LEI: 213800RAR6ZDJLZDND86
IMPAX ENVIRONMENTAL MARKETS
PLC HALF-YEARLY REPORT AND ACCOUNTS FOR THE SIX MONTHS ENDING 30
JUNE 2024
IMPAX ENVIRONMENTAL MARKETS
PLC HALF-YEARLY FINANCIAL REPORT ANNOUNCEMENT FOR THE SIX MONTHS TO
30 JUNE 2024
London 12 August 2024. Impax
Environmental Markets plc (LSE: IEM) (the "Company" or "IEM") the
UK's largest environmental markets investment trust, today
announced its half-yearly results for the six months to 30 June
2024.
·
Net asset value ("NAV") per
ordinary share of 429.3p (31 Dec 2023: 434.9p)
·
Net assets at 30 June 2024 of
£1,113m (31 Dec 2023: £1,221m)
·
Ordinary share price of 388.0p
(31 Dec 2023: 400.0p)
·
Ordinary share price discount
to NAV at 9.6% (31 Dec 2023: 7.9%)
·
259.3m shares in circulation
(reflecting 21.8m bought back)
Glen Suarez, Chairman of Impax Environmental Markets
comments:
"The first half of 2024 for IEM has
been marked by material volatility. Following our recent full year
report, there have been continued challenges and upheavals in the
macroeconomic environment which have created an uncertain backdrop
generating headwinds for the small- and mid-cap companies in which
IEM invests. Consequently, while the Company's investment thesis
remains strong, and valuations have become increasingly attractive,
IEM has seen its portfolio fall very slightly in value.
"The investment trust sector at
large has experienced challenges in the returns experienced by
shareholders. As of 30 June, shares in IEM traded at a discount of
9.6%, a narrower margin than the market average of 14.6% and the
Company's own AIC sector (c.25%). There are also signs that
stronger performance for UK equities is tightening discounts across
investment trusts. However, history shows that, in the long-term,
what matters most for shareholder returns is growth in earnings of
the portfolio's companies and the Manager strongly believes that
there is significant potential for the Company to generate very
attractive returns for shareholders in the future.
"With upcoming worldwide elections,
changing trade policies, continuing conflicts and interest rate cut
uncertainty, and the current trend of investor demand pushing
investment trusts to discounts, the second half of 2024 will
continue to present challenges and opportunities for IEM. I have
great confidence that the hypothesis underpinning the Company's
investment strategy - that sustainability pressures create
opportunities for companies providing environmental solutions -
remains well positioned to deliver financial outperformance over
the long term. I am also confident in the skills and experience of
the Manager in identifying strong companies with attractive
valuations that are well-positioned to generate value from those
opportunities."
-ENDS-
Contact:
Montfort Communications
iem@montfort.london
/07471475485
IEM
at a Glance
IEM
Overview
Impax Environmental Markets plc ("IEM" or the "Company") is
founded on the belief that, with insatiable demand for higher
living standards on a finite planet, companies enabling the cleaner
and more efficient delivery of basic needs - such as power, water
and food - or mitigating environmental risks like pollution and
climate change, will grow earnings faster than the global economy
over the long-term.
IEM provides its shareholders with
exposure to this exciting growth story. The Company invests in a
well-researched and diversified portfolio of fast-growing,
globally-listed companies providing innovative solutions to
environmental challenges or improving resource efficiency. IEM's
investment opportunity set is also likely to expand rapidly as
regulation, technological innovation, and consumer preferences
accelerate demand for sustainable solutions. The Board
believes this approach can deliver superior risk-adjusted returns
over the long-term.
IEM has recently experienced a
period of weaker performance as a result of sharply rising interest
rates and economic uncertainty. However, the underlying earnings of
IEM's portfolio companies remain robust with excellent prospects
for growth. As the shift to a more sustainable economy accelerates,
IEM should benefit from many positive trends, including
requirements for countries to improve energy security, the drive by
thousands of companies to achieve "net zero" targets, and
regulations such as the US Inflation Reduction Act, which support
US domestic manufacturing in emerging industries.
The
Manager
The
Manager of IEM, Impax Asset Management (AIFM) Limited (the
"Manager", or "Impax"), uses a proprietary classification system to
define these higher growth markets. This approach has been in place
since IEM was founded in 2002 and is curated by a dedicated Impax
team.
As of today, the system identifies
six sectors: Energy, Clean and Efficient transport, Water, Circular
economy, Smart environment and Sustainable food. The range of
activities included has naturally grown as technologies advance and
more industries look to address material environmental
challenges.
To qualify for IEM's investable
universe, a company must derive at least 50% of its revenues from
these Environmental Markets. As a result, IEM's investments are
predominantly in small and medium-sized companies, which tend to
focus their business models on fewer activities.
The Manager then follows a rigorous,
performance-focused process based on bottom-up research to invest
in proven and profitable companies. The breadth of the
Environmental Markets opportunity set enables Impax to create
a diversified portfolio spanning traditional sector
boundaries. Once a company is purchased, its share price is
continually monitored within the context of a live 'valuation
range' which incorporates worst- and best-case
assumptions.
The Manager also maintains an active
dialogue with executive management. Doing so is an important part
of the investment process and helps promote greater transparency
around ESG and sustainability issues. Engagement outcomes, company
valuations, as well as portfolio risk metrics and the
macro-outlook, all inform buy and sell decisions.
The
Portfolio
The
IEM portfolio is built with a focus on financial returns, and its
long-term thesis remains compelling.
Reflecting this, the investment
managers are personally invested in the Company. Two of IEM's three
co-portfolio managers - Bruce Jenkyn-Jones and Jon Forster - have
worked together since its launch in 2002, while Fotis
Chatzimichalakis has worked on IEM since 2015. IEM also benefits
from competitive fees and a committed Board, which in 2023
authorised the Manager to increase gearing to reflect the high
conviction and low valuations across the portfolio. Since IEM's
shares began to trade at a discount in 2022, the Board has bought
back shares at a steady rate. All buybacks were accretive to the
Company.
Additionally, by focusing on
Environmental Markets, the portfolio generates outcomes beyond
financial returns. Annually, for each £1m invested, enough clean,
renewable energy is generated to power 70 homes and the equivalent
of 422 households' water consumption while 17 tonnes of domestic
waste are saved. In addition, whilst the Manager does not target
them in the investment process, 84% of revenues generated by
portfolio companies were covered by United Nations Sustainable
Development Goals in 2023.
Investment Objective
The
investment objective of Impax Environmental Markets plc is to
enable investors to benefit from growth in the markets for cleaner
or more efficient delivery of basic services of energy, water and
waste.
Investments are made predominantly in quoted companies which
provide, utilise, implement or advise upon technology-based
systems, products or services in environmental markets,
particularly those of alternative energy and energy efficiency,
water treatment and pollution control and waste technology and
resource management (which includes sustainable food, agriculture
and forestry).
Financial Information
|
As at 30 June 2024
|
As at 31 December 2023
|
Net asset value ("NAV") per ordinary
share with debt at bookcost
|
429.3p
|
434.9p
|
NAV per ordinary share with debt at fair
value1
|
429.4p
|
434.3p
|
Ordinary share price discount to
NAV1,2
|
9.6%
|
7.9%
|
Ordinary share price
|
388.0p
|
400.0p
|
Net assets
|
£1,113m
|
£1,221m
|
PERFORMANCE
SUMMARY
For the six months ended 30 June
2024
|
% CHANGE2,3
|
NAV total return per ordinary
share1,2
|
-0.5%
|
Share price total return per ordinary
share1
|
-2.3%
|
MSCI AC World Index4
|
12.2%
|
FTSE ET100 Index4
|
7.4%
|
Alternative performance measures ("APMs")
The disclosures as indicated in
footnote 1 are considered to represent the Company's APMs.
Definitions of these APMs and other performance measures used by
the Company, together with how these measures have been calculated,
can be found in the Half-yearly Report.
1 These
are alternative performance measures.
2 With
debt at fair value.
3 Total
returns in sterling for the 6 months to 30 June 2024.
4
Source: Bloomberg and FactSet.
Chairman's Statement
Glen Suarez
Chairman
"I
have great confidence that the hypothesis underpinning the
Company's investment strategy - that sustainability pressures
create opportunities for companies providing environmental
solutions - remains well positioned to deliver financial
outperformance over the long-term."
The
first half of 2024 (the "Period") for Impax Environmental Markets
(the "Company", or "IEM") has been marked by material volatility.
Following our full year report, there have been continued
challenges and upheavals in the macroeconomic environment which
have continued the headwinds for the small-and mid‑cap companies in
which IEM invests. Consequently, while the Company's investment
thesis remains strong, and valuations have become increasingly
attractive, the portfolio fell slightly in value.
Short-term underperformance is not
unusual given the nature of IEM's investment philosophy and
approach, particularly in periods of interest rate uncertainty.
This is discussed further in the Manager's Report.
