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REG-BlackRock American Income Trust Plc: Final Results

BlackRock American Income Trust plc (formerly BlackRock Sustainable American
Income Trust plc)

LEI: 549300WWOCXSC241W468

Annual Report and Financial Statements 31 October 2024

Performance record

                                                    As at          As at            
                                                     31 October     31 October      
                                                     2024           2023            
 Net assets (£’000) 1                               155,067        154,789          
 Net asset value per ordinary share (pence)         216.24         193.51           
 Ordinary share price (mid-market) (pence)          190.00         174.00           
 Discount to cum income net asset value 2           12.1%          10.1%            
 Russell 1000 Value Index – gross total return 3    2143.06        1733.58          
 Russell 1000 Value Index – net total return 3      2533.77        2056.54          
                                                    =========      =========        

 

                                                          For the year     For the year       
                                                           ended            ended             
                                                           31 October       31 October        
                                                           2024             2023              
 Performance (with dividends reinvested)                                                      
 Net asset value per share 2                              16.0%            -5.6%              
 Ordinary share price 2                                   13.8%            -8.1%              
 Russell 1000 Value Index – gross total return 3          23.6%            -5.0%              
 Russell 1000 Value Index – net total return 3            23.2%            -5.3%              
                                                          ---------------  ---------------    
 Performance since inception (with dividends reinvested)                                      
 Net asset value per share 2                              246.5%           198.7%             
 Ordinary share price 2                                   204.7%           167.8%             
 Russell 1000 Value Index – gross total return 3          333.6%           250.7%             
 Russell 1000 Value Index – net total return 3            315.1%           236.9%             
                                                          =========        =========          

 

                                                              For the year     For the year     Change           
                                                               ended            ended            %               
                                                               31 October       31 October                       
                                                               2024             2023                             
 Revenue                                                                                                         
 Net profit on ordinary activities after taxation (£’000)     2,604            2,945            -11.6            
 Revenue earnings per ordinary share (pence) 4                3.39             3.67             -7.6             
                                                              ---------------  ---------------  ---------------  
 Interim dividends (pence)                                                                                       
 1st interim                                                  2.00             2.00             –                
 2nd interim                                                  2.00             2.00             –                
 3rd interim                                                  2.00             2.00             –                
 4th interim                                                  2.00             2.00             –                
                                                              ---------------  ---------------  ---------------  
 Total dividends payable/paid                                 8.00             8.00             –                
                                                              =========        =========        =========        

1 The change in net assets reflects portfolio movements, shares bought back
into treasury and dividends paid during the year.

2 Alternative Performance Measures, see Glossary in the Company’s Annual
Report for the year ended 31 October 2024.

3 The Company’s performance reference index (the Russell 1000 Value Index)
may be calculated on either a gross or a net total return basis. Net total
return (NR) indices calculate the reinvestment of dividends net of withholding
taxes using the tax rates applicable to non-resident institutional investors,
and hence give a lower total return than indices where calculations are on a
gross total return basis. As the Company is subject to the same withholding
tax rates for the countries in which it invests, the NR basis is felt to be
the most accurate, appropriate, consistent and fair comparison for the
Company.

4 Further details are given in the Glossary in the Company’s Annual Report
for the year ended 31 October 2024.

Sources: BlackRock and LSEG Datastream.

Performance figures have been calculated in Sterling terms with dividends
reinvested.

Chair’s Statement

Market overview
The performance of markets over the year to October 2024 was supported by a
more benign economic backdrop of falling inflation, a lower cost of borrowing,
a resilient consumer and robust corporate earnings. Evidence suggests that US
policymakers may have managed to bring inflation under control without causing
a recession and, despite persistent concerns surrounding the durability of
growth and interest rate policy, the US economy remains fundamentally strong.

Performance
Against this background and over the year to 31 October 2024, the Company’s
net asset value per share (NAV) returned +16.0% and the share price returned
+13.8%. This compares with a rise of +23.2% in the Russell 1000 Value Index
– net total return1, the Company’s reference index (all figures are in
Sterling terms with dividends reinvested net of withholding taxes). In the
same period, and as a broader comparison, the S&P 500 Index was up by +30.2%.

More details on this and the significant contributors to and detractors from
performance during the year are given in the Investment Manager’s Report.
Since the financial year end and up to close of business on 25 February 2025,
the Company’s NAV had increased by 4.8% (with dividends reinvested).

The Board is disappointed with the Company’s performance relative to the
Russell 1000 Value Index. Following a review of a wide range of options over
the last few months, the Board is proposing to shareholders a change of
investment strategy that will offer a differentiated approach to investing in
US value equities with an enhanced dividend policy but at a lower cost, as set
out in detail in the section below.

Revenue earnings and dividends
Your Company’s revenue earnings per share, based on the weighted average
number of shares in issue for the year, amounted to 3.39p (2023: 3.67p), a
decrease of 7.6%. Four quarterly interim dividends of 2.00p per share were
paid on 26 April 2024, 5 July 2024, 1 October 2024 and 2 January 2025. This is
in line with the payments made in the previous financial year. The dividend
paid represents a yield of 4.2% on the share price at the year end.

Your Board considers that it remains appropriate to continue with an enhanced
dividend policy, supported through both revenue and other distributable
reserves. The Board continues to believe that such a dividend policy provides
an attractive option for investors who wish to achieve exposure to the US
equity market, whilst at the same time receiving a competitive dividend.

Management of share rating
The Directors recognise the importance to investors that the market price of
the Company’s shares should not trade at a significant premium or discount
to the underlying NAV. Accordingly, the Board monitors the share price
closely, receiving regular updates from the Manager and our corporate broker,
Cavendish Securities, and may use the Company’s share buy back and share
issue powers to ensure that the share price does not go to an excessive
discount or premium. In the Board's opinion it is important to consider the
discount in the context of wider market conditions, with investor sentiment
and discounts being influenced by various external factors.

The investment trust sector average discount widened over the year as markets
were disrupted by market volatility related to increased geopolitical
instability and election uncertainty both in the US and Europe. Additionally,
in the run-up to the UK budget, there was an accelerated stream of retail
selling which also widened discounts. The Company’s underperformance over
the past couple of years compared to the Russell 1000 Value Index may have
contributed to the discount widening out, but the Board has put in place a
consistent buyback policy that has helped to defend the Company’s discount
which at 25 February 2025 was 7.4%.

Over the Company’s financial year to end October 2024, the Company’s
shares have traded at an average discount of 9.6%. During the year, the
Company purchased 8,280,074 shares at an average price of 194.78p per share at
an average discount of 9.9% for a total cost of £16,128,000. The buyback of
shares during the year has provided a gross capital uplift of £1.75 million
(1.07% of the daily average NAV). Since the year end and up to 25 February
2025, a further 3,136,986 shares have been bought back at an average price of
205.06p per share for a total cost of £6,449,000. All shares have been placed
in treasury. No shares were issued during the year under review and up to the
date of this report.

Resolutions to renew the authorities to issue and buy back shares will be put
to shareholders at the forthcoming Annual General Meeting.

General Meeting
On 19 December 2024 a letter was sent to shareholders regarding the renewal of
the share buyback authority and notice of a General Meeting. Following the
share buybacks both during the year and since the financial year end, the
Directors concluded that, if the Company’s purchases of its own shares were
to continue at the same rate as they had since the Company’s 2024 Annual
General Meeting, the remaining capacity would be fully utilised before the
2025 Annual General Meeting.

The Directors therefore convened a General Meeting to seek authority from
shareholders to renew the Company’s authority to buy back shares with the
renewed authority expiring at the conclusion of the 2025 Annual General
Meeting. The General Meeting was held on 23 January 2025 and the special
resolution was passed giving the Directors renewed authority to make market
purchases of up to 10,468,142 ordinary shares. As mentioned above, the
Directors intend to seek further renewal of the authority at the forthcoming
Annual General Meeting.

Board composition
As stated in the 2024 Annual Report, as part of the Board’s ongoing
succession plans and, having now served as a Director for more than ten years
and as Chair for just over two years, it is my intention to retire at the
Company’s forthcoming Annual General Meeting. I am delighted that David
Barron has agreed to succeed me as Chair, at which time Solomon Soquar will
become Senior Independent Director.

The Board has appointed an external recruitment firm to undertake a search and
selection process to identify a new Director with the knowledge and skills to
replace David Barron as Chair of the Audit Committee. If the Company's
continuation vote is passed, the Board will proceed with the appointment of a
new Director.

It has been a privilege to serve as Chair of your Company and also to have the
opportunity to work with the Board, the investment team and others at
BlackRock who help support the Company. With David’s extensive experience, I
leave the Company in the capable hands of the Board and the Investment Manager
and wish it every success for the future.

Agreement with Saba

On 22 January 2025, the Board entered into an agreement with Saba Capital
Management L.P. (Saba) pursuant to which Saba has provided a number of
undertakings which has the effect of limiting certain actions by Saba. The
press release can be found here. The agreement lasts until the earlier of the
day following the completion of the Company’s 2027 AGM or 31 August 2027.
The agreement does not limit Saba’s ability to acquire or dispose of shares
in the Company.

SDR
Over the year, the Board considered the implications for the Company of the
Financial Conduct Authority’s Sustainability Disclosure Requirements (SDR)
which came into effect on 2 December 2024. Noting that adopting a label under
SDR would have required changes to the Company’s existing strategy that
would have required additional ESG constraints, the Board decided to remove
the word ‘sustainable’ from the Company’s name and investment objective
such that the Company became an unlabelled ESG fund. As a result, on 13
November 2024 the Company’s name was changed to BlackRock American Income
Trust plc and, to reflect the Naming & Marketing Rules under SDR, the Company
was required to make non-material changes to its investment objective and
investment policy. These changes are reflected in the Strategic Report below.
There was no change to how the investment portfolio was managed. However, as
part of a wider exercise the Board has undertaken a detailed review of
strategy and are proposing a number of additional changes as set out below.

Proposal to change investment strategy

The Board recognises that the investment performance relative to the Russell
1000 Value Index has been challenged for some time. Further, the Board has
sought to offer shareholders active investment management at a lower cost and
to identify a differentiated investment strategy that shareholders will find
appealing and which better enables the Company to achieve greater scale.
During the year the Directors engaged with their advisers to consider a number
of strategic options available to the Company to address these points.
Accordingly, following a thorough review and after careful consideration, the
Board is proposing to amend the Company’s investment approach (including its
investment objective and investment policy) based on a proposal that was
presented by BlackRock, a summary of which is set out below and in greater
detail in the Circular.

 

Systematic Active Equity approach

Adopt a modern Systematic Active Equity investment process. By combining the
power of big data, artificial intelligence and human expertise, the systematic
investment process offered by BlackRock aims to unlock new ways to seek
consistent portfolio outcomes and exploit market inefficiencies. Further
details on the characteristics of this approach are set out in the Circular
sent to shareholders.

 

Value investment style providing diversity for the US equity market

The strategy will continue to use the Russell 1000 Value Index, providing a
diversifier from US growth allocations. There are few US equity-focused
investment trusts and fewer focused with a value bias. This will be the first
investment trust through which to access a systematic active equity strategy
in the UK. Similar to the existing investment policy the portfolio managers
will retain the flexibility to invest up to 20 per cent of gross asset value
in securities that are not US equity securities, but in practice the Company
is expected to be 100 per cent invested in US equity securities. There will be
a significant marketing and communications campaign to communicate the
characteristics and potential advantages of the new strategy to existing and
prospective shareholders.

 

Using the investment trust structure for the benefit of shareholders –
Enhanced dividend and gearing

Continue to pay an enhanced dividend. Using revenue and other distributable
reserves, the Company will pay an attractive dividend of 1.5 per cent of net
asset value each quarter, equivalent to 6 per cent of net asset value
annually. Shareholders will be able to maintain exposure to the US equity
market, which now represents approximately 74 per cent of global developed
markets, whilst receiving an income yield significantly above the natural
yield of the US market. The Board believes the Company’s proposed approach
may be attractive to investors with an income requirement who do not wish to
reduce their US weighting. The Board will also be working with BlackRock to
introduce gearing to the strategy to make use of the tools available within
the investment trust structure.

 

Reduction in management fees and ongoing charges

The management fees for the new strategy will reduce from 0.70 per cent per
annum to 0.35 per cent per annum of net assets, tiered to 0.30 per cent on net
assets greater than £350 million. The future ongoing charges are expected to
reduce from 1.06 per cent to circa 0.70 per cent - 0.80 per cent.

 

Fee holiday and cost contribution from the Manager

The Manager has agreed to a six-month management fee holiday in respect of the
period 1 May 2025 to 31 October 2025 and to make a cost contribution to the
costs of changing the investment strategy, such that the change of strategy
and implementation of the tender offer referred to below are cost-neutral for
shareholders in respect of their continuing investment in the Company.

 

Offering shareholders opportunities for exit

20 per cent tender opportunity available at time of strategy change. The Board
believes the proposals are attractive to shareholders. Nonetheless, the Board
recognise that some shareholders may wish to tender part or all of their
investment at or around net asset value. As part of the strategy change,
shareholders will be able to tender up to 20 per cent. of the issued share
capital (excluding ordinary shares held in treasury) at a discount of 2 per
cent. to the cum-income net asset value per ordinary share adjusted for the
related portfolio realisation costs. The Company will also commit to offering
shareholders the opportunity to tender for up to 100 per cent. of the
Company's issued share capital (excluding ordinary shares held in treasury) at
a tender price reflecting the latest cum-income NAV per ordinary share less 2
per cent. and adjusted for the related portfolio realisation costs where the
annualised total NAV return of the Company does not exceed the annualised
benchmark return (being the Russell 1000 Value Index) GBP (net total return)
by more than 50 basis points over each three-year period from 1 May 2025.

 

The Board may also, at its discretion, determine to implement a tender offer
on the basis set out above where the cum-income net asset value of the Company
as at close of business at the end of each three-year period referred to above
is less than £125 million.

 

Recommendation on continuation
Further details on the proposals, including the terms of the tender offer and
the revised investment objective and policy are required to be set out in a
separate Circular to shareholders. These proposals are conditional on the
Company continuing as an investment trust for a further three years. They can
only be implemented if shareholders vote in favour of continuation.
Accordingly, the Board unanimously recommends shareholders vote in favour of
continuation at the Annual General Meeting.

Outlook
The story for the US economy remains positive having grown faster than other
large economies and expected to continue doing so. The re-election of US
President Trump and a Republican majority is predicted to result in new trade
policies and higher tariffs, much lower immigration, fresh tax cuts and
regulatory easing. The economic headwind from US trade policy is expected to
be greater outside the US, weighing more on China and the Euro area but,
overall, global economic growth is expected to be solid despite the potential
for US tariffs.

Against this backdrop of fundamental strength but potentially higher
volatility, the Company continues to provide shareholders with exposure to US
equities through a diversified portfolio of attractively valued companies.

Annual General Meeting
The Annual General Meeting of the Company will be held at the offices of
BlackRock at 12 Throgmorton Avenue, London EC2N 2DL on Wednesday, 16 April
2025 at 12 noon. Details of the business of the meeting are set out in the
Notice of Annual General Meeting in the Company’s Annual Report for the year
ended 31 October 2024. The Board very much looks forward to meeting
shareholders on the day and we hope you will be able to attend.

ALICE RYDER
Chair
27 February 2025

1 Return on net total return index is calculated including the reinvestment
of dividends net of withholding taxes.

 

Investment Manager’s Report

Market overview
Over the year to 31 October 2024, the Company’s net asset value per share
(NAV) returned +16.0% and the share price returned +13.8%. This compares with
a return of +23.2% in the Russell 1000 Value Index – net total return1 (all
percentages calculated in Sterling terms with dividends reinvested net of
withholding taxes). For the one-year period ended 31 October 2024, US large
cap stocks, as represented by the S&P 500 Index, advanced by +38.0% in US
Dollar terms. In Sterling, S&P 500 Index returned +30.2% for the period. The
following discussion highlights some of the key market events during the
fiscal year.

