Half-year Report

RNS Number : 9781G
Monks Investment Trust PLC
01 December 2020
 

RNS Announcement

 

 

 

The Monks Investment Trust PLC

 

 

 

Legal Entity Identifier: 213800MRI1JTUKG5AF64

 

Regulated Information Classification: Half Yearly Financial Report.

 

 

 

Results for the six months to 31 October 2020

 

Over the six-month period, the Company produced a positive net asset value (NAV)* return of 26.8% compared to an increase of 10.2% for the FTSE World Index (in sterling), both in total return terms. The share price total return for the same period was 25.7%. The shares ended the period trading at a premium of 3.5% to the Company's NAV*.

 

¾ The approach taken by the Monks Investment Trust places significant emphasis on investing in adaptable companies which seek to remain on the right side of change.

¾ Patient and supportive stewardship is of paramount importance during challenging times. In contrast to many market participants, the manager has encouraged companies to forego near-term profitability in the best long-term interests of their stakeholders.

¾ Revenue earnings per share were 2.76p compared to 3.56p in the corresponding period. No interim dividend is to be paid.

¾ Since the current team took over management of Monks on 27 March 2015, the NAV* total return has been +131.7%, the share price total return +170.8% and the comparative index total return +70.9%.

* With borrowings deducted at fair value.

 

Past performance is not a guide to future performance. Total return information is sourced from Baillie Gifford/Refinitiv and relevant underlying index providers. See disclaimer at the end of this announcement. For a definition of terms see Glossary of Terms and Alternative Performance Measures at the end of this announcement.

         

 

The Monks Investment Trust PLC ('Monks') invests globally in order to achieve capital growth. This takes priority over income and dividends. Monks is managed by Baillie Gifford, an independent fund management group with over £310 billion under management and advice as at 27 November 2020.

Monks is a listed UK company. The value of its shares and any income from them can fall as well as rise and investors may not get back the amount invested. The Company is listed on the London Stock Exchange and is not authorised or regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority. You can find up to date performance information about Monks at www.monksinvestmenttrust.co.uk. Past performance is not a guide to future performance. See disclaimer at the end of this announcement.

 

Neither the contents of the Managers' website nor the contents of any website accessible from hyperlinks on the Managers' website (or any other website) is incorporated into, or forms part of, this announcement.

 

30 November 2020

 

For further information please contact:

Jon Henry, Baillie Gifford & Co, Tel: 0131 275 2000

Mark Knight, Director, Four Communications, Tel: 0203 697 4200 or 07803 758810

The following is the unaudited Interim Financial Report for the six months to 31 October 2020.

 

Responsibility statement

 

We confirm that to the best of our knowledge:

a)  the condensed set of Financial Statements has been prepared in accordance with FRS 104 'Interim Financial Reporting';

b)  the Interim Management Report includes a fair review of the information required by Disclosure Guidance and Transparency Rule 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 Interim Financial Report includes a fair review of the information required by Disclosure Guidance and Transparency Rule 4.2.8R (disclosure of related party transactions and changes therein).

 

On behalf of the Board

K S Sternberg

Chairman

30 November 2020

Interim Management Report

 

Given the choice of possessing any superpower, adaptability would not be top of many people's lists. Indeed, one might rightly question whether it is a superpower at all. Teleportation and the ability to fly have featured in numerous box office movies over the years; however, no-one should underestimate the value of adaptability. Recent months have highlighted this more than ever: 'normal' life has been redefined by the global pandemic. It has been heartening amid these challenging times to observe the resilience of many individuals and enterprises as they adapt and respond to changing circumstances.

The approach taken by the Monks Investment Trust places significant emphasis on investing in adaptable companies which seek to remain on the right side of change. By recognising and embracing a diversity of growth types, the Monks portfolio's resilience lies in its adaptability. We remain focused and open-minded as we seek the best growth companies globally, spread across our four growth categories - Stalwart, Rapid, Cyclical and Latent. The objective is to build a diversified portfolio that remains resilient through periods of cyclical and structural change and delivers attractive levels of capital growth over the long term.

During the first half of our financial year, the Company produced a positive net asset value (NAV)* total return of 26.8% compared to an increase of +10.2% for the comparative index (FTSE World in sterling). The share price total return was 25.7%, with the premium to NAV*  being 3.5% at the end of the period. In the context of our investment approach, six months is a very short time period. The Board and manager believe that performance should be judged over the longer term. Since the current team took over management of Monks Investment Trust on 27 March 2015, the NAV* total return has been +131.7%, and the share price total return +170.8%, compared to the comparative index total of +70.9%.

Portfolio Changes

Patient and supportive stewardship is of paramount importance during challenging times. In contrast to many market participants, the manager has encouraged companies to forego near-term profitability in the best long-term interests of their stakeholders. In some cases, Monks has supported its holdings with further capital, earmarked to underpin future growth. As a reminder, following the onset of the pandemic in March the resilience of the portfolio was examined. Positively reassured by the position of a vast majority of the holdings, the manager was then able to be on the front foot in identifying exciting long-term growth opportunities.

There have been three main areas of change within the portfolio over the past six months. The first is a meaningful investment in 'new frontiers' of the internet, which includes Wayfair in online furniture sales, Tencent Music Entertainment (TME), the Chinese music streaming and social media platform, and several cloud service businesses. Wayfair is successfully building a trusted brand. Its investment in its customer interface and logistics is increasingly marking it out as a long-term winner in a sector which has been problematic for many in the past. TME is the leader in online music streaming in China and provides a hugely popular social platform on which individuals participate in karaoke, competing for notoriety. This combination of a growing ecosystem, vast addressable market and scope for increasing levels of monetisation make for a compelling growth opportunity. Finally, Monks has made investments in a handful of hugely exciting enterprise cloud businesses, whose services require no 'on-premise' hardware, and which have significant scope for future growth. These include Adyen (digital payments), Twilio (digital communications), and three companies delivering services within the information systems and data management sphere (Datadog, Cloudflare and Snowflake). Common to all these holdings is the utility and simplicity they provide their customers in an increasingly complex world. Barriers to adoption of these services are low (no up-front capital requirements) whilst their addressable markets are immense. The capital-light nature of these companies means they offer the potential for attractive levels of future profitability as scale builds.