It is also true to say that the
investment trust sector at large has experienced challenges in the
returns experienced by shareholders. Discounts on share prices to
NAVs have widened, although IEM's at 9.6%1 has been
actively managed by the Board, causing it to fare better than the
market average of 14.6% and the Company's AIC sector average of
c.25%. However, history shows that, in the long-term what matters
most for shareholder returns is growth in earnings of the
portfolio's companies - and given the nature of portfolio
companies' profitability and expected revenue growth, the Manager
strongly believes that there is significant potential for the
Company to generate very attractive returns for shareholders in the
future.
It is worth re-stating the
investment hypothesis that underpins the Company. There is a clear
need for solutions to pressing environmental challenges, to promote
resource efficiency and for infrastructure that enables basic needs
to be more efficiently and cleanly met. We believe that investing
globally in pure-play companies that provide these solutions across
a diverse range of end-markets will generate long-term investment
outperformance. The current combination of a strong underlying
investment hypothesis and a de-rating of the portfolio compared
with wider equity markets creates a compelling long-term valuation
case.
Performance
During the Period, the share price
total return of the Company was -2.3% and the NAV per share total
return was
-0.5%. The MSCI All Country World Index ("MSCI ACWI"), the
Company's global equities comparator index, meanwhile generated a
total return of 12.2%, with the FTSE Environmental Technology 100
Index ("FTSE ET100") rising 7.4% over the Period.
Challenging macroeconomic conditions
have impacted the Company's performance over the past two and half
years, regrettably pulling the longer-term returns down. The
Company has nevertheless delivered strong absolute returns over the
longer-term, but it is fair to say that returns have fallen short
of those of the wider market. Over five years to 30 June 2024, the
annualised performance of the share price and NAV are 5.6% and 8.0%
respectively, compared to 10.9% for MSCI ACWI and 19.5% for the
FTSE ET100. Over ten years, the annualised returns are 10.7% for
the share price and 10.6% for the NAV versus 11.8% for MSCI ACWI
and 14.4% for the FTSE ET100.
1 With
debt at fair value.
Although the MSCI ACWI shows the
returns available across global equity markets generally, the FTSE
ET100's purpose and coverage has changed over the years since the
Manager first designed it. This was done via the Manager's
environmental market taxonomy and approach to investing, in
conjunction with FTSE. Since then, ownership and design has passed
entirely to FTSE and the index has moved in a direction different
to that of the strategy that IEM focusses on, including very large
companies and technology companies which may not necessarily be
providing environmental solutions to the proportion of their
revenues we demand.
Notwithstanding the above and the
disappointing comparison we see, we retain our belief in the long
term potential of investing in environmental solutions and the
Manager's ability to identify companies that are well-positioned to
generate value from environmental opportunities.
Dividend
The Company's net revenue return for
the Period was £8.6 million, compared with £9.1 million earned in
the same period last year.
The second interim dividend for the
2023 financial year, of 2.9 pence per ordinary share, was declared
on 2 February 2024 and paid on 15 March 2024. The aggregate
dividend for 2023 was 4.6 pence, an increase of 15% from
4.0 pence for the previous year. It remains the Board's
intention to pay out substantially all earnings by way of
dividends, the quantum of which is affected both by the level of
dividends received by the Company and by the number of shares in
issue at the relevant record date.
On 6 August 2024, the Board
announced a first interim dividend for this financial year of 1.8
pence per ordinary share (2023: 1.7p), payable on 5 September 2024
to shareholders who appear on the register at 16 August 2024, with
an ex‑dividend date of 15 August 2024.
Gearing
The Board and Manager believe that
gearing, or the ability to borrow capital to invest, is an
attractive feature of investment trusts and can enhance long-term
performance.
The Company has used gearing for a
number of years and in 2023 the Board, in consultation with the
Manager, put in place a combination of fixed and floating rate debt
with a mix of maturity dates and interest rates.
At the Period end the aggregate of
Company's borrowings was £85.2 million, giving net gearing of 7.5%
(31 December 2023: £87.1 million and 6.2% respectively). A
breakdown of the Company's borrowings at 30 June 2024
follows.
The Company has €60 million of
privately placed notes ("Notes"), as set out in the table
below.
Loan
|
|
|
|
amount
|
Loan amount
|
Maturity
|
|
€
million
|
£'million
|
30
September
|
Interest rate
|
20
|
16.9
|
2030
|
Floating: 6m EURIBOR
+1.35%
|
30
|
25.3
|
2033
|
Fixed: 4.48%
|
10
|
8.4
|
2035
|
Fixed: 4.63%
|
The Company also has a two-year £80
million multicurrency revolving credit facility which has a
floating interest rate priced at reference rate +1.6%. An amount of
€40.9 million (equivalent to £34.5 million) was drawn down at the
Period end.
At the period end, the weighted
maturity of the Company's borrowings was 5.6% and the mix of fixed
to floating was 40%:60% (31 December 2023: 6.4% and 40%:60%,
respectively).
Discount Control
The discount at which the shares
trade to the underlying net asset value ("NAV") is actively
monitored by the Board and the Company's brokers. As referred to
earlier, discounts have widened for investment companies and the
Company's ordinary shares traded a discount to NAV of 9.6% on 30
June 2024 - slightly wider than the discount of 7.9% on 31 December
2023.
This is a disappointing result given
the Company has bought back 21,774,810 shares in the Period,
equivalent to 7.7% of the Company's issued share capital at the
start of the year. A positive side effect of a wider discount is
the greater accretion to NAV from share buybacks. So far this year
buybacks have enhanced NAV by 0.7%
In the first half of 2024 the
investment trust sector trailed behind the broader equity markets,
experiencing diminished returns and more pronounced discounts. This
trend has coincided with a wave of buybacks, tender offers and
redemptions.
There were 281.1 million ordinary
shares in circulation at the start of the year, falling to 259.3
million by the end of the Period, reflecting the 21.8 million
shares bought back, of which 46,283,310 shares were held in
treasury at 30 June 2024. The Board will continue to exercise its
authority to buy back or issue shares depending on the
circumstances and when in the interests of shareholders.
Change of Broker
The Board undertakes reviews of all
of its service providers on a regular basis. As part of this the
Board undertook a review of its broker. This included written
submissions, presentation of proposals, and follow up questions.
Consequently, the Company appointed Winterflood Securities Limited
as its sole corporate broker on 28 May 2024. The Board, and I
personally, take this opportunity to thank Investec for its
much-valued services over the years.
Sustainability Disclosure Regulations and Sustainability
Label
At the end of 2023, the Financial
and Conduct Authority (the "FCA") announced the finalised rules and
introduction of new Sustainability labels under the new
Sustainability Disclosure Regulations. These labels became
available to use with effect from 31 July 2024. The Board is
actively working with the Manager to assess the appropriateness of
any label for the Company and will in due course announce its
plans. The regulations also incorporate a new set of
"anti‑greenwashing" rules, which seek to ensure consumers receive
accurate information about unit trusts, open‑ended investment
companies and investment trusts which claim to offer access to
sustainable and related investment themes. the Company and the
Manager met all greenwashing requirements and will continue to do
so.
Outlook
Political momentum for
decarbonisation is gaining traction globally, with several key
regions embracing ambitious climate goals. In the US, UK and EU,
policies are increasingly aligned with green initiatives,
reflecting a strong commitment to reducing carbon emissions.
Notably, China's third plenum has, for the first time, pledged to
pursue decarbonisation, signalling a significant policy shift for
the world's largest emitter.1 Meanwhile, Australia is
making strides in renewable energy investment and policy
frameworks.
With ongoing cost reductions and
favourable policies, renewable energy's economic appeal is growing,
accelerating the shift to sustainable energy. Recent examples
include Indian energy production offering ongoing (rather than
intermittent) solar power at lower rates, reflecting the sector's
increasing cost-competitiveness, while in the U.S., Texas stands
out for having the largest renewable market share without state
subsidies, highlighting the sector's market viability. The cost
reductions in renewables are driven by economies of scale, improved
supply chains and technological advancements.
It is encouraging to learn that
according to Bloomberg NEF, the world may have hit a pivotal
milestone by reaching peak carbon emissions last year. This
suggests that emissions from energy and industry in particular have
likely topped out, setting a precedent for a downward trend. This
peak is a significant marker in the fight against climate change,
indicating a shift towards greener energy sources and more
sustainable practices. It reflects the cumulative impact of
worldwide efforts in renewable energy adoption, energy efficiency
improvements and stringent environmental policies.
With worldwide elections, changing
trade policies, continuing conflicts and the current trend of
investor demand pushing investment trusts to discounts, the second
half of 2024 will continue to present challenges and opportunities.
I have great confidence that the hypothesis underpinning the
Company's investment strategy - that sustainability pressures
create opportunities for companies providing environmental
solutions - remains well positioned to deliver financial
outperformance over the long-term. I am also confident in the
skills and experience of the Manager in identifying strong
companies with attractive valuations that are well-positioned to
generate value from those opportunities. To echo the 2023 Annual
Report, as Chairman, I will maintain a relentless focus on that
performance, and challenge the Manager to ensure we generate
positive investment returns for our shareholders over the
long‑term.
