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REG - Caledonian Trust PLC - Unaudited interim results

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RNS Number : 9197U  Caledonian Trust PLC  31 March 2023

 

31 March 2023

Caledonian Trust plc

("Caledonian Trust", the "Company" or the "Group")

Unaudited interim results for the six months ended 31 December 2022

 

Caledonian Trust plc, the Edinburgh-based property investment holding and
development company, announces its unaudited interim results for the six
months ended 31 December 2022.

 

 

Enquiries:

 Caledonian Trust plc
 Douglas Lowe, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer  Tel: 0131 220 0416
 Mike Baynham, Finance Director                      Tel: 0131 220 0416

 Allenby Capital Limited

 (Nominated Adviser and Broker)
 Nick Athanas                                        Tel: 0203 328 5656

 Alex Brearley

 Dan Dearden-Williams

 

 

CHAIRMAN'S STATEMENT

 

Introduction

The Group made a pre-tax profit of £353,000 in the six months to 31 December
2022 compared with a pre-tax loss of £196,000 for the same period last
year.  The profit per share for the six months to 31 December 2022 was 3.00p
and the NAV per share as at 31 December 2022 was 200.3p compared with a loss
per share of 1.66p and a NAV per share of 206.7p last year.  The Group's
emphasis will continue to be to secure, improve and realise the value in our
property portfolios.

 

Review of Activities

I provided a comprehensive review of activities in my December statement
accompanying our audited results for the year ended 30 June 2022.

 

On 24 February we released an announcement to the market, stating that, as a
result of strong interest, we had set a closing date for indicative offers for
St. Margaret's House ("SMH") on 23 February 2023 and had received non-binding
proposals from three separate parties.  Careful consideration and analysis of
each of the proposals has led us to select a preferred bidder and enter into
an exclusivity agreement with them to enable them to undertake their necessary
due diligence and agree formal terms for the purchase by the end of April 2023
with the intention that any such agreement entered into would be conditional,
inter alia, on the purchaser obtaining the required amendments to the planning
consent at SMH.  Whilst the Board is hopeful of a satisfactory outcome, there
can be no certainty that a sale of SMH will proceed, nor on its terms or the
timing of any sale.

 

A further announcement will be made when a formal sale agreement has been
entered into or the Company will otherwise provide an update in relation to
SMH in due course.

 

In the meantime, SMH continues to be fully let at a nominal rent, presently
just over £1.50/ft(2) of occupied space, to a charity, Edinburgh Palette, who
have reconfigured and sub-let all the space to over 200 artists, artisans and
galleries.

 

At Brunstane we completed the construction of the third phase of development,
comprising five new houses over 8,650ft(2) forming the Steading Courtyard, at
the beginning of July 2021 and this development was completed in September
2022.  We completed the sale of three of the houses in October and November
2022 for an aggregate £2m and a fourth in March 2023 for £725,000.  Knight
Frank are marketing the remaining house at a fixed price of £700,000.  The
application for 11 new houses (c.20,000ft(2)), "Upper Brunstane", in the
Stackyard field to the east of the steading was granted in November 2022.  We
intend to prepare the site for development, take up the planning consent and
secure the requisite building warrant with a view to undertaking the
development as soon as appropriate.  We have made an application to modify
the consent for "Plot 10", lying between Phase 3 and Upper Brunstane, by
replacing the single large (3,500ft(2)) house with two smaller houses of
similar combined size which will complete the small courtyard leading into
Upper Brunstane.

 

At Wallyford we are currently finalising several minor but important
variations to the planning consent for six detached houses and four
semi-detached houses over 13,350ft(2) and we have received detailed tender
prices, but are reviewing when to start construction in light of current
conditions.  The site lies within 400m of the East Coast mainline station, is
near the A1/A720 City Bypass junction and is contiguous with a completed
development of houses.  To the south of Wallyford a very large development of
new houses is being built at St Clement's Wells on ground rising to the south,
affording extensive views over the Forth estuary to Fife.  Wallyford, no
longer a mining village, is rapidly becoming another leafy commuting Edinburgh
suburb in the fertile East Lothian coastal strip.

 

 

 

 

Economic Prospects

 

Winter came this Spring - a sudden icy blast.  The economic winter too has
proved unseasonal, but is it, too, deferred?  Economic prospects, major world
events excepted, depend upon whether a long recession has been avoided or
merely deferred, like Winter.

 

The economic Winter has been unexceptionally mild and GDP is 0.8% higher than
the OBR forecast in November 2023, having narrowly avoided the forecast
recession in December 2022, as output was unchanged in Q4 2022 following the
0.2% contraction in Q3 2022.  After the Covid lockdown in late 2021 there was
a robust recovery of 4.2% in Q1 2022 followed by growth of 0.2% in Q2
resulting in growth of 4.10% in 2022, but GDP is still 2.0% below the
pre-Covid level in 2019.

 

In 2023 the OBR expects GDP to contract 0.4% in Q1, to be nil in Q2, but to
rise 0.1% in each of Q3 and Q4, and to be -0.2% lower overall in 2023.  This
forecast of -0.2% is 1.2 percentage points higher than the OBR November
forecast for 2023.  A 0.5 percentage point rise over the OBR's November 2022
forecast is forecast for 2024, but subsequent years are marked down 0.2, 0.3
and 0.4 percentage points respectively, resulting in the November 1.7
percentage point rise forecast changed to only 0.8% over five years.  The
March forecast has reduced forecast growth and effectively re-distributed it
forward, such a change in timing being convenient for the 2024 election.

 

While the OBR's forecast is that GDP will return to the pre-Covid 2019 level
in late 2024, real living standards - RHDI - real household disposable income
- per person does move in proportion with GDP and is forecast to fall by 5.7%
over the financial years 2022-23 and 2023-24, the largest two-year fall on
record.  In 2027-28 real living standards are expected to be 0.4% lower than
the pre-Covid level and are not expected to rise above that level until 2029.

