LEI:
21380048Q8UABVMAG916
MITON
UK MICROCAP TRUST PLC
(the "Company")
2024
Annual Results, Dividend announcement and Notice of Annual General
Meeting
Miton UK Microcap Trust plc ("MINI" or the "Trust") announces its
annual results for the year ended 30 April
2024 and the publication of its annual report and accounts
for the same period, which includes the notice of its 2024
Annual General
Meeting.
SUMMARY
OF RESULTS
|
Year
to
30
April
2024
|
Year
to
30
April
2023
|
Total net
assets attributable to equity shareholders including fair value of
warrants (£000)
|
43,297
|
60,754
|
Statutory
NAV including fair value of warrants*
|
56.29p
|
64.20p
|
Adjusted
NAV per Ordinary Share*
|
55.79p
|
64.20p
|
Share
price (last close)
|
50.50p
|
59.50p
|
Discount
to Adjusted NAV*
|
(9.48)%
|
(7.32)%
|
Investment
income
|
£0.9m
|
£0.8m
|
Revenue
return per Ordinary Share
|
0.09p
|
0.03p
|
Total
return per Ordinary Share including value of warrants
|
(9.17)р
|
(28.93)p
|
Ongoing
charges#*
|
1.99%
|
1.72%
|
Ordinary
Shares in issue
|
76,923,603
|
94,638,561
|
*Alternative
Performance Measure ("APM"). Details provided in the Glossary of
the Annual Report. The Adjusted NAV is the Statutory NAV presented
in the financial statements adjusted to exclude the fair value of
the warrants held by the Trust
#The
ongoing charges are calculated in accordance with AIC
guidelines.
CHAIRMAN'S
STATEMENT
The report
covers the full year to 30 April
2024, a period which was, in football parlance, a game of
two halves. In the first half to end of October 2023, the Trust's Adjusted Net Asset
Value ("Adjusted NAV") fell by 15.5%, from 64.20p to 54.10p. The
second half saw a tentative recovery with the Adjusted NAV rising
by 3.1% to 55.79p. This somewhat anaemic return was greatly
outpaced by other indices, as local selling was offset hardly at
all by few corporate buybacks within microcaps, and which led to
UK-quoted microcap valuations declining even further. Over the
period as a whole, therefore, the Trust's Adjusted NAV fell 12.9%,
compared to a rise in the Deutsche Numis Smaller Companies 1000
Index of 7.2%. The vast majority of UK microcaps were already
standing on unusually low valuations even prior to their share
price weakness over this past year. The low average Price to Book
of holdings in the portfolio highlights the value to be found in
owning shares in the Trust.
Earnings
and Dividends
Earnings
for the year, after costs, were 0.09p per share (2023: 0.03p) on
the revenue account. Earnings on the capital account consisted of a
loss of 9.26p per share (2023: loss of 28.96p). Earnings on the
revenue account remain depressed as microcap companies seek to
retain cash rather than paying it out in dividends to shareholders.
As far as setting the dividend is concerned, the Directors have
always given the Manager maximum flexibility to follow which ever
course is believed to lead to the best results for our
shareholders. As Directors, we regard the dividend as a useful
by-product of the investment process but not a target in itself.
This year, your Board is recommending a final dividend of 0.09p per
ordinary share, reflecting the revenue for the year. Subject to
approval by shareholders at the AGM, this will be paid on
25 October 2024 to shareholders on
the register on 27 September
2024.
Performance
With the
dearth of buying interest in UK microcaps over the last three
years, marginal sellers have dominated the direction of share
prices. Every excuse in the book has been rolled out for why
institutions and individuals should not buy UK equities - a close
Scottish referendum, Brexit, four Prime Ministers in five years,
the UK's lack of exposure to technology stocks, an egregious 0.5%
stamp duty on the purchase of equities not paid by investors in
other first world stock markets, the sudden imposition of an
additional tax on North Sea oil producers, a major land war in
Europe and the ongoing conflict in
the Middle East. To add insult to
injury, the investment trust sector has been discriminated against
by the iniquitous double counting of fees such that wealth managers
find real difficulties explaining why they should be buying closed
end vehicles for their clients, given the apparently high level of
fees.
Given the
continuing mergers of wealth managers, the barriers to liquidity
are now so high that in order to attract the selector's eye,
investment trusts need to have market capitalisations of £1bn+.