The portfolio's second cohort of changes relates to Monks' desire to seek opportunities which are uncorrelated with its existing portfolio. The purchases of BHP Billiton and Rio Tinto as diversified commodities businesses offer alternative drivers of future growth for the portfolio. A supply-side contraction in the commodities sector (industry capital expenditure peaked in 2012) coupled with the likelihood of a moderate uptick in demand from the infrastructure needs of emerging markets and a green stimulus may present an attractive long-term growth opportunity.

Thirdly, the manager invested in a handful of companies where near-term demand looks bleak. A position in Booking Holdings, the online travel agency, was established in the period and has since been increased. On a long-term view the manager believes that Booking is in a position of strength relative to peers, is well placed to take market share in the US and to take a growing share of its customers' spending by providing ancillary services like car hire and travel insurance. Another new holding, Lyft, is a ride-hailing application which is in its infancy. Whilst its operating environment is challenging now, Lyft has the potential to grow the transportation-as-a-service market and change the way transportation assets are owned and run. Monks' position in Ryanair, the low-cost airline, has twice been increased in the period, underpinned by the belief that the company is well placed to take market share whilst others retrench. Its relentless focus on efficiency affords the business a much higher tolerance of challenging operating conditions. Ryanair should emerge from the crisis stronger than it entered it. Finally, positions in adidas (sports apparel) and Estée Lauder (cosmetics) have been added to the portfolio. The manager believes that both these businesses possess brands which will endure this challenging period to grow successfully, particularly in Asia, over the coming years. 

The manager guards against complacency by continuing to assess the prospects of the portfolio holdings. Action has been taken where prospects fail to meet their hurdle rate (a doubling in the share price over 5 years). This has been the case with a handful of holdings which failed to take advantage of their growth opportunity. This includes Signify, which has struggled in its transition towards LED lighting, and Distribution Now, in not proactively consolidating the distribution market for parts and consumables to industrial sectors in the US. Elsewhere, capital allocation has proven a headache at Kirby Corporation, a US barge business. Despite a successful inland Marine Services operation which transports oil and petrochemicals throughout canals and waterways of south east America, management has consistently allocated capital to its failing engine services business. Valuation remains an important discipline and there have been some instances where this has driven sales from the portfolio. Chief in this regard is Visa, the digital payments business and Chipotle, the Tex-Mex fast food chain, which has excelled in turning around its fortunes in recent years but where the manager feels that future growth is fully reflected in the share price.

Gearing

The level of invested gearing at the period end stood at 3.2%, compared to 6.5% six months earlier, having fallen on account of continued strong performance and a reduction in short-term borrowing. It is expected that gearing will be maintained in the range of minus 15% to plus 15%, with the intention of plus 10% as a long-term neutral position. The Company undertook a private placement capital raise in August, successfully raising £100m in two tranches with an average duration of 30 years and coupon of 1.8%. We believe this to be an attractive cost of borrowing and are confident that future long-term returns are likely to be significantly in excess of this level.

Dividend

No interim dividend is being paid. A single final dividend will typically be paid after the AGM, reflecting the Company's focus on capital growth.

Current Positioning and Outlook

Monks retains a tried and tested investment approach which centres on bottom-up stock picking and an ability to invest in growth companies anywhere in the world. Indeed, the manager undertakes regular thematic reviews of the Monks portfolio, the most recent of which highlights a proliferating and reassuringly diverse range of underlying exposures (see below). This established approach has supported a calm and measured response to the developments of recent months and has allowed Monks to make modest changes to position itself for future growth. Inherent in this is a desire to invest in companies run by management teams who are sensible stewards of capital and are capable of navigating and adapting to what the future brings. This is what underpins our confidence about Monks' prospects for the future and optimism about the opportunities that lie ahead.

 

The principal risks and uncertainties facing the Company are set out in note 14.

 

On behalf of the Board

K S Sternberg

Chairman

30 November 2020

 

Past performance is not a guide to future performance. For a definition of terms used see Glossary of Terms and Alternative Performance Measures at the end of this announcement. Total return information is sourced from Baillie Gifford /Refinitiv and relevant underlying index providers. See disclaimer at the end of this announcement.

 

The Managers' Core Investment Beliefs

 

We believe the following features of Monks provide a sustainable basis for adding value for shareholders.

 

Active Management

¾ We invest in attractive companies using a 'bottom-up' investment process. Macroeconomic forecasts are of relatively little interest to us.

¾ High active share* provides the potential for adding value.

¾ We ignore the structure of the index - for example the location of a company's HQ and therefore its domicile are less relevant to us than where it generates sales and profits.

¾ Large swathes of the market are unattractive and of no interest to us.

¾ As index agnostic global investors we can go anywhere and only invest in the best ideas.

¾ As the portfolio is very different from the index, we expect portfolio returns to vary - sometimes substantially and often for prolonged periods.

 

Committed Growth Investors

¾ In the long run, share prices follow fundamentals; growth drives returns.

¾ We aim to produce a portfolio of stocks with above average growth - this in turn underpins the ability of Monks to add value.

¾ We have a differentiated approach to growth, focusing on the type of growth that we expect a company to deliver. All holdings fall into one of four growth categories - as set out in the Investment Portfolio by Growth Category table below.

¾ The use of these four growth categories ensures a diversity of growth drivers within a disciplined framework.

 

Long-Term Perspective

¾ Long-term holdings mean that company fundamentals are given time to drive returns.

¾ We prefer companies that are managed with a long-term mindset, rather than those that prioritise the management of market expectations.

¾ We believe our approach helps us focus on what is important during the inevitable periods of underperformance.

¾ Short-term portfolio results are random.

¾ As longer-term shareholders we are able to have greater influence on environmental, social and governance matters.

 

Dedicated Team with Clear Decision-making Process

¾ Senior and experienced team drawing on the full resources of Baillie Gifford.

¾ Alignment of interests - the investment team responsible for Monks all own shares in the Company.

