TIDMMNL
MANCHESTER AND LONDON INVESTMENT TRUST PLC
(the "Company")
ANNUAL FINANCIAL REPORT FOR THE YEARED 31 JULY 2023
The full Annual Report and Financial Statements for the year ended 31 July 2023
can be found on the Company's website at www.mlcapman.com/manchester-london
-investment-trust-plc.
STRATEGIC REPORT
Financial Summary
Total Return Year to Year to Percentage
31 July 31 July increase/
2023 2022 (decrease)
Total return (£'000) 28,754 (61,162)
Return per Share 71.45p (151.62p)
Total revenue return per Share 3.67p (4.13p)
Dividend per Share 14.00p 21.00p (33.3%)
Capital As at As at Percentage
31 July 31 July increase
2023 2022
Net assets attributable to 221,379 198,546 11.5%
equity Shareholders(i)
(£'000)
Net asset value ("NAV") per 550.79p 493.04p 11.7%
Share
NAV total return(ii)? 15.3% (23.0%)
Benchmark performance - 5.1% 7.3%
total return basis(iii)
Share price 451.00p 389.00p 15.9%
Share price (18.1%) (21.1%)
(discount)/premium to NAV?
(i) NAV as at 31 July 2023 includes a net £289,000 decrease in
respect of share buybacks (2022: £1,509,000).
(ii) Total return including dividends reinvested, as sourced
from Bloomberg.
(iii) The Company's benchmark is the MSCI UK Investable Market
Index ("MXGBIM" or the "benchmark"), as sourced from Bloomberg.
Ongoing Charges Year to Year to
31 July 31 July
2023 2022
Ongoing charges as a percentage of average net assets*? 0.54% 0.67%
* Based on total expenses, excluding finance costs and certain non-recurring
items for the year and average monthly NAV.
? Alternative performance measure. Details provided in the Glossary below.
CHAIRMAN'S STATEMENT
Introduction & Performance
After a difficult financial year in 2022 due to the material rerating of long
duration growth equities, I am pleased to report a solid performance for this
financial year resulting in a NAV total return per Share of 15.3%*. The
Manager's multi-year interest in and studying of Artificial Intelligence put the
fund in a good position to capitalise on the change in tide as 2023 dawned. The
year in financial market terms can be summarised as a story of inflation, how
high will it go, can it be controlled, how sticky will it be? Whilst we have a
better feel for these questions, they are in no way fully answered yet.
Discount Management, PDMRs & Buy Backs
At the year end, the Shares traded at a 18.1% discount to their NAV per Share,
compared to a discount of 21.1% in 2022. The Company bought 77,037 shares into
Treasury during the year. The Board supports the Manager's subjective view that
buying back shares to close discounts is akin to "Canute commanding the tide"
and that the discount will only close when 10 year Treasury yields are clearly
on a downward path and growth shares are back in vogue. We note that the other
Investment Trust Companies that focus on investing in Technology are on similar
free float adjusted discounts. The Directors and the Managers bought a net total
of 168,298 shares (with a value of £0.7m) during the financial year.
Board Composition
The Company notes that more than 20% of votes were cast against the resolution
to re-elect Daniel Wright as a Director of the Company at the last AGM, the
results of which were released on 21 November 2022. The UK Corporate Governance
Code requires companies to provide an update within six months of an AGM where
more than 20% of votes were cast against a resolution.
To better understand shareholders concerns with a view to identifying how such
concerns can be addressed, the Board of the Company via the Manager reached out
to shareholders to gain an understanding of their concerns. Communication was
sent to a number of shareholders including (but not exclusively) Nortrust
Nominees Ltd, Vidacos Nominees Ltd, L&G Asset Management and Fidelity Investment
Services Limited. Excluding State Street Nominees Ltd (who indicated they may
consider altering their voting next year), no conclusive responses were received
from the remaining shareholders of the Company.
Following this feedback, the Manager believes that this vote against my re
-election is due to the composition of the Board being insufficiently gender
diversified. As such, and as noted on page 38 of the full Annual Report, the
Manager has invited any interested parties who can diversify the composition of
the Board and have some knowledge of investment or Technology operations to
indicate their interest in becoming a non-executive director of the Company by
emailing them at ir@mlcapman.com. We remain committed to diversifying the board
with appropriately talented individuals.
Annual General Meeting
Our fifty first Annual General Meeting ("AGM") will be held virtually on 1
November 2023 at 12.00 noon.
We are aware that some Shareholders prefer physical AGMs and, although they are
materially more expensive, we do see some benefits in undertaking a
physical/virtual hybrid every three years or so. However, with our Net Asset
Value per Share below its value as at 31st July 2021, we believe that saving
costs is a more important consideration.
The notice of AGM will be provided to shareholders and will also be available on
the Company's website. Detailed explanations on the formal business and the
resolutions to be proposed at the AGM is contained within the Shareholder
Information section of the Annual Report and Accounts as well as the Notice of
AGM.
Environmental, Social And Governance Matters ("ESG")
We continue to keep abreast of ESG developments. The Manager is responsible for
considering ESG factors in the investment process, while the Board's role is
supervisory.
The portfolio does not contain any stocks in the following sectors:
1. Energy and Fossil Fuels: The energy sector, particularly companies involved
in fossil fuel extraction and production, has been criticised for its
environmental impact due to greenhouse gas emissions, oil spills, and other
pollution-related issues.
2. Mining and Metals: The mining sector allegedly has significant environmental
impacts due to resource extraction, habitat disruption, and waste generation.
Concerns also arise regarding labour practices and community displacement in
some cases.
3. Tobacco: The tobacco industry is often seen as having negative social impacts
due to health risks associated with smoking, marketing practices targeting
vulnerable populations, and legal controversies.
4. Heavy Manufacturing: Industries such as heavy manufacturing and heavy
chemicals might have higher environmental impacts due to emissions, waste
production, and energy consumption.
5. Utilities: While the utilities sector is essential for providing energy, the
environmental impact of some energy generation methods (such as coal) and
concerns about emissions can impact the sector's ESG performance.
6. Agriculture: Certain agricultural practices, such as large-scale monoculture
farming and excessive pesticide use, can have negative environmental
consequences, impacting the agricultural sector's ESG factors.
7. Fast Fashion: The fashion industry can have social and environmental issues
related to labour practices, waste generation, and resource consumption.
As at 31 July 2023, the portfolio has a Sustainalytics Environment score of
84.4% (where 50% is the median).
Outlook
I also believe that we are in a new era to be defined by Artificial Intelligence
("AI"), and that this technology is so powerful it is quite possible that its
growth can continue to overpower a challenging economic and geo-political
backdrop. However, the geo-political risks that lie ahead should not be under
-estimated.
Daniel Wright
Chairman
27 September 2023
*Source: Bloomberg. See Glossary below.
MANAGER'S REVIEW
Market Review
In 2022, the global market experienced a significant shift as central banks took
measures to rein in the economy and address inflation concerns. Contrary to
expectations of "transitory inflation", prices continued to rise, leading to
global inflation rates well above pre-pandemic levels. To combat inflation,
central banks implemented unprecedented interest rate hikes. The US Federal
Reserve raised rates by 450 basis points, including four 75bps hikes, and
resumed quantitative tightening. This tightening of monetary policy led to a
sharp increase in risk-free rates, negatively impacting asset prices especially
for long duration assets. The longer the duration, the worse the return, with
even the normally safe ten-year US Treasuries and government bonds in Japan,
Europe, and the UK all recording substantial losses. Global equities responded
negatively to higher sovereign yields, recession risks, and negative earnings
revisions. The Nasdaq 100 Index experienced significant declines, posting its
worst performance since 2008.
However, 2023 started on a more positive note as disinflationary data, lower
energy prices, and better-than-expected company earnings provided some relief.
Tech-heavy indices like the NASDAQ Composite started to recover and we were
ready for that event. There were many concerns through 2023 such as the collapse
of Signature Bank and Silicon Valley Bank in March and Credit Suisse in the
Summer. However, the tech heavy indices kept grinding higher as the optimists
saw an end to the period of ever rising rates.
So it was a game of two halves with H2 2022 marked by inflationary pressures,
interest rate hikes, and significant market losses and H1 2023 the start of the
long road of recovery. This was the period of the Polycrisis.
"The polycrisis emerged as a global phenomenon in 2022-2023. Dozens of
environmental, social, technological, and economic stressors are interacting
with increasing velocity."
- The Omega Network.
Technology Review
2022 saw an ugly unwinding of the performance of the perceived "Covid winners"
and an exodus from unprofitable technology stocks. Longer-duration assets with
limited valuation support, such as Tesla and the ARK Innovation fund faced
declines of over 60%. Nonsense assets like alternative coins and their
platforms, non-fungible tokens ("NFTs"), and Special Purpose Acquisition
Companies ("SPACs") collapsed.
As we have written many times before, we shifted out of "Soft Tech" names into
"Hard Tech" names and repositioned with "AI Core & Central" to our portfolio.
Luckily, when the technology sector's fortunes reversed in the early part of
2023, profitable "Hard Tech" stocks caught the first bid and then Artificial
Intelligence ("AI") came along sending some of our holdings rocketing higher.
Large-cap technology companies and Semiconductor stocks saw positive
performances due to AI enthusiasm and cloud & datacentre revenues remained
relatively resilient even through some optimisation of spend.
"The Global Semiconductors Market reached US$640.6 billion in 2022 and is
expected to reach US$1,132.8 billion by 2030, growing with a CAGR of 7.5% during
the forecast period 2023-2030."
- DataM Intelligence.
Portfolio Review
The portfolio's NAV total return per Share of 15.3%* represented a 10.2%*
outperformance against the benchmark and compared to a 10.6%* return for the
Nasdaq Composite (in GBP) and a 16.5%* return for the Nasdaq 100 Technology
subindex (in GBP).
The 5.7% increase in the value of Sterling against the US Dollar over the year
was a headwind for performance due to the significant level of US Dollar
exposure in the portfolio. Overall, we estimate that the loss in portfolio
performance from Foreign Exchange was roughly 5.5%.
The Total Return of the portfolio broken down by sector holdings in local
currency (separating costs and foreign exchange) is shown below:
Total return of underlying sector holdings in local currency 2023
(excluding costs and foreign exchange)
Information Technology 28.7%
Communication Services (3.2%)
Consumer Discretionary (3.3%)
Other investments (including funds, ETFs and beta hedges) (0.5%)
Foreign Exchange, operating costs & financing (6.3%)
Total NAV per Share return 15.3%
Total return of underlying sector holdings in local currency 2022
(excluding costs and foreign exchange)
Information Technology (6.4%)
Communication Services (12.8%)
Consumer Discretionary (9.1%)
Other investments (including funds, ETFs and beta hedges) (3.3%)
Foreign Exchange, operating costs & financing 8.7%
Total NAV per Share return (23.0%)
*Source: Bloomberg.
Information Technology
The Information Technology sector delivered roughly 186.8% of the negative NAV
total return per Share.
Material positive performers (>1% contribution to return) included NVIDIA Corp,
Microsoft Corp, Advanced Micro Devices Inc, Cadence Designs Systems Inc, ASML
Holding NV and Synopsys Inc.
There were no material negative contributors.
The portfolio's weighting to this sector (including options on a MTM basis) at
the year end was 97.3% of the net assets (2022: 58.9%).
Communication Services
The Communication Services sector delivered roughly minus 21.1% of the NAV total
return per share.
There were no material positive contributors.
Alphabet Inc was the only material negative contributor. Although the stock
ended with a positive return for the year after a significant gain in FY H2
(+33.3% TR), we had materially reduced this position at lower prices earlier in
the year. As explained in the interim results, we wrote a detailed article on
the Company which we published on LinkedIn which set out the Action Points we
needed to see from the Company to remain invested, and following no such actions
from Alphabet, we cut the position significantly. It is worth noting that
although we missed some of the upside from the stock's second half rally, some
of our "Hard Tech" holdings had an even stronger FY H2, such as NVIDIA Corp
(+139.2% TR), Advanced Micro Devices Inc (+52.2% TR) and Microsoft Corp (+35.6%
TR).
The portfolio's weighting to this sector (including options on a MTM basis) at
the year end was 5.1% of the net assets (2022: 25.3%).
Consumer Discretionary
The Consumer discretionary sector delivered roughly minus 21.3% of the NAV total
return per share.
