Final Results

Personal Assets Trust PLC 30 May 2007 To: RNS From: Personal Assets Trust plc Date: 30 May 2007 Preliminary Results for the year to 30 April 2007 (Unaudited) The Directors of Personal Assets Trust (PAT) are pleased to announce the Group's unaudited preliminary results for the year to 30 April 2007. The key points are as follows: • PAT is run expressly for private investors. Its investment policy is to protect and increase (in that order) the value of shareholders' funds over the long term and to earn as high a total return as is compatible with a lower level of volatility than the FTSE All-share Index. • Over the year to 30 April 2007 PAT's net asset value per share ('NAV') rose by 3.3%. This compares to a rise of 9.2% in the Company's benchmark, the FTSE All-Share Index. PAT's share price rose by £6.75 during the year and at 30 April 2007 was £266.00. An analysis of performance is provided in the Chairman's Statement and Managing Director's Report below. • Since PAT became independently managed in 1990 the Board has chosen to measure PAT's performance over rolling three-year periods. Over the three years to 30 April 2007 the net asset value per share rose by 25.9% compared to the FTSE All-Share Index's rise of 50.0%, an underperformance of 16.1%. • During the year, PAT continued to maintain a high level of effective liquidity (30 April 2007: 51%, 30 April 2006: 41%). • The Directors intend PAT's annual dividend rate to grow at least in line with inflation. Two interim dividends have been declared and paid during the year, totalling £4.10 per ordinary share. Together these represent an increase of 10.8% over the corresponding payments for the previous year, compared to inflation of 4.5%. • The Board's stated policy is never to cut the dividend rate, so that shareholders can be confident that each half-yearly payment will at least equal the previous one. Therefore, the first interim dividend for the year to 30 April 2008, expected to be paid in October 2007, will be at least £2.10 per share and total dividends for the year to 30 April 2008 will be not less than £4.20 per share. The Chairman, Robert White, said: 'For those with bearish leanings, as shareholders know us to have been for some time, this past year has not been very rewarding. As you will read in the Managing Director's Report, we are not about to change tack. However, we are perhaps beginning to feel like that young Scottish soldier whose mother, spectating at his passing out parade, was heard to say proudly, 'They're a' oot o' step but oor Jock!' Bull markets are said to climb a wall of worry; but, if this is a genuine bull market rather than the sustained rally in a bear market that Ian and Robin have long alleged it to be (!), worry seems the last thing on most minds. The price for risk seems to have been ignored for some time now and the returns from securities of very different quality diverge hardly at all. Consider Argentina, which is able to celebrate the 25th anniversary of its foiled Falkland Islands land-grab with the proceeds of another outrageous theft. In 2001, Argentina was responsible for what no less a pundit than Mr Ed Balls described in a speech last year as the biggest default in history: $100 billion, which in 2005 it magnanimously repaid at 34 cents on the dollar - $67 billion of ill-gotten loot for the Argentines. Then the President, to quote the Financial Times, 'bid goodbye to the (IMF) with a derisive 'ciao''. One would imagine that Argentina's name would be mud in the bond markets as a result. Not so. Today this defaulting nation's 2033 (sic) Bond is selling on a 7.7% yield compared to 4.7% on a US Bond of comparable maturity. You must either be very young or a hedge fund manager to see value in a 3% risk premium. As Ian makes clear, we do believe that we are now experiencing 'bubble' conditions in asset pricing. However, the strength of capitalism is its ability to cleanse itself of excess. Now that interest rates (if not Argentine bond yields!) are getting closer to the correct price it may be not too long before the cleansing process starts. Interest rates below an appropriate level are what have produced the asset bubble and the dramatic increase in 'broad money' which, in turn, is leading to inflation. This will be brought back under control only with quite painful