 

Portfolio Construction

¾ Investments are held in three broad holding sizes - as set out in the Investment Portfolio by Growth Category table below.

¾ This allows us to back our judgement in those stocks for which we have greater conviction, and to embrace the asymmetry of returns through 'incubator' positions in higher risk/return stocks.

¾ 'Asymmetry of returns': some of our smaller positions will struggle and their share prices will fall; those that are successful may rise many fold. The latter should outweigh the former.

 

Low Cost

¾ Investors should not be penalised by high management fees.

¾ Low turnover and trading costs benefit shareholders.

 

For a definition of terms used see Glossary of Terms and Alternative Performance Measures at the end of this announcement.

Investment Portfolio by Growth Category as at 31 October 2020*   

 

Holding Size

Growth Stalwarts   

%

Rapid Growth 

%

Cyclical Growth 

%

Latent Growth 

%

 

(c.10%p.a. earnings growth)

 

 

(c.15% to 25% p.a. earnings growth)

 

(c.10% to 15% p.a. earnings growth through a cycle)

 

(earnings growth to accelerate over time)

 

 

 

Company Characteristics

¾ Durable franchise

¾ Deliver robust profitability in most macroeconomic environments

¾ Competitive advantage includes dominant local scale, customer loyalty and strong brands

 

Company Characteristics

¾ Early stage businesses with vast growth opportunity

¾ Innovators attacking existing profit pools or creating new markets

 

Company Characteristics

¾ Subject to macroeconomic and capital cycles with significant structural growth prospects

¾ Strong management teams highly skilled at capital allocation

 

Company Characteristics

¾ Company specific catalyst will drive above average earnings in future

¾ Unspectacular recent operational performance and therefore out of favour

 

Highest conviction holdings

c.2.0% each

 

Total: 34.1%

Moody's

2.0

Naspers

3.1

 

 

SoftBank Group

2.0

Microsoft

2.0

Amazon.com

2.8

 

 

Ryanair

1.7

MasterCard

1.7

Alibaba

2.7

 

 

 

 

Thermo Fisher Scientific

1.7

Alphabet

2.6

 

 

 

 

Anthem

1.7

Meituan Dianping

2.0

 

 

 

 

AIA

1.6

The Schiehallion Fund

1.8

 

 

 

 

Olympus

1.5

Shopify

1.7

 

 

 

 

 

 

SEA Limited

1.5

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Average sized holdings

c.1.0% each

 

Total: 41.8%

Facebook

1.4

Tesla

1.3

Martin Marietta Materials

1.3

Rio Tinto

0.9

Prudential

1.4

Ping An Insurance

1.2

TSMC

1.2

BHP Billiton

0.8

Pernod Ricard

1.4

Zillow

1.2

CRH

1.1

MS&AD Insurance

0.8

Arthur J. Gallagher

1.2

Trupanion

1.2

Booking Holdings

0.8

 

 

Resmed

1.1

Prosus

1.1

Teradyne

0.8

 

 

Estee Lauder

1.0

Reliance Industries

1.1

SMC

0.8

 

 

Sysmex

1.0

Farfetch

1.0

Atlas Copco

0.7

 

 

adidas

0.9

Teladoc

1.0

SiteOne Landscape Supply

0.7

 

 

Broadridge Financial Solutions

0.9

The Trade Desk

1.0

Advantest

0.7

 

 

Service Corporation International

0.8

HDFC

0.9

 

 

 

 

SAP

0.7

M3

0.9

 

 

 

 

 

 

MercadoLibre

0.9

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Alnylam Pharmaceuticals

0.8

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Seagen

0.8

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Cloudflare

0.8

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

CyberAgent

0.7

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Lemonade

0.7

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Spotify

0.7

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Netflix

0.7

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ant International

0.7

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Denali Therapeutics

0.7

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Holding Size

Growth Stalwarts   

%

%

Rapid Growth   

%

%

Cyclical Growth 

%

%

Latent Growth 

%

%

 

(c.10%p.a. earnings growth)

 

 

(c.15% to 25% p.a. earnings growth)

 

(c.10% to 15% p.a. earnings growth through a cycle)

 

(earnings growth to accelerate over time)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Incubator Holdings

c.0.5% each

 

Total: 24.1%

S&P Global

0.4

Illumina

0.6

Markel

0.6

Stericycle

0.5

Hoshizaki Corp

0.3

Schibsted

0.6

Albermarle

0.6

CBRE Group

0.4

 

 

Renishaw

0.6

Epiroc

0.5

Sberbank of Russia

0.4

 

 

Chegg

0.6

Deutsche Boerse

0.5

Brilliance China Automotive

0.4

 

 

Datadog

0.6

Richemont

0.5

Howard Hughes

0.3

 

 

Wayfair

0.6

Charles Schwab

0.5

Fairfax Financial

0.3

 

 

Genmab

0.5

Jefferies Financial Group

0.4

Toyota Tsusho

0.3

 

 

Axon Enterprise

0.5

EOG Resources

0.4

Lindblad Expeditions Holdings

0.2

 

 

Adyen

0.5

Ritchie Bros Auctioneers

0.4

Silk Invest Africa Food Fund

0.1

 

 

Novocure

0.5

Wabtec

0.3

MRC Global

0.1

 

 

Twilio

0.5

Hays

0.3

Ferro Alloy Resources

0.0

 

 

GRAIL

0.5

Lyft

0.3

 

 

 

 

Ping An Healthcare &

  Technology

 

0.5

Orica

0.2

 

 

PageGroup

0.2

 

 

 

 

Mail.ru Group

0.5

Sands China

0.2

 

 

 

 

Autohome

0.5

 

 

 

 

 

 

Tencent Music Entertainment

0.5

 

 

 

 

 

 

Just Eat Takeaway

0.5

 

 

 

 

 

 

B3 Group

0.5

 

 

 

 

 

 

Abiomed

0.5

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ubisoft Entertainment

0.4

 

 

 

 

 

 

Appian

0.4

 

 

 

 

 

 

ICICI Prudential Life Insurance

0.4

 

 

 

 

 

 

iRobot

0.4

 

 

 

 

 