Amazon.com Inc was the only material negative contributor. Like Alphabet, we had
materially reduced this position at lower prices in the first half of the year
as outlined in the interim results, however, it should be noted that Amazon's H2
return (29.6%) was inferior to the returns of the three "Hard Tech" holdings
named in the section above.
The portfolio's weighting to this sector (including options on a MTM basis) at
the year end was 0.3% of the net assets (2022: 8.3%).
Other (including funds, ETFs and beta hedges)
Other holdings delivered roughly minus 3.2% of the NAV total return per Share.
PayPal Holdings Inc was the only material negative contributor in this sector.
The portfolio's weighting to this sector (including options on a MTM basis) at
the year end was 7.0% of the net assets (2022: -0.4%).
Market Outlook
After more than 525bps of US rate hikes over the past couple of years, the range
of potential outcomes for the next 12 months now appears somewhat narrower.
Advanced economies are expected to experience slower growth and inflation
remains a key factor influencing monetary policy. China has shifted from a
growth engine for the world to a deflation engine. We see geopolitical risks
remaining between the US and China and continuing de-risking of supply chains.
Most major central banks are near the end of their rate tightening cycles. In
the more medium term, inflation is expected to fall, and there are even signs of
future disinflation in parts. While risks remain, the possibility of 10 year
Treasury yields falling with improving inflation prints provides optimism for
stock returns. The US economy's situation is unique, and while recession risk
exists, the outturn may well be much better than previously anticipated. We do
believe that our portfolio of long duration assets may be more interest rate
sensitive than it is sensitive to a mild recession.
"The only function of economic forecasting is to make astrology look
respectable."
- J K Galbraith.
Market Risks
The primary challenges to equities remain inflation, recession, regulation,
energy prices and war. Central banks aim to prevent entrenched price changes,
but it is difficult to calibrate monetary policy to prevent transitions to high
inflation regimes. The Fed's preferred measure, the PCE price index, has fallen
but history has seen reversals before. We are hopeful that, over time,
productivity gains can assist in reducing inflation.
Recession risk is always a concern when the Fed has been so active in attempting
to slow the economy but we would remind readers that the areas of technology
that we are invested in are often considered more defensive. Geopolitical risks,
such as the conflict in Ukraine and US-Sino relations, also pose very material
concerns. China, Iran, N Korea and Russia are all bad actors that can cause
numerous horrific events that could cause material downside for the markets. The
companies in our portfolio have a material exposure to China and Taiwan and
hence we have been active at various times during the year at laying on hedges
against this risk. We are constantly watching the oil price with anxiety.
"A cynic is a man who knows the price of everything, and the value of nothing."
- Oscar Wilde
Technology Outlook
IT spending is expected to increase by 5% over the next 12 months. The
technology sector is projected to deliver above-market growth in 2024 with
projected revenues and earnings progress of 8% and 16% respectively (Source:
Bloomberg). Our portfolio is forecast by Bloomberg estimates to see projected
revenues and earnings progress of 16% and 21% respectively. Forecasts are
mainly useless apart from providing some relative indications. Technology stocks
have seen their valuations recover but a lot of the over-hyped stocks from
2021/2 are a long way from fully recovered in terms of valuations. We see a lot
of these names ultimately being disrupted by AI and hence they look expensive
"Value Traps" to us.
The post-pandemic period has led to a challenging demand normalisation with even
cloud demand seeing optimisation. Sensible companies are adopting a slower and
more sensible growth playbook, focusing on profitability, by undertaking cost
-cutting initiatives. Despite the revenue growth slowdown, the best companies
are expected to continue growing.
"I do not fear computers. I fear the lack of them."
- Isaac Asimov
AI Outlook
We see continued strong spending by enterprises on digital transformation,
cloud, and cybersecurity but the outlier for the next 12 months will surely be
AI. The progress of AI is embryonic compared to its immense era defining
potential. As we have said many times before, we are investing in the "picks and
shovels providers" and especially the hyper-scalers, EDA providers and the
semiconductor designers. The latter is forecast to capture up to 50% of AI's
associated value and we would guess that NVIDIA will get the lion's share of
that. We would predict that in a couple of years many investors will rue their
underweight position in NVIDIA today. We have positioned our portfolio so that a
vast majority of our holdings have AI "core and central" to their business
purpose. If AI is the era defining technology wave we believe it to be, the
portfolio should perform very well, and vice versa.
"The only constant is change, continuing change, inevitable change, that is the
dominant factor in society today. No sensible decision can be made any longer
without taking into account not only the world as it is, but the world as it
will be."
- Isaac Asimov
AI & Technology Risks
Regulatory challenges, misinformed Luddite braying and ethical concerns surround
AI, but its transformative capabilities are expected to overpower these
headwinds. We would guess that we may also start to hear more about the
incredible abilities of non-generative AI over the next 12 months although we
would concede that generative AI does now seem to be positioned as the front-end
AI user interface model.
Unsurprisingly to some, we are also starting to study more about Quantum
Computing as we see this as the next era of computing after AI. We would note
the famous quip by Max Planck:
"A new scientific truth does not triumph by convincing its opponents and making
them see the light, but rather because its opponents eventually die, and a new
generation grows up that is familiar with it."
Multiple more general risks exist for our medium-term constructive view on
technology. We may have misunderstood how AI will disrupt incumbent software and
technology companies and we certainly feel some other investors are
underestimating this risk. There may be a new technological change that we have
not foreseen such as the arrival of Quantum sooner than expected. China may
surpass the USA in technological advancement rendering the US technology
companies as disrupted. Valuations are also always a concern, as the recent
surge in technology stocks has pushed sector valuations back to higher than 5
year average levels.
Regulation remains a key risk, though a divided Congress makes legislation less
likely. However, as Europe sees itself fall further and further behind in the AI
era then regulation becomes perversely more likely. Souring US-Sino relations
are likely to further negatively impact supply chains, especially in
semiconductors, and Taiwan's role as the leading semiconductor producer coupled
with China's territorial ambitions adds a huge risk to world peace.
Concentration Risk
We always seek as diversified a portfolio as we can possibly construct but we
must address the concentration risk within our portfolio. Our top two holdings -
Microsoft, and Nvidia - represented around 50% of our NAV and our top 5 holdings
represent about 75% of our portfolio. Sadly, we do believe the outstanding
winners from the AI era may, in time, be counted on the fingers of two hands. So
what are we meant to do: diversify to dilute performance? The conclusion to this
risk is that our Fund should form part of a wide and diversified portfolio for
our shareholders. Please do not over-concentrate on our Fund if you cannot
afford to bear potential loss. It is worth noting that according to two of the
leading ratings agencies MSFT has a better credit rating than US sovereign debt.
May I remind you of our limits on these metrics:
"No single holding will represent more than 20%. of gross assets at the time of
investment. In addition, the Company's five largest holdings (by value) will not
exceed (at the time of investment) more than 75%. of gross assets"
We do prioritise risk reduction in our approach, aiming to partially hedge
specific risks that concern us (but hedging requires luck in its timing) and
avoiding any holdings that give us nagging doubts.
"Three-quarters of Warren Buffett's equity portfolio are tied up in just 5
stocks."
- CNBC headline August 2023.
Conclusion
The risks are varied, numerous and material but the era of AI is just beginning.
Technology offers investors a first-class ticket to what could be one of the
most exciting investment periods of the century.
Long the Future.
M&L Capital Management Limited
Manager
27 September 2023
*Source: Bloomberg. See Glossary below.
Equity exposures and portfolio sector analysis
Equity exposures (longs)
As at 31 July 2023
Company Sector * Exposure % of net
£'000** assets**
Microsoft Information Technology 66,646 30.1
Corporation**
Nvidia Corporation Information Technology 45,399 20.5
Inc.**
ASML Holding NV** Information Technology 18,895 8.5
Advanced Micro Information Technology 17,787 8.0
Devices Inc
Cadence Design Information Technology 16,610 7.5
Systems Inc.**
Synopsys Inc.** Information Technology 15,648 7.1
Alphabet Inc. Communication Services 10,814 4.9
Arista Networks Inc. Information Technology 9,477 4.3
Oracle Corporation ** Information Technology 8,366 3.8
PayPal Holdings Inc. Financials 6,926 3.1
ROBO Global Robotics ETF 6,490 2.9
& Automation Index
ETF
NXP Semiconductors Information Technology 5,253 2.4
N.V.
GoDaddy Inc.** Information Technology 4,249 1.9
Intuitive Surgical Health Care 3,733 1.7
Inc.
Analog Devices Inc. Information Technology 3,692 1.7
Apple Inc. Information Technology 2,321 1.0
Polar Capital Fund 1,641 0.7
Technology Trust Plc
RTX Corporation Industrials 1,504 0.7
Gen Digital Inc. Information Technology 1,331 0.6
AirBnB Inc. Consumer Discretionary 1,089 0.5
Match Group Inc. Communication Services 759 0.3
Fidelity National Financials 390 0.2
Info Services Inc.
Total long positions 249,020 112.4
Other net assets and (27,641) (12.4)
liabilities
Net assets 221,379 100.0
*GICS - Global Industry Classification Standard.
**Including equity swap exposures as detailed in note 13.
Portfolio sector analysis (excluding options and short equity swap hedges)
As at 31 July 2023
Sector % of net
assets
Information Technology 97.4
Communication services 5.2
Consumer Discretionary 0.5
Fund 0.7
Health Care 1.7
Financials 3.3
Industrials 0.7
ETF 2.9
Cash and other net assets and liabilities (12.4)
Net assets 100.0
PRINCIPAL PORTFOLIO EQUITY HOLDINGS
The positions described below have an Exposure that aggregates to 97.8% of Net
Assets.
Microsoft Corporation ("Microsoft")
Microsoft is a global enterprise software company and a leader in cloud
computing, business software, operating systems and gaming.
NVIDIA Corporation ("NVIDIA")
NVIDIA is the market leader in GPUs. Whilst originally created for graphics
processing, specialised GPUs are also key in the training and inference of AI
models due to their parallel processing capabilities. Following the emergence of
Chat GPT, which demonstrated the immense potential of generative AI, NVIDIA has
reported surging demand for its AI chips. NVIDIA currently has a dominant
position in the AI chip hardware market and has also built a strong position in
the wider software ecosystem for AI training and inference (for example with
their CUDA platform). As a result, NVIDIA has become the preferred partner for
many enterprises seeking to harness the potential of AI.
ASML Holding NV ("ASML")
ASML is a producer of Semiconductor manufacturing equipment, with a near
monopoly in advanced EUV lithography, which is one of the leading edge
production technologies in the industry's never ending quest to make smaller and
more advanced Semiconductor chips (Integrated Circuits used in a wide variety of
electronic devices).
Advanced Micro Devices Inc. ("AMD")
AMD is a semiconductor company that designs and manufactures a range of
microprocessors, graphics processing units (GPUs), and related technologies.
Established in 1969, AMD has played a crucial role in the evolution of computing
hardware, providing innovative solutions for both consumer and enterprise
markets. Like NVIDIA, AMD has leveraged its GPU technology to make notable
strides in the field of AI chips and accelerators. AMD's entrance into the AI
chip market presents a competitive alternative to industry leader Nvidia going
forward, offering customers more options when selecting hardware for their AI
workloads.
Cadence Design Systems Inc. ("Cadence")
Cadence is a leading EDA (electronic design automation) company primarily
delivering software and Intellectual Property for electronic design in the
Semiconductor industry. EDA software is mission critical to Semiconductor chip
design, particularly as the demands on Semiconductor chip capabilities continues
to increase. The majority of the EDA market is controlled by three players;
Cadence, Synopsys and Siemens. Unlike the highly cyclical Semiconductor
manufacturers, the EDA software market has a very high degree of recurring
revenue and growth tends to be more correlated to Semiconductor R&D than Capital
or Operational Expenditure within the industry.
Synopsys Inc ("Synopsys")
Similar to Cadence, Synopsys is an EDA company that focuses on Semiconductor
chip design software and verification tools (such as finding and resolving bugs
in Semiconductor chip designs).
Arista Networks Inc. ("Arista")
Arista is a technology company that specialises in providing networking
solutions for data centres and cloud environments. The company's products
encompass a range of switches, routers, and software-defined networking (SDN)
solutions, designed to meet the demands of modern data-intensive applications
and the dynamic requirements of cloud computing. Arista's solutions often
emphasise low-latency, high- speed data transmission, making it a key player in
the networking industry, particularly for enterprises seeking advanced
infrastructure solutions. As a result, Arista is heavily exposed to cloud capex
from the hyperscale cloud providers.