remedies. We owe today's glut of cheap money to Alan Greenspan, who consistently refused to let the system clear itself. Politicians around the world - not least our own Gordon Brown, whose definition of ' prudence' is not to be found in any dictionary we have ever encountered - welcomed it with open arms. We, however, find it frightening. I wrote last year that we had succeeded in avoiding the traditional danger for an investment trust experiencing a spell of underperformance - the opening up of a discount to NAV. As you know, our stated policy is to ensure that the shares of Personal Assets always trade at close to NAV. This they continued to do during the year under review, as they have done ever since the spring of 1995. In recent years, Personal Assets has been a substantial net issuer of new shares. Sceptics kept warning us, however, that our 'no discount' policy might encounter difficulties in the face of selling pressure and it has therefore been satisfying to see that our 'no discount' policy has been as easy to sustain during a year in which we were called upon to buy in more shares than we issued. This will remain true whenever, and to whatever extent, we are called upon to buy in shares in future. Although our share price closed the year at its highest level ever, our cautious investment policy has meant that shareholders are only a little better off in capital terms than a year ago. We have, however, been able to increase the dividend by a handsome margin, significantly greater than the rate of inflation. As a result of listening to shareholders, we have been paying more attention to the income return available from a Personal Assets holding. This is seen in our Cash Income Option (see page 12) as well as a more rapidly rising dividend. Over the last three years the dividend has risen by 32%, a compound annual rate of nearly 10%, compared to a compound rate of 3.4% in the RPI. The dividend is comfortably covered by earnings and is underpinned by our substantial revenue reserve.' The Managing Director, Ian Rushbrook, said: 'Over the year to 30 April 2007 the FTSE All-Share Index ('FTSE'), our benchmark, rose by 9.2% (having gained 28.3% in the previous year) while the net asset value ('NAV') of Personal Assets Trust ('PAT') increased by only 3.3%, an underperformance of some 5.4%. Although this year's rise in the FTSE was much smaller than last year's, it surprised me far more. This is because our equity valuation model (see later) moved during the year from a 16% overvaluation at the beginning to an overvaluation of more than 40% at the end. The explanation for our underperformance is simple and mirrors that of last year. We were liquid while the market rose; and our two favoured sectors, major UK Banks and Oils, failed to deliver. While the RBS Group, HBOS and Barclays on average performed in line with the FTSE, BP and Royal Dutch Shell underperformed by an astonishing 23.4% and 17.1% respectively. In 1990 we chose the FTSE as our benchmark, against which we measure our performance on a rolling three-year basis. Three years seemed at the time to offer a reasonable period over which shareholders could monitor PAT's performance. However, last year I suggested that it failed to cover adequately the extraordinary economic circumstances from 2000 onwards. To update my last year's analysis, our NAV has risen by 32.5% from 30 April 2000 against our benchmark's 11.8%, an outperformance of 18.5% over seven years. However, over the last three years the rise of 25.9% against our benchmark's 50.0%, representing an underperformance of 16.0%, has come as a striking and unwelcome contrast. The disparity between the seven and three year relative performances reflects nothing other than the outcome of the application of our unchanged investment management strategy. Last year I quoted Maynard Keynes' aphorism, 'There is nothing so disastrous as the pursuit of a rational investment policy in an irrational world.' Whilst noting Keynes' rational cynicism, I suggested that for PAT, given our objective of preservation and growth (in that order) of shareholders' wealth, 'There was nothing so sensible as the pursuit of a rational investment policy in an irrational world.' And, provided we were prepared to accept ongoing relative underperformance, 'We could remain liquid longer than