There are precious few of those around. The Association of
Investment Companies (AIC) is trying to get the Financial Conduct
Authority (FCA) to reverse the cost disclosure position but the
latter does not appear to grasp the urgency, whilst the government
seems unable to appreciate the seriousness resulting from the UK
falling from its position as the premier global centre for finance.
Many large companies are voting with their feet, seeking listings
in the US, where valuations are far higher and the climate more
benign - even the mighty Shell is contemplating such a
move.
At the end
of April, for example, it was reported that Coutts & Co. was
cutting its UK equity allocation by almost £2bn from 33% to 2%,
even below the UK's now feeble 3% weighting in global equity
indices. The consequence is that UK equities are almost wholly
unloved and, as at the end of April
2024, were trading on 12x forward price earnings ratio vs
the world on 17x and the US on 21x, (source: Bloomberg). The Price
to Book ratios are even more extreme with the UK on 1.6x, the world
on 2.7x and the US on a lofty 4.4x, whilst the UK also offers a
meaningfully higher dividend yield at 3.8% than both the US (1.4%)
and world markets (2.1%). I thought that the nadir of selling of UK
equities was reached a year ago but I was sadly mistaken; as the
chart below shows the rate of selling has in fact accelerated.
Capitalism abhors a vacuum and the recent high and rising level of
corporate take overs of listed companies demonstrates the value to
be found in the UK. Canny contrarians are buying UK equities at
what appear to be knock down prices.
Prospects
The last
three years have been incredibly frustrating for the management
teams of numerous UK quoted companies and for our shareholders. UK
microcap share prices have steadily declined, even whilst the
underlying companies have often continued to deliver results in
line with expectations.
Whilst
this is disappointing, the Trust was set up because quoted
microcaps possess extraordinary upside potential. When microcaps
succeed, sometimes their share prices can appreciate very
dramatically. We liken this to an option-value upside, where the
term of the option is open-ended, and its cost comes almost for
free, embedded within the quoted microcap share price.
Currently
the media is marvelling because Nvidia has delivered an annualised
return of 86% in sterling terms over the last four years. And yet,
the Trust's holding in Yü Group (a microcap exemplar), has
appreciated at an annualised rate over the same period of 130%. In
short, Yü Group's share price has risen some 27-fold, compared with
Nvidia which has risen 11-fold.
Furthermore,
after Nvidia's rise, it has moved up to a high-expectation
valuation (Price to Book of 51.8x), whereas Yü Group is still on a
modest valuation - even now its Price to Book is only 6.2x. Thus,
Yü Group still retains bags more upside potential, even in the
short-term.
Microcap
share prices generally have been severely repressed over the last
three years, so these abnormally large upsides have been more
infrequent. To catch the discerning investor's eye, small stocks
have to be exceptional. Yü Group is a good example and is currently
one of the multi-baggers in the Company's portfolio.
Hopefully,
by the time that you read this, the green shoots in UK equities
which started emerging in mid-April, will have blossomed into
something more substantial. The UK is now officially out of
recession and `animal spirits' are evident. After largely
flatlining since 2000, the UK stock market has recently broken out
on the upside. Rather similar to the Japanese stock market, we
believe this is the start of a new longer-term trend. In our view,
the mainstream UK stocks are now set to enter a period when they
will outperform their international comparators.
But the
greatest upside potential has always lain within UK-quoted
microcaps - and they now are starting from shockingly low
valuations. Those that succeed from here have the potential to
perform so much better than large caps. The old stock exchange
adage that `Elephants don't gallop' is normally the rule. If the UK
stock market itself may be starting a long-term trend of
outperformance, and if UK microcaps outperform the UK majors as
they have done historically, then they are set to outperform
international comparatives.
In
conclusion, it is hard to overstate the scale of the current upside
potential for the Miton UK Microcap Trust in absolute terms, as
well in the context of other equities internationally.
Share
Issuance
As the
shares did not trade at a premium to the prevailing Adjusted NAV
during the year under report, there were no opportunities to issue
shares. We will be seeking approval at the AGM in September 2024 to renew this useful facility.
Issuing shares at a premium to Adjusted NAV is to the benefit of
all shareholders as it dilutes the fixed charges which the Company
bears and thus lowers the Ongoing Charges Figure
("OCF").
