. The key detractor during the year in terms of sector positions was Electronic & Electrical Equipment, due to poor stock selection. The Investment Managers' focus remains on stock-picking. In addition to those mentioned above, notable performers included Tanfield (electric vehicle manufacturer) and Eros International (distributor of Bollywood films), both of which were new to the portfolio, and a number of long-term holdings such as Chemring, Keller and Hyder Consulting. The investment process underlying the Company, as discussed in the last Annual Report, remains unchanged. The methodology uses a quantitative screen which breaks down the individual stocks in the investible universe and ranks them according to four factors: value, earnings momentum, price momentum and growth. After fundamental research to check the data, the balance sheet and the market environment, the portfolio is constructed around stocks which demonstrate these tilts. This aims to ensure not only that the portfolio is constructed around our underlying philosophy of fast-growing cheap stocks with good newsflow, but also that the portfolio has both growth and value signatures, which academic evidence has demonstrated to be the two long-term drivers of outperformance in the stockmarket. This quantitative approach is the starting point for the stock selection that is the bedrock of the portfolio; it is then overlaid by the Investment Managers' extensive knowledge of individual companies and their markets, and their own research efforts. Market Outlook Since the Company's year end, financial markets have been front page news. Too much liquidity in the system led to the inevitable consequence of a relaxation of lending criteria, both in the corporate sector (for example, certain lending to private equity) and in the consumer mortgage and credit markets. The immediate effects of the US sub-prime debacle and consequent credit freeze have been seen in the sharp August declines in stockmarkets throughout the developed world. Much has been written on the proximate causes of the huge volatility seen in that month, as de-leveraging and the meeting of margin calls led to the sell-off. Actions taken to date by the US Federal Reserve and European Central Bank have pumped some liquidity back into the system, but further shocks and dramatic write-downs of debt must be expected as the fall-out continues. For equity investors, however, the key question is the likely impact on future economic growth. It is too early to provide a definitive answer, but it should be remembered that global growth is no longer powered by the US consumer, but by a strong corporate sector and a global investment boom. This corporate sector continues to invest for the future, and to achieve rates of return significantly above the cost of borrowing. Thus while global growth would not be impervious to a slowing US economy, strong demand dynamics - examples include commodities, the oil & gas sector and the multitude of companies that feed directly and indirectly into it, and the construction sector in the UK, Europe and the Middle East - and strong company balance sheets and strong newsflow all suggest that the impact on future global economic growth should not be significant, despite tighter on-going financial conditions. In the UK, the broader economy remains resilient. Interest rates look to be at or near their peak at 5.75%, as evidenced by recent inflationary data showing the CPI to be back below the target of 2%, and the threat of high wage settlements has diminished. UK companies increased their profits by 16.2% year-on-year, and thus are highly cash-generative at present, as can be seen by the current levels of dividend growth and share buy-backs. On account of this, corporate activity is expected to return, not through the medium of private equity, but by corporates themselves utilising their strong balance sheets. We continue to find this backdrop encouraging, while being cognisant of the fact that the risk to the global growth outlook has increased. Very much as we said six months ago, we expect on-going volatility and further periods of retrenchment, but newsflow from companies, earnings growth and valuations all remain supportive. A forward price/earnings ratio of some 13x for the smaller companies index is an attractive price to pay for the double digit growth that we continue to believe will be delivered. The recent volatility has provided significant buying opportunities in individual companies and the Investment Managers have been and will continue to take advantage of such opportunities. Georgina Brittain and Mark Davids Investment Managers 10th October 2007 A copy of the full report will be available shortly on the JPMorgan Internet site at www.jpmsmallercompanies.co.uk. JPMorgan Smaller Companies Investment Trust plc Unaudited figures for the year ended 31st July 2007 Income Statement (Unaudited) (Audited) Year ended 31st July 2007 Year ended 31st July 2006 Revenue Capital Total Revenue Capital Total £'000 £'000 £'000 £'000 £'000 £'000 Gains from investments held at fair value through profit or loss - 35,973 35,973 - 29,718 29,718 Net foreign currency losses - (2) (2) - - - Income from investments 2,519 - 2,519 2,034 - 2,034 Other interest receivable and similar income 21 - 21 23 - 23 Gross return 2,540 35,971 38,511 2,057 29,718 31,775 Management fee (697) (697) (1,394) (552) (552) (1,104) Other