 

ICICI Bank

0.4

 

 

 

 

 

 

Epic Games

0.4

 

 

 

 

 

 

LendingTree

0.4

 

 

 

 

 

 

Sensyne Health

0.4

 

 

 

 

 

 

Interactive Brokers Group

0.3

 

 

 

 

 

 

KE Holdings

0.3

 

 

 

 

 

 

Adevinta Asa

0.2

 

 

 

 

 

 

Snowflake

0.2

 

 

 

 

 

 

Istyle

0.2

 

 

 

 

 

Total

24.7

Total

52.1

Total

14.0

Total

9.2

Excludes net liquid assets

Portfolio Positioning as at 31 October 2020*    

 

Thematic Exposure

 

 

At 31 October 2020

Category

%

%

New Economy

 

48.6

Platform Crush

Regulation/Anti-trust

Innovation

 

14.8

 

13.0

 

16.7

 

Innovation/Transformational Health

8.4

 

 

Enterprise Cloud

3.9

 

 

Innovation/Chips

2.6

 

 

Other Innovation

1.8

 

Transformational / Unproven model

 

4.1

Developing Economies

 

15.7

Emerging Markets Middle Classes

 

9.1

 

Emerging Markets Consumer Catch-up

Emerging Markets Financial Development

5.0

 

 

4.1

 

Resources

Interest Rate Normalisation

Industrial Demand

 

3.8

 

2.5

 

0.3

Economically Agnostic

 

16.8

High Valued Compounders

Idiosyncratic

Insurance Cycle

 

11.6

 

3.0

 

2.2

Developed Market Growth

 

15.1

Consumer Demand

 

4.5

Industrial Demand

 

4.2

Capital Markets/Asset Inflation

 

2.4

Resources

 

1.6

Lending/Underwriting Risk

 

1.6

Japanese Reflation

 

0.8

Net Liquid Assets

 

3.8

Total Assets

 

100.0

 

* Expressed as a percentage of total assets.

For a definition of terms used see Glossary of Terms and Alternative Performance Measures at the end of this announcement.

 

 

 

Portfolio Positioning as at 31 October 2020* (Ctd)   

 

Geographical

 

At

31 October 2020

%

At

30 April 2020

%

North America

47.2

48.6

Emerging Markets

17.5

17.6

Continental Europe

12.2

12.2

Japan

8.7

9.9

United Kingdom

7.2

7.3

Developed Asia

3.4

3.5

Total Investments

96.2

99.1

Net Liquid Assets

3.8

0.9

Total Assets

100.0

100.0

 

 

 

 

 

 

Sectoral

 

 

At

31 October 2020

%

At

30 April 2020

%

Financials

22.8

25.2

Technology

20.5

18.1

Consumer Services

19.5

19.2

Healthcare

13.7

14.1

Industrials

7.7

11.9

Consumer Goods

6.1

5.4

Basic Materials

2.5

1.7

Telecommunications

1.9

1.6

Oil and Gas

1.5

1.9

Total Investments

96.2

99.1

Net Liquid Assets

3.8

0.9

Total Assets

100.0

100.0

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

* Expressed as a percentage of total assets.

For a definition of terms used see Glossary of Terms and Alternative Performance Measures at the end of this announcement.

 

 

Thirty largest holdings as at 31 October 2020   

 

Name

 

 

 

 

Growth

Category

Business Description

Fair Value £'000

% of
Total Assets*

Naspers

Rapid

Media and ecommerce company

79,984

3.0

Amazon.com

Rapid

Online retailer

71,214

2.7

Alibaba

Rapid

Online commerce company

68,900

2.6

Alphabet

Rapid

Online search engine

67,485

2.5

Moody's

Stalwart

Credit rating agency

51,748

1.9

Meituan Dianping

Rapid

Online commerce platform

50,899

1.9

SoftBank Group

Latent

Technology focused investment group

50,562

1.9

Microsoft

Stalwart

Software and cloud computing enterprise

50,357

1.9

The Schiehallion Fund

Rapid

Global unlisted growth equity investment trust

47,614

1.8

Ryanair

Latent

Low cost European airline

44,400

1.7

MasterCard

Stalwart

Electronic payments network and related services

44,370

1.7

Thermo Fisher Scientific

Stalwart

Scientific instruments, consumables and chemicals

44,088

1.6

Shopify

Rapid

Online commerce platform

43,842

1.6

Anthem

Stalwart

Healthcare insurer

43,289

1.6

AIA

Stalwart

Asian life insurer

41,777

1.6

SEA Limited

Rapid

Online and digital gaming

39,505

1.5

Olympus

Stalwart

Optoelectronic products

39,337

1.5

Facebook

Stalwart

Social networking website

35,496

1.3

Prudential

Stalwart

International life insurance

35,424

1.3

Pernod Ricard

Stalwart

Global spirits manufacturer

35,326

1.3

Martin Marietta Materials

Cyclical

Cement and aggregates manufacturer

34,761

1.3

Tesla

Rapid

Electric cars and renewable energy solutions

34,136

1.3

Ping An Insurance

Rapid

Chinese life insurer

32,214

1.2

Arthur J. Gallagher

Stalwart

Insurance broker

32,138

1.2

Zillow

Rapid

US online real estate services

32,136

1.2

TSMC

Cyclical

Semiconductor manufacturer

31,783

1.2

Trupanion

Rapid

Pet health insurance provider

30,431

1.1

CRH

Cyclical

Diversified building materials company

29,073

1.1

Prosus

Rapid

Media and ecommerce company

28,073

1.0

Resmed

Stalwart

Develops and manufactures medical equipment

28,060

1.0

 

 

 

1,298,422

48.5

 

 

* For a definition of terms used see Glossary of Terms and Alternative Performance Measures at the end of this announcement.