Share
Redemption
Each year
your Directors offer the facility for shareholders to redeem their
holdings in part or whole, at or close to the prevailing Adjusted
Net Asset Value. The Directors are offering this facility again
this year and the timetable is laid out in the annual report.
Should the redemption be substantial, then the Directors may take
the decision to form a separate redemption pool, as we did last
year, and it may take a number of weeks, if not months, to
liquidate the pool carefully without disadvantaging the remaining
shareholders, or indeed the exiting ones. Thanks to microcaps
having been out of favour for almost three years, the Trust has
suffered heavy redemptions over each of the last two years, being
13.4% in 2022 and 18.7% in 2023. We have in place an agreement with
the Trust's managers, Premier Miton, that they will rebate their
ongoing management fee to the extent required for the Trust to
maintain an ongoing charges ratio of no more than 2%. The Trust
thus has the facility to remain viable at a lower level of market
capitalisation than most investors would believe possible. It is
also worth noting that Premier Miton's fee is based on the Trust's
market capitalisation and not its Adjusted NAV, which, when it is
trading at a significant discount, is of material benefit to
shareholders.
Board
Refreshment
Your
Directors have a policy that a non-executive Director should serve
for no more than nine years, from the date of first election. A
well-structured waterfall of directors' retirements is always
difficult when coming after a company has been launched, as
directors should retire nine years after the first election by
shareholders. Davina Walter will
take over from Peter Dicks as Senior
Independent Director on 1 May 2024.
Louise Bonham will take over from
Peter on 1 September 2024 as Chair of
the Audit Committee, whilst Peter will be on hand to help with the
redemption process and with the interim results until he retires
from the Company at the end of December
2024.
Environmental,
Social and Governance (ESG) issues
Your
Manager follows Premier Miton's responsible investing policy, which
is to consider Environmental, Social and Governance issues and
actively to engage in the investment process with investee
companies, in order to deliver improved outcomes for all
stakeholders and to take an active approach to voting on company
resolutions at annual general meetings of investee companies.
Premier Miton has been a signatory of the UN Principles for
Responsible Investment since January
2020, an organisation which encourages and supports its
signatories to incorporate ESG factors into investment and
ownership decisions. Premier Miton also adopts a banned weapons
exclusion and utilises third party data to maintain a list of such
companies.
Change
of Service Providers
As
reported in the interim report, following due process, evidenced by
extensive due diligence and interviews, on 4
March 2024, the Trust appointed subsidiaries of Northern
Trust as company secretary and registered office, fund
administrator and depositary, resulting in considerable savings for
shareholders.
Annual
General Meeting
The Annual
General Meeting of the Trust will be held at 11.30am on Tuesday 24
September 2024 at the offices of Stephenson Harwood, 1
Finsbury Circus, London EC2M 7SH.
Your Directors look forward to this opportunity to meet
shareholders and especially retail investors, as there are few
other opportunities to engage with the latter. Aside from the
formal business of the AGM, Gervais
Williams and Martin Turner
will give a presentation on the Trust's prospects and at the end of
proceedings we will be offering a sandwich lunch. We hope that as
many shareholders as possible will be able to attend and would
encourage those wishing to do so to register their interest via a
link that will be available on the Trust's website,
www.mitonukmicrocaptrust.com, in
the preceding six weeks. There you will also find additional
details regarding the Trust including factsheets and a range of
regularly updated videos, podcasts and articles.
In
conclusion, as I wrote in my last report, the Directors are
grateful for your tolerance in holding the Trust's shares over what
has been a fairly dismal period and we are hopeful that your
patience will be amply rewarded in the not-too-distant future. Two
of your Directors added materially to their holdings over the year,
demonstrating their confidence in the long term prospects for the
Company.
Ashe
Windham
Chairman
11 July 2024
INVESTMENT
MANAGER'S REPORT
Which
fund managers have day-to-day responsibility for the Trust's
portfolio?
Since the
launch of the Trust in April 2015,
the day-to-day management of the Trust's portfolio has consistently
been carried out by Gervais Williams
and Martin Turner.
Gervais Williams
Gervais
joined Miton in March 2011 and is
Head of Equities at Premier Miton. He has been an equity fund
manager since 1985, including 17 years at Gartmore. He was named
Fund Manager of the Year by What Investment? In 2014. Gervais is
President of the Quoted Companies Alliance and a member of the AIM
Advisory Council.