administrative expenses (351) - (351) (277) - (277) Net return on ordinary activities before finance costs and taxation 1,492 35,274 36,766 1,228 29,166 30,394 Finance costs (319) (319) (638) (203) (203) (406) Net return on ordinary activities before taxation 1,173 34,955 36,128 1,025 28,963 29,988 Taxation (1) - (1) - - - Net return on ordinary activities after taxation 1,172 34,955 36,127 1,025 28,963 29,988 Return per ordinary share 5.22p 155.62p 160.84p 4.37p 123.54p 127.91p (note 2) All revenue and capital items in the above statement derive from continuing operations. No operations were acquired or discontinued in the year. The 'Total' column of this statement is the profit and loss account of the Company and the 'Revenue' and 'Capital' columns represent supplementary information. The 'Total' column represents all the information that is required to be disclosed in a 'Statement of Total Recognised Gains and Losses (STRGL)'. For this reason a STRGL has not been presented. JPMorgan Smaller Companies Investment Trust plc Unaudited figures for the year ended 31st July 2007 Reconciliation of Movements in Shareholders' Funds (Unaudited) Capital Called up redemption Capital Revenue Share capital Share premium reserve reserves reserve Total £'000 £'000 £'000 £'000 £'000 £'000 At 31st July 2005 5,986 18,360 680 68,649 1,078 94,753 Adjustment to opening shareholders' funds at 1st August 2005 to reflect the adoption of bid prices - - - (1,991) - (1,991) Shares bought back and (229) - 229 (3,546) - (3,546) cancelled Total return from ordinary - - - 28,963 1,025 29,988 activities Dividends appropriated in the year - - - - (878) (878) At 31st July 2006 5,757 18,360 909 92,075 1,225 118,326 Shares bought back and cancelled (445) - 445 (9,817) - (9,817) Total return from ordinary - - - 34,955 1,172 36,127 activities Dividends appropriated in the year - - - - (979) (979) At 31st July 2007 5,312 18,360 1,354 117,213 1,418 143,657 JPMorgan Smaller Companies Investment Trust plc Unaudited figures for the year ended 31st July 2007 BALANCE SHEET (Unaudited) (Audited) 31st July 2007 31st July 2006 £'000 £'000 Fixed assets Investments at fair value through profit or loss 154,170 125,529 Investments in liquidity funds at fair value through profit or loss - 1,518 _______ _______ Total Portfolio 154,170 127,047 Current assets Debtors 984 676 Cash at bank and in hand - 794 _______ _______ 984 1,470 Creditors : amounts falling due within one year (11,497) (10,191) _______ _______ Net current liabilities (10,513) (8,721) _______ _______ Total assets less current liabilities 143,657 118,326 _______ _______ Total net assets 143,657 118,326 ===== ===== Capital and reserves Share capital 5,312 5,757 Share premium 18,360 18,360 Capital redemption reserve 1,354 909 Capital reserves 117,213 92,075 Revenue reserve 1,418 1,225 _______ _______ Shareholders' funds 143,657 118,326 === ==== == = Net asset value per ordinary share (note 3) 676.1p 513.8p CASH FLOW STATEMENT (Unaudited) (Audited) 31st July 2007 31st July 2006 £'000 £'000 Net cash inflow from operating activities 932 485 Net cash outflow from returns on investments and servicing of (586) (347) finance Net cash inflow from capital expenditure and financial investment 7,501 2,614 Dividends paid (979) (878) Net cash outflow from financing (7,817) (466) _______ ______ (Decrease)/increase in cash for the year (949) 1,408 ===== ==== Notes to the Accounts 1. Accounting policies The accounts are prepared in accordance with the Companies Act 1985, United Kingdom Generally Accepted Accounting Practice ('UK GAAP') and with the Statement of Recommended Practice 'Financial Statements of Investment Trust Companies' issued by the AIC in December 2005. All of the Company's operations are of a continuing nature. The accounting policies applied to these financial statements are consistent with those applied in the financial statements for the year ended 31st July 2006. 2. Return per ordinary share (Unaudited) (Audited) 31st July 2007 31st July 2006 £'000 £'000 Return per share is based on the following: Revenue return 1,172 1,025 Capital return 34,955 28,963 Total return 36,127 29,988 Weighted average number of shares in issue 22,462,361 23,445,186 Revenue return per ordinary share 5.22p 4.37p Capital return per ordinary share 155.62p 123.54p Total return per ordinary share 160.84p 127.91p 3. Net asset value per ordinary share The net asset value per ordinary share is based on the funds attributable to ordinary shareholders and on 21,248,983 (2006: 23,030,186) ordinary shares in issue at the year end. 4. Status of preliminary announcement The financial information set out in this preliminary announcement does not constitute the Company's statutory accounts for the years ended 31st July 2007 or 2006. The statutory accounts for the year ended 31st July 2007 have not been delivered to the Registrar of Companies, nor have the auditors yet reported on them. The statutory accounts for the year ended 31st July 2007 will be finalised on the basis of the information presented by the directors in this preliminary announcement and will be delivered to the Registrar of Companies following the approval of the accounts by the Board of Directors. JPMORGAN ASSET MANAGEMENT (UK) LIMITED This information is provided by RNS The company news service from the London Stock Exchange
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