 

The UK's poor economic performance can be traced back to the financial crisis
of 2007/08 followed by an injudicious austerity policy, then by Covid, and
then quickly by the Ukraine war.  Had the growth rate experienced until
2007/08 continued at the same rate until 2023, GDP per head would now have
been 38.9% higher.  Moreover, the UK's economic recovery post Covid is
strikingly poor, as by 2025 the UK economy is forecast to have recovered only
to the pre-Covid level, whereas the EU area is forecast to have grown 6.0% and
the US 9.0%.  From 1980 until the 2007/08 Great Recession the UK enjoyed the
highest annual real growth in GDP in the G7, but since 2016 it has had the
second poorest performance of about 0.5%pa, just above Japan's 0.3%.

 

Other commentators' forecasts are less optimistic than the OBR's forecast of a
cumulative growth of 1.6% by December 2024 and of 8.1% by December 2027 (6.2%
by 2026).  In contrast the mean of "new" forecasts by economists surveyed in
March by HMT is for a much lower growth of 0.3% by end 2024.  The NIESR's
forecast of 6.4% growth by 2027 is the highest of the other longer term
forecasts.  The Bank's forecast until the end 2024 is even more pessimistic
at minus 1.0%, a pessimism that persists as it forecasts growth at only 0.1%
by end 2026, compared to 4.5%, NIESR, and 6.2%, OBR.

 

While the Bank's current forecast is pessimistic, it is considerably better
than its November 2022 forecast, only three months ago, of a depression with a
fall of 3.0% and a return to the pre-depression output level only after 21
quarters.  Now the Bank forecasts a depression of less than 1.0% and a return
to the pre-depression level in 13 quarters.

 

The Bank's reduced pessimism is based on important reductions in gas futures
prices of over a third and, most significantly, in Bank Rate, as implied by
financial market interest rates (i.e. not interest rates assumed or forecast
by the Bank, but market" rates), falling compared to their November report by
0.8 percentage points to 4.4% in 2023, by 0.7 percentage points in 2024 to
3.7%, and by 0.3 percentage points in 2025 to 3.4%.  Unlike the Bank, the OBR
is not constrained in its forecasts of future bank rate, forming their own
estimates rather than using the implied market rates.  Over the next three
years its forecasts are based on interest rates of 0.25 percentage points
lower than those of the Bank in February 2023.  Such lower interest rates
would account for an important part of the difference between the Bank and the
OBR forecasts.

 

The implied interest rate used by the Bank and the forecast rate used by the
OBR are both likely to prove to be too high.  The interest rate rise (prior
to the recent 0.25% rise) is unprecedented - from 0.1% to 4.0% in 14 months.
The cash cost of an increase in interest from say 0.1% to 4.0% and from 4% to
7.9% is the same.  However, with low interest rates many organisations are
likely to have increased gearing, and if the gearing has been increased so
that the interest paid as a percentage of sales is the same, then the effect
of the same percentage point increase in interest rates is quite different.
If, for instance, interest costs are 10% of revenue and the bank margin is
2.9%, then, with a gross margin of 20%, a 3.9% percentage point rise in
interest costs results in a gross margin of 7%.  If, however, in the higher
interest environment with the same interest cost of 10% of revenue when the
interest payable is 6.9% the gross margin is 20%, a 3.9% percentage point rise
in interest costs results in a gross margin 14.5%, a much lower reduction in
gross margin.  Thus, for the same interest cost as a proportion of sales, the
same increase in rate from a low base has much larger effect on
profitability.  Thus, the effect of the same percentage point rises in
interest costs will have a larger impact on the economy than it would have had
from a higher base, and to the extent such an effect may be unrecognised the
extent of an interest rate rise required to bring a given effect on the
economy may be overstated.  This effect will only operate where low interest
rates have induced higher gearing, the likelihood of which will increase with
the length of time low interest rates have operated and been expected to
continue to do so, as has widely been the case in the UK.

 

There is another major uncertainty concerning the effect of interest rate
rises.  There is a time lag before the full effect of any interest rate rise
becomes evident in the economy, typically reaching its maximum only after a
year, or even two, a phenomenon dubbed by Milton Friedman as the "long and
variable lags" of interest rate policy.  Some recent research suggests that,
due to the current more rapid transmission of central bank intentions, the
strongest impact may come after nine months.  In that case, interest rises
from the late Spring may be exerting their full effect now, but rate rises
above 2.0% are now only six months old and the most recent rise to 4.25%
occurred only last week.  Thus, even if rapid transmission is now more
likely, the majority of the full effect of rate rises is yet to be reflected
in the economy.

 

The Bank risks "overkill" if interest rates are raised in line with the 4.4%
for 2023 implied by the forward market interest rates used by the MPC.  Three
months have already passed with interest rates at 4% or 3.5%, the average of
the remaining nine months would have to 4.6% to reach the 4.4% level implied
by the forward markets.