Alphabet Inc. ("Alphabet")
Alphabet is a global technology company with products and platforms across a
wide range of technology verticals, including online advertising, cloud
computing, autonomous vehicles, artificial intelligence and smart phones.
Oracle Corporation ("Oracle")
Oracle Corporation is a multinational technology company that specialises in
providing a wide range of software, hardware, and cloud-based services to
businesses and organisations. Founded in 1977, Oracle is best known for its
robust database management systems, which are widely used to store, retrieve,
and manage large volumes of structured and unstructured data. The company's
extensive portfolio includes enterprise software applications for various
functions like customer relationship management (CRM), enterprise resource
planning (ERP), human capital management (HCM), and more. Oracle also offers
cloud services that encompass infrastructure as a service (IaaS), platform as a
service (PaaS), and software as a service (SaaS), enabling clients to leverage
cloud computing for enhanced scalability, efficiency, and flexibility. With a
significant presence in both hardware and software markets, Oracle plays a
critical role in supporting modern business operations and digital
transformation efforts across industries.
PayPal Inc. ("PayPal")
PayPal is an online payments platform that enables individuals and businesses to
send and receive money securely over the internet. Founded in 1998, PayPal
revolutionised the way electronic transactions were conducted by offering a
convenient and widely accepted alternative to traditional methods.
All Equity & Debt portfolio holdings
As at 31 July 2023
Stocks Gross Net Delta
(Underlying Only) (inc Net Delta
% of NAV
exposure of
options) % of
NAV
Microsoft 30.1 30.1
Corporation
NVIDIA 20.5 20.5
Corporation
ASML Holding 8.5 8.1
NV
Advanced Micro 8.0 8.0
Devices Inc.
Cadence Design 7.5 7.5
Systems Inc.
Synopsys Inc. 7.1 7.1
Arista 4.3 4.3
Networks Inc.
Alphabet Inc. 4.9 3.9
Oracle 3.8 3.8
Corporation
Paypal 3.1 3.0
Holdings Inc.
Robo Global 2.9 2.9
Robotics and
Automation
Index ETF
NXP 2.4 2.0
Semiconductors
NV
GoDaddy Inc. 1.9 1.7
Analog Devices 1.7 1.7
Inc.
Intuitive 1.7 1.5
Surgical Inc.
MS EU China (1.3) (1.3)
Revenue
Exposure
Basket
Apple Inc. 1.0 1.2
Invesco QQQ (1.0) (1.0)
Trust Series 1
Polar Capital 0.7 0.7
Technology
Trust Plc
RTX 0.7 0.7
Corporation
Gen Digital 0.6 0.6
Inc.
Amazon.com, 0.6
Inc.
Micron 0.4
Technology
Inc.
Match Group 0.3 0.2
Inc.
CISCO Systems 0.2
Inc.
Airbnb Inc. 0.5 0.1
Fidelity 0.2 0.1
National Info
Services Inc.
iShares MSCI 0.0 0.0
United Kingdom
ETF
Total 110.1 108.5
For an explanation of why we report exposures on a Delta Adjusted basis please
read our FAQ at https://mlcapman.com/faq/
Investment record of the last ten years
Year ended Total Return per Dividend per Net assets (£'000) NAV per
Return Share* Share Share*
(£'000) (p) (p) (p)
31 July 2014 (6,295) (28.08) 13.75 64,361 293.20
31 July 2015 2,483 11.47 6.00 63,074 293.35
31 July 2016 13,424 62.50 13.36 75,546 350.81
31 July 2017 20,055 92.43 9.00 94,661 429.05
31 July 2018 26,792 115.27 12.00 130,388 532.81
31 July 2019 15,900 58.75 14.00 166,981 568.66
31 July 2020 24,037 74.74 14.00 225,933 625.23
31 July 2021 22,222 57.10 14.00 269,686 665.43
31 July 2022 (61,162) (151.62) 21.00 198,546 493.04
31 July 2023 28,754 71.45 14.00 221,379 550.79
* Basic and fully diluted.
Business model
The Company is an investment company as defined by Section 833 of the Companies
Act 2006 and operates as an investment trust in accordance with Section 1158 of
the Corporation Tax Act 2010.
The Company is also governed by the Listing Rules and the Disclosure Guidance
and Transparency Rules of the Financial Conduct Authority (the "FCA") and is
listed on the Premium Segment of the Main Market of the London Stock Exchange.
A review of investment activities for the year ended 31 July 2023 is detailed in
the Manager's review on pages 7 to 11 of the full Annual Report.
Investment objective
The investment objective of the Company is to achieve capital appreciation.
Investment policy
Asset allocation
The Company's investment objective is sought to be achieved through a policy of
actively investing in a diversified portfolio, comprising any of global equities
and/or fixed interest securities and/or derivatives.
The Company may invest in derivatives, money market instruments, currency
instruments, contracts for differences ("CFDs"), futures, forwards and options
for the purposes of (i) holding investments and (ii) hedging positions against
movements in, for example, equity markets, currencies and interest rates.
The Company seeks investment exposure to companies whose shares are listed,
quoted or admitted to trading. However, it may invest up to 10% of gross assets
(at the time of investment) in the equities and/or fixed interest securities of
companies whose shares are not listed, quoted or admitted to trading.
Risk diversification
The Company intends to maintain a diversified portfolio and it is expected that
the portfolio will have between approximately 20 to 100 holdings. No single
holding will represent more than 20% of gross assets at the time of investment.
In addition, the Company's five largest holdings (by value) will not exceed (at
the time of investment) more than 75% of gross assets.
Although there are no restrictions on the constituents of the Company's
portfolio by geography, industry sector or asset class, it is intended that the
Company will hold investments across a number of geographies and industry
sectors. During periods in which changes in economic, political or market
conditions or other factors so warrant, the Manager may reduce the Company's
exposure to one or more asset classes and increase the Company's position in
cash and/or money market instruments.
The Company will not invest more than 15% of its total assets in other listed
closed-ended investment funds. However, the Company may invest up to 50% of
gross assets (at the time of investment) in an investment company subsidiary,
subject always to the other restrictions set out in this investment policy and
the Listing Rules.
Gearing
The Company may borrow to gear the Company's returns when the Manager believes
it is in Shareholders' interests to do so. The Company's Articles of Association
("Articles") restrict the level of borrowings that the Company may incur up to a
sum equal to two times the net asset value of the Company as shown by the then
latest audited balance sheet of the Company.
The effect of gearing may be achieved without borrowing by investing in a range
of different types of investments including derivatives. Save with the approval
of Shareholders, the Company will not enter into any investments which have the
effect of increasing the Company's net gearing beyond the limit on borrowings
stated in the Articles.
General
In addition to the above, the Company will observe the investment restrictions
imposed from time to time by the Listing Rules which are applicable to
investment companies with shares listed on the Official List of the FCA.
No material change will be made to the investment policy without the approval of
Shareholders by ordinary resolution.
In the event of any breach of the investment restrictions applicable to the
Company, Shareholders will be informed of the remedial actions to be taken by
the Board and the Manager by an announcement issued through a regulatory
information service approved by the FCA.
Investment Strategy and Style
The fund's portfolio is constructed with flexibility but is primarily focused on
stocks that exhibit the attributes of growth.
Target Benchmark
The Company was originally set up by Brian Sheppard as a vehicle for British
retail investors to invest in with the hope that total returns would exceed the
total returns on the UK equity market. Hence, the benchmark the Company uses to
assess performance is one of the many available UK equity indices being the MSCI
UK Investable Market Index (MXGBIM). The Company has used this benchmark to
assess performance for over five years but is not set on using this particular
UK Equity index forever into the future and currently uses this particular UK
Equity index because at the current time it is viewed as the most cost
advantageous of the currently available UK Equity indices (which have a high
degree of correlation and hence substitutability). However, once the Company
announces the use of an index, then this index should be used across all of the
Company's documentation.
Investments for the portfolio are not selected from constituents of this index
and hence the investment remit is in no way constrained by the index, although
the Manager's management fee is varied depending on performance against the
benchmark. It is suggested that Shareholders review the Company's Active Share
Ratio that is on the fund factsheets as this illustrates to what degree the
holdings in the portfolio vary from the underlying benchmark.
Environmental, Social, Community and Governance
The Company considers that it does not fall within the scope of the Modern
Slavery Act 2015 and it is not, therefore, obliged to make a slavery and human
trafficking statement. In any event, the Company considers its supply chains to
be of low risk as its suppliers are typically professional advisers.
In its oversight of the Manager and the Company's other service providers, the
Board seeks assurances that they have regard to the benefits of diversity and
promote these within their respective organisations. The Company has given
discretionary voting powers to the Manager. The Manager votes against
resolutions they consider may damage Shareholders' rights or economic interests
and reports their actions to the Board. The Company believes it is in the
Shareholders' interests to consider environmental, social, community and
governance factors when selecting and retaining investments and has asked the
Manager to take these issues into account. The Manager does not exclude
companies from their investment universe purely on the grounds of these factors
but adopts a positive approach towards companies which promote these factors.
The portfolio's Sustainalytic's Environmental Percentile was 84.4% as at 31 July
2023.
The Company notes the Task Force on Climate-related Financial Disclosures
(`TCFD') reporting recommendations. However, as a listed investment company, the
Company is not subject to the Listing Rule requirement to report against the
framework. The Company fully recognises the impact climate change has on the
environment and society, and information on the Manager's endeavours on ESG can
be found on page 42 of the full Annual Report. The Manager continues to work
with the investee companies to raise awareness on climate change risks, carbon
emission and energy efficiency.
Stakeholder Engagement
The Company's s172 Statement can be found in the Corporate Governance Statement
on pages 35 to 44 of the full Annual Report and is incorporated into this
Strategic Report by reference.
Dividend policy
The Company may declare dividends as justified by funds available for
distribution. The Company will not retain in respect of any accounting period an
amount which is greater than 15% of net revenue in that period.
Recurring income from dividends on underlying holdings is paid out as ordinary
dividends.
Results and dividends
The results for the year are set out in the Statement of Comprehensive Income on
page 68 of the full Annual Report and in the Statement of Changes in Equity on
page 69 of the full Annual Report.
For the year ended 31 July 2023, the net revenue return attributable to
Shareholders was £1,479,000 (2022: negative £1,668,000) and the net capital
return attributable to Shareholders was £27,275,000 (2022: negative
£59,494,000). Total Shareholders' funds increased by 11.5% to £221,379,000
(2022: £198,546,000).
The dividends paid/proposed by the Board for 2022 and 2023 are set out below:
Year ended 31 July 2023 Year ended 31 July 2022
(pence per Share) (pence per Share)
Interim dividend 7.00 7.00
Special dividend - 7.00
Proposed final dividend 7.00 7.00
14.00 21.00
Subject to the approval of Shareholders at the forthcoming AGM, the proposed
final ordinary dividend will be payable on 8 November 2023 to Shareholders on
the register at the close of business on 6 October 2023. The ex-dividend date
will be 5 October 2023.
Further details of the dividends paid in respect of the years ended 31 July 2023
and 31 July 2022 are set out in note 7 below.
Principal risks and uncertainties
The Board considers that the following are the principal risks and uncertainties
facing the Company. The actions taken to manage each of these are set out below.
If one or more of these risks materialised, it could potentially have a
significant impact upon the Company's ability to achieve its investment
objective. These risks are formalised within the risk matrix maintained by the
Company's Manager.
Risk How the risk is managed
Investment Investment performance is monitored and reviewed daily by M&L
Performance Capital Management Limited ("MLCM") as AIFM through:
Risk
· Intra-day portfolio statistics; and
The
performance · Daily Risk reports.
of the
Company may The metrics and statistics within these reports may be used (in
not be in combination with other factors) to help inform investment
line with decisions.
its
investment The AIFM also provides the Board with monthly performance
objectives. updates, key portfolio stats (including performance attribution,
valuation metrics, VaR and liquidity analysis) and performance
charts of top portfolio holdings.
It should be noted that none of the above steps guarantee that
Company performance will meet its stated objectives.
Key Man Risk The Manager has a remuneration policy that incentivises key
and staff to take a long-term view as variable rewards are spread
Reputational over a five-year period. MLCM also has documented policies and
Risk procedures, including a business continuity plan, to ensure
continuity of operations in the unlikely event of a departure.