Martin Turner
Martin
joined Miton in May 2011. He and
Gervais have had a close working relationship since 2004, with
complementary expertise that led them to back a series of
successful companies. Martin qualified as a Chartered Accountant
with Arthur Anderson and had senior
roles and extensive experience at Merrill Lynch and Collins
Stewart.
What
were the principal stock contributors and detractors in the
portfolio over the year to April
2024?
Over the
last three years, including throughout the year to April 2024, institutional investors have sought
to reduce their holdings of UK equities, so that capital could be
invested elsewhere. Hence, there have been persistent sellers of
microcap shares that have often outnumbered the buyers, such that
most microcap share prices have fallen, even when their prospects
remained unchanged.
However,
occasionally, the prospects of a quoted microcap improve so
significantly that even though its share price might appreciate by
many multiples, its valuation still remains relatively modest. With
the overhang of quoted microcaps sellers, this outcome has been
somewhat more frequent than usual this year. The best example in
this period was Yü Group, which appreciated three-fold over the
year to April 2024 and yet still
stands on an overlooked valuation. Whilst the Trust's holding in Yü
Group was trimmed to keep its percentage of the portfolio below
10%, it still appears to have an unusually attractive risk/reward
ratio at its current share price. Serabi Gold, a gold mining
company in Brazil, was somewhat
similar, having appreciated by 130% over the year.
Given the
generally unfavourable background, the share prices of portfolio
holdings that chose to raise additional capital were often
particularly weak. A good example is CyanConnode, a market leader
in Indian smart meters. The Trust held this in its portfolio
because the Indian government is tendering to install 250 million
meters over the coming years. In November
2023, the company raised £2.5m to increase its component
inventory, anticipating that this would help it to win a larger
proportion of its tenders. Even though CyanConnode has continued to
meet market expectations, with the additional share issuance, its
share price fell 53% over the year to April
2024. Whilst corporate prospects may have been enhanced by
raising additional capital, the holding was the worst detractor in
terms of the Trust's Adjusted NAV return this year.
Alongside,
there are always a number of portfolio holdings where prospects
deteriorate, and which are therefore sold from the portfolio,
typically crystalising losses. This year the most significant of
these were Cap-XX, Ethernity Networks, FireAngel, Graft Polymer,
MusicMagpie, Saietta and Velocys. In addition, the management team
of Accrol Group recommended a takeover offer, even though it was
only at a modest premium to its share price. They feared global
competition setting up in the UK would degrade their
profitability.
In a
normal year, when buyers and sellers of microcap holdings are in
balance, there will always be a number of microcap share prices
that appreciate significantly. With microcap transactions being out
of balance, however, these were comparatively scarce in the year
under review. In addition, even microcaps that excelled did not
necessarily appreciate in valuation as much as might be expected.
Even so, where valuations of individual holdings moved well above
others, these were sold, giving the potential to reinvest capital
in other stocks standing on extremely overlooked valuations. For
this reason, positions in Corero Network Securities, DX Group,
Journeo, Oxford BioDyanmics, React Group and Sureserve were sold
during the year.
In
summary, with the persistent sellers of microcap shares over the
year to April 2024, their share
prices have been unusually weak even when their prospects remained
unchanged. This is the principal reason why the Adjusted NAV of the
Trust fell 12.9% over the year.
What
are the main factors that have driven the Trust's returns since it
first listed in April
2015?
As
highlighted in previous annual reports, the best performing part of
the UK stock market since 1955 (the start of the relevant data
series) has been the microcap sector.
When the
investment universe is narrowed further, solely to include
microcaps standing on undemanding valuations (typically determined
by low Price to Book ratios), the scale of their outperformance is
even more marked. With this background in mind, the Trust's
portfolio principally invests in UK-quoted microcaps standing on
what we consider to be overlooked valuations at the time of
purchase. When these microcaps succeed, their share prices can
appreciate by many multiples of the purchase price.