 

A review of the causes of the high inflation suggests that not only has the
inflation rate just peaked, but it is likely to return to "acceptable"
levels.  Firstly, commodity prices have fallen both recently and over a year:
the Economist all-items sterling index is down 0.7% on the month and 11.2% on
the year; the dollar indices all-items are down 17.5%; food 16.4%; and
non-food agriculturals 36.3%.  Brent oil has fallen to $77.5, 21.9% lower
than last year and the price of gas, now $2.35 per MM Btu, is down from $5.41
last year and from a peak price of $9.77.  Secondly, the supply shortages
induced by the rapid recovery from Covid and the production dislocation of
Covid have reversed and, for example, there is now a surplus, not a dire
shortage, of "chips".  Thirdly, supply chains have adjusted and shipping
rates returned to normal.  Fourthly, price rises caused by shortages of basic
industrial imports caused prices to rise throughout the economy "spilling" the
rises generally - interestingly even into second hand cars, for instance.
Fifthly, the flush of demand extended into the re-opening service industries
which, being short staffed, had a reduced supply capability and so increased
their prices, while, more generally, the sudden demand for "labour" of all
types raised wages.  However, prices in all sectors, including oil, have
since stabilised with the exception of wages where unemployment rates in the
G7 countries, apart from Italy, are the lowest or close to the lowest for 25
years.  Clearly economies have adequate supplies of goods at current prices
but not of labour.  Labour shortages are partly due to a reduction in the
labour force because of the large increase in those employable not seeking
employment, and, of course, a very low rate of increased productivity augments
such a shortage.  Unfortunately, until the supply shortages are resolved,
demand must be reduced if inflation is to be controlled.  The delay in the
moderation of wages may be due to the lag effect of interest rate rises, but
the extent of the wage rises achieved or in contemplation may be due to the
increased political pressure for rises after the particularly high inflation
levels experienced by those below the median wage, a pressure reinforced by
the minimal improvement in such living standards over many years.

 

A cardinal tenet of the models used by central banks to forecast inflation is
the level of employment and of vacancies: put more simply, if the demand for
labour is high, the price is unlikely to fall.  Fortunately, recent figures
indicate a downturn in employment and falling vacancies.  As wage inflation
is a lag indicator, the effects of rising interest rates may now be being
seen.

 

One dramatic effect of interest rate rises has just become evident, being the
reduced value Tier 1 equity, an early warning of the possible wide effects on
stability of large, sudden interest rate rises on the banking sector over and
above inflation.  Financial stability supersedes "normal" inflationary
concerns and ensuring stability may be a major determinant of future interest
rate changes.  The rise in interest rates has caused a corresponding drop in
the value of all fixed interest securities, which form a substantial part of
many banks' assets.  In the case of the Silicon Valley Bank, the USA's 16(th)
largest bank, they comprised so high a proportion that SVB's Tier 1 equity
fell from 12% to almost 0%.  This bank, and others have crashed as a
consequence, throwing doubt on the integrity of the whole banking sector.
Even "strong" banks like Bank of America's Tier 1 capital has halved to 6%,
and Credit Suisse has just been rescued by the Swiss National Bank and then
taken over for a relatively nominal amount by UBS.  The crisis in the banking
sector would be worsened if rates were increased further, but greatly
ameliorated if the trend in rates was seen to have peaked.  This overriding
consideration for stability will, at least, moderate any further rate
increase.  I re-affirm my December 2022 statement that rates should peak at
or about 4%, but decline slowly to stabilise at around 3% over the next few
years.

 

The failure of SVB, a bank outside the criterion of banks considered "too big
to fail", but with the rescue of its depositors, has proved both that
regulation must be extended and the quality of the banks' executives must be
improved or even controlled.  As I noted in my 2022 statement, of the many
depressions since the 14(th) century, financial policies or irregularities
have been responsible for a large proportion of them.  Recently many pension
funds have had to be rescued when, after securing their long-term bond
holdings against equity investments, the bond value fell leaving the security
uncovered and the consequent margin requirement unmet.  These lacunae follow
those revealed in the Great Depression of widespread weak governance, notably
in the largest bank in the world, the RBS.  These recent financial crises
originate because of a disregard of the basic tenet of banking: when long-term
lending is funded, even in part, by short-term deposits, depositors must have
confidence in the liquidity of the bank.  The Bank of England notes carried
the statement "… promise to pay the bearer on demand …".  True, but what
the Bank meant was, "provided not too many other people require payment at the
same time".

 

Writing in the FT, Martin Wolf put the position pithily: "The marriage of
risky and often illiquid assets with liabilities that have to be safe and
liquid within undercapitalised, profit-seeking and bonus-paying institutions
regulated by politically subservient and often incompetent public sectors is a
calamity waiting to happen.  Banking needs radical change."

 

Possibly, a more limited change in management might be recommended also for
the Bank whose timing of interest rate changes both before the 2007 Recession
and before the current inflationary crisis has been suspect.

 

In Scotland, in contrast to previous forecasts, I close by forecasting that
the economic climate will improve significantly over the next few years.  The
SNP has cracked: its aura of integrity, its halo of purity, its selflessness
in the common cause and its solidarity are strewn publicly in pieces.  In its
place are unedifying evidences of malfeasance, perverting the course of
justice, self-aggrandisement, undemocratic practices, the manifold "sins" of
all older parties.  Thus, the cause of independence has suffered a blow that
may prove mortal.  This benefit is complemented by a possible "stay of
execution" for the oil and gas sector, Scotland's major non-state employer,
and maybe assisted by a possible reduction in the power of the Green alliance
where a tiny minority of MSPs has been responsible for obstructing
economically productive investments in Scotland at an economic and social cost
that far outweighs any measured benefit.  Thus, I forecast confidence in
Scotland, its future and its economy will be greatly improved, so lowering the
cost of capital, increasing investment and asset values and, most importantly,
living standards.

 

Property Prospects

I reviewed property prospects comprehensively in my statement to the year
ended 30 June 2022 based on the forecasts made in the autumn, but by December
2022 the forecast returns for 2022 had deteriorated very considerably.  The
Investment Property Forum (IPF) All Property return for 2022, previously
forecast at 6.4%, is now estimated at -2.3%, due almost entirely to forecast
Capital Value growth dropping from 2.3% to -6.4% and only the Retail Warehouse
sector is estimated to produce a positive return of 5.2%, although down from
12.3%, but all other sectors are estimated to have negative returns of from
-1.9% (Shopping Centres) to -3.9% (City Offices).

 

The MSCI(2) Monthly Property Index reported an even larger negative return of
-10.4% for 2022.  The changes in capital value reflect the spike in interest
rates to over 5%, following the economic and tax proposals made during the
very brief period of Liz Truss' leadership.