markets could remain irrational.' This strategy remains in place. So, are financial assets irrationally priced? And if so, what might be the catalyst for a reassessment of values, given that pricing is driven by ever expanding levels of credit and debt -- and, hence, liquidity? Three factors are causing today's escalating liquidity and, hence, today's irrational asset prices: 1. Continuing securitisation, packaging and distribution of ever less creditworthy investments to ever more gullible investors. It is especially worrying that these include some for whom 'gullible' would normally seem the most incongruous of adjectives. Recently, UBS, the Swiss bank, following losses on US sub-prime mortgage investments, terminated its hedge fund business run by its fixed income proprietary traders, incurring a loss of around $500 million; 2. Ongoing additions to the enormous pools of high risk equity capital in hedge funds and private equity funds, the managers of which are prepared to use ever-higher gearing in pursuit of ever-diminishing returns. The dramatic increase in the 'Yen carry trade' of borrowing huge sums in Yen and investing the funds elsewhere in higher-yielding currencies or financial assets appears to have added many hundreds of billions of US Dollars to world liquidity; and 3. An apparent, ever-widening, belief that momentum investing (as demonstrated in its extremest form within the lemming community) is the optimum strategy for achieving relative performance. Robin and I, however, have some difficulty with an underlying logic that requires investors to believe that the higher prices rise, the cheaper must be the assets. Nevertheless, what is clear is that if momentum investing is the dominant strategy, then financial assets must be, or as we would argue, have already been, driven to levels of 'bubble' pricing. The second question - 'What might be the catalyst for a substantial fall in financial markets?' - is impossible to answer. If the world is fortunate, the catalyst may turn out to be, as 'chaos theory' suggests, a butterfly fluttering its wings in Peking. On the other hand, it could be as extreme as Israel's being driven to eliminate Iran's nuclear weapon capability. We will know only after the event. However, the more that liquidity expands, the higher the risks increase for investors. Inflation, too, worries us more and more. Global inflationary pressures keep rising, leaving economies vulnerable to any unforeseen (and unforeseeable) market crises. In the US, core inflation at 2.4% has been well in excess of the Fed's 'comfort' range of 1% to 2% for some considerable time. In the UK, the RPI has risen from 2% to 4.5% since January 2000 and the CPI from 0.8% to 2.8%. Never mind that inflation is still in single digits and seems low compared to the double-digit levels we all remember - what is important is the direction and pace of change. These increases are serious. To demonstrate why Robin and I are quite so bearish, I have to refer to our equity valuation model. Its genesis was the 1987 Crash, when, after the event, I realised that I was unable to explain why it had happened. Obviously, for the market to fall by 30% in a matter of days it must have been overvalued - but by how much? What valuation metrics could explain a Day One equity market value of 100 and a Day Three value of 70? My challenge was how to incorporate economic and financial statistics into a model to estimate 'fair value' - not a forecast of future market levels but, rather, a reliable indicator of fundamental equity values at any time. By 1992 I believed the model to be 'fit for purpose' and it was first described in that year's Annual Report. Robin discussed what it has been telling us recently in Quarterly No. 44, published at the end of March this year. Over the last 40 years, there have been seven periods where the model has shown the FTSE as being overvalued by more than 30%. The table below presents the outcomes. Maximum overvaluation Jan 1970 Mar 1972 Jan 1976 Jul 1987 Mar 1998 Jul 1999 May 2007 Overvaluation per model 40% 52% 30% 35% 55% 71% 45% Month of subsequent low Jul 1970 Dec 1974 Oct 1976 Oct 1987 Oct 1998 Mar 2003 When? FTSE All-Share fall to (28%) (70%) (32%) (33%) (25%) (45%) Awaited! low In summary, UK equities according to our model are now overvalued by 45%, long-dated