The
globalisation trend was already declining when the Trust was set up
in April 2015, and we anticipated
that it would gradually fade. Whilst economic trends have indeed
evolved as expected, governments and central banks have been
fearful of unwinding the debt burden, so have adopted
unconventional policies to keep the prior stock market status quo
in place. This has led to perverse outcomes. Whereas the smaller
company effect is near-ubiquitous, recent policy gymnastics have
boosted megacap outperformance dramatically. Although this pattern
is likely to prove unsustainable over time, it has had the
unwelcome side effect of making market conditions for quoted
microcaps increasingly hostile since the Trust's listing in
April 2015.
Over
recent years, the cost of raising additional microcap capital has
typically become far more onerous, as investors have become
increasingly cautious about committing additional capital to assets
that continue to underperform. Thus, quoted microcaps seeking to
raise additional capital have either contemplated issuing new
shares at a discount to their subnormal valuations or chosen to
live without additional capital. While issuing additional capital
typically enhances prospects, many microcaps have preferred to grow
at a slower pace over recent years rather than issue heavily
dilutive new capital. Microcaps that have run out of cash meanwhile
have often been obliged to raise new capital irrespective of its
dilutive effect. In these cases, the prospective returns for
existing shareholders will have been downgraded, other than for
those that invested additional capital and therefore maintained
their percentage ownership.
For these
reasons, over the nine years since issue, the share prices of many
UK-quoted microcaps in the Trust's portfolio have suffered a
valuation headwind, even amongst those that were successful. Those
that disappointed have typically delivered poorer returns than
normal.
In spite
of these severe microcap headwinds, the Adjusted NAV of the Trust
has nevertheless modestly risen since inception in April 2015, and outperformed the return of the
Deutsche Numis Alternative Markets Index. Whilst the portfolio does
include a list of holdings that have delivered poor returns, there
are many others that have generated excellent returns despite the
adverse microcap conditions. Further up the market capitalisation
scale, conditions have typically been less hostile, which explains
why the returns of the comparative indices are generally better
than that of the Trust's Adjusted NAV total return. In addition,
the returns of larger market capitalisations stocks by definition
have larger index weightings, and hence skew the overall return of
the comparative indices further upwards when they
outperform.
Total
returns of the Trust and various comparative indices since launch
in April 2015
|
%
|
Deutsche
Numis All Share Index
|
60.8
|
Deutsche
Numis Smaller Companies Index
|
45.4
|
Deutsche
Numis SC 1000 Index
|
55.3
|
Deutsche
Numis Alternative Markets Index
|
12.0
|
MINI
adjusted NAV
|
16.2
|
Source:
Morningstar
In
the light of the substantial decline in the Trust's Adjusted NAV
over the last three years, have its longer-term prospects
deteriorated?
The period
of globalisation can be characterised as favouring `bigness', which
may explain why the US stock market has greatly outpaced others
over recent decades. During globalisation, the valuations of other
exchanges such as the UK have trailed behind the US comparatives.
This position is even more extreme within UK-quoted microcaps,
where over the last three years valuations have fallen to what we
consider to be absurdly low levels.
Over the
last decade or so however, the electorate has come to distrust the
compromises that come with globalisation. This was evident as long
ago as 2016 with the Brexit and Trump votes. Thereafter, the
logistics nightmares of the pandemic have made the compromises that
come with globalisation all the more prominent, and electoral
pressure for change has become more persistent.
Beyond
globalisation, policies such as reshoring manufacturing, which tend
to boost inflation, are expected to lead to a much more challenging
economic outlook. Interestingly, we believe changes like this
favour companies funded with risk capital, such as those listed on
stock markets, over those principally funded by debt, like private
equities. Quoted companies generating cash surpluses (such as those
that dominate the UK mainstream stock market) now have the
potential to outperform greatly. In this context, we are not
surprised that this is the moment when the mainstream UK stock
market has broken out of its trading range on the upside. This is
all the more significant given that it has done so at a time when
numerous local investors have been aggressively reducing their UK
equity weightings. Breakouts such as that of the UK tend to bring
in new participants from overseas, boosting the outperformance
trend further. As local selling moderates and in time ceases, we
anticipate the new UK outperformance trend will accelerate further
and become persistent.
Furthermore,
we also anticipate that market trends will start to favour small
cap stocks over large ones, in which the UK exchange is better
represented than most other markets. Hence, far from being worried
about the Trust's prospects deteriorating after its recent
underperformance, we believe its upside potential is now even
greater than before, and more immediate. In part, this is due to
UK-quoted microcaps standing on absurdly low valuations, but also
because we anticipate that the current political and geopolitical
trends will favour UK-quoted equities, and most particularly
UK-quoted microcaps in future.