 

The IPF February forecast for 2023 forecasts a Total All Property return of
-0.6%, an improvement on the November forecast of -2.4%.  The only sector
forecast to have a positive Total return is Industrials (0.4%) and Offices are
forecast to have a Total return of -2.7% within which City Offices, with a
-3.5% return, are the worst performing sub-sector.  All sectors, with the
exception of Industrials (2.9% gain), are forecast to have declines in rental
value of which Shopping Centres are forecast to have the greatest fall of
2.8%, and Standard Retail 2.3% and City Offices 2.0%.  Capital value
contraction is forecast as 5.5% with all sectors falling in value.  The IPF
conducts its research in January (6 contributors) and February (11) and the
figures quoted are averages of these contributors.  The January forecasts
were for a Capital Value growth of -6.6%, but the February forecasts were for
a Capital Value growth of -5.0%; reflecting a cautious return of confidence
following the establishment of the new Government.

 

Forecasts for later years are for a recovery to a Total return of 7.2% in 2024
and of 8.0% in 2025.  In 2024 average rental value growth is only 1.0% but
Shopping Centres and City Office sectors are forecast to continue to decline
in rental value.  Shopping Centres are forecast to decline also in Capital
Value growth in 2024, but the Industrial sector is forecast to increase by
3.8%, the largest rise in Capital Value, which averages 2.2%.  In 2025 all
sectors are forecast to have higher Rental and Capital Value growth than in
2024 to give an improved All property return of 8.0%.  The poor returns
forecast for 2023 reduce the five year 2023/27 forecast Total return to 5.6%
per annum.

 

The IPF forecasts are based on the mean of normally 20 forecasts evenly
divided into two groups - Property Advisors and Fund Managers, whose
individual forecasts are widely dispersed.  Until recently there has been
little difference between the forecasts of these two groups, but for 2023
there is a sharp distinction.  Whereas the nine Property Advisors mean
forecast for total return is -0.2%, the Fund Managers participating forecast
was for -1.6%.  The total returns for subsequent years between the two groups
of forecasters had no similar disparities.

 

Colliers provide comprehensive forecasts which, interestingly, as there is no
averaging, normally have been very similar to the IPF means.  But currently,
the Colliers forecasts are markedly different to the IPF's forecasts,
particularly for 2023 where the total return is forecast as 5.3% in contrast
to the IPF's -0.6% with a corresponding difference of 5 percentage points for
Industrial and Office returns and 7.7 percentage points difference in the
Retail return (8.5% cf 0.8%).  There is a similar disparity in the five-year
return forecast where Colliers forecast about a 3 percentage point increased
return in all sectors.  Exceptionally, Colliers forecast Total return for
Industrials is 10.5% whereas IPF forecast 6.5%.  In general, Colliers expect
a higher growth in rentals than the IPF, forecasting five-year rental growth
of 4.3%pa for Industrials (IPF 2.6%), 1.7% for Retail Warehouses (0.6%) and
Offices "averaging" 1.4% ("averaging" 0.7%).  For Standard Retail the
forecasts agree: no increase in rental value over five years!

 

Patently, returns as forecast by Colliers are greatly to be desired, but
consideration of the prospects for the individual sectors gives little
comfort.  Most forecasters tend to project a continuation of recent changes
and very unusually are turning points accurately forecast.  Colliers
forecasts, being less pessimistic, may correctly be forecasting such an
inversion!

 

However, both forecasts agree on the forecast for Standard Retail: more of the
same!  They both forecast the Industrial / Logistics sector as having the
highest returns, based largely on the expected continuing rise in online sales
and the demand for distribution facilities to meet demand.  Online sales were
20.5% of all retail sales in the three months before the Covid crisis in late
March 2020, rose considerably during that crisis, and in January 2023 were
26.6% of all retail sales, having peaked at 37.8% in January 2021.  The
average for the 12 months to January 2023 was 25.8%.

 

Online sales administration and the associated distribution services appear to
be becoming even more convenient and efficient.  However, several factors
militate against a further expansion of their proportion of retail sales: the
"easiest", the low lying fruit has been harvested; goods' returns are rising
and are probably increasingly expensive to resell, especially of "personal"
goods; working from home, while established, is declining; existing retailers
are adopting a hybrid system of online / collection / in-store services; and
retail services are becoming increasingly "personal", for example, in areas of
health and beauty, services which cannot be delivered online!  While online
sales will continue to expand, no significant change in their percentage of
retail sales seems likely.  Although the retail sector is adjusting to the
extent of online sales, the total growth in retail sales will be limited by
low expected growth in Real Household Disposable Income.

 

In 2022 there were 3,365 net store closures compared to 7,902 in 2021 and to a
peak of 11,319 in 2020, but closures are expected to increase slightly over
the next two years before falling to 2,600 in 2025, in line with expected
improvements then in the economy.  The 3,365 net closures in 2022 included
net openings of 904 leisure units and 430 convenience units and the net
closure of 2,308 service units and 2,391 comparison units.  The fastest
declining categories were Banks 676, Hairdressers 527 and Newsagents, Bookies
and Recruitment, each 268, and fastest growing categories were Fast Food,
Takeaways, Beauty Salons and Convenience Stores each increasing by about 425,
and "Bars" 347 units.  The retail sector is adapting quickly to changed
economic circumstances, but, although the rate of decline in shop units slows,
returns to the retail sector will be severely restricted, especially as the
vacancy rate of 18.2% remains above the pre-Covid level of 14.4%.