Glen Suarez, Chairman
9 August 2024
1 Five
Trends in Decarbonisation That Are Shaping Global Politics -
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.
Manager's Report
Jon
Forster
Fotis
Chatzimichalakis
Bruce Jenkyn-Jones
Performance Summary
In the first half of 2024, IEM's NAV
fell 0.5%. By contrast, global equities as measured by the MSCI All
Country World Index ("MSCI ACWI") rose 12.2%.
Despite robust global equity
returns, the underlying dynamics were more complex. Resilient
economic data and company earnings vied with softer US employment
data and weaker consumer spending. As a result, markets readjusted
fitfully to "higher-for-longer" interest rates. Geopolitical
tensions have created an additional layer of volatility.
Against this
backdrop, IEM's market cap bias proved a headwind. IEM invests in
companies which generate at least 50% of their revenues from
Environmental Markets. These tend to be mid and small-caps that are
less accessible to IEM's shareholders and in which the Manager
believes it has an information advantage. However small and mid cap
companies1 have suffered disproportionately from the
"higher and for longer" interest rate environment, underperforming
their large cap counterparts by over 8% over the Period.
This is reflected in IEM's relative
valuation, which derated over the six months to 30 June 2024. At
the end of last year, the portfolio traded on price to next
twelve-month earnings ("PE") multiple of 20.7x, a 26% premium to
the MSCI ACWI. That multiple has seen little change, but the
premium has fallen to c.16%, as MSCI ACWI PE has risen faster.
While the market has become more expensive, the Company's portfolio
has not, even as its forward-looking earnings growth data remain
higher.
The effect is exacerbated by the
market's willingness to pay up for a handful of mega-cap technology
names outside of IEM's investable universe. Weakness from Tesla has
reduced returns from the wider 'Magnificent Seven' group. Despite
this, not holding AI chip-designer Nvidia, along with Apple,
Microsoft, Amazon, Meta and Alphabet, accounts for a -5.7% drag on
relative performance. Performance of the FTSE ET100, which we also
consider against portfolio returns, was similarly dominated by
names such as Schneider Electric, Tokyo Electron and TSMC, all of
which are many times larger than IEM's biggest holdings.
Yet performance within the portfolio
has been encouraging. Earnings growth has been above that of the
broader market, with notable positives from natural ingredients
companies which weakened performance last year. At the same time,
areas of the portfolio which have delivered consistently strong
returns - such as US construction, digital infrastructure and
electrical grids - continued to do so.
IEM is also starting to see the
benefits of M&A as market participants acknowledge the
disconnect between holdings' long-term growth prospects and their
low valuations. Stericycle
and Terna Energy have both
been subject to takeover bids at double digit premiums during the
period.
Pockets of weakness continue to be
driven by temporary headwinds such as inventory destocking in
solar, bioprocessing and some select industrial stocks. At the time
of writing, Independent Power Producers ("IPPs") are demonstrating
how swiftly these can reverse. With purchasing manager indices
("PMIs") now in expansion territory, and industrial companies'
managements increasingly confident of improving demand, there are
reasons for cautious optimism across the portfolio.
Key
Developments and Drivers of Environmental Markets
The
US Presidential Election
The US presidential election will
undoubtedly affect global trends in Environmental Markets. The
composition of Congress will also be paramount, with the next
President presiding over a potentially divided or united House.
Given the unreliable nature of polling this far in advance, Impax
is modelling for all four of these potential scenarios.
The fate of the US Inflation
Reduction Act ("IRA") is a key question for investors. Impax
maintains the view that the chances of an outright repeal are
extremely low, even under full Republican control. This is because
many measures have Republican support. The Rocky Mountain Institute
estimates that Republican-leaning states will receive over US$600bn
in IRA investments between now and 2030, roughly double the amount
for Democrat states.2
1 As
measured by the MSCI ACWI Mid and Small Cap indices.
2
Climate Power, 2024: The state of the clean energy boom.
However, there are real prospects
for some IRA cutbacks regardless of who is in office. Partly this
is because the IRA has been more successful than anticipated,
with a higher than forecast uptake of tax credits by project
developers. The most vulnerable elements relate to tax credits on
electric vehicles ("EVs"), clean electricity, and energy
efficiency. While eliminating this funding would remove a potential
tailwind, IEM's investment managers target companies whose success
is determined by their operational advantages, not their ability to
collect subsidies.
It is also important to note that
there can be a meaningful gap between what politicians say on the
campaign trail and ultimately enact. During Donald Trump's term in
office, Environmental Markets performed strongly and pledges to
repeal Obamacare went unfulfilled. Furthermore, with many
renewables now at cost parity with fossil fuel
equivalents,1 no political party controls the advance of
key technologies. These structural growth drivers will continue to
underpin Environmental Markets for the next four years and
beyond.
Resurgent M&A
There is a long history of mergers
and acquisitions ("M&A") in Environmental Markets. Like the
investment managers of IEM, large corporates and private equity are
drawn to the structural growth potential that these companies
offer. Activity typically picks up when a sector is viewed as ripe
for consolidation or valuations become particularly
attractive.
Notwithstanding the longer-term
cyclical trend, there have been fewer takeovers in Environmental
Markets over the past decade. Maturing companies have instead
focused on consolidating existing business and growing their own
franchises. However, in the last six months, with valuations
materially lower following higher rates, M&A activity has
meaningfully stepped up.
This is most evident in IPPs - where
valuations have been compressed by higher rates, supply chain
issues and - most recently - weak European power prices. Valuations
for listed companies have dislocated from much higher multiples in
private assets, with Canadian investment group Brookfield acquiring
France's Neoen and private equity group KKR buying Germany's
ENCAVIS.
The IEM portfolio is starting to
benefit as a result. In June, Terna Energy announced that it was
being taken private by Masdar, an Abu Dhabi owned renewables
developer. At an EV/EBITDA multiple of c.15x 2024 earnings, the
takeout price is almost double where the Manager initially started
its position four years ago. By comparison EDPR, a Portuguese IPP also held in the
portfolio, trades at 12.5x EV/EBITDA on 2024 earnings.
The same month also saw Waste
Management (not held) announce its intention to acquire
long-standing IEM holding Stericycle for USD 7.2 billion, a c.38%
premium to where shares traded before rumours of the deal emerged.
Stericycle is the leading
medical waste management player in the US with >40% market
share.
Battery Technology
Demand for batteries is structurally
growing. This is driven by rising EV sales and renewables'
increasing proportion of the global energy mix.
EV sales continue to grow strongly
despite moderating growth ex-China, increasing from 4% of all
global vehicle sales in 2020 to 18% in 2023.2 Similarly,
the International Energy Agency ("IEA") predicts that by 2028,
renewables will account for over 42% of global electricity
generation.3 Backing up renewables with storage solves
intermittency - by which energies like wind or solar are produced
at different times from when required - such that battery
attachment is expected to grow from 2% to 9% by
2030.4
This combination has incentivised
manufacturers to invest in developing ever-more powerful batteries.
Lithium iron phosphate ("LFP") has emerged as the dominant
technology, with scaled-up manufacturing meaning that a typical
LFP battery costs around 85% less than it did a decade
ago.5 Continued investment in raw material supply chains
means prices are expected to ease further in 2024, further boosting
potential demand.
These structural growth prospects
informed IEM's new position in CATL, a Chinese battery producer. The
company is a global market share leader thanks to a history of
technological innovation across battery chemistries and its
competitive cost structure. Recently, the company unveiled a
battery it claims can deliver 400km of range on a ten‑minute
charge.6 At the time of purchase, the shares were overly
discounted due to anaemic EV sales growth, China's lacklustre
rebound post-Covid and the potential impact of US tariffs. However,
with a robust balance sheet, the shares offer significant upside on
the basis of sales to Asia and Europe alone.
1 BNEF
Levelised Cost of Electricity, December 2023 - 2H 2023 LCOE Update:
An Uneven Recovery | Full Report | BloombergNEF
(bnef.com).
2
Electric vehicles - International Energy Agency ("IEA").
3
Executive summary - Renewables 2023 - Analysis - IEA.
4
Bernstein 'Global Energy Storage' - June 2024.
5 2023
Lithium-Ion Battery Price Survey | BloombergNEF
(bnef.com).
6 CATL
unveils EV battery enabling a 400 km driving range on a 10 minute
charge - pv magazine International (pv-magazine.com).
Absolute Performance Contributors and
Detractors
Contributors
A structural increase in grid
spending has helped Prysmian, a manufacturer of cables and
fibre optics, deliver the portfolio's largest positive contribution
year to date. A similarly sustained rise in both commercial and
residential construction - particularly in the US - means related
holdings have also boosted returns. Top contributors with
impressive earnings included water infrastructure company
Advanced Drainage, as well
as sustainable decking producer AZEK and the Dutch industrial
specialist Aalberts.
The portfolio's technology holdings
also continue to boost returns. While IEM has no direct exposure to
AI, Monolithic Power Systems is a leading supplier of
energy efficient power semiconductors to chip-designer Nvidia,
resulting in strong data centre growth. Other positive contributors
included Trimble - a maker
of geolocation software - and Descartes - a logistics software
company.