The Company
may be MLCM has a comprehensive compliance framework to ensure strict
unable to adherence to relevant governance rules and requirements.
fulfil its
investment
objectives
following
the
departure of
key staff at
the Manager.
Fund NAVs are produced independently by the Administrator, based on
Valuation the Company's valuation policy.
Risk
Valuation is overseen and reviewed by the AIFM's valuation
The committee which reconciles and checks NAV reports prior to
Company's publication.
valuation is
not It should be noted that the vast majority of the portfolio
accurately consists of quoted equities, whose prices are provided by
represented independent market sources; hence material input into the
to valuation process is rarely required from the valuation
investors. committee.
Third-Party All outsourced relationships are subject to an extensive dual
Service -directional due diligence process and to ongoing monitoring.
Providers Where possible, the Company appoints a diversified pool of
outsourced providers to ensure continuity of operations should a
Failure of service provider fail.
outsourced
service The cyber security of third-party service providers is a key
providers in risk that is monitored on an ongoing basis. The safe custody of
performing the Company's assets may be compromised through control failures
their by the Depositary or Custodian, including cyber security
contractual incidents. To mitigate this risk, the AIFM receives monthly
duties. reports from the Depositary confirming safe custody of the
Company's assets held by the Custodian.
Regulatory The AIFM adopts a series of pre-trade and post-trade controls to
Risk minimise breaches. MLCM uses a fully integrated order management
system, electronic execution system, portfolio management system
A breach of and risk system developed by Bloomberg. These systems include
regulatory automated compliance checks, both pre- and post-execution, in
rules/ other addition to manual checks by the investment team. The AIFM
legislation undertakes ongoing compliance monitoring of the portfolio
resulting in through a system of daily reporting.
the Company
not meeting Furthermore, there is additional oversight from the Depositary,
its which ensures that there are three distinct layers of
objectives independent monitoring.
or
investors'
loss.
Fiduciary The Company has a clear documented investment policy and risk
Risk profile. The AIFM employs various controls and monitoring
processes to ensure guidelines are adhered to (including pre-
The Company and post- execution checks as mentioned above and monthly Risk
may not be meetings). Additional oversight is also provided by the
managed to Company's Depositary.
the agreed
guidelines.
Fraud Risk The AIFM has extensive fraud prevention controls and adopts a
zero tolerance approach towards fraudulent behaviour and
Fraudulent breaches of protocol surrounding fraud prevention. The transfer
actions may of cash or securities involve the use of dual authorisation and
cause loss. two-factor authentication to ensure fraud prevention, such that
only authorised personnel are able to access the core systems
and submit transfers. The Administrator has access to core
systems to ensure complete oversight of all transactions.
In addition to the above, the Board considers the following to be the principal
financial risks associated with investing in the Company: market risk, interest
rate risk, liquidity risk, currency rate risk and credit and counterparty risk.
An explanation of these risks and how they are managed along with the Company's
capital management policies are contained in note 16 of the Financial
Statements.
The Board, through the Audit Committee, has undertaken a robust assessment and
review of all the risks stated above and in note 16 of the Financial Statements,
together with a review of any emerging or new risks which may have arisen during
the year, including those that would threaten the Company's business model,
future performance, solvency or liquidity. Whilst reviewing the principal risks
and uncertainties, the Board considered the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic and
the implications of the Russia conflict on the Company, concluding that these
events did not materially affect the operations of the business.
In accordance with guidance issued to directors of listed companies, the
Directors confirm that they have carried out a review of the effectiveness of
the systems of internal financial control during the year ended 31 July 2023, as
set out on pages 41 to 42 of the full Annual Report. There were no matters
arising from this review that required further investigation and no significant
failings or weaknesses were identified.
Further discussion about risk considerations can be found in the Company's
latest prospectus available at https://mlcapman.com/manchester-london-investment
- trust-plc/
Year-end gearing
At the year end, gross long equity exposure represented 112.4% (2022: 101.65%)
of net assets.
Key performance indicators
The Board considers the most important key performance indicator to be the
comparison with its benchmark index. This is referred to in the Financial
Summary above.
Other key measures by which the Board judges the success of the Company are the
Share price, the NAV per Share and the ongoing charges measure.
Total net assets at 31 July 2023 amounted to £221,379,000 compared with
£198,546,000 at 31 July 2022, an increase of 11.5%, whilst the fully diluted NAV
per Share increased to 550.79p from 493.04p. During the year, Ordinary Shares
were bought back and held in treasury at a cost of £289,000.
Net revenue return after taxation for the year was a positive £1,479,000 (2022:
negative £1,668,000).
The quoted Share price during the period under review has ranged from a discount
of 25.3% to 11.6%.
Ongoing charges, which are set out below, are a measure of the total expenses
(including those charged to capital) expressed as a percentage of the average
net assets over the year. The Board regularly reviews the ongoing charges
measure and monitors Company expenses.
Future development
The Board and the Manager do not currently foresee any material changes to the
business of the Company in the near future. As the majority of the Company's
equity investments are denominated in US Dollar, any currency volatility may
have an impact (either positive or negative) on the Company's NAV per Share,
which is denominated in Sterling.
Management arrangements
Under the terms of the management agreement, MLCM manages the Company's
portfolio in accordance with the investment policy determined by the Board. The
management agreement has a termination period of three months. In line with the
management agreement, the Manager receives a variable portfolio management fee.
Details of the fee arrangements and the fees paid to the Manager during the year
are disclosed in note 3 to the Financial Statements.
The Manager is authorised and regulated by the FCA.
M&M Investment Company Limited ("MMIC"), which is controlled by Mr Mark Sheppard
who forms part of the Manager's management team, is the controlling Shareholder
of the Company. Further details regarding this are set out in the Directors'
Report on page 31 of the full Annual Report.
Alternative Investment Fund Managers Directive (the "AIFMD")
The Company permanently exceeded the sub-threshold limit under the AIFMD in 2017
and MLCM was appointed as the Company's AIFM with effect from 17 January 2018.
Following their appointment as the AIFM, MLCM receives an annual risk management
and valuation fee of £59,000 to undertake its duties as the AIFM in addition to
the portfolio management fees set out above.
The AIFMD requires certain information to be made available to investors before
they invest and requires that material changes to this information be disclosed
in the Annual Report.
Remuneration
In the year to 31 July 2023, the total remuneration paid to the employees of the
Manager was £420,000 (2022: £465,000), payable to an average employee number
throughout the year of three (2022: four).
The management of MLCM is undertaken by Mr Mark Sheppard and Mr Richard Morgan,
to whom a combined total of £388,000 (2022: £392,000) was paid by the Manager
during the year.
The remuneration policy of the Manager is to pay fixed annual salaries, with non
-guaranteed bonuses, dependent upon performance only. These bonuses are
generally paid in the Company's Shares, released over a five-year period.
Leverage
The leverage policy has been approved by the Company and the AIFM. The policy
limits the leverage ratio that can be deployed by the Company at any one time to
275% (gross method) and 250% (commitment method). This includes any gearing
created by its investment policy. This is a maximum figure as required for
disclosure by the AIFMD regulation and not necessarily the amount of leverage
that is actually used. The leverage ratio as at 31 July 2023 measured by the
gross method was 126.8% and that measured by the commitment method was 120.6%.
Leverage is defined in the Glossary below.
Risk profile
The risk profile of the Company as measured through the Summary Risk Indicator
("SRI") score, is currently at a 6 on a scale of 1 to 7 as at 31 July 2023 (31
July 2022: 5). This score is calculated on past performance data using
prescribed PRIIPS methodology. Liquidity, counterparty and currency risks are
not captured on the scale. The Manager will periodically disclose the current
risk profile of the Company to investors. The Company will make this disclosure
on its website at the same time as it makes its Annual Report and Financial
Statements available to investors or more frequently at its discretion.
For further information on SRI - including key risk disclaimers - please read
the Fund Key Information Document available at https://mlcapman.com/manchester
-london- investment-trust-plc/
Liquidity arrangements
The Company currently holds no assets that are subject to special arrangements
arising from their illiquid nature. If applicable, the Company would disclose
the percentage of its assets subject to such arrangements on its website at the
same time as it makes its Annual Report and Financial Statements available to
investors, or more frequently at its discretion.
Continuing appointment of the Manager
The Board keeps the performance of MLCM, in its capacity as the Company's
Manager, under continual review. It has noted the good long-term performance
record and commitment, quality and continuity of the team employed by the
Manager. As a result, the Board concluded that it is in the best interests of
the Shareholders as a whole that the appointment of the Manager on the agreed
terms should continue.
Human rights, employee, social and community issues
The Board consists entirely of non-executive Directors. The Company has no
employees and day-to-day management of the business is delegated to the Manager
and other service providers. As an investment trust, the Company has no direct
impact on the community or the environment, and as such has no human rights or
community policies. In carrying out its investment activities and in
relationships with suppliers, the Company aims to conduct itself responsibly,
ethically and fairly. Further details of the Environmental, Social and
Governance policy can be found in the Statement of Corporate Governance on pages
42 and 43 of the full Annual Report. Details of the Company's Board composition
and related diversity considerations can be found in the Statement of Corporate
Governance on page 38 of the full Annual Report.
Gender diversity
At 31 July 2023, the Board comprised four male Directors. As stated in the
Statement of Corporate Governance, the appointment of any new Director is made
on the basis of merit.
Approval
This Strategic Report has been approved by the Board and signed on its behalf
by:
Daniel Wright
Chairman
27 September 2023
DIRECTORS
The current Directors of the Company are:
Daniel Wright (Chairman of the Board)
Brett Miller
Sir James Waterlow
Daren Morris (Chairman of the Audit Committee and Senior Independent Director)
All the Directors are non-executive. Mr Morris, Sir James Waterlow and Mr Wright
are independent of the Company's Manager.
EXTRACTS FROM THE DIRECTORS' REPORT
Share capital
As at 31 July 2023, the Company's issued share capital comprised 40,528,238
Shares of 25 pence each, of which 335,220 were held in Treasury.
At general meetings of the Company, Shareholders are entitled to one vote on a
show of hands and on a poll, to one vote for every Share held. Shares held in
Treasury do not carry voting rights.
In circumstances where Chapter 11 of the Listing Rules would require a proposed
transaction to be approved by Shareholders, the controlling Shareholder (see
page 31 of the full Annual Report for further details) shall not vote its Shares
on that resolution. In addition, any Director of the Company appointed by MMIC,
the controlling Shareholder, shall not vote on any matter where conflicted and
the Directors will act independently from MMIC and have due regard to their
fiduciary duties.
Issue of Shares
At the Annual General Meeting held on 21 November 2022, Shareholders approved
the Board's proposal to authorise the Company to allot Shares up to an aggregate
nominal amount of £2,516,875. In addition, the Directors were authorised to
issue Shares and sell Shares from Treasury up to an aggregate nominal value of
£1,006,751 on a non-pre-emptive basis. This authority is due to expire at the
Company's forthcoming AGM on 1 November 2023.
There were no share issues during the year.
As at the date of this report, the total voting rights were 40,193,018.
Purchase of Shares
At the Annual General Meeting held on 21 November 2022, Shareholders approved
the Board's proposal to authorise the Company to acquire up to 14.99% of its
issued Share capital (excluding Treasury Shares) amounting to 6,036,481 Shares.
This authority is due to expire at the Company's forthcoming AGM on 1 November
2023.
During the year, 77,037 Shares have been bought back and at the date of this
report there were 40,528,238 Shares in issue of which 335,220 were held in
treasury. The total amount paid for these Shares was £289,000 at an average
price of 375 pence per Share.
Sale of Shares from Treasury
At the Annual General Meeting held on 21 November 2022, Shareholders approved
the Board's proposal to authorise the Company to waive pre-emption rights in
respect of Treasury Shares up to an aggregate amount of £1,006,751 and to permit
the allotment or sale of Shares from Treasury at a discount to a price at or
above the prevailing NAV. This authority is due to expire at the Company's
forthcoming AGM on 1 November 2023.
No Shares were sold from Treasury during the year. As at the date of this
report, 335,220 Shares are held in Treasury.