After a banner year in 2023, US markets, defined as the S&P 500 Index,
continued their momentum in 2024. Key drivers of performance may be attributed
to a strong macro backdrop and above average earnings. The US economy
continues to demonstrate a high level of resilience relative to the rest of
the world. US gross domestic product (GDP) continues to grow at a healthy rate
while employment remains low relative to long-term averages. At the same time
inflation has come down meaningfully, leading to the US Federal Reserve’s
(the Fed) first rate cut in September which has also driven excitement around
a more sanguine outlook for equities. This supportive macro environment has
translated into exceptionally strong performance for US equity markets,
particularly for the largest tech-oriented companies that continue to see a
boon from excitement around the development of artificial intelligence (AI).
The market does continue to run at historically concentrated levels, but there
has been signs of broadening taking place. Since June, the leading sectors in
the S&P 500 Index in terms of absolute performance have been utilities,
financials, real estate and industrials. Moving forward, a broadening market
will be one of the key trends that will dictate the health and longevity of
strong performance for US equities.

Portfolio overview
In the fiscal year ending 31 October 2024, the US equity market experienced a
tremendous amount of momentum among the more expensive end of the market.
While this dynamic was most apparent in growth and core indexes, it also led
to underperformance for the Company relative to the Russell 1000 Value Index.
In environments where the market is led by strong momentum instead of
fundamentals, the Company can lag the high growth of the market during these
periods. Along with market dynamics, there were isolated stock selection
decisions that weighed on the Company in consumer staples and health care. We
continue to find conviction in these areas of the market and provide further
commentary on our positioning below.

The largest detractor from relative performance was stock selection in
consumer staples. Our selection decisions in the consumer staples distribution
& retail industry accounted for the majority of underperformance. In health
care, the overweight allocation along with stock selection within the health
care providers & services industry proved costly. Other detractors from
relative results included selection decisions within energy, specifically oil,
gas and consumable fuels.

The largest contributor to relative performance was stock selection in
industrials. Within the sector, our overweight allocation to the building
products industry accounted for the majority of relative outperformance. In
materials, an underweight allocation along with positive stock selection in
chemicals boosted relative returns. Furthermore, stock selection in
communication services proved beneficial, mainly due to stock selection within
the entertainment industry.

 Company name         Sector                  Portfolio         Reference index   Portfolio        Contribution to    
                                               average weight    average weight    active weight    relative return   
 Top 10 detractors                                                                                                    
 JPMorgan Chase       Financials              +0.2%             +2.5%             -2.3%            -0.6%              
 Icon                 Health Care             +0.3%             +0.1%             +0.3%            -0.6%              
 Prudential           Financials              +1.3%             +0.0%             +1.3%            -0.8%              
 Humana               Health Care             +1.1%             +0.1%             +0.9%            -0.8%              
 Woodside Energy      Energy                  +1.3%             +0.0%             +1.3%            -0.8%              
 Samsung Electronics  Information Technology  +1.3%             +0.0%             +1.3%            -0.9%              
 Aptiv                Industrials             +1.5%             +0.1%             +1.4%            -1.0%              
 Fortrea Holdings     Industrials             +1.5%             +0.0%             +1.5%            -1.2%              
 Kosmos Energy        Energy                  +1.3%             +0.0%             +1.3%            -1.5%              
 Dollar Tree          Consumer Staples        +1.9%             +0.1%             +1.8%            -1.8%              
                                              =========         =========         =========        =========          

 

 Company name                            Sector                  Portfolio         Reference index   Portfolio        Contribution to    
                                                                  average weight    average weight    active weight    relative return   
 Top 10 contributors                                                                                                                     
 Fidelity National Information Services  Financials              +2.1%             +0.2%             +1.9%            +0.8%              
 Citigroup                               Financials              +3.2%             +0.5%             +2.7%            +0.8%              
 General Motors                          Industrials             +1.9%             +0.2%             +1.7%            +0.7%              
 Western Digital                         Information Technology  +1.9%             +0.1%             +1.8%            +0.7%              
 Intel                                   Information Technology  +0.1%             +0.7%             -0.6%            +0.5%              
 Johnson Controls International          Industrials             +1.8%             +0.2%             +1.6%            +0.5%              
 Hasbro                                  Consumer Discretionary  +1.8%             +0.0%             +1.8%            +0.5%              
 Exxon Mobil                             Energy                  +0.0%             +2.2%             -2.2%            +0.4%              
 Johnson & Johnson                       Health Care             +0.0%             +1.7%             -1.7%            +0.4%              
 Westinghouse Airbrake Technologies      Industrials             +1.1%             +0.1%             +1.0%            +0.4%              
                                                                 =========         =========         =========        =========          

Below is a comprehensive overview of our allocations (in Sterling) at the end
of the period.

Health Care: 3.0% overweight (18.0% of the portfolio)
Secular growth opportunities in health care are a by product of demographic
trends. Older populations spend more on health care than younger populations.
In the US, a combination of greater demand for health care services and rising
costs facilitates a need for increased efficiency within the health care
ecosystem. We believe innovation and strong cost control can work together to
address this need and companies that can contribute to this outcome may be
poised to benefit. On the innovation front, we are finding opportunities in
pharmaceuticals and among companies in the health care equipment & supplies
industry. We prefer to invest in pharma companies with a proven ability to
generate high research and development productivity with companies like Sanofi
(2.2% of the portfolio) and Novo Nordisk (1.5% of the portfolio). Outside of
pharma, our search for attractively priced innovators is more stock specific;
we continue to like Baxter International (2.4% of the portfolio) a health care
company focused on products to treat kidney disease and other chronic medical
conditions. We believe the company is still poised to do well as margin
pressures from temporary inflation (logistics and shipping) continue to reside
and operation count rises as hospitals gain more capacity. From a cost
perspective, health maintenance organisations (HMOs) have an economic
incentive to drive down costs as they provide health insurance coverage to
constituents. These efforts ultimately help to make health care insurance
affordable to more people and the HMOs also play a substantial role in
improving the access to and quality of health care its members receive.
Fundamentally, we believe our holdings in the space can benefit from downward
pressure on cost-trend and further industry consolidation over time. HMOs are
also secular beneficiaries of aging populations which should drive membership
growth, specifically for the Medicare exposed names. Furthermore, they trade
at meaningfully discounted valuations versus peers, offering us an attractive
risk versus reward opportunity.

Consumer Discretionary: 4.1% overweight (10.2% of the portfolio)
Within the sector, our preferred areas of investment include leisure products
and firms with auto-related exposure. In leisure products, we believe Hasbro
(1.9% of the portfolio) which trades at a significant discount to peers, but
has a wide catalogue of strong franchises offers nice upside for an extremely
steady business. Disruption risks persist in the sector and we believe these
risks are best mitigated through identifying stock-specific investment
opportunities that either trade at discounted valuations or have business
models that are able to take advantage of possible disruptions. For example,
we believe companies such as General Motors (autos; 1.6% of the portfolio) and
Aptiv (auto components; 1.5% of the portfolio) offer investors exposure to
underappreciated franchises at discounted valuations from the perspective of
General Motors and an opportunity to benefit from the further electrification
of cars with Aptiv.

Communication Services: 3.5% overweight (7.8% of the portfolio)
The portfolio has an overweight to communication services. The portfolio is
overweight to the media and entertainment industries. Notable portfolio
holdings include Comcast (media; 2.9% of the portfolio) and Electronic Arts
(entertainment; 2.4% of the portfolio). Comcast trades at a very reasonable
valuation due to competition in broadband and in media. As the leading
broadband provider in the US, Comcast is a key enabler of digital interactions
and provides some of the key infrastructure that enables remote work (which
reduces commuting related emissions). Electronic Arts has been going through a
notable investment period over the last few years as they refreshed their
catalogue of video games and are set to start reaping the benefits with their
now wider array of franchises.

Information Technology (IT): 7.5% overweight (16.5% of the portfolio)
An increasing number of companies in the technology sector are what we refer
to as “industrial tech”. These firms are competitively insulated from
disruptors, well-positioned to take advantage of long-term secular tailwinds
and exhibit growth in earnings and free cash flow (FCF). Strong earnings
growth and FCF generation is also translating to an increasing number of
companies paying growing dividends to shareholders. This is in stark contrast
to the dot-com era where growth was often prioritised over shareholder return.
We believe this trend is poised to continue. Our preferred industry exposures
in the sector include technology hardware, storage & peripherals and
electronic equipment, instruments & components companies. In the sector we
have looked to gain exposure to the AI excitement through the memory chip
producers. We like this part of the theme because companies like Samsung
Electronics (1.9% of the portfolio) and Western Digital (1.8% of the
portfolio) trade at valuations much more appropriate for a value portfolio but
should be beneficiaries of the significant demand uptick that graphics
processing units require to run AI queries.

Utilities: 0.3% overweight (5.1% of the portfolio)
The portfolio currently invests in four utility stocks and we have a slight
overweight in the sector relative to the reference index. Portfolio exposures
are stock specific as we are finding pockets of investment opportunity among
US regulated utilities, which add a level of stability and defensiveness to
the portfolio through their durable earnings and dividend profiles. Our
investments in the sector primarily focus on ESG leaders that have specific
targets for reduction in carbon emissions and maintain significant exposure to
renewables or generate power through cleaner means such as natural gas.

Consumer Staples: 2.1% underweight (5.8% of the portfolio)
The consumer staples sector is a common destination for the conservative
equity income investor. Historically, many of these companies have offered
investors recognisable brands, diverse revenue streams, exposure to growing
end markets and the ability to garner pricing power. These characteristics, in
turn, have translated into strong and often stable FCF and growing dividends
for shareholders. Notable portfolio holdings include Kraft Heinz (2.3% of the
portfolio) and Dollar Tree (1.4% of the portfolio). Kraft Heinz is
historically among the strongest franchises in food products but has also
continued to innovate its product mix to meet the changing demands of modern
consumers. Dollar Tree is a discount retailer that has historically performed
counter cyclically as more consumers tend to trade down and shop at the store
during challenging economic environments. The performance dynamic helps build
stability into the portfolio in the scenario that there is a drawdown in the
economy.

Materials: 2.0% overweight (6.6% of the portfolio)
Our exposure to the materials sector is stock specific because broadly the
sector is fairly expensive relative to history, but there are isolated
opportunities at the stock level. Within the containers & packaging industry,
our position in Sealed Air (1.6% of the portfolio) offers a relatively stable
growth outlook. Sealed Air operates a high return business and has good
pricing power. They have also expanded their business into paper packaging in
order to position them more competitively against the rising competition from
low-cost packaging materials. From a ESG standpoint, plastic packagers
generally score poorly on waste and water stress. The key issue for plastic is
how to improve circularity and management has pledged to have 100%
recyclable/reusable solutions and 50% average recycled/renewable content by
2025, which is well ahead of peers. Within the chemicals industry, we have a
position in International Flavors & Fragrances (1.4% of the portfolio), a
global supplier of inputs into food, consumer items and health care solutions.
International Flavors & Fragrances is a dominant player in every market it
participates in, making it a consistent earnings compounder.

Energy: 0.8% underweight (6.0% of the portfolio)
The portfolio currently invests in four energy stocks and we have a slight
underweight in the sector relative to the reference index. Our focus on ESG
places a high hurdle for energy companies to be included in the portfolio, but
we believe the sector remains investable, as more traditional oil & gas
operators are critical in the energy transition towards less carbon intensive
sources. For example, natural gas is 40-60% less carbon-intensive to produce
and combust versus coal and oil. We view natural gas as a key “bridge
fuel” and like companies such as Cheniere Energy (2.1% of the portfolio) and
Shell (1.7% of the portfolio). Fundamentally, we generally seek to invest in
attractively priced operators with good resource assets that have the
opportunity to improve upon environmental issues or demonstrate clear
leadership in ESG (i.e. through their exposure to renewables or commitments to
net zero/carbon neutral outcomes). We also prefer to target companies with
experienced management teams, low financial leverage and disciplined capital
expenditure spending plans, as these elements can contribute to positive free
cash flow generation over time.

Financials: 5.9% underweight (16.1% of the portfolio)
Financials represent our portfolio’s largest absolute sector allocation, and
we prefer companies in banks, insurance and consumer finance. We believe the
large US banks offer investors a combination of strong balance sheets (their
capital levels are meaningfully higher post financial crisis), attractive
valuations and the potential for relative upside versus the broader market
from inflation and higher interest rates. Secondly, we continue to like
insurers and insurance brokers as these companies operate relatively stable
businesses and trade at attractive valuations. We categorise most of our
holdings in this space as ESG improvers, with opportunities for company
managements to enact stronger corporate governance and human capital
development policies. Lastly, we have also identified stock specific
investments in consumer finance with an opportunity in Discover Financial
Services (1.1% of the portfolio). While currently in conversation to be
acquired by Capital One, which would be beneficial to shareholders, the
company has strong growth prospects with differentiated networks that offer a
healthy outlook for the business even if the current deal with Capital One
were to fall through.

Real Estate: 2.7% underweight (2.1% of the portfolio)
The portfolio has an underweight allocation to real estate, as we are finding
few companies in the sector with both attractive valuations and strong or
improving fundamentals. For example, retail REITs are facing challenges due to
e-commerce and its negative impact on traditional brick and mortar retailers.
Meanwhile, data center and logistics companies have strong fundamentals, but
we view their valuations as unattractive. Our lone recent holding is a
specialised REIT company, Crown Castle (2.1% of the portfolio). The company
owns cell towers, fiber, and collects rent from carriers who collocate their
equipment on the infrastructure. Crown Castle is trading at a wide discount
relative to peers and is a leader in labour management and corporate
governance practices.

Industrials: 8.9% underweight (5.8% of the portfolio)
The portfolio is meaningfully underweight to the industrials sector. Our
selectivity is driven by relative valuations which we view as expensive, in
many cases, versus other cyclical value segments of the US equity market.
Notable positions include Johnson Controls International (2.0% of the
portfolio) and Allegion (1.9% of the portfolio). We view both companies as ESG
leaders in their respective domains. Allegion’s products enhance public
safety and increase building efficiency. Additionally, Allegion’s MSCI ESG
score is top decile, both relative to the investment universe and Allegion’s
peer group.

Market outlook
Like many, we see plenty of reasons to be optimistic in 2025: the US economy
continues to hum along, a Republican-led administration has historically led
to reduced regulation and lower taxes, which should support companies’
bottom lines, and AI infrastructure spend shows no signs of slowing down.
However, in the face of excitement, experience tells us to maintain prudence.
Multiples have continued to expand with current levels similar to those in the
mid-to-late 1990s. This has coincided with a growing ‘valuation gap’ i.e.
expensive companies getting more expensive and cheap companies getting cheaper
despite, in many cases, company fundamentals not materially changing. We
believe this opens the door for earnings growth to broaden out in 2025,
shrinking the valuation gap. Lastly, high expectations for policy, economics
and markets, may lead to harsher negative reactions if there are speed bumps.
Taken together, our team continues to emphasise discipline in finding high
quality businesses (i.e. clean balance sheets, good franchises, savvy
management etc.) at attractive valuations, while avoiding chasing momentum.

TONY DESPIRITO, DAVID ZHAO AND LISA YANG
BLACKROCK INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT LLC
27 February 2025

1 Return on net total return index is calculated including the reinvestment of
dividends net of withholding taxes.

Ten largest investments

Together, the Company’s ten largest investments represented 26.9% of the
Company’s portfolio as at 31 October 2024 (2023: 28.0%)

1 ▲ Citigroup (2023: 8th)
Sector: Financials
Market value: £5,373,000
Share of investments: 3.5% (2023: 2.7%)

Citigroup (Citi) is a multinational investment bank and financial services
corporation with a larger international footprint and smaller US retail
footprint compared to its large US bank peers. Citi generates returns
significantly below its peers due to numerous issues, including higher funding
costs, business mix and weak operating performance. However, we believe there
is a multi-year opportunity to close the gap over time, as they continue to
cut costs. Citi also scores similarly to its large US bank peers with a strong
score in Financing Environmental Impact, which will be increasingly important.

2 ▲ Cardinal Health (2023: 12th)
Sector: Health Care
Market value: £4,578,000
Share of investments: 2.9% (2023: 2.4%)

Cardinal Health (Cardinal) is one of three leading pharmaceutical wholesalers
in the US engaged in sourcing and distributing of branded, generic and
specialty pharmaceutical products to pharmacies (retail chains, independent
and mail order), hospitals networks and health care providers. Over the long
term, the fundamental outlook for the drug distribution industry looks
extremely positive, driven by an aging population and increased utilisation of
prescription drugs. We believe at the current valuation, Cardinal gives the
best opportunity to capture this secular tailwind.