Natural ingredients companies, have
started to reverse much of last year's losses. The likes of
DSM-Firmenich, Borregaard and Corbion have all posted encouraging
results. Earnings indicate inventory destocking in key consumer and
healthcare markets is easing, with profitability rising as a
result.
Lastly, IEM's waste management
holdings Clean Harbors and
Stericycle have also made
significant positive contributions. In addition to Stericycle's previously mentioned
takeover bid, Clean Harbors
has been able to lift prices especially in the core industrial
hazardous waste business, driving upgrades to full-year
guidance.
Detractors
EDPR made the largest negative
contribution to performance. As mentioned, deferred rate cuts and
weaker European power prices provoked a sharp pullback in IPPs
(including Northland Power
and Ormat) at the start of
the year.
Yet rising M&A is forcing the
market to acknowledge mismatched valuations between public assets
and those in private hands. The sector is also benefiting from
soaring electricity demand from data centres. With EDPR also focussing on its higher
returning projects, the market's view on temporary headwinds is
evolving, demonstrating the appeal of companies supported by
long-term trends and robust operational performance.
Performance in the portfolio's solar
holdings - another source of weakness in 2023 - was more split.
Xinyi Solar, a Chinese
producer of solar glass, initially boosted returns as input prices
became more favourable, but retraced these as volume expectations
softened. By contrast SolarEdge, the US-listed producer of
optimisers and inverters, continues to face inventory destocking
challenges. However, at these levels, the investment team is
comfortable holding a small position until sales
recover.
Destocking also remains a challenge
for the portfolio's bioprocessing holdings and some select
industrial names. Bioprocessing entails manufacturing chemical
compounds from living organisms, typically cells or their
components. The long-term efficiency gains which make the sector
attractive have been offset by softer near-term demand, with weak
results from industry bellwether Sartorius (not held) as well as
holdings Repligen and
Cryoport.
Similarly, cautious earnings
guidance driven by uncertain end demand saw LEM, NIBE and Signify all detracting from returns.
The three companies produce electronic components, specialising in
measurement, diversified industrials and lighting respectively.
While they are all focusing on operational improvements, a
meaningful rally in the shares will require a clear sign that
destocking is coming to an end.
Relative Performance Analysis
|
6 Months
Ended
|
|
30 June
2024
|
Performance relative to MSCI ACWI
|
%
|
NAV total return
|
(0.5)
|
MSCI ACWI total return
|
12.2
|
Relative performance
|
(12.7)
|
Analysis of relative
performance
|
|
Portfolio total return
|
(0.3)
|
MSCI ACWI total return
|
12.2
|
Portfolio
underperformance
|
(12.5)
|
Borrowing:
|
|
Gearing effect
|
(0.1)
|
Finance costs
|
(0.2)
|
Management fee
|
(0.4)
|
Other expenses
|
(0.1)
|
Trading costs
|
-
|
Share transactions:
|
|
Buy-backs
|
0.7
|
Tax
|
(0.1)
|
Total relative NAV performance
|
(12.7)
|
|
6 Months
Ended
|
|
30 June
2024
|
Performance relative to FTSE ET100
|
%
|
NAV total return
|
(0.5)
|
FTSE ET100 total return
|
7.4
|
Relative performance
|
(7.9)
|
Analysis of relative
performance
|
|
Portfolio total return
|
(0.3)
|
MSCI ACWI total return
|
7.4
|
Portfolio
underperformance
|
(7.7)
|
Borrowing:
|
|
Gearing effect
|
(0.1)
|
Finance costs
|
(0.2)
|
Management fee
|
(0.4)
|
Other expenses
|
(0.1)
|
Trading costs
|
-
|
Share transactions:
|
|
Buy-backs
|
0.7
|
Tax
|
(0.1)
|
Total relative NAV performance
|
(7.9)
|
Portfolio Positioning and Trades
As of 30 June 2024, the Company held
a diversified portfolio of 62 listed companies. These are balanced
between cyclicals and defensives, although the Manager has
moderately increased cyclical exposure to reflect more attractive
valuations. Additional activity has focused on increasing weights
where the Manager has most conviction, while exiting positions with
less visible upside.
The Manager initiated two positions.
CATL, as discussed above
and Cognex, a US-listed
company specialising in machine vision systems. These play a
critical role in factory automation, improving energy efficiency
and reducing waste. Ageing workforces, the repatriation of
industrial activity and corporate efficiency provide long-term
structural growth drivers. Cognex also continues to find new
applications for its technology.
The Manager exited its positions in
Indraprastha Gas, an Indian
provider of natural gas, and Dialight, a maker of energy efficient
lighting for a range of industrial end markets. Regulatory changes
are increasingly pushing for electrification of IPG's key
transportation end-market, fundamentally changing the investment
thesis. Similarly, poor operational performance weakened
Dialight's investment case,
with the Manager reallocating to higher conviction
opportunities.
The Manager sold its position in
Eurofins, an environmental
testing company listed in France. Due to a changing business mix,
company revenues fell below Impax's 50% environmental markets
revenue threshold.
It is IEM's investment thesis that
companies operating in Environmental Markets should be able to
deliver superior earnings growth over the long-term. Recent
performance has called this into question, particularly given the
operational challenges in some high conviction sectors such as IPPs
(as referenced previously). However, the companies held in the IEM
portfolio have delivered earnings growth over 2% p.a. higher than
broader global equities as represented by the MSCI All Country
World Index, calculated on a bottom-up basis.
The main driver of performance
weakness therefore has been a compression in price to earnings
("PE") multiples. In other words, how much the market is willing to
pay for a stream of future cash flows. Higher interest rates and
the prospect of economic weakness have driven investors to exit
both higher growth environmental markets and smaller companies in
general, regardless of their underlying fundamentals. Since 2021,
the IEM portfolio's PE multiple has contracted far beyond that of
the MSCI ACWI.
As a result, IEM's portfolio is now
more attractively priced relative to the MSCI ACWI than it was
before the pandemic. With expected earnings growth still well above
the index, IEM's relative PE premium has fallen to 16%, well below
its ten-year average as illustrated in the chart on page 10 of the
Half-yearly Report. At the same time, the broader market has become
more expensive. This is despite the longer term growth story for
many holdings becoming stronger thanks to technological innovation,
regulation and consumer preferences.
Outlook
Equity markets are paying close
attention to politics in the second half of 2024. The UK's Labour
party has won its first election since 2005. The EU and France are
grappling with the consequence of electoral gains by far-right
parties. In the US, President Biden has withdrawn his candidacy.
While the team is alert to these developments and reviews exposure
accordingly, the importance of short-term political events should
not be overstated relative to technology, regulation and consumer
demand - all long-term drivers which continue to favour
Environmental Markets.
In the meantime, the market now
expects two US rate cuts by the end of the year, even if long-term
rate expectations have in fact risen to reflect a possible Trump
victory. Earnings growth within the portfolio remains above that of
the broader market. Even in areas like solar and bioprocessing,
where destocking headwinds have taken longer than expected to
abate, conversations with management are pointing to more positive
trends by the end of the year. In short, both the fundamentals and
macro backdrop for IEM remains supportive.
Lastly, the portfolio's valuation
premium relative to global equity markets has fallen to below its
ten-year average. With suppressed valuations in small and mid-caps,
the portfolio's forward PE has fallen to 20.3x, while its premium
has moved sharply from 22% to 16%. This market divergence is
driving up M&A activity within the portfolio and across
Environmental Markets more broadly. IEM offers shareholders
meaningfully diversified and differentiated exposure to the broader
market in a vehicle which continues to trade at a discount to NAV.
Given these potential catalysts, the Manager remains
optimistic.
Impax Asset Management (AIFM) Limited
9 August 2024
Ten Largest
Holdings
As at 30 June 2024 (31 December
2023)
1
3.5%
of net assets
(2023: 2.7%)
|
STERICYCLE - United States |
www.stericycle.com
Stericycle provides regulated
medical waste management services, offering waste collection,
transportation, treatment, and disposal to healthcare organisations
and commercial businesses worldwide. As the US market share leader
of Medical Waste, Stericycle operates a strong margin business with
stable, recurring revenues in a highly regulated industry, one with
high barriers to entry where waste must be disposed of to the
greatest technical standards to avoid health and environmental
risks. The company is also a meaningful player in the disposal of
confidential documents, providing shredding services which ensure
high recycling and less incineration.
|
2
3.2%
of net assets
(2023: 2.6%)
|
PTC
INC - United States | www.ptc.com
PTC is an Information Technology
company that offers software products which can be deployed toward
leaner manufacturing: computer-aided design modelling and Product
Lifecycle Management. Importantly, PTC's industrial connectivity
platform enables customers to connect 'smart' devices, analyse
associated data, and create internet of things applications. These
solutions help to increase resource efficiency and eliminate waste
in industrial processes. Operating in a market with high barriers
to entry and low customer turnover, PTC is using its established
market position to emerge as a leader in increasing numbers of
connectivity platforms and is benefiting from high recurring
revenues (~80%).