 

 

 

 

Income Statement (unaudited)   

 

 

 

For the six months ended

31 October 2020

 

For the six months ended

31 October 2019

(Audited)

For the year ended

30 April 2020

 

Revenue

£'000

Capital

£'000

Total

£'000

Revenue

£'000

Capital

£'000

Total

£'000

Revenue

£'000

Capital

£'000

Total

£'000

 

Gains on investments

513,864 

513,864 

22,637 

22,637 

50,247 

50,247 

Currency gains/(losses)

1,186 

1,186

(1,234)

(1,234)

(1,277)

(1,277)

Income from investments and interest receivable

11,509 

11,509 

16,777 

16,777 

26,691 

26,691 

Investment management fee (note 3)

(4,516)

(4,516)

(3,790)

(3,790)

(7,644)

(7,644)

Other administrative expenses

(776)

(776)

(848)

(848)

(1,677)

(1,677)

Net return before finance costs and taxation

6,217

515,050 

521,267 

12,139 

21,403 

33,542 

17,370 

48,970 

66,340 

Finance costs of borrowings

(2,621)

(2,621)

(3,169)

(3,169)

(6,046)

(6,046)

Net return on ordinary activities before taxation

3,596 

515,050 

518,646 

8,970 

21,403 

30,373 

11,324 

48,970 

60,294 

Tax on ordinary activities (note 4)

2,599 

(170)

2,429 

(1,173)

(461)

(1,634)

(2,005)

(2,005)

Net return on ordinary activities after taxation

6,195 

514,880 

521,075

7,797 

20,942 

28,739 

9,319 

48,970 

58,289 

Net return per ordinary share (note 5)

2.76p

229.51p

232.27p

3.56p

9.57p

13.13p

4.24p

22.26p

26.50p

 

 

The total column of this statement represents the profit and loss account of the Company. The supplementary revenue and capital columns are prepared under guidance issued by the Association of Investment Companies.

All revenue and capital items in this statement derive from continuing operations.

A Statement of Comprehensive Income is not required as the Company does not have any other comprehensive income and the net return on ordinary activities after taxation is both the profit and total comprehensive income for the period.

Balance Sheet (unaudited)   

 

 

 

At 31 October 2020 

£'000 

(Audited)

At 30 April 2020

£'000

Fixed assets

 

 

Investments held at fair value through profit or loss (note 7)

2,581,617 

2,088,827 

Current assets

 

 

Debtors

4,048 

7,566 

Cash and cash equivalents

101,366 

19,537 

 

105,414 

27,103 

Creditors

 

 

Amounts falling due within one year:

 

 

Bank loans (note 8)

(37,587)

(103,854)

Other creditors

(3,610)

(8,544)

 

(41,197)

(112,398)

Net current assets/(liabilities)

64,217 

(85,295)

Total assets less current liabilities

2,645,834 

2,003,532 

Creditors

 

 

Amounts falling due after more than one year:

 

 

Loan notes (note 8)

(99,845)

Debenture stock (note 8)

(39,924)

(39,908)

Provision for deferred tax liability (note 9)

(170)

 

(139,939)

(39,908)

 

  2,505,895 

1,963,624 

 

 

 

Capital and reserves

 

 

Share capital

11,297 

11,178 

Share premium account

121,008 

94,328 

Capital redemption reserve

8,700 

8,700 

Capital reserve

2,303,436 

1,788,556 

Revenue reserve

61,454

60,862 

Shareholders' funds (note 10)

2,505,895

1,963,624 

Shareholders' funds per ordinary share

(borrowings at book value) (note 10)

1,109.2p

878.4p

Net asset value per ordinary share*

(borrowings at par)

1,109.1p

878.3p

Net asset value per ordinary share*

(borrowings at fair value)

1,107.3p

875.6p

Ordinary shares in issue (note 10)

225,928,859 

223,553,859 

 

For a definition of terms used see Glossary of Terms and Alternative Performance Measures at the end of this announcement

Statement of Changes in Equity (unaudited)   

 

For the six months ended 31 October 2020

 

Share
capital

£'000

Share premium account

£'000

Capital redemption reserve

£'000

Capital reserve*

£'000

Revenue reserve

£'000

Shareholders'
funds

£'000

Shareholders' funds at 1 May 2020

11,178

94,328

8,700

1,788,556

60,862 

1,963,624 

Net return on ordinary activities after taxation

-

-

-

514,880

6,195 

521,075 

Ordinary shares issued (note 11)

119

26,680

-

-

26,799 

Dividends paid during the period (note 6)

-

-

-

-

(5,603)

(5,603)

Shareholders' funds at 31 October 2020

11,297

121,008

8,700

2,303,436

61,454 

2,505,895 

 

 

 

For the six months ended 31 October 2019

 

Share
capital

£'000

Share premium account

£'000

Capital redemption reserve

£'000

Capital reserve*

£'000

Revenue reserve

£'000

Shareholders'
funds

£'000

Shareholders' funds at 1 May 2019

10,930

48,007

8,700

1,739,586

55,592 

1,862,815 

Net return on ordinary activities after taxation

-

-

-

20,942

7,797 

28,739 

Ordinary shares issued (note 11)

24

4,330

-

-

4,354 

Dividends paid during the period (note 6)

-

-

-

-

(4,049)

(4,049)

Shareholders' funds at 31 October 2019

10,954

52,337

8,700

1,760,528

59,340 

1,891,859 

 

 

 

The Capital Reserve balance at 31 October 2020 includes holding gains on investments of £1,045,847,000 (31 October 2019 - gains of £630,321,000).

Condensed cash flow statement (unaudited)   

 

 

Six months to

 31 October 2020

£'000

Six months to

 31 October 2019

£'000

Cash flows from operating activities

 

 

Net return on ordinary activities before taxation

518,646 

30,373 

Net gains on investments

(513,864)

(22,637)

Currency (gains)/losses

(1,186)

1,234 

Finance costs of borrowings

2,621 

3,169 

Overseas tax incurred

(963)

(1,178)

Corporation tax refunded

3,597 

Changes in debtors and creditors

1,482 

1,066 

Cash from operations*

10,333 

12,027 

Interest paid

(1,997)

(3,240)

Net cash inflow from operating activities

8,336 

8,787 

Net cash inflow from investing activities

16,107 

535 

Cash flow from financing activities

 

 

Equity dividends paid (note 6)

(5,603)

(4,049)

Ordinary shares issued

28,227 

5,242 

Loan notes issued

99,844 

Net borrowings repaid

(63,178)

(1,498)

Net cash inflow/(outflow) from financing activities

59,290 

(305)

Increase in cash and cash equivalents

83,733 

9,017 

Exchange movements

(1,904)

(422)

Cash and cash equivalents at start of period

19,537 

25,919 

Cash and cash equivalents at end of period

101,366 

34,514 

 

Cash from operations includes dividends received of £12,133,000 (31 October 2019 - £17,791,000) and interest received of £361,000 (31 October 2019 - £178,000).