Going concern
The Directors consider that it is appropriate to adopt the going concern basis
in preparing the Financial Statements. After making enquiries, and considering
the nature of the Company's business and assets, the Directors consider that the
Company has adequate resources to continue in operational existence for the
foreseeable future. In arriving at this conclusion, the Directors have
considered the liquidity of the portfolio and the Company's ability to meet
obligations as they fall due for a period of at least 12 months from the date
that these Financial Statements were approved.
Cashflow projections have been reviewed and provide evidence that the Company
has sufficient funds to meet both its contracted expenditure and its
discretionary cash outflows in the form of the dividend policy. Additionally,
Value at Risk scenario analyses to demonstrate that the company has sufficient
capital headroom to withstand market volatility are performed periodically.
Viability statement
The Directors have assessed the prospects of the Company over a five-year
period. The Directors consider five years to be a reasonable time horizon to
consider the continuing viability of the Company, however they also consider
viability for the longer-term foreseeable future.
In their assessment of the viability of the Company, the Directors have
considered each of the Company's principal risks and uncertainties as set out in
the Strategic Report on pages 21 to 23 of the full Annual Report and in
particular, have considered the potential impact of a significant fall in global
equity markets on the value of the Company's investment portfolio overall. The
Directors have also considered the Company's income and expenditure projections
and the fact that the Company's investments mainly comprise readily realisable
securities which could be sold to meet funding requirements if necessary. On
that basis, the Board considers that five years is an appropriate time period to
assess continuing viability of the Company.
In forming their assessment of viability, the Directors have also considered:
· internal processes for monitoring costs;
· expected levels of investment income;
· the performance of the Manager;
· portfolio risk profile;
· liquidity risk;
· gearing limits;
· counterparty exposure; and
· financial controls and procedures operated by the Company.
The Board has reviewed the influence of the COVID-19 pandemic on its service
providers and is satisfied with the ongoing services provided to the Company.
Based upon these considerations, the Directors have concluded that there is a
reasonable expectation that the Company will be able to continue in operation
and meet its liabilities as they fall due over the five-year period.
By order of the Board
Link Company Matters Limited
Company Secretary
27 September 2023
STATEMENT OF DIRECTORS' RESPONSIBILITIES IN RELATION TO THE ANNUAL REPORT AND
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
The Directors are responsible for preparing the Company's Annual Report and
Financial Statements in accordance with applicable law and regulations.
Company law requires the Directors to prepare Financial Statements for each
financial period. Under that law, they have elected to prepare the Financial
Statements in accordance with International Financial Reporting Standards
("IFRS") as adopted by the European Union. Under Company law, the Directors must
not approve the Financial Statements unless they are satisfied that they give a
true and fair view of the state of affairs of the Company and of the profit or
loss of the Company for that period.
In preparing the Financial Statements, the Directors are required to:
· select suitable accounting policies in accordance with IAS 8 `Accounting
Policies, Changes in Accounting Estimates and Errors' and then apply them
consistently;
· present information, including accounting policies, in a manner that
provides relevant, reliable, comparable and understandable information;
· provide additional disclosure when compliance with specific requirements in
IFRS is insufficient to enable users to understand the impact of particular
transactions, other events and conditions on the Company's financial position
and financial performance;
· state that the Company has complied with IFRS, subject to any material
departures disclosed and explained in the Financial Statements;
· make judgements and estimates that are reasonable and prudent; and
· prepare Financial Statements on a going concern basis unless it is
inappropriate to presume that the Company will continue in business.
The Directors are responsible for keeping adequate accounting records that are
sufficient to show and explain the Company's transactions and disclose with
reasonable accuracy, at any time, the financial position of the Company and to
enable them to ensure that the Financial Statements comply with the Companies
Act 2006 and Article 4 of the IAS Regulation. They are also responsible for
safeguarding the assets of the Company and hence for taking reasonable steps for
the prevention and detection of fraud and other irregularities.
Under applicable law and regulations, the Directors are also responsible for
preparing a Strategic Report, Directors' Report, Directors' Remuneration Report
and Corporate Governance Statement that comply with that law and those
regulations, and ensuring that the Annual Report includes information required
by the Listing Rules and Disclosure Guidance and Transparency Rules of the FCA.
The Financial Statements are published on the Company's
website,www.mlcapman.com/manchester-london-investment-trust-plc, which is
maintained on behalf of the Company by the Manager. The Manager has agreed to
maintain, host, manage and operate the Company's website and to ensure that it
is accurate and up-to-date and operated in accordance with applicable law. The
work carried out by the Auditor does not involve consideration of the
maintenance and integrity of this website and accordingly, the Auditor accepts
no responsibility for any changes that have occurred to the Financial Statements
since they were initially presented on the website. Visitors to the website need
to be aware that legislation in the United Kingdom covering the preparation and
dissemination of the Financial Statements may differ from legislation in their
jurisdiction.
We confirm that to the best of our knowledge:
i. the Financial Statements, prepared in accordance with the IFRS, give a true
and fair view of the assets, liabilities, financial position and profit of the
Company; and
ii. the Annual Report includes a fair review of the development and performance
of the business and position of the Company, together with a description of the
principal risks and uncertainties that it faces.
The Directors consider that the Annual Report and Financial Statements, taken as
a whole, are fair, balanced and understandable and provide the information
necessary for Shareholders to assess the Company's position and performance,
business model and strategy.
On behalf of the Board
Daniel Wright
Chairman
27 September 2023
NON-STATUTORY ACCOUNTS
The financial information set out below does not constitute the Company's
statutory accounts for the years ended 31 July 2023 and 31 July 2022 but is
derived from those accounts. Statutory accounts for the year ended 31 July 2022
have been delivered to the Registrar of Companies and statutory accounts for the
year ended 31 July 2023 will be delivered to the Registrar of Companies in due
course. The Auditor has reported on those accounts; their report was (i)
unqualified, (ii) did not include a reference to any matters to which the
Auditor drew attention by way of emphasis without qualifying their report and
(iii) did not contain a statement under Section 498 (2) or (3) of the Companies
Act 2006. The text of the Auditor's report can be found on page 56 and further
of the Company's full Annual Report at www.mlcapman.com/manchester-london
-investment-trust-plc.
STATEMENT OF COMPREHENSIVE INCOME
For the year ended 31 July 2023
2022
2023
Notes Revenue Capital Total Revenue Capital
Total
£'000
£'000 £'000 £'000 £'000
£'000
Gains
Gains/(losses) 9 296 29,284 29,580 (58,542)
(58,267
on investments 275
at
)
fair value
through profit
or loss
Investment 2 575 - 575 265 -
265
income
Bank Interest 2 1,754 - 1,754 -
-
-
Gross return 2,625 29,284 31,909 540 (58,542)
(58,002)
Expenses
Management fee 3 (532) - (532) (1,515) -
(1,515)
Other operating 4 (499) - (499) (598) -
(598)
expenses
Total expenses (1,031) - (1,031) (2,113) -
(2,113)
Return before 1,594 29,284 30,878 (1,573) (58,542)
(60,115)
finance costs
and
tax
Finance costs 5 (38) (2,009) (2,047) (55) (952)
(1,007)
Return on 1,556 27,275 28,831 (1,628) (59,494)
(61,122)
ordinary
activities
before tax
Taxation 6 (77) - (77) (40) -
(40)
Return on 1,479 27,275 28,754 (1,668) (59,494)
(61,162)
ordinary
activities
after tax
Return per Share pence pence pence pence pence
pence
Basic and fully 8 3.67 67.78 71.45 (4.13) (147.49)
(151.62)
diluted
The total column of this statement is the Income Statement of the Company
prepared in accordance with international accounting standards in conformity
with the requirements of the Companies Act 2006. The supplementary revenue
return and capital return columns are presented in accordance with the Statement
of Recommended Practice issued by the Association of Investment Companies ("AIC
SORP").
All revenue and capital items in the above statement derive from continuing
operations. No operations were acquired or discontinued during the year.
There is no other comprehensive income, and therefore the return for the year
after tax is also the total comprehensive income.
STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN EQUITY
For the year ended 31 July 2023
Notes Share Share Special Capital
Retained Total
capital premium reserve** reserve*
earnings** £'000
£'000 £'000 £'000 £'000 £'000
Balance at 1 10,132 25,888 98,780 63,746 -
198,546
August 2022
Changes in
equity for
2023
Ordinary 14 - - (289) - -
(289)
shares bought
back and held
in
treasury
Total - - - 27,275 1,479
28,754
comprehensive
(loss)
Dividends 7 - (4,153) -
(1,479) (5,632)
paid -
Balance at 31 10,132 25,888 94,338 91,021 -
221,379
July 2023
Balance at 1 10,132 25,888 107,188 123,240 3,238
269,686
August 2021
Changes in
equity for
2022
Ordinary 14 - - (1,509) - -
(1,509)
shares bought
back and held
in
treasury
Total - - - (59,494)
(1,668) (61,162)
comprehensive
income/(loss)
Dividends 7 - - (6,899) -
(1,570) (8,469)
paid
Balance at 31 10,132 25,888 98,780 63,746 -
198,546
July 2022
* Within the balance of the capital reserve, £33,340,000 relates to realised
gains (2022: £15,871,000). Realised gains are distributable by way of a
dividend. The remaining £57,681,000 relates to unrealised gains on financial
instruments (2022: £47,875,000) and is non-distributable.
** Fully distributable.
STATEMENT OF FINANCIAL POSITION
As at 31 July 2023
2023 2022
Notes £'000 £'000
Non-current assets
Investments at fair 9 188,264 128,111
value through profit or
loss
Current assets
Unrealised derivative 13 5,680 2,548
assets
Trade and other 10 147 29
receivables
Cash and cash 11 17,049 48,840
equivalents
Cash collateral 13 12,186 36,394
receivable from brokers
35,062 87,811
Creditors - amounts
falling due within one
year
Unrealised derivative 13 (1,411) (14,284)
liabilities
Trade and other payables 12 (277) (1,107)
Cash collateral payable 13 (259) (1,985)
to brokers
(1,947) (17,376)
Net current assets 33,115 70,435
Net assets 221,379 198,546
Capital and reserves
Ordinary Share Capital 14 10,132 10,132
Share premium 25,888 25,888
Special Reserves 94,338 98,780
Capital reserve 91,021 63,746
Retained earnings - -
Total equity 221,379 198,546
Basic and fully diluted 15 550.79p 493.04p
NAV per Share
Number of Shares in 14 40,193,018 40,270,055
issue excluding treasury
The Financial Statements on pages 68 to 88 of the full Annual Report were
approved by the Board of Directors and authorised for issue on 27 September 2023
and are signed on its behalf by:
Daniel Wright
Chairman
Manchester and London Investment Trust Public Limited Company
Company Number: 01009550
STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS
For the year ended 31 July 2023
2023 2022
£'000 £'000
Cash flow from operating activities
Return on operating activities 28,831 (61,122)
before tax
Interest expense 2,047 968
(Gains)/Losses on investments held (27,810) 64,501
at fair value through profit or
loss
(Increase)/Decrease in receivables (116) 2
Increase/(decrease) in payables 26 (92)
Exchange gains on Currency Balances (1,473) (5,815)
Tax (77) (40)
Net cash generated from/(used in) 1,428 (1,598)
operating activities
Cash flow from investing activities
Purchases of investments (116,934) (86,419)
Sales of investments 73,120 105,030
Derivative instrument cashflows 17,023 (71)
Net cash (outflow)/inflow from (26,791) 18,540
investing activities
Cash flow from financing activities
Ordinary shares bought back and (289) (1,509)
held in treasury
Equity dividends paid (5,632) (8,469)
Interest paid (1,980) (960)
Net cash generated in financing (7,901) (10,938)
activities
Net (decrease)/increase in cash and (33,264) 6,004
cash equivalents
Exchange gains on Currency Balances 1,473 5,815
Cash and cash equivalents at 48,840 37,021
beginning of year
Cash and cash equivalents at end of 17,049 48,840
year
The notes below form partof these Financial Statements.
NOTES FORMING PART OF THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
For the year ended 31 July 2023
1. General information and accounting policies
Manchester and London Investment Trust plc is a public limited company
incorporated in the UK and registered in England and Wales. The principal
activity of the Company is that of an investment trust company within the
meaning of Sections 1158/1159 of the Corporation Tax Act 2010 and its investment
approach is detailed in the Strategic Report.
The Company's Financial Statements have been prepared in accordance with
international accounting standards in conformity with the requirements of the
Companies Act 2006. The Financial Statements have also been prepared in
accordance with the AIC SORP for the financial statements of investment trust
companies and venture capital trusts.