|
3
3.1%
of net assets
(2023: 2.8%)
|
PENTAIR - United States | www.pentair.com
Pentair has products which address a
range of residential, commercial, industrial, infrastructure and
agricultural end-markets. Its sales are focused on providing more
energy and water efficient systems including variable speed,
intelligent pumps for pools and biological commercial filter
equipment for fish farming. Pentair has a history of strong
operational margins.
|
4
3.0%
of net assets
(2023: 2.2%)
|
DSM
FIRMENICH - Netherlands | www.dsm-firmenich.com
DSM Firmenich is a leading producer
of specialty chemicals spanning food, beauty, healthcare and animal
end markets. The company's products help improve livestock health
and efficacy of feed conversion. This lowers input-related waste,
mitigates emissions and limits harmful by-products of cultivation,
including excessive antibiotics usage. The company also works to
reduce methane from animal farming. Its human nutrition activities,
mostly utilising naturally-derived ingredients i.e. cultures and
enzymes, also contribute to improved Health &
Wellbeing.
|
5
2.7%
of net assets
(2023: 2.6%)
|
AALBERTS NV - Netherlands | www.aalberts.com
Aalberts is a Dutch manufacturer of
industrial products, with a focus on mission-critical products that
enhance sustainability. The company develops and sells its various
technologies through two business segments: Building Technology -
which enhances energy efficiency with hydronic flow control and
integrated piping for water or gas management - and Industrial
Technology - which delivers mechatronics and fluid regulation
technology, as well as surface technologies. These divisions cater
to four key end markets: sustainable transportation, semiconductor
efficiency, eco-friendly buildings and industrial
niches.
|
6
2.6%
of net assets
(2023: 2.3%)
|
CLEAN HARBORS INC - United States |
www.cleanharbors.com
Clean Harbors provides waste
collection, transportation, recycling, treatment, and disposal
services. The company also holds dominant positions in incinerators
and landfills, where new permits are becoming exceedingly rare.
Environmental services such as waste disposal, hazardous waste
clean-up, recycling services and emergency clean-up are an
important component of environmental solutions for a broad range of
industries. Clean Harbors is a market leader in its core business -
the US hazardous waste sector - with a strong market position and
pricing power in a sector with high barriers to entry.
|
7
2.6%
of net assets
(2023: 1.7%)
|
AMERICAN WATER WORKS - United States |
www.amwater.com
American Water Works is the largest
publicly traded water utility in the US and is based in New Jersey.
The company provides water and water-related services in 47 states
in the US, as well as in Ontario, Canada. American Water targets
solid earnings growth through a healthy capital expenditure budget,
operational efficiencies, and cost controls, alongside the backdrop
of a supportive regulatory environment. The company has been an
active consolidator of smaller water systems which provides
synergies, presents ongoing opportunities for growth, and allows
for healthy dividend growth.
|
8
2.5%
of net assets
(2023: 2.1%)
|
LITTELFUSE - United States |
www.littelfuse.com
Littelfuse sells fuses, and other
circuit protection devices, for use in the automotive, electronics
and general industrial markets. There is significant growth in
electrical circuits across the global economy - greater protection,
control and sensing within circuits can enhance efficiency. To meet
net zero ambitions in the coming three decades, more and more
products will have to run off electricity and thus the demand for
Littelfuse's circuit protection, sensor and connector goods should
increase. It serves a purpose in the strategy due to its high
single digit growth prospects and a good acquisition track record,
supported by solid margins.
|
9
2.4%
of net assets
(2023: 2.1%)
|
RAYONIER - United States | www.rayonier.com
Rayonier is a pure-play timber real
estate investment trust and one of the largest private timberland
owners in the US. It owns 2.7 million acres of well-managed
timberlands in the US and New Zealand. Sustainably managed forests
help prevent deforestation, forest degradation and illegal logging,
while commercial silviculture techniques help improve tree vigour,
making them less susceptible to insects, fire and disease. A
sufficient and sustainable supply of timber is essential for more
"green" construction, as well as fibre-based packaging. Rayonier
also has optionality in its land‑base, through renewable energy
(solar and wind) and carbon (CCS and credit) projects.
|
10
2.4%
of net assets
(2023: 1.7%)
|
PRYSMIAN - Italy | www.prysmian.com
Prysmian is a manufacturer of
electrical and fibre optic cables. Prysmian's cables are employed
widely across electricity transmission and distribution systems
(the grid) as well as in wind turbines, solar farms, and EV
charging infrastructure. Ageing grid infrastructure is increasingly
at risk of faults and needs replacement - over 70% of the US grid
is over 25 years old. At the same time, rapid growth in renewables,
as well as sector-wide electrification requires meaningful
expansion and hardening of the grid. As a result, Prysmian is a
crucial enabler of the energy transition. It also sells more
efficient building/infrastructure cables. With substantial market
share, particularly in the more operationally demanding High
Voltage segment, Prysmian is well-placed to benefit from structural
demand growth.
|
Top
Thirty Portfolio Investments
|
|
|
Market
|
% of
|
As
at 30 June 2024
|
|
Country of main
|
value
|
net
|
Company
|
Sector
|
listing
|
£'000
|
assets
|
Stericycle
|
Resource Efficiency & Waste
Management
|
United States
|
39,075
|
3.5
|
PTC
|
Digital Infrastructure
|
United States
|
35,291
|
3.2
|
Pentair
|
Water Infrastructure &
Technologies
|
United States
|
34,513
|
3.1
|
DSM-Firmenich
|
Sustainable Food &
Agriculture
|
Netherlands
|
33,619
|
3.0
|
Aalberts
|
Water Infrastructure &
Technologies
|
Netherlands
|
29,904
|
2.7
|
Clean Harbors
|
Resource Efficiency & Waste
Management
|
United States
|
29,320
|
2.6
|
American Water Works
|
Water Infrastructure &
Technologies
|
United States
|
28,357
|
2.6
|
Littelfuse
|
Energy Management &
Efficiency
|
United States
|
27,625
|
2.5
|
Rayonier Inc
|
Sustainable Food &
Agriculture
|
United States
|
27,152
|
2.4
|
Prysmian
|
Energy Management &
Efficiency
|
Italy
|
26,947
|
2.4
|
Top
Ten Holdings
|
|
|
311,803
|
27.9
|
Monolithic Power Systems
|
Digital Infrastructure
|
United States
|
25,178
|
2.3
|
Dabur India
|
Resource Efficiency & Waste
Management
|
India
|
24,155
|
2.2
|
STERIS
|
Resource Efficiency & Waste
Management
|
United States
|
24,032
|
2.1
|
Repligen
|
Resource Efficiency & Waste
Management
|
United States
|
23,961
|
2.1
|
Brambles
|
Resource Efficiency & Waste
Management
|
Australia
|
23,627
|
2.1
|
Graphic Packaging Holding
|
Sustainable Food &
Agriculture
|
United States
|
23,578
|
2.1
|
Ormat Technologies
|
Alternative Energy
|
United States
|
23,468
|
2.1
|
Borregaard
|
Resource Efficiency & Waste
Management
|
Norway
|
23,447
|
2.1
|
Northland Power
|
Alternative Energy
|
Canada
|
23,137
|
2.1
|
Spirax-Sarco Engineering
|
Energy Management &
Efficiency
|
United Kingdom
|
23,025
|
2.1
|
Top
Twenty Holdings
|
|
|
549,411
|
49.3
|
EDP Renovaveis
|
Alternative Energy
|
Portugal
|
22,806
|
2.0
|
Altair Engineering
|
Digital Infrastructure
|
United States
|
22,413
|
2.0
|
Kingspan
|
Energy Management &
Efficiency
|
Ireland
|
22,382
|
2.0
|
Bucher Industries
|
Sustainable Food &
Agriculture
|
Switzerland
|
22,278
|
2.0
|
Mondi
|
Sustainable Food &
Agriculture
|
United Kingdom
|
21,441
|
1.9
|
Croda International
|
Resource Efficiency & Waste
Management
|
United Kingdom
|
20,362
|
1.9
|
Descartes Systems
|
Digital Infrastructure
|
Canada
|
20,124
|
1.8
|
Trimble
|
Digital Infrastructure
|
United States
|
19,633
|
1.8
|
Advanced Drainage Systems
|
Water Infrastructure &
Technologies
|
United States
|
19,571
|
1.7
|
Generac Holdings
|
Energy Management &
Efficiency
|
United States
|
19,114
|
1.7
|
Top
Thirty Holdings
|
|
|
759,535
|
68.2
|
Other quoted holdings
|
|
|
427,968
|
38.4
|
Portfolio Total
|
|
|
1,187,503
|
106.6
|
Cash
|
|
|
11,054
|
1.0
|
Other net liabilities
|
|
|
(85,136)
|
(7.6)
|
Net
assets
|
|
|
1,113,421
|
100.0
|
|
|
|
|
| |
All investment is in equity
securities unless otherwise stated.