3 ▲ Comcast (2023: 25th)
Sector: Communication Services
Market value: £4,527,000
Share of investments: 2.9% (2023: 1.8%)

Comcast is a leading American multinational telecommunications and media
conglomerate. It operates primarily through its cable services, internet
offerings and media production capabilities, making it one of the largest
telecommunications companies globally. Comcast is currently trading at a
discount due to competitive dynamics and structural fears around linear TV.
However, we believe Comcast is a high-return communication infrastructure
business with high-quality assets (studios, parks) and thus this discount
creates an asymmetric risk-reward profile.

4 ▲ CVS Health (2023: n/a)
Sector: Health Care
Market value: £4,302,000
Share of investments: 2.8% (2023: n/a)

CVS Health (CVS) is a prominent American health care company that provides a
wide array of health services, including retail pharmacy, health insurance and
various health care solutions. The company aims to enhance patient care and
improve health outcomes through its integrated services. Currently, CVS is
experiencing a 30% decline in earnings due to losses in Medicare Advantage
(MA) amid industry-wide mispricing of MA health plans. However, earnings are
expected to recover as plans reprice and adjust benefits. In the meantime,
CVS's other major business lines remain profitable and strong free cash flow
provides time for a turnaround. The early stages of a turnaround are already
coming together with a new MA team in place.

5 ▲ Wells Fargo (2023: 35th)
Sector: Financials
Market value: £4,092,000
Share of investments: 2.6% (2023: 1.5%)

Wells Fargo is a major American multinational financial services corporation
that provides a wide range of banking, investment and mortgage products and
services to millions of customers worldwide. Wells Fargo was a high-quality
compounder that has historically generated best-in-class returns. However,
Wells Fargo is currently underearning relative to peers because of a
suboptimal efficiency ratio driven by an inflated cost base due to historical
mismanagement and regulatory issues. Therefore, there is an opportunity for
outperformance over the long term as Wells Fargo manages efficiencies and
approaches normalised return levels.

6 ▼ American International Group (2023: 5th)
Sector: Financials
Market value: £3,843,000
Share of investments: 2.5% (2023: 2.8%)

American International Group (AIG) is a leading global insurer that provides
insurance solutions to help businesses and individuals in over 190 countries
and jurisdictions protect their assets and manage risks. In recent years,
management has transformed AIG and returned the company to financial strength.
AIG continues to present an investment opportunity by trading at a discount to
book value.

7 ▼ Willis Towers Watson (2023: 4th)
Sector: Financials
Market value: £3,813,000
Share of investments: 2.5% (2023: 2.9%)

Willis Towers Watson (WTW) is a British-American multinational company that
specialises in insurance brokerage, risk management and consulting services.
We believe that insurance brokerage and health/risk outsourcing is an
attractive business that has sticky customer relationships and high free cash
flow conversion. Within this space, WTW trades at a discount to peers due to
low cash conversion, low margins and high staff turnover post the failed sale
to AON. The team believes that the valuation gap will narrow as WTW executes
on its cost efficiency strategy, boosting margins while maintaining long-term
growth.

8 ▲ First Citizens BancShares (2023: 30th)
Sector: Financials
Market value: £3,783,000
Share of investments: 2.4% (2023: 1.6%)

First Citizens BancShares is a family-controlled financial institution based
in the US, offering a comprehensive range of banking products and services
tailored for both personal and business needs. The bank emphasises stability,
customer service and community involvement. The team believes in the upside of
First Citizens BancShares because it is a disciplined bank that serves
attractive markets (primarily in the Carolinas). The bank’s opportunistic
acquisitions of CIT Group & Silicon Valley Bank have created meaningful value
with further runway ahead. First Citizens BancShares' significant excess
capital also provides optionality.

9 ▲ Electronic Arts (2023: n/a)
Sector: Communication Services
Market value: £3,782,000
Share of investments: 2.4% (2023: n/a)

Electronic Arts (EA) is a leading American video game company that has become
one of the largest and most influential players in the video game industry,
known for its innovative games and franchises. Currently, EA is going through
an investment period that has led to a substantial discount in their
valuation. However, the team believes that EA should benefit over time from
new titles within dormant franchises such as NCAA Football, Battlefield, Sims
and more.

10 ▲ Baxter International (2023: 16th)
Sector: Health Care
Market value: £3,689,000
Share of investments: 2.4% (2023: 2.2%)

Baxter International (Baxter) markets devices and drugs used to treat kidney
disease and other chronic and acute medical conditions. Baxter is the number
one player in Peritoneal Dialysis (PD) with dominant positions in medical
fluids/delivery systems and strong market positions across a wide range of
medical equipment and devices. The company’s PD technology helps improve
access to care for high-risk patients with kidney disease. They are focused on
driving higher penetration rates of PD therapy globally to address the needs
of dialysis patients in a more cost-effective manner.

All percentages reflect the value of the holding as a percentage of total
investments.

Percentages in brackets represent the value of the holding as at 31 October
2023.

Arrows indicate the change in relative ranking of the position in the
portfolio compared to its ranking as at 31 October 2023.

Portfolio analysis as at 31 October 2024

Sector Exposure

                         2024 1 portfolio  2023 2 portfolio  2024 reference index 3  
 Communication Services  7.8%              4.5%              4.3%                    
 Consumer Discretionary  10.2%             9.6%              6.1%                    
 Consumer Staples        5.8%              7.2%              7.9%                    
 Energy                  6.0%              9.3%              6.8%                    
 Financials              16.1%             19.6%             22.0%                   
 Health Care             18.0%             18.4%             15.0%                   
 Industrials             5.8%              9.0%              14.7%                   
 Information Technology  16.5%             13.5%             9.0%                    
 Materials               6.6%              3.6%              4.6%                    
 Real Estate             2.1%              1.3%              4.8%                    
 Utilities               5.1%              4.0%              4.8%                    

 

1 Represents portfolio exposure at 31 October 2024.

2 Represents portfolio exposure at 31 October 2023.

3 Represents exposure of the Russell 1000 Value Index at 31 October 2024.

 

Geographic Exposure1

                 As at 31 October 2024  As at 31 October 2023       
 United States   90.2%                  86.8%                       
 United Kingdom  3.4%                   4.8%                        
 Other           2.3% 2                 3.7% 3                      
 France          2.2%                   1.9%                        
 South Korea     1.9%                   n/a                         
 Japan           n/a                    2.8%                        
                                                                    

 

1 Based on the principal place of operation of each investment.

2 Consists of Ireland and Canada.

3 Consists of Australia, Canada and Denmark.

Investments as at 31 October 2024

 Company                                 Country         Sector                       Market           % of total       
                                                                                       value            portfolio       
                                                                                       £’000                            
 Citigroup                               United States   Financials                   5,373            3.5              
 Cardinal Health                         United States   Health Care                  4,578            2.9              
 Comcast                                 United States   Communication Services       4,527            2.9              
 CVS Health                              United States   Health Care                  4,302            2.8              
 Wells Fargo                             United States   Financials                   4,092            2.6              
 American International Group            United States   Financials                   3,843            2.5              
 Willis Towers Watson                    United States   Financials                   3,813            2.5              
 First Citizens BancShares               United States   Financials                   3,783            2.4              
 Electronic Arts                         United States   Communication Services       3,782            2.4              
 Baxter International                    United States   Health Care                  3,689            2.4              
 Kraft Heinz                             United States   Consumer Staples             3,536            2.3              
 Sanofi                                  France          Health Care                  3,338            2.2              
 Cheniere Energy                         United States   Energy                       3,326            2.1              
 Fidelity National Information Services  United States   Information Technology (IT)  3,317            2.1              
 Crown Castle                            United States   Real Estate                  3,278            2.1              
 Microsoft                               United States   IT                           3,258            2.1              
 Sony                                    United States   Consumer Discretionary       3,190            2.1              
 Johnson Controls International          United States   Industrials                  3,135            2.0              
 Cisco Systems                           United States   IT                           2,969            1.9              
 Allegion                                United States   Industrials                  2,963            1.9              
 Hasbro                                  United States   Consumer Discretionary       2,949            1.9              
 Samsung Electronics                     South Korea     IT                           2,906            1.9              
 HP                                      United States   IT                           2,809            1.8              
 Western Digital                         United States   IT                           2,746            1.8              
 WPP                                     United Kingdom  Communication Services       2,678            1.7              
 Cognizant Technology Solutions          United States   IT                           2,669            1.7              
 Shell                                   United Kingdom  Energy                       2,654            1.7              
 Amazon                                  United States   Consumer Discretionary       2,638            1.7              
 Sempra                                  United States   Utilities                    2,596            1.7              
 General Motors                          United States   Consumer Discretionary       2,507            1.6              
 Sealed Air                              United States   Materials                    2,428            1.6              
 Exelon                                  United States   Utilities                    2,388            1.5              
 Novo Nordisk                            United States   Health Care                  2,387            1.5              
 Keysight Technologies                   United States   IT                           2,376            1.5              
 Aptiv                                   United States   Consumer Discretionary       2,375            1.5              
 Laboratory Corporation of America       United States   Health Care                  2,338            1.5              
 Crown Holdings                          United States   Materials                    2,299            1.5              
 International Flavors & Fragrances      United States   Materials                    2,209            1.4              
 Dollar Tree                             United States   Consumer Discretionary       2,129            1.4              
 Icon                                    Ireland         Health Care                  2,089            1.3              
 PG&E                                    United States   Utilities                    2,054            1.3              
 Diageo                                  United States   Consumer Staples             2,037            1.3              
 Avnet                                   United States   IT                           1,967            1.3              
 Hess                                    United States   Energy                       1,820            1.2              
 Fortrea Holdings                        United States   Health Care                  1,817            1.2              
 Elevance Health                         United States   Health Care                  1,784            1.2              
 Unilever                                United States   Consumer Staples             1,740            1.1              
 Lamb Weston Holdings                    United States   Consumer Staples             1,694            1.1              
 Air Products & Chemicals                United States   Materials                    1,679            1.1              
 Discover Financial Services             United States   Financials                   1,657            1.1              
 Humana                                  United States   Health Care                  1,631            1.0              
 CNH Industrial                          United States   Industrials                  1,614            1.0              
 Teck Resources                          Canada          Materials                    1,570            1.0              
 Kosmos Energy                           United States   Energy                       1,509            1.0              
 Wabtec                                  United States   Industrials                  1,467            0.9              
 Fidelity National                       United States   Financials                   1,462            0.9              
 Walt Disney Company                     United States   Communication Services       1,242            0.8              
 NASDAQ                                  United States   Financials                   982              0.6              
 Dominion Energy                         United States   Utilities                    970              0.6              
 Intel                                   United States   IT                           620              0.4              
                                                                                      ---------------  ---------------  
 Portfolio                                                                            155,578          100.0            
                                                                                      =========        =========        

All investments are in ordinary shares unless otherwise stated. The number of
holdings as at 31 October 2024 was 60 (2023: 60).

At 31 October 2024, the Company did not hold any equity interests comprising
more than 3% of any company’s share capital.

Strategic Report

The Directors present the Strategic Report of the Company for the year ended
31 October 2024.

Principal activity
The Company carries on business as an investment trust and is listed on the
London Stock Exchange. Its principal activity is portfolio investment.

Investment objective
The Company’s current objective is to provide an attractive level of income
return together with capital appreciation over the long term, whilst
incorporating the ESG commitments described in the Company’s investment
policy.

Proposed amendments to the Company's investment objective and policy are set
out in the Chair's Statement and in the Circular to shareholders. As such,
this Strategic Report section should be read within the context of the current
objectives of the Company.

Strategy, business model and investment policy
Strategy
The Company invests in accordance with the objective given above. The Board is
collectively responsible to shareholders for the long-term success of the
Company and is its governing body. There is a clear division of responsibility
between the Board and BlackRock Fund Managers Limited (the Manager). Matters
reserved for the Board include setting the Company’s strategy, including its
investment objective and policy, setting limits on gearing, capital structure,
governance and appointing and monitoring performance of service providers,
including the Manager.

Business model
The Company’s business model follows that of an externally managed
investment trust. Therefore, the Company does not have any employees and
outsources its activities to third-party service providers including the
Manager who is the principal service provider. In accordance with the
Alternative Investment Fund Managers’ Directive (AIFMD) the Company is an
Alternative Investment Fund (AIF). BlackRock Fund Managers Limited is the
Company’s Alternative Investment Fund Manager.

The management of the investment portfolio and the administration of the
Company have been contractually delegated to the Manager which in turn (with
the permission of the Company) has delegated certain investment management and
other ancillary services to BlackRock Investment Management (UK) Limited (the
Investment Manager or BIM (UK)). The Manager, operating under guidelines
determined by the Board, has direct responsibility for the decisions relating
to the day-to-day running of the Company and is accountable to the Board for
the investment, financial and operating performance of the Company.

The Company delegates fund accounting services to the Manager, which in turn
sub-delegates these services to The Bank of New York Mellon (International)
Limited (BNY). Other service providers include the Depositary (also BNY) and
the Registrar, Computershare Investor Services PLC. Details of the contractual
terms with the Manager and the Depositary and more details of arrangements in
place governing custody services are set out in the Directors’ Report.
Oversight of service levels of third-party providers is set out on in the
Company’s Annual Report for the year ended 31 October 2024.

Investment policy
The Company invests primarily in a diversified portfolio of North American*
equity securities, with a focus on large-cap and medium-cap companies that pay
and grow their dividends. ‘North America’, in accordance with the United
Nations publication ‘Standard Country or Area Codes for Statistical Use’,
means Bermuda, Canada, Greenland, Saint Pierre and Miquelon and United States
of America and ‘North American’ shall be construed accordingly. The
Company may also invest in the equity securities of companies outside North
America, subject to the restrictions set out below, and may invest in
securities denominated in currencies other than the official currencies of the
relevant countries or areas within North America. The Company may also hold
other securities from time-to-time including, inter alia, options, futures
contracts, convertible securities, fixed interest securities, preference
shares, non-convertible preferred stock and depositary receipts (such
securities other than equity securities, together ‘Other Securities’). The
Company may also write covered call options in respect of its portfolio.

To achieve the Company’s investment objective, the Investment Manager adopts
a stock specific approach in managing the Company’s portfolio, selecting
investments that it believes will both increase in value over the long term
and provide income. The Company does not invest in companies which are not
listed, quoted or traded on an exchange at the time of investment, although it
may have exposure to such companies where, following investment, the relevant
securities cease to be listed, quoted or traded on an exchange. Typically, it
is expected that the investment portfolio will comprise between 30 and 60
equity securities. As at 31 October 2024, there were 60 holdings in the
Company’s portfolio.

The Company may invest in derivatives for efficient portfolio management and
in options for investment purposes and may, for investment purposes, write
covered call options in respect of its portfolio. Any use of derivatives for
efficient portfolio management and/or options for investment purposes is made
based on the same principles of risk spreading and diversification that apply
to the Company’s direct investments. For the avoidance of doubt, the Company
does not enter into physical or synthetic short positions or write any
uncovered options.

Portfolio risk is mitigated by investing in a diversified spread of
investments. In particular, the Company observes the following investment
restrictions: no single investment (including for the avoidance of doubt, any
single derivative instrument) at the time of investment, shall account for
more than 10% of the gross asset value of the Company; no more than 25% of the
gross asset value of the Company, at the time of investment, shall be invested
in securities which are not deemed to be North American securities; no more
than 35% of the gross asset value of the Company, at the time of investment,
shall be exposed to any one sector; no more than 20% of the gross asset value
of the Company, at the time of investment, shall be invested in Other
Securities; and no more than 20% of the Company’s portfolio will be under
option at any given time.

In managing the Company’s portfolio, the Investment Manager, in addition to
other investment criteria, takes into account the environmental, social and
governance (ESG) characteristics of the relevant issuers of securities and
seeks to deliver a superior ESG outcome versus the reference index by aiming
for the Company’s portfolio to achieve: (i) a better ESG score than the
reference index; and (ii) a lower carbon emissions intensity score than the
reference index. The reference index is the Russell 1000 Value Index, or such
other index as may be agreed by the Company and the Investment Manager to be
appropriate from time to time. However, there can be no guarantee that these
aims will be achieved and the ESG rating of the Company’s portfolio and its
carbon emission intensity score may vary.