 

The office sector also faces reducing demand for its existing premises, apart
from the effect of the continuing slow growth in the economy.  Demand for
existing offices has been significantly diminished because of the changing
work routines, especially "work from home", which, however disadvantageous for
some work categories, seems likely to persist.  Symptomatic of the change is
the recent announcement that Abrdn is closing its 100,000ft(2) office in St.
Andrews Square, Edinburgh and consolidating its offices, and, anecdotally, it
is reported that the Registers of Scotland's 125,00ft(2) office in Edinburgh
is currently only 20% occupied.  The office sector will suffer, not only from
a reduced demand but, from a different demand as a result of energy pricing
and ESG policies rendering much existing office stock outdated or redundant
and therefore effectively worthless.  Thus, while values will be high for the
limited high-quality space, values will be greatly impaired for all other
space.

 

The industrial sector is the only main property sector where demand continues
to increase, a surprising volte-face from the traditional position where it
traded on low nearly static rents and consistently high yields.

 

The prospects for Commercial Property are poor and depend primarily on rental
returns while capital values remain static.  The OBR, comparatively
optimistic in economics prospects, forecasts that "Commercial Property Prices"
will decline 4.8% this year and grow less than 0.5% pa for the next five
years.  The OBR forecasts CPI to be 18.1% over the next five years, resulting
in the real value of Commercial Property falling by about 15%.  The poor
performance of commercial property since 2007 will continue.

 

The anomalously high house price rises that I reported last year,
unsurprisingly, halted late last summer when monthly falls became widely
reported, the extent varying among surveys.  In the year to February 2023
rises were reported by Halifax 2.1%, Acadata (E&W) 4.7%, Acadata
(Scotland) 4.6% (January), Knight Frank 5.3% and ESPC 2.2%, but a fall was
reported by Nationwide of 1.1%.  The divergence between Halifax and
Nationwide is anomalous because their figures are both derived from their own
mortgages for properties that are of similar values (10% approximately higher
for Halifax).  The difference between these figures and Acadata figures is
also anomalous as both mortgage-based surveys are for a "standardised" house
product and include an upward Winter seasonal adjustment.  Acadata figures
are actual figures including both cash and mortgage sales, and therefore
include more expensive properties in the result.  It seems likely more
"expensive" properties have been less affected by the more difficult mortgage
market and have continued to rise in value.  Acadata report that, while
overall rises have continued, the rate of growth has slowed for six months,
and that prices in London have fallen.

 

Higher price rises continue to take place outside London and the South-East:
quite exceptionally in Blaenau Gwent prices have risen 30.3% - a narrow
market!  In Scotland where, in January, prices fell 0.9%, there was a
noticeable difference between house types as flat values fell 2.0%, terraces
1.6%, and semi-detached houses 0.6%, while detached houses maintained their
value.  Acadata say, "expensive detached properties tend to attract wealthy
and more resilient buyers who are less impacted by the rising cost of mortgage
finance".

 

The general decline in prices is reflected specifically in new house sales in
East Lothian (Wallyford) near one of the Company's prospective development
sites where, over the last few months, prices generally have been reduced (or
incentives given) equivalent to 5% or occasionally to nearly 10% of the quoted
price.

 

Recent surveyed price changes provide a background for forecasts of changes in
2023.  In January the Times newspaper summarised 13 forecasts from surveyors,
economic research groups and the OBR, and these ranged from -1%, Chestertons,
to -10%, Savills.  The OBR, using fiscal not calendar years, forecast that
prices would fall 4.6% in the year to April 2024 and would only grow about 1%
by end 2027/28.  This poor forecast is, however, higher than the equivalent
-7.8% OBR forecast in November 2022.

 

Comprehensive forecasts are given by Savills covering the next five years.
Mainstream UK prices are forecast to fall 10% in 2023 but rise 6.2% over the
four years to 2027, but in London prices are forecast to lose 1.7% over five
years.  Areas outside London and the South-East have much improved five-year
forecasts of over 10% for Northern regions and Wales and of 9.5% for
Scotland.  In all cases the greatest growth occurs in 2026 of 7.5% except in
London and the South-East and South-West.  Prime UK prices are forecast not
to have as large price falls as the mainstream with English regional values
falling 6.5% in 2027 but rising by 9.9% over 5 years and Scottish prime
prices, while falling 5.0% in 2023, rise 12.7% over five years, a better
expected performance than Scottish "mainstream".

 

The main determinants of the rate of change of house prices will be how
quickly interest rates fall and whether a recession occurs that causes a
severe rise in unemployment and a consequent increase in "fire sales" and
repossessions.  On average the equity content of mortgaged houses is now much
greater than in previous downturns and the resilience of mortgagors much
higher due to MMR and other financial controls.  Thus, I expect any increase
in forced sales to be minimal.  The forecast for interest rates is only for a
gradual fall to a level far above the abnormally low levels prevailing since
the 2008 Great Recession and this will moderate the prospective rise in house
prices.

 

I conclude that the current house price falls will not persist.  I forecast
that, while over the short-term prices will fall, over the next few years
prices will be stable and then rise.  In the long term the major determinant
of prices will revert to supply, primarily land supply.  The land supply is
determined by centrally set rules and regulations based on social and
political objectives, interpreted locally, which invariably restricts the
supply of land, raising its price.  These supply restrictions are deeply
entrenched and closely guarded with considerable political influence and thus,
without equivocation, I repeat my previous forecast: "the key determinant of
the long-term housing market will be a shortage of supply, resulting in higher
prices".