The full portfolio is published each
month, quarterly in arrears on the Company's website
www.impaxenvironmantalmarkets.co.uk
Interim Management Report
The Directors are required to
provide an Interim Management Report in accordance with the
Financial Conduct Authority ("FCA") Disclosure Guidance and
Transparency Rules ("DTR"). The Directors consider that the
Chairman's Statement and the Manager's Report of this Half-yearly
Financial Report, provide details of the important events which
have occurred during the six months ended 30 June 2024 ("Period")
and their impact on the financial statements. The statement on
related party transactions and the Directors' Statement of
Responsibility (below), the Chairman's Statement and the Manager's
Report together constitute the Interim Management Report of the
Company for the Period. The outlook for the Company for the
remaining six months of the year ending 31 December 2024 is
discussed in the Chairman's Statement and the Manager's
Report.
Details of the largest ten
investments held at the Period end are provided on pages 12 and 13
of the Half-yearly Report and the structure of the portfolio at the
Period end is analysed on page 15 of the Half-yearly
Report.
Principal risks and uncertainties
The principal risks and
uncertainties facing the Company are summarised below:
(i) economic and
market risks - price movements of the Company's investments are
highly correlated to market movements and general economic
conditions. This is even more so for investee companies with small
market capitalisation;
(ii) environmental
markets - the Company invests in companies operating in
environmental markets. There is a risk in such markets that change
to governmental support, technology costs or customer demand may
have an adverse effect;
(iii) share price
trades at excessive discount to net asset value - returns to
shareholders may be affected by the level of discount at which the
Company's shares might trade;
(iv) financing risk -
the Company may borrow money for investment purposes and should
investment markets fall in value, any borrowing will enhance the
level of loss. Capacity constraints on the availability of
desirable companies for investment may mean the Company is unable
to achieve the level of gearing wanted. Higher interest rates will
increase the cost of borrowing for the Company and borrowings may
not be available of acceptable types, amounts and/or interest
rates;
(v) under performance
of the investment manager - Consistent long-term underperformance
by the investment manager may lead to poor performance of the
Company compared to its benchmark comparators and peers, a widening
of discount to NAV, a reduction in capital and dissatisfied
shareholders;
(vi) failure or breach
of information security (IT) - including cyber-security and
physical security risks - failure of IT or physical security could
potentially lead to breaches of confidentiality, data records being
compromised and the inability to make investment decisions. In
addition, unauthorized physical access to buildings could lead to
damage or lose of equipment; and
(vii) operational risk
- the management of the investment portfolio and other key services
have been delegated to third party service providers. Failure by
any service provider to carry out its obligations to the Company
could have a material adverse effect on the Company's performance
or prevent the accurate reporting and monitoring of the Company's
financial position.
Emerging risks are considered by the
Board at its quarterly meetings and by the Audit Committee as part
of its risk management and internal control review. Failure to
identify emerging risks may cause reactive actions rather than
being proactive and the Company could be forced to change its
structure, objective or strategy and, in worst case, could cause
the Company to become unviable or otherwise fail.
Specifically, the risks posed by
global economic conditions including higher inflation and interest
rates and disruption to supply chains as a result of the wars in
Ukraine and the Middle East continue to be monitored by the Board.
The Manager and other key service providers provide periodic
reports to the Board on market impact and operational resilience to
these events. The Board is satisfied that the key service providers
have the ability to continue their operations efficiently in a
remote or virtual working environment.
The Company's Annual Report for the
year ended 31 December 2023 contains more detail on the Company's
principal risks and uncertainties, including the Board's ongoing
process to identify, and where possible mitigate, emerging risks
(pages 42 to 46). Detail is also provided on other risks that,
whilst not being identified as principal risks after mitigation
controls are applied, are relevant risks to the Company. The Annual
Report can be found on the Company's website at
www.impaxenvironmentalmarkets.co.uk.
In the view of the board the
principal risks and uncertainties facing the business are broadly
the same as those in the published annual report and financial
statements for the year ended 31 December 2023 and these risks and
uncertainties remain applicable to the remaining six months of the
year.
Related party transactions
Details of the investment management
arrangements are provided in the Annual Report. There have been no
changes to the related party transactions described in the Annual
Report that could have a material effect on the financial position
or performance of the Company.
Going concern
This Half-yearly Financial Report
has been prepared on a going concern basis. The Directors consider
this the appropriate basis as they have a reasonable expectation
that the Company has adequate resources to continue in operational
existence for at least twelve months from the date of this report.
In reaching this conclusion, the Directors considered the liquidity
of the Company's portfolio of investments, as well as its cash
position, income and expense flows. The Company's net assets as at
30 June 2024 were £1,113.4 million, of which £1,187.5 million was
in quoted investments and cash totalled £11.1 million. The main
liability of the Company is its borrowings of £85.2 million which
is covered 13 times by the adjusted assets, well in excess of the
level of cover required by the borrowing covenants of four times.
The total expenses (excluding finance costs and taxation) for the
six months ended 30 June 2024 were £5.7 million, while income was
£12.7 million.
The Directors have considered the
potential effect of continuing geopolitical tensions and economic
uncertainties on the Company's portfolio of investments and that
any future prolonged and deep market decline would likely lead to
falling values in the Company's investments and/or reduced dividend
receipts. However, as explained above, the Company has more than
sufficient liquidity available to meet its expected future
obligations.
Board of Directors
9 August 2024
Directors' Statement of Responsibility
The Directors confirm to the best of
their knowledge that:
·
the condensed set of financial
statements contained within the Half-yearly Financial Report has
been prepared in accordance with FRS 104 Interim Financial
Reporting and gives a true and fair view of the assets,
liabilities, financial position and return of the Company;
and
·
the interim management report
includes a fair review of the information required by 4.2.7R and
4.2.8R of the FCA's Disclosure Guidance and Transparency
Rules.
Glen Suarez, Chairman of the Board of
Directors
9 August 2024
Condensed Income Statement
Unaudited
|
|
Six months ended 30 June
2024
|
Six months ended 30 June
2023
|
|
|
Revenue
|
Capital
|
Total
|
Revenue
|
Capital
|
Total
|
|
Notes
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
(Losses)/gains on
investments
|
|
-
|
(20,900)
|
(20,900)
|
-
|
41,677
|
41,677
|
Net foreign exchange
gains/(losses)
|
|
-
|
1,871
|
1,871
|
-
|
(2,192)
|
(2,192)
|
Income
|
4
|
12,667
|
-
|
12,667
|
12,569
|
-
|
12,569
|
Investment management
fees
|
|
(1,233)
|
(3,699)
|
(4,932)
|
(1,197)
|
(3,592)
|
(4,789)
|
Other expenses
|
|
(762)
|
-
|
(762)
|
(754)
|
-
|
(754)
|
Return on ordinary activities before finance costs and
taxation
|
|
10,672
|
(22,728)
|
(12,056)
|
10,618
|
35,893
|
46,511
|
Finance costs
|
5
|
(566)
|
(1,696)
|
(2,262)
|
(385)
|
(1,155)
|
(1,540)
|
Return on ordinary activities before
taxation
|
|
10,106
|
(24,424)
|
(14,318)
|
10,233
|
34,738
|
44,971
|
Taxation
|
6
|
(1,461)
|
(16)
|
(1,477)
|
(1,142)
|
(295)
|
(1,437)
|
Return on ordinary activities after taxation
|
|
8,645
|
(24,440)
|
(15,795)
|
9,091
|
34,443
|
43,534
|
Return per ordinary share
|
7
|
3.20p
|
(9.05p)
|
(5.85p)
|
3.00p
|
11.36p
|
14.36p
|
The total column of the Income
Statement is the profit and loss account of the Company.
The supplementary revenue and
capital columns are provided for information purposes in accordance
with the Statement of Recommended Practice issued by the
Association of Investment Companies.
All revenue and capital items in the
above statement derive from continuing operations. No operations
were acquired or discontinued during the period.
Return on ordinary activities after
taxation is also the "Total comprehensive income for the
period".
The accompanying notes form part of
these financial statements.
Condensed Balance Sheet
Unaudited
|
|
As at
|
As at
|
|
|
30 June
|
31 December
|
|
|
2024
|
2023*
|
|
Notes
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Fixed assets
|
|
|
|
Investments at fair value through
profit or loss
|
3
|
1,187,503
|
1,295,847
|
Current assets
|
|
|
|
Dividends receivable
|
|
1,195
|
586
|
Sales awaiting settlement
|
|
7,781
|
-
|
Taxation recoverable
|
|
64
|
39
|
Other debtors
|
|
376
|
166
|
Cash and cash equivalents
|
|
11,054
|
16,804
|
|
|
20,470
|
17,595
|
Creditors: amounts falling due within one
year
|
|
|
|
Trade and other payables
|
|
(3,888)
|
(3,821)
|
Purchases awaiting
settlement
|
|
(5,445)
|
-
|
|
|
(9,333)
|
(3,821)
|
Net
current assets
|
|
11,137
|
13,774
|
Total assets less current liabilities
|
|
1,198,640
|
1,309,621
|
Creditors: amounts falling due after more than one
year
|
|
|
|
Capital gains tax
provision
|
|
(56)
|
(40)
|
Notes
|
8
|
(50,645)
|
(51,785)
|
Revolving credit facility
|
8
|
(34,518)
|
(35,312)
|
Net
assets
|
|
1,113,421
|
1,222,484
|
Capital and reserves: equity
|
|
|
|
Share capital
|
9
|
30,562
|
30,562
|
Share premium account
|
|
423,098
|
423,098
|
Capital redemption
reserve
|
|
9,877
|
9,877
|
Share purchase reserve
|
|
-
|
52,557
|
Capital reserve
|
|
634,286
|
691,454
|
Revenue reserve
|
|
15,598
|
14,936
|
Shareholders' funds
|
|
1,113,421
|
1,222,484
|
|
|
|
|
Net
assets per ordinary share -debt at bookcost
|
10
|
429.33p
|
434.87p
|
Net
assets per ordinary share -debt at fair value
|
10
|
429.37p
|
434.34p
|
*
Audited
Approved by the Board of Directors
and authorised for issue on 9 August
2024.