gilts by 34% and long index-linked gilts by 70%. Given such an overvaluation of all three classes of financial assets, our largest investment is liquidity, at 51% of shareholders' funds (up from 41% last year). Last year, I described the 'The White Queen's Six Impossible Things' needed for equity markets to avoid disaster. In summary -- foreign investors would continue to fund a US current account deficit of over $800 billion per annum; the dollar wouldn't collapse and inflation wouldn't escalate; the oil price would fall; the US government wouldn't be forced to cut the Federal deficit; the US housing market wouldn't collapse and consumers would continue to borrow to spend; and, lastly, the extraordinarily low real rates of return on financial assets wouldn't revert to mean. Alas! The White Queen, in believing her six impossible things, would have achieved a far better performance for PAT in the year to end April 2007 than I managed. However, these 'six impossible things' remain major threats. Most investors justify the prices of financial assets in terms of a benign global environment of high economic growth, stable inflation and low interest rates. We don't share their Panglossian fervour that 'all is for the best, in the best of all possible worlds'. We believe the world's financial system faces serious systemic threats and that the risks and dangers increase with every upward ratchet in liquidity levels and every consequential increase in financial asset pricing. Pekingese, Pomeranian or Pug, it matters not which we are, but to paraphrase the Arabic proverb, 'The dogs may bark, but the (financial) caravan moves on.'' For further information contact: Ian Rushbrook Managing Director Tel: 0131 718 1000 The Group's Income Statement, Balance Sheet, Statements of Changes in Equity and Cash Flow Statement follow. Group Income Statement For the Year Ended 30 April 2007 Year ended 30 April 2007 (Unaudited) Revenue Capital Total £'000 £'000 £'000 Income Investment income 4,919 - 4,919 Other operating income 983 - 983 5,902 - 5,902 Losses on investments held at fair value - (873) (873) Gains on derivatives held at fair value - 568 568 Foreign exchange differences - 5,849 5,849 Total income 5,902 5,544 11,446 Expenses (2,136) - (2,136) Profit before tax 3,766 5,544 9,310 Tax (18) - (18) Profit for the year 3,748 5,544 9,292 Earnings per share £5.08 £7.52 £12.60 The 'Total' column of this statement represents the Group Income Statement, prepared in accordance with IFRS. Under IFRS the Income Statement is the equivalent of the Statement of Total Return as reported previously. The supplementary revenue and capital return columns are both prepared under guidance published by the Association of Investment Companies. All items in the above statement derive from continuing operations. Supplementary Information (Unaudited) Dividends per share £4.10 Dividends paid out of current year revenue £'000 First interim dividend of £2.00 per share 1,482 Second interim dividend of £2.10 per share 1,537 3,019 Group Income Statement For the Year Ended 30 April 2006 Year ended 30 April 2006 Revenue Capital Total £'000 £'000 £'000 Income Investment income 4,075 - 4,075 Other operating income 593 - 593 4,668 - 4,668 Gains on investments held at fair value - 22,296 22,296 Gains on derivatives held at fair value - 6,255 6,255 Foreign exchange differences - (3,625) (3,625) Total income 4,668 24,926 29,594 Expenses (1,958) - (1,958) Profit before tax 2,710 24,926 27,636 Tax 11 - 11 Profit for the year 2,721 24,926 27,647 Earnings per share £3.78 £34.61 £38.39 Group Balance Sheet As at 30 April 2007 As at 30 April As at 30 April 2007 2006 (Unaudited) (Restated*) £'000 £'000 Non current assets Investments held at fair value 189,645 170,360 Current assets Other receivables 2,662 3,732 Cash and cash equivalents 304 15,391 2,966 19,123 Total Assets 192,611 189,483 Current liabilities Other payables (195) (132) Total liabilities (195) (132) Net assets 192,416 189,351 Capital and reserves Ordinary share capital 9,386 9,360 Share premium account 87,098 86,584 Capital redemption reserve 219 219 Special reserve (distributable) 22,517 22,526 Treasury share reserve (6,047) (2,247) Other Capital reserves 75,580 69,975 Revenue reserve 3,663 2,934 Total equity 192,416 189,351 Net asset value per share £264.70 £256.14 * The