 

Conclusion

The UK economy teeters on the cliff edge of a recession.  Will the delayed
effect of the rise in interest rates push the economy over that edge.  Or,
will the Bank, panicking that it has not raised rates sufficiently to quell
inflation, undermine the economy by raising rates too far, causing the cliff
to collapse, or, will a standstill in rates prove ineffective in the
short-term and lead to even higher interest rate rises later, causing a
landslide?  My conclusion is that a further rate rise above 4.25% would not
be optimal, as inflation is due to fall sharply as energy and food inflation
will drop out of the calculation as the base date changes.  The rise to 4%
will allow the residual inflation to be brought down and controlled at an
acceptable level - say 2.5% to 3.5%.  Many commentators consider that the
2.0% target rate of inflation is not more beneficial than a slightly higher
target rate of inflation.  Such higher target rates would allow a more rapid
and less behaviourally difficult adjustment to changing economic circumstances
and, in a recession, allow a greater range of cuts before becoming
progressively less effective, and so are more advantageous than the current
2.0% target.  A return to economic stability would be very welcome, but an
unexciting one as living standards would continue to lag expectations which
depend on improved economic growth.

 

Higher economic growth than has occurred since 2007 is a function of many
independent changes, but would be severely limited by recurring recessions.
While wars, plagues and famine are often a common, largely unavoidable (wars
at times excepted) cause of recession, economic or financial mismanagement has
often been the cause.  Financial or economic mismanagement caused or
accentuated the post WWI recession, the Great Depression, Black Wednesday, the
Great Recession, the post-Covid recession and the recession now threatening
and, most recently, the UK pensions crisis and the failure of the SVB and
associated banks and Credit Suisse.  To remedy such unnecessary economic
setbacks, change in regulation is required.  With a change in regulation
perhaps a change in regulators is required as evidenced by the Bank's decision
to put up interest rates on the eve of the Great Depression and then to
maintain low interest rates into the current "Great Inflation".

 

The obviation of unnecessary causes of stagnation or recession by improved
financial management would remove a recurring impediment to growth for which
the vitally important requirement is improved productivity.  Since 2015/16 UK
productivity has increased only by about 5.0% or 0.8% per year.  Prior to
2008 productivity improved by about 2.25% pa, about 1.5 percentage points
above the post 2008 level, and had it been maintained at the 2.25% pre-2008
level, would have resulted in current output being around 25% higher than at
present.  In its analysis of productivity the NIESR concludes:-

 

"The UK has one of the poorest productivity performances among the OECD's 38
advanced economies and this has been made worse by Covid-19.  If policymakers
return to the same economic structures post-pandemic that failed to resolve
the productivity problem pre-pandemic, then the UK is set for another decade
of a low-growth, low-productivity and low-wage economy".  Of this Martin Wolf
says "The biggest problem for the UK remains its dismal underlying
productivity growth".  This is dramatically illustrated by the NIESR's recent
analysis of Public Sector productivity - where it says: "inputs rising by 19%
since 2019 and output by only about half that".

 

The downturn in the economy delayed a possible sale of St. Margaret's House
but, being in one of the very few sectors where demand is growing and supply
is limited, prospects for its sale have, in the Board's view, greatly
improved.

 

The Steading phase of the Brunstane development has sold well with three
houses above the UK House Price Index level (HPI), one at HPI level and the
fifth remaining on the market.  The market for houses near the City Centre
remains strong as this segment of the market is less effected by finance
affordability and availability.  We now have permission for the next 12
houses there at Upper Brunstane which, even at current prices, provides a very
attractive development which we will undertake once all remaining regulatory
hurdles are cleared.

 

Our development at Wallyford, although sufficiently profitable at current
costs and prices, has been delayed to allow the pursuit of opportunities
likely to provide higher returns.  The delay to our Belford Road development
is not caused by market conditions but by the continuing delay in obtaining
suitable non-material variations to planning to meet changed insulation,
servicing and building control requirements and by the time being taken to
obtain desirable changes to the internal layout to meet market requirements
and to effect small changes to the facade to improve the appearance of the
building and an enhancement to the already high amenity of the area.

 

The development opportunities in our existing portfolio have continued to
improve and I conclude, as previously, "In our existing portfolio, most
development properties are valued at cost, usually based on existing use, and
when these sites are developed or sold, I expect their considerable upside
will be realised.  Some investment properties also have considerable
development value, as we expect to realise eventually at St Margaret's".

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I D LOWE

Chairman

30 March 2023

 

 

 

 

Consolidated income statement for the six months ended 31 December 2022

__________________________________________________________________________________

 

 

                                                                                  Note    6 months                          6 months                          Year
                                                                                          ended                             ended                             ended
                                                                                          31 Dec                            31 Dec                            30 Jun
                                                                                          2022                              2021                              2022
                                                                                          £000                              £000                              £000
 Revenue
 Revenue from development property sales                                                  1,990                             -                                 -
 Gross rental income from investment properties                                           195                               167                                        306

 Total Revenue                                                                            2,185                             167                                    306

 Cost of development property sales                                                             (1,393)                              -                        -
 Property charges                                                                                    (35)                              (47)                   (90)

 Cost of Sales                                                                                  (1,428)                           (47)                        (90)

 Gross Profit                                                                             757                               120                                       216

 Administrative expenses                                                                         (294)                             (254)                      (887)
 Other income                                                                                            -                                 -                            8

 Net operating profit/(loss) before investment property disposals and valuation
 movements
                                                                                                      463                          (134)

                                                                                                                                                                     (663)

 Valuation gains on investment properties                                         5                      -                                 -                  190
 Valuation losses on investment properties                                        5                -                                 -                        (690)

 Net (losses) on investment properties                                                             -                                 -                        (500)

 Operating profit/(loss)                                                                  463                                        (134)                        (1,163)

 Financial expenses                                                                               (110)                             (62)                      (139)

 Profit/(loss) before taxation                                                             353                               (196)                            (1,302)

 Income tax                                                                       6                      -                                 -                               -

 Profit/(loss) and total comprehensive income
 for the financial period attributable to equity
 holders of the parent Company                                                                     353                               (196)                    (1,302)

 Earnings per share
 Basic and diluted earnings per share (pence)                                     7       3.00p                                   (1.66p)                       (11.05p)

 

 

 

Consolidated statement of changes in equity as at 31 December 2022

__________________________________________________________________________________

 