The Company will apply the BlackRock EMEA Baseline Screens as follows: The
Investment Manager will limit and/or exclude (as applicable) direct investment
in corporate issuers which, at the time of purchase, in the opinion of the
Investment Manager, have exposure to, or ties with, the following sectors (i)
the production of certain types of controversial weapons or nuclear weapons;
(ii) the production or, subject to specific revenue thresholds, distribution
of firearms or small arms ammunition intended for retail to civilians; (iii)
subject to specific revenue thresholds, the extraction of certain types of
fossil fuel and/or the generation of power from them; (iv) the production of
tobacco products or, subject to specific revenue thresholds, certain
activities in relation to tobacco-related products; and (v) issuers which have
been deemed to have failed to comply with United Nations Global Compact
Principles.

Should existing holdings, compliant with the above limits and/or exclusions at
the time of investment subsequently become ineligible, they will be divested
within a reasonable period of time.

The BlackRock EMEA Baseline Screens described above are only applied by the
Investment Manager to direct investments made by the Company in corporate
issuers and accordingly the Company may have exposure to other investments
(including, but not limited to, derivatives, money market instruments, units
or shares in collective investment schemes, cash and assets that can be turned
into cash quickly) which are inconsistent with the BlackRock EMEA Baseline
Screens and other exclusionary screens.

Following application of the screening policy outlined above, those companies
which have not yet been excluded from investment are then evaluated by the
Investment Manager based on their ability to manage the risks and
opportunities associated with ESG-consistent business practices and their ESG
risk and opportunity credentials, such as their leadership and governance
framework, which is considered essential for growth, their ability to
strategically manage longer-term issues surrounding ESG and the potential
impact this may have on a company’s financials. To undertake the required
analyses, the Investment Manager may use data provided by external ESG data
providers, proprietary models and local intelligence and may undertake site
visits.

The Company may borrow up to 20 per cent of its net asset value (calculated at
the time of draw down), although typically borrowings are not expected to
exceed 10 per cent of its net asset value at the time of draw down. Borrowings
may be used for investment purposes. The Company has entered into an overdraft
facility for this purpose. The Company may enter into interest rate hedging
arrangements.

The Company’s foreign currency investments are not hedged to Sterling as a
matter of general policy. However, the investment team may employ currency
hedging, either back to Sterling or between currencies (i.e. cross-hedging of
portfolio investments).

In order to comply with the current Listing Rules, the Company also complies
with the following investment restrictions (which do not form part of the
Company’s investment policy): the Company will not conduct any trading
activity which is significant in the context of its group as a whole; and the
Company will not invest more than 10% of its gross asset value in other listed
closed-ended investment funds, whether managed by the Investment Manager or
not, except that this restriction shall not apply to investments in listed
closed-ended investment funds which themselves have stated investment policies
to invest no more than 15% of their gross assets in other listed closed-ended
investment funds.

Information regarding the Company’s investment exposures is contained within
the schedule of investments above. Further information regarding investment
risk and activity throughout the year can be found in the Investment
Manager’s Report.

No material change will be made to the investment policy without the approval
of shareholders by ordinary resolution.

* Securities may be deemed to be North American securities if: (i) the
company’s principal operations are conducted from North America; or (ii) the
company’s equity securities are listed, quoted or traded on a North American
stock exchange; or (iii) the company does a substantial amount of business in
North America; or (iv) the issuer of securities is included in the Company’s
reference index.

Performance
Over the year ended 31 October 2024, the Company’s net asset value returned
+16.0% compared with a return of +23.2% in the Russell 1000 Value Index. The
ordinary share price returned +13.8% (all percentages are calculated in
Sterling terms with dividends reinvested). The Investment Manager’s Report
includes a review of the main developments during the year, together with
information on investment activity within the Company’s portfolio.

Results and dividends
The results for the Company are set out in the Statement of Comprehensive
Income. The total return for the year, after taxation, was a profit of
£22,572,000 (2023: loss of £9,456,000) of which the revenue return amounted
to a profit of £2,604,000 (2023: profit of £2,945,000) and the capital
return amounted to a profit of £19,968,000 (2023: loss of £12,401,000).

The Company pays dividends quarterly. Four quarterly interim dividends of
2.00p per share were paid on 26 April 2024, 5 July 2024, 1 October 2024 and 2
January 2025. Total dividends of 8.00p per share were paid or declared in the
year ended 31 October 2024 (2023: 8.00p).

Future prospects
The Board’s main focus is to provide an attractive level of income together
with capital appreciation over the long term, whilst incorporating the ESG
commitments described in the Company’s investment policy. Subject to
shareholder approval, the investment objective and strategy will be changing
as set out above, with more details published in a separate Circular to
shareholders, but the core focus will remain on providing an attractive level
of income and capital appreciation through investment in US equities with a
value style. The future of the Company is dependent upon the success of the
investment strategy. The outlook for US equity markets in the next twelve
months is discussed in both the Chair’s Statement and in the Investment
Manager’s Report.

Social, community and human rights issues
As an investment trust, the Company has no direct social or community
responsibilities or impact on the environment. However, the Directors believe
that it is important and in shareholders’ interests to consider human rights
issues and environmental, social and governance factors when selecting and
retaining investments. Details of the Company’s approach on socially
responsible investment are set out in the Company’s Annual Report for the
year ended 31 October 2024.

Modern Slavery Act
As an investment vehicle, the Company does not provide goods or services in
the normal course of business and does not have customers. The Investment
Manager considers modern slavery as part of supply chains and labour
management within the investment process. Accordingly, the Directors consider
that the Company is not required to make any slavery or human trafficking
statement under the Modern Slavery Act 2015. In any event, the Board considers
the Company’s supply chains, dealing predominantly with professional
advisers and service providers in the financial services industry, to be low
risk in relation to this matter.

Directors, gender representation and employees
The Directors of the Company on 31 October 2024 are set out in the
Directors’ Biographies in the Company’s Annual Report for the year ended
31 October 2024. The Board consists of two male Directors and two female
Directors. The Company does not have any executive employees. Further
information on the composition and diversity of the Board is set out in the
Company’s Annual Report for the year ended 31 October 2024.

Key performance indicators
At each Board meeting, the Directors consider a number of performance measures
to assess the Company’s success in achieving its objectives. The key
performance indicators (KPIs) used to measure the progress and performance of
the Company over time, and which are comparable to other investment trusts,
are set out in the following table.

Additionally, the Board regularly reviews the performance of the portfolio, as
well as the net asset value and share price of the Company and compares this
against various companies and indices. The Board also reviews the performance
of the portfolio against a reference index, the Russell 1000 Value Index.
Information on the Company’s performance is given in the Chair’s
Statement.

                                             Year ended     Year ended     
                                              31 October     31 October    
                                              2024           2023          
 Net asset value per ordinary share          216.24p        193.51p        
 Ordinary share price (mid-market)           190.00p        174.00p        
 Net asset value total return 1,2            16.0%          -5.6%          
 Reference index – net total return 3        23.2%          -5.3%          
 Share price total return 1,2                13.8%          -8.1%          
 Dividends per share                         8.00p          8.00p          
 Discount to cum income net asset value 2,4  12.1%          10.1%          
 Revenue return per share                    3.39p          3.67p          
 Ongoing charges 5                           1.06%          1.03%          
                                             =========      =========      

1 This measures the Company’s share price and NAV total return, which
assumes dividends paid by the Company have been reinvested.

2 Alternative Performance Measures, see Glossary in the Company’s Annual
Report for the year ended 31 October 2024.

3 Russell 1000 Value Index.

4 This is the difference between the share price and the NAV per share with
debt at par. It is an indicator of the need for shares to be bought back or,
in the event of a premium to NAV per share, issued.

5 Ongoing charges represent the management fee and all other operating
expenses excluding finance costs, direct transaction costs, custody
transaction charges, VAT recovered, taxation, prior year expenses written back
and certain non-recurring items as a % of average daily net assets.

Principal risks
The Company is exposed to a variety of risks and uncertainties. As required by
the 2018 UK Corporate Governance Code (the UK Code), the Board has put in
place a robust ongoing process to identify, assess and monitor the principal
and emerging risks facing the Company, including those that would threaten its
business model. A core element of this process is the Company’s risk
register which identifies the risks facing the Company and assesses the
likelihood and potential impact of each risk and the quality of controls
operating to mitigate it. A residual risk rating is then calculated for each
risk based on the outcome of the assessment.

The risk register, its method of preparation and the operation of key controls
in BlackRock’s and third-party service providers’ systems of internal
control, are reviewed on a regular basis by the Audit Committee. In order to
gain a more comprehensive understanding of BlackRock’s and other third-party
service providers’ risk management processes and how these apply to the
Company’s business, BlackRock’s internal audit department provides an
annual presentation to the Audit Committee chairs of the BlackRock investment
trusts setting out the results of testing performed in relation to
BlackRock’s internal control processes. The Audit Committee also
periodically receives and reviews internal control reports from BlackRock and
the Company’s service providers.

The Board has undertaken a robust assessment of both the principal and
emerging risks facing the Company, including those that would threaten its
business model, future performance, solvency or liquidity. For instance, the
risk that unforeseen or unprecedented events including (but not limited to)
heightened geopolitical tensions such as the war in Ukraine and the conflict
in the Middle East, inflation and the current cost of living crisis has had a
significant impact on global markets. The Board has taken into consideration
the risks posed to the Company by these events and incorporated these into the
Company’s risk register. The threat of climate change has also reinforced
the importance of environmental responsibility.

Emerging risks are considered by the Board as they come into view and are
incorporated into the existing review of the Company’s risk register.
Additionally, the Manager considers emerging risks in numerous forums and the
Risk and Quantitative Analysis team produces an annual risk survey. Any
material risks of relevance to the Company identified through the annual risk
survey will be communicated to the Board.

Emerging risks that have been considered by the Board over the year include
the impact of climate change, escalating geo-political conflict and
technological advances.

The key emerging risks identified are as follows:

Climate change: Investors can no longer ignore the impact that the world’s
changing climate will have on their portfolios, with the impact of climate
change on returns, including climate-related natural disasters, now
potentially significant and with the potential to escalate more swiftly than
one is able to predict. The Board receives ESG reports from the Manager on the
portfolio and the way ESG considerations are integrated into the investment
decision making, so as to mitigate risk at the level of stock selection and
portfolio construction.

Geopolitical risk: Escalating geopolitical tensions (including, but not
limited to tensions in the Middle East and the ongoing war in Ukraine, or
deteriorating relations between China and the US/other countries) have a
significant negative impact on global markets, with an increasing use of
tariffs and domestic regulations making global trade more complex and driving
economic fragmentation.

Artificial Intelligence (AI): Advances in computing power means that AI has
become a powerful tool that will impact a huge range of areas and with a wide
range of applications that have the potential to dislocate established
business models and disrupt labour markets, creating uncertainty in corporate
valuations. The significant energy required to power this technological
revolution will create further pressure on environmental resources and carbon
emissions.

The Board will continue to assess these risks on an ongoing basis. In relation
to the UK Code, the Board is confident that the procedures that the Company
has put in place are sufficient to ensure that the necessary monitoring of
risks and controls has been carried out throughout the reporting period.

The principal risks and uncertainties faced by the Company during the
financial year, together with the potential effects, controls and mitigating
factors are set out below.

Market
Principal risk
Market risk arises from volatility in the prices of the Company’s
investments. It represents the potential loss the Company might suffer through
realising investments in the face of negative market movements.

Changes in general economic and market conditions, such as currency exchange
rates, interest rates, rates of inflation, industry conditions, tax laws,
political events and trends can also substantially and adversely affect the
securities and, as a consequence, the Company’s prospects and share price.

Market risk includes the potential impact of events which are outside the
Company’s control, including (but not limited to) heightened geopolitical
tensions and military conflict, a global pandemic and high inflation.

Companies operating in sectors in which the Company invests may be impacted by
new legislation governing climate change and environmental issues, which may
have a negative impact on their valuation and share price.

Mitigation/Control
The Board considers the diversification of the portfolio, asset allocation,
stock selection and levels of gearing on a regular basis and has set
investment restrictions and guidelines which are monitored and reported on by
the Investment Manager.

The Board monitors the implementation and results of the investment process
with the Investment Manager.

The Board also recognises the benefits of a closed-end fund structure in
extremely volatile markets such as those experienced as a consequence of the
COVID-19 pandemic and the conflicts in Ukraine and the Middle East. Unlike
open-ended counterparts, closed-end funds are not obliged to sell-down
portfolio holdings at low valuations to meet liquidity requirements for
redemptions. During times of elevated volatility and market stress, the
ability of a closed-end fund structure to remain invested for the long term
enables the portfolio managers to adhere to disciplined fundamental analysis
from a bottom-up perspective and be ready to respond to dislocations in the
market as opportunities present themselves.

The portfolio managers spend a considerable amount of time understanding the
ESG risks and opportunities facing investee companies and conduct research and
due diligence on new investments and when monitoring investments in the
portfolio.

Investment performance
Principal risk
Returns achieved are reliant primarily upon the performance of the portfolio.

The Board is responsible for:

- deciding the investment strategy to fulfil the Company’s objective; and

- monitoring the performance of the Investment Manager and the implementation
of the investment strategy.

An inappropriate investment strategy may lead to:

- underperformance compared to the reference index;

- a reduction or permanent loss of capital; and

- dissatisfied shareholders and reputational damage.

Mitigation/Control
To manage this risk the Board:

- regularly reviews the Company’s investment mandate and long-term
strategy;

- has set investment restrictions and guidelines which the Investment Manager
monitors and regularly reports on;

- receives from the Investment Manager a regular explanation of stock
selection decisions, portfolio exposure, gearing and any changes in gearing
and the rationale for the composition of the investment portfolio;

- monitors and maintains an adequate spread of investments in order to
minimise the risks associated with particular countries or factors specific to
particular sectors, based on the diversification requirements inherent in the
investment policy; and

- receives and reviews regular reports showing an analysis of the Company’s
performance against the Russell 1000 Value Index and other similar indices.

Operational
Principal risk
In common with most other investment trust companies, the Company has no
employees. The Company therefore relies on the services provided by
third-parties and is dependent on the control systems of the Manager, the
Depositary and Fund Accountant, which maintain the Company’s assets, dealing
procedures and accounting records.

The security of the Company’s assets, dealing procedures, accounting records
and adherence to regulatory and legal requirements depend on the effective
operation of the systems of these other third-party service providers. There
is a risk that a major disaster, such as floods, fire, a global pandemic, or
terrorist activity, renders the Company’s service providers unable to
conduct business at normal operating effectiveness.

Failure by any service provider to carry out its obligations could have a
material adverse effect on the Company’s performance. Disruption to the
accounting, payment systems or custody records (including cyber security risk)
could prevent the accurate reporting and monitoring of the Company’s
financial position.

Mitigation/Control
Due diligence is undertaken before contracts are entered into with third-party
service providers. Thereafter, the performance of the provider is subject to
regular review and reported to the Board.

The Board reviews on a regular basis an assessment of the fraud risks that the
Company could potentially be exposed to and also a summary of the controls put
in place by the Manager, Depositary, Custodian, Fund Accountant and Registrar
specifically to mitigate these risks.

Most third-party service providers produce Service Organisation Control (SOC
1) reports to provide assurance regarding the effective operation of internal
controls as reported on by their reporting accountants. These reports are
provided to the Audit Committee for review. The Committee would seek further
representations from service providers if not satisfied with the effectiveness
of their control environment.

The Company’s financial instruments held in custody are subject to a strict
liability regime and, in the event of a loss of such financial instruments
held in custody, the Depositary must return financial instruments of an
identical type or the corresponding amount, unless able to demonstrate the
loss was a result of an event beyond its reasonable control.

The Board reviews the overall performance of the Manager, Investment Manager
and all other third-party service providers on a regular basis and compliance
with the Investment Management Agreement annually.

The Board also considers the business continuity arrangements of the
Company’s key service providers on an ongoing basis and reviews these as
part of its review of the Company’s risk register.