 

Notes to the condensed financial statements (unaudited)   

 

1. 

The condensed Financial Statements for the six months to 31 October 2020 comprise the Statements set out in the previous pages together with the related notes below. They have been prepared in accordance with FRS 104 'Interim Financial Reporting' and the AIC's Statement of Recommended Practice issued in October 2019. They have not been audited or reviewed by the Auditor pursuant to the Auditing Practices Board Guidance on 'Review of Interim Financial Information'. The Financial Statements for the six months to 31 October 2020 have been prepared on the basis of the same accounting policies set out in the Company's Annual Report and Financial Statements at 30 April 2020. 

Going Concern

The Directors have considered the Company's principal risks and uncertainties, as set out in note 14 below, together with the Company's current position, investment objective and policy, the level of demand for the Company's shares, the nature of its assets, its liabilities and projected income and expenditure. The Board has, in particular, considered the impact of heightened market volatility since the coronavirus (Covid-19) outbreak. It is the Directors' opinion that the Company has adequate resources to continue in operational existence for the foreseeable future. The vast majority of the Company's investments are readily realisable and can be sold to meet its liabilities as they fall due. All borrowings require the prior approval of the Board. Gearing levels and compliance with covenants are reviewed by the Board on a regular basis. The Company has continued to comply with the investment trust status requirements of section 1158 of the Corporation Tax Act 2010 and the Investment Trust (Approved Company) Regulations 2011. Accordingly, the Directors consider it appropriate to adopt the going concern basis of accounting in preparing these Financial Statements and confirm that they are not aware of any material uncertainties which may affect the Company's ability to continue to do so over a period of at least twelve months from the date of approval of these Financial Statements.

2. 

The financial information contained within this Interim Financial Report does not constitute statutory accounts as defined in sections 434 to 436 of the Companies Act 2006. The financial information for the year ended 30 April 2020 has been extracted from the statutory accounts which have been filed with the Registrar of Companies. The Auditor's Report on those accounts was not qualified, did not include a reference to any matters to which the Auditor drew attention by way of emphasis without qualifying its report, and did not contain statements under sections 498 (2) or (3) of the Companies Act 2006.

3. 

Baillie Gifford & Co Limited, a wholly owned subsidiary of Baillie Gifford & Co, has been appointed by the Company as its Alternative Investment Fund Manager (AIFM) and Company Secretary. The investment management function has been delegated to Baillie Gifford & Co. The management agreement can be terminated on six months' notice. The annual management fee is 0.45% on the first £750 million of total assets, 0.33% on the next £1 billion of total assets and 0.30% on the remaining total assets. For fee purposes, total assets is defined as the total value of all assets held less all liabilities (other than any liability in the form of debt intended for investment purposes) and excludes the value of the Company's holding in The Schiehallion Fund, a closed-ended investment company managed by Baillie Gifford & Co. The Company does not currently hold any other collective investment vehicles managed by Baillie Gifford & Co. Where the Company holds investments in open-ended collective investment vehicles managed by Baillie Gifford, such as OEICs, Monks' share of any fees charged within that vehicle will be rebated to the Company. All debt drawn down during the periods under review is intended for investment purposes.

4. 

Tax on ordinary activities

The revenue tax charge for the period to 31 October 2020 includes £3,597,000 UK corporation tax repaid in respect of the Company's financial years to 2008 and 2009, following successful legal action regarding the tax treatment of overseas dividend income. This amount had not previously been provided for, as recovery was not considered sufficiently probable. It has therefore been recognised on receipt. As it exceeds the overseas withholding tax suffered in the period, this has resulted in a positive revenue tax charge. Interest on the corporation tax repayment is included within interest income. The capital tax charge results from the Provision for Deferred Tax Liability in respect of Indian capital gains tax as detailed in note 9.

 

 

 

Notes to the condensed financial statements (unaudited) (Ctd)   

 

 

5. 

Net return per ordinary share

Six months to

 31 October

 2020

£'000

Six months to

31 October

 2019

£'000

Year to

30 April 2020

(audited)

£'000

Revenue return on ordinary activities after taxation

6,195 

7,797

9,319

Capital return on ordinary activities after taxation

514,880

20,942

48,970

Total net return

521,075

28,739

58,289

 

Net return per ordinary share is based on the above totals of revenue and capital and on 224,337,011 (31 October 2019 - 218,821,739; 30 April 2020 - 219,986,605) ordinary shares, being the weighted average number of ordinary shares in issue during the period.

There are no dilutive or potentially dilutive shares in issue.

6. 

Dividends

 

Six months to

 31 October

2020

£'000

 

Six months to

31 October

 2019

£'000

Year to

30 April

2020

(audited)

£'000

Amounts recognised as distributions in the period:

 

 

 

Previous year's final dividend of 2.50p (2019 - 1.85p), paid 4 September2020

5,603

4,049

4,049

Amounts paid and payable in respect of the period:

 

 

 

Final Dividend (2020 - 2.50 p )

-

-

5,603

 

No interim dividend has been declared in respect of the current period. 

7. 

Fair Value Hierarchy

The Company's investments are financial assets held at fair value through profit or loss. The fair value hierarchy used to analyse the basis on which the fair values of such financial instruments are measured is described below. Fair value measurements are categorised on the basis of the lowest level input that is significant to the fair value measurement.

Level 1 - using unadjusted quoted prices for identical instruments in an active market;

Level 2 - using inputs, other than quoted prices included within Level 1, that are directly or indirectly observable (based

  on market data); and

Level 3 - using inputs that are unobservable (for which market data is unavailable).