 

                                Share          Capital         Share        Retained                                Total
                                Capital        redemption      premium      earnings
                                               reserve         account
                                £000           £000            £000         £000                                    £000

 At 1 July 2022                 2,357          175             2,745            17,976                              23,253

 Profit and total
 comprehensive income
 for the period                  -             -               -                     353                            353

 At 31 December 2022            2,357          175             2,745            18,329                              23,606

 At 1 July 2021                 2,357          175             2,745            19,278                              24,555

 Loss and total
 comprehensive expenditure
 for the period                 -              -               -            (196)                                      (196)

 At 31 December 2021            2,357          175             2,745            19,082                              24,359

 At 1 July 2021                 2,357          175             2,745            19,278                              24,555

 Loss and total
 comprehensive expenditure
 for the period                 -              -               -               (1,302)                              (1,302)

 At 30 June 2022                2,357          175             2,745            17,976                              23,253

 

 

 

 

 

Consolidated balance sheet as at 31 December 2022

__________________________________________________________________________________

 

 

                                                  31 Dec                              31 Dec                              30 Jun
                                                  2022                                2021                                2022
                                          Note    £000                                £000                                £000
 Non-current assets
 Investment property                      8       16,610                              17,110                                  16,610
 Plant and equipment                               10                                 11                                             8
 Investments                                                      1                                   1                                1

 Total non-current assets                         16,621                              17,122                                  16,619

 Current assets
 Trading properties                               9,840                               9,896                               10,672
 Trade and other receivables                      159                                 121                                 134
 Cash and cash equivalents                        2,367                               2,322                               1,317

 Total current assets                             12,366                              12,339                              12,123

 Total assets                                     28,987                              29,461                              28,742

 Current liabilities
 Trade and other payables                         (1,001)                             (722)                               (1,109)
 Interest bearing loans and borrowings            (360)                               (360)                               (360)

 Total current liabilities                        (1,361)                             (1,082)                             (1,469)

 Non-current liabilities
 Interest bearing loans and borrowing             (4,020)                             (4,020)                             (4,020)

 Total liabilities                                (5,381)                             (5,102)                             (5,489)

 Net assets                                       23,606                              24,359                                 23,253

 Equity
 Issued share capital                     10              2,357                               2,357                            2,357
 Capital redemption reserve                                  175                                 175                              175
 Share premium account                                    2,745                               2,745                            2,745
 Retained earnings                                18,329                              19,082                                 17,976

 Total equity attributable to equity
 holders of the parent Company                    23,606                              24,359                                 23,253

 NET ASSET VALUE PER SHARE                        200.3p                              206.7p                              197.3p

 

 

 

Consolidated cash flow statement for the six months ended 31 December 2022

__________________________________________________________________________________

 

                                                                6 months                              6 months                                        Year
                                                                ended                                 ended                                           ended
                                                                31 Dec                                31 Dec                                          30 Jun
                                                                2022                                  2021                                            2022
                                                                £000                                  £000                                            £000
 Cash flows from operating activities

 Profit/(loss) for the period                                            353                                   (196)                                  (1,302)

 Adjustments for:

 Net loss/(gain) on revaluation of investment properties

                                                                -                                     -                                               500
 Depreciation and Loss on sale of fixed assets                                 -                                     -                                            5
 Net finance expense                                            110                                   62                               ﷐                       139

 Operating cash flows before movements                          463                                   (134)                                           (658)
 in working capital

 Decrease/(increase) in trading properties                      832                                   (583)                                           (1,359)
 (Increase)/decrease in trade and other receivables             (25)                                  14                                              1
 (Decrease)/increase in trade and other payables                (218)                                 73                                                     574

 Cash generated from/(absorbed by) operations                   1,052                                 (630)                                           (1,442)

 Interest paid                                                  -                                       (60)                                                (251)

 Net cash inflow/(outflow) from operating activities

                                                                1,052                                 (690)                                           (1,693)

 Investment activities

 Proceeds from sale of investment properties                    -                                     -                                               -
 Proceeds from sale of fixed assets                                            -                                     -                                             -
 Acquisition of plant and equipment                             (2)                                   (8)                                             (10)

 Cash flows (absorbed by) investing activities                               (2)                                   (8)                                      (10)

 Net increase/(decrease) in cash and cash equivalents                    1,050                                 (698)                                  (1,703)

 Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of period               1,317                                 3,020                                                 3,020

 Cash and cash equivalents at end of period                     2,367                                  2,322                                          1,317

 

 

 

 

Notes to the interim statement

 

 

1          This interim statement for the six-month period to 31
December 2022 is unaudited and was approved by the directors on 30 March 2023.
 Caledonian Trust PLC (the "Company") is a company incorporated in England
and domiciled in the United Kingdom.  The information set out does not
constitute statutory accounts within the meaning of Section 434 of the
Companies Act 2006.

 

2          Going concern basis

 

The Group and parent Company finance their day to day working capital
requirements through related party loans and bank and other funding for
specific development projects.  The directors have assessed the group cash
flow forecasts and expect that current rental streams and property sales in
the normal course of business will provide sufficient cash inflows to allow
the Group to continue to trade.  In addition, the related party lender has
indicated its willingness to continue to provide financial support and not to
demand repayment of its principal loan during 2023.

 

Accordingly, the directors continue to adopt the going concern basis in
preparing this interim statement.

 

3          Basis of preparation

 

The consolidated interim financial statements of the Company for the six
months ended 31 December 2022 are in respect of the Company and its
subsidiaries, together referred to as the "Group".  The financial information
set out in this announcement for the year ended 30 June 2022 does not
constitute the Group's statutory accounts for that period within the meaning
of Section 434 of the Companies Act 2006.  Statutory accounts for the year
ended 30 June 2022 are available on the Company's website at
www.caledoniantrust.com (http://www.caledoniantrust.com) and have been
delivered to the Registrar of Companies. The accounts for the year ended 30
June 2022 have been prepared in accordance with UK-adopted International
Accounting Standards. The auditors have reported on those financial
statements; their reports were (i) unqualified, (ii) did not include
references to any matters to which the auditors drew attention by way of
emphasis without qualifying their reports, and (iii) did not contain
statements under Section 498 (2) or (3) of the Companies Act 2006.