Legal & Regulatory Compliance
Principal risk
The Company has been approved by HM Revenue & Customs as an investment trust,
subject to continuing to meet the relevant eligibility conditions, and
operates as an investment trust in accordance with Chapter 4 of Part 24 of the
Corporation Tax Act 2010. As such, the Company is exempt from corporation tax
on capital gains on the profits realised from the sale of its investments.

Any breach of the relevant eligibility conditions could lead to the Company
losing investment trust status and being subject to corporation tax on capital
gains realised within the Company’s portfolio. In such event, the investment
returns of the Company may be adversely affected.

A serious regulatory breach could result in the Company and/or the Directors
being fined or the subject of criminal proceedings, or the suspension of the
Company’s shares which would in turn lead to a breach of the Corporation Tax
Act 2010.

Amongst other relevant laws, the Company is required to comply with the
provisions of the Companies Act 2006, the Alternative Investment Fund
Managers’ Directive, the UK Listing Rules, Disclosure Guidance and
Transparency Rules, the Sanctions and Anti-Money Laundering Act 2018 and the
Market Abuse Regulation.

Mitigation/Control
The Investment Manager monitors investment movements, the level and type of
forecast income and expenditure and the amount of proposed dividends to ensure
that the provisions of Chapter 4 of Part 24 of the Corporation Tax Act 2010
are not breached. The results are reported to the Board at each meeting.

Compliance with the accounting rules affecting investment trusts is also
carefully and regularly monitored.

The Company Secretary, Manager and the Company’s professional advisers
provide regular reports to the Board in respect of compliance with all
applicable rules and regulations. The Board and Manager also monitor changes
in government policy and legislation which may have an impact on the Company.

The Company’s Investment Manager, BlackRock, at all times complies with the
sanctions administered by the UK Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation,
the United States Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control, the United
Nations, European Union member states and any other applicable regimes.

Financial
Principal risk
The Company’s investment activities expose it to a variety of financial
risks which include market risk, counterparty credit risk, liquidity risk and
the valuation of financial instruments.

Mitigation/Control
Details of these risks are disclosed in note 15 to the financial statements in
the Company’s Annual Report for the year ended 31 October 2024, together
with a summary of the policies for managing these risks.

Marketing
Principal risk
Marketing efforts are inadequate or do not comply with relevant regulatory
requirements. There is a failure to communicate adequately with shareholders
or reach out to potential new shareholders resulting in reduced demand for the
Company’s shares and a widening of the discount.

Mitigation/Control
The Board reviews marketing strategy and initiatives and the Manager is
required to provide regular updates on progress. BlackRock has a dedicated
investment trust sales team visiting both existing and potential clients on a
regular basis. The Manager also devotes considerable resources marketing to
self-directed private investors. Data on client meetings and issues raised are
provided to the Board on a regular basis.

All investment trust marketing documents are subject to appropriate review and
authorisation.

Section 172 statement: Promoting the success of the Company
The Companies (Miscellaneous Reporting) Regulations 2018 require directors to
explain in greater detail how they have discharged their duties under Section
172(1) of the Companies Act 2006 in promoting the success of their companies
for the benefit of members as a whole. This includes the likely consequences
of their decisions in the longer term and how they have taken wider
stakeholders’ needs into account.

The disclosure that follows covers how the Board has engaged with and
understands the views of stakeholders and how stakeholders’ needs have been
taken into account, the outcome of this engagement and the impact that it has
had on the Board’s decisions. The Board considers the main stakeholders in
the Company to be the Manager, Investment Manager and the shareholders. In
addition to this, the Board considers investee companies and key service
providers of the Company to be stakeholders; the latter comprise the
Company’s Custodian, Depositary, Registrar and Broker.

Stakeholders
Shareholders
Continued shareholder support and engagement are critical to the continued
existence of the Company and the successful delivery of its long-term
strategy. The Board is focused on fostering good working relationships with
shareholders and on understanding the views of shareholders in order to
incorporate them into the Board’s strategy and objectives in delivering an
attractive level of income return together with capital appreciation over the
long term, whilst also incorporating the ESG commitments as described in the
Company’s investment policy.

Manager and Investment Manager
The Company’s Board has delegated the management of the Company’s
portfolio to BlackRock Investment Management (UK) Limited (the Manager), as
well as ancillary functions such as administration, secretarial, accounting
and marketing services. The Manager has sub-delegated portfolio management to
the Investment Manager (BlackRock Investment Management LLC). Successful
management of shareholders’ assets by the Investment Manager is critical for
the Company to deliver successfully its investment strategy and meet its
objective. The Company is also reliant on the Manager as AIFM to provide
support in meeting relevant regulatory obligations under the AIFMD and other
relevant legislation.

Other key service providers
In order for the Company to function as an investment trust on the London
Stock Exchange’s (LSE) main market for listed securities and generally
function as an investment trust with a listing on the official list of the
FCA, the Board relies on a diverse range of advisors for support in meeting
relevant obligations and safeguarding the Company’s assets. For this reason,
the Board considers the Company’s Custodian, Depositary, Registrar and
Broker to be stakeholders. The Board maintains regular contact with its key
external service providers and receives regular reporting from them through
the Board and Committee meetings, as well as outside of the regular meeting
cycle.

Investee companies
Portfolio holdings are ultimately shareholders’ assets and the Board
recognises the importance of good stewardship and communication with investee
companies in meeting the Company’s investment objective and strategy. The
Board monitors the Manager’s stewardship activities and receives regular
feedback from the Manager in respect of meetings with the management.

A summary of the key areas of engagement undertaken by the Board with its key
stakeholders in the year under review and how Directors have acted upon this
to promote the long-term success of the Company are set out below.

Area of Engagement
Investment mandate and objective
Issue
The Board is committed to promoting the role and success of the Company in
delivering on its investment mandate to shareholders over the long term. The
Board also has responsibility to shareholders to ensure that the Company’s
portfolio of assets is invested in line with the stated investment objective
and in a way that ensures an appropriate balance between spread of risk and
portfolio returns.

Engagement
The Board worked closely with the Investment Manager throughout the year in
further developing investment strategy and underlying policies in the
interests of shareholders and future investors. During the year the Board held
meetings with a wide range of BlackRock personnel ahead of the introduction of
the SDR changes. They considered the implications for the existing strategy of
the regulatory changes before concluding to make the name change as announced
on 13 November 2024.

As part of a wider exercise, the Board has undertaken a review of the
challenges facing the Company and, along with its adviser, considered a number
of different strategies. Amongst these, the Board asked BlackRock to put
forward alternatives approaches for the management of the Company’s
portfolio.

Impact
On 13 November 2024, the Company’s name was changed to BlackRock American
Income Trust plc and, to reflect the Naming & Marketing Rules under SDR, the
Company was required to make non-material changes to its investment objective
and investment policy. The Company’s current investment objective is to
provide an attractive level of income together with capital appreciation over
the long term, whilst incorporating the ESG commitments described in the
Company’s investment policy.

As part of a wider exercise the Board has undertaken a detailed review of the
Company's strategy and is proposing a number of additional changes as set out
above, with more details published in a separate Circular to shareholders.

Shareholders
Issue
Continued shareholder support and engagement are critical to the continued
existence of the Company and the successful delivery of its long-term
strategy.

Engagement
The Board is committed to maintaining open channels of communication and
engaging with shareholders. The Company welcomes and encourages attendance and
participation from shareholders at its Annual General Meetings. Shareholders
will have the opportunity to meet the Directors and Investment Manager and to
address questions to them directly. The Investment Manager will also provide a
presentation on the Company’s performance and outlook. The Chair and Senior
Independent Director offer meetings to all major shareholders and also meet
directly with shareholders providing a forum for canvassing their views and
enabling the Board to be aware of any issues of concern.

The Annual Report and Half Yearly Financial Report are available on the
BlackRock website and are also circulated to shareholders. In addition,
regular updates on performance, monthly factsheets, the daily NAV and other
information are also published on the Manager’s website at
www.blackrock.com/uk/brai. The Company’s website and marketing initiatives
are geared to providing a breadth and depth of informative and engaging
content.

The Board also works closely with the Manager to develop the Company’s
marketing strategy. Unlike trading companies, one-to-one shareholder meetings
normally take the form of a meeting with the Investment Manager as opposed to
members of the Board. The Company’s willingness to enter into discussions
with institutional shareholders is also demonstrated by the programmes of
institutional presentations by the portfolio managers. Additionally, the
Investment Manager regularly presents at professional and private investor
events to help explain and promote the Company’s strategy.

If shareholders wish to raise issues or concerns with the Board, they are
welcome to do so at any time. The Chair is available to meet directly with
shareholders periodically to understand their views on governance and the
Company’s performance where they wish to do so. She may be contacted via the
Company Secretary whose details are given in the Company’s Annual Report for
the year ended 31 October 2024.

Impact
The Board values any feedback and questions from shareholders ahead of and
during Annual General Meetings in order to gain an understanding of their
views and will take action when and as appropriate. Feedback and questions
will also help the Company evolve its reporting, aiming to make reports more
transparent and understandable.

During the year the Chair and Senior Independent Director offered meetings to
all identifiable major shareholders and met with a number of them, without any
representatives of the management group present. These meetings, and private
Board discussions with its Broker Cavendish, are particularly important as the
Company approaches its continuation vote. Feedback from all substantive
meetings between the Investment Manager and shareholders is also shared with
the Board. The Directors also receive updates from the Company’s Broker on
any feedback from shareholders, as well as share trading activity, share price
performance and updates from the Investment Manager.

Portfolio holdings are ultimately shareholders’ assets and the Board
recognises the importance of good stewardship and communication with investee
companies in meeting the Company’s investment objective and strategy. The
Board monitors the Manager’s stewardship activities and receives regular
feedback from the Investment Manager in respect of meetings with the
management of portfolio companies.

Responsible investing
Issue
Good governance and consideration of ESG investment are key factors in making
investment decisions. Climate change is becoming a defining factor in
companies’ long-term prospects across the investment spectrum, with
significant and lasting implications for economic growth and prosperity.

Engagement
The Board believes that responsible investment is important to the longer-term
delivery of the Company’s success. The Board works closely with the
Investment Manager to review regularly and challenge the Company’s
performance, investment strategy and underlying policies to ensure that the
Company’s investment objective continues to be met in an effective and
responsible way in the interests of shareholders and future investors.

The Investment Manager’s approach to the consideration of ESG factors in
respect of the Company’s portfolio, as well as the Investment Manager’s
engagement with investee companies to encourage the adoption of business
practices which support long-term value creation, are kept under review by the
Board. The Board also expects to be informed by the Manager of any sensitive
voting issues involving the Company’s investments.

The Investment Manager reports to the Board in respect of its ESG policies and
how these are integrated into the investment process; a summary of
BlackRock’s approach to ESG is set out in the Company’s Annual Report for
the year ended 31 October 2024. The Investment Manager’s engagement and
voting policy is detailed in the Company’s Annual Report for the year ended
31 October 2024 and on the BlackRock website.

Impact
The Board and Investment Manager believe there is likely to be a positive
correlation between strong ESG practices and investment performance over time.

The proposal to amend the Company's investment objective and investment policy
will remove the current ESG commitments. If the amendment is approved, the
Company will cease to meet the requirements of an Article 8 fund under the
European Union Sustainable Finance Disclosure Regulation and will become an
Article 6 fund. Whilst ESG information and data still form some of the
important inputs of the research and investment process, by removing the ESG
commitments the portfolio managers will have access to the entire investment
universe and will be better able to seek out the best total return for
shareholders. 

Management of share rating
Issue
The Board recognises that it is in the long-term interests of shareholders
that the Company’s shares do not trade at a significant discount (or
premium) to their prevailing NAV. The Board believes this may be achieved by
the use of share buy back powers and the issue of shares.

Engagement
The Board monitors the Company’s share rating on an ongoing basis and
receives regular updates from the Manager and the Company’s Broker,
Cavendish Securities, regarding the level of discount/premium.

The Board believes that the best way of maintaining the share rating at an
optimal level over the long term is to create demand for the shares in the
secondary market. To this end, the Investment Manager is devoting considerable
effort to broadening the awareness of the Company, particularly to wealth
managers and to the wider retail market.

In addition, the Board has worked closely with the Manager to develop the
Company’s marketing strategy, with the aim of ensuring effective
communication with existing shareholders and to attract new shareholders to
the Company in order to improve liquidity in the Company’s shares and to
sustain the share rating of the Company.

Impact
The Board continues to monitor the Company’s premium/discount to NAV and
will look to buy back or issue shares if it is deemed to be in the interests
of shareholders as a whole. During the financial year and up to the date of
this report the Company did not reissue any shares. The Company bought back
11,417,060 shares both during the financial year and since the year end.

The Company’s average discount for the year to 31 October 2024 was 9.6% and
the discount at 25 February 2025 stood at 7.4%. In addition, the Board
convened a General Meeting to renew the Company’s share buyback powers. The
resolution was passed on 23 January 2025.

Service levels of third-party providers
Issue
The Board acknowledges the importance of ensuring that the Company’s
principal suppliers are providing a suitable level of service, including the
Manager in respect of investment performance and delivering on the Company’s
investment mandate; the Custodian and Depositary in respect of their duties
towards safeguarding the Company’s assets; the Registrar in its maintenance
of the Company’s share register and dealing with investor queries; and the
Company’s Broker in respect of the provision of advice and acting as a
market maker for the Company’s shares.

Engagement
The Manager reports to the Board on the Company’s performance on a regular
basis. The Board carries out a robust annual evaluation of the Manager’s
performance, their commitment and available resources.

The Board performs an annual review of the service levels of all third-party
service providers and concludes on their suitability to continue in their
role. The Board receives regular updates from the AIFM, Depositary, Registrar
and Broker on an ongoing basis. For example, our Broker, Cavendish Securities,
reports to the Board at each board meeting and provides direct unfiltered
feedback on the views of the shareholders, wider market considerations and
offers Company specific advice. They also arrange meetings for major
shareholders to meet the Chair, or other Directors, outside the normal general
meeting cycle. The AIFM and Depositary also attend the Audit Committee
meetings and provide a report on their monitoring activities, whilst the
Registrar produces a quarterly report to monitor their level of service and
ensure it is acceptable.

The Board works closely with the Manager to gain comfort that relevant
business continuity plans are operating effectively for all of the Company’s
key service providers.

Impact
If the Company's continuation vote is passed, the Board will proceed with the
appointment of a new Director.

The Board has received updates in respect of business continuity planning from
the Company’s Manager, Custodian, Depositary, Fund Accountant, Registrar and
Printer and is confident that arrangements are in place to ensure a good level
of service will continue to be provided.

Board composition
Issue
The Board is committed to ensuring that its own composition brings an
appropriate balance of knowledge, experience and skills, and that it is
compliant with best corporate governance practice under the UK Code, including
guidance on tenure and the composition of the Board’s committees.

Engagement
The Board has engaged the services of an external search consultant, Cornforth
Consulting Ltd, to identify potential candidates to replace Ms Ryder who will
be retiring as a Director following the forthcoming Annual General Meeting.
The Nomination Committee agreed the selection criteria and the method of
selection, recruitment and appointment.

All Directors are subject to a formal evaluation process on an annual basis
(more details and the conclusions of the 2024 evaluation process are given in
the Company’s Annual Report for the year ended 31 October 2024). All
Directors stand for re-election by shareholders annually.

Shareholders may attend the Annual General Meeting and raise any queries in
respect of Board composition or individual Directors in person or may contact
the Company Secretary or the Chair using the details provided in the
Company’s Annual Report for the year ended 31 October 2024 with any issues.

Impact
If the Company's continuation vote is passed, the Board will proceed with the
appointment of a new Director.

As at the date of this report, the Board was comprised of two men and two
women. The Board considers that the tenure of the Chair and Directors should
be determined principally by how the Board’s purpose in providing strategic
leadership, governance and bringing challenge and support to the Manager can
best be maintained, whilst also recognising the importance of independence,
refreshment, diversity and retention of accumulated knowledge. It firmly
believes that an appropriate balance of these factors is essential for an
effective functioning board and, at times, will naturally result in some
longer serving Directors. Furthermore, the Board wishes to retain the
flexibility to recruit outstanding candidates when they become available
rather than simply adding new Directors based upon a predetermined timetable.

Details of each Directors’ contribution to the success and promotion of the
Company are set out in the Directors’ Report and details of Directors’
biographies can be found in the Company’s Annual Report for the year ended
31 October 2024.