An analysis of the Company's financial asset investments based on the fair value hierarchy described above is shown below. A new unlisted equity investment of £10,469,000 was acquired during the period and classified as Level 3.

 

 

As at 31 October 2020

Level 1

£'000

Level 2

£'000

Level 3

£'000

Total

£'000

Listed equities

2,489,591

47,614

-

2,537,205

Unlisted equities

-

-

44,412

44,412

Total financial asset investments

2,489,591

47,614

44,412

2,581,617

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

As at 30 April 2020 (audited)

Level 1

£'000

Level 2

£'000

Level 3

£'000

Total

£'000

Listed equities

2,019,786

48,052

-

2,067,838

Unlisted equities

-

-

20,989

20,989

Total financial asset investments

2,019,786

48,052

20,989

2,088,827

                     

 

Notes to the condensed financial statements (unaudited) (Ctd)   

 

 

 

The fair value of listed investments is either bid price or last traded price depending on the convention of the exchange on which the investment is listed. Listed investments are categorised as Level 1 if they are valued using unadjusted quoted prices for identical instruments in an active market and as Level 2 if they do not meet all these criteria but are, nonetheless, valued using market data. Unlisted investments are valued at fair value by the Directors following a detailed review and appropriate challenge of the valuations proposed by the Managers. The Managers' unlisted investment policy applies methodologies consistent with the International Private Equity and Venture Capital Valuation guidelines ('IPEV'). These methodologies can be categorised as follows: (a) market approach (multiples, industry valuation benchmarks and available market prices); (b) income approach (discounted cash flows); and (c) replacement cost approach (net assets). The Company's holdings in unlisted investments are categorised as Level 3 as unobservable data is a significant input to their fair value measurements.

8. 

At 31 October 2020 the total book value of the Company's borrowings amounted to £177,356,000 (30 April 2020 - £143,762,000).  This comprised a £40m 6 3/8% debenture stock repayable in 2023 (30 April 2020 - £40m), loan notes of £60m repayable in 2054 (30 April 2020 - nil), loan notes of £40m repayable in 2045 (30 April 2020 - nil) and a short-term bank loan of US$48.6m (30 April 2020 - short term bank loans of US$124.7m and £5m).

The fair value of borrowings at 31 October 2020 was £181,587,000 (30 April 2020 - £149,854,000).

9. 

Provision for Deferred Tax Liability

The deferred tax liability provision at 31 October 2020 of £170,000 (30 April 2020 - nil) relates to a potential liability for Indian capital gains tax that may arise on the Company's Indian investments should they be sold in the future, based on the net unrealised taxable capital gain at the period end and on enacted Indian tax rates. The amount of any future tax amounts payable may differ from this provision, depending on the value and timing of any future sales of such investments and future Indian tax rates.

10. 

Shareholders' Funds

 

 

 

At 31 October 2020

At 30 April 2020

(audited)

Shareholders' funds

£2,505,895,000

£1,963,624,000

Number of ordinary shares in issue at the period end

225,928,859

223,553,859

Shareholders' funds per ordinary share

1,109.2p

878.4p

 

The shareholders' funds figures above have been calculated after deducting borrowings at book value, in accordance with the provisions of FRS 104. Reconciliations between shareholders' funds and net asset values, calculated after deducting borrowings at par value and fair value, are shown in the Glossary of Terms and Alternative Performance Measurements section below.

11. 

In the six months to 31 October 2020 the Company issued 2,375,000 ordinary shares with a nominal value of £119,000 (31 October 2019 - 480,000 shares with a nominal value of £24,000) at a premium to net asset value, raising net proceeds of £26,799,000 (31 October 2019 - £4,354,000). No shares were bought back during the period and no shares were held in treasury at 31 October 2020. At 31 October 2020, the Company had authority to buy back 33,559,440 shares and to allot, or sell from treasury, 20,942,885 shares.

12. 

Transaction costs on purchases amounted to £489,000 (31 October 2019 - £91,000; 30 April 2020 - £338,000) and transaction costs on sales amounted to £111,000 (31 October 2019 - £73,000; 30 April 2020 - £145,000). Total transaction costs were £600,000 (31 October 2019 - £164,000; 30 April 2020 - £483,000).

 

 

 

 

 

Notes to the condensed financial statements (unaudited) (Ctd)   

 

13. 

Related Party Transactions

There have been no transactions with related parties during the first six months of the current financial year that have materially affected the financial position or the performance of the Company during that period and there have been no changes in the related party transactions described in the last Annual Report and Financial Statements that could have had such an effect on the Company during that period.

14. 

Principal Risks and Uncertainties

The principal risks facing the Company, which have not changed since the date of the Company's Annual Report and Financial Statements for the year ended 30 April 2020, are financial risk, investment strategy risk, regulatory risk, custody and depositary risk, operational risk, discount risk, political risk and leverage risk. An explanation of these risks and how they are managed is set out on pages 19 and 20 of that report, which is available on the Company's website: www.monksinvestmenttrust.co.uk.‡

 

None of the views expressed in this document should be construed as advice to buy or sell a particular investment.

The printed version of the Interim Financial Report will be sent to shareholders and will be available on the Monks' page of the Managers' website   www.monksinvestmenttrust.co.uk   on or around 14 December 2020.

Neither the contents of the Managers' website nor the contents of any website accessible from hyperlinks on the Managers' website (or any other website) is incorporated into, or forms part of, this announcement.

Glossary of Terms and Alternative Performance Measures (APM)   

 

Total Assets

The total value of all assets held less all liabilities (other than liabilities in the form of borrowings).

 

Shareholders' Funds

Shareholders' Funds is the value of all assets held less all liabilities, with borrowings deducted at book cost.

 

Net Asset Value (APM)

Net Asset Value (NAV) is the value of all assets held less all liabilities, with borrowings deducted at either par value or fair value as described below. Per share amounts are calculated by dividing the relevant figure by the number of ordinary shares in issue.

 

Net Asset Value (Borrowings at Par Value) (APM)

Borrowings are valued at nominal par value. A reconciliation from shareholders' funds (borrowings at book value) to net asset value after deducting borrowings at par value is provided below.