Basis of preparation
In order to better reflect the activities of an investment trust company and in
accordance with the AIC SORP, supplementary information which analyses the
Statement of Comprehensive Income between items of revenue and capital nature
has been prepared alongside the Statement of Comprehensive Income.
The Financial Statements are presented in Sterling, which is the Company's
functional currency as the UK is the primary environment in which it operates,
rounded to the nearest £'000, except where otherwise indicated.
Going concern
The financial statements have been prepared on a going concern basis and on the
basis that approval as an investment trust company will continue to be met.
The Directors have made an assessment of the Company's ability to continue as a
going concern and are satisfied that the Company has adequate resources to
continue in operational existence for a period of at least 12 months from the
date when these financial statements were approved.
In making the assessment, the Directors of the Company have considered the
likely impacts of international and economic uncertainties on the Company,
operations and the investment portfolio. These include, but are not limited to,
the impact of COVID-19, the war in Ukraine, political instability in the UK,
supply shortages and inflationary pressures.
The Directors noted that the Company, with the current cash balance and holding
a portfolio of listed investments, is able to meet the obligations of the
Company as they fall due. The current cash balance, enables the Company to meet
any funding requirements and finance future additional investments. The Company
is a closed-end fund, where assets are not required to be liquidated to meet day
to day redemptions.
The Directors have completed stress tests assessing the impact of changes in
market value and income with associated cash flows. In making this assessment,
they have considered plausible downside scenarios. These tests were driven by
the possible effects of continuation of the COVID-19 pandemic but, as an
arithmetic exercise, apply equally to any other set of circumstances in which
asset value and income are significantly impaired. The conclusion was that in a
plausible downside scenario the Company could continue to meet its liabilities.
Whilst the economic future is uncertain, and the Directors believe that it is
possible the Company could experience further reductions in income and/or market
value, the opinion of the Directors is that this should not be to a level which
would threaten the Company's ability to continue as a going concern.
The Directors, the Manager and other service providers have put in place
contingency plans to minimise disruption. Furthermore, the Directors are not
aware of any material uncertainties that may cast significant doubt on the
Company's ability to continue as a going concern, having taken into account the
liquidity of the Company's investment portfolio and the Company's financial
position in respect of its cash flows, borrowing facilities and investment
commitments (of which there are none of significance). Therefore, the financial
statements have been prepared on the going concern basis.
Segmental reporting
The Directors are of the opinion that the Company is engaged in a single segment
of business, being investment business. The Company primarily invests in
companies listed on recognised international exchanges.
Accounting developments
In the year under review, the Company has applied amendments to IFRS issued by
the IASB adopted in conformity with UK adopted international accounting
standards. These include annual improvements to IFRS, changes in standards,
legislative and regulatory amendments, changes in disclosure and presentation
requirements. This incorporated:
· Interest Rate Benchmark Reform - IBOR `phase 2' (Amendments to IFRS 9, IAS
39 and IFRS 7);
· Onerous contracts - Cost of Fulfilling a Contract (Amendments to IAS 37);
· IAS 1 Presentation of Financial Statements and IAS 8 Accounting Policies,
Changes in Accounting Estimates and Errors (Amendment - Disclosure initiative -
Definition of Material); and
· Revisions to the Conceptual Framework for Financial Reporting.
The adoption of the changes to accounting standards has had no material impact
on these or prior years' financial statements. There are amendments to IAS/IFRS
that will apply from 1 August 2023 as follows:
· Classification of liabilities as current or non-current (Amendments to IAS
1);
· Disclosure of Accounting Policies (Amendments to IAS 1 and IFRS Practice
Statement 2);
· Definition of Accounting Estimates (Amendments to IAS 8);
· Deferred Tax Related to Assets and Liabilities Arising from a Single
Transaction - Amendments to IAS 12 Income Taxes; and
· Annual improvements to IFRS Standards.
The Directors do not anticipate the adoption of these will have a material
impact on the financial statements.
Critical accounting judgements and key sources of estimation uncertainty
The preparation of financial statements in conformity with IFRS requires
management to make judgements, estimates and assumptions that affect the
application of policies and the reported amounts in the financial statements.
The estimates and associated assumptions are based on historical experience and
various other factors that are believed to be reasonable under the
circumstances, the results of which form the basis of making judgements about
carrying values of assets and liabilities that are not readily apparent from
other sources. Actual results may differ from these estimates.
The areas requiring the greatest level of judgement and estimation in the
preparation of the Financial Statements are: valuation of derivatives; and
accounting for revenue and expenses in relation to equity swaps. The policies
for these are set out in the notes to the Financial Statements.
There were no significant accounting estimates or critical accounting judgements
in the year.
Investments
Investments are measured initially, and at subsequent reporting dates, at fair
value through profit and loss, and derecognised at trade date where a purchase
or sale is under a contract whose terms require delivery within the timeframe of
the relevant market. For listed equity investments, this is deemed to be closing
prices.
Changes in fair value of investments are recognised in the Statement of
Comprehensive Income as a capital item. On disposal, realised gains and losses
are also recognised in the Statement of Comprehensive Income as capital items.
All investments for which fair value is measured or disclosed in the Financial
Statements are categorised within the fair value hierarchy in note 9.
Financial instruments
The Company may use a variety of derivative instruments, including equity swaps,
futures, forwards and options under master agreements with the Company's
derivative counterparties to enable the Company to gain long and short exposure
on individual securities.
The Company recognises financial assets and financial liabilities when it
becomes a party to the contractual provisions of the instrument. Listed options
and futures contracts are recognised at fair value through profit or loss valued
by reference to the underlying market value of the corresponding security,
traded prices and/or third party information.
Notional dividend income arising on long positions is recognised in the
Statement of Comprehensive Income as revenue. Interest expenses on open long
positions are allocated to capital. All remaining interest or financing charges
on derivative contracts are allocated to the revenue account.
Unrealised changes to the value of securities in relation to derivatives are
recognised in the Statement of Comprehensive Income as capital items.
Foreign currency
Transactions denominated in foreign currencies are converted to Sterling at the
actual exchange rate as at the date of the transaction. Monetary assets and
liabilities and non-monetary assets held at fair value denominated in foreign
currencies at the year end are translated at the Statement of Financial Position
date. Any gain or loss arising from a change in exchange rate subsequent to the
date of the transaction is included as an exchange gain or loss in the capital
reserve or the revenue account depending on whether the gain or loss is capital
or revenue in nature.
Cash and cash equivalents
Cash comprises cash in hand and overdrafts. Cash equivalents are short-term,
highly liquid investments that are readily convertible to known amounts of cash
and which are subject to insignificant risk of changes in value.
For the purposes of the Statement of Financial Position and the Statement of
Cash Flows, cash and cash equivalents consist of cash and cash equivalents as
defined above, net of outstanding bank overdrafts when applicable.
Cash held in margin/collateral accounts at the Company's brokers is presented as
Cash collateral receivable from brokers in the financial statements. Any cash
collateral owed back to the brokers on marked to market gains of Equity Swaps is
shown in the financial statements as Cash collateral payable to brokers.
Trade receivables, trade payables and short-term borrowings
Trade receivables, trade payables and short-term borrowings are measured at
amortised cost.
Revenue recognition
Revenue is recognised when it is probable that economic benefits associated with
a transaction will flow to the Company and the revenue can be reliably measured.
Dividends from overseas companies are shown gross of any non-recoverable
withholding taxes which are disclosed separately in the Statement of
Comprehensive Income.
Dividends receivable on quoted equity shares are taken to revenue on an ex
-dividend basis. Dividends receivable on equity shares where no ex-dividend date
is quoted are brought into account when the Company's right to receive payment
is established.
All other income is accounted for on a time-apportioned basis and recognised in
the Statement of Comprehensive Income.
Expenses
All expenses are accounted for on an accruals basis and are charged to revenue.
All other administrative expenses are charged through the revenue column in the
Statement of Comprehensive Income.
Finance costs
Finance costs are accounted for on an accruals basis.
Financing charged by the Prime Brokers on open long positions are allocated to
capital, with other finance costs being allocated to revenue.
Taxation
The charge for taxation is based on the net revenue for the year and any
deferred tax.
Deferred tax is provided using the liability method on temporary differences
between the tax bases of assets and liabilities and their carrying amount for
financial reporting purposes at the reporting date. Deferred tax assets are only
recognised if it is considered more likely than not that there will be suitable
profits from which the future reversal of timing differences can be deducted. In
line with recommendations of the AIC SORP, the allocation method used to
calculate the tax relief on expenses charged to capital is the "marginal" basis.
Under this basis, if taxable income is capable of being offset entirely by
expenses charged through the revenue account, then no tax relief is transferred
to the capital account.
No taxation liability arises on gains from sales of investments by the Company
by virtue of its investment trust status. However, the net revenue (excluding
investment income) accruing to the Company is liable to corporation tax at
prevailing rates.
Dividends payable to Shareholders
Dividends to Shareholders are recognised as a liability in the period in which
they are approved and are taken to the Statement of Changes in Equity. Dividends
declared and approved by the Company after the Statement of Financial Position
date have not been recognised as a liability of the Company at the Statement of
Financial Position date.
Share capital
The share capital is the nominal value of issued ordinary shares and is not
distributable.
Share premium
The Share premium account represents the accumulated premium paid for Shares
issued in previous periods above their nominal value less issue expenses. This
is a reserve forming part of the non-distributable reserves. The following items
are taken to this reserve:
· costs associated with the issue of equity;
· premium on the issue of Shares; and
· premium on the sales of Shares held in Treasury over the market value.
Special Reserve
The special reserve was created by a cancellation of the share premium account
increasing the distributable reserves of the Company. The special reserve is
distributable, and the following items are taken to this reserve:
· costs of share buy-backs, including related stamp duty and transaction
costs; and
· dividends.
Capital reserve
The following are taken to capital reserve:
· gains and losses on the realisation of investments;
· increases and decreases in the valuation of the investments held at the year
end;
· cost of share buy backs;
· exchange differences of a capital nature; and
· expenses, together with the related taxation effect, allocated to this
reserve in accordance with the above policies.
Retained earnings
The revenue reserve represents accumulated revenue account profits and losses.
The surplus accumulated profits are distributable by way of dividends.
2. Income
2023 2022
£'000 £'000
Dividends from listed investments 575 265
Bank interest 1,754 -
2,329 265
3. Management fee
2023 2022
£'000 £'000
Base fee 473 1,022
Variable fee - 434
Risk management and valuation fee 59 59
532 1,515
The Management Fee payable to the Manager is equal to 0.5% per annum of the
Company's NAV (the "Base Fee"), calculated as at the last business day of each
calendar month (the "Calculation Date"), and is paid monthly arrears. An uplift
of 0.25% of the NAV will be applied to the fee, should the performance of the
Company over the 36-month period to the Calculation Date be above that of the
Company's benchmark. Should the performance of the Company over the 36-month
period to the Calculation Date be below that of the Company's benchmark, a
downward adjustment of 0.25% of the NAV will be applied to the fee.
In addition, a Risk Management and Valuation fee equating to £59,000 on an
annualised basis is charged by the AIFM. The Manager is also reimbursed any
expenses incurred by it on behalf of the Company.
4. Other operating expenses
2023 2022
£'000 £'000
Directors' fees 95 94
Auditors' remuneration 35 34
Registrar fees 27 27
Depositary fees 69 83
Other expenses 273 360
499 598
Other operating expenses include irrecoverable VAT where appropriate, excluding
the Auditors' and Directors' remuneration which have been shown net of VAT.
No non-audit services were provided by Deloitte LLP in the year to 31 July 2023.
5. Finance costs
2023 2022
£'000 £'000
Charged to revenue 38 55
Charged to capital 2,009 952
2,047 1,007
6. Taxation
a) Analysis of charge in year
Year to Year to
31 July 31 July
2023 2022
Revenue Capital Total Revenue Capital£'000 Total
£'000
£'000 £'000 £'000 £'000
Current tax:
Overseas tax 77 - 77 40 - 40
not recoverable
77 - 77 40 - 40
b) The current
taxation charge
for the year is
lower than the
standard rate
of Corporation
Tax in the UK
of 25% (2022:
19%).