The Directors are not aware of any issues that have been raised directly by
shareholders in respect of Board composition in the year under review. Details
of the proxy voting results in favour and against individual Directors’
re-election at the 2024 Annual General Meeting are given on the Manager’s
website at www.blackrock.com/uk/brai.

Viability statement
In accordance with provision 31 of the 2018 UK Corporate Governance Code, the
Directors have assessed the prospects of the Company over a longer period than
the twelve months referred to by the ‘Going Concern’ guidelines.

The Directors expect the Company to continue as a going concern and is
proposing to change its investment strategy to adopt a systematic active
investment process subject to approval by shareholders. The new strategy has
committed to a conditional 100% tender offer if the Company does not
outperform its benchmark index by 0.50% per annum over each three-year period
from 1 May 2025 which they believe is attractive to existing and prospective
shareholders. The Directors assess viability over a rolling three-year period
as they believe it best balances the Company’s long-term objective, its
financial flexibility and scope with the difficulty in forecasting economic
conditions which could affect both the Company and its shareholders. The
Company also undertakes a continuation vote every three years with the next
one scheduled to take place at the forthcoming Annual General Meeting.

In making an assessment on the viability of the Company, the Board has
considered the following:

- the expected support for a continuation vote and the change in investment
strategy as described in the Going Concern Statement in the Company’s Annual
Report for the year ended 31 October 2024;

- the impact of a significant fall in US equity markets on the value of the
Company’s investment portfolio;

- the principal and emerging risks and uncertainties, as set out above, and
their potential impact;

- the level of ongoing demand for the Company’s shares;

- a significant reduction in the Company’s ongoing charges in the new
investment strategy;

- the Company’s share price discount/premium to NAV;

- the liquidity of the Company’s portfolio; and

- the level of income generated by the Company and future income and
expenditure forecasts.

The Directors have concluded that there is a reasonable expectation that the
Company will continue in operation and meet its liabilities as they fall due
over the period of their assessment based on the following considerations:

- the Investment Manager’s compliance with the investment objective and
policy, its investment strategy and asset allocation;

- the portfolio mainly comprises readily realisable assets with low value at
risk which continue to offer a broad range of investment opportunities for
shareholders as part of a balanced investment portfolio;

- the ongoing processes for monitoring operating costs and income which are
considered to be reasonable in comparison to the Company’s total assets; and

- the Board’s discount management policy.

In addition, the Board’s assessment of the Company’s ability to operate in
the foreseeable future is included in the Going Concern Statement which can be
found in the Directors’ Report.

BY ORDER OF THE BOARD
CAROLINE DRISCOLL
FOR AND ON BEHALF OF
BLACKROCK INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT (UK) LIMITED
Company Secretary
27 February 2025

Related Party and Transactions with the Investment Manager and AIFM

BlackRock Fund Managers Limited (BFM) provides management and administration
services to the Company under a contract which is terminable on six months’
notice. BFM has (with the Company’s consent) delegated certain portfolio and
risk management services, and other ancillary services, to BlackRock
Investment Management (UK) Limited (BIM (UK)). Further details of the
investment management contract are disclosed in the Directors’ Report in the
Company’s Annual Report for the year ended 31 October 2024.

The investment management fee due for the year ended 31 October 2024 amounted
to £1,146,000 (2023: £1,144,000). At the year end, £1,128,000 was
outstanding in respect of the management fee (2023: £837,000).

In addition to the above services, BIM (UK) has provided the Company with
marketing services. The total fees paid or payable for these services for the
year ended 31 October 2024 amounted to £87,000 excluding VAT (2023:
£94,000). Marketing fees of £35,000 excluding VAT (2023: £123,000) were
outstanding as at the year end.

The Company has an investment in the BlackRock Institutional Cash Series plc
– US Dollar Liquid Environmentally Aware Fund of £801,000 (2023: £879,000)
at the year end, which is a fund managed by a company within the BlackRock
Group. The Company’s investment in the Cash Fund is held in a share class on
which no management fees are paid to BlackRock to avoid double dipping.

The ultimate holding company of the Manager and the Investment Manager is
BlackRock, Inc., a company incorporated in Delaware, USA.

As at 31 October 2024, the Board consisted of four non-executive Directors,
all of whom were considered to be independent by the Board. None of the
Directors has a service contract with the Company. For the year ended 31
October 2024, the Chair received an annual fee of £44,000, the Chairman of
the Audit Committee received an annual fee of £38,000 and each other Director
received an annual fee of £31,500. With effect from 1 November 2024, the
Chair receives an annual fee of £45,000, the Chairman of the Audit Committee
receives an annual fee of £39,000 and each other Director receives an annual
fee of £32,500.

As at 31 October 2024, all members of the Board held shares in the Company.
Alice Ryder held 9,047 ordinary shares, David Barron held 11,500 ordinary
shares, Melanie Roberts held 10,000 ordinary shares and Solomon Soquar held
10,000 ordinary shares.

All of the holdings of the Directors are beneficial. Since the year end there
have been no further changes to the Directors’ share interests.

Statement of Directors’ Responsibilities in respect of the Annual Report and
Financial Statements

The Directors are responsible for preparing the Annual Report and the
financial statements in accordance with applicable United Kingdom law and
regulations.

Company law requires the Directors to prepare financial statements for each
financial year. Under that law, the Directors have elected to prepare the
financial statements under UK-adopted International Accounting Standards (IAS)
in conformity with the requirements of the Companies Act 2006. 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 as at the end of each financial year and of the profit or loss of the
Company for that period.

In preparing those financial statements, the Directors are required to:

- present fairly the financial position, financial performance and cash flows
of the Company;

- 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;

- make judgements and estimates that are reasonable and prudent;

- state whether the financial statements have been prepared in accordance
with IAS in conformity with the requirements of the Companies Act 2006,
subject to any material departures disclosed and explained in the financial
statements;

- provide additional disclosures when compliance with the specific
requirements in IAS in conformity with the requirements of the Companies Act
2006 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; and

- prepare the financial statements on the 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
enable them to ensure that the financial statements comply with the Companies
Act 2006. 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.

The Directors are also responsible for preparing the Strategic Report,
Directors’ Report, the Directors’ Remuneration Report, the Corporate
Governance Statement and the Report of the Audit Committee in accordance with
the Companies Act 2006 and applicable regulations, including the requirements
of the Listing Rules and the Disclosure Guidance and Transparency Rules. The
Directors have delegated responsibility to the Manager for the maintenance and
integrity of the Company’s corporate and financial information included on
the BlackRock website. Legislation in the United Kingdom governing the
preparation and dissemination of financial statements may differ from
legislation in other jurisdictions.

Each of the Directors, whose names are listed in the Company’s Annual Report
for the year ended 31 October 2024, confirm to the best of their knowledge
that:

- the financial statements, which have been prepared in accordance with IAS
in conformity with the requirements of the Companies Act 2006, give a true and
fair view of the assets, liabilities, financial position and net profit of the
Company; and

- the Strategic Report contained in the Annual Report and Financial
Statements includes a fair review of the development and performance of the
business and the position of the Company, together with a description of the
principal risks and uncertainties that it faces.

The 2018 UK Corporate Governance Code also requires Directors to ensure that
the Annual Report and Financial Statements are fair, balanced and
understandable. In order to reach a conclusion on this matter, the Board has
requested that the Audit Committee advise on whether it considers that the
Annual Report and Financial Statements fulfil these requirements. The process
by which the Committee has reached these conclusions is set out in the Audit
Committee’s report in the Company’s Annual Report for the year ended 31
October 2024. As a result, the Board has concluded that the Annual Report and
Financial Statements for the year ended 31 October 2024, taken as a whole, are
fair, balanced and understandable and provide the information necessary for
shareholders to assess the Company’s position, performance, business model
and strategy.

For and on behalf of the Board
ALICE RYDER
Chair
27 February 2025

Statement of Comprehensive Income for the year ended 31 October 2024

                                                                                                2024                                               2023                                               
                                                                                         Notes  Revenue          Capital          Total            Revenue          Capital          Total            
                                                                                                 £’000            £’000            £’000            £’000            £’000            £’000           
 Income from investments held at fair value through profit or loss                       3      3,842            –                3,842            4,252            –                4,252            
 Other income                                                                            3      13               –                13               11               –                11               
                                                                                                ---------------  ---------------  ---------------  ---------------  ---------------  ---------------  
 Total income                                                                                   3,855            –                3,855            4,263            –                4,263            
                                                                                                =========        =========        =========        =========        =========        =========        
 Net profit/(loss) on investments and options held at fair value through profit or loss         –                20,909           20,909           –                (11,550)         (11,550)         
 Net (loss)/gain on foreign exchange                                                            –                (67)             (67)             –                50               50               
                                                                                                ---------------  ---------------  ---------------  ---------------  ---------------  ---------------  
 Total                                                                                          3,855            20,842           24,697           4,263            (11,500)         (7,237)          
                                                                                                =========        =========        =========        =========        =========        =========        
 Expenses                                                                                                                                                                                             
 Investment management fee                                                               4      (286)            (860)            (1,146)          (286)            (858)            (1,144)          
 Other operating expenses                                                                5      (534)            (10)             (544)            (521)            (4)              (525)            
                                                                                                ---------------  ---------------  ---------------  ---------------  ---------------  ---------------  
 Total operating expenses                                                                       (820)            (870)            (1,690)          (807)            (862)            (1,669)          
                                                                                                =========        =========        =========        =========        =========        =========        
 Net profit/(loss) on ordinary activities before finance costs and taxation                     3,035            19,972           23,007           3,456            (12,362)         (8,906)          
 Finance costs                                                                                  (2)              (4)              (6)              (13)             (39)             (52)             
                                                                                                ---------------  ---------------  ---------------  ---------------  ---------------  ---------------  
 Net profit/(loss) on ordinary activities before taxation                                       3,033            19,968           23,001           3,443            (12,401)         (8,958)          
 Taxation                                                                                       (429)            –                (429)            (498)            –                (498)            
                                                                                                ---------------  ---------------  ---------------  ---------------  ---------------  ---------------  
 Profit/(loss) for the year                                                                     2,604            19,968           22,572           2,945            (12,401)         (9,456)          
                                                                                                =========        =========        =========        =========        =========        =========        
 Earnings/(loss) per ordinary share (pence)                                              7      3.39             25.97            29.36            3.67             (15.46)          (11.79)          
                                                                                                =========        =========        =========        =========        =========        =========        

 

The total columns of this statement represent the Company’s Statement of
Comprehensive Income, prepared in accordance with UK-adopted International
Accounting Standards (IAS). The supplementary revenue and capital accounts are
both prepared under guidance published by the Association of Investment
Companies (AIC). All items in the above statement derive from continuing
operations. No operations were acquired or discontinued during the year. All
income is attributable to the equity holders of the Company.

The Company does not have any other comprehensive income/(loss) (2023: £nil).
The net profit/(loss) for the year disclosed above represents the Company’s
total comprehensive income.

Statement of Changes in Equity for the year ended 31 October 2024

                                                         Notes  Called           Capital          Special          Capital          Revenue          Total            
                                                                 up share         redemption       reserve          reserves         reserve          £’000           
                                                                 capital          reserve          £’000            £’000            £’000                            
                                                                 £’000            £’000                                                                               
 For the year ended 31 October 2024                                                                                                                                   
 At 31 October 2023                                             1,004            1,460            82,540           69,201           584              154,789          
 Total comprehensive income:                                                                                                                                          
 Net profit for the year                                        –                –                –                19,968           2,604            22,572           
 Transactions with owners, recorded directly to equity:                                                                                                               
 Ordinary shares bought back into treasury               8,9    –                –                (16,067)         –                –                (16,067)         
 Share buyback costs                                     8,9    –                –                (61)             –                –                (61)             
 Dividends paid                                          6      –                –                –                (3,477)          (2,689)          (6,166)          
                                                                ---------------  ---------------  ---------------  ---------------  ---------------  ---------------  
 At 31 October 2024                                             1,004            1,460            66,412           85,692           499              155,067          
                                                                =========        =========        =========        =========        =========        =========        
 For the year ended 31 October 2023                                                                                                                                   
 At 31 October 2022                                             1,004            1,460            82,963           84,940           719              171,086          
 Total comprehensive (loss)/income:                                                                                                                                   
 Net (loss)/profit for the year                                 –                –                –                (12,401)         2,945            (9,456)          
 Transactions with owners, recorded directly to equity:                                                                                                               
 Ordinary shares bought back into treasury               8,9    –                –                (421)            –                –                (421)            
 Share buyback costs                                     8,9    –                –                (2)              –                –                (2)              
 Dividends paid                                          6      –                –                –                (3,338)          (3,080)          (6,418)          
                                                                ---------------  ---------------  ---------------  ---------------  ---------------  ---------------  
 At 31 October 2023                                             1,004            1,460            82,540           69,201           584              154,789          
                                                                =========        =========        =========        =========        =========        =========        

 

For information on the Company’s distributable reserves please refer to note
14 in the Company’s Annual Report for the year ended 31 October 2024.

Statement of Financial Position as at 31 October 2024

                                                        Notes  2024             2023             
                                                                £’000            £’000           
 Non current assets                                                                              
 Investments held at fair value through profit or loss         155,578          154,212          
 Current assets                                                                                  
 Current tax asset                                             97               130              
 Other receivables                                             212              2,614            
 Cash and cash equivalents                                     1,075            1,092            
                                                               ---------------  ---------------  
 Total current assets                                          1,384            3,836            
                                                               ---------------  ---------------  
 Total assets                                                  156,962          158,048          
                                                               =========        =========        
 Current liabilities                                                                             
 Current tax liability                                         –                (6)              
 Other payables                                                (1,895)          (3,253)          
                                                               ---------------  ---------------  
 Total current liabilities                                     (1,895)          (3,259)          
                                                               ---------------  ---------------  
 Net assets                                                    155,067          154,789          
                                                               =========        =========        
 Equity                                                                                          
 Called up share capital                                       1,004            1,004            
 Capital redemption reserve                             9      1,460            1,460            
 Special reserve                                        9      66,412           82,540           
 Capital reserves                                       9      85,692           69,201           
 Revenue reserve                                        9      499              584              
                                                               ---------------  ---------------  
 Total shareholders’ funds                                     155,067          154,789          
                                                               ---------------  ---------------  
 Net asset value per ordinary share (pence)             7      216.24           193.51           
                                                               =========        =========        

 

Cash Flow Statement for the year ended 31 October 2024

                                                                                                                       2024             2023             
                                                                                                                        £’000            £’000           
 Operating activities                                                                                                                                    
 Net profit/(loss) on ordinary activities before taxation                                                              23,001           (8,958)          
 Add back finance costs                                                                                                6                52               
 Net (profit)/loss on investments and options held at fair value through profit or loss (including transaction costs)  (20,909)         11,550           
 Net loss/(gain) on foreign exchange                                                                                   67               (50)             
 Sales of investments held at fair value through profit or loss                                                        133,284          98,933           
 Purchases of investments held at fair value through profit or loss                                                    (113,741)        (89,270)         
 Decrease in other receivables                                                                                         17               61               
 Increase in other payables                                                                                            208              195              
 Decrease in amounts due from brokers                                                                                  2,385            612              
 Decrease in amounts due to brokers                                                                                    (1,918)          (911)            
                                                                                                                       ---------------  ---------------  
 Net cash inflow from operating activities before taxation                                                             22,400           12,214           
 Taxation paid                                                                                                         (402)            (483)            
                                                                                                                       ---------------  ---------------  
 Net cash inflow from operating activities                                                                             21,998           11,731           
                                                                                                                       =========        =========        
 Financing activities                                                                                                                                    
 Interest paid                                                                                                         (6)              (52)             
 Payments for ordinary shares bought back into treasury                                                                (15,776)         (423)            
 Dividends paid                                                                                                        (6,166)          (6,418)          
                                                                                                                       ---------------  ---------------  
 Net cash outflow from financing activities                                                                            (21,948)         (6,893)          
                                                                                                                       =========        =========        
 Increase in cash and cash equivalents                                                                                 50               4,838            
 Effect of foreign exchange rate changes                                                                               (67)             50               
                                                                                                                       ---------------  ---------------  
 Change in cash and cash equivalents                                                                                   (17)             4,888            
 Cash and cash equivalents at start of year                                                                            1,092            (3,796)          
                                                                                                                       ---------------  ---------------  
 Cash and cash equivalents at end of year                                                                              1,075            1,092            
                                                                                                                       =========        =========        
 Comprised of:                                                                                                                                           
 Cash at bank                                                                                                          274              213              
 Cash Fund 1                                                                                                           801              879              
                                                                                                                       ---------------  ---------------  
                                                                                                                       1,075            1,092            
                                                                                                                       =========        =========        

1 Cash Fund represents funds held on deposit with the BlackRock Institutional
Cash Series plc – US Dollar Liquid Environmentally Aware Fund.