 

 

31 October 2020

£'000

31 October 2020

per share

30 April 2020

£'000

30 April 2020

per share

Shareholders' funds (borrowings at book value)

2,505,895

1,109.2p 

1,963,624 

878.4p 

Add: book value of borrowings

177,356

78.5p 

143,762 

64.3p 

Less: par value of borrowings

177,587

(78.6p)

(143,854)

(64.4p)

Net asset value (borrowings at par value)

2,505,664

1,109.1p 

1,963,532 

878.3p 

 

The per share figures above are based on 225,928,859 (30 April 2020 - 223,553,859) ordinary shares of 5p, being the number of ordinary shares in issue at the period end.

 

Net Asset Value (Borrowings at Fair Value) (APM)

Borrowings are valued at an estimate of market worth. The fair value of the Company's 6 3/8 % debenture stock 2023 is based on the closing market offer price on the London Stock Exchange. The fair value of the Company's loan notes is calculated using the spread on reference gilts with comparable durations. The fair value of the Company's short-term bank borrowings is equivalent to its book value.

A reconciliation from shareholders' funds (borrowings at book value) to net asset value after deducting borrowings at fair value is provided below.

 

 

31 October 2020

£'000

31 October 2020

per share

30 April 2020

£'000

30 April 2020

per share

Shareholders' funds (borrowings at book value)

2,505,895 

  1,109.2p 

1,963,624 

878.4p 

Add: book value of borrowings

177,356 

78.5p 

143,762 

64.3p 

Less: fair value of borrowings

(181,587)

(80.4p)

(149,854)

(67.1p)

Net asset value (borrowings at fair value)

2,501,664 

1,107.3p

1,957,532 

875.6p 

The per share figures above are based on 225,928,859 (30 April 2020 - 223,553,859) ordinary shares of 5p, being the number of ordinary shares in issue at the period end.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Discount/Premium (APM)

As stockmarkets and share prices vary, an investment trust's share price is rarely the same as its NAV. When the share price is lower than the NAV per share it is said to be trading at a discount. The size of the discount is calculated by subtracting the share price from the NAV per share and is usually expressed as a percentage of the NAV per share. If the share price is higher than the NAV per share, this situation is called a premium.

 

Net Liquid Assets

Net liquid assets comprise current assets less current liabilities (excluding borrowings) and provisions for deferred liabilities.

 

Active Share (APM)

Active share, a measure of how actively a portfolio is managed, is the percentage of the listed equity portfolio that differs from its comparative index. It is calculated by deducting from 100 the percentage of the portfolio that overlaps with the comparative index. An active share of 100 indicates no overlap with the index and an active share of zero indicates a portfolio that tracks the index.

 

Total Return (APM)

The total return is the return to shareholders after reinvesting the dividend on the date that the share price goes ex-dividend.

 

Net Asset Value Total Return

 

 

 

31 October 2020

NAV

(par)

31 October 2020

NAV

(fair)

Closing NAV per share

a

 

1,109.1p

1,107.3p

Dividend adjustment factor *

b

 

1.0023

1.0023

Adjusted closing NAV per share

c = a x b

 

1,111.7p

1,109.8p

Opening NAV per share

d

 

878.3p

875.6p

Total return

(c ÷ d) -1

 

26.6%

26.8%

 

The dividend adjustment factor is calculated on the assumption that the dividend of 2.50p paid by the Company during the period was reinvested into shares of the Company at the cum income NAV at the ex-dividend date.

 

Share Price Total Return

 

 

31 October 2020

Share price

Closing share price

a

1,146.0p

Dividend adjustment factor *

b

1.0023

Adjusted closing share price

c = a x b

1,148.6p

Opening share price

d

914.0p

Total return

(c ÷ d) -1

25.7%

 

The dividend adjustment factor is calculated on the assumption that the dividend of 2.50p paid by the Company during the period was reinvested into shares of the Company at the share price at the ex-dividend date.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Gearing (APM)

At its simplest, gearing is borrowing. Just like any other public company, an investment trust can borrow money to invest in additional investments for its portfolio. The effect of the borrowing on the shareholders' assets is called 'gearing'. If the Company's assets grow, the shareholders' assets grow proportionately more because the debt remains the same. But if the value of the Company's assets falls, the situation is reversed. Gearing can therefore enhance performance in rising markets but can adversely impact performance in falling markets. The level of gearing can be adjusted through the use of derivatives which affect the sensitivity of the value of the portfolio to changes in the level of markets.

Potential gearing is the Company's borrowings expressed as a percentage of shareholders' funds.

Invested gearing is the Company's borrowings at par less cash and brokers' balances expressed as a percentage of shareholders' funds.

Automatic Exchange of Information   

 

In order to fulfil its obligations under UK tax legislation relating to the automatic exchange of information, the Company is required to collect and report certain information about certain shareholders.

The legislation requires investment trust companies to provide personal information to HMRC on certain investors who purchase shares in investment trusts. Accordingly, the Company will have to provide information annually to the local tax authority on the tax residencies of a number of non-UK based certificated shareholders and corporate entities.

Shareholders, excluding those whose shares are held in CREST, who come on to the share register will be sent a certification form for the purposes of collecting this information.

For further information, please see HMRC's Quick Guide: Automatic Exchange of Information - information for account holders https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/exchange-of-information-account-holders.

 

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No Provider shall in any way be liable to any recipient of the data for any inaccuracies, errors or omissions in the index data included in this document, regardless of cause, or for any damages (whether direct or indirect) resulting therefrom.

No Provider has any obligation to update, modify or amend the data or to otherwise notify a recipient thereof in the event that any matter stated herein changes or subsequently becomes inaccurate.

Without limiting the foregoing, no Provider shall have any liability whatsoever to you, whether in contract (including under an indemnity), in tort (including negligence), under a warranty, under statute or otherwise, in respect of any loss or damage suffered by you as a result of or in connection with any opinions, recommendations, forecasts, judgements, or any other conclusions, or any course of action determined, by you or any third party, whether or not based on the content, information or materials contained herein.

 

FTSE Index data

 

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