Will
institutional investors ever return to the UK quoted microcap
investment universe?
Inflationary
pressures were benign during the period of globalisation, and asset
valuations in general rose considerably. In addition, the opening
up of international trade also enhanced world growth, so most
businesses expanded. Overall, the returns of many assets have been
unusually strong during globalisation.
As the
favourable pattern persisted over decades, stock market returns
were routinely well above inflation, and additional returns from
smallcap portfolios became apparently optional for institutions.
Indeed, institutions progressively favoured concentrating capital
in large and megacap equities because they came with abundant
market liquidity. Hence, although quoted smallcaps may have
outperformed the majors during globalisation, the commercial
returns from all sorts of mainstream assets were so copious that
most institutional investors steadily reduced their smallcap
participation. The adverse pattern has been most pronounced within
the UK-quoted microcap investment universe, where the vast majority
of capital is now provided by private investors. Amongst
institutional investors, even those with dedicated UK smallcap
strategies now routinely disregard quoted companies below a minimum
market capitalisation, say, of £150m.
Recent
elections have led to a Balkanisation of international
relationships, and globalisation is now in retreat. There are fewer
opportunities to sell goods across all international geographies,
which constrains opportunity for many global businesses.
Furthermore, the reshoring of manufactured goods, and greater
immigration controls add to inflationary pressures, and hence are
also expected to reduce asset valuations. The return on mainstream
stock markets by implication may be much poorer in the future.
Given that many quoted megacaps are currently standing on
incredibly high valuations, many stock markets around the world may
fail to deliver a commercial return for many years.
Even if
UK-quoted microcaps were to start outperforming very substantially
over the coming quarters, we doubt that institutions would
immediately crowd into them. However, if the mainstream indices
were to fail to deliver a commercial return for a long period, in
time we do expect institutional capital to be reallocated into
areas that are outperforming.
Number
of quoted companies in the UK below and above £150m market
capitalisation
|
No of
Companies
|
|
<£150m
|
538
|
Combined
market capitalisation £14bn
|
>£150m
|
468
|
Combined
market capitalisation £2,296bn
|
Source:
Premier Miton
The
smallcap investment universe is typically defined as comprising the
bottom ten percent of market capitalisations of the overall stock
market, so an allocation from the large cap ninety percent, into
the smallcap ten percent tends to amplify its performance.
Furthermore, as microcaps are typically defined as being the bottom
two percent, an allocation from the large and smallcap ninety-eight
percent into the microcap two percent can be expected to have an
even greater amplification impact on performance. Alongside, as UK
mainstream companies have fallen to undemanding valuations during
globalisation, and UK-quoted microcaps have fallen to absurdly low
valuations, the new outperformance trends have the potential to
persist in scale for years.
For all
these reasons, we expect UK-quoted microcaps to outperform greatly
global large and megacaps, in a new trend that is boosted further
by institutional capital being allocated increasingly further down
the market capitalisation range. Even a tiny incremental allocation
of institutional capital would have a major impact on UK-quoted
microcap returns. And as the cost of microcap capital becomes less
onerous, we foresee they will enhance their returns yet further
through share issuance. Over time, the more that quoted microcaps
outperform, the greater will be the willingness of institutional
capital to participate. We anticipate something of a virtuous
spiral from here, with additional institutional capital allocations
being matched by an accelerating pattern of UK-quoted microcap
outperformance in a new trend that could last for
decades!
What
are the prospects for the Trust?
In the
sections above, we outline why we believe the current political and
geopolitical trends are now set to favour quoted equities and
specifically UK-quoted equities from here. In addition, we also
outline why we believe market trends will now start to favour
smallness over bigness. When these factors are set in the context
of UK-quoted microcaps that are currently standing on unusually low
valuations, the reasoning for being upbeat about the Trust's
prospects should be obvious.
Even after
setting out these arguments however, we believe that the full
upside potential of the Trust's strategy is still not fully
captured. The issue is that investors' expectations are currently
framed in the context of a stock market that has become
increasingly hostile towards UK-quoted microcaps. Investors may
gauge the ultimate upside potential of the Trust with reference to
the return from a holding such as Yü Group, whose share price has
appreciated 21-fold between first purchase in May/June 2020 and the end of April 2024. This is twice as fast as that of
Nvidia for example (by far the best performing US-listed member of
the Magnificent Seven over that period) and hence may be assumed to
represent a UK-quoted microcap at its best.