Notes to the Financial Statements for the year ended 31 October 2024

1. Principal activity
The principal activity of the Company is that of an investment trust company
within the meaning of Section 1158 of the Corporation Tax Act 2010. The
Company was incorporated in England and Wales on 30 August 2012 and this is
the eleventh Annual Report.

2. Accounting policies
The principal accounting policies adopted by the Company have been applied
consistently, other than where new policies have been adopted and are set out
below.

(a) Basis of preparation
The financial statements have been prepared under the historic cost convention
modified by the revaluation of certain financial assets and financial
liabilities held at fair value through profit or loss and in accordance with
UK-adopted International Accounting Standards (IAS). All of the Company’s
operations are of a continuing nature.

Insofar as the Statement of Recommended Practice (SORP) for investment trust
companies and venture capital trusts, issued by the Association of Investment
Companies (AIC) in October 2019 and updated in July 2022, is compatible with
UK-adopted IAS, the financial statements have been prepared in accordance with
the guidance set out in the SORP.

Substantially, all of the assets of the Company consist of securities that are
readily realisable and, accordingly, the Directors are satisfied that the
Company has adequate resources to continue in operational existence for the
foreseeable future for the period to 28 February 2026, being a period of at
least twelve months from the date of approval of the financial statements and
therefore consider the going concern assumption to be appropriate. (See the
Directors’ Report in the Annual Report for further details on going
concern.) The Directors have reviewed the income and expense projections, the
continuation vote coming up at the forthcoming AGM and the nature, liquidity
and stock volatility of the investment portfolio in making their assessment.

The Directors have considered the impact of climate change on the value of the
investments included in the Financial Statements and have concluded there was
no further impact of climate change to be considered as the investments are
valued based on market pricing as required by IFRS 13.

None of the Company’s other assets and liabilities were considered to be
potentially impacted by climate change.

The Company’s financial statements are presented in Sterling, which is the
functional currency of the Company and the currency of the primary economic
environment in which the Company operates. All values are rounded to the
nearest thousand pounds (£’000) except where otherwise indicated.

Adoption of new and amended International Accounting Standards and
interpretations:
IFRS 17 – Insurance contracts (effective 1 January 2023). This standard
replaced IFRS 4 and applies to all types of insurance contracts. IFRS 17
provides a consistent and comprehensive model for insurance contracts covering
all relevant accounting aspects.

IAS 12 – Deferred tax related to assets and liabilities arising from a
single transaction (effective 1 January 2023). The International Accounting
Standards Board (IASB) has amended IAS 12 Income Taxes to require companies to
recognise deferred tax on particular transactions that, on initial
recognition, give rise to equal amounts of taxable and deductible temporary
differences. According to the amended guidance, a temporary difference that
arises on initial recognition of an asset or liability is not subject to the
initial recognition exemption if that transaction gave rise to equal amounts
of taxable and deductible temporary differences. These amendments might have a
significant impact on the preparation of financial statements by companies
that have substantial balances of right-of-use assets, lease liabilities,
decommissioning, restoration and similar liabilities. The impact for those
affected would be the recognition of additional deferred tax assets and
liabilities.

IAS 8 – Definition of accounting estimates (effective 1 January 2023). The
IASB has amended IAS 8 Accounting Policies, Changes in Accounting Estimates
and Errors to help distinguish between accounting policies and accounting
estimates, replacing the definition of accounting estimates.

IAS 1 and IFRS Practice Statement 2 – Disclosure of accounting policies
(effective 1 January 2023). The IASB has amended IAS 1 Presentation of
Financial Statements to help preparers in deciding which accounting policies
to disclose in their financial statements by stating that an entity is now
required to disclose material accounting policies instead of significant
accounting policies.

IAS 12 – International Tax Reform Pillar Two Model Rules (effective 1
January 2023). The IASB has published amendments to IAS 12 Income Taxes to
respond to stakeholders’ concerns about the potential implications of the
imminent implementation of the OECD pillar two rules on the accounting for
income taxes. The amendment is an exception to the requirements in IAS 12 that
an entity does not recognise and does not disclose information about deferred
tax assets as liabilities related to the OECD pillar two income taxes and a
requirement that current tax expenses must be disclosed separately to pillar
two income taxes.

The amendment of these standards did not have any significant impact on the
Company.

Relevant International Accounting Standards that have yet to be adopted:
IAS 1 – Classification of liabilities as current or non current (effective 1
January 2024). The IASB has amended IAS 1 Presentation of Financial Statements
to clarify its requirement for the presentation of liabilities depending on
the rights that exist at the end of the reporting period. The amendment
requires liabilities to be classified as non current if the entity has a
substantive right to defer settlement for at least 12 months at the end of the
reporting period. The amendment no longer refers to unconditional rights.

IAS 1 – Non current liabilities with covenants (effective 1 January 2024).
The IASB has amended IAS 1 Presentation of Financial Statements to introduce
additional disclosures for liabilities with covenants within 12 months of the
reporting period. The additional disclosures include the nature of covenants,
when the entity is required to comply with covenants, the carrying amount of
related liabilities and circumstances that may indicate that the entity will
have difficulty complying with the covenants.

IAS 21 – Lack of exchangeability (effective 1 January 2025). The IASB issued
amendments to IAS 21 The Effects of Changes in Foreign Exchange Rates to
specify how an entity should assess whether a currency is exchangeable and how
it should determine a spot exchange rate when exchangeability is lacking. The
amendments also require disclosure of information that enables users of its
financial statements to understand how the currency not being exchangeable
into the other currency affects, or is expected to affect, the entity’s
financial performance, financial position and cash flows.

IFRS 18 – Presentation and disclosure in financial statements (effective 1
January 2027). The IASB issued IFRS 18, which replaces IAS 1 Presentation of
Financial Statements. IFRS 18 introduces new requirements for presentation
within the statement of profit or loss, including specified totals and
subtotals. Furthermore, entities are required to classify all income and
expenses within the statement of profit or loss into one of five categories:
operating, investing, financing, income taxes and discontinued operations,
whereof the first three are new. It also requires disclosure of newly defined
management defined performance measures, subtotals of income and expenses, and
includes new requirements for aggregation and disaggregation of financial
information based on the identified ‘roles’ of the primary financial
statements and the notes.

None of the standards that have been issued, but are not yet effective, are
expected to have a material impact on the Company.

(b) Presentation of the Statement of Comprehensive Income
In order to better reflect the activities of an investment trust company and
in accordance with guidance issued by the AIC, supplementary information which
analyses the Statement of Comprehensive Income between items of a revenue and
a capital nature has been presented alongside the Statement of Comprehensive
Income.

(c) Segmental reporting
The Directors are of the opinion that the Company is engaged in a single
segment of business being investment business.

(d) Income
Dividends receivable on equity shares are recognised as revenue for the year
on an ex-dividend basis. Where no ex-dividend date is available, dividends
receivable on or before the year end are treated as revenue for the year.
Provision is made for any dividends not expected to be received. Special
dividends, if any, are treated as a capital or a revenue receipt depending on
the facts or circumstances of each particular case. The return on a debt
security is recognised on a time apportionment basis so as to reflect the
effective yield on the debt security.

Deposit interest receivable is accounted for on an accruals basis. Interest
income from the Cash Fund is accounted for on an accruals basis.

Where the Company has elected to receive its dividends in the form of
additional shares rather than in cash, the cash equivalent of the dividend is
recognised as income. Any excess in the value of the shares received over the
amount of the cash dividend is recognised in capital.

(e) Expenses
All expenses, including finance costs, are accounted for on an accruals basis.
Expenses have been charged wholly to the revenue account of the Statement of
Comprehensive Income, except as follows:

- expenses which are incidental to the acquisition or sale of an investment
are charged to the capital account of the Statement of Comprehensive Income.
Details of transaction costs on the purchases and sales of investments are
disclosed within note 10 to the financial statements in the Company’s Annual
Report for the year ended 31 October 2024;

- expenses are treated as capital where a connection with the maintenance or
enhancement of the value of the investments can be demonstrated;

- the investment management fee and finance costs have been allocated 25% to
the revenue account and 75% to the capital account of the Statement of
Comprehensive Income in line with the Board’s expected long-term split of
returns, in the form of capital gains and income, respectively, from the
investment portfolio.

(f) Taxation
The tax expense represents the sum of the tax currently payable and deferred
tax. The tax currently payable is based on the taxable profit for the year.
Taxable profit differs from net profit as reported in the Statement of
Comprehensive Income because it excludes items of income or expenses that are
taxable or deductible in other years and it further excludes items that are
never taxable or deductible. The Company’s liability for current tax is
calculated using tax rates that were applicable at the balance sheet date.

Where expenses are allocated between capital and revenue accounts, any tax
relief in respect of expenses is allocated between capital and revenue returns
on the marginal basis using the Company’s effective rate of corporation tax
for the accounting period.

Deferred taxation is recognised in respect of all temporary differences that
have originated but not reversed at the financial reporting date, where
transactions or events that result in an obligation to pay more taxation in
the future or right to pay less taxation in the future have occurred at the
financial reporting date. This is subject to deferred taxation assets only
being recognised if it is considered more likely than not that there will be
suitable profits from which the future reversal of the temporary differences
can be deducted. Deferred taxation assets and liabilities are measured at the
rates applicable to the legal jurisdictions in which they arise.

(g) Investments held at fair value through profit or loss
In accordance with IFRS 9, the Company classifies its investments at initial
recognition as held at fair value through profit or loss and are managed and
evaluated on a fair value basis in accordance with its investment strategy and
business model.

All investments are measured initially and subsequently at fair value through
profit or loss. Purchases of investments are recognised on a trade date basis.
Sales of investments are recognised at the trade date of the disposal.

The fair value of the financial investments is based on their quoted bid price
at the financial reporting date, without deduction for the estimated selling
costs. This policy applies to all current and non-current asset investments
held by the Company.

Changes in the value of investments held at fair value through profit or loss
and gains and losses on disposal are recognised in the Statement of
Comprehensive Income as “Net profit/(loss) on investments and options held
at fair value through profit or loss”. Also included within the heading are
transaction costs in relation to the purchase or sale of investments.

For all financial instruments not traded in an active market, the fair value
is determined by using various valuation techniques. Valuation techniques
include market approach (i.e., using recent arm’s length market transactions
adjusted as necessary and reference to the current market value of another
instrument that is substantially the same) and the income approach (i.e.,
discounted cash flow analysis and option pricing models making as much use of
available and supportable market data where possible).

(h) Other receivables and other payables
Other receivables and other payables do not carry any interest and are short
term in nature and are accordingly stated on an amortised cost basis.

(i) Dividends payable
Under IAS, final dividends should not be accrued in the financial statements
unless they have been approved by shareholders before the financial reporting
date. Interim dividends should not be recognised in the financial statements
unless they have been paid.

Dividends payable to equity shareholders are recognised in the Statement of
Changes in Equity.

(j) Foreign currency translation
Transactions involving foreign currencies are converted at the rate ruling at
the date of the transaction. Foreign currency monetary assets and liabilities
and non-monetary assets held at fair value are translated into Sterling at the
rate ruling on the financial reporting date. Foreign exchange differences
arising on translation are recognised in the Statement of Comprehensive Income
as a revenue or capital item depending on the income or expense to which they
relate. For investment transactions and investments held at the year end,
denominated in a foreign currency, the resulting gains or losses are included
in the profit/(loss) on investments and options held at fair value through
profit or loss in the Statement of Comprehensive Income.

(k) Cash and cash equivalents
Cash comprises cash in hand, bank overdrafts and on demand deposits. Cash
equivalents are short term, highly liquid investments that are readily
convertible to known amounts of cash and that are subject to an insignificant
risk of changes in value.

The Company can invest in a Cash Fund which is managed as part of the
Company’s investment policy and, accordingly, the investment is managed as
part of the Company’s cash and cash equivalents as defined under IAS 7 and
is presented as a cash equivalent in the Financial Statements.

(l) Bank borrowings
Bank overdrafts and loans are recorded as the proceeds received. Finance
charges, including any premium payable on settlement or redemption and direct
issue costs, are accounted for on an accruals basis in the Statement of
Comprehensive Income using the effective interest rate method and are added to
the carrying amount of the instrument to the extent that they are not settled
in the period in which they arise.

(m) Share repurchases
Shares repurchased and subsequently cancelled – share capital is reduced by
the nominal value of the shares repurchased and the capital redemption reserve
is correspondingly increased in accordance with Section 733 of the Companies
Act 2006. The full cost of the repurchase is charged to the special reserve.

Shares repurchased and held in treasury – the full cost of the repurchase is
charged to the special reserve.

(n) Critical accounting estimates and judgements
The Company makes estimates and assumptions concerning the future. The
resulting accounting estimates and assumptions will, by definition, seldom
equal the related actual results. Estimates and judgements are regularly
evaluated and are based on historical experience and other factors, including
expectations of future events that are believed to be reasonable under the
circumstances. The Directors do not believe that any accounting judgements or
estimates have a significant risk of causing a material adjustment to the
carrying amount of assets and liabilities within the next financial year.

3. Income

                             2024             2023             
                              £’000            £’000           
 Investment income:                                            
 UK dividends                518              334              
 Overseas dividends          3,107            3,839            
 Overseas special dividends  12               –                
 Overseas REIT 1 dividends   176              34               
 Interest from Cash Fund     29               45               
                             ---------------  ---------------  
 Total investment income     3,842            4,252            
 Deposit interest            13               11               
                             ---------------  ---------------  
 Total                       3,855            4,263            
                             =========        =========        

1 Real Estate Investment Trust.

Dividends and interest received in cash during the year amounted to
£3,363,000 and £43,000 (2023: £3,724,000 and £51,000).

Special dividends of £nil have been recognised in capital (2023: £nil).

4. Investment management fee

                            2024                                               2023                                               
                            Revenue          Capital          Total            Revenue          Capital          Total            
                             £’000            £’000            £’000            £’000            £’000            £’000           
 Investment management fee  286              860              1,146            286              858              1,144            
                            ---------------  ---------------  ---------------  ---------------  ---------------  ---------------  
 Total                      286              860              1,146            286              858              1,144            
                            =========        =========        =========        =========        =========        =========        

 

The investment management fee is payable in quarterly arrears, calculated at
the rate of 0.70% of the Company’s net assets.

The investment management fee is allocated 25% to the revenue account and 75%
to the capital account.

There is no additional fee for company secretarial and administration
services.

5. Other operating expenses

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           2024             2023             
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                            £’000            £’000           
 Allocated to revenue:                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                       
 Custody fee                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                               2                2                
 Auditors’ remuneration – audit services 1                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                 47               39               
 Registrar’s fee                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           30               28               
 Directors’ emoluments 2                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                   145              142              
 Broker fees                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                               40               40               
 Depositary fees                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           16               16               
 Printing fees                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                             43               31               
 Legal and professional fees                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                               16               14               
 Marketing fees                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                            87               94               
 AIC fees                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                  12               13               
 FCA fees                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                  12               11               
 Write back of prior year expenses 3                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                       (43)             (11)             
 Other administrative costs                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                127              102              
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           ---------------  ---------------  
 Total revenue expenses                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                    534              521              
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           =========        =========        
 Allocated to capital:                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                       
 Custody transaction charges                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                               10               4                
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           ---------------  ---------------  
 Total                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                     544              525              
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           =========        =========        
 The Company’s ongoing charges 4 , calculated as a percentage of average daily net assets and using the management fee and all other operating expenses excluding finance costs, direct transaction costs, custody transaction charges, VAT recovered, taxation, prior year expenses written back and certain non-recurring items were:    1.06%            1.03%            
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           =========        =========        

1 No non-audit services were provided by the Company’s auditor (2023:
none).

2 Further information on Directors’ emoluments can be found in the
Directors’ Remuneration Report in the Company’s Annual Report for the year
ended 31 October 2024. The Company has no employees.