financial statements for 2006 have been restated to disclose separately the Treasury share reserve along with a number of related adjustments, none of which affects the net assets of the Group or Company. Group Statement of Changes in Equity For the year ended Share Share Capital Treasury Other Revenue Capital Premium Redemption Special Reserve Capital Reserve 30 April 2007 (Unaudited) Account Reserve Reserve Reserves Total £'000 £'000 £'000 £'000 £'000 £'000 £'000 £'000 Balance as at 30 April 2006 9,240 89,336 483 17,589 - 69,769 2,934 189,351 as previously stated Prior year adjustment 120 (2,752) (264) 4,937 (2,247) 206 - - Balance as at 30 April 2006 9,360 86,584 219 (2,247) 69,975 2,934 189,351 Profit for the year - - - - - 5,544 3,748 9,292 Issue of ordinary shares 26 514 - - 710 61 - 1,311 Buy-back of ordinary shares - - - (9) (4,510) - - (4,519) Dividends paid - - - - - - (3,019) (3,019) Balance as at 30 April 2007 9,386 87,098 219 22,517 (6,047) 75,580 3,663 192,416 For the year ended Share Share Capital Treasury Other Revenue Capital Premium Redemption Special Reserve Capital Reserve 30 April 2006 Account Reserve Reserve Reserves Total £'000 £'000 £'000 £'000 £'000 £'000 £'000 £'000 Balance as at 30 April 2005 8,465 70,813 219 22,526 - 44,843 4,131 150,997 Profit for the year - - - - 24,926 2,721 27,647 Issue of ordinary shares 895 15,771 - - 2,690 206 - 19,562 Buy-back of ordinary shares - - - - (4,937) - - (4,937) Dividends paid - - - - - - (3,918) (3,918) Balance as at 30 April 2006 9,360 86,584 219 22,526 (2,247) 69,975 2,934 189,351 Group Cash Flow Statement For the Year Ended 30 April 2007 Year Ended 30 Year Ended 30 April April 2007 2006 (Unaudited) £'000 £'000 Operating activities Profit before taxation 9,310 27,636 Losses/(gains) on investments 305 (28,551) Foreign exchange differences at fair value through the profit or loss (5,849) 3,625 Operating cash flows before movements in working capital 3,766 2,710 Increase in receivables (239) (132) Increase in payables 63 4 Net cash from operating activities before taxation 3,590 2,582 Taxation (18) (11) Net cash inflow from operating activities 3,572 2,571 Investing activities Purchases of investments (173,524) (187,959) Sales of investments 154,082 196,143 Net cash (outflow)/inflow from investing activities (19,442) 8,184 Financing activities Equity dividends paid (3,019) (3,918) Issue of ordinary shares 1,311 14,002 Buy-back of ordinary shares (4,519) (4,937) Net cash (outflow)/inflow from financing activities (6,227) 5,147 Net (decrease)/increase in cash and cash equivalents (22,097) 15,902 Cash and cash equivalents at the start of the year 15,391 5,875 Effect of foreign exchange rates 7,010 (6,386) Cash and cash equivalents at the end of the year 304 15,391 Notes: 1. Return per ordinary share is based on a weighted average of 737,371 ordinary shares in issue during the year (2006 - 720,152). 2. Net asset value per ordinary share is based on the 726,921 ordinary shares in issue as at 30 April 2007 (2006 - 739,234). 3. During the year the Directors allotted 5,122 ordinary shares (including 3,005 from Treasury), bought back 17,400 ordinary shares for Treasury and bought back 35 ordinary shares for cancellation. 4. At 30 April 2007 the sterling value of the US Treasury Strip and US Equity exposure was protected by a forward currency contract. 5. These are not statutory accounts in terms of Section 240 of the Companies Act 1985. Full audited accounts for the year to 30 April 2006, which were unqualified, have been lodged with the Registrar of Companies. No accounts in respect of any period after 30 April 2006 have been reported on by the Company's auditors or delivered to the Registrar of Companies. 6. These accounts have been prepared on the same basis as the annual accounts for the year ended 30 April 2006 with the exception of the treatment of Treasury shares where the 2006 balances on reserves have been restated to establish the Treasury Share Reserve and make associated adjustments. 7. The Annual Report and Accounts will be posted to Shareholders in early June 2007. Copies will be available from the Company's registered office at 80 George Street, Edinburgh, EH2 3BU. This information is provided by RNS The company news service from the London Stock Exchange
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