The differences
are explained
below:
Net return 1,556 27,275 28,831 (1,628) (59,494) (61,122)
before taxation
Theoretical tax 327 5,728 6,055 (309) (11,304) (11,613)
at UK
corporation tax
rate of 21%
(2022: 19%)*
Effects of:
UK dividends (6) - (6) - - -
that are not
taxable
Foreign (115) - (115) (51) - (51)
dividends that
are not
taxable
Non-taxable - (6,150) (6,150) - 11,123 11,123
investment
(gains)/losses
Offshore income - - - 5 - 5
gains
Irrecoverable 77 - 77 40 - 40
overseas tax
Unrelieved (206) 422 (216) 355 181 536
excess expenses
Total tax 77 - 77 40 - 40
charge
*The theoretical tax rate is calculated using a blended tax rate over the year.
c) Factors that may affect future tax charges.
At 31 July 2023, there is an unrecognised deferred tax asset, measured at the
latest enacted tax rate of 25%, of £4,070,000 (2022: £3,813,000). This deferred
tax asset relates to surplus management expenses and non trade loan relationship
debits. It is unlikely that the company will generate sufficient taxable profits
in the foreseeable future to recover these amounts and therefore the asset has
not been recognised in the year, or in prior years.
As at 31 July 2023, the company has unrelieved capital losses of £9,329,000
(2022: £9,329,000). There is therefore, a related unrecognised deferred tax
asset, measured at the latest enacted rate of 25%, of £2,332,000 (2022:
£2,332,000). These capital losses can only be utilised to the extent that the
company does not qualify as an investment trust in the future and, as such, the
asset has not been recognised.
7. Dividends
Amounts recognised as distributions to 2023 2022
equity holders in the year:
£'000 £'000
Final ordinary dividend for the year ended 2,819 2,831
31 July 2023 of 7.0p (2022: 7.0p) per share
Interim ordinary dividend for the year ended 2,813 2,819
31 July 2023 of 7.0p (2022: 7.0p) per share
Special dividend for the year ended 31 July - 2,819
2023 of Nil (2022:7.0p) per share
5,632 8,469
The Directors are proposing a final dividend of 7.0p for the financial year
2023.
These proposed dividends have been excluded as a liability in these Financial
Statements in accordance with IFRS.
We also set out below the total dividend payable in respect of the financial
year, which is the basis on which the requirements of Section 1158 of the
Corporation Tax Act 2010 are considered.
Included in the dividend distributions to equity holders in the year is
£4,153,000 (2022: £6,899,000) paid from special reserve.
2023 2022
£'000 £'000
Interim ordinary dividend for the year ended 31 2,813 2,819
July 2023 of 7.0p (2022: 7.0p) per Share
Special dividend for the year ended 31 July 2023 - 2,819
of Nil (2022: 7.0p) per share
Proposed final ordinary dividend* for the year 2,813* 2,819
ended 31 July 2023 of 7.0p (2022: 7.0p) per
Share
5,626 8,457
*Based on Shares in circulation on 27 September 2023 (excluding Shares held in
treasury).
8. Return per Share
2023 2022
Net Weighted Total Net Weighted Total
Return Average Return Average
Shares (p) Shares (p)
£'000 £'000
Basic and fully
diluted return:
Net revenue 1,479 40,242,768 3.67 (1,668) 40,338,477 (4.13)
return after
taxation
Net capital 27,275 40,242,768 40,338,477 (147.49)
return after 67.78 (59,494)
taxation
Total 28,754 40,242,768 40,338,477 (151.62)
71.45 (61,162)
Basic revenue, capital and total return per Share is based on the net revenue,
capital and total return for the period and on the weighted average number of
Shares in issue of 40,242,768 (2022: 40,338,477).
9. Investments at fair value through profit or loss
2023 2022
Total Total
£'000 £'000
Analysis of investment portfolio movements
Opening cost at 1 August 82,500 80,793
Opening unrealised appreciation at 45,611 76,126
1 August
Opening fair value at 1 August 128,111 156,919
Movements in the year
Purchases at cost 116,009 87,343
Sales proceeds (73,432) (105,030)
Realised profit on sales 11,078 19,394
Increase/(decrease) in unrealised appreciation 6,498 (30,515)
Closing fair value at 31 July 188,264 128,111
Closing cost at 31 July 136,155 82,500
Closing unrealised appreciation at 52,109 45,611
31 July
Closing fair value at 31 July 188,264 128,111
Fair value hierarchy
Financial assets of the Company are carried in the Statement of Financial
Position at fair value. The fair value is the amount at which the asset could be
sold or the liability transferred in an orderly transaction between market
participants, at the measurement date, other than a forced or liquidation sale.
The Company measures fair values using the following hierarchy that reflects the
significance of the inputs used in making the measurements.
Categorisation within the hierarchy has been determined on the basis of the
lowest level input that is significant to the fair value measurement of the
relevant assets as follows:
· Level 1 - valued using quoted prices unadjusted in an active market.
· Level 2 - valued by reference to valuation techniques using observable
inputs for the asset or liability other than quoted prices included in Level 1.
· Level 3 - valued by reference to valuation techniques using inputs that are
not based on observable market data for the asset or liability.
The tables below set out fair value measurements of financial instruments as at
the year end, by their category in the fair value hierarchy into which the fair
value measurement is categorised.
Financial assets/liabilities at fair value through profit or loss at 31 July
2023
Level 1 Level 2 Total
£'000 £'000 £'000
Investments 188,264 - 188,264
Unrealised Derivative Assets - 5,680 5,680
Unrealised Derivative Liability - (1,411) (1,411)
Total 188,264 4,269 192,533
Financial assets/liabilities at fair value through profit or loss at 31 July
2022
Level 1 Level 2 Total
£'000 £'000 £'000
Investments 128,111 - 128,111
Unrealised Derivative Assets - 2,548 2,548
Unrealised Derivative Liability - (14,284) (14,284)
Total 128,111 (11,736) 116,385
There have been no transfers during the year between Level 1 and 2 fair value
measurements.
Transaction costs
During the year, the Company incurred transaction costs of £176,000 (2022:
£194,000) on the purchase and disposal of investments.
Analysis of capital gains and losses
2023 2022
£'000 £'000
Gains on sales of investments 11,078 19,394
Investment holding (losses)/gains 6,498 (30,515)
Realised gains /(losses) on 7,238 (44,396)
derivatives
Unrealised gains/(losses) on 3,309 (8,984)
derivatives
28,123 (64,501)
Realised gains/(losses) on 1,161 5,959
currency balances and trade
settlements
Dividend income in respect of 296 275
contracts for difference
29,580 (58,267)
10. Trade and other receivables
2023 2022
£'000 £'000
Dividends receivable 6 -
Interest receivable 105 -
Prepayments 36 29
147 29
11. Cash and cash equivalents
2023 2022
£'000 £'000
Cash and cash equivalents 17,049 48,840
17,049 48,840
As at the balance sheet date, the Company held shares valued at £3,852,000
(2022: £6,741,000) in the Morgan Stanley Sterling Liquidity fund, which has been
classified as a Cash equivalent (see Note 1).
12. Trade and other payables
2023 2022
£'000 £'000
Due to Brokers - 924
Accruals 277 183
277 1,107
13. Derivatives
The Company may use a variety of derivative contracts under master agreements
with the Company's derivative counterparties to enable it to gain long and short
exposure, including Options and Equity Swaps (which are synthetic equities), and
are valued by reference to the market values of the investments' underlying
securities.
The sources of the return under the Equity Swap contracts (e.g. notional
dividends, financing costs, interest returns and realised and unrealised gains
and losses) are allocated to the revenue and capital accounts in alignment with
the nature of the underlying source of income.
· Notional dividend income or expense arising on long or short positions is
apportioned wholly to the revenue account.
· Notional interest or financing charges on open long positions are
apportioned wholly to the capital account. All remaining interest or financing
charges on derivative contracts are allocated to the revenue account.
· Changes in value relating to underlying price movements of securities in
relation to Equity Swap exposures are allocated to capital.
The fair values of derivative financial assets are set out in the table below:
2023 2022
Original £'000
£'000
Unrealised derivative assets 5,680 2,548
Cash collateral receivable from brokers 12,186 36,394
Unrealised derivative liabilities (1,411) (14,284)
Cash collateral payable to brokers (259) (1,985)
The corresponding gross exposure on long equity swaps as at 31 July 2023 was
£60,756,000 (2022: £73,714,000) and the total gross exposure of short equity
swaps was £5,203,000 (2022: £9,695,000). The net marked to market futures and
options total value as at 31 July 2023 was negative £1,064,000 (2022: negative
£9,369,000).
As at 31 July 2023, the Company held cash and cash equivalent balances of
£17,049,000 (2022: £48,840,000). The Company also pledged cash of £12,186,000
(2022: £36,394,000) on collateral accounts with counterparty brokers
specifically for derivatives (including exchange traded derivatives positions
and non-exchange traded swap positions). This cash represents collateral posted
to broker deposit accounts in relation to amounts due to brokers in order to
maintain open positions and constitute a number of types of margin required
(such as initial, marked to market variation etc).
The nature of the Company's portfolio means that the Company gains significant
exposure to a number of markets through Equity Swaps. The Company may use Equity
Swaps to manage gearing. However, to the extent the Manager has elected not to
be geared, the Company will generally hold a level of cash (or equivalent
holding in the Cash Fund) on its balance sheet representative of the difference
between the cost of purchasing investments directly and the lower initial cost
of making a margin payment on an Equity Swap contract.
As at 31 July 2023, the Company also owed £259,000 (2022: £1,985,000) to brokers
in respect of cash collateral received relating to amounts owed by these brokers
to cover unrealised gains on open Equity Swaps on the Statement of Financial
Position. To the extent there are unrealised losses on Equity Swap contracts
uncovered by balances held at the broker, the Company will transfer deposit
monies across to these broker margin deposit accounts. The Manager monitors
margin positions on a daily basis to ensure any margin deposit balances are as
expected and any amounts owed to the Company are transferred on a timely basis.
In the event of default, a proportion of the monies held in the collateral
accounts resides with the counterparty broker.
14. Share capital
2023 2022
Share capital Number of Nominal Numberof Nominal value £'000
Shares value Shares
£'000
Shares of 25p each
issued and fully
paid
Balance as at 1 40,528,238 10,132 40,528,238 10,132
August
Shares issued - - - -
Balance as at 31 40,528,238 10,132 40,528,238 10,132
July
Treasury shares
Balance as at 1 258,183 -
August
Buyback of Ordinary 77,037 258,183
Shares into Treasury
Balance at end of 335,220 258,183
year
Total Ordinary Share 40,193,018 40,270,055
capital excluding
Treasury shares
No shares were issued during the year (2022: nil).
During the year, 77,037 Ordinary Shares (2022: 258,183) were bought back and
held in treasury for total cost of £289,000.
15. NAV per Share
NAV per Share Net assets
attributable
2023 2022 2023 2022
(p) (p) £'000 £'000
Shares: basic and fully diluted 550.79 493.04 221,379 198,546
The basic NAV per Share is based on net assets at the year end and 40,193,018
(2022: 40,270,055) Shares in issue, adjusted for any Shares held in Treasury.
16. Risks - investments, financial instruments and other risks
Investment objective and policy
The Company's investment objective and policy are detailed above.
The investing activities in pursuit of its investment objective involve certain
inherent risks.
The Company's financial instruments can comprise:
· shares and debt securities held in accordance with the Company's investment
objective and policy;
· derivative instruments for trading, hedging and investment purposes;
· cash, liquid resources and short-term debtors and creditors that arise from
its operations; and
· current asset investments and trading.
Risks
The risks identified arising from the Company's financial instruments are market
risk (which comprises market price risk and interest rate risk), liquidity risk
and credit and counterparty risk. The Company may enter into derivative
contracts to manage risk. The Board reviews and agrees policies for managing
each of these risks, which are summarised below.
These policies remained unchanged since the beginning of the accounting period.
Market risk
Market risk arises mainly from uncertainty about future prices of financial
instruments used in the Company's business. It represents the potential loss the
Company might suffer through holding market positions by way of price movements,
interest rate movements and exchange rate movements. The Company assesses the
exposure to market risk when making each investment decision and these risks are
monitored by the Manager on a regular basis and the Board at quarterly meetings
with the Manager.
Details of the long equity exposures held at 31 July 2023 are shown above.
If the price of these investments and equity swaps had increased by 5% at the
reporting date with all other variables remaining constant, the capital return
in the Statement of Comprehensive Income and the net assets attributable to
equity holders of the Company would increase by £12,191,000.