And yet,
when UK-quoted microcap market conditions are less hostile,
microcaps like Yü Group may have even greater upside potential. To
repeat, many UK-quoted microcaps currently stand on very overlooked
valuations. So, even after Yü Group's astronomical returns, for
example, its Price to Book ratio is still only 6.2x, whereas that
of Nvidia is over 50x (even though it has delivered lesser, though
still stellar, returns). In short, without wishing to debate the
relative investment merits of Yü Group versus Nvidia, we believe
that if Yü Group's share price were to rise to a valuation that
fairly reflects its prospects, it would offer plenty of upside
potential from here. As it is, following its recent deal with
Shell, Yü Group no longer needs to commit tens of millions of
pounds in cash collateral when it hedges the energy price for its
customers. With Yü Group's collateral constraints now lifted, it
can now take the brakes off its full growth potential and hence a
potential valuation that fairly reflects its prospects may now be
even greater than it was a few months ago.
The bottom
line is that when UK-quoted market conditions become less hostile,
we anticipate that the Trust's returns have considerable potential.
There was a glimpse of its scale when, over only a fourteen-month
period, the Trust's Adjusted NAV rose from 37.28p on
19 March
2020 to 107.5p on 10 May
2021.
Now that
the mainstream UK stock market has broken out of its historic
trading range on the upside, we believe that local market
conditions are improving. Stock market breakouts tend to bring in
new participants from overseas, boosting the outperformance trend
further and help it become embedded. When institutional capital
starts to be allocated further down the market capitalisation
range, market conditions within UK-quoted microcaps will normalise
again and investors should start to recognise the full potential of
the Trust's strategy. The key point is that even tiny increments of
institutional capital have the potential to make a giant difference
to UK-quoted microcaps market conditions, and hence the scale of
their return potential.
In
summary, the Trust's strategy seeks to pick out stocks that have
the potential to appreciate by many multiples of the original share
price, and in our view the prospects for the Trust's UK-quoted
microcap strategy are now the best they have been for over thirty
years. Enough said.
Gervais Williams and Martin
Turner
11 July 2024
PORTFOLIO
INFORMATION
As
at 30 April 2024
Rank
|
Company
|
Sector
& main activity
|
Valuation
£'000
|
%
of net assets
|
1
|
Yü
Group
|
Utilities
|
3,967
|
9.2
|
2
|
MTI
Wireless Edge
|
Telecommunications
|
1,267
|
2.9
|
3
|
TruFin
|
Financials
|
1,238
|
2.9
|
4
|
Serabi
Gold
|
Basic
Materials
|
1,023
|
2.3
|
5
|
CyanConnode
Holdings (including
warrants)
|
Telecommunications
|
889
|
2.0
|
6
|
Zephyr
Energy (including
warrants)
|
Energy
|
859
|
2.0
|
7
|
Supreme
|
Consumer
Staples
|
834
|
1.9
|
8
|
Braemar
|
Industrials
|
774
|
1.8
|
9
|
Concurrent
Technologies
|
Technology
|
743
|
1.7
|
10
|
UP Global
Sourcing Holdings
|
Consumer
Discretionary
|
732
|
1.7
|
Top
10 investments
|
|
12,326
|
28.4
|
11
|
Frontier
IP Group
|
Industrials
|
705
|
1.6
|
12
|
Ingenta
|
Technology
|
694
|
1.6
|
13
|
Zoo
Digital Group
|
Technology
|
691
|
1.6
|
14
|
STM
Group
|
Financials
|
659
|
1.5
|
15
|
Zinc Media
Group
|
Consumer
Discretionary
|
645
|
1.5
|
16
|
Beeks
Financial Cloud
|
Technology
|