 

The financial information set out in this announcement has been prepared in
accordance with International Accounting Standard IAS34 "Interim Financial
Reporting".  The financial information is presented in sterling and rounded
to the nearest thousand.

 

The interim financial statements have been prepared based UK-adopted
International Accounting Standards that are expected to exist at the date on
which the Group prepares its financial statements for the year ending 30 June
2023.  To the extent that IFRS at 30 June 2023 do not reflect the assumptions
made in preparing the interim statements, those financial statements may be
subject to change.

 

In the process of applying the Group's accounting policies, management
necessarily makes judgements and estimates that have a significant effect on
the amounts recognised in the interim statement.  Changes in the assumptions
underlying the estimates could result in a significant impact to the financial
information.  The most critical of these accounting judgement and estimation
areas are included in the Group's 2022 consolidated financial statements and
the main areas of judgement and estimation are similar to those disclosed in
the financial statements for the year ended 30 June 2022.

 

 

Notes to the interim statement (continued)

 

 

4          Accounting policies

 

The accounting policies used in preparing these financial statements are the
same as those set out and used in preparing the Group's audited financial
statements for the year ended 30 June 2022.

 

 

5          Valuation (losses)/gains on investment properties

 

                                                                      31 Dec    31 Dec           30 Jun
                                                                      2022      2021               2022
                                                                      £000      £000               £000

 Valuation gains in investment properties                             -         -                     190

 Valuation losses on investment properties after transaction costs

                                                                      -         -         (690)

 Net valuation (losses)/gains on investment properties                -         -         (500)

 

 

6          Income tax

 

Taxation for the six months ended 31 December 2022 is based on the effective
rate of taxation which is estimated to apply to the year ending 30 June
2023.  Due to the tax losses incurred there is no tax charge for the period.

 

In the case of deferred tax in relation to investment property revaluation
surpluses, the base cost used is historical book cost and includes allowances
or deductions which may be available to reduce the actual tax liability which
would crystallise in the event of a disposal of the asset.  At 31 December
2022 there is a deferred tax asset which is not recognised in these accounts.

 

Notes to the interim statement (continued)

 

 

7          Profit or loss per share

 

            Basic profit or loss per share is calculated by
dividing the profit or loss attributable to ordinary
shareholders by the weighted average number of ordinary shares outstanding
during the period        as follows:

 

                                       6 months                          6 months                        Year
                                       ended                             ended                           ended
                                       31 Dec                            31 Dec                          30 Jun
                                       2022                              2021                            2022
                                       £000                              £000                            £000

 Profit/(loss) for financial period                  353                 (196)                                    (1,302)

                                       No.                               No.                             No.
 Weighted average no. of shares:
 For basic and diluted profit or
 loss per share                           11,783,577                        11,783,577                      11,783,577

                                                                                          ﷐

 Earnings per share                       3.00p                          (1.66p)                         (11.05p)
 Earnings per share                    3.00p                             (1.66p)                         (11.05p)

 

 

 

8          Investment Properties

 

                          31 Dec    31 Dec    30 Jun
                          2022      2021      2022
                          £000      £000      £000

 Valuation
 Opening valuation        16,610    17,110          17,110
 Revaluation in period    -         -                  (500)

 Closing valuation        16,610    17,110        16,610

 

The fair value of investment property at 31 December 2022 was determined by
the directors' taking cognisance of the independent valuation by Montagu
Evans, Chartered Surveyors as at 30 June 2022 having made adjustments for
changes in leases and market conditions.

 

 

 

Notes to the interim statement (continued)

 

 

9          Financial instruments

 

            Fair values

 

            Fair values versus carrying amounts

 

The fair values of financial assets and liabilities, together with the
carrying amounts shown in the balance sheet, are as follows:

 

                              31 Dec 2022                 31 Dec 2021              30 Jun 2022
                              Fair            Carrying    Fair         Carrying    Fair        Carrying
                              value           amount      value        amount      value       amount
                              £000            £000        £000         £000        £000        £000

 Trade and other receivables     144          144         86           86          103         103
 Cash and cash equivalents    2,367           2,367       2,322        2,322       1,317       1,317

                              2,511           2,511       2,408        2,408       1,420       1,420

 Loans from related parties   4,380           4,380       4,380        4,380       4,380       4,380
 Trade and other payables     992             992         722          722         1,100       1,100

                              5,372           5,372       5,102        5,102       5,480       5,480

 

            Estimation of fair values

 

            The following methods and assumptions were used to
estimate the fair values shown above:

 

Trade and other receivables/payables - the fair value of receivables and
payables with a remaining life of less than one year is deemed to be the same
as the book value.

 

Cash and cash equivalents - the fair value is deemed to be the same as the
carrying amount due to the short maturity of these instruments.

 

Other loans - the fair value is calculated by discounting the expected future
cashflows at prevailing interest rates.

 

 

Notes to the interim statement (continued)

 

 

10        Issued share capital

 

                                         31 Dec 2022                31 Dec 2021              30 Jun 2022
                                 No.                                No.                      No.
                                 000                   £000         000           £000       000           £000

 Issued and
 Fully paid
 Ordinary shares of 20p each      11,784               2,357        11,784         2,357     11,784        2,357

 

 

11        Seasonality

 

              Investment property sales by the Group are not
seasonal and sales of completed houses on development sites are driven more by
completion of construction projects than by season.

 

 

 

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