A 5% decrease in share prices would have resulted in an equal and opposite
effect of £12,191,000, on the basis that all other variables remain constant.
This level of change is considered to be reasonable based on observation of
current market conditions.
At the year end, the Company's direct equity exposure to market risk was as
follows:
Company
2023 2022
£'000 £'000
Equity long exposures
Investments held in equity form 188,264 128,111
Long exposure held in equity swap hedges 60,756 73,714
249,020 201,825
Short exposure held in equity swap hedges (5,203) (9,695)
243,817 192,130
Interest rate risk
Interest rate risk arises from uncertainty over the interest rates charged by
financial institutions. It represents the potential increased costs of financing
for the Company. The Manager actively monitors interest rates and the Company's
ability to meet its financing requirements throughout the year and reports to
the Board. No sensitivity analysis is presented because, as at the financial
year end, the Company held zero balances invested in bonds or fixed interest
securities. The Company is charged interest on its Equity Swap positions but
these charges are not currently material once netted with interest received on
cash, collateral and cash equivalent balances.
Liquidity risk
Liquidity risk reflects the risk that the Company will have insufficient funds
to meet its financial obligations as they fall due. The Directors have minimised
liquidity risk by investing in a portfolio of quoted companies that are readily
realisable.
The Company's uninvested funds are held almost entirely with the Prime Brokers
or on deposits with UK banking institutions.
As at 31 July 2023, the financial liabilities comprised:
Company
2023 2022
£'000 £'000
Unrealised derivative liabilities 1,411 14,284
Trade payables and accruals 277 1,107
Cash collateral payable to brokers 259 1,985
1,947 17,376 17,376
The above liabilities are stated at amortised cost or fair value.
The Company manages liquidity risk through constant monitoring of the Company's
gearing position to ensure the Company is able to satisfy any and all debts
within the agreed credit terms.
Currency rate risk
Currency risk is the risk that the fair value of future cash flows of a
financial instrument will fluctuate because of changes in foreign exchange
rates. If Sterling had strengthened by 5% against all other currencies at the
reporting date, with all other variables remaining constant, the total return in
the Statement of Comprehensive Income and the net assets attributable to equity
holders of the Company, assuming the Company held no balances in Sterling, would
have decreased by £11,069,000. If Sterling had weakened by 5% against all
currencies, there would have been an equal and opposite effect. This level of
change is considered to be reasonable based on observation of current market
conditions.
The Company's material foreign currency exposures are laid out below.
Sterling US Dollar Euro Total
£'000 £'000 £'000 £'000
Investments 1,641 186,623 - 188,264
Unrealised - 4,522 1,158 5,680
derivative assets
Cash and cash 6,450 10,865 (266) 17,049
equivalents
Cash collateral 6,746 5,214 226 12,186
receivable from
brokers
Unrealised - (1,232) (179) (1,411)
derivative
liabilities
Cash collateral (259) - - (259)
payable to brokers
Other net (130) - - (130)
liabilities
14,448 205,992 939 221,379
The Company constantly monitors currency rate risk to ensure balances, wherever
possible, are translated at rates favourable to the Company.
Credit and counterparty risk
Credit risk is the risk of financial loss to the Company if the contractual
party to a financial instrument fails to meet its contractual obligations.
The maximum exposure to credit risk as at 31 July 2023 was £35,062,000 (2022:
£80,911,000). The calculation is based on the Company's credit risk exposure as
at 31 July 2023 and this may not be representative for the whole year.
The Company's quoted investments are held on its behalf by the Prime Brokers.
Bankruptcy or insolvency of the Prime Brokers may cause the Company's rights
with respect to securities held by the Prime Brokers to be delayed. The Manager
and the Board monitor the Company's risk and exposures.
Where the Manager makes an investment in a bond, corporate or otherwise, the
credit worthiness of the issuer is taken into account so as to minimise the risk
to the Company of default. The credit standing and other associated risks are
reviewed by the Manager.
Investment transactions are carried out with a number of brokers where
creditworthiness is reviewed by the Manager.
Cash is only held at banks that have been identified by the Board as reputable
and of high credit quality. The Manager reviews these on a continual basis with
regular updates to the Board.
Capital management policies
The structure of the Company's capital is noted in the Statement of Changes in
Equity and managed in accordance with the investment objective and policy set
out in the Strategic Report.
The Company's capital management objectives are to maximise the return to
Shareholders while maintaining a capital base to allow the Company to operate
effectively and meet obligations as they fall due.
The Board, with the assistance of the Manager, monitors and reviews the capital
on an ongoing basis.
The Company is subject to externally imposed capital requirements:
· as a public company, the Company is required to have a minimum Share capital
of £50,000; and
· in accordance with the provisions of Sections 832 and 833 of the Companies
Act 2006, the Company, as an investment company:
· is only able to make a dividend distribution to the extent that the assets
of the Company are equal to at least one and a half times its liabilities after
the dividend payment has been made; and
· is required to make a dividend distribution each year such that it does
not retain more than 15% of the income that it derives from shares and
securities.
These requirements are unchanged since last year and the Company has complied
with them at all times.
A sensitivity analysis has not been prepared for interest risk, as the Company
is not materially exposed to interest rates.
17. Related party transactions
MLCM, a company controlled by Mr Mark Sheppard, is the Manager and AIFM of the
Company. Mr Sheppard is also a director of MMIC, which is the controlling
Shareholder of the Company.
The Manager receives a monthly management fee for these services which in the
year under review amounted to a total of £532,000 (2022: £1,515,000) excluding
VAT. The balance owing to the Manager as at 31 July 2023 was £52,000 (2022:
£47,000). Also payable to the Manager during the year were expenses incurred on
behalf of the Company of £nil (2022: £3,000).
Details relating to the Directors' emoluments are found in the Directors'
Remuneration Report on page 48 of the full Annual Report.
18. Ultimate control
The ultimate controlling Shareholder throughout the year and the previous year
was MMIC, a company incorporated in the UK and registered in England and Wales.
This company was controlled throughout the year and the previous year by Mr Mark
Sheppard and his immediate family.
A copy of the financial statements of MMIC can be obtained from the Company's
website: www.mlcapman.com/manchester-london-investment-trust-plc.
19. Post Statement of Financial Position events
There are no post balance sheet events to report.
GLOSSARY
Active share
Active share is a measure of the percentage of stock holdings in a manager's
portfolio that differ from the comparative benchmark index. It is calculated by
summing the absolute differences between benchmark and portfolio holdings'
weights, then dividing by two (to eliminate double counting). An active share of
100 indicates no overlap with the index and an active share of zero indicates a
portfolio that tracks the index (when using leverage, maximum active share
levels can exceed 100%).
Alternative Performance Measure (`APM')
An APM is a numerical measure of the Company's current, historical or future
financial performance, financial position or cash flows, other than a financial
measure defined or specified in the applicable financial framework. In selecting
these Alternative Performance Measures, the Directors considered the key
objectives and expectations of typical investors in an investment trust such as
the Company.
Delta
Delta measures the degree to which an option is exposed to shifts in the price
of the underlying asset (i.e. stock) or commodity (i.e. futures contract).
Values range from 1.0 to -1.0 (or 100 to -100, depending on the convention
employed). See website link for further details: https://mlcapman.com/faq/
Delta Adjusted Exposure
Delta times the underlying security's notional exposure for options. For all
other instruments, the notional exposure of the security. At the sector and
portfolio levels, this is the sum of the individual security delta adjusted
exposures. See website link for further details: https://mlcapman.com/faq/
Discount/premium
If the Share price is lower than the NAV per Share it is said to be trading at a
discount. The size of the discount is calculated by subtracting the Share price
from the NAV per Share and is usually expressed as a percentage of the NAV per
Share. If the Share price is higher than the NAV per Share, this situation is
called a premium.
Gearing
Gearing refers to the level of the Company's debt to its equity capital. The
Company may borrow money to invest in additional investments for its portfolio.
If the Company's assets grow, the Shareholders' assets grow proportionately more
because the debt remains the same. But if the value of the Company's assets
falls, the situation is reversed. Gearing can therefore enhance performance in
rising markets but can adversely impact performance in falling markets.
Gearing represents borrowings at par less cash and cash equivalents (including
any outstanding trade or foreign exchange settlements) expressed as a percentage
of Shareholders' funds.
Potential gearing is the Company's borrowings expressed as a percentage of
Shareholders' funds.
Leverage
Under the AIFMD it is necessary for AIFs to disclose their leverage in
accordance with the prescribed calculations of the Directive. Leverage is often
used as another term for gearing which is included within the Strategic Report.
Under the AIFMD there are two types of leverage that the AIF is required to set
limits for, monitor and periodically disclose to investors. The two types of
leverage calculations defined are the gross and commitment methods. These
methods summarily express leverage as a ratio of the exposure of debt, non
-sterling currency, equity or currency hedging and derivatives exposure against
the net asset value. The difference between the two methods is that the
commitment method nets off derivative instruments and the gross method
aggregates them.
Net asset value ("NAV")
The NAV is Shareholders' funds expressed as an amount per individual Share.
Shareholders' funds are the total value of all the Company's assets, at a
current market value, having deducted all liabilities and prior charges at their
par value (or at their asset value). The total NAV per Share is calculated by
dividing the NAV by the number of Shares in issue excluding Treasury Shares.
Prime Broker
Prime brokerage is the bundling of services by investment banks enabling the
Company to borrow securities and cash in order to be able to invest on a netted
basis and achieve an absolute return. The Prime Broker provides custody and a
centralised securities clearing facility for the Company so the Company's
collateral requirements are netted across all deals handled by the Prime Broker.
Ongoing charges ratio
As recommended by the AIC, ongoing charges are the Company's annualised expenses
including (excluding finance costs, variable management fee and certain non
-recurring items) expressed as a percentage of the average monthly net assets of
£188,932,000. The ongoing charges ratio is 0.54%.
Total assets
Total assets include investments, cash, current assets and all other assets. An
asset is an economic resource, being anything tangible or intangible that can be
owned or controlled to produce value and to produce positive economic value.
Assets represent the value of ownership that can be converted into cash. The
total assets less all liabilities will be equivalent to total Shareholders'
funds.
Total return
Total return statistics enable the investor to make performance comparisons
between investment trusts with different dividend policies. The total return
measures the combined effect of any dividends paid, together with the rise or
fall in the Share price or NAV. This is calculated by the movement in the NAV or
Share price plus dividend income reinvested by the Company at the prevailing NAV
or Share price.
NAV Total Return Page** 31 July 2023 31 July
2022
Closing NAV per Share (p) 3 550.79 493.04
Total dividends paid in the 14.00 21.00
year ended 31 July 2023 (2022)
(p)
Adjusted closing NAV (p) 564.79 514.04 a
Opening NAV per Share (p) 3 493.04 665.43 b
NAV total return unadjusted 14.55 (22.75) c
(c=((a-b)/b)) (%)
NAV total return adjusted (%)* 3/4 15.34 (23.00)
*Based on NAV price movements and dividends reinvested at the relevant cum
dividend NAV value during the period. Where the dividend is invested and the NAV
value falls this will further reduce the return or, if it rises, any increase
will be greater. The source is Bloomberg who have calculated the return on an
industry comparative basis.
**Page numbers refer to this in the full Annual Report.
ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING
Notice is hereby given that the Annual General Meeting of Manchester and London
Investment Trust plc will be held on Wednesday 1 November 2023 at 12.00 noon.
Please note that the Annual General Meeting will be held virtually and
attendance in person is not permitted.
The notice of this meeting, which includes an explanation of the items of
business to be considered at the meeting and restrictions on attendance in
person, will be circulated to Shareholders and will also be available at
www.mlcapman.com/manchester-london-investment-trust-plc.
NATIONAL STORAGE MECHANISM
A copy of the Annual Report and Financial Statements and Notice of Annual
General Meeting will be submitted shortly to the National Storage Mechanism
("NSM") and will be available for inspection at the NSM, which is situated at
https://data.fca.org.uk/#/nsm/nationalstoragemechanism.
LEI: 213800HMBZXULR2EEO10
ENDS
Neither the contents of the Company's website nor the contents of any website
accessible from hyperlinks on this announcement (or any other website) is
incorporated into, or forms part of, this announcement.
This information was brought to you by Cision http://news.cision.com
END
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