645
|
1.5
|
17
|
Amaroq
Minerals
|
Basic
Materials
|
645
|
1.5
|
18
|
Andrada
Mining
|
Basic
Materials
|
620
|
1.4
|
19
|
Marwyn
Value Investors
|
Financials
|
600
|
1.4
|
20
|
Capital
|
Basic
Materials
|
596
|
1.4
|
Top
20 investments
|
|
18,826
|
43.4
|
21
|
Savannah
Resources
|
Basic
Materials
|
591
|
1.4
|
22
|
Record
Financial Group
|
Financials
|
570
|
1.3
|
23
|
Elemental
Altus Royalties
|
Basic
Materials
|
508
|
1.2
|
24
|
Xeros
Technology
|
Industrials
|
507
|
1.2
|
25
|
CT
Automotive Group
|
Consumer
Discretionary
|
506
|
1.2
|
26
|
Zotefoams
|
Basic
Materials
|
476
|
1.1
|
27
|
Van Elle
Holdings
|
Industrials
|
476
|
1.1
|
28
|
Mercia
Asset Management
|
Financials
|
467
|
1.1
|
29
|
Enteq
Technologies
|
Energy
|
465
|
1.1
|
30
|
Feedback
|
Health
Care
|
465
|
1.1
|
Top
30 investments
|
|
23,857
|
55.2
|
Balance
held in equity investments
(including warrants)
|
|
17,435
|
40.3
|
Total
equity investments
|
|
41,292
|
95.5
|
Listed
Put Option
|
|
|
|
|
UKX - June
2024 5,900 Put
|
|
2
|
0.0
|
Other
net current assets
|
|
2,003
|
4.5
|
Net
assets
|
|
43,297
|
100.0
|
*
Source: Refinitiv. Based on historical yields and therefore not
representative of future yields. Includes special dividends where
known.
Portfolio
as at 30 April
2024
Portfolio
exposure by sector (%)
|
£43.30
million
|
Basic
Materials
|
17.4
|
Technology
|
15.6
|
Financial
Services
|
12.5
|
Industrials
|
10.2
|
Utilities
|
10.0
|
Energy
|
9.1
|
Consumer
Discretionary
|
6.1
|
Telecommunications
|
5.9
|
Cash and
cash equivalents
|
4.5
|
Health
Care
|
4.0
|
Consumer
Staples
|
2.8
|
Real
Estate
|
1.9
|
Actual
annual income by sector (%)
|
£0.64
million
|
Financial
Services
|
32.9
|
Industrials
|
16.2
|
Telecommunications
|
10.2
|
Basic
Materials
|
9.1
|
Consumer
Discretionary
|
7.2
|
Technology
|
5.6
|
Real
Estate
|
4.8
|
Energy
|
4.6
|
Consumer
Staples
|
4.3
|
Utilities
|
3.8
|
Health
Care
|
1.3
|
Net
asset by asset allocation (%)
|
£43.30
million
|
AIM/AQUIS
Exchanges
|
78.7
|
Main
Market
|
15.6
|
Cash and
cash equivalents
|
4.5
|
International
Equities
|
1.2
|
FTSE 100
Option
|
0.0
|
Source:
Refinitiv.
DIVIDEND
RECOMMENDATION
The
Directors have recommended the payment of a final dividend in
respect of the year of 0.09 pence per
Ordinary Share, payable on 25 October
2024 to shareholders who appear on the register on
27 September 2024. The ex-dividend
date will be 26 September
2024.
NOTICE
OF ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING
NOTICE IS
HEREBY GIVEN that the ninth annual general meeting of Miton UK
MicroCap Trust plc (the "Company") will be held on 24 September 2024 at 11.30
am at the offices of Stephenson Harwood LLP. The Notice of
AGM can be found within the full Annual Report and
Accounts.
FURTHER INFORMATION
Miton UK MicroCap Trust plc's Annual Report and Accounts for the
year ended 30 April 2024 (which
includes the notice of meeting for the Company's AGM) will be
available today on
https://www.mitonukmicrocaptrust.com/documents/.
It will also be submitted shortly in full unedited text to the
Financial Conduct Authority's National Storage Mechanism and will
be available for inspection at
data.fca.org.uk/#/nsm/nationalstoragemechanism
in accordance with DTR 6.3.5(1A) of the Financial Conduct
Authority's Disclosure Guidance and Transparency Rules.
Enquiries:
Miton
UK MicroCap Trust plc
Gervais Williams, Martin
Turner, Claire
Long Tel:
020 3714 1500
Peel
Hunt LLP (Broker)
Liz Yong, Huw
Jeremy Tel:
020 7418 8900