3 Relates to Directors’ expenses and legal fees written back during the
year (2023: Directors’ expenses).

4 Alternative Performance Measure, see Glossary in the Company’s Annual
Report for the year ended 31 October 2024.

6. Dividends

 Dividends paid on equity shares                                                           Record date       Payment date    2024             2023             
                                                                                                                              £’000            £’000           
 4th interim dividend of 2.00p per share for the year ended 31 October 2023 (2022: 2.00p)  24 November 2023  2 January 2024  1,597            1,604            
 1st interim dividend of 2.00p per share for the year ended 31 October 2024 (2023: 2.00p)  29 March 2024     26 April 2024   1,560            1,605            
 2nd interim dividend of 2.00p per share for the year ended 31 October 2024 (2023: 2.00p)  7 June 2024       5 July 2024     1,521            1,605            
 3rd interim dividend of 2.00p per share for the year ended 31 October 2024 (2023: 2.00p)  16 August 2024    1 October 2024  1,488            1,604            
                                                                                                                             ---------------  ---------------  
 Accounted for in the financial statements                                                                                   6,166            6,418            
                                                                                                                             =========        =========        

 

The total dividends payable in respect of the year ended 31 October 2024 which
form the basis of Section 1158 of the Corporation Tax Act 2010 and Section 833
of the Companies Act 2006, and the amounts declared, meet the relevant
requirements as set out in this legislation.

 Dividends paid or declared on equity shares                                                                           2024             2023             
                                                                                                                        £’000            £’000           
 1st interim dividend of 2.00p per share for the year ended 31 October 2024 (2023: 2.00p)                              1,560            1,605            
 2nd interim dividend of 2.00p per share for the year ended 31 October 2024 (2023: 2.00p)                              1,521            1,605            
 3rd interim dividend of 2.00p per share for the year ended 31 October 2024 (2023: 2.00p)                              1,488            1,604            
 4th interim dividend of 2.00p per share payable on 2 January 2025 for the year ended 31 October 2024 1 (2023: 2.00p)  1,410            1,597            
                                                                                                                       ---------------  ---------------  
                                                                                                                       5,979            6,411            
                                                                                                                       =========        =========        

1 Based on 70,524,781 ordinary shares in issue on 21 November 2024 (the
ex-dividend date).

7. Earnings and net asset value per ordinary share
Revenue earnings, capital earnings/(loss) and net asset value per ordinary
share are shown below and have been calculated using the following:

                                                                                                                                       Year ended       Year ended       
                                                                                                                                        31 October       31 October      
                                                                                                                                        2024             2023            
 Net revenue profit attributable to ordinary shareholders (£’000)                                                                      2,604            2,945            
 Net capital profit/(loss) attributable to ordinary shareholders (£’000)                                                               19,968           (12,401)         
                                                                                                                                       ---------------  ---------------  
 Total profit/(loss) attributable to ordinary shareholders (£’000)                                                                     22,572           (9,456)          
                                                                                                                                       =========        =========        
 Equity shareholders’ funds (£’000)                                                                                                    155,067          154,789          
                                                                                                                                       =========        =========        
 The weighted average number of ordinary shares in issue during the year on which the earnings per ordinary share was calculated was:  76,877,643       80,225,591       
 The actual number of ordinary shares in issue at the year end on which the net asset value per ordinary share was calculated was:     71,708,970       79,989,044       
 Earnings/(loss) per ordinary share                                                                                                                                      
 Revenue earnings per share (pence) – basic and diluted                                                                                3.39             3.67             
 Capital earnings/(loss) per share (pence) – basic and diluted                                                                         25.97            (15.46)          
                                                                                                                                       ---------------  ---------------  
 Total earnings/(loss) per share (pence) – basic and diluted                                                                           29.36            (11.79)          
                                                                                                                                       =========        =========        

 

                                             As at          As at          
                                              31 October     31 October    
                                              2024           2023          
 Net asset value per ordinary share (pence)  216.24         193.51         
 Ordinary share price (pence)                190.00         174.00         
                                             =========      =========      

 

There were no dilutive securities at the year end.

8. Share capital

                                                              Ordinary           Treasury           Total              Nominal            
                                                               shares             shares             shares             value             
                                                               in issue           number             number             £’000             
                                                               number                                                                     
 Allotted, called up and fully paid share capital comprised:                                                                              
 Ordinary shares of 1 pence each:                                                                                                         
 At 31 October 2023                                           79,989,044         20,372,261         100,361,305        1,004              
 Ordinary shares bought back into treasury                    (8,280,074)        8,280,074          –                  –                  
                                                              -----------------  -----------------  -----------------  -----------------  
 At 31 October 2024                                           71,708,970         28,652,335         100,361,305        1,004              
                                                              ==========         ==========         ==========         ==========         

 

During the year ended 31 October 2024, the Company bought back and transferred
8,280,074 (2023: 240,000) shares into treasury for a total consideration
including costs of £16,128,000 (2023: £423,000).

Since 31 October 2024 and up to the date of this report, 3,136,986shares have
been bought back into treasury for a total consideration including costs of
£6,449,000.

9. Reserves

                                                                          Distributable reserves                                                
                                                         Capital          Special          Capital          Capital            Revenue          
                                                          redemption       reserve          reserve          reserve            reserve         
                                                          reserve          £’000            arising on       arising on         £’000           
                                                          £’000                             investments      revaluation of                     
                                                                                            sold             investments                        
                                                                                            £’000            held                               
                                                                                                             £’000                              
 At 31 October 2023                                      1,460            82,540           75,840           (6,639)            584              
 Movement during the year:                                                                                                                      
 Total comprehensive income:                                                                                                                    
 Net profit for the year                                 –                –                10,333           9,635              2,604            
 Transactions with owners, recorded directly to equity:                                                                                         
 Ordinary shares bought back into treasury               –                (16,067)         –                –                  –                
 Share buyback costs                                     –                (61)             –                –                  –                
 Dividends paid                                          –                –                (3,477)          –                  (2,689)          
                                                         ---------------  ---------------  ---------------  ---------------    ---------------  
 At 31 October 2024                                      1,460            66,412           82,696           2,996              499              
                                                         =========        =========        =========        =========          =========        

 

                                                                          Distributable reserves                                                
                                                         Capital          Special          Capital          Capital            Revenue          
                                                          redemption       reserve          reserve          reserve            reserve         
                                                          reserve          £’000            arising on       arising on         £’000           
                                                          £’000                             investments      revaluation of                     
                                                                                            sold             investments                        
                                                                                            £’000            held                               
                                                                                                             £’000                              
 At 31 October 2022                                      1,460            82,963           73,260           11,680             719              
 Movement during the year:                                                                                                                      
 Total comprehensive income:                                                                                                                    
 Net profit/(loss) for the year                          –                –                5,918            (18,319)           2,945            
 Transactions with owners, recorded directly to equity:                                                                                         
 Ordinary shares bought back into treasury               –                (421)            –                –                  –                
 Share buyback costs                                     –                (2)              –                –                  –                
 Dividends paid                                          –                –                (3,338)          –                  (3,080)          
                                                         ---------------  ---------------  ---------------  ---------------    ---------------  
 At 31 October 2023                                      1,460            82,540           75,840           (6,639)            584              
                                                         =========        =========        =========        =========          =========        

 

The capital redemption reserve is not a distributable reserve under the
Companies Act 2006. In accordance with ICAEW Technical Release 02/17BL on
Guidance on Realised and Distributable profits under the Companies Act 2006,
the special reserve and capital reserves may be used as distributable reserves
for all purposes and, in particular, the repurchase by the Company of its
ordinary shares and for payments such as dividends. In accordance with the
Company’s Articles of Association, the special reserve, capital reserves and
the revenue reserve may be distributed by way of dividend. At 31 October 2024,
the gain on the capital reserve arising on the revaluation of investments was
£2,996,000 (2023: no gain). The gains on revaluation of investments are
subject to fair value movements and may not be readily realisable at short
notice, as such any gains may not be entirely distributable. The investments
are subject to financial risks, as such capital reserves (arising on
investments sold) and the revenue reserve may not be entirely distributable if
a loss occurred during the realisation of these investments.

10. Valuation of financial instruments
Financial assets and financial liabilities are either carried in the Statement
of Financial Position at their fair value (investments) or at an amount which
is a reasonable approximation of fair value (due from brokers, dividends and
interest receivable, due to brokers, accruals, cash at bank and bank
overdrafts). IFRS 13 requires the Company to classify fair value measurements
using a fair value hierarchy that reflects the significance of inputs used in
making the measurements. The valuation techniques used by the Company are
explained in the accounting policies note 2(g) to the Financial Statements in
the Company’s Annual Report for the year ended 31 October 2024.

Categorisation within the hierarchy has been determined on the basis of the
lowest level of input that is significant to the fair value measurement of the
relevant asset.

The fair value hierarchy has the following levels:

Level 1 – Quoted market price for identical instruments in active markets
A financial instrument is regarded as quoted in an active market if quoted
prices are readily available from an exchange, dealer, broker, industry group,
pricing service or regulatory agency and those prices represent actual and
regularly occurring market transactions on an arm’s length basis. The
Company does not adjust the quoted price for these instruments.

Level 2 – Valuation techniques using observable inputs
This category includes instruments valued using quoted prices for similar
instruments in markets that are considered less than active, or other
valuation techniques where all significant inputs are directly or indirectly
observable from market data.

Level 3 – Valuation techniques using significant unobservable inputs
This category includes all instruments where the valuation technique includes
inputs not based on market data and these inputs could have a significant
impact on the instrument’s valuation.

This category includes instruments that are valued based on quoted prices for
similar instruments where significant entity determined adjustments or
assumptions are required to reflect differences between the instruments and
instruments for which there is no active market.

The Investment Manager considers observable data to be that market data that
is readily available, regularly distributed or updated, reliable and
verifiable, not proprietary and provided by independent sources that are
actively involved in the relevant market.

The level in the fair value hierarchy within which the fair value measurement
is categorised in its entirety is determined on the basis of the lowest level
input that is significant to the fair value measurement. If a fair value
measurement uses observable inputs that require significant adjustment based
on unobservable inputs, that measurement is a Level 3 measurement.

Assessing the significance of a particular input to the fair value measurement
in its entirety requires judgement, considering factors specific to the asset
or liability, including an assessment of the relevant risks including but not
limited to credit risk, market risk, liquidity risk, business risk and climate
change risk. The determination of what constitutes ‘observable’ inputs
requires significant judgement by the Investment Manager and these risks are
adequately captured in the assumptions and inputs used in measurement of Level
3 assets or liabilities.

Fair values of financial assets and financial liabilities
The table below sets out fair value measurements using the IFRS 13 fair value
hierarchy.

 Financial assets at fair value through profit or loss  Level 1     Level 2     Level 3     Total       
                                                         £’000       £’000       £’000       £’000      
 Equity investments at 31 October 2024                  155,578     –           –           155,578     
 Equity investments at 31 October 2023                  154,212     –           –           154,212     
                                                        =========   =========   =========   =========   

 

There were no transfers between levels of financial assets and financial
liabilities during the year recorded at fair value as at 31 October 2024 and
31 October 2023. The Company did not hold any Level 3 securities throughout
the financial year or as at 31 October 2023 (2023: nil).

For exchange listed equity investments, the quoted price is the bid price.
Substantially, all investments are valued based on unadjusted quoted market
prices. Where such quoted prices are readily available in an active market,
such prices are not required to be assessed or adjusted for any price related
risks, including climate risk, in accordance with the fair value related
requirements of the Company’s financial reporting framework.

11. Related party disclosure
Directors’ Emoluments
At the date of this report, the Board consists of four non-executive
Directors, all of whom are considered to be independent of the Manager by the
Board.

Disclosures of the Directors’ interests in the ordinary shares of the
Company and fees and expenses payable to the Directors are set out in the
Directors’ Remuneration Report in the Company’s Annual Report for the year
ended 31 October 2024. At 31 October 2024, £12,000 (2023: £12,000) was
outstanding in respect of Directors’ fees.

Significant Holdings
The following investors are:

a. funds managed by the BlackRock Group or are affiliates of BlackRock Inc.
(Related BlackRock Funds); or

b. investors (other than those listed in (a) above) who held more than 20% of
the voting shares in issue in the Company and are, as a result, considered to
be related parties to the Company (Significant Investors).

                        Total % of shares held by   Total % of shares held by             Number of Significant Investors         
                         Related BlackRock Funds     Significant Investors who are         who are not affiliates of BlackRock    
                                                     not affiliates of BlackRock Group     Group or BlackRock, Inc.               
                                                     or BlackRock, Inc.                                                           
 As at 31 October 2024  0.9                         n/a                                   n/a                                     
 As at 31 October 2023  0.8                         n/a                                   n/a                                     
                        =========                   =========                             =========                               

 

12. Transactions with the Investment Manager and AIFM
BlackRock Fund Managers Limited (BFM) provides management and administration
services to the Company under a contract which is terminable on six months’
notice. BFM has (with the Company’s consent) delegated certain portfolio and
risk management services, and other ancillary services, to BlackRock
Investment Management (UK) Limited (BIM (UK)). Further details of the
investment management contract are disclosed in the Directors’ Report in the
Company’s Annual Report for the year ended 31 October 2024.

The investment management fee due for the year ended 31 October 2024 amounted
to £1,146,000 (2023: £1,144,000). At the year end, £1,128,000 was
outstanding in respect of the management fee (2023: £837,000).

In addition to the above services, BIM (UK) has provided the Company with
marketing services. The total fees paid or payable for these services for the
year ended 31 October 2024 amounted to £87,000 excluding VAT (2023:
£94,000). Marketing fees of £35,000 excluding VAT (2023: £123,000) were
outstanding as at the year end.

The Company has an investment in the BlackRock Institutional Cash Series plc
– US Dollar Liquid Environmentally Aware Fund of £801,000 (2023: £879,000)
at the year end, which is a fund managed by a company within the BlackRock
Group. The Company’s investment in the Cash Fund is held in a share class on
which no management fees are paid to BlackRock to avoid double dipping.

The ultimate holding company of the Manager and the Investment Manager is
BlackRock, Inc., a company incorporated in Delaware, USA.

13. Contingent liabilities
There were no contingent liabilities at 31 October 2024 (2023: none).

14. Publication of non-statutory accounts

The financial information contained in this announcement does not constitute
statutory accounts as defined in the Companies Act 2006. The Annual Report and
Financial Statements for the year ended 31 October 2024 will be filed with the
Registrar of Companies after the Annual General Meeting.

The figures set out above have been reported upon by the auditors, whose
report for the year ended 31 October 2024 contains no qualification or
statement under section 498(2) or (3) of the Companies Act 2006.

The comparative figures are extracts from the audited financial statements of
BlackRock American Income Trust plc for the year ended 31 October 2023, which
have been filed with the Registrar of Companies. The report of the auditor on
those financial statements contained no qualification or statement under
section 498 of the Companies Act.

15. Annual Report

Copies of the Annual Report and Financial Statements will be published shortly
and will be available from the registered office, c/o The Company Secretary,
BlackRock American Income Trust plc, 12 Throgmorton Avenue, London EC2N 2DL.

16. Annual General Meeting

The Annual General Meeting of the Company will be held at the offices of
BlackRock, 12 Throgmorton Avenue, London EC2N 2DL on Wednesday, 16 April 2025
at 12.00 noon.

ENDS

The Annual Report will also be available on the BlackRock website at
blackrock.com/uk/brai. Neither the contents of the Manager’s website nor the
contents of any website accessible from hyperlinks on the Manager’s website
(or any other website) is incorporated into, or forms part of, this
announcement.

For further information please contact:

Charles Kilner, Director, Investment Trusts, BlackRock Investment Management
(UK) Limited

Tel: 020 7743 3000

 

Press enquiries:

Ed Hooper, Lansons Communications

Tel: 020 7294 3620

E-mail: BlackRockInvestmentTrusts@lansons.com or EdH@lansons.com

 

12 Throgmorton Avenue

London

EC2N 2DL

27 February 2025

 

 Release (https://mb.cision.com/Main/22399/4110229/3291919.pdf)  



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