Impax Environmental Market plc
incorporated in England with registered number 4348393.
The accompanying notes form part of
these financial statements.
Condensed Statement of Changes in Equity
Unaudited
|
|
|
Share
|
Capital
|
Share
|
|
|
|
|
|
Share
|
premium
|
redemption
|
purchase
|
Capital
|
Revenue
|
|
Six
months ended
|
|
capital
|
account
|
reserve
|
reserve
|
reserve
|
reserve
|
Total
|
30
June 2024
|
Note
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Opening equity as at 1 January 2024
|
|
30,562
|
423,098
|
9,877
|
52,557
|
691,454
|
14,936
|
1,222,484
|
Dividend paid
|
11
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(7,983)
|
(7,983)
|
Cost of share buybacks
|
9
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(52,557)
|
(32,728)
|
-
|
(85,285)
|
Return for the period
|
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(24,440)
|
8,645
|
(15,795)
|
Closing equity as at 30 June 2024
|
|
30,562
|
423,098
|
9,877
|
-
|
634,286
|
15,598
|
1,113,421
|
|
|
|
Share
|
Capital
|
Share
|
|
|
|
|
|
Share
|
premium
|
redemption
|
purchase
|
Capital
|
Revenue
|
|
Six
months ended
|
|
capital
|
account
|
reserve
|
reserve
|
reserve
|
reserve
|
Total
|
30
June 2023
|
Note
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Opening equity as at 1 January 2023
|
|
30,562
|
423,098
|
9,877
|
141,872
|
657,373
|
13,156
|
1,275,938
|
Dividend paid
|
11
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(7,604)
|
(7,604)
|
Cost of share buybacks
|
9
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(20,029)
|
-
|
-
|
(20,029)
|
Return for the period
|
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
34,443
|
9,091
|
43,534
|
Closing equity as at 30 June 2023
|
|
30,562
|
423,098
|
9,877
|
121,843
|
691,816
|
14,643
|
1,291,839
|
The accompanying notes form part of
these financial statements.
Condensed Statement of Cash Flows
Unaudited
|
|
Six months
|
Six months
|
|
|
ended
|
ended
|
|
|
30 June
2024
|
30 June
2023
|
|
Notes
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Operating activities
|
|
|
|
(Loss)/return on ordinary activities
before finance costs and taxation*
|
|
(12,056)
|
46,511
|
Less: Tax deducted at source on
income from investments
|
|
(1,461)
|
(1,142)
|
Foreign exchange
(gains)/losses
|
|
(1,871)
|
2,192
|
Adjustment for losses/(gains) on
investments
|
|
20,900
|
(41,677)
|
Special dividends received as
capital
|
|
1,567
|
-
|
Increase in other debtors
|
|
(844)
|
(1,630)
|
Increase in other
creditors
|
|
158
|
923
|
Net
cash flow from operating activities
|
|
6,393
|
5,177
|
Investing activities
|
|
|
|
Sale of investments
|
|
188,291
|
277,964
|
Purchase of investments
|
|
(104,750)
|
(265,682)
|
Net
cash flow used in investing
|
|
83,541
|
12,282
|
Financing activities
|
|
|
|
Equity dividends paid
|
11
|
(7,983)
|
(7,604)
|
Finance costs paid
|
|
(2,416)
|
(1,526)
|
Cost of share buybacks
|
9
|
(85,285)
|
(20,029)
|
Net
cash flow used in financing
|
|
(95,684)
|
(29,159)
|
Decrease in cash
|
|
(5,750)
|
(11,700)
|
Cash and cash equivalents at start of period
|
|
16,804
|
26,327
|
Cash and cash equivalents at end of period
|
|
11,054
|
14,627
|
*
Cash inflow includes dividend income received during the six
months to 30 June 2024 of £19,285,000 (30 June 2023: £10,467,000)
and bank interest of £272,000 (six months to 30 June 2023:
£369,000).
Changes in net debt
|
Six months
|
Six months
|
|
ended
|
ended
|
|
30 June
2024
|
30 June
2023
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Net debt at start of year
|
(70,293)
|
(25,279)
|
Decrease in cash and cash
equivalents
|
(5,750)
|
(11,700)
|
Foreign exchange
movements
|
1,934
|
1,296
|
Net
debt at end of period
|
(74,109)
|
(35,683)
|
The accompanying notes form part of
these financial statements.
Notes to the Financial Statements
1
Accounting policies
The Half-yearly Condensed Financial
Statements have been prepared in accordance with FRS 104 Interim
Financial Reporting issued by the Financial Reporting Council
('FRC') and the Statement of Recommended Practice 'Financial
Statements of Investment Trust Companies and Venture Capital
Trusts' issued by the Association of Investment Companies in July
2022.
This Half-yearly Financial Report is
unaudited and does not include all of the information required for
a full set of annual financial statements. The Half-yearly
Financial Report should be read in conjunction with the Annual
Report and Accounts of the Company for the year ended 31 December
2023. The Annual Report and Accounts for the year ended 31 December
2023 were prepared in accordance with FRS 102 'The Financial
Reporting Standard applicable in the UK and Republic of Ireland'
('FRS 102') and received an unqualified audit report. The financial
information for the year ended 31 December 2023 in this Half-yearly
Financial Report has been extracted from the audited Annual Report
and Accounts for the year ended 31 December 2023. The accounting
policies in this Half-yearly Financial Report are consistent with
those applied in the Annual Report for the year ended 31 December
2023.
2
Going concern
The Directors have adopted the going
concern basis in preparing the accounts. Details of the Directors'
assessment of the going concern status of the Company, which
considered the adequacy of the Company's resources and took account
of continued geopolitical and economic uncertainties, are given in
the Interim Management Report.
3
Investments at fair value through profit or loss
Classification of financial instruments
Securities of companies quoted on
regulated stock exchanges and any holdings in unquoted companies
are classified as 'at fair value through profit or loss' and are
initially recognised on the trade date and measured at fair value
in accordance with sections 11 and 12 of FRS 102. Investments are
measured at subsequent reporting dates at fair value by reference
to their market bid prices. Any unquoted investments are measured
at fair value, which is determined by the Directors in accordance
with the International Private Equity and Venture Capital
guidelines.
Changes in fair value are included
in the Condensed Income Statement as a capital item.
The
classifications and their descriptions are below:
FRS 102 requires classification of
financial instruments within the fair value hierarchy be determined
by reference to the source of inputs used to derive the fair value
and the lowest level input that is significant to the fair value
measurement as a whole. The classifications and their descriptions
are below:
Level 1
The unadjusted quoted price in an
active market for identical assets or liabilities that the entity
can access at the measurement date.
Level 2
Holdings in companies with no quoted
prices. Inputs other than quoted prices included within Level 1
that are observable (i.e. developed using market data) for the
asset or liability, either directly or indirectly.
Level 3
Inputs are unobservable (i.e. for
which market data is unavailable) for the asset or
liability.
The classification of the Company's
investments held at fair value is detailed in the table
below:
|
30 June
2024
|
31 December
2023
|
|
Level 1
|
Level 2
|
Level 3
|
Total
|
Level 1
|
Level 2
|
Level 3
|
Total
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Investments at fair value through
profit or loss
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
- Quoted
|
1,187,503
|
-
|
-
|
1,187,503
|
1,295,847
|
-
|
-
|
1,295,847
|
|
1,187,503
|
-
|
-
|
1,187,503
|
1,295,847
|
-
|
-
|
1,295,847
|
At the period end the Company had no
unlisted holding (2023: none).
4
Income
|
Six months
|
Six months
|
|
ended
|
ended
|
|
30 June
2024
|
30 June
2023
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Dividends from UK listed
investments
|
910
|
889
|
Dividends from overseas listed
investments
|
11,485
|
11,311
|
Bank interest received
|
272
|
369
|
Total Income
|
12,667
|
12,569
|
Dividends from overseas listed
investments includes special dividends classified as revenue of
£382,000 (2023: £75,000).
5
Finance costs
|
Six months ended 30 June
2024
|
Six months ended 30 June
2023
|
|
Revenue
|
Capital
|
Total
|
Revenue
|
Capital
|
Total
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Interest
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Interest on bank loans and
repaid
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
revolving credit facility
("RCF")
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
383
|
1,149
|
1,532
|
Interest on current RCF
|
240
|
749
|
989
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Interest on Notes
|
309
|
897
|
1,206
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
|
549
|
1,646
|
2,195
|
383
|
1,149
|
1,532
|
Direct finance costs
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Bank loans and repaid RCF
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
2
|
6
|
8
|
RCF
|
14
|
40
|
54
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Notes
|
3
|
10
|
13
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
|
17
|
50
|
67
|
2
|
6
|
8
|
Total
|
566
|
1,696
|
2,262
|
385
|
1,155
|
1,540
|
The Notes and revolving credit
facility arrangement costs amounted to £252,000 and £217,000
respectively. The direct finance costs are amortised over the life
of each of the Notes and the RCF.
6
Taxation
Analysis of charge in the period
|
Six months ended 30 June
2024
|
Six months ended 30 June
2023
|
|
Revenue
|
Capital
|
Total
|
Revenue
|
Capital
|
Total
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Overseas taxation
|
1,461
|
-
|
1,461
|
1,142
|
-
|
1,142
|
Increase on CGT Provision
|
-
|
16
|
16
|
-
|
295
|
295
|
Taxation
|
1,461
|
16
|
1,477
|
1,142
|
295
|
1,437
|
The capital gains tax provision
represents an estimate of the amount of tax provisionally payable
by the Company on direct investment in Indian equities. It is
calculated based on the long-term or short-term nature of the
investments and the unrealised gain thereon at the applicable tax
rate at the period end.
Movements on the capital gains tax provision for the
period
|
Six months
|
Six months
|
|
ended
|
ended
|
|
30 June
2024
|
30 June
2023
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Provision brought forward
|
40
|
169
|
Increase in provision in
period
|
16
|
295
|
Provision carried forward
|
56
|
464
|
7
Return per share
|
Six months
|
Six months
|
|
ended
|
ended
|
|
30 June
2024
|
30 June
2023
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Revenue return after taxation
(£'000)
|
8,645
|
9,091
|
Capital return after taxation
(£'000)
|
(24,440)
|
34,443
|
Return after tax (£'000)
|
(15,795)
|
43,534
|
Weighted average number of ordinary
shares
|
269,884,823
|
303,095,575
|
The return per ordinary share is
based on the above totals of revenue and capital and the weighted
average number of ordinary shares in issue during each
period.
There is no dilution to return per
share as the Company has only ordinary shares in issue.
8
Notes and revolving credit facilities
The Company has €60 million of
privately placed notes ("Notes").
The Notes consist of three tranches
as follows:
·
€20m maturing on 1 September
2030 with a floating coupon of Euribor + 1.35%
·
€30m maturing on 1 September
2033 with a fixed coupon of 4.48%; and
·
€10m maturing on 1 September
2035 with a fixed coupon of 4.63%.
The Company has a two-year £80m
multi-currency revolving credit facility ("RCF") with The Bank of
Nova Scotia, expiring on 6 September 2025. An amount equivalent to
£35m was drawn down in Euro under the RCF with a floating interest
rate priced at the relevant reference rate plus a margin of 1.6%.
The RCF is secured by a floating charge over the assets of the
Company and this floating charge has been extended to the Notes, so
that the two lenders rank pari passu.
A summary of the Company's
borrowings follows.
|
|
30 June
2024
|
31 December
2023
|
|
|
Loan
|
|
Loan
|
|
|
|
currency
|
Bookcost
|
currency
|
Bookcost
|
|
Interest
rate
|
amount
|
£'000
|
amount
|
£'000
|
Notes - Fixed and floating rate
|
|
|
|
|
|
Series A - Floating 2030
|
Euribor +
1.35%
|
€20,000,000
|
16,884
|
€20,000,000
|
17,263
|
Series B - Fixed 2033
|
4.48%
|
€30,000,000
|
25,321
|
€30,000,000
|
25,892
|
Series C - Fixed 2035
|
4.63%
|
€10,000,000
|
8,440
|
€10,000,000
|
8,630
|
|
|
|
50,645
|
|
51,785
|
RCF- floating rate
|
|
|
|
|
|
Non-sterling
|
Six month
EURIBOR +1.6%
|
€40,872,000
|
34,518
|
€40,943,000
|
35,312
|
|
|
|
85,163
|
|
87,097
|
The maturity profile of the Notes
and Revolving Credit Facility as follows:
|
|
31 December
|
|
30 June
2024
|
2023
|
|
Bookcost
|
Bookcost
|
Payable after more than 1 year
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Notes payable after more than 1
year
|
50,645
|
51,785
|
RCF payable after more than 1
year
|
34,518
|
35,312
|
|
85,163
|
87,097
|
9
Share capital
|
Six months ended 30 June
2024
|
Six months ended 30 June
2023
|
|
Number
|
£'000
|
Number
|
£'000
|
Issued and fully paid shares of 10p
each
|
|
|
|
|
Brought forward
|
281,115,039
|
28,111
|
304,167,039
|
30,416
|
Shares bought back and held in
treasury
|
(21,774,810)
|
(2,177)
|
(4,835,000)
|
(484)
|
Carried forward
|
259,340,229
|
25,934
|
299,332,039
|
29,932
|
Treasury shares of 10p
each
|
|
|
|
|
Brought forward
|
24,508,500
|
2,451
|
1,456,500
|
146
|
Shares bought back and held in
treasury
|
21,774,810
|
2,177
|
4,835,000
|
484
|
Carried forward
|
46,283,310
|
4,628
|
6,291,500
|
630
|
Share capital
|
305,623,539
|
30,562
|
305,623,539
|
30,562
|
During the period, 21,774,810
ordinary shares (30 June 2023: 4,835,000) have been bought back and
held in treasury at a total cost of £85,285,000 after purchase
costs of £577,000 (30 June 2023: £20,029,000 and £83,000,
respectively).
Since the period end and up to 7
August 2024, the latest practicable date before publication of this
report, a further 2,022,368 ordinary shares have been bought back
and held in treasury at a total cost of £7,892,000 after purchase
costs of £47,000.
10
Net asset value per ordinary share
|
30 June
|
31 December
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
|
|
Net asset value ("NAV")
(£'000)
|
1,113,421
|
1,222,484
|
Ordinary shares in issue (excluding
shares held in treasury)
|
259,340,229
|
281,115,039
|
NAV
per ordinary share with debt at bookcost
|
429.33p
|
434.87p
|
A reconciliation of shareholders'
funds using debt at fair value is shown in the Alternative
Performance Measures in the Half-yearly Report.
11
Dividends
(a)
Dividends paid in the period
|
2024
|
|
2023
|
|
|
RATE
|
£'000
|
RATE
|
£'000
|
Second interim in lieu of final for
the previous year
|
2.90p
|
7,983
|
2.50p
|
7,604
|
(b)
Dividends payable in respect of the period, which is the basis on
which the requirements of s1158-1159 of the Corporation Tax Act
2010 are considered
|
2024
|
|
2023
|
|
|
RATE
|
£'000
|
RATE
|
£'000
|
First interim for the current
year1
|
1.8p
|
4,632
|
1.70p
|
5,032
|
1 The first interim dividend payable
is based upon 257,317,861 ordinary shares, which is the number of
shares in issue on the 7 August 2024, being
the latest practical date before the publication of this
Half-yearly Financial Report.
12
Transactions with the Manager and related party
transactions
The Company's transactions with
related parties in the period were with the Directors. There have
been no material transactions between the Company and its Directors
during the half year other than amounts paid to them in respect of
expenses and remuneration for which there are no outstanding
amounts payable at the half year period end.
Fees payable to the Manager are
shown in the Income Statement. At 30 June 2024 the fee outstanding
to the Manager was £2,196,000 (31 December 2023: £2,225,000; 30
June 2023: £2,397,000).
13
Status of this report
These financial statements are not
the Company's statutory accounts for the purposes of section 434 of
the Companies Act 2006. They are unaudited. The Half-yearly
Financial Report will be made available to the public at the
registered office of the Company. The report will be available in
electronic format on the Manager's website (www.impaxam.com) and
the Company's website,
(www.impaxenvironmentalmarkets.co.uk).
The information for the year ended
31 December 2023 has been extracted from the last published audited
financial statements, unless otherwise stated. The audited
financial statement has been delivered to the Registrar of
Companies. BDO LLP reported on those accounts and their report was
unqualified, did not draw attention to any matters by way of
emphasis and did not contain a statement under sections 498(2) or
498(3) of the Companies Act 2006.
The Half-yearly Financial Report was
approved by the Board on 9 August 2024.
For further information
contact:
Impax Asset Management
|
p.french@impaxam.com
|
Paul French
|
0203 912 3032
|
|
|
Montfort Communications
|
iem@montfort.london
|
Gay Collins/Nita Shah/Lesley
Wang
|
07798 626282
|
|
|
Apex Listed Companies Services (UK) Limited
|
020 3327 9720
|
